[8] Which means, “In the thirteenth century,” my dear little bell-and-coral reader. You have rightly guessed that the question means, “What is the history of the Reformation in Hungary?”
THE SINGER.
A star into our twilight fell,
’Mong peasant homes
in vales remote;
Men marvelled not till all the dell
Was waked as by a bugle-note.
They wondered at the wild-eyed boy,
And drank his song like draughts
of wine;
And yet, amid their new-born joy,
They bade him tend the herds
and swine.
But he knew neither swine nor herds,—
His shepherd soul was otherwhere;
The flocks he tended were the birds,
And stars that fill the folds
of air.
To sweeter song the wind would melt
That fanned him with its perfumed
wing;
Flowers thronged his path as if they felt
The warm and flashing feet
of Spring.
The brooklet flung its ringlets wide,
And leapt to him, and kept
his pace,—
Sang when he sang, and when he sighed,
Turned up to him its starry
face.
Through many a dawn and noon and night,
The singing boy still kept
his course;
For in his heart that meteor light
Still burned with all its
natal force.
He sang,—nor cherished thought of care,—
As when, upon the garden-vine,
A blue-bird thrills the April air,
Regardless of the herds and
swine.
The children in their May-time plays,
The maidens in their rosy
hours,
And matrons in their autumn days,
All heard and flung him praise
or flowers.
And Age, to chimney-nooks beguiled,
Caught the sweet music’s
tender closes,
And, gazing on the embers, smiled
As on a bed of summer roses.
And many a heart, by hope forsook,
Received his song through
depths of pain,
As the dry channels of a brook
The freshness of a summer
rain.
But when he looked for house or bread,
The stewards of earth’s
oil and wine
Shook sternly the reproving head,
And bade him tend the herds
and swine!
He strayed into the harvest plains,
And ’mid the sultry
windrows sung,
Till glowing girls and swarthy swains
Caught music from his charmed
tongue,—
Caught music that from heart to brain
Went thrilling with delicious
measure,
Till toil, which late had seemed a pain,
Became a sweet Arcadian pleasure.
The farmer, at the day’s decline,
Sat listening till the eve
was late;
Then, offering neither bread nor wine,
Arose, and barred the outer
gate,—
And said, “Would you have where to sleep
On wholesome straw, good brother
mine,
You need but plow, and sow, and reap,
And daily tend the herds and
swine.”
The poet’s locks shook out reply;
He turned him gayly down the
rill;
Yet left a light which shall not die,
A sunshine on the farmer’s
sill.