The
Bell
By Hans Christian Andersen
(1850)
In the narrow streets of a large town people
often heard in the evening, when the sun was
setting, and his last rays gave a golden
tint to the chimney-pots, a strange noise
which resembled the sound of a church bell;
it only lasted an instant, for it was lost
in the continual roar of traffic and hum of
voices which rose from the town. “The
evening bell is ringing,” people used to say;
“the sun is setting!” Those who walked
outside the town, where the houses were less
crowded and interspersed by gardens and
little fields, saw the evening sky much
better, and heard the sound of the bell much
more clearly. It seemed as though the sound
came from a church, deep in the calm,
fragrant wood, and thither people looked
with devout feelings.
A considerable time elapsed: one said to the
other, “I really wonder if there is a church
out in the wood. The bell has indeed a
strange sweet sound! Shall we go there and
see what the cause of it is?” The rich drove,
the poor walked, but the way seemed to them
extraordinarily long, and when they arrived
at a number of willow trees on the border of
the wood they sat down, looked up into the
great branches and thought they were now
really in the wood. A confectioner from the
town also came out and put up a stall there;
then came another confectioner who hung a
bell over his stall, which was covered with
pitch to protect it from the rain, but the
clapper was wanting.
When people came home they used to say that
it had been very romantic, and that really
means something else than merely taking tea.
Three persons declared that they had gone as
far as the end of the wood; they had always
heard the strange sound, but there it seemed
to them as if it came from the town. One of
them wrote verses about the bell, and said
that it was like the voice of a mother
speaking to an intelligent and beloved child;
no tune, he said, was sweeter than the sound
of the bell.
The emperor of the country heard of it, and
declared that he who would really find out
where the sound came from should receive the
title of “Bellringer to the World,” even if
there was no bell at all.
Now many went out into the wood for the sake
of this splendid berth; but only one of them
came back with some sort of explanation.
None of them had gone far enough, nor had he,
and yet he said that the sound of the bell
came from a large owl in a hollow tree. It
was a wisdom owl, which continually knocked
its head against the tree, but he was unable
to say with certainty whether its head or
the hollow trunk of the tree was the cause
of the noise.
He was appointed “Bellringer to the World,”
and wrote every year a short dissertation on
the owl, but by this means people did not
become any wiser than they had been before.
It was just confirmation-day. The clergyman
had delivered a beautiful and touching
sermon, the candidates were deeply moved by
it; it was indeed a very important day for
them; they were all at once transformed from
mere children to grown-up people; the
childish soul was to fly over, as it were,
into a more reasonable being.
The sun shone most brightly; and the sound
of the great unknown bell was heard more
distinctly than ever. They had a mind to go
thither, all except three. One of them
wished to go home and try on her ball dress,
for this very dress and the ball were the
cause of her being confirmed this time,
otherwise she would not have been allowed to
go. The second, a poor boy, had borrowed a
coat and a pair of boots from the son of his
landlord to be confirmed in, and he had to
return them at a certain time. The third
said that he never went into strange places
if his parents were not with him; he had
always been a good child, and wished to
remain so, even after being confirmed, and
they ought not to tease him for this; they,
however, did it all the same. These three,
therefore did not go; the others went on.
The sun was shining, the birds were singing,
and the confirmed children sang too, holding
each other by the hand, for they had no
position yet, and they were all equal in the
eyes of God. Two of the smallest soon became
tired and returned to the town; two little
girls sat down and made garlands of flowers,
they, therefore, did not go on. When the
others arrived at the willow trees, where
the confectioner had put up his stall, they
said: “Now we are out here; the bell does
not in reality exist—it is only something
that people imagine!”
Then suddenly the sound of the bell was
heard so beautifully and solemnly from the
wood that four or five made up their minds
to go still further on. The wood was very
thickly grown. It was difficult to advance:
wood lilies and anemones grew almost too
high; flowering convolvuli and brambles were
hanging like garlands from tree to tree;
while the nightingales were singing and the
sunbeams played. That was very beautiful!
But the way was unfit for the girls; they
would have torn their dresses. Large rocks,
covered with moss of various hues, were
lying about; the fresh spring water rippled
forth with a peculiar sound. “I don’t think
that can be the bell,” said one of the
confirmed children, and then he lay down and
listened. “We must try to find out if it
is!” And there he remained, and let the
others walk on.
