The Old Church Bell
By Hans Christian Andersen
(1861)
In the country of Wurtemburg, in Germany,
where the acacias grow by the public road,
where the apple-trees and the pear-trees in
autumn bend to the earth with the weight of
the precious fruit, lies the little town of
Marbach. As is often the case with many of
these towns, it is charmingly situated on
the banks of the river Neckar, which rushes
rapidly by, passing villages, old knights’
castles, and green vineyards, till its
waters mingle with those of the stately
Rhine. It was late in the autumn; the
vine-leaves still hung upon the branches of
the vines, but they were already tinted with
red and gold; heavy showers fell on the
surrounding country, and the cold autumn
wind blew sharp and strong. It was not at
all pleasant weather for the poor. The days
grew shorter and more gloomy, and, dark as
it was out of doors in the open air, it was
still darker within the small, old-fashioned
houses of the village. The gable end of one
of these houses faced the street, and with
its small, narrow windows, presented a very
mean appearance. The family who dwelt in it
were also very poor and humble, but they
treasured the fear of God in their innermost
hearts. And now He was about to send them a
child. It was the hour of the mother’s
sorrow, when there pealed forth from the
church tower the sound of festive bells. In
that solemn hour the sweet and joyous
chiming filled the hearts of those in the
humble dwelling with thankfulness and trust;
and when, amidst these joyous sounds, a
little son was born to them, the words of
prayer and praise arose from their
overflowing hearts, and their happiness
seemed to ring out over town and country in
the liquid tones of the church bells’ chime.
The little one, with its bright eyes and
golden hair, had been welcomed joyously on
that dark November day. Its parents kissed
it lovingly, and the father wrote these
words in the Bible, “On the tenth of
November, 1759, God sent us a son.” And a
short time after, when the child had been
baptized, the names he had received were
added, “John Christopher Frederick.”
And what became of the little lad?—the poor
boy of the humble town of Marbach? Ah,
indeed, there was no one who thought or
supposed, not even the old church bell which
had been the first to sound and chime for
him, that he would be the first to sing the
beautiful song of “The Bell.” The boy grew
apace, and the world advanced with him.
While he was yet a child, his parents
removed from Marbach, and went to reside in
another town; but their dearest friends
remained behind at Marbach, and therefore
sometimes the mother and her son would start
on a fine day to pay a visit to the little
town. The boy was at this time about six
years old, and already knew a great many
stories out of the Bible, and several
religious psalms. While seated in the
evening on his little cane-chair, he had
often heard his father read from Gellert’s
fables, and sometimes from Klopstock’s grand
poem, “The Messiah.” He and his sister, two
years older than himself, had often wept
scalding tears over the story of Him who
suffered death on the cross for us all.
On his first visit to Marbach, the town
appeared to have changed but very little,
and it was not far enough away to be
forgotten. The house, with its pointed
gable, narrow windows, overhanging walls and
stories, projecting one beyond another,
looked just the same as in former times. But
in the churchyard there were several new
graves; and there also, in the grass, close
by the wall, stood the old church bell! It
had been taken down from its high position,
in consequence of a crack in the metal which
prevented it from ever chiming again, and a
new bell now occupied its place. The mother
and son were walking in the churchyard when
they discovered the old bell, and they stood
still to look at it. Then the mother
reminded her little boy of what a useful
bell this had been for many hundred years.
It had chimed for weddings and for
christenings; it had tolled for funerals,
and to give the alarm in case of fire. With
every event in the life of man the bell had
made its voice heard. His mother also told
him how the chiming of that old bell had
once filled her heart with joy and
confidence, and that in the midst of the
sweet tones her child had been given to her.
And the boy gazed on the large, old bell
with the deepest interest. He bowed his head
over it and kissed it, old, thrown away, and
cracked as it was, and standing there amidst
the grass and nettles. The boy never forgot
what his mother told him, and the tones of
the old bell reverberated in his heart till
he reached manhood. In such sweet
remembrance was the old bell cherished by
the boy, who grew up in poverty to be tall
and slender, with a freckled complexion and
hair almost red; but his eyes were clear and
blue as the deep sea, and what was his
career to be? His career was to be good, and
his future life enviable. We find him taking
high honors at the military school in the
division commanded by the member of a family
high in position, and this was an honor,
that is to say, good luck. He wore gaiters,
stiff collars, and powdered hair, and by
this he was recognized; and, indeed, he
might be known by the word of
command—“March! halt! front!”
The old church bell had long been quite
forgotten, and no one imagined it would ever
again be sent to the melting furnace to make
it as it was before. No one could possibly
have foretold this. Equally impossible would
it have been to believe that the tones of
the old bell still echoed in the heart of
the boy from Marbach; or that one day they
would ring out loud enough and strong enough
to be heard all over the world. They had
already been heard in the narrow space
behind the school-wall, even above the
deafening sounds of “March! halt! front!”
