Page:Cheskian Anthology.pdf/169

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158

6.

And many, many ages pass'd away,

Their gloomy shades o'er our Bohemia flinging,

That church in melancholy ruins lay,

The tower o'erturn'd—thebell had ceas'd its ringing:

Yet when that church and tower in fragments fell,

A heavenly angel, clad in light, appearing,

Convey'd the silver relic to the well—

Žizkians! that bell will toll not in your hearing.

From that same hour the crystal waters play

Above the silver bell—in silence sleeping—

There come the thirsty sheep-flocks, as they stray,

And there the revellers of the chase are keeping

Their court—that silver bell in deep repose

Lies cold and voiceless ages without number;

The ancient woman in the water throws

Her flaxen threads—and wakes it from its slumber.

'Twas the last time its awful accents broke—

"John, John—is for the greyhound gone," it mutter'd,

And never more to mortal can it spoke,

Nor noise, nor word, nor whisper has it utter'd.