The Lay of the Bell
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- The Lay of the Bell
- Vivos voco – Mortuos plango – Fulgura frango.
- (I celebrate the living. I mourn the dead. I break the lightning.)
- Master:
- Firmly walled within the earth,
- Burnt of loam, the frame doth stand;
- Today the bell must have its birth;
- Brisk, my comrades, be at hand!
- From the heated brow
- Down the sweat must flow,
- If praise to the master shall be given;
- But the blessing comes from heaven.
- An earnest word doth well betide
- When we prepare for earnest deeds,
- By good discourse accompanied
- Then labour cheerfully proceeds.
- So let us carefully now scan
- Of feeble strength what are the fruits;
- One must despise the wretched man,
- Who, unreflecting, executes.
- For this it is that man doth grace,
- Hereto he hath power to understand,
- That he, in his heart's core, may trace
- The type of his creative hand.
- Master:
- Take ye wood of the pine-stem,
- But be sure that 'tis right dry,
- That the inward pent-up flame
- Through the furnace throat may fly.
- Melt the copper down!
- Quick! the tin bring on!
- That the tough bell metal so
- Properly may fuse and flow.
- What now with fire's assisting power
- In this deep pit we fashion thus,
- Loud from the belfry's lofty tower
- Shall one day testify of us;
- And many a man shall hear its tone,
- For it shall last in after-time,
- And shall with the afflicted moan,
- And with devotion's chorus chime.
- Whatever to earth's lowly son
- Aye-changing destiny may bring,
- Shall strike on its metallic crown,
- And edifying thence shall ring.
- Master:
- Lo! I see white bubbles spring!
- Good! the mass is fused at last.
- Let us in the potash fling,
- That will quickly aid the cast.
- From scum all pure and free
- Must the mixture be;
- That from metal clean and round
- Clear and full the voice may sound.
- For with its joyous festal tone
- The dear-loved infant it doth greet,
- Life's path when first it enters on,
- Lapped in the arms of slumber sweet;
- The lot, or dark, or bright, of whom
- As yet rests hidden in time's womb.
- Maternal love with tender yearning
- Is watching o'er his golden morning –
- The years fly on as arrows fleet.
- From the girl the proud boy rushes forth;
- He wildly storms into life's danger;
- On wanderer's staff roams o'er the earth –
- To his father's home returns, a stranger.
- And glorious in the pride of youth,
- Even as a form from heaven's height,
- Her cheeks deep-dyed with bashful truth,
- The virgin stands before his sight.
- Then doth a nameless longing seize
- His youthful heart; alone he rambles;
- The frequent tear breaks from his eye;
- He shuns his brethren's noisy gambols;
- Blushing, he follows in her track,
- And is but by her greeting blest;
- And to adorn his love brings back
- From flowery meads the loveliest.
- O tender yearning! O sweet hope!
- Of love the golden age is this;
- The eye doth see the heavens ope;
- The heart doth revel in deep bliss.
- Oh! that it ever green might prove,
- That beauteous season of young love.
- Master:
- Already how the pipes are browned!
- This little staff I now dip in;
- If glazed over it be found,
- Then the casting may begin.
- Hither, comrades, hie!
- Quick the mixture try;
- If the pliant with the brittle
- Join to make the proper metal.
- For then a perfect tone we find,
- When soft and hard are well combined,
- The mild united with the strong.
- Whoe'er would form eternal bonds
- Should weigh if heart to heart responds.
- Folly is short – repentance long.
- Mid the bridal tresses slinging
- Plays the virgin garland bright,
- When the clear toned church bells ringing
- To the festive scene invite.
- Ah! Life's fairest festival
- Closes also life's young May;
- With the girdle, with the veil,
- The fine illusion's torn away.
- Passion may fly,
- Love should endure;
- The blossom may die,
- The fruit shall mature;
- The man must abroad
- Into hostile life,
- Mid labor and strife,
- With craft and with pain,
- Must gather and gain,
- Must venture and stake,
- Good luck to o'ertake.
- Then endless wealth rushes in, like a stream,
- With costly possessions the granaries teem,
- The space is extended – enlarged the abode:
- And indoors governs
- The modest housewife,
- The mother of children,
- And wisely doth steer
- The domestic sphere;
- And schooleth the girls,
- And ruleth the boys;
- And plies without end
- Her diligent hand;
- And the stock doth enlarge
- By her orderly charge;
- And fills with treasures the scent-breathing chests;
- And the thread round the whirring spindle she twists;
- And the bright polished coffer she storeth full
- With snowy white linen, and shimmering wool;
- The useful with beauty and brightness investing,
- And never resting.
- And the father, with cheerful look,
- From his home's far-seeing roof,
- Reckons o'er his flourishing stock;
- The lofty poles of the stacks discerns,
- And the well-filled spaces of the barns,
- And the treasure-laden granaries,
- And the cornfields' waving seas.
