THE STORY OF THE
VOLSUNGS AND NIBLUNGS
Volsunga Saga
(with Excerpts from the Poetic Edda)
CHAPTER I. Of Sigi,
the Son of Odin.
Here begins the tale, and tells of a man who
was named Sigi, and called of men the son of Odin; another man
withal is told of in the tale, hight Skadi, a great man and
mighty of his hands; yet was Sigi the mightier and the higher
of kin, according to the speech of men of that time. Now Skadi
had a thrall with whom the story must deal somewhat, Bredi by
name, who was called after that work which he had to do; in
prowess and might of hand he was equal to men who were held
more worthy, yea, and better than some thereof.
Now it is to be told that, on a time, Sigi
fared to the hunting of the deer, and the thrall with him; and
they hunted deer day- long till the evening; and when they
gathered together their prey in the evening, lo, greater and
more by far was that which Bredi had slain than Sigi's prey;
and this thing he much misliked, and he said that great wonder
it was that a very thrall should out-do him in the hunting of
deer: so he fell on him and slew him, and buried the body of
him thereafter in a snow-drift.
Then he went home at evening tide and says that
Bredi had ridden away from him into the wild-wood. "Soon was
he out of my sight," he says, "and naught more I wot of him."
Skadi misdoubted the tale of Sigi, and deemed
that this was a guile of his, and that he would have slain
Bredi. So he sent men to seek for him, and to such an end came
their seeking, that they found him in a certain snow-drift;
then said Skadi, that men should call that snow-drift Bredi's
Drift from henceforth; and thereafter have folk followed, so
that in such wise they call every drift that is right great.
Thus it is well seen that Sigi has slain the
thrall and murdered him; so he is given forth to be a wolf in
holy places, (1) and may no more abide in the land with his
father; therewith Odin bare him fellowship from the land, so
long a way, that right long it was, and made no stay till he
brought him to certain war- ships. So Sigi falls to lying out
a-warring with the strength that his father gave him or ever
they parted; and happy was he in his warring, and ever
prevailed, till he brought it about that he won by his wars
land and lordship at the last; and thereupon he took to him a
noble wife, and became a great and mighty king, and ruled over
the land of the Huns, and was the greatest of warriors. He had
a son by his wife, who was called Refit, who grew up in his
father's house, and soon became great of growth, and shapely.
ENDNOTES:
(1) "Wolf in holy places," a man put out of the pale of
society for crimes, an outlaw.
CHAPTER II. Of the Birth of Volsung, the Son of
Rerir, who was the Son of Sigi.
Now Sigi grew old, and had many to envy him, so
that at last those turned against him whom he trusted most;
yea, even the brothers of his wife; for these fell on him at
his unwariest, when there were few with him to withstand them,
and brought so many against him, that they prevailed against
him, and there fell Sigi and all his folk with him. But Rerir,
his son, was not in this trouble, and he brought together so
mighty a strength of his friends and the great men of the
land, that he got to himself both the lands and kingdom of
Sigi his father; and so now, when he deems that the feet under
him stand firm in his rule, then he calls to mind that which
he had against his mother's brothers, who had slain his
father. So the king gathers together a mighty army, and
therewith falls on his kinsmen, deeming that if he made their
kinship of small account, yet none the less they had first
wrought evil against him. So he wrought his will herein, in
that he departed not from strife before he had slain all his
father's banesmen, though dreadful the deed seemed in every
wise. So now he gets land, lordship, and fee, and is become a
mightier man than his father before him.
Much wealth won in war gat Rerir to himself,
and wedded a wife withal, such as he deemed meet for him, and
long they lived together, but had no child to take the
heritage after them; and ill-content they both were with that,
and prayed the Gods with heart and soul that they might get
them a child. And so it is said that Odin hears their prayer,
and Freyia no less hearkens wherewith they prayed unto her: so
she, never lacking for all good counsel, calls to her her
casket-bearing may, (1) the daughter of Hrimnir the giant, and
sets an apple in her hand, and bids her bring it to the king.
