
A Brochure Issued by Lovers of the Bells and Dedicated to Others of Their Kind. Done in the Interest of a Greater Washington.
The essay begins with a celebration of Ghent’s 52‑bell carillon, the instrument that sounded the 1814 peace treaty between America and Britain. From that triumphant moment the author traces how centuries of war have silenced and melted countless bells, leaving the towers of Flanders and Artois mute. He proposes a concrete remedy: recasting captured enemy cannon into new “peace bells” for the capitals of the allied nations, turning instruments of war back into music.
Interlaced with that vision are vivid anecdotes about earlier monumental bells—such as the Austrian emperor’s 1710 Turkish‑cannon bell and the German “Emperor” and “Gloriosa” bells forged from French guns after 1870. By dissecting their ornate inscriptions and lion‑clawed crowns, the writer shows how sound can embody both triumph and hubris. He imagines new towers rising like modern Giottos, their walls built from fragments of shattered cathedrals, turning ruins into foundations for a lasting peace.
Language
en
Duration
~18 minutes (17K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jessica Hope
Release date
2020-08-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

b. 1872
Best known as a botanist and illustrator, this little-known writer brought the same eye for beauty and detail to his books. His work connects science, gardening, and art in a way that still feels fresh.
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