People said “The Evening Bell
is sounding, the sun is setting.” For a
strange wondrous tone was heard in the narrow streets
of a large town. It was like the sound of a church-bell:
but it was only heard for a moment, for the rolling
of the carriages and the voices of the multitude made
too great a noise.
Those persons who were walking outside
the town, where the houses were farther apart, with
gardens or little fields between them, could see the
evening sky still better, and heard the sound of the
bell much more distinctly. It was as if the tones
came from a church in the still forest; people looked
thitherward, and felt their minds attuned most solemnly.
A long time passed, and people said
to each other—“I wonder if there is
a church out in the wood? The bell has a tone
that is wondrous sweet; let us stroll thither, and
examine the matter nearer.” And the rich
people drove out, and the poor walked, but the way
seemed strangely long to them; and when they came
to a clump of willows which grew on the skirts of the
forest, they sat down, and looked up at the long branches,
and fancied they were now in the depth of the green
wood. The confectioner of the town came out, and
set up his booth there; and soon after came another
confectioner, who hung a bell over his stand, as a
sign or ornament, but it had no clapper, and it was
tarred over to preserve it from the rain. When
all the people returned home, they said it had been
very romantic, and that it was quite a different sort
of thing to a pic-nic or tea-party. There were
three persons who asserted they had penetrated to
the end of the forest, and that they had always heard
the wonderful sounds of the bell, but it had seemed
to them as if it had come from the town. One
wrote a whole poem about it, and said the bell sounded
like the voice of a mother to a good dear child, and
that no melody was sweeter than the tones of the bell.
The king of the country was also observant of it, and
vowed that he who could discover whence the sounds
proceeded, should have the title of “Universal
Bell-ringer,” even if it were not really a bell.
Many persons now went to the wood,
for the sake of getting the place, but one only returned
with a sort of explanation; for nobody went far enough,
that one not further than the others. However,
he said that the sound proceeded from a very large
owl, in a hollow tree; a sort of learned owl, that
continually knocked its head against the branches.
But whether the sound came from his head or from the
hollow tree, that no one could say with certainty.
So now he got the place of “Universal Bell-ringer,”
and wrote yearly a short treatise “On the Owl”;
but everybody was just as wise as before.
It was the day of confirmation.
The clergyman had spoken so touchingly, the children
who were confirmed had been greatly moved; it was an
eventful day for them; from children they become all
at once grown-up-persons; it was as if their infant
souls were now to fly all at once into persons with
more understanding. The sun was shining gloriously;
the children that had been confirmed went out of the
town; and from the wood was borne towards them the
sounds of the unknown bell with wonderful distinctness.
They all immediately felt a wish to go thither; all
except three. One of them had to go home to try
on a ball-dress; for it was just the dress and the
ball which had caused her to be confirmed this time,
for otherwise she would not have come; the other was
a poor boy, who had borrowed his coat and boots to
be confirmed in from the innkeeper’s son, and
he was to give them back by a certain hour; the third
said that he never went to a strange place if his parents
were not with him—that he had always been
a good boy hitherto, and would still be so now that
he was confirmed, and that one ought not to laugh at
him for it: the others, however, did make fun
of him, after all.
There were three, therefore, that
did not go; the others hastened on. The sun shone,
the birds sang, and the children sang too, and each
held the other by the hand; for as yet they had none
of them any high office, and were all of equal rank
in the eye of God.
But two of the youngest soon grew
tired, and both returned to town; two little girls
sat down, and twined garlands, so they did not go either;
and when the others reached the willow-tree, where
the confectioner was, they said, “Now we are
there! In reality the bell does not exist; it
is only a fancy that people have taken into their
heads!”
At the same moment the bell sounded
deep in the wood, so clear and solemnly that five
or six determined to penetrate somewhat further.
It was so thick, and the foliage so dense, that it
was quite fatiguing to proceed. Woodroof and
anemonies grew almost too high; blooming convolvuluses
and blackberry-bushes hung in long garlands from tree
to tree, where the nightingale sang and the sunbeams
were playing: it was very beautiful, but it was
no place for girls to go; their clothes would get
so torn. Large blocks of stone lay there, overgrown
with moss of every color; the fresh spring bubbled
forth, and made a strange gurgling sound.
“That surely cannot be the bell,”
said one of the children, lying down and listening.
“This must be looked to.” So he remained,
and let the others go on without him.
They afterwards came to a little house,
made of branches and the bark of trees; a large wild
apple-tree bent over it, as if it would shower down
all its blessings on the roof, where roses were blooming.
