The Toll of the Bells I We gave them at the harbor every token— The ritual of the guns, and at the mast The flag half-high, and as the cortege passed, All that remained by our dumb hearts unspoken. And what within the band's low requiem, In footfall or in head uncovered fails Of final tribute, shall at altar-rails Around a chancel soon be offered them. And now a throbbing organ-prelude dwells On the eternal story of the sea; Following in undertone, the Litany Ends like a sobbing wave; and now begins A tale of life's fore-shortened days; now swells The tidal triumph of Corinthians. II But neither trumpet-blast, nor the hoarse din Of guns, nor the drooped signals from those mute Banners, could find a language to salute The frozen bodies that the ships brought in. To-day the vaunt is with the grave. Sorrow Has raked up faith and burned it like a pile Of driftwood, scattering the ashes while Cathedral voices anthemed God's To-morrow. Out from the belfries of the town there swung Great notes that held the winds and the pagan roll Of open seas within their measured toll. Only the bells' slow ocean tones, that rose And hushed upon the air, knew how to tongue That Iliad of Death upon the floes. |
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