They had chimed so loudly in the heart of
the youngster, that he had sung them to his
companions, and their tones resounded to the
very borders of the country. He was not a
free scholar in the military school, neither
was he provided with clothes or food. But he
had his number, and his own peg; for
everything here was ordered like clockwork,
which we all know is of the greatest
utility—people get on so much better
together when their position and duties are
understood. It is by pressure that a jewel
is stamped. The pressure of regularity and
discipline here stamped the jewel, which in
the future the world so well knew.
In the chief town of the province a great
festival was being celebrated. The light
streamed forth from thousands of lamps, and
the rockets shot upwards towards the sky,
filling the air with showers of colored
fiery sparks. A record of this bright
display will live in the memory of man, for
through it the pupil in the military school
was in tears and sorrow. He had dared to
attempt to reach foreign territories
unnoticed, and must therefore give up
fatherland, mother, his dearest friends,
all, or sink down into the stream of common
life. The old church bell had still some
comfort; it stood in the shelter of the
church wall in Marbach, once so elevated,
now quite forgotten. The wind roared around
it, and could have readily related the story
of its origin and of its sweet chimes, and
the wind could also tell of him to whom he
had brought fresh air when, in the woods of
a neighboring country, he had sunk down
exhausted with fatigue, with no other
worldly possessions than hope for the
future, and a written leaf from “Fiesco.”
The wind could have told that his only
protector was an artist, who, by reading
each leaf to him, made it plain; and that
they amused themselves by playing at
nine-pins together. The wind could also
describe the pale fugitive, who, for weeks
and months, lay in a wretched little
road-side inn, where the landlord got drunk
and raved, and where the merry-makers had it
all their own way. And he, the pale
fugitive, sang of the ideal.
For many heavy days and dark nights the
heart must suffer to enable it to endure
trial and temptation; yet, amidst it all,
would the minstrel sing. Dark days and cold
nights also passed over the old bell, and it
noticed them not; but the bell in the man’s
heart felt it to be a gloomy time. What
would become of this young man, and what
would become of the old bell?
The old bell was, after a time, carried away
to a greater distance than any one, even the
warder in the bell tower, ever imagined; and
the bell in the breast of the young man was
heard in countries where his feet had never
wandered. The tones went forth over the wide
ocean to every part of the round world.
We will now follow the career of the old
bell. It was, as we have said, carried far
away from Marbach and sold as old copper;
then sent to Bavaria to be melted down in a
furnace. And then what happened?
In the royal city of Bavaria, many years
after the bell had been removed from the
tower and melted down, some metal was
required for a monument in honor of one of
the most celebrated characters which a
German people or a German land could
produce. And now we see how wonderfully
things are ordered. Strange things sometimes
happen in this world.
In Denmark, in one of those green islands
where the foliage of the beech-woods rustles
in the wind, and where many Huns’ graves may
be seen, was another poor boy born. He wore
wooden shoes, and when his father worked in
a ship-yard, the boy, wrapped up in an old
worn-out shawl, carried his dinner to him
every day. This poor child was now the pride
of his country; for the sculptured marble,
the work of his hands, had astonished the
world.1 To him was offered the honor of
forming from the clay, a model of the figure
of him whose name, “John Christopher
Frederick,” had been written by his father
in the Bible. The bust was cast in bronze,
and part of the metal used for this purpose
was the old church bell, whose tones had
died away from the memory of those at home
and elsewhere. The metal, glowing with heat,
flowed into the mould, and formed the head
and bust of the statue which was unveiled in
the square in front of the old castle. The
statue represented in living, breathing
reality, the form of him who was born in
poverty, the boy from Marbach, the pupil of
the military school, the fugitive who
struggled against poverty and oppression,
from the outer world; Germany’s great and
immortal poet, who sung of Switzerland’s
deliverer, William Tell, and of the
heaven-inspired Maid of Orleans.
It was a beautiful sunny day; flags were
waving from tower and roof in royal
Stuttgart, and the church bells were ringing
a joyous peal. One bell was silent; but it
was illuminated by the bright sunshine which
streamed from the head and bust of the
renowned figure, of which it formed a part.
On this day, just one hundred years had
passed since the day on which the chiming of
the old church bell at Marbach had filled
the mother’s heart with trust and joy—the
day on which her child was born in poverty,
and in a humble home; the same who, in
after-years, became rich, became the noble
woman-hearted poet, a blessing to the
world—the glorious, the sublime, the
immortal bard, John Christoper Frederick
Schiller!
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