She took the apple, and did on her the gear of a crow, and
went flying till she came whereas the king sat on a mound, and
there she let the apple fall into the lap of the king; but he
took the apple and deemed he knew whereto it would avail; so
he goes home from the mound to his own folk, and came to the
queen, and some deal of that apple she ate.
So, as the tale tells, the queen soon knew that
she big with child, but a long time wore or ever she might
give birth to the child: so it befell that the king must needs
go to the wars, after the custom of kings, that he may keep
his own land in peace: and in this journey it came to pass
that Rerir fell sick and got his death, being minded to go
home to Odin, a thing much desired of many folk in those days.
Now no otherwise it goes with the queen's
sickness than heretofore, nor may she be the lighter of her
child, and six winters wore away with the sickness still heavy
on her; so that at the last she feels that she may not live
long; wherefore now she bade cut the child from out of her;
and it was done even as she bade; a man-child was it, and
great of growth from his birth, as might well be; and they say
that the youngling kissed his mother or ever she died; but to
him is a name given, and he is called Volsung; and he was king
over Hunland in the room of his father. From his early years
he was big and strong, and full of daring in all manly deeds
and trials, and he became the greatest of warriors, and of
good hap in all the battles of his warfaring.
Now when he was fully come to man's estate,
Hrimnir the giant sends to him Ljod his daughter; she of whom
the tale told, that she brought the apple to Rerir, Volsung's
father. So Volsung weds her withal; and long they abode
together with good hap and great love. They had ten sons and
one daughter, and their eldest son was hight Sigmund, and
their daughter Signy; and these two were twins, and in all
wise the foremost and the fairest of the children of Volsung
the king, and mighty, as all his seed was; even as has been
long told from ancient days, and in tales of long ago, with
the greatest fame of all men, how that the Volsungs have been
great men and high-minded and far above the most of men both
in cunning and in prowess and all things high and mighty.
So says the story that king Volsung let build a
noble hall in such a wise, that a big oak-tree stood therein,
and that the limbs of the tree blossomed fair out over the
roof of the hall, while below stood the trunk within it, and
the said trunk did men call Branstock.
ENDNOTES:
(1) May (A.S. "maeg"), a maid.
CHAPTER III. Of the Sword that Sigmund, Volsung's
son, drew from the Branstock.
There was a king called Siggeir, who ruled over
Gothland, a mighty king and of many folk; he went to meet
Volsung, the king, and prayed him for Signy his daughter to
wife; and the king took his talk well, and his sons withal,
but she was loth thereto, yet she bade her father rule in this
as in all other things that concerned her, so the king took
such rede (1) that he gave her to him, and she was betrothed
to King Siggeir; and for the fulfilling of the feast and the
wedding, was King Siggeir to come to the house of King
Volsung. The king got ready the feast according to his best
might, and when all things were ready, came the king's guests
and King Siggeir withal at the day appointed, and many a man
of great account had Siggeir with him.
The tale tells that great fires were made
endlong the hall, and the great tree aforesaid stood midmost
thereof, withal folk say that, whenas men sat by the fires in
the evening, a certain man came into the hall unknown of
aspect to all men; and suchlike array he had, that over him
was a spotted cloak, and he was bare- foot, and had
linen-breeches knit tight even unto the bone, and he had a
sword in his hand as he went up to the Branstock, and a
slouched hat upon his head: huge he was, and seeming-ancient,
and one-eyed. (2) So he drew his sword and smote it into the
tree- trunk so that it sank in up to the hilts; and all held
back from greeting the man. Then he took up the word, and said
--
"Whoso draweth this sword from this stock,
shall have the same as a gift from me, and shall find in good
sooth that never bare he better sword in hand than is this."
Therewith out went the old man from the hall,
and none knew who he was or whither he went.
Now men stand up, and none would fain be the
last to lay hand to the sword, for they deemed that he would
have the best of it who might first touch it; so all the
noblest went thereto first, and then the others, one after
other; but none who came thereto might avail to pull it out,
for in nowise would it come away howsoever they tugged at it;
but now up comes Sigmund, King Volsung's son, and sets hand to
the sword, and pulls it from the stock, even as if it lay
loose before him; so good that weapon seemed to all, that none
thought he had seen such a sword before, and Siggeir would
fain buy it of him at thrice its weight of gold, but Sigmund
said --
"Thou mightest have taken the sword no less
than I from there whereas it stood, if it had been thy lot to
bear it; but now, since it has first of all fallen into my
hand, never shalt thou have it, though thou biddest therefor
all the gold thou hast."
