SONG OF MINSTERWORTH

Air: “The Vicar of Bray

In olden, olden centuries

On Gloucester’s holy ground, sir,

The monks did pray and chant all day,

And grow exceeding round, sir;

And here’s the reason that they throve

To praise their pleasant fortune,

“We keep our beasts”—thus quoth the priests,

“In Minsterworth—that’s Mortune!”[1]

So this is the chorus we will sing,

And this is the spot we’ll drink to,

While blossom blows and Severn flows,

And Earth has mugs to clink to.

Oh! there in sleepy Summer sounds

The drowsy drone of bees, sir,

And there in Winter paints the sun

His patterns ’neath the trees, sir;

And there with merry song doth run

A river full of fish, sir,

That Thursday sees upon the flood

And Friday on the dish, sir.

So this is the chorus we will sing

And this is the spot we’ll drink to,

While blossom blows and Severn flows,

And Earth has mugs to clink to.

The jovial priests to dust are gone,

We cannot hear their singing;

But still their merry chorus-song

From newer lips runs ringing.

And we who drink the sunny air

And see the blossoms drifting,

Will sit and sing the self-same thing

Until the roof we’re lifting.

So this is the chorus we will sing,

And this is the spot we’ll drink to,

While blossom blows and Severn flows,

And Earth has mugs to clink to.

[1] The ancient name of the parish was Mortune—that is, the village in the mere; and the name was changed to Minsterworth early in the fourteenth century because it belonged to the Minster or Abbey of Gloucester, and was the Minster’s “Worth” or farm where the cattle were kept.—F. W. H.