Page:Von Heidenstam - Sweden's laureate, selected poems of Verner von Heidenstam (1919).djvu/111

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Singers
SINGERS IN THE STEEPLE.
At the belfry window the ringer stood,
A vigorous form of giant size.
His thatch of red hair, unkempt and rude,
Was blown down over his eyes.
  ——Ding! Dong!——
He tramped at the treadle and sang his song:

"Thou mighty thundering church-bell, thou,
With lips and tongue of metal that ring,
Thou callest the people to worship now,
But this my own psalm I prefer to sing.
The weary week-days back to Monday
Are slaves to the rich man, the money-lord.
The only day that steals from his hoard
A paltry copper is Sunday.
His life is a heaven. Ours instead
Is a hell. We are ragged and eat hard bread.
At home our loved ones are sighing,
While starved we row for a surfeited race
Their barge of trade with sweat in our face
And weep at the oars we are plying."
  ——Ding! Dong!——
"May vengeance dire consume them!
When shall I ring in redress of wrong,
And God's own judgment doom them?

"From our starving flesh they cut off a pound
To make the money-lord fat and round.

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