King Siggeir grew wroth at these words, and
deemed Sigmund had answered him scornfully, but whereas was a
wary man and a double- dealing, he made as if he heeded this
matter in nowise, yet that same evening he thought how he
might reward it, as was well seen afterwards.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Rede (A.S. raed), counsel, advice, a tale or prophecy.
(2) The man is Odin, who is always so represented, because he
gave his eye as a pledge for a draught from the fountain of
Mimir, the source of all wisdom.
CHAPTER IV. How King Siggeir wedded Signy, and
bade King Volsung and his son to Gothland.
Now it is to be told that Siggeir goes to bed
by Signy that night, and the next morning the weather was
fair; then says King Siggeir that he will not bide, lest the
wind should wax, or the sea grow impassable; nor is it said
that Volsung or his sons letted him herein, and that the less,
because they saw that he was fain to get him gone from the
feast. But now says Signy to her father --
"I have no will to go away with Seggeir,
neither does my heart smile upon him, and I wot, by my
fore-knowledge, and from the fetch (1) of our kin, that from
this counsel will great evil fall on us if this wedding be not
speedily undone."
"Speak in no such wise, daughter!" said he,
"for great shame will it be to him, yea, and to us also, to
break troth with him, he being sackless; (2) and in naught may
we trust him, and no friendship shall we have of him, if these
matters are broken off; but he will pay us back in as evil
wise as he may; for that alone is seemly, to hold truly to
troth given."
So King Siggeir got ready for home, and before
he went from the feast he bade King Volsung, his
father-in-las, come see him in Gothland, and all his sons with
him whenas three months should be overpast, and to bring such
following with him, as he would have, and as he deemed meet
for his honour; and thereby will Siggeir the king pay back for
the shortcomings of the wedding-feast, in that he would abide
thereat but one night only, a thing not according to the wont
of men. So King Volsung gave word to come on the day named,
and the kinsmen-in-law parted, and Siggeir went home with his
wife.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Fetch; wraith, or familiar spirit.
(2) Sackless (A.S. "sacu", Icel. "sok".) blameless.
CHAPTER V. Of the Slaying of King Volsung.
Now tells the tale of King Volsung and his sons
that they go at the time appointed to Gothland at the bidding
of King Siggeir, and put off from the land in three ships, all
well manned, and have a fair voyage, and made Gothland late of
an evening tide.
But that same night came Signy and called her
father and brothers to a privy talk, and told them what she
deemed King Siggeir was minded to do, and how that he had
drawn together an army no man may meet. "And," says she, "he
is minded to do guilefully by you; wherefore I bid you get ye
gone back again to your own land, and gather together the
mightiest power ye may, and then come back hither and avenge
you; neither go ye now to your undoing, for ye shall surely
fail not to fall by his wiles if ye turn not on him even as I
bid you."
Then spake Volsung the king, "All people and
nations shall tell of the word I spake, yet being unborn,
wherein I vowed a vow that I would flee in fear from neither
fire nor the sword; even so have I done hitherto, and shall I
depart therefrom now I am old? Yea withal never shall the
maidens mock these my sons at the games, and cry out at them
that they fear death; once alone must all men need die, and
from that season shall none escape; so my rede is that we flee
nowhither, but do the work of our hands in as manly wise as we
may; a hundred fights have I fought and whiles I had more, and
whiles I had less, and yet even had I the victory, nor shall
it ever be heard tell of me that I fled away or prayed for
peace."
Then Signy wept right sore, and prayed that she
might not go back to King Siggeir, but King Volsung answered
--
"Thou shalt surely go back to thine husband,
and abide with him, howsoever it fares with us."
