Lord Elderley, Lrd Borrowmere,
Lord Sickert and Lord Camp,
With every virtue, every grace,
Ah what avails the sceptred race,
Here you see-the four of us,
And there are so many more of us
Eldest sons that must succeed.
We know how Caesar conquered Gaul
And how to whack a cricket ball;
Apart from this, our education lacks co-ordination.
Though we're young and tentative
And rather rip-representative,
We are the products of those homes serene and stately
Seem to have run to seed!
The Stately Homes of England,
How beautiful they stand,
To prove the upper classes
Have still the upper hand;
Though the fact that they have to be rebuilt
And frequently mortgaged to the hilt
Is inclined to take the gilt
And certainly damps the fun
But still we won't be beaten,
We'll scrimp and scrape and save,
The playing fields of Eton
Have made us frightfully brave-
And though if the Van Dycks have to go
And we pawn the Bechstein Grand,
By the Stately Homes of England.
You may be heartily sick of us,
Our homes command extensive views
And with assistance from the Jews
We have been able to dispose of
Rows and rows and rows of
Gainsboroughs and Lawrences,
Some sporting prints of Aunt Florence's,
Some of which were rather rude.
Although we sometimes flaunt our family conventions,
The Stately Homes of England
Though the pipes that supply the bathroom burst
And the lavatory makes you fear the worst,
It was used by Charles the First
And later by George the Fourth
The State Apartments keep their
It's wiser not to sleep there
In case they tumble down'
But still if they ever catch on fire
Which, with any luck, they might
For the Stately Homes of England
The Stately Homes of England,
Though rather in the lurch,
There's the ghost of a crazy younger son
Who murdered, in thirteen fifty-one,
And people who come to call
The baby in the guest wing,
Who crouches by the grate,
Was walled up in the west wing
In fourteen twenty-eight.
In a hand-embroidered shroud
Of the Stately Homes of England.
Lord Elderley, Lord Borrowmere,
Lord Sickert and Lord Camp,
Behold us in our hours of ease,
Uncertain, coy and hard to please.
Reading in Debrett of us,
This fine Patrician quartette of us,
We can feel extremely proud,
Our ancient lineage we trace
Back to the cradle of the Race
Before those beastly Roman bowmen
Bitched our local Yeomen.
Through the new democracy
May pain the old Aristocarcy
We've not winced nor cried aloud,
Under the bludgeonings of chance what will be- will be.
Bloody but quite unbowed!
The Stately Homes of England
Produce a race of charming,
Though our mental equipment may be slight
And we barely distinguish left from right,
We are quite prepared to fight
Though none of us know so far
As to married like we go,
For the Stately Homes of England!
The Stately Homes of England,
We've a cousin who won the Golden Fleece
And a very peculiar fowling-piece
Which was sent to Cromwell's niece,
A note we have from Chaucer
We've two pairs of tights
Had completely worn away.
For the Stately Homes of England.
The Stately Homes of England,
For what we do and think.
Tho' we freely admit we may be wrong,
Our conviction that we are right is strong
Tho' it may not be for long,
We might as well hold the bat
Our Minister of Grace may
And we're forced to use the rod,
For the Stately Homes of England