Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
France: Vols. IX–X. 1876–79.
The Bells of Avignon
By Walter Thornbury (18281876)A
A joyous town with many a steeple,
Towers and tourelles, roofs and turrets,
Sheltering a merry people.
In each tower the bells of silver,
Bronze, or iron, swayed so proudly,
Tolling deep and swinging cheerly,
Beating fast and beating loudly.
Two! Four! One! Three! still repeating;
Five! Seven! Six! Eight! hurrying, chasing;
Bim-bom-bing-bang merry beating.
All the day the dancing sextons
Dragged at bell-ropes, rising, falling;
Clanging bells, inquiring, answering,
From the towers were ever calling.
Stood and listened to the chiming;
And within his lofty château
Sat the Pope, and beat the timing;
Minstrels, soldiers, monks, and jesters
Laughed to hear the merry clamour,
As above them in the turrets
Music clashed from many a hammer.
Far away across the bridges,
’Mong the vine-slopes, upward lessening,
To the brown cliffs’ highest ridges,
Clamoured those sonorous bells;
In the summer’s noontide wrangling,
In one silver knot of music
All their chimes together tangling.
Round the town-house in the mornings;
Scattering joy and jubilations,
Hope and welcome, wrath and scornings;
Ushering kings, or mourning pontiffs;
Clanging in the times of thunder,
And on nights when conflagrations
Clove the city half asunder.
Through the darkness starry-dotted,
Far across the bridge so stately,
Now by lichens blurred and blotted,
Came that floating, mournful music,
As from bands of angels flying,
With the loud blasts of the tempest
Still victoriously vying.
All its bells was ever pealing,—
Whether to scare evil spirits,
Still round holy cities stealing?
Yet, perhaps, that ceaseless chiming,
And that pleasant silver beating,
Was but as of children playing,
And their mother’s name repeating.
With a music so untiring;
One! Two! Three! in merry cadence,
Rolling, crashing, clanging, firing.
Hence it was that in past ages,
When mid war those sounds seemed sweeter,
La Ville Sonnante people called it,
City sacred to Saint Peter.
Lone and sad, the grass-grown city
Has its bell-towers all deserted
By those ringers,—more ’s the pity.
Pope and cardinal are vanished,
And no music fills the night air;
Gone the red robes and the sable,
Gone the crosier and the mitre.