So Signy went home, and they abode there that
night but in the morning, as soon as it was day, Volsung bade
his men arise and go aland and make them ready for battle; so
they went aland, all of them all-armed, and had not long to
wait before Siggeir fell on them with all his army, and the
fiercest fight there was betwixt them; and Siggeir cried on
his men to the onset all he might; and so the tale tells that
King Volsung and his sons went eight times right through
Siggeir's folk that day, smiting and hewing on either hand,
but when they would do so even once again, King Volsung fell
amidst his folk and all his men withal, saving his ten sons,
for mightier was the power against them than they might
withstand.
But now are all his sons taken, and laid in
bonds and led away; and Signy was ware withal that her father
was slain, and her brothers taken and doomed to death, that
she called King Siggeir apart to talk with her, and said --
"This will I pray of thee, that thou let not
slay my brothers hastily, but let them be set awhile in the
stocks, for home to me comes the saw that says, "Sweet to eye
while seen": but longer life I pray not for them, because I
wot well that my prayer will not avail me."
Then answered Siggeir
"Surely thou art mad and witless, praying thus
for more bale for thy brothers than their present slaying; yet
this will I grant thee, for the better it likes me the more
they must bear, and the longer their pain is or ever death
come to them."
Now he let it be done even as she prayed, and a
mighty beam was brought and set on the feet of those ten
brethren in a certain place of the wild-wood, and there they
sit day-long until night; but at midnight, as they sat in the
stocks, there came on them a she-wolf from out the wood; old
she was, and both great and evil of aspect; and the first
thing she did was to bite one of those brethren till he died,
and then she ate him up withal, and went on her way.
But the next morning Signy sent a man to the
brethren, even one whom she most trusted, to wot of the
tidings; and when he came back he told her that one of them
was dead, and great and grievous she deemed it, if they should
all fare in like wise, and yet naught might she avail them.
Soon is the tale told thereof: nine nights
together came the she- wolf at midnight, and each night slew
and ate up one of the brethren, until all were dead, save
Sigmund only; so now, before the tenth night came, Signy sent
that trusty man to Sigmund, her brother, and gave honey into
his hand, bidding him do it over Sigmund's face, and set a
little deal of it in his mouth; so he went to Sigmund and did
as he was bidden, and then came home again; and so the next
night came the she-wolf according to her wont, and would slay
him and eat him even as his brothers; but now she sniffs the
breeze from him, whereas he was anointed with the honey, and
licks his face all over with her tongue, and then thrusts her
tongue into the mouth of him. No fear he had thereof, but
caught the she-wolf's tongue betwixt his teeth, and so hard
she started back thereat, and pulled herself away so mightily,
setting her feet against the stock that all was riven asunder;
but he ever held so fast that the tongue came away by the
roots, and thereof she had her bane.
But some men say that this same she-wolf was
the mother of King Siggeir, who had turned herself into this
likeness by troll's lore and witchcraft.
CHAPTER VI. Of how Signy sent the Children of her
and Siggeir to Sigmund.
Now whenas Sigmund is loosed and the stocks are
broken, he dwells in the woods and holds himself there; but
Signy sends yet again to wot of the tidings, whether Sigmund
were alive or no; but when those who were sent came to him, he
told them all as it had betid, and how things had gone betwixt
him and the wolf; so they went home and tell Signy the
tidings; but she goes and finds her brother, and they take
counsel in such wise as to make a house underground in the
wild-wood; and so things go on a while, Signy hiding him
there, and sending him such things as he needed; but King
Siggeir deemed that all the Volsungs were dead.
Now Siggeir had two sons by his wife, whereof
it is told that when the eldest was ten winters old, Signy
sends him to Sigmund, so that he might give him help, if he
would in any wise strive to avenge his father; so the
youngling goes to the wood, and comes late in evening-tide to
Sigmund's earth-house; and Sigmund welcomed him in seemly
fashion, and said that he should make ready their bread; "But
I," said he, "will go seek firewood."
Therewith he gives the meal-bag into his hands
while he himself went to fetch firing; but when he came back
the youngling had done naught at the bread-making. Then asks
Sigmund if the bread be ready --
Says the youngling, "I durst not set hand to
the meal sack, because somewhat quick lay in the meal."
