| |
| WALLED in fast within the earth | |
| Stands the form burnt out of clay. | |
| This must be the bells great birth! | |
| Fellows, lend a hand to-day. | |
| Sweat must trickle now | 5 |
| From the burning brow, | |
| Till the work its master honour. | |
| Blessing comes from Heavens Donor. | |
| While we our serious work are doing, | |
| We ought to speak a serious word, | 10 |
| More easily our work pursuing, | |
| When noble speech the while is heard. | |
| Now let us earnestly be spying | |
| What our weak powers can create; | |
| I scorn the man who is not trying | 15 |
| On his own work to meditate. | |
| This is the fairest of mans graces: | |
| The power to think and understand | |
| For in his inmost heart he traces | |
| What he has fashioned with his hand. | 20 |
| Wood that from the pine-tree came | |
| Keep right dry with zealous care, | |
| That the deftly governed flame | |
| Through the furnace hole may flare. | |
| Boiling coppers thick | 25 |
| Get the tin now, quick! | |
| Let the substance, liquid growing, | |
| In a docile way be flowing. | |
| What with the help of fires great power. | |
| In this deep pit our hands have framed, | 30 |
| High on the belfry of the tower | |
| In mighty tones shall be proclaimed. | |
| In ages far beyond the morrow, | |
| A voice for many shall ring out, | |
| And it will mourn with those in sorrow | 35 |
| And join the choir of the devout. | |
| What fate, forever changing, fleeting, | |
| To mortals far below may bring, | |
| Against the crown of metal beating, | |
| As music of the bell will ring. | 40 |
| Bubbles leaping, white and spry! | |
| Good! The masses flow at last. | |
| Mix them with the alkali, | |
| That they be more quickly cast. | |
| From all foam quite free | 45 |
| Shall the mixture be, | |
| From the metal pure before us, | |
| Rise a perfect voice sonorous. | |
| The bell with festive peal and cheering | |
| Greets the belovèd tender child, | 50 |
| Upon his lifes first way appearing, | |
| Still in the arms of sleep beguiled. | |
| Deep in the womb of time there stay | |
| His destinies, both dark and gay. | |
| His mothers gentle, loving care | 55 |
| Is watching still his morning fair. | |
| The years fly swiftlyall is play. | |
| Away from girls, impatient, tearing, | |
| The boy starts wildly forth to roam, | |
| He sees the world, and, after faring, | 60 |
| Comes back, a stranger, to his home. | |
| In beauty and youths splendour glowing, | |
| A vision from some heavenly height, | |
| While blushes on her cheeks are growing, | |
| He sees the maiden with delight. | 65 |
| And now a strange and nameless yearning | |
| Has seized upon the young mans heart, | |
| From sports and wild companions turning, | |
| With tearful eyes he roams apart. | |
| And happy at her slightest speaking, | 70 |
| Her footsteps blushingly to trace, | |
| He wanders over meadows, seeking | |
| The fairest flowers his love to grace. | |
| Oh, tender longing, sweetest hoping, | |
| First loves enchanting, golden days! | 75 |
| The eye can see the heavens oping, | |
| A bliss the heart unhindered sways. | |
| Would it might bloom eternally | |
| The time of young loves ecstasy! | |
| See, how brown the blow-pipes grow! | 80 |
| When this stick has been dipped in, | |
| And a glaze begins to show, | |
| Then the casting should begin. | |
| Now good fellows, quick! | |
| Prove the mixture thick! | 85 |
| Hard and soft united duly | |
| Are a lucky omen truly. | |
| For when the stern and mild are pairing, | |
| The tender with the strong and daring, | |
| The tone must ring out fair and strong. | 90 |
| Let him who binds himself forever, | |
| To sound his heart and hers endeavour! | |
| Passion is short, repentance long. | |
| On the young brides tresses lightly | |
| Lies the wreath of blossoms white, | 95 |
| When the church bells, ringing brightly, | |
| To the festive hour invite. | |
| Lovely festivalthe ending | |
| Ofalas!lifes joyous May, | |
| Beautiful illusions rending | 100 |
| With the veil and brides array! | |
