• The repeating chorus line "With your drums and guns and drums and guns" is sometimes sung as "With your drums and guns and guns and drums", or "We had guns and drums and drums and guns", as in the
Dropkick Murphys version. • "Why did ye run from me and the child?" sometimes replaces "Why did ye skedaddle from me and the child?" • "Where are the legs with which you run?" sometimes replaces "Where are the legs that used to run?", often also accompanied by a change from "When you went to carry a gun" to "When first you went to carry a gun", such as in the version performed by
The Clancy Brothers. • In some versions, the final lines are sung as: •
Steeleye Span recorded an adaptation of the song, called "Fighting For Strangers", on their 1976 album
Rocket Cottage. Their version is substantially different, but bears the refrain "Johnny, what've they done to you" or "Johnny what'll happen to you". The other similarity is in the last verse: • The song "English Civil War" from
The Clash's 1978 album ''
Give 'Em Enough Rope'' incorporates melody and lyrics from the original. • The rugby song "
I Met a Whore in the Park" goes to the tune of the song. •
PJ Harvey's 2011 song "
Let England Shake" modifies and incorporates the line, "Indeed your dancing days are done". • The villains in the 2001 film
The Luck of the Irish sang the song during a victory feast. • The song "Hip Hurray" on the
Fiddler's Green's 1995 album
King Shepherd retains some of the lyrics while using a different melody and additional lyrics to create a reflection on the original song. •
Marc Gunn and Jamie Haeuser recorded it on their album
How America Saved Irish Music (2014). ==Reusage of the title==