The Matin-song of Friar Tuck

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I.
If souls could sing to heaven's high King
 As blackbirds pipe on earth,
  How those delicious courts would ring
 With gusts of lovely mirth!
What white-robed throng could lift a song
So mellow with righteous glee
As this brown bird that all day long
Delights my hawthorn tree.
  Hark! That's the thrush
 With speckled breast
  From yon white bush
 Chaunting his best,
  Te Deum! Te Deum laudamus!

  II.
If earthly dreams be touched with gleams
 Of Paradisal air,
Some wings, perchance, of earth may glance
 Around our slumbers there;
Some breaths of may might drift our way
 With scents of leaf and loam,
Some whistling bird at dawn be heard
 From those old woods of home.
  Hark! That's the thrush
 With speckled breast
  From yon white bush
  Chaunting his best,
  Te Deum! Te Deum laudamus!

  III.
No King or priest shall mar my feast
 Where'er my soul may range.
I have no fear of heaven's good cheer
  Unless our Master change.
But when death's night is dying away,
 If I might choose my bliss,
My love should say, at break of day,
 With her first waking kiss:-
  Hark! That's the thrush
 With speckled breast,
  From yon white bush
  Chaunting his best,
  Te Deum! Te Deum laudamus!

© Alfred Noyes