Fuchsschwank German Fuchsschwanz German Noli me tangere Latin |
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In describing this unlikely �stop�, whose name comes from the German �fuchs� (fox), �schwanz� (tail), and �schwank� (joke), I could not possibly improve upon Wedgwood, whose entry reads as follows:
One of the strange accessories sometimes found in old German organs. A stop-knob bearing the inscription �Noli me tangere� (�Do not touch�) was attached to the console. As a reward for their curiosity, persons who, regardless of this injunction, touched the knob, thereby set free the catch of a spring, causing a huge foxtail to fly out into their faces. Sometimes the foxtail was simply attached to the stop knob. Having once drawn the tail out of the jamb, it was a matter of some difficulty to replace it. Meanwhile, the recalcitrant culprit was subject to the chaff of his comrades. There is a foxtail near the dwarf �Perkeo�, guarding the great Tun at Heidelberg Castle. St. Andrea, Erfurt; St. Gertrud, Hamburg.
Regarding Fuchsschwanz, Adlung writes: �Of course the name is not written on [the stopknob].�
See Vox Inaudita.Noli me tangere; Domes St.Maria (cathedral), Riga, Latvia; Walcker 1883 (restored 1983). This is actually a Pedal to Great (not Great to Pedal!) coupler.
Original site compiled by Edward L. Stauff. For educational use only. Fuchsschwanz.html - Last updated 16 April 2003. |
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