A Traditional Farewell Song

The Parting Glass is sometimes sung when friends part.

The Parting Glass - Irish Children's Songs - Ireland - Mama Lisa's World: Children's Songs and Rhymes from Around the World  - Intro Image

Notes

There's a Scottish version of this song too, an early version of which appeared in print in the 1770's. According to Wikipedia, "The song is doubtless older than its 1770 appearance in broadside, as it was recorded in the Skene Manuscript, a collection of Scottish airs written at various dates between 1615 and 1635. It was known at least as early as 1605, when a portion of the first stanza was written in a farewell letter, as a poem now known as 'Armstrong's Goodnight', by one of the Border Reivers [raiders along the Anglo-Scottish border] executed that year for the murder in 1600 of Sir John Carmichael, Warden of the Scottish West March."

Here's "Armstrong's Goodnight":

This night is my departing night,
For here nae langer must I stay;
There's neither friend nor foe o' mine,
But wishes me away.

What I have done thro' lack of wit,
I never, never can recall;
I hope ye're a' my friends as yet;
Good night and joy be with you all.

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Thanks and Acknowledgements

Image from "Collecting Old Glass, English and Irish" (1918) by Sir James Henry Yoxall, graphically edited by Mama Lisa.