Hearken to our neighbor with the iron tongue. While I sit musing over my sheet
of foolscap, he emphatically tells the hour, in tones loud enough for all the
town to hear, though doubtless intended only as a gentle hint to myself, that I
may begin his biography before the evening shall be further wasted.
Unquestionably, a personage in such an elevated position, and making so great a
noise in the world, has a fair claim to the services of a biographer. He is the
representative and most illustrious member of that innumerable class, whose
characteristic feature is the tongue, and whose sole business, to clamor for
the public good. If any of his noisy brethren, in our tongue-governed
democracy, be envious of the superiority which I have assigned him, they have
my free consent to hang themselves as high as he. And, for his history, let not
the reader apprehend an empty repetition of ding-dong-bell. He has been the
passive hero of wonderful vicissitudes, with which I have chanced to become
acquainted, possibly from his own mouth; while the careless multitude supposed
him to be talking merely of the time of day, or calling them to dinner or to
church, or bidding drowsy people go bedward, or the dead to their graves. Many
a revolution has it been his fate to go through, and invariably with a
prodigious uproar. And whether or no he have told me his reminiscences, this at
least is true, that the more I study his deep-toned language, the more sense,
and sentiment, and soul, do I discover in it.
This bell—for we may as well drop our quaint personification—is of
antique French manufacture, and the symbol of the cross betokens that it was
meant to be suspended in the belfry of a Romish place of worship. The old
people hereabout have a tradition, that a considerable part of the metal was
supplied by a brass cannon, captured in one of the victories of Louis the
Fourteenth over the Spaniards, and that a Bourbon princess threw her golden
crucifix into the molten mass. It is said, likewise, that a bishop baptized and
blessed the bell, and prayed that a heavenly influence might mingle with its
tones. When all due ceremonies had been performed, the Grand Monarque bestowed
the gift—than which none could resound his beneficence more
loudly—on the Jesuits, who were then converting the American Indians to
the spiritual dominion of the Pope. So the bell,—our self-same bell,
whose familiar voice we may hear at all hours, in the streets,—this very
bell sent forth its first-born accents from the tower of a log-built chapel,
westward of Lake Champlain, and near the mighty stream of the St. Lawrence. It
was called Our Lady’s Chapel of the Forest. The peal went forth as if to
redeem and consecrate the heathen wilderness. The wolf growled at the sound, as
he prowled stealthily through the underbrush; the grim bear turned his back,
and stalked sullenly away; the startled doe leaped up, and led her fawn into a
deeper solitude. The red men wondered what awful voice was speaking amid the
wind that roared through the tree-tops; and, following reverentially its
summons, the dark-robed fathers blessed them, as they drew near the
cross-crowned chapel. In a little time, there was a crucifix on every dusky
bosom. The Indians knelt beneath the lowly roof, worshipping in the same forms
that were observed under the vast dome of St. Peter’s, when the Pope
performed high mass in the presence of kneeling princes. All the religious
festivals, that awoke the chiming bells of lofty cathedrals, called forth a
peal from Our Lady’s Chapel of the Forest. Loudly rang the bell of the
wilderness while the streets of Paris echoed with rejoicings for the birthday
of the Bourbon, or whenever France had triumphed on some European battle-field.
And the solemn woods were saddened with a melancholy knell, as often as the
thick-strewn leaves were swept away from the virgin soil, for the burial of an
Indian chief.
Meantime, the bells of a hostile people and a hostile faith were ringing on
Sabbaths and lecture-days, at Boston and other Puritan towns. Their echoes died
away hundreds of miles southeastward of Our Lady’s Chapel. But scouts had
threaded the pathless desert that lay between, and, from behind the huge
tree-trunks, perceived the Indians assembling at the summons of the bell. Some
bore flaxen-haired scalps at their girdles, as if to lay those bloody trophies
on Our Lady’s altar. It was reported, and believed, all through New
England, that the Pope of Rome, and the King of France, had established this
little chapel in the forest, for the purpose of stirring up the red men to a
crusade against the English settlers. The latter took energetic measures to
secure their religion and their lives. On the eve of an especial fast of the
Romish Church, while the bell tolled dismally, and the priests were chanting a
doleful stave, a band of New England rangers rushed from the surrounding woods.
Fierce shouts, and the report of musketry, pealed suddenly within the chapel.
