The South Country
WHEN I am living in the Midlands |
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| That are sodden and unkind, |
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| I light my lamp in the evening: |
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| My work is left behind; |
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| And the great hills of the South Country | |
| Come back into my mind. |
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| The great hills of the South Country |
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| They stand along the sea; |
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| And it's there walking in the high woods |
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| That I could wish to be, | |
| And the men that were boys when I was a boy |
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| Walking along with me. |
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| The men that live in North England |
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| I saw them for a day: |
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| Their hearts are set upon the waste fells, | |
| Their skies are fast and grey; |
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| From their castle-walls a man may see |
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| The mountains far away. |
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| The men that live in West England |
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| They see the Severn strong, | |
| A-rolling on rough water brown |
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| Light aspen leaves along. |
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| They have the secret of the Rocks, |
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| And the oldest kind of song. |
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| But the men that live in the South Country | |
| Are the kindest and most wise, |
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| They get their laughter from the loud surf, |
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| And the faith in their happy eyes |
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| Comes surely from our Sister the Spring |
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| When over the sea she flies; | |
| The violets suddenly bloom at her feet, |
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| She blesses us with surprise. |
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| I never get between the pines |
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| But I smell the Sussex air; |
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| Nor I never come on a belt of sand | |
| But my home is there. |
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| And along the sky the line of the Downs |
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| So noble and so bare. |
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| A lost thing could I never find, |
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| Nor a broken thing mend: | |
| And I fear I shall be all alone |
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| When I get towards the end. |
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| Who will there be to comfort me |
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| Or who will be my friend? |
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| I will gather and carefully make my friends | |
| Of the men of the Sussex Weald; |
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| They watch the stars from silent folds, |
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| They stiffly plough the field. |
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| By them and the God of the South Country |
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| My poor soul shall be healed. | |
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| If I ever become a rich man, |
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| Or if ever I grow to be old, |
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| I will build a house with deep thatch |
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| To shelter me from the cold, |
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| And there shall the Sussex songs be sung | |
| And the story of Sussex told. |
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| I will hold my house in the high wood |
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| Within a walk of the sea, |
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| And the men that were boys when I was a boy |
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| Shall sit and drink with me. |
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