- Boasting, he gazes round,
- "Firm as the very ground,
- Spite of misfortune's cross,
- Stands the wealth of my house."
- But with the powers of destiny
- No lasting band may woven be;
- And misfortune strideth swift.
- Master:
- Good! the cast may be begun,
- Well-jagged doth the breach appear;
- Yet, before we let it run,
- Breathe ye first a pious pray'r.
- Strike the stopper loose!
- God preserve the house!
- Shooting into the hanger's bow
- The fire-brown billows reeking flow.
- Beneficent is fire's strong might
- When man subdues and watches it;
- Whate'er with art or toil he does,
- Unto this heavenly power his owes;
- But dread this heavenly power grows,
- When, breaking from its fetters loose,
- On its own track it ranges wild,
- Nature's free and daring child.
- Woe! when it, from bondage freed,
- When nought its increase can withstand,
- Through streets alive with crowds doth haste,
- Whirling its enormous brand;
- For the elements detest
- Every work of human hand.
- From the cloud
- Blessings pour; –
- The rain doth shower; –
- From the cloud, undistinguishing,
- Lightnings spring.
- Hark! from the tower that wailing peal!
- 'Tis the 'larum-bell!
- Blood-red, lo!
- Are the skies!
- That is not the daybreak's glow!
- Hark! what noise,
- Along the streets!
- Smoke waves up!
- Fiery columns flickering rise!
- Through the streets' long lines it flies,
- And with the wind in swiftness vies.
- As from furnace jaws out-reeking,
- Glows the hot air; beams are creaking,
- Windows jarring, pillars sundering,
- Children screaming, mothers wandering,
- Cattle lowing
- 'Neath the ruin.
- All is hurry, rescue, flight;
- Clear as daylight gleams the night;
- Thro' the long and emulous band
- Of many a hand
- Flies the bucket; arching high
- Water-streams from engines fly;
- Howling, on the storm-blasts hie,
- With the roaring flame to meet;
- Crackling in the arid wheat
- It falleth; in the granary,
- In the spars and rafters dry;
- And with mighty blast, as though
- 'Twould tear away, in violent flight,
- With itself the earth's own weight,
- It into heaven's height doth grow,
- Giant-great!
- In hopeless state,
- Man succumbs to strength divine,
- And amazed and supine
- Sees his handyworks laid low.
- Bare and burnt
- Is the space,
- The wild storms' rough resting-place.
- In the desolate window-cells
- Horror broods;
- And from heaven the lofty clouds
- Peer within.
- One look – the last –
- Tow'rds the tomb
- Of his home,
- Doth the man behind him cast –
- Then cheerful grasps his staff to roam;
- Whate'er the fire's rage hath o'erthrown,
- One comfort sweet remains unmoved,
- He counts the heads of his beloved,
- And lo! not one dear head is lost.
- Master:
- 'Tis received within the Earth;
- The mould it happily doth fill;
- Will it issue fairly forth,
- To requite our toil and skill?
- If the cast should fail –
- Should the mould prove frail!
- Ah! perhaps while hoping thus
- Mischance e'en now hath stricken us.
- To the dark womb of holy earth,
- Do we our handywork confide;
- The sower too confides his seed,
- And hopes that it shall yet shoot forth
- To bless – if heaven has so decreed.
- Far costlier seed do we commit
- In sorrow to the earth's dark womb,
- And hope that, from the coffin, it
- May blossom to a fairer doom.
- From the tower
- Tolls the bell,
- Dull and heavy,
- The funeral knell;
- Sad its melancholy notes convey
- Some poor wand'rer on the long last way.
- Ah! it is the wife, the dear one!
- Ah! it is the tender mother!
- Whom the gloomy Prince of Shades
- From her mate's embraces leads;
- From the group of children dear,
- Which blooming unto him she bare;
- Which growing on her faithful breast,
- She watched with a mother's interest.
- Ah! of home each tender band
- Now for evermore is loose;
- For she dwells in the shadow-land,
- Who was the mother of the house;
- Her faithful rule has passed away,
- Her care no more shall watchful prove;
- In the orphaned place shall sway
- Henceforth the stranger, void of love.
- Master:
- While the bell is cooling now,
- Rigorous toil may have its rest;
- As birds gambol on the bough,
- Each may sport as likes him best.
- When winking stars appear,
- Freed from every care,
- The workman hears the vespers toll,
- Doubts still vex the master's soul.
- In the wild forest's distant gloom,
- The wanderer with cheerful steps
- Hastes to his dear cottage-home.
- Bleating homeward went the flocks;
- And the glossy
- Broadly-fronted herds of oxen
- Come on lowing,
- To fill their wonted home-stalls going.
- Heavily in
- Reels the wagon,
- Harvest laden;
- Of varied dies
- The garland lies
- The sheaves upon;
- And the youthful band of reapers
- To the dance hath flown.
