Page:Poems Dorr.djvu/81

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THE BELL OF ST. PAUL'S
61
Come, tell us tales, thou bell,
Of those of old renown,
Those sturdy warrior kings who fought
For sceptre and for crown.
Tell of the lion-hearts
Whose pulses moved the world;
Whose banners flew so swift and far,
O'er land and sea unfurled!

From out the buried years,
From many a vaulted tomb,
Whence neither pomp nor power could chase
The dim, sepulchral gloom,
Lo, now, a pale, proud line,
They glide before our eyes!—
Art thou a wizard, mighty bell,
To bid the dead arise?

But toll, toll on, thou bell!
Toll for the royal dead;
Toll—for the hand now sceptreless;
Toll—for the crownless head;
Toll—for the human heart
With all its loves and woes;
Toll—for the soul that passes now
Unto its long repose!