The Swan Bells are a set of 18 bells hanging in a specially built 82.5 metres (271ft)-high copper and glass campanile in Perth, Western Australia. The tower is commonly known as The Bell Tower or the Swan Bell Tower.
Taking their name from the Swan River, which their tower overlooks, and forming a sixteen-bell peal with two extra chromatic notes, they are one of the largest sets of change ringing bells in the world.
Because I knew that I would do the swan, a large, long-necked water bird had started gliding around my mind, so it seemed clear that the word limn looks like a swan ... the full moon limned the dark river and the white feathers of a swan upon it.
A swan sings ... A swan sings ... After the unfolding shapes and strange colours of the aurora have been richly explored, the swan’s song is heard again, and culminates rather tersely in the sound of a tolling bell’s “last ring”.