| Your hay it is mow’d, and your corn is reap’d
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| Your barns will be full, and your hovels heap’d
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| Come, boys, come
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| And we’ll roar out our Harvest Home
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| We’ve cheated the parson, we’ll cheat him again
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| Why should the blockhead have one in ten?
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| One in ten
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| For prating so long like a book learned sot
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| Till pudding and dumplin burn to the pot
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| Burn to the pot
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| We’ll toss off our ale till we cannot stand
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| Then Ho for the times of Old England
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| Old England
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| Your hay it is mow’d, and your corn is reap’d
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| Your barns will be full and your hovls heaped
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| The nck, the neck, the neck
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| Hard faced dames in hoods make haste
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| To cram their lapbags with the barley waste
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| Before the rout the leveret darts
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| Bawled at by boys in blundering carts
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| Scorched there in the heat of the sun
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| The dinner hour their leisure won
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| Sweet, now the small beer goes
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| In hardwood bottles, we all knows
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| Start of the day the church bell’s knell
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| And fear to hear the gleaning bell
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| We’ll toil all day in the last of the hay
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| We’ll scratch our days away
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| Beside the hedge the baby sleeps
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| While far the footsore rabble creeps
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| Dogs are left to mind the farm
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| But knaves slouch out to steal the grain
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| Pigs they all rootle there
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| Fields are full of din and blare
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| Time passes, as they glean
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| The hobby-horse whirls round and round
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| Stumbling now the gleaning’s done
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| The farmer’s fat hares, slung upon his gun
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| Gives goodnight, as home they pull
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| In creaking handcarts bursting full
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| Stacked well out of mischief’s way
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| To thrash and dress another day
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| Wives full of weary pride
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| With such small riches satisfied
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| The neck |