- Street and market grow more still;
- Round the candle's social flame,
- All house-dwellers meet together,
- And the town gate closes gnarring.
- The earth doth dight
- Herself in black;
- But the safe burgher at the night
- Feels no awe,
- Which fearful wakes the guilty wight,
- For still watchful is the eye of law.
- Holy Order! blissful child
- Of Heaven! in union free and mild
- And joyous, she hath equals bound;
- She the first did cities found;
- And therein from the waste plain
- Called unsocial, savage man;
- Entered in the rugged hut,
- Its inmates gentler manners taught,
- And wove that best and dearest band,
- The vital love of fatherland.
- Thousand active hands bestir;
- In cheerful league each other aid,
- And, in fiery movement, are
- All the powers of art displayed.
- Man and master calmly rest,
- Holy freedom their reliance;
- Each in his own place is blest,
- To the scorner bids defiance.
- Labor is the burgher's pride,
- Success, of industry the prize;
- The king by pomp is dignified,
- Us our hands' work dignifies.
- Gentle concord!
- Kindly peace!
- Ah! tarry, tarry,
- Friendly over this our town!
- Never may the day appear,
- When the hordes of rugged war
- Riot thro' this tranquil valley;
- When the heavens,
- Whence the evening's blushes mild
- Lovely beam,
- Shall, with conflagration wild
- Of towns and hamlets, frightful gleam.
- Master:
- Now the mould we may destroy,
- It hath answered its intent;
- Let us feast both heart and eye
- On our task's accomplishment.
- Swing the hammer, swing!
- Till the mantle spring!
- Ere the bell rise from below,
- Must the frame to pieces go.
- The master may break up the frame
- With prudent hand at fitting hour;
- But woe! whene'er, in brooks of flame,
- Itself shall free the flowing ore,
- Blind-raging, with the crash of thunder,
- It springs in air the bursten house;
- And, as from hell-jaws wide asunder,
- Blazing destruction forth it spews.
- Where rude and senseless powers prevail
- There form and shape wilt ever fail;
- To free themselves when nations strive,
- The common weal can never thrive.
- Woe! when in cities' womb hath lain
- The fuel heaped by slow degrees,
- The people, shattering their chain,
- At self-relief doth madly seize.
- Then at the ropes doth uproar pull,
- Till, hallowed but to peaceful chimes,
- The bell with hideous clang doth howl,
- The signal to revolt and crimes.
- "Freedom! Equality!" they call –
- The fearful burgher grasps his arms;
- The streets are filled, the market-hall –
- On all sides prowl the murderous swarms.
- Women into hyaenas start,
- Disgustingly with horror jest;
- With panther-teeth their victims' heart
- They tear, yet quivering, from the breast.
- Nought holy is there more; all ties
- Of pious shame are rent in twain;
- The bad of the good the place supplies,
- And freely all the vices reign.
- To wake the lion is perilous;
- Destructive is the tiger's tooth;
- But fearfullest of fears to rouse
- Is Man in his delirious wrath.
- Woe's them, who heaven's torch of light
- Unto the ever-blind would trust;
- It lights not him; can but ignite,
- And lands and cities burns to dust.
- Master:
- Joy unto me God hath given!
- See! how like a star of gold,
- From its shell, all bright and even,
- The metal kernel doth unfold.
- From helve to crown, the ray
- Like sunny glance doth play:
- And the neat armorial shield
- Doth credit to the workman yield.
- Come in! Come in!
- Comrades all, and close the ring,
- To aid at the bell's christening;
- Concordia is the name we bring.
- In union's cordial harmony her summons
- Shall oft-times congregate the loving commons.
- This office let her hence fulfil,
- The purpose of the master's will!
- High in the heavens' blue tent away,
- Above our lowly earth-life here,
- The thunder's neighbor she shall sway,
- And border on the starry sphere.
- A voice shall she be from above,
- Like the bright constellations' throng,
- Who praise their maker as they move,
- And lead the wreathed year along.
- Only to grave and lasting things,
- Be consecrate her metal chime;
- And hourly with his rapid wings,
- Shall she be touched by flying time.
- A tongue to destiny shall she lend;
- Heartless herself to joy or grief,
- Still with her swing let her attend
- Upon the changeful game of life.
- And as the sounds which forth she casts,
- In mighty tones, on the ear decay;
- So let her teach that nothing lasts –
- That all things earthly die away.
- Master:
- Now, with the power of the rope,
- Rock the bell from out the ground;
- Into the air let her mount up,
- Into the heavenly realm of sound!
- Pull ye! pull ye! heave!
- She doth move – doth wave!
- May she forebode us happiness –
- May her first chime utter – peace.
This work is a translation and has a separate copyright status to the applicable copyright protections of the original content.
Original: |
This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
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Translation: |
This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |