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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

‘Goodbye, England’s Rose …’

“Candle in the Wind” as performed Saturday at Westminster Abbey by Elton John:

Goodbye, England’s rose;

may you ever grow in our hearts.

You were the grace that placed itself

where lives were torn apart.

You called out to our country,

and you whispered to those in pain.

Now you belong to heaven,

and the stars spell out your name.

And it seems to me you lived your life

like a candle in the wind:

never fading with the sunset

when the rain set in.

And your footsteps will always fall here,

along England’s greenest hills;

your candle’s burned out long before

your legend ever will.

Loveliness we’ve lost;

these empty days without your smile.

This torch we’ll always carry

for our nation’s golden child.

Even though we try,

the truth brings us to tears;

all our words cannot express

the joy you brought us through the years.

And it seems to me you lived your life

like a candle in the wind:

never fading with the sunset

when the rain set in.

And your footsteps will always fall here,

along England’s greenest hills;

your candle’s burned out long before

your legend ever will.

Goodbye, England’s rose;

may you ever grow in our hearts.

You were the grace that placed itself

where lives were torn apart.

Goodbye, England’s rose,

from a country lost without your soul,

who’ll miss the wings of your compassion

more than you’ll ever know.

And it seems to me you lived your life

like a candle in the wind:

never fading with the sunset

when the rain set in.

And your footsteps will always fall here,

along England’s greenest hills;

your candle’s burned out long before

your legend ever will.