THE BELLS OF SAN GABRIEL

THE BELLS OF SAN GABRIEL

By Charles Warren Stoddard

(The Mission of San Gabriel Archangel, near Los Angeles, founded in 1771, was, for a time, the most flourishing mission in California)

Thine was the corn and the wine,The blood of the grape that nourished;The blossom and fruit of the vineThat was heralded far away.When the wine and fig-tree flourished,The promise of peace and of glad increaseForever and ever and aye.What then wert thou, and what art now?Answer me, O, I pray!And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.Oil of the olive was thine;Flood of the wine-press flowing,Blood of the Christ was the wine—Blood of the Lamb that was slain.Thy gifts were fat of the kineForever coming and goingFar over the hills, the thousand hills—Their lowing a soft refrain.What then wert thou, and what art now?Answer me once again!And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.Seed of the corn was thine—Body of Him thus brokenAnd mingled with blood of the vine—The bread and the wine of life.Out of the good sunshineThey were given to thee as a token—The body of Him, and the blood of Him,When the gifts of God were rife.What then wert thou, and what art now?After the weary strife?And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel the Archangel.Where are they now, O bells?Where are the fruits of the Mission?Garnered, where no one dwells,Shepherd and flock are fled.O’er the Lord’s vineyard swellsThe tide that with fell perditionSounded their doom and fashioned their tombAnd buried them with the dead.What then wert thou, and what art now?The answer is still unsaid.And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.Where are they now, O tower!The locusts and wild honey?Where is the sacred dowerThat the bride of Christ was given?Gone to the wielders of power,The misers and minters of money;Gone for the greed that is their creed—And these in the land have thriven.What then wert thou, and what art now,And wherefore hast thou striven?And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.

Thine was the corn and the wine,The blood of the grape that nourished;The blossom and fruit of the vineThat was heralded far away.When the wine and fig-tree flourished,The promise of peace and of glad increaseForever and ever and aye.What then wert thou, and what art now?Answer me, O, I pray!And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.Oil of the olive was thine;Flood of the wine-press flowing,Blood of the Christ was the wine—Blood of the Lamb that was slain.Thy gifts were fat of the kineForever coming and goingFar over the hills, the thousand hills—Their lowing a soft refrain.What then wert thou, and what art now?Answer me once again!And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.Seed of the corn was thine—Body of Him thus brokenAnd mingled with blood of the vine—The bread and the wine of life.Out of the good sunshineThey were given to thee as a token—The body of Him, and the blood of Him,When the gifts of God were rife.What then wert thou, and what art now?After the weary strife?And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel the Archangel.Where are they now, O bells?Where are the fruits of the Mission?Garnered, where no one dwells,Shepherd and flock are fled.O’er the Lord’s vineyard swellsThe tide that with fell perditionSounded their doom and fashioned their tombAnd buried them with the dead.What then wert thou, and what art now?The answer is still unsaid.And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.Where are they now, O tower!The locusts and wild honey?Where is the sacred dowerThat the bride of Christ was given?Gone to the wielders of power,The misers and minters of money;Gone for the greed that is their creed—And these in the land have thriven.What then wert thou, and what art now,And wherefore hast thou striven?And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.

Thine was the corn and the wine,The blood of the grape that nourished;The blossom and fruit of the vineThat was heralded far away.When the wine and fig-tree flourished,The promise of peace and of glad increaseForever and ever and aye.What then wert thou, and what art now?Answer me, O, I pray!

Thine was the corn and the wine,

The blood of the grape that nourished;

The blossom and fruit of the vine

That was heralded far away.

When the wine and fig-tree flourished,

The promise of peace and of glad increase

Forever and ever and aye.

What then wert thou, and what art now?

Answer me, O, I pray!

And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.

And every note of every bell

Sang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!

In the tower that is left the tale to tell

Of Gabriel, the Archangel.

Oil of the olive was thine;Flood of the wine-press flowing,Blood of the Christ was the wine—Blood of the Lamb that was slain.Thy gifts were fat of the kineForever coming and goingFar over the hills, the thousand hills—Their lowing a soft refrain.What then wert thou, and what art now?Answer me once again!

Oil of the olive was thine;

Flood of the wine-press flowing,

Blood of the Christ was the wine—

Blood of the Lamb that was slain.

Thy gifts were fat of the kine

Forever coming and going

Far over the hills, the thousand hills—

Their lowing a soft refrain.

What then wert thou, and what art now?

Answer me once again!

And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.

And every note of every bell

Sang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!

In the tower that is left the tale to tell

Of Gabriel, the Archangel.

Seed of the corn was thine—Body of Him thus brokenAnd mingled with blood of the vine—The bread and the wine of life.Out of the good sunshineThey were given to thee as a token—The body of Him, and the blood of Him,When the gifts of God were rife.What then wert thou, and what art now?After the weary strife?

Seed of the corn was thine—

Body of Him thus broken

And mingled with blood of the vine—

The bread and the wine of life.

Out of the good sunshine

They were given to thee as a token—

The body of Him, and the blood of Him,

When the gifts of God were rife.

What then wert thou, and what art now?

After the weary strife?

And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel the Archangel.

And every note of every bell

Sang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!

In the tower that is left the tale to tell

Of Gabriel the Archangel.

Where are they now, O bells?Where are the fruits of the Mission?Garnered, where no one dwells,Shepherd and flock are fled.O’er the Lord’s vineyard swellsThe tide that with fell perditionSounded their doom and fashioned their tombAnd buried them with the dead.What then wert thou, and what art now?The answer is still unsaid.

Where are they now, O bells?

Where are the fruits of the Mission?

Garnered, where no one dwells,

Shepherd and flock are fled.

O’er the Lord’s vineyard swells

The tide that with fell perdition

Sounded their doom and fashioned their tomb

And buried them with the dead.

What then wert thou, and what art now?

The answer is still unsaid.

And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.

And every note of every bell

Sang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!

In the tower that is left the tale to tell

Of Gabriel, the Archangel.

Where are they now, O tower!The locusts and wild honey?Where is the sacred dowerThat the bride of Christ was given?Gone to the wielders of power,The misers and minters of money;Gone for the greed that is their creed—And these in the land have thriven.What then wert thou, and what art now,And wherefore hast thou striven?

Where are they now, O tower!

The locusts and wild honey?

Where is the sacred dower

That the bride of Christ was given?

Gone to the wielders of power,

The misers and minters of money;

Gone for the greed that is their creed—

And these in the land have thriven.

What then wert thou, and what art now,

And wherefore hast thou striven?

And every note of every bellSang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!In the tower that is left the tale to tellOf Gabriel, the Archangel.

And every note of every bell

Sang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!

In the tower that is left the tale to tell

Of Gabriel, the Archangel.


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