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Home  »  The Oxford Book of Victorian Verse  »  Francis Sylvester Mahony (Father Prout) (1804–1866)

Arthur Quiller-Couch, comp. The Oxford Book of Victorian Verse. 1922.

The Bells of Shandon

Francis Sylvester Mahony (Father Prout) (1804–1866)

WITH deep affection,

And recollection,

I often think of

Those Shandon bells,

Whose sounds so wild would,

In the days of childhood,

Fling around my cradle

Their magic spells:

On this I ponder

Where’er I wander,

And thus grow fonder,

Sweet Cork, of thee;

With thy bells of Shandon,

That sound so grand on

The pleasant waters

Of the River Lee.

I’ve heard bells chiming

Full many a clime in,

Tolling sublime in

Cathedral shrine,

While at a glib rate

Brass tongues would vibrate—

But all their music

Spoke naught like thine;

For memory, dwelling

On each proud swelling

Of the belfry knelling

Its bold notes free,

Made the bells of Shandon

Sound far more grand on

The pleasant waters

Of the River Lee.

I’ve heard bells tolling

Old Adrian’s Mole in,

Their thunder rolling

From the Vatican,

And cymbals glorious

Swinging uproarious

In the gorgeous turrets

Of Notre Dame;

But thy sounds were sweeter

Than the dome of Peter

Flings o’er the Tiber,

Pealing solemnly—

O, the bells of Shandon

Sound far more grand on

The pleasant waters

Of the River Lee.

There ’s a bell in Moscow,

While on tower and kiosk O

In Saint Sophia

The Turkman gets,

And loud in air

Calls men to prayer

From the tapering summits

Of tall minarets.

Such empty phantom

I freely grant them;

But there ’s an anthem

More dear to me,—

’Tis the bells of Shandon,

That sound so grand on

The pleasant waters

Of the River Lee.