Hooligan’s Mule

First Published 1897
Writer/composer Lester Barrett Roud RN34686

Music Hall Performers Lester Barrett
Folk performances Collected from the singing of:
Lovett, Tom ; Ireland : Co. Kerry; 1982
Merdith, John; Australia : New South Wales; 1985

There's murder in the atmosphere,
There's earthquakes in the air;
Pat Hooligan, last Thursday,
Bought a mule down at the fair.
When he tried to put it in the shafts,
It smashed the cart to bits.
It chewed up all the harness,
And gave all the neighbours fits.

Oh, Hooligan, if ever you buy a mule a-gin,
You ought to be shot, you've gone off your dot,
You are a stupid fool.
It's killed a lot of people off,
Kicked the top of the steeple off;
If you want to die quick, just get a kick,
From Patsy Hooligan's mule.

They tried their best to coax the brute,
Inside the stable door,
They coaxed it with a crow-bar,
Till the poor old mule was sore;
Then Hogan said that kindness
To and animal was best;
He commenced to stroke the mule and now,
Hogan's gone to rest.

He chewed up all the tramway lines,
He smashed in all the roofs;
He killed a dozen p'licemen
With his eighty one tonne hoofs.
We held a public meeting
Down at Micky Doolan's school,
To discuus the best and safest way
To kill that murdering mule.


A Music Hall song from the late 1890s, popular throughout the English speaking world. Whilst the song mocks Irish stereotypes it seems to have been popular amongst members of the Irish diaspora and it passed into Irish and Australian traditional singing. It was originally written and performed by Lester Barrett

Sources:

  • VWML entry
  • Kilgarrif Sing Us
  • Lyrics: monologues.co.uk
  • Sheet Music: Francis and Day’s 17th Annual, p40