| THE STATELY Homes of England, | |
| How beautiful they stand! | |
| Amidst their tall ancestral trees, | |
| O’er all the pleasant land; | |
| The deer across their greensward bound | 5 |
| Through shade and sunny gleam, | |
| And the swan glides past them with the sound | |
| Of some rejoicing stream. | |
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| The merry Homes of England! | |
| Around their hearths by night, | 10 |
| What gladsome looks of household love | |
| Meet in the ruddy light. | |
| There woman’s voice flows forth in song, | |
| Or childish tale is told; | |
| Or lips move tunefully along | 15 |
| Some glorious page of old. | |
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| The blessèd Homes of England! | |
| How softly on their bowers | |
| Is laid the holy quietness | |
| That breathes from Sabbath hours! | 20 |
| Solemn, yet sweet, the church-bell’s chime | |
| Floats through their woods at morn; | |
| All other sounds, in that still time, | |
| Of breeze and leaf are born. | |
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| The cottage Homes of England! | 25 |
| By thousands on her plains, | |
| They are smiling o’er the silvery brooks, | |
| And round the hamlet-fanes. | |
| Through glowing orchards forth they peep, | |
| Each from its nook of leaves; | 30 |
| And fearless there the lowly sleep, | |
| As the bird beneath their eaves. | |
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| The free, fair Homes of England! | |
| Long, long in hut and hall, | |
| May hearts of native proof be reared | 35 |
| To guard each hallowed wall! | |
| And green forever be the groves, | |
| And bright the flowery sod, | |
| Where first the child’s glad spirit loves | |
| Its country and its God. | 40 |
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