Summer Legends
THE FORGOTTEN BELL
MANY, many years ago there was a pious hermit. He had turned his
back on the world, and had built a hermitage in a green meadow,
which lay in the midst of the forest; and the peasants of the
neighboring villages and farms had helped him diligently in the
building and furnishing of his hut. Next the hermit's dwelling
stood a chapel with a doleful Madonna; and above it, under a
little roof, hung a small bell, which the solitary man was
accustomed to ring at certain hours, and this was his most
important work of the day; the rest of the time he spent in
prayer and pious reflection. His thirst he quenched at a cool
fountain, which sprang up out of the black-wood earth, not far
from the hermitage; but he satisfied his hunger with the fruit of
the forest and the food which the faithful peasant women brought
to him.
In this way the pious man lived for a long succession of years.
Then he laid himself down on his bed of straw, wrapped himself up
closely in his cowl, and died. Many tears were shed at his
burial, and the sobbing women said, “Such a hermit as he was we
shall never have again.” And in this respect they were quite right.
It happened that soon after the hermit's decease another came,
who established himself in the deserted hermitage; and he pleased
the women quite well, for he was young in years and had a pair of
eyes as black as coals. But the new hermit was an eyesore to the
men; why, it was never exactly known. In short, the peasants
collected together one day, seized the recluse, and conducted him
to the highway. And the hermit turned his back to the thankless
fellows, and was seen no more in that region.
>From that time the hermitage stood desolate, and only
occasionally did a roving huntsman, or a maiden with her jug,
turn their footsteps towards the deserted house to draw
refreshment from the well near by. Brown wood-moss grew
luxuriantly on the thatched roof of the hermitage, and brambles
and clematis grew round the door and windows. In the deceased
hermit's straw bed the field-mice were rearing their young, and
in the chapel the red-tail had built her nest. The forest, with
its creatures, was gradually taking possession again of the
ground which man had taken away from it.
Spring was about to make her appearance, and the earth was
getting ready for the Easter festival. With damp wings the
thawing wind came flying across the sea, shook the trees and
threw the fir-cones and dead branches on the ground. The springs
and brooks murmured louder, and ran more swiftly on their winding
way. The tips of the snowdrops and anemones peeped stealthily up
out of the ground in the woods, and the showy laurel put on its
red silk gown. Then came the hoopoo bird with his bright-colored
crest and announced the coming of the cuckoo. And the briers
shook off their last dry leaves and stood with their buds swollen
with sap, waiting patiently for the awakening call of Spring.
The little bell in the ruined forest chapel saw with sorrow how
everything was preparing for the feast of the Resurrection. In
former years, when the sound of the bells trembled through the
air at the happy Easter-tide, she, too, had lifted her voice and
sung in the chorus of the proud sisters in the church towers. But
that time was long ago. Since the old hermit was buried, no hand
had pulled the rope at Easter-tide; silent and forgotten hung the
bell beneath her little roof, and for a bell nothing is harder
than to be obliged to keep silent at the feast of the Resurrection.
Passion week had come. On Wednesday the hare came bounding out of
the forest. He stopped in front of the chapel, stood on his hind
legs, and called up to the bell, “If you have anything to be done
in the city, tell me, for I am on my way there. I have been
appointed Easter hare, and have my paws full, and so much
business to attend to that I don't know which end my head is on.”
The sorrowful bell kept silent, and the hare ran on.
The next night there was a mighty roaring in the air. The roses
crouched down in the underbrush, for they thought it was the
night huntsman passing through the forest. But it was not the
forest fiend, but the bells, on their way to Rome to obtain the
blessing of the Pope.
The bell from the convent on the mountain came over to the forest
chapel, and stopped for a moment.
“How is it, sister,” she asked the forgotten bell, “that you are
not going, too?”
“Ah, I would gladly go,” lamented the little bell. “But I have
been idle the whole year long, therefore I dare not go with you.