Now Sigmund deemed he wotted that the lad was
of no such heart as that he would be fain to have him for his
fellow; and when he met his sister, Sigmund said that he had
come no nigher to the aid of a man though the youngling were
with him.
Then said Signy, "Take him and kill him then;
for why should such an one live longer?" and even so he did.
So this winter wears, and the next winter Signy
sent her next son to Sigmund; and there is no need to make a
long tale thereof, for in like wise went all things, and he
slew the child by the counsel of Signy.
CHAPTER VII. Of the Birth of Sinfjotli the Son of
Sigmund.
So on a tide it befell as Signy sat in her
bower, that there came to her a witch-wife exceeding cunning,
and Signy talked with her in such wise, "Fain am I," says she,
"that we should change semblances together."
She says, "Even as thou wilt then."
And so by her wiles she brought it about that
they changed semblances, and now the witch-wife sits in
Signy's place according to her rede, and goes to bed by the
king that night, and he knows not that he has other than Signy
beside him.
But the tale tells of Signy, that she fared to
the earthhouse of her brother, and prayed him give her
harbouring for the night; "For I have gone astray abroad in
the woods, and know not whither I am going."
So he said she might abide, and that he would
not refuse harbour to one lone woman, deeming that she would
scarce pay back his good cheer by tale-bearing: so. she came
into the house, and they sat down to meat, and his eyes were
often on her, and a goodly and fair woman she seemed to him;
but when they are full, then he says to her, that he is right
fain that they should have but one bed that night; she nowise
turned away therefrom, and so for three nights together he
laid her in bed by him.
Thereafter she fared home, and found the
witch-wife and bade her change semblances again, and she did
so.
Now as time wears, Signy brings forth a
man-child, who was named Sinfjotli, and when he grew up he was
both big and strong, and fair of face, and much like unto the
kin of the Volsungs, and he was hardly yet ten winters old
when she sent him to Sigmund's earth-house; but this trial she
had made of her other sons or ever she had sent them to
Sigmund, that she had sewed gloves on to their hands through
flesh and skin, and they had borne it ill and cried out
thereat; and this she now did to Sinfjotli, and he changed
countenance in nowise thereat. Then she flayed off the kirtle
so that the skin came off with the sleeves, and said that this
would be torment enough for him; but he said --
"Full little would Volsung have felt such a
smart this."
So the lad came to Sigmund, and Sigmund bade
him knead their meal up, while he goes to fetch firing; so he
gave him the meal-sack, and then went after the wood, and by
then he came back had Sinfjotli made an end of his baking.
Then asked Sigmund if he had found nothing in the meal.
"I misdoubted me that there was something quick
in the meal when I first fell to kneading of it, but I have
kneaded it all up together, both the meal and that which was
therein, whatsoever it was."
Then Sigmund laughed out, he said --
"Naught wilt thou eat of this bread to-night,
for the most deadly of worms (1) hast thou kneaded up
therewith."
Now Sigmund was so mighty a man that he might
eat venom and have no hurt therefrom; but Sinfjotli might
abide whatso venom came on the outside of him, but might
neither eat nor drink thereof.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Serpents.
CHAPTER VIII. The Death of King Siggeir and of
Stigny.
The tale tells that Sigmund thought Sinfjotli
over young to help him to his revenge, and will first of all
harden him with manly deeds; so in summer-tide they fare wide
through the woods and slay men for their wealth; Sigmund deems
him to take much after the kin of the Volsungs, though he
thinks that he is Siggeir's son, and deems him to have the
evil heart of his father, with the might and daring of the
Volsungs; withal he must needs think him in no wise a kinsome
man, for full oft would he bring Sigmund's wrongs to his
memory, and prick him on to slay King Siggeir.