| Passion will fly! | |
| Love must remain; | |
| The flower must die, | |
| The fruit to attain. | 105 |
| The man must go out | |
| To stern hostile life, | |
| For power and strife, | |
| To plant and to toil, | |
| To gain and to foil, | 110 |
| To wager and dare, | |
| His luck to ensnare. | |
| And now without end the blessings are streaming, | |
| With goodly possessions the storerooms are teeming, | |
| The rooms are expanding, the house has to grow. | 115 |
| And in it there moves | |
| The good, modest housewife, | |
| The mother of children, | |
| Who wise and dear | |
| Here rules in her sphere, | 120 |
| And teaches the girls | |
| And wards off the boys, | |
| While work without end | |
| Her busy hands tend, | |
| Enlarging her share | 125 |
| Through order and care, | |
| Her sweet-smelling linen-chests filling with treasure, | |
| By spinning her thread in the speediest measure. | |
| Her neatly and smoothly kept closets are full | |
| Of linen like snow and the shining fair wool; | 130 |
| And still adding glamour and charm to the best, | |
| She never can rest. | |
| And the father with happy eye | |
| From his mansions high gable is counting | |
| Blessings fair that before him lie | 135 |
| Pillars and posts as high as the trees, | |
| Barns that are bursting with treasures that please, | |
| Granges with bounties swelling and bending, | |
| Grain-fields waving in billows unending. | |
| He boasts with noble pride: | 140 |
| Firm as the ground abide | |
| My homesteads splendours bright | |
| Against misfortunes might! | |
| Covenants with powers of fate | |
| Willalack!not always last, | 145 |
| And misfortune travels fast. | |
| Now the casting can begin, | |
| For the dented mould is fair: | |
| But before we pour it in, | |
| Let us say a pious prayer! | 150 |
| Push the tendon hard! | |
| God shall be our guard! | |
| In the bell's ear smoking, glowing, | |
| Waves of fiery brown are flowing. | |
| Most wholesome is the force of fire, | 155 |
| When man can tame and guard its ire, | |
| And from this heavenly force man takes | |
| Good help for what he moulds and makes. | |
| But frightful is this power's abuse | |
| When, from its fetters broken loose, | 160 |
| Upon its own track wantonly | |
| It roams as nature's daughter free. | |
| Horror when unbound and growing | |
| Fiend that no resistance stays! | |
| Through the peopled city blowing | 165 |
| Sweeps along the monster-blaze! | |
| Elements have ever hated | |
| What the hand of man created. | |
| From the cloud | |
| Rain is pouring, | 170 |
| Earth restoring. | |
| From the cloud, even so, | |
| Lightnings glow! | |
| From the tower hear the wail: | |
| Tis the gale! | 175 |
| Bloody red | |
| Are the heavens; | |
| Daylight neer such brightness shed! | |
| Riot leavens | |
| All the crowds! | 180 |
| Dense smoke-clouds! | |
| Fiery pillar, flickering, glowing, | |
| Down the street is swiftly going, | |
| Like the wind so rapid growing. | |
| Hot, as if in furnace baking, | 185 |
| Glows the air; the beams are breaking, | |
| Windows rattle, posts are falling, | |
| Mothers straying, children calling, | |
| Beasts are moaning, | |
| Crushed, and groaning. | 190 |
| All run, save and flee in fright, | |
| Bright as daylight is the night, | |
| Chains of eager hands are plying, | |
| Pails are flying, | |
| Arching water-spouts are playing, | 195 |
| Flames with hissing fountains spraying; | |
| Howling wild the storm is straying, | |
| Driving on the flame with roars. | |
| Crackling in the dry grain-stores | |
| Shoots the flame, through garrets sweeping, | 200 |
| Fast along the rafters creeping, | |
| And, as if with monstrous blowing | |
| It would sweep along in flight | |
| The whole earth with all its might, | |
| Rises, now gigantic growing, | 205 |
| To the sky. | |
| Man stands by: | |
| Hopeless, awestruck, he is yielding, | |
| Sees the heavens their power wielding, | |
| His own works to ruin going. | 210 |
| Now the homestead | |
| Is burnt bare; | |
| Savage storms are raging there. | |
