| NEW ENGLAND'S dead! 
					New England's dead! On every hill they lie;
 On every 
					field of strife, made red
 By bloody victory.
 Each 
					valley, where the battle poured
 Its red and awful tide,
 Beheld the brave New England sword
 With slaughter deeply 
					dyed.
 Their bones are on the northern hill,
 And on the 
					southern plain,
 By brook and river, lake and rill,
 And 
					by the roaring main.
 
 The land is holy where they 
					fought,
 And holy where they fell;
 For by their blood 
					that land was bought,
 The land they loved so well.
 Then glory to that valiant band,
 The honored saviours of 
					the land!
 
 O, few and weak their numbers were,
 A 
					handful of brave men;
 But to their God they gave their 
					prayer,
 And rushed to battle then.
 The God of battles 
					heard their cry,
 And sent to them the victory.
 
 They left the ploughshare in the mould,
 Their flocks and 
					herds without a fold,
 The sickle in the unshorn grain,
 The corn, half-garnered, on the plain,
 And mustered, in 
					their simple dress,
 For wrongs to seek a stern redress,
 To right those wrongs, come weal, come woe,
 To perish, or 
					o'ercome their foe.
 
 And where are ye, O fearless men?
 And where are ye to-day?
 I call:�the hills reply again
 That ye have passed away;
 That on old Bunker's lonely 
					height,
 In Trenton, and in Monmouth ground,
 The grass 
					grows green, the harvest bright
 Above each soldier's 
					mound.
 The bugle's wild and warlike blast
 Shall muster 
					them no more;
 An army now might thunder past,
 And they 
					heed not its roar.
 The starry flag, 'neath which they 
					fought
 In many a bloody day,
 From their old graves 
					shall rouse them not,
 For they have passed away.
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