Still, if you will do me a favor, say a good word to the holy
father in Rome for me. Perhaps he will send some one to ring me
on Easter Sunday. It is so melancholy to have to be silent when
all of you are singing. Will you do me the kindness?”
The convent bell mumbled something like “non possumus.” Then she
arose, like a great, clumsy bird, from the ground, and flew after
the others. And the forgotten bell remained sadly behind.
“Be thankful that human beings leave you in peace,” said the
forest owl to the bell. “The stupid beasts in the woods
understand nothing about your ringing, and it disturbs me in my
meditation. But you are not entirely forsaken, for I am going to
build my nest near you. And you will gain much by it, for I am a
man from whom you can learn a great deal.” Thus spoke the owl,
and puffed himself up. But the bell gave him no answer.
Easter morning dawned. Twilight still lingered over the village,
and the mist stretched over the mountain slope. A cool wind blew
through the branches of the trees, stirred the white May lilies,
and rustled through the dry reeds, so that it sounded like the
low tones of a harp. Then the mountain tops grew red, and the
firs creaked and shook their branches, as if they were just
awaking from sleep. The sun rose and scattered gold over the tips
of the fir-trees, and the wood birds flapped their wings, raised
their voices, and sang their Easter songs. But the forgotten bell
hung sad and silent under the roof in the chapel.
At the same hour a young man was walking along the highway which
led through the forest. He wore a huntsman's leather jacket and a
gray hawk's feather in his hat. By his left side hung a broad
hunting-knife, with a handle of a stag's horn; but instead of
fire-arms, he carried a heavily packed knapsack of badger's skin.
This and a cane of buckthorn with iron mountings, which he swung
in his right hand, led one to suppose that the huntsman was not
after game, but was making a journey; and so it was.
At the place where a path which led to a mill struck off from the
road, the young fellow stopped, and seemed undecided whether to
keep on the road or to take the meadow path. But he did not
linger long. He cast a gloomy look in the direction of the mill,
threw his head back haughtily, and gave a hunting-cry that made
the fir-woods resound. Then as he went along, he sang:—
“Farewell, green jocund forest home!
Thee must I leave behind me,
Throughout the weary world to roam
Till Fortune's favors find me.
As hunter lad
My joy I've had
The noble stag in chasing;
But now my way
Leads to the fray
Where death I shall be facing.
“A gray hawk sat upon the height,
Enchained by evil magic;
In sadness pined he day and night,
His mood was grim and tragic.
He would exchange
For freedom's range
The forests' wide dominions;
On high, on high,
Thou wild bird, fly,
And spread thy noble pinions.”
But the last words stuck in the young man's throat, and the
half-suppressed sigh at the end ill accorded with the huntsman's
joyous manner.
Suddenly the youth left the broad road, and went diagonally
through the forest, straight to the deserted hermitage. By the
spring, which had its source near the house he stopped, bent
down, and filled a wooden cup with the cool water. He drank it
slowly, and sprinkled the last drops on the moss. “Well,” he
said, “now it is all over.”
The water was clear and cold, but it could not cool the hot blood
of the one who drank it. The young huntsman sat down on the
threshold of the hermitage and covered his face with both hands.
The summer before, after a long absence, he had returned to the
country, and entered the service of the old forester. He had seen
something of the world; in the emperor's hunting-train, he had
chased the chamois and the steinboc in the high mountains; he had
followed his master to the merry hunting-boxes and to the
splendid residence in the capital; and everywhere he had carried
with him his love for the miller's fairhaired daughter in his
native valley. He had come back with a generous sum of money and
many sweet hopes, but they had melted away to nothing, and now he
was on the point of leaving the country and enlisting as a soldier.
It was near the hermitage in the forest where he had found his
sweetheart for the first time after their separation. She had
come to draw water; and when the hunter recognized the beautiful,
slender form, as she bent over the well, his joy was so great
that he leaped from his hiding-place with a wild shout, and threw
his arms around the frightened maiden. But she had pushed him
roughly away from her, so that he fell backwards, and then she
turned her back and went away.
