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Verses Turned

Across the wet November

The church is bright with

And waiting Evensong.

A single bell with plaintive

Pleads louder than the stirring

The leafless lanes along.

It calls the choirboys from their

And villagers, the two or three,

Damp down the kitchen fire,

Let out the cat, and up the

Go paddling through the gentle

Of misty Oxfordshire.

How warm the many candles

Of Samuel Dowbiggin's

For this interior neat,

These high box pews of Georgian

Which screen us from the public

When we make answer meet;

How gracefully their shadow

On bold pilasters down the

And on the pulpit high.

The chandeliers would twinkle

As pre-Tractarian sermons

Doctrinal, sound and dry.

From that west gallery no

The viol and serpent tooted

The Tallis tune to Ken,

And firmly at the end of

The clerk below the pulpit

Would thunder out "Amen."But every wand'ring thought will

Before the noble

With carven swags array'd,

For there in letters all may

The Lord's Commandments,

Prayer and Creed,

And decently display'd.

On country morningd sharp and

The penitent in faith draw

And kneeling here

Partake the heavenly banquet

Of sacramental Wine and

And Jesus' presence know.

And must that plaintive bell in

Plead loud along the dripping lane?

And must the building fall?

Not while we love the church and

And of our charity will

Our much, our more, our all.

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Sir John Betjeman

Sir John Betjeman CBE (/ˈbɛtʃəmən/; 28 August 1906 – 19 May 1984) was an English poet, writer, and broadcaster. He was Poet Laureate from 1972 u…

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