They came to a hut built of the bark of
trees and branches; a large crab-apple tree
spread its branches over it, as if it
intended to pour all its fruit on the roof,
upon which roses were blooming; the long
boughs covered the gable, where a little
bell was hanging. Was this the one they had
heard? All agreed that it must be so, except
one who said that the bell was too small and
too thin to be heard at such a distance, and
that it had quite a different sound to that
which had so touched men’s hearts.
He who spoke was a king’s son, and therefore
the others said that such a one always
wishes to be cleverer than other people.
Therefore they let him go alone; and as he
walked on, the solitude of the wood produced
a feeling of reverence in his breast; but
still he heard the little bell about which
the others rejoiced, and sometimes, when the
wind blew in that direction, he could hear
the sounds from the confectioner’s stall,
where the others were singing at tea. But
the deep sounds of the bell were much
stronger; soon it seemed to him as if an
organ played an accompaniment—the sound came
from the left, from the side where the heart
is. Now something rustled among the bushes,
and a little boy stood before the king’s
son, in wooden shoes and such a short jacket
that the sleeves did not reach to his wrists.
They knew each other: the boy was the one
who had not been able to go with them
because he had to take the coat and boots
back to his landlord’s son. That he had
done, and had started again in his wooden
shoes and old clothes, for the sound of the
bell was too enticing—he felt he must go on.
“We might go together,” said the king’s son.
But the poor boy with the wooden shoes was
quite ashamed; he pulled at the short
sleeves of his jacket, and said that he was
afraid he could not walk so fast; besides,
he was of opinion that the bell ought to be
sought at the right, for there was all that
was grand and magnificent.
“Then we shall not meet,” said the king’s
son, nodding to the poor boy, who went into
the deepest part of the wood, where the
thorns tore his shabby clothes and scratched
his hands, face, and feet until they bled.
The king’s son also received several good
scratches, but the sun was shining on his
way, and it is he whom we will now follow,
for he was a quick fellow. “I will and must
find the bell,” he said, “if I have to go to
the end of the world.”
Ugly monkeys sat high in the branches and
clenched their teeth. “Shall we beat him?”
they said. “Shall we thrash him? He is a
king’s son!”
But he walked on undaunted, deeper and
deeper into the wood, where the most
wonderful flowers were growing; there were
standing white star lilies with blood-red
stamens, sky-blue tulips shining when the
wind moved them; apple-trees covered with
apples like large glittering soap bubbles:
only think how resplendent these trees were
in the sunshine! All around were beautiful
green meadows, where hart and hind played in
the grass. There grew magnificent oaks and
beech-trees; and if the bark was split of
any of them, long blades of grass grew out
of the clefts; there were also large smooth
lakes in the wood, on which the swans were
swimming about and flapping their wings. The
king’s son often stood still and listened;
sometimes he thought that the sound of the
bell rose up to him out of one of these deep
lakes, but soon he found that this was a
mistake, and that the bell was ringing still
farther in the wood. Then the sun set, the
clouds were as red as fire; it became quiet
in the wood; he sank down on his knees, sang
an evening hymn and said: “I shall never
find what I am looking for! Now the sun is
setting, and the night, the dark night, is
approaching. Yet I may perhaps see the round
sun once more before he disappears beneath
the horizon. I will climb up these rocks,
they are as high as the highest trees!” And
then, taking hold of the creepers and roots,
he climbed up on the wet stones, where
water-snakes were wriggling and the toads,
as it were, barked at him: he reached the
top before the sun, seen from such a height,
had quite set. “Oh, what a splendour!” The
sea, the great majestic sea, which was
rolling its long waves against the shore,
stretched out before him, and the sun was
standing like a large bright altar and there
where sea and heaven met—all melted together
in the most glowing colours; the wood was
singing, and his heart too. The whole of
nature was one large holy church, in which
the trees and hovering clouds formed the
pillars, the flowers and grass the woven
velvet carpet, and heaven itself was the
great cupola; up there the flame colour
vanished as soon as the sun disappeared, but
millions of stars were lighted; diamond
lamps were shining, and the king’s son
stretched his arms out towards heaven,
towards the sea, and towards the wood. Then
suddenly the poor boy with the short-sleeved
jacket and the wooden shoes appeared; he had
arrived just as quickly on the road he had
chosen. And they ran towards each other and
took one another’s hand, in the great
cathedral of nature and poesy, and above
them sounded the invisible holy bell; happy
spirits surrounded them, singing hallelujahs
and rejoicing. |