Читать книгу The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01 - Коллектив авторов, Ю. Д. Земенков, Koostaja: Ajakiri New Scientist - Страница 22

POEMS
THE WALKING BELL23 (1813)

Оглавление

  A child refused to go betimes

  To church like other people;

  He roamed abroad, when rang the chimes

  On Sundays from the steeple.


  His mother said: "Loud rings the bell,

  Its voice ne'er think of scorning;

  Unless thou wilt behave thee well,

  'Twill fetch thee without warning."


  The child then thought: "High over head

  The bell is safe suspended—"

  So to the fields he straightway sped

  As if 'twas school-time ended.


  The bell now ceased as bell to ring,

  Roused by the mother's twaddle;

  But soon ensued a dreadful thing!—

  The bell begins to waddle.


  It waddles fast, though strange it seem;

  The child, with trembling wonder,

  Runs off, and flies, as in a dream;

  The bell would draw him under.


  He finds the proper time at last,

  And straightway nimbly rushes

  To church, to chapel, hastening fast

  Through pastures, plains, and bushes.


  Each Sunday and each feast as well,

  His late disaster heeds he;

  The moment that he hears the bell,

  No other summons needs he.


The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01

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