The
Bell Deep
By Hans Christian Andersen
(1858)
"Ding-dong! Ding-dong!" It sounds up from
the "bell-deep" in the Odense Au. Every
child in the old town of Odense, on the
island of Funen, knows the Au, which washes
the gardens round about the town, and flows
on under the wooden bridges from the dam to
the water-mill. In the Au grow the yellow
water-lilies and brown feathery reeds; the
dark velvety flag grows there, high and
thick; old and decayed willows, slanting and
tottering, hang far out over the stream
beside the monk's meadow and by the
bleaching ground; but opposite there are
gardens upon gardens, each different from
the rest, some with pretty flowers and
bowers like little dolls' pleasure grounds,
often displaying cabbage and other kitchen
plants; and here and there the gardens
cannot be seen at all, for the great elder
trees that spread themselves out by the
bank, and hang far out over the streaming
waters, which are deeper here and there than
an oar can fathom. Opposite the old nunnery
is the deepest place, which is called the "bell-deep,"
and there dwells the old water spirit, the "Au-mann."
This spirit sleeps through the day while the
sun shines down upon the water; but in
starry and moonlit nights he shows himself.
He is very old. Grandmother says that she
has heard her own grandmother tell of him;
he is said to lead a solitary life, and to
have nobody with whom he can converse save
the great old church Bell. Once the Bell
hung in the church tower; but now there is
no trace left of the tower or of the church,
which was called St. Alban's.
"Ding-dong! ding-dong!" sounded the Bell,
when the tower still stood there; and one
evening, while the sun was setting, and the
Bell was swinging away bravely, it broke
loose and came flying down through the air,
the brilliant metal shining in the ruddy
beam.
"Ding-dong! ding-dong! Now I'll retire to
rest!" sang the Bell, and flew down into the
Odense-Au, where it is deepest; and that is
why the place is called the "bell-deep."
But the Bell got neither rest nor sleep.
Down in the Au-mann's haunt it sounds and
rings, so that the tones sometimes pierce
upward through the waters; and many people
maintain that its strains forebode the death
of some one; but that is not true, for the
Bell is only talking with the Au-mann, who
is now no longer alone.
And what is the Bell telling? It is old,
very old, as we have already observed; it
was there long before grandmother's
grandmother was born; and yet it is but a
child in comparison with the Au-mann, who is
quite an old quiet personage, an oddity,
with his hose of eel-skin, and his scaly
Jacket with the yellow lilies for buttons,
and a wreath of reed in his hair and seaweed
in his beard; but he looks very pretty for
all that.
What the Bell tells? To repeat it all would
require years and days; for year by year it
is telling the old stories, sometimes short
ones, sometimes long ones, according to its
whim; it tells of old times, of the dark
hard times, thus:
"In the church of St. Alban, the monk had
mounted up into the tower. He was young and
handsome, but thoughtful exceedingly. He
looked through the loophole out upon the
Odense-Au, when the bed of the water was yet
broad, and the monks' meadow was still a
lake. He looked out over it, and over the
rampart, and over the nuns' hill opposite,
where the convent lay, and the light gleamed
forth from the nun's cell. He had known the
nun right well, and he thought of her, and
his heart beat quicker as he thought.
Ding-dong! ding-dong!"
Yes, this was the story the Bell told.
"Into the tower came also the dapper
man-servant of the bishop; and when I, the
Bell, who am made of metal, rang hard and
loud, and swung to and fro, I might have
beaten out his brains. He sat down close
under me, and played with two little sticks
as if they had been a stringed instrument;
and he sang to it. 'Now I may sing it out
aloud, though at other times I may not
whisper it. I may sing of everything that is
kept concealed behind lock and bars. Yonder
it is cold and wet. The rats are eating her
up alive! Nobody knows of it! Nobody hears
of it! Not even now, for the bell is ringing
and singing its loud Ding-dong, ding-dong!'
"There was a King in those days. They called
him Canute. He bowed himself before bishop
and monk; but when he offended the free
peasants with heavy taxes and hard words,
they seized their weapons and put him to
flight like a wild beast. He sought shelter
in the church, and shut gate and door behind
him. The violent band surrounded the church;
I heard tell of it. The crows, ravens and
magpies started up in terror at the yelling
and shouting that sounded around. They flew
into the tower and out again, they looked
down upon the throng below, and they also
looked into the windows of the church, and
screamed out aloud what they saw there. King
Canute knelt before the altar in prayer; his
brothers Eric and Benedict stood by him as a
guard with drawn swords; but the King's
servant, the treacherous Blake, betrayed his
master. The throng in front of the church
knew where they could hit the King, and one
of them flung a stone through a pane of
glass, and the King lay there dead! The
cries and screams of the savage horde and of
the birds sounded through the air, and I
joined in it also; for I sang 'Ding-dong!
ding-dong!'
"The church bell hangs high, and looks far
around, and sees the birds around it, and
understands their language. The wind roars
in upon it through windows and loopholes;
and the wind knows everything, for he gets
it from the air, which encircles all things,
and the church bell understands his tongue,
and rings it out into the world, 'Ding-dong!
ding-dong!'
"But it was too much for me to hear and to
know; I was not able any longer to ring it
out. I became so tired, so heavy, that the
beam broke, and I flew out into the gleaming
Au, where the water is deepest, and where
the Au-mann lives, solitary and alone; and
year by year I tell him what I have heard
and what I know. Ding-dong! ding-dong"
Thus it sounds complainingly out of the
bell-deep in the Odense-Au. That is what
grandmother told us.
But the schoolmaster says that there was not
any bell that rung down there, for that it
could not do so; and that no Au-mann dwelt
yonder, for there was no Au-mann at all! And
when all the other church bells are sounding
sweetly, he says that it is not really the
bells that are sounding, but that it is the
air itself which sends forth the notes; and
grandmother said to us that the Bell itself
said it was the air who told it to him,
consequently they are agreed on that point,
and this much is sure.
"Be cautious, cautious, and take good heed
to thyself," they both say.
The air knows everything. It is around us,
it is in us, it talks of our thoughts and of
our deeds, and it speaks longer of them than
does the Bell down in the depths of the
Odense-Au where the Au-mann dwells. It rings
it out in the vault of heaven, far, far out,
forever and ever, till the heaven bells
sound "Ding-dong! ding-dong!"
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