Dancing in Glenroan (Rinnceoiri Ghleann Ruain) — The singer, "growing old and weary," recalls the dancing of his youth in Glenro… Daniel O'Connell (I) — Singer overhears an old woman and a tinker; he says Daniel O'Connell is now mak… The Days of the Past Are Gone — "The harness hangs in the old log barn, The wagon rots in the shed...." "For we… The Deaf Woman's Courtship — An old man comes to an old woman and asks her is she will (mend his jacket). Sh… Do Ye Mind Lang Syne — "Do ye mind lang syne, When the simmer days were fine, When the sun it shone fa… The Dog in the Closet (The Old Dyer) — The hatter has to hide in the closet when the woman's husband comes home unexpe… Don't Go, Tommy — "You'll miss it, my boy, now mind what I say, Don't spend all your money and ti… Don't Leave Your Mother When Her Hair Turns Gray — "Stick to your mother, Tom, And don't you leave her worry, lad." The singer, wh… The Engineer — Singer, an old engineer, tells his friend (and fireman?) Joe about the wreck on… Flowery Nolan — At seventy one, Flowery Nolan, "a terror to all men," decides to marry. He marr…