Deacon John decides not to ring the bells. |
Strangely, the bells were silent that morning. Deacon John, a Quasimodo wannabe, would always ring the bells. Feisty in his five-foot stature, rotund face, white hair and beard; a hirsute countenance of snowy steel wool applied by Mother Nature slowly over time. Deacon John looked at me as I arrived at nine, eyed me narrowly, and said with a voice as smooth as Shea Butter, “Call me John.” “No bells today?” I put it to him, easy like Sunday morning. Then Quasimodo John looked up like he swallowed canaries, grinned as if he had received lechery lessons all night long, and with a twinkle in blue eyes, offered one stalwart “HA,” and pointed at the rope, of which he had secured with cinder blocks—four of them. Heavy as a parishioner’s sin, weights in the church foyer. “What is it, my dear John?” I sincerely asked, both puzzled and amused. So Deacon John motored on over, shuffling upon recently refinished hardwood, sporting size seven brown boots in dire need of fixing. John then sighed and glumly announced: “No Edgar Allan Poe today. There will be no tintinnabulation* of any bells.” “That hurts my ears.” 40 Lines Writer’s Cramp 12-9-17 ______ *Tintinnabulation is the lingering sound of a ringing bell that occurs after the bell has been struck. This word was invented by Edgar Allan Poe as used in the first stanza of his poem, The Bells. |