November, so far, has been
full of images of poppies, especially those
symbolic ceramic poppies. One Hundred Years.
However, my post today is about an earlier moment commemorating the dead.
All History Girls readers will
surely know the children’s song “Oranges and Lemons”, listing the sounds of all the different
church bells within the City of London, with the familiar opening line that echoes
the ring changes of St Clements Danes church.
Sometime, at the end of the First
World War, the poet and writer Eleanor Farjeon chose those familiar bells as a subject for a poem,
offering an explanatory foot-note which, for the purpose of this blog, is coming first.
“When the half-muffled City Bells rang out in
Commemoration of the Bell-Ringers who fell in the war, the bells of St Clement
Danes could not take part owing to a defect in the frame work.”
Finally, here is Farjeon's poem,
commemorating a small moment of unwanted silence amid the aftermath of the
Great War:
THE CHILDREN’S BELLS
Where
are your Oranges?
Where
are your Lemons?
What,
are you silent now,
Bells
of St Clement’s?
You,
of all bells that rang
Once
in Old London,
You,
of all bells that sang
Utterly
undone?
You
whom all children know
Ere
they know letters,
Making
Big Ben himself
Call
you his betters?
Where
are your lovely tones
Fruitful
and mellow,
Full-
flavoured orange-gold,
Clear
lemon yellow?
Ring
again, sing again,
Bells
of St Clement’s,
Call
as you swing again,
“Oranges! Lemons!”
Fatherless
children
Are
listening near you –
Sing
for the children,
The
fathers will hear you.
The poem was chosen by Walter De la
Mare’
for his 1923 “Come Hither” anthology, offered “for the Young of All
Ages”.
Penny Dolan
How wonderful, Penny, to put this into context. I hadn't known about the defect in the bells' framework. How long since I have heard that song! Thank you.
ReplyDeleteSo poignant.
ReplyDeleteComing late to this,but it's beautiful!thanks Penny!
ReplyDeleteAdele (signing because for some reason can only comment anonymously!)
Ooh! This let me do a comment on Google! Amazing
ReplyDeleteThanks, Carol, Adele and Joan. Glad you enjoyed the post.
ReplyDeleteThe poem and foot-note made me wish I had time to research this story further. I assumed it was a WWII event when I first read the poem, but then I checked the publication dates, and the story was definitely post-WWI.