Born in a sorry cot, left on the stairs of the cold stone;
Damned to be scorned, in darkness, damned to be alone;
Taken by
the Church, his soul will be slave of God;
In the belfry's beauty is his figure something odd.
We see the hunchback in Notre
Dame
Dancing on the tallest towers
Arcades and spires, filling his heart,
Deep like the choir, fine like the art
Is the
place my cell, is it?
Is God's home my hell?
Oh, my body prisions my poor soul,
Until I toll!
I am grim, full of
gloom
In my dim gothic tomb
But the bells in my heart chime for ever
With the ding that belongs
To the king of their
songs
I'm the sound of Notre Dame
In the Wheel of Life he is a horror for the crowd,
When will be the time he'll see the sun
between the clouds?
Looking at the bells he thinks about his tragic fate
Wants to be a rock or metal like his souless
mates
We hear the hunchback in Notre Dame
Crying on the tallest towers
Gargoyles and columns, his relity;
Chants wich
are solemn, his agony
Is this place my cell, is it?
Is God's home my hell?
Oh, my body imprisons my poor soul
Until i
toll!
I am grim, full of gloom
In my dim gothic tomb
But the bells in my heart chime for ever
With the ding that
belongs
To the king of their songs
I'm the sound of Notre Dame