Now on a time as they fare abroad in the wood
for the getting of wealth, they find a certain house, and two
men with great gold rings asleep therein: now these twain were
spell-bound skin- changers, (1) and wolf-skins were hanging up
over them in the house; and every tenth day might they come
out of those skins; and they were kings' sons: so Sigmund and
Sinfjofli do the wolf- skins on them, and then might they
nowise come out of them, though forsooth the same nature went
with them as heretofore; they howled as wolves howl but both
knew the meaning of that howling; they lay out in the
wild-wood, and each went his way; and a word they made betwixt
them, that they should risk the onset of seven men, but no
more, and that he who was first to be set on should howl in
wolfish wise: "Let us not depart from this," says Sigmund,
"for thou art young and over-bold, and men will deem the
quarry good, when they take thee."
Now each goes his way, and when they were
parted, Sigmund meets certain men, and gives forth a wolf's
howl; and when Sinfjotli heard it, he went straightway
thereto, and slew them all, and once more they parted. But ere
Sinfjotli has fared long through the woods, eleven men meet
him, and he wrought in such wise that he slew them all, and
was awearied therewith, and crawls under an oak, and there
takes his rest. Then came Sigmund thither, and said --
"Why didst thou not call on me?"
Sinfjotli said, "I was loth to call for thy
help for the slaying of eleven men."
Then Sigmund rushed at him so hard that he
staggered and fell, and Sigmund bit him in the throat. Now
that day they might not come out of their wolf-skins: but
Sigmund lays the other on his back, and bears him home to the
house, and cursed the wolf-gears and gave them to the trolls.
Now on a day he saw where two weasels went and how that one
bit the other in the throat, and then ran straightway into the
thicket, and took up a leaf and laid in on the wound, and
thereon his fellow sprang up quite and clean whole; so Sigmund
went out and saw a raven flying with a blade of that same herb
to him; so he took it and drew it over Sinfjotli's hurt, and
he straightway sprang up as whole as though he had never been
hurt. There after they went home to their earth-house, and
abode there till the time came for them to put off the
wolf-shapes; then they burnt them up with fire, and prayed
that no more hurt might come to any one from them; but in that
uncouth guise they wrought many famous deeds in the kingdom
and lordship of King Siggeir.
Now when Sinfjotli was come to man's estate,
Sigmund deemed he had tried him fully, and or ever a long time
has gone by he turns his mind to the avenging of his father;
if so it may be brought about; so on s certain day the twain
get them gone from their earth-house, and come to the abode of
King Siggeir late in the evening, and go into the porch before
the hall, wherein were tuns of ale, and there they lie hid:
now the queen is ware of them, where they are, and is fain to
meet them; and when they met they took counsel and were of one
mind that Volsung should be revenged that same night.
Now Signy and the king had two children of
tender age, who played with a golden toy on the floor, and
bowled it along the pavement of the hall, running along with
it; but therewith a golden ring from off it trundles away into
the place where Sigmund and Sinfjotli lay, and off runs the
little one to search for the same, and beholds withal where
two men axe sitting, big and grimly to look on, with
overhanging helms and bright white byrnies; (2) so he runs up
the hall to his father, and tells him of the sight he has
seen, and thereat the king misdoubts of some guile abiding
him; but Signy heard their speech, and arose and took both the
children, and went out into the porch to them and said --
"Lo ye! These younglings have bewrayed you;
come now therefore and slay them!"
Sigmund says, "Never will I slay thy children
for telling of where I lay hid."
But Sinfjotli made little enow of it, but drew
his sword and slew them both, and cast them into the hall at
King 8iggeir's feet.
Then up stood the king and cried on his men to
take those who had lain privily in the porch through the
night. So they ran thither and would lay hands on them, but
they stood on their defence well and manly, and long he
remembered it who was the nighest to them; but in the end they
were borne down by many men and taken, and bonds were set upon
them, and they were cast into fetters wherein they sit night
long.
Then the king ponders what longest and worst of
deaths he shall mete out to them; and when morning came he let
make a great barrow of stones and turf; and when it was done,
let set a great flat stone midmost inside thereof, so that one
edge was aloft, the other alow; and so great it was that it
went from wall to wall, so that none might pass it.
Now he bids folk take Sigmund and Sinfjotli and
set them in the barrow, on either side of the stone, for the
worse for them he deemed it, that they might hear each the
other's speech, and yet that neither might pass one to the
other. But now, while they were covering in the barrow with
the turf-slips, thither came Signy, bearing straw with her,
and cast it down to Sinfjotli, and bade the thralls hide this
thing from the king; they said yea thereto, and therewithal
was the barrow closed in.