| Empty window-holes are staring | |
| Horror-haunted, | 215 |
| And the sailing clouds undaunted | |
| Peer inside. | |
| |
| Manalack! | |
| Glances back | |
| At the grave | 220 |
| Of the goods he could not save: | |
| Then ventures forth with spirit brave. | |
| However sadly he has fared, | |
| Though raging fire has so bereft him, | |
| The sweetest comfort still is left him: | 225 |
| He counts his dear ones: all are spared. | |
| Now tis resting in the earth, | |
| For the form contains its fill. | |
| Will there be a happy birth, | |
| To repay our care and skill? | 230 |
| Is there a mistake? | |
| If the form should break? | |
| While our hopes are soaring high | |
| Woe!misfortune may be nigh. | |
| Unto the sacred earth confiding, | 235 |
| We trust to her our hands own deed, | |
| The sower trusts to her his seed, | |
| Calm, with a blessèd hope abiding | |
| That it shall grow as Heaven decreed. | |
| Alas, we know that seed far rarer | 240 |
| In earths dark bosom buried lies, | |
| And hope that to a lot still fairer | |
| Out of the graveyard it will rise. | |
| From the church | |
| Tolls the bell | 245 |
| Grave and heavy | |
| Funeral knell. | |
| And the toll sonorous is attending | |
| One more pilgrim on his last way wending. | |
| Woe! It is the wife belovèd. | 250 |
| Woe! It is the faithful mother | |
| Whom the shadow prince of harm | |
| Drew from out her husbands arm, | |
| From her tender childrens sphere, | |
| Whom she bare him, fair and dear, | 255 |
| And then watched with mothers zest | |
| As they grew upon her breast. | |
| Ah! The homes most tender ties | |
| Are unloosed forevermore; | |
| In the shadowland she lies | 260 |
| Who was mother here before. | |
| How they miss her faithful guiding, | |
| And the care she used to give! | |
| In the orphaned home presiding, | |
| Loveless strangers soon will live. | 265 |
| Till the bell shall cooler be, | |
| After labour take your ease, | |
| And as birds play in the tree, | |
| Each shall do what he may please. | |
| Youth, at rise of stars, | 270 |
| Free from dutys bars, | |
| Hears the evening bell, releasing: | |
| Masters toil is never ceasing. | |
| In the forest wild the wanderer | |
| Homeward turns his steps with pleasure | 275 |
| To his dear and cheerful cottage. | |
| Homeward trudge the sheep-flocks bleating, | |
| And the herds | |
| Of the sleek and broad-browed cattle | |
| With their lowing | 280 |
| To accustomed stalls are going. | |
| Now with grain | |
| Heavy laden, | |
| Reels the wagon: | |
| And beneath | 285 |
| Sheaves, the wreath | |
| Fragrant lies; | |
| To the dance the flock of reapers | |
| Gaily flies. | |
| Streets and markets grow more quiet; | 290 |
| Round the bright and genial lamplight | |
| All the household members gather, | |
| And the town-gate closes, creaking. | |
| Blackness spreads | |
| Oer the earth; | 295 |
| But the steady townsman dreads | |
| Not the night | |
| Rousing wicked men from bed: | |
| For the eye of law is ever bright. | |
| Sacred order, blessings spreading, | 300 |
| Heavens daughter, freely treading, | |
| Like to like thou bindest lightly, | |
| Cities thou hast founded rightly, | |
| And the wild man roaming blindly | |
| Thou hast called to home-life, kindly. | 305 |
| To mens homes thy presence giving, | |
| Thou hast taught them gentle living, | |
| Woven of all ties the deepest | |
| Love for fatherland thou keepest! | |
| Busy hands, by thousands stirring, | 310 |
| Briskly one another aid, | |
| And, while eager work is spurring, | |
| All the powers are displayed. | |
| Under freedoms wing united, | |
| Master and apprentice toil, | 315 |
| Each with his own place delighted, | |
| Ready any scorn to foil. | |
| Work adorns the burgher greatly, | |
| Blessing is our labours prize; | |
| Honoured crowns make princes stately, | 320 |
| But in work our honour lies. | |
| Blessed peace, oh | |
| Sweetest concord, | |
| Tarry, tarry | |
| With your kindness in this town! | 325 |
| May that day be never dawning, | |
