The Falmouth Bell

By Katharine Lee Bates

Never was there lovelier town

Than our Falmouth by the sea.

Tender curves of sky look down

On her grace of knoll and lea.

Sweet her nestled Mayflower blows

Ere from prouder haunts the spring

Yet has brushed the lingering snows

With a violet-colored wing.

Bright the autumn gleams pervade

Cranberry marsh and bushy wold,

Till the children's mirth has made

Millionaires in leaves of gold;

And upon her pleasant ways,

Set with many a gardened home,

Flash through fret of drooping sprar

Visions far of ocean foam.

Happy bell of Paul Revere,

Sounding o'er such blest demesne

While a hundred times a year

Weaves the round from green to green.

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 Never were there friendlier folk

Than in Falmouth by the sea,

Neighbor-households that invoke

Pride of sailor-pedigree.

Here is princely interchange

Of the gifts of shore and field,

Starred with treasures rare and strange

That the liberal sea-chests yield.

Culture here burns breezy torch

Where gray captains, bronzed of neck

Tread their little length of porch

With a memory of the deck.

Ah, and here the tenderest hearts,

Here where sorrows sorest wring

And the widows shift their parts

Comforted and comforting.

Holy bell of Paul Revere

Calling such to prayer and praise.

While a hundred times the year

Herds her flock of faithful days!

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 Greetings to thee, ancient bell

Of our Falmouth by the sea!

Answered by the ocean swell,

Ring thy centuried Jubilee!

Like the white sails of the Sound,

Hast thou seen the years drift by,

From the dreamful, dim profound

To a goal beyond the eye.

Long thy maker lieth mute,

Hero of a faded strife;

Thou hast tolled from seed to fruit

Generations three of life.

Still thy mellow voice and clear

Floats o'er land and listening deep,

And we deem our fathers hear

From their shadowy hill of sleep.

Ring thy peals for centuries yet,

Living voice of Paul Revere!

Let the future not forget

That the past accounted dear!