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THE OLD CHAPEL-BELL

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A BALLAD


ITHIN a churchyard's sacred ground,

Whose fading tablets tell

Where they who built the village church

In solemn silence dwell,

Half hidden in the earth, there lies

An ancient Chapel-Bell.

Broken, decayed, and covered o'er

With mouldering leaves and rust;

Its very name and date concealed

Beneath a cankering crust;

Forgotten,—like its early friends,

Who sleep in neighboring dust.

Yet it was once a trusty Bell,

Of most sonorous lung,

And many a joyous wedding-peal

And many a knell had rung,

Ere Time had cracked its brazen sides,

And broke its iron tongue.

And many a youthful heart had danced,

In merry Christmas-time,

To hear its pleasant roundelay,

Sung out in ringing rhyme;

And many a worldly thought been checked

To list its sabbath chime.

A youth—a bright and happy boy—

One sultry summer's day,

Aweary of his bat and ball,

Chanced hitherward to stray,

To read a little book he had,

And rest him from his play.

"A soft and shady spot is this!"

The rosy youngster cried,

And sat him down beneath a tree,

That ancient Bell beside;

(But, hidden in the tangled grass,

The Bell he ne'er espied.)

Anon, a mist fell on his book,

The letters seemed to stir,

And though, full oft, his flagging sight

The boy essayed to spur,

The mazy page was quickly lost

Beneath a cloudy blur.

And while he marveled much at this,

And wondered how it came,

He felt a languor creeping o'er

His young and weary frame,

And heard a voice, a gentle voice,

That plainly spoke his name.

That gentle voice that named his name

Entranced him like a spell,

Upon his ear so very near

And suddenly it fell,

Yet soft and musical, as 'twere

The whisper of a bell.

"Since last I spoke," the voice began,

"Seems many a dreary year!

(Albeit, 'tis only since thy birth

I've lain neglected here!)

Pray list, while I rehearse a tale

Behooves thee much to hear.

"Once, from yon ivied tower, I watched

The villagers around,

And gave to all their joys and griefs

A sympathetic sound,—

But most are sleeping, now, within

This consecrated ground.

"I used to ring my merriest peal

To hail the blushing bride;

I sadly tolled for men cut down

In strength and manly pride;

And solemnly,—not mournfully,—

When little children died.

"But, chief, my duty was to bid

The villagers repair,

On each returning sabbath morn

Unto the House of Prayer,

And in his own appointed place

The Saviour's mercy share.

"Ah! well I mind me of a child,

A gleesome, happy maid,

Who came, with constant step, to church,

In comely garb arrayed,

And knelt her down full solemnly,

And penitently prayed.

"And oft, when church was done, I marked

That little maiden near

This pleasant spot, with book in hand,

As you are sitting here,—

She read the Story of the Cross,

And wept with grief sincere.

"Years rolled away,—and I beheld

The child to woman grown;

Her cheek was fairer, and her eye

With brighter lustre shone;

But childhood's truth and innocence

Were still the maiden's own.

"I never rang a merrier peal

Than when, a joyous bride,

She stood beneath the sacred porch,

A noble youth beside,

And plighted him her maiden troth,

In maiden love and pride.

"I never tolled a deeper knell,

Than when, in after years,

They laid her in the churchyard here,

Where this low mound appears,—

(The very grave, my boy, that you

Are watering now with tears!)

"It is thy mother! gentle boy, That claims this tale of mine,— Thou art a flower whose fatal birth Destroyed the parent vine! A precious flower art thou, my child,— Two lives were given for thine!

"One was thy sainted mother's, when

She gave thee mortal birth;

And one thy Saviour's, when in death

He shook the solid earth;

Go! boy, and live as may befit

Thy life's exceeding worth!"

The boy awoke, as from a dream,

And, thoughtful, looked around,

But nothing saw, save at his feet

His mother's lowly mound,

And by its side that ancient Bell,

Half hidden in the ground!

Selections from the Poetry of John Godfrey Saxe

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