But when night fell, Sinfjotli said to Sigmund,
"Belike we shall scarce need meat for a while, for here has
the queen cast swine's flesh into the barrow, and wrapped it
round about on the outer side with straw."
Therewith he handles the flesh and finds that
therein was thrust Sigmund's sword; and he knew it by the
hilts as mirk as it might be in the barrow, and tells Sigmund
thereof, and of that were they both fain enow.
Now Sinfjotli drave the point of the sword up
into the big stone, and drew it hard along, and the sword bit
on the stone. With that Sigmund caught the sword by the point,
and in this wise they sawed the stone between them, and let
not or all the sawing was done that need be done, even as the
song sings:
"Sinfjotli sawed
And Sigmund sawed,
Atwain with main
The stone was done."
Now are they both together loose in the barrow,
and soon they cut both through stone and through iron, and
bring themselves out thereof. Then they go home to the hall,
whenas all men slept there, and bear wood to the hall, and lay
fire therein; and withal the folk therein are waked by the
smoke, and by the hall burning over their heads.
Then the king cries out, "Who kindled this
fire, I burn withal?"
"Here am I," says Sigmund, "with Sinfjotli, my
sister's son; and we are minded that thou shalt wot well that
all the Volsungs are not yet dead."
Then he bade his sister come out, and take all
good things at his hands, and great honour, and fair atonement
in that wise, for all her griefs.
But she answered, "Take heed now, and consider,
if I have kept King Siggeir in memory, and his slaying of
Volsung the king! I let slay both my children, whom I deemed
worthless for the revenging of our father, and I went into the
wood to thee in a witch-wife's shape; and now behold,
Sinfjotli is the son of thee and of me both! And therefore has
he this so great hardihood and fierceness, in that he is the
son both of Volsung's son and Volsung's daughter; and for
this, and for naught else, have I so wrought, that Siggeir
might get his bane at last; and all these things have I done
that vengeance might fall on him, and that I too might not
live long; and merrily now will I die with King Siggeir,
though I was naught merry to wed him."
Therewith she kissed Sigmund her brother, and
Sinfjotli, and went back again into the fire, and there she
died with King Siggeir and all his good men.
But the two kinsmen gathered together folk and
ships, and Sigmund went back to his father's land, and drave
away thence the king, who had set himself down there in the
room of king Volsung.
So Sigmund became a mighty King and far-famed,
wise and high- minded: he had to wife one named Borghild, and
two sons they had between them, one named Helgi and the other
Hamund; and when Helgi was born, Norns came to him, (3) and
spake over him, and said that he should be in time to come the
most renowned of all kings. Even therewith was Sigmund come
home from the wars, and so therewith he gives him the name of
Helgi, and these matters as tokens thereof, Land of Rings,
Sun-litten Hill and Sharp-shearing Sword, and withal prayed
that he might grow of great fame, and like unto the kin of the
Volsungs.
And so it was that he grew up high-minded, and
well beloved, and above all other men in all prowess; and the
story tells that he went to the wars when he was fifteen
winters old. Helgi was lord and ruler over the army, but
Sinfjotli was gotten to be his fellow herein; the twain bare
sway thereover.
ENDNOTES:
(1) "Skin-changers" were universally believed in once, in
Iceland no less than elsewhere, as see Ari in several places
of his history, especially the episode of Dufthach and
Storwolf o' Whale. Men possessing the power of becoming wolves
at intervals, in the present case compelled so to become,
wer-wolves or "loupsgarou", find large place in medieval
story, but were equally well-known in classic times. Belief in
them still lingers in parts of Europe where wolves are to be
found. Herodotus tells of the Neuri, who assumed once a year
the shape of wolves; Pliny says that one of the family of
Antaeus, chosen by lot annually, became a wolf, and so
remained for nine years; Giraldus Cambrensis will have it that
Irishmen may become wolves; and Nennius asserts point-blank
that "the descendants of wolves are still in Ossory;" they
retransform themselves into wolves when they bite. Apuleius,
Petronius, and Lucian have similar stories. The Emperor
Sigismund convoked a council of theologians in the fifteenth
century who decided that wer-wolves did exist.