| When the hordes of war with terror | |
| Raid across this quiet valley, | |
| When the heavens | |
| Which the lovely glow of evening | 330 |
| Gently paints, | |
| Flash, alas, when towns are burning, | |
| Fiery taints! | |
| Break the form now, stand me by, | |
| For its purpose is fulfilled; | 335 |
| And rejoice, let heart and eye | |
| By the well-done task be thrilled. | |
| Swing the hammer, whack! | |
| Till the cope shall crack! | |
| For the finished bell shall rise, | 340 |
| When the form in pieces lies. | |
| In time the master, skilled and knowing, | |
| Can break the form most prudently. | |
| Woe! When in fiery torrents flowing, | |
| The ore itself seeks liberty! | 345 |
| In blindest rage with thundrous roaring, | |
| The bursting house it rushes through, | |
| As if the jaws of hell were pouring | |
| The flames that death and horror spew. | |
| Where raw wild forces rage and blight, | 350 |
| Men can create no form aright; | |
| And no true welfare can there be, | |
| When mobs are by themselves set free. | |
| Woe, when the tinder-heap is swelling | |
| In hearts of cities, in the night, | 355 |
| The masses tear their chains, rebelling, | |
| And free themselves with furys might! | |
| Then riot, to the bell-ropes clinging, | |
| Pulls till the bell begins to howl; | |
| Devoted once to peaceful ringing, | 360 |
| She gives the sign for outrage foul. | |
| Equality and freedom! screaming, | |
| The burgher in once peaceful hands | |
| Grasps weapons; streets and halls are teeming, | |
| And everywhere swarm ruffian bands. | 365 |
| With jest and ribaldry unsparing, | |
| The women like hyenas grow, | |
| With panthers fangs unbridled tearing | |
| The flinching bosom of the foe. | |
| There is no sacredness remaining, | 370 |
| Unloosed are ties of piety, | |
| The bad in goodness place is reigning, | |
| And every vice is swaying free. | |
| A lion wakened is ferocious, | |
| Destructive is the tigers bite; | 375 |
| But of all horrors most atrocious | |
| Is man at his own madness height. | |
| Woe unto those who to the yearning, | |
| The ever-blind lend heavens torch! | |
| It will not beam; to ashes burning, | 380 |
| The fields and cities it will scorch. | |
| Gladness God has given me! | |
| Now the kernel shells the mould, | |
| Rising smoothly, evenly, | |
| Shining like a star of gold. | 385 |
| Dome and crest both beam, | |
| Like the sunlights gleam, | |
| And the blazons quaint device | |
| Shows performance skilled and nice. | |
| Come in and see! | 390 |
| Now, fellows, let us close the ring, | |
| For the bells high christening: | |
| Concordia her name shall be. | |
| For concord, deepest brotherhood with all, | |
| The loving congregation she shall call. | 395 |
| This be the calling of the bell, | |
| Wherefore she has been fashioned well! | |
| With earthly life beneath her lying, | |
| High she shall swing in heavens blue dome, | |
| A neighbour of the thunder, flying | 400 |
| And touching on the starry home, | |
| Her voice from heights celestial raising, | |
| Like all the stars in heavens sphere, | |
| That live and move, their Maker praising, | |
| And leading forth the festive year. | 405 |
| Our bell, her metal voice devoting | |
| Alone to grave, eternal things, | |
| Shall ever feel, while she is floating, | |
| The throbbing touch of times swift wings. | |
| The tongue of fate, she shall be ringing: | 410 |
| Heartless herself and pitiless, | |
| She shall accompany with swinging | |
| Lifes game of constant changefulness. | |
| And as her mighty peal sonorous | |
| Within our ears at last shall die, | 415 |
| A lesson she will put before us, | |
| That all things earthly must go by. | |
| Come now, with the ropes whole might, | |
| From her dungeon swing the bell, | |
| Till she rise to heavens height, | 420 |
| In the realm of sound to dwell! | |
| Pull and liftstill more! | |
| See her move and soar! | |
| Joy unto this city bringing, | |
| Peace shall be her first glad ringing! | 425 |
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