The ministering priests threw themselves before the altar, and were slain even
on its steps. If, as antique traditions tell us, no grass will grow where the
blood of martyrs has been shed, there should be a barren spot, to this very
day, on the site of that desecrated altar.
While the blood was still plashing from step to step, the leader of the rangers
seized a torch, and applied it to the drapery of the shrine. The flame and
smoke arose, as from a burnt-sacrifice, at once illuminating and obscuring the
whole interior of the chapel,—now hiding the dead priests in a sable
shroud, now revealing them and their slayers in one terrific glare. Some
already wished that the altar-smoke could cover the deed from the sight of
Heaven. But one of the rangers—a man of sanctified aspect, though his
hands were bloody—approached the captain.
“Sir,” said he, “our village meeting-house lacks a bell, and
hitherto we have been fain to summon the good people to worship by beat of
drum. Give me, I pray you, the bell of this popish chapel, for the sake of the
godly Mr. Rogers, who doubtless hath remembered us in the prayers of the
congregation, ever since we began our march. Who can tell what share of this
night’s good success we owe to that holy man’s wrestling with the
Lord?”
“Nay, then,” answered the captain, “if good Mr. Rogers hath
holpen our enterprise, it is right that he should share the spoil. Take the
bell and welcome, Deacon Lawson, if you will be at the trouble of carrying it
home. Hitherto it hath spoken nothing but papistry, and that too in the French
or Indian gibberish; but I warrant me, if Mr. Rogers consecrate it anew, it
will talk like a good English and Protestant bell.”
So Deacon Lawson and half a score of his townsmen took down the bell, suspended
it on a pole, and bore it away on their sturdy shoulders, meaning to carry it
to the shore of Lake Champlain, and thence homeward by water. Far through the
woods gleamed the flames of Our Lady’s Chapel, flinging fantastic shadows
from the clustered foliage, and glancing on brooks that had never caught the
sunlight. As the rangers traversed the midnight forest, staggering under their
heavy burden, the tongue of the bell gave many a tremendous
stroke,—clang, clang, clang!—a most doleful sound, as if it were
tolling for the slaughter of the priests and the ruin of the chapel. Little
dreamed Deacon Lawson and his townsmen that it was their own funeral knell. A
war-party of Indians had heard the report, of musketry, and seen the blaze of
the chapel, and now were on the track of the rangers, summoned to vengeance by
the bell’s dismal murmurs. In the midst of a deep swamp, they made a
sudden onset on the retreating foe. Good Deacon Lawson battled stoutly, but had
his skull cloven by a tomahawk, and sank into the depths of the morass, with
the ponderous bell above him. And, for many a year thereafter, our hero’s
voice was heard no more on earth, neither at the hour of worship, nor at
festivals nor funerals.
And is he still buried in that unknown grave? Scarcely so, dear reader. Hark!
How plainly we hear him at this moment, the spokesman of Time, proclaiming that
it is nine o’clock at night! We may therefore safely conclude that some
happy chance has restored him to upper air.
But there lay the bell, for many silent years; and the wonder is, that he did
not lie silent there a century, or perhaps a dozen centuries, till the world
should have forgotten not only his voice, but the voices of the whole
brotherhood of bells. How would the first accent of his iron tongue have
startled his resurrectionists! But he was not fated to be a subject of
discussion among the antiquaries of far posterity. Near the close of the Old
French War, a party of New England axe-men, who preceded the march of Colonel
Bradstreet toward Lake Ontario, were building a bridge of logs through a swamp.
Plunging down a stake, one of these pioneers felt it graze against some hard,
smooth substance. He called his comrades, and, by their united efforts, the top
of the bell was raised to the surface, a rope made fast to it, and thence
passed over the horizontal limb of a tree. Heave ho! up they hoisted their
prize, dripping with moisture, and festooned with verdant water-moss. As the
base of the bell emerged from the swamp, the pioneers perceived that a skeleton
was clinging with its bony fingers to the clapper, but immediately relaxing its
nerveless grasp, sank back into the stagnant water. The bell then gave forth a
sullen clang. No wonder that he was in haste to speak, after holding his tongue
for such a length of time! The pioneers shoved the bell to and fro, thus
ringing a loud and heavy peal, which echoed widely through the forest, and
reached the ears of Colonel Bradstreet, and his three thousand men. The
soldiers paused on their march; a feeling of religion, mingled with
borne-tenderness, overpowered their rude hearts; each seemed to hear the
clangor of the old church-bell, which had been familiar to hint from infancy,
and had tolled at the funerals of all his forefathers. By what magic had that
holy sound strayed over the wide-murmuring ocean, and become audible amid the
clash of arms, the loud crashing of the artillery over the rough
wilderness-path, and the melancholy roar of the wind among the boughs?