Later on, the huntsman had tried once more to approach the
miller's daughter. It was at the time of the harvest festival,
when young and old march in bands to the dancing-ground. There
the huntsman had waylaid the beautiful girl, and had come to meet
her with a friendly greeting and a bouquet of clove pinks. But
when she saw the youth coming towards her, she had turned around
and gone back to the mill, and the hunter, in his anger, had
thrown the bunch of pinks into the mill brook. The coy maid had
fished the flowers out of the water near the dam, dried them, and
laid them away in her chest, but he knew nothing about that.
Then perversity came over the huntsman. “If you go to the left, I
will go to the right,” he thought; and lest she might imagine
that he took the matter to heart, he joined a company of gay
fellows, drank, sang, and carried on so madly that the wild youth
was in everybody's mouth for seven miles around.
That went on through the whole winter. Then one evening a bright
light, which took the form of a sword, was seen in the sky, and
shortly after the news came that in the spring there would be war
in Italy. It was not long before the beating of drums was heard
in the land, and the roads swarmed with travelling people, who
were all going to join the imperial army. Then the huntsman gave
notice that he was going to leave the forester's service, gave
his drinking-companions a generous parting cup, and followed the
rest, to forget on the field his sorrow and distress. And he had
already really come as far as the hermitage in the forest. He was
now sitting on the door-stone, sadly hanging his head.
A soft, distant rustling in the underbrush fell on the young
fellow's sharp ear. The huntsman was awake in him, and his sharp
eye looked about for the cause of the sound. But it was no
shifting game that was coming through the bushes. Between the
trunks of the fir-trees gleamed something light, like a woman's
garments, and the hunter slipped noiselessly, but with
loud-beating heart, behind the wall of the house, for through the
forest came walking her whom he would fain forget, but could not forget.
The maiden came slowly nearer. Now and then she bent down to add
a flower to the nosegay which she carried in her hand, and each
time her long flaxen braids would fall forward and touch the
ground. When she reached the well, she filled a little earthen
jug with the water and placed the nosegay in it. Then she went
into the chapel, placed the flowers before the image of the
Virgin, and knelt down on the moss-covered step.
In a low voice she repeated the angel's greeting, and then began
to pour out her heart to the queen of heaven. It was a prayer
full of self-accusation and repentance. “I have driven him from
me,” she bemoaned, “driven him out into danger and death, and yet
I love him so! more dearly than the light of my eyes! Still there
is time to change everything by a word of reconciliation, if I
knew that he still loved me. Easter is the time of miracles. Give
me, oh, heaven, a sign, if he still thinks of me lovingly and
faithfully, and I will run after him to the end of the world, and
bring him back. Give me a sign!”
Then above her softly sounded the bell. It was only a single
tone, but it rang through the heart of the grieved maiden like a
joyful song of jubilee. She lifted her eyes and looked up
questioningly at the Madonna. Then the bell sounded for the
second time, and louder and more joyful, and when the maiden
turned, there stood in the entrance of the chapel the young
huntsman, stretching out his arms to his beloved. And this time
she did not run away. She threw her arms about the wild hunter's
sun-burned neck, and stammered words of love.
The titmice, and the golden-crested wrens which lived in the
branches of the fir-trees, fluttered along, and the wood-mouse
put his head out at the door of his house, and everything looked
curiously at the pair in the chapel.
The two remained in each others' embrace for a long time. Then
the huntsman grasped the rope of the bell and called up to it:
“Bell, you have brought us together; now tell our joy to the
forest!” And the little bell under the chapel roof began to gleam
with joy in the warm sunshine, and swing tirelessly to and fro
and let her clear voice sound through the forest.
From the towers in the surrounding villages came the sounds of
famous church bells. They had returned the night before from
their visit to Rome, and had seen many wonderful sights. But not
one of them sang her Easter song so joyfully as the little
forgotten bell in the forest.
