Paul Revere

Heaven on earth?

Village Green Inn,  on the town green in Falmouth Mass. It’s on the National Register of Historic Places.— Photo by John Phelan

Village Green Inn, on the town green in Falmouth Mass. It’s on the National Register of Historic Places.

— Photo by John Phelan

Statue of Katherine Lee Bates outside the Falmouth Public Library.

Statue of Katherine Lee Bates outside the Falmouth Public Library.



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.


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!


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!

”The Falmouth Bell,’’ by Falmouth, Mass., native Katherine Lee Bates (1859-1929), poet, professor and social reformer best known as the author of the lyrics of “America the Beautiful’’. She’s buried in Falmouth’s Oak Hill Cemetery (close to the graves of many relatives of New England Diary editor Robert Whitcomb).

The reference to Paul Revere is that the bell in Falmouth’s First Congregational Church (built 1796), where Ms. Bates’s father was briefly the minister, was cast by Revere’s shop.

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Along Vineyard Sound in the Falmouth Village  of Woods Hole— Photo by ToddC4176

Along Vineyard Sound in the Falmouth Village of Woods Hole

— Photo by ToddC4176