The New-Englanders hid their prize in a shadowy nook, betwixt a large gray
stone and the earthy roots of an overthrown tree; and when the campaign was
ended, they conveyed our friend to Boston, and put him up at auction on the
sidewalk of King Street. He was suspended, for the nonce, by a block and
tackle, and being swung backward and forward, gave such loud and clear
testimony to his own merits, that the auctioneer had no need to say a word. The
highest bidder was a rich old representative from our town, who piously
bestowed the bell on the meeting-house where he had been a worshipper for half
a century. The good man had his reward. By a strange coincidence, the very
first duty of the sexton, after the bell had been hoisted into the belfry, was
to toll the funeral knell of the donor. Soon, however, those doleful echoes
were drowned by a triumphant peal for the surrender of Quebec.
Ever since that period, our hero has occupied the same elevated station, and
has put in his word on all matters of public importance, civil, military, or
religious. On the day when Independence was first proclaimed in the street
beneath, he uttered a peal which many deemed ominous and fearful, rather than
triumphant. But he has told the same story these sixty years, and none mistake
his meaning now. When Washington, in the fulness of his glory, rode through our
flower-strewn streets, this was the tongue that bade the Father of his Country
welcome! Again the same voice was heard, when La Fayette came to gather in his
half-century’s harvest of gratitude. Meantime, vast changes have been
going on below. His voice, which once floated over a little provincial seaport,
is now reverberated between brick edifices, and strikes the ear amid the buzz
and tumult of a city. On the Sabbaths of olden time, the summons of the bell
was obeyed by a picturesque and varied throng; stately gentlemen in purple
velvet coats, embroidered waistcoats, white wigs, and gold-laced hats, stepping
with grave courtesy beside ladies in flowered satin gowns, and hoop-petticoats
of majestic circumference; while behind followed a liveried slave or bondsman,
bearing the psalm-book, and a stove for his mistress’s feet. The
commonalty, clad in homely garb, gave precedence to their betters at the door
of the meetinghouse, as if admitting that there were distinctions between them,
even in the sight of God. Yet, as their coffins were borne one after another
through the street, the bell has tolled a requiem for all alike. What mattered
it, whether or no there were a silver scutcheon on the coffin-lid? “Open
thy bosom, Mother Earth!” Thus spake the bell. “Another of thy
children is coming to his long rest. Take him to thy bosom, and let him slumber
in peace.” Thus spake the bell, and Mother Earth received her child. With
the self-same tones will the present generation be ushered to the embraces of
their mother; and Mother Earth will still receive her children. Is not thy
tongue a-weary, mournful talker of two centuries? O funeral bell! wilt thou
never be shattered with thine own melancholy strokes? Yea, and a trumpet-call
shall arouse the sleepers, whom thy heavy clang could awake no more!
Again—again thy voice, reminding me that I am wasting the “midnight
oil.” In my lonely fantasy, I can scarce believe that other mortals have
caught the sound, or that it vibrates elsewhere than in my secret soul. But to
many hast thou spoken. Anxious men have heard thee on their sleepless pillows,
and bethought themselves anew of to-morrow’s care. In a brief interval of
wakefulness, the sons of toil have heard thee, and say, “Is so much of
our quiet slumber spent?—is the morning so near at hand?” Crime has
heard thee, and mutters, “Now is the very hour!” Despair answers
thee, “Thus much of this weary life is gone!” The young mother, on
her bed of pain and ecstasy, has counted thy echoing strokes, and dates from
them her first-born’s share of life and immortality. The bridegroom and
the bride have listened, and feel that their night of rapture flits like a
dream away. Thine accents have fallen faintly on the ear of the dying man, and
warned him that, ere thou speakest again, his spirit shall have passed whither
no voice of time can ever reach. Alas for the departing traveller, if thy
voice—the voice of fleeting time—have taught him no lessons for
Eternity!
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