For oft the boy had eyed the spoil His father homeward bore,And prayed to join the hunting crew When they should roam for more.
And often on some merry night, When wondrous feats were told,He longed his father"s bow to take,
And be a hunter bold.
Tell saw the crowd, the lifted cap,
The tyrant"s angry frown;
And heralds shouted in his ear, "Bow down, ye slaves, bow down!"Stern Gessler marked the peasant"s mien,
And watched to see him fall;
But never palm-tree straighter stood Than Tell before them all!
"My knee shall bend," he calmly said, "To God, and God alone;My life is in the Austrian"s hand,
My conscience is my own."
"Seize him, ye guards!" the ruler cried, While passion choked his breath;"He mocks my power, he braves my lord,
He dies the traitor"s death.
"Yet wait. The Swiss are marksmen true- So all the world doth say;That fair-haired stripling hither bring-
We"ll try their skill to-day."
Hard by, a spreading lime-tree stood; To this the youth was bound;They placed an apple on his head- He looked in wonder round.
"The fault is mine, if fault there be," Cried Tell, in accents wild;"On manhood let your vengeance fall, But spare, oh, spare my child !""I will not harm the pretty boy," Said Gessler tauntingly;"If blood of his shall stain the ground, Yours will the murder be.
"Draw tight your bow, my cunning man, Your straightest arrow take;For know, yon apple is your mark, Your liberty the stake."A mingled noise of wrath and grief Was heard among the crowd;The men, they muttered curses deep, The women wept aloud.
Full fifty paces from his child,
His strong bow in his hand,
With lips compressed, and flashing eye, Tell firmly took his stand.
Sure, full enough of pain and woe This crowded Earth has been; But never, since the curse began,A sadder sight was seen.
Then spake aloud the gallant boy Impatient of delay,"Shoot straight and quick, thine aim is sure;Thou canst not miss to-day."
"Heaven bless thee now!" the parent said, "Thy courage shames my fear:
"Man tramples on his brother man,
But God is ever near.""
The bow was bent, the arrow went As by an angel guided;In pieces two, beneath the tree, The apple fell divided.
Drawn by W.S. Wemyss
" "Twas bravely done," the ruler said,
"My plighted word I keep;
"Twas bravely done by sire and son.
Go home, and feed your sheep."
"No thanks I give thee for thy boon," The peasant coldly said;"To God alone my praise is due, And duly shall be paid.
"Yet know, proud man, thy fate was near, Had I but missed my aim;Not unavenged my child had died- Thy parting hour the same.
"For see! a second shaft was here, If harm my boy befell;Now go and bless the heavenly powers
My first has sped so well."
God helped the right, God spared the sin; He brings the proud to shame;He guards the weak against the strong- Praise to His holy name!
- Rev. J. H. Gurney
Author.-Reverend J. H. Gurney. Of the author little is known. The Gurneys of Norwich are a well-known English family. One of them was a brother of Mrs. Fry, the prison reformer.
General Notes.-It is now believed that the story of Tell and theapple has no solid foundation in fact; that it is merely a legend, which has been told in various forms in different countries. It serves to show, however, the spirit of the Swiss people. What is quite true is that, after the death of Emperor Rudolph of Hapsburg in 1291, the inhabitants of some districts in Switzerland joined together to defend their common interests against the despotic power exercised by the imperial bailiffs or middlemen. To this period belong the Tell legends. This defensive alliance was the first beginning of the present Swiss Confederation. What, according to the poem, was Tell"s occupation? Who was Gessler, and what was his character as shown in the poem?
Notes on the Places Mentioned.-The River Reuss rises in the south ofSwitzerland and flows north through Lake Lucerne into the River Aar. Uri is one of the twenty-two cantons or states of Switzerland; it is south of the eastern arm of Lake Lucerne. Altorf, the chief town in Uri, is near the entrance of the Reuss into the lake. Find these places in your atlas.
Lesson 28
kING kAID OF INDIA
The great King Kaid of India was growing weary. For years he had been a mighty warrior, but now all his enemies were conquered; there were no rebels in his realm, and the neighbouring countries paid their tribute regularly.
"I cannot go to war without cause," said Kaid, " for that would be displeasing to the gods, and I should go down to posterity as a wicked oppressor. Yet there is nothing else that interests me. I would give anything to the man who would invent some means of interesting me and so make the time pass quickly."There were many courtiers present. And one man, an aged sage, paid a good deal of attention to what the King had said. He went home and retired to a room, taking with him pen and parchment.
For days the old man remained in this apartment by himself, coming out only to eat his meals. At last, after a fortnight, he sent for Talachand, a skilful carver of ivory, and commanded him to make thirty-two little figures af te r p atte rns w hich he de scribe d care fu lly to the carver. There were to be two kings and two queens,four warriors on horseback, two castles modelled after a famous stronghold near Delhi, and other figures of different sizes and shapes. Half of these were to be white and the other half red.
Talachand worked hard at the figures, and in another fortnight brought them to the wise man, who was very pleased with them.
Meanwhile, the sage had ordered a curious board from a woodworker in the bazaar. It was square, and contained sixty-four smaller squares, alternately red and white. Such a curious board had not been seen before, and many people were puzzled to think what its use could be.
At last, when the board was finished, and the figures were all ready, the wise man carried them to the King"s palace. As soon as his presence was announced, the King summoned him to his chamber.