Hear the May Day Morning bells - |
Morris bells! |
What a breath of springtime their cacophony foretells! |
How they waken, waken, waken, |
In the chilly, early light, |
Almost singing, as they're shaken, |
"Rise and shine, and smell the bacon!" |
With a saccharine delight. |
Keeping time, time, time, |
(Well, they're SORT-OF keeping time) |
To the merry mystic melodies and deep druidic spells |
Of the bells, bells, bells, |
Bells, bells, bells, bells, |
To the cloying and annoying of the bells. |
Hear the mellow, evening bells - |
drunken bells. |
What a scene of jovial camaraderie it tells. |
At the tavern, late at night, |
More than just a little tight, |
From their happy, raspy throats |
As they croon, |
What a bawdy ballad floats |
To a vaguely-half-remembered string of notes, |
Out of tune. |
Oh, their song no sound of harmony excels. |
How it tells |
Of buxom belles, |
Through such blatant parallels |
As warm vales and shady dells, |
Hiding deep and secret wells; |
To the rhythm of the ringing |
Of the bells, bells, bells, |
Of the bells, bells, bells, |
Bells, bells, bells, bells, |
As they're singing to the ringing of the bells. |
Hear the cheep, freeloaders' bells - |
Fleeing bells! |
What a righteous anger in the landlord it foretells! |
As they surge into the night, |
Fumbling, stumbling in their flight, |
In a hasty get-away |
From a bill they cannot pay |
From the bag, |
When the squire, in a sudden flash of drunken insight knowing, |
By the glasses on the tables, just how much they must be owing, |
O'er his back a jacket throwing, |
Muttered "Lads, we'd best be going!" |
Now the landlord gapes, agog, |
And cries out, "Unchain the dog! |
For to track them through the fog, |
By their bells, bells, bells, |
And the telltale moldy smells |
Of their feet, |
As they trip and reel and wobble, |
And careen off every cobble |
In the dark, uneven street!" |
Then, at length his doorway reaching, |
And impeaching |
With his screaching, |
Loud the landlord there decries the mass retreat, |
And invokes a thousand hells, |
Loudly cursing |
Their dispersing, |
And fires off a couple shells |
At the filthy fleeing figures in the bells, bells, bells, |
In the bells, bells, bells, |
Bells, bells, bells, bells, |
At the stinking Morris dancers in the bells! |
Hear the morning-after bells - |
POUNDING bells. |
What a day of living purgatory it foretells! |
With a piercing stab of light, |
Putting blessed sleep to flight, |
In its subtlety much like a sonic boom, |
To an aching, sloshing head |
On the floor beside the bed. |
Feel it bloom, |
Feel it blossom into throbbing |
Of all sense and reason robbing, |
Save a sense of certain doom, |
As a groan, groan, groan |
Seems the stomach to consume. |
All too weak to reach the "throne" |
In the small adjacent room, |
Like the karma of the boozing, |
Like the call of cookie-losing. |
Feel it fume. |
With a force no will can squelch |
Comes a belch, |
Belch, belch, belch, belch, |
Like an echo of the bells, |
In the belly how it swells. |
Like an echo of the bells, |
How of hops and bile it smells. |
As it spews, spews, spews |
And it covers socks and shoes |
Like some great artesian well's |
Gush it expels, |
And it spews, spews, spews, |
And begins to seep and ooze, |
To the music of the bells, |
Of the bells, bells, bells, |
To the pounding and the sounding of the bells, |
As it spews, spews, spews, |
And up-wells, -wells, -wells, |
And it fills both socks and shoes, |
To the clanging of the bells, |
Of the bells, bells, bells, |
To the banging of the bells, |
Of the bells, bells, bells, |
Bells, bells, bells, bells, |
The accompanying thumping of the bells. |