The long stems twined round the gable, on which there
hung a small bell.
Was it that which people had heard?
Yes, everybody was unanimous on the subject, except
one, who said that the bell was too small and too fine
to be heard at so great a distance, and besides it
was very different tones to those that could move
a human heart in such a manner. It was a king’s
son who spoke; whereon the others said, “Such
people always want to be wiser than everybody else.”
They now let him go on alone; and
as he went, his breast was filled more and more with
the forest solitude; but he still heard the little
bell with which the others were so satisfied, and
now and then, when the wind blew, he could also hear
the people singing who were sitting at tea where the
confectioner had his tent; but the deep sound of the
bell rose louder; it was almost as if an organ were
accompanying it, and the tones came from the left hand,
the side where the heart is placed. A rustling
was heard in the bushes, and a little boy stood before
the King’s Son, a boy in wooden shoes, and with
so short a jacket that one could see what long wrists
he had. Both knew each other: the boy was
that one among the children who could not come because
he had to go home and return his jacket and boots
to the innkeeper’s son. This he had done,
and was now going on in wooden shoes and in his humble
dress, for the bell sounded with so deep a tone, and
with such strange power, that proceed he must.
“Why, then, we can go together,”
said the King’s Son. But the poor child
that had been confirmed was quite ashamed; he looked
at his wooden shoes, pulled at the short sleeves of
his jacket, and said that he was afraid he could not
walk so fast; besides, he thought that the bell must
be looked for to the right; for that was the place
where all sorts of beautiful things were to be found.
“But there we shall not meet,”
said the King’s Son, nodding at the same time
to the poor boy, who went into the darkest, thickest
part of the wood, where thorns tore his humble dress,
and scratched his face and hands and feet till they
bled. The King’s Son got some scratches
too; but the sun shone on his path, and it is him
that we will follow, for he was an excellent and resolute
youth.
“I must and will find the bell,”
said he, “even if I am obliged to go to the
end of the world.”
The ugly apes sat upon the trees,
and grinned. “Shall we thrash him?”
said they. “Shall we thrash him? He
is the son of a king!”
But on he went, without being disheartened,
deeper and deeper into the wood, where the most wonderful
flowers were growing. There stood white lilies
with blood-red stamina, skyblue tulips, which shone
as they waved in the winds, and apple-trees, the apples
of which looked exactly like large soapbubbles:
so only think how the trees must have sparkled in
the sunshine! Around the nicest green meads,
where the deer were playing in the grass, grew magnificent
oaks and beeches; and if the bark of one of the trees
was cracked, there grass and long creeping plants
grew in the crevices. And there were large calm
lakes there too, in which white swans were swimming,
and beat the air with their wings. The King’s
Son often stood still and listened. He thought
the bell sounded from the depths of these still lakes;
but then he remarked again that the tone proceeded
not from there, but farther off, from out the depths
of the forest.
The sun now set: the atmosphere
glowed like fire. It was still in the woods,
so very still; and he fell on his knees, sung his evening
hymn, and said: “I cannot find what I seek;
the sun is going down, and night is coming—the
dark, dark night. Yet perhaps I may be able once
more to see the round red sun before he entirely disappears.
I will climb up yonder rock.”
And he seized hold of the creeping-plants,
and the roots of trees—climbed up the moist
stones where the water-snakes were writhing and the
toads were croaking—and he gained the summit
before the sun had quite gone down. How magnificent
was the sight from this height! The sea—the
great, the glorious sea, that dashed its long waves
against the coast—was stretched out before
him. And yonder, where sea and sky meet, stood
the sun, like a large shining altar, all melted together
in the most glowing colors. And the wood and the
sea sang a song of rejoicing, and his heart sang with
the rest: all nature was a vast holy church,
in which the trees and the buoyant clouds were the
pillars, flowers and grass the velvet carpeting, and
heaven itself the large cupola. The red colors
above faded away as the sun vanished, but a million
stars were lighted, a million lamps shone; and the
King’s Son spread out his arms towards heaven,
and wood, and sea; when at the same moment, coming
by a path to the right, appeared, in his wooden shoes
and jacket, the poor boy who had been confirmed with
him. He had followed his own path, and had reached
the spot just as soon as the son of the king had done.
They ran towards each other, and stood together hand
in hand in the vast church of nature and of poetry,
while over them sounded the invisible holy bell:
blessed spirits floated around them, and lifted up
their voices in a rejoicing hallelujah!