<< Previous Page
Next
Page >>
© 2004-2007 Northvegr.
Most of the material on this site is in the public domain. However, many people have worked very hard to bring these texts to you so if you do use the work, we would appreciate it if you could give credit to both the Northvegr site and to the individuals who worked to bring you these texts. A small number of texts are copyrighted and cannot be used without the author's permission. Any text that is copyrighted will have a clear notation of such on the main index page for that text. Inquiries
can be sent to info@northvegr.org.
Northvegr™ and the Northvegr symbol are trademarks and service marks
of the Northvegr Foundation.
|
> Northvegr™ Foundation
>> About Northvegr Foundation
>> What's New
>> Contact Info
>> Link to Us
>> E-mail Updates
>> Links
>> Mailing Lists
>> Statement of Purpose
>> Socio-Political Stance
>> Donate
> The Vík - Online Store
>> More Norse Merchandise
> Advertise With Us
> Heithni
>> Books & Articles
>> Trúlög
>> Sögumál
>>
Heithinn Date Calculator
>> Recommended Reading
>>
The 30 Northern Virtues
> Recommended Heithinn Faith Organizations
>> Alfaleith.org
> NESP
>> Transcribe Texts
>> Translate Texts
>> HTML Coding
>> PDF Construction
> N. European Studies
>> Texts
>> Texts in PDF Format
>> NESP Reviews
>> Germanic Sources
>> Roman Scandinavia
>> Maps
> Language Resources
>> Zoëga Old Icelandic Dict.
>> Cleasby-Vigfusson Dictionary
>> Sweet's Old Icelandic Primer
>> Old Icelandic Grammar
>> Holy Language Lexicon
>> Old English Lexicon
>> Gothic Grammar Project
>> Old English Project
>> Language Resources
> Northern Family
>> Northern Fairy Tales
>> Norse-ery Rhymes
>>
Children's Books/Links
>> Tafl
>> Northern Recipes
>> Kubb
> Other Sections
>> The Holy Fylfot
>> Tradition Roots
Please Visit Our Sponsors
- Référencement
- Alfaleith.org - Heithni, Viðartrú
- Odin's Journey
- Baman - Iceland/Aboriginal Australia
- Biker's Booty
- Création site Internet Paris
- Pagan T-shirts
- Appartements
- Chalets au Québec
- Logo Designers
- Web Design
- Appartements Montreal
- Espace Bureau Montreal
- London Tours
- Spanish Property Legal Advice
- Multi Pret Hypotheque
- Company Logo Design
- Wiccan T-shirts
- Art Gallery, Painting artists
- free logo design reviews
- Heathen, Heathenism, Norse Pagan
- Logo design by LogoBee
- Pagan Shirts
- Norse Pagan Religion
- Triumph, BSA, Norton, Euro Motorcycles - Accessories
- Logo Maker
- Logo Design - Business Logos, Inc.
- Logo Design - Logo Maker
- Create A Website
- Wiccan Shirts
- Mortgages
- Multi-Prêts Hypothèques
- Viking T-shirts
- Hewlett Packard Ink Cartridges
- Indian Recipes
- Logo Design London
- Logo Design
- Logo Design UK
- Subvention et financement PME
- Heathen T-shirts
- Medical Alert, Emergency response
- orlando hotels
- Slot Machines for Vikings
- Norse Pagan Clothing and Merchandise
- New Homes
- Branding Irons
- Bachelor Degree Online
- Online Degree
- College Degree
- Heathen, Viking and Norse Texts
- Création site Internet
- Montreal Web Design
- Free Dish Network Satellite TV
- Discount ink cartridge & laser cartridge
- DUI Lawyers & DWI Attorneys
- Promotional Products
- Ready-Made Company Logos
- Canadian Art Dealer
- Best CD Rates
- Laser Toner Cartridge
- Logotyper & Grafiska Profilprogram
- Banner Design
- Custom Logo Design
Web site design and coding by Golden Boar Creations
|
|