(2) Byrny (A.S. "byrne"), corslet, cuirass.
(3) "Norns came to him." Nornir are the fates of the northern
mythology. They are three -- "Urd", the past; "Verdandi", the
present; and "Skuld", the future. They sit beside the fountain
of Urd ("Urdarbrienur"), which is below one of the roots of
"Yggdrasil", the world-tree, which tree their office it is to
nourish by sprinkling it with the water of the fountain.
CHAPTER IX. How Helgi, the son of Sigmund, won
King Hodbrod and his Realm, and wedded Sigurn.
Now the tale tells that Helgi in his warring
met a king hight Hunding, a mighty king, and lord of many men
and many lands; they fell to battle together, and Helgi went
forth mightily, and such was the end of that fight that Helgi
had the victory, but King Hunding fell and many of his men
with him; but Helgi is deemed to have grown greatly in fame
because he had slain so mighty a king.
Then the sons of Hunding draw together a great
army to avenge their father. Hard was the fight betwixt them;
but Helgi goes through the folk of those brothers unto their
banner, and there slays these sons of Hunding, Alf and Eyolf,
Herward and Hagbard, and wins there a great victory.
Now as Helgi fared from the fight he met a many
women right fair and worthy to look on, who rode in exceeding
noble array; but one far excelled them all; then Helgi asked
them the name of that their lady and queen, and she named
herself Sigrun, and said she was daughter of King Hogni.
Then said Helgi, "Fare home with us: good
welcome shall ye have!"
Then said the king's daughter, "Other work lies
before us than to drink with thee."
"Yea, and what work, king's daughter?" said
Helgi.
She answers, "King Hogni has promised me to
Hodbrod, the son of King Granmar, but I have vowed a vow that
I will have him to my husband no more than if he were a crow's
son and not a king's; and yet will the thing come to pass, but
and if thou standest in the way thereof and goest against him
with an army, and takest me away withal; for verily with no
king would I rather bide on bolster than with thee."
"Be of good cheer, king's daughter," says he,
"for certes he and I shall try the matter, or ever thou be
given to him; yea, we shall behold which may prevail against
the other; and hereto I pledge my life."
Thereafter, Helgi sent men with money in their
hand to summon his folk to him, and all his power is called
together to Red-Berg: and there Helgi abode till such time as
a great company came to him from Hedinsey; and therewithal
came mighty power from Norvi Sound aboard great and fair
ships. Then King Helgi called to him the captain of his ships,
who was hight Leif, and asked him if he had told over the tale
of his army.
"A thing not easy to tell, lord," says he, "on
the ships that came out of Norvi Sound are twelve thousand
men, and otherwhere are half as many again."
Then bade King Helgi turn into the firth,
called Varin's firth, and they did so: but now there fell on
them so fierce a storm and so huge a sea, that the beat of the
waves on board and bow was to hearken to like as the clashing
together of high hills broken.
But Helgi bade men fear naught, nor take in any
sail, but rather hoist every rag higher than heretofore; but
little did they miss of foundering or ever they made land;
then came Sigrun, daughter of King Hogni, down on to the beach
with a great army, and turned them away thence to a good haven
called Gnipalund; but the landsmen see what has befallen and
come down to the sea-shore. The brother of King Hodbrod, lord
of a land called Swarin's Cairn, cried out to them, and asked
them who was captain over that mighty army. Then up stands
Sinfjotli, with a helm on his head, bright shining as glass,
and a byrny as white as snow; a spear in his hand, and thereon
a banner of renown, and a gold- rimmed shield hanging before
him; and well he knew with what words to speak to kings --
"Go thou and say, when thou hast made an end of
feeding thy swine and thy dogs, and when thou beholdest thy
wife again, that here are come the Volsungs, and in this
company may King Helgi be found, if Hodbrod be fain of finding
him, for his game and his joy it is to fight and win fame,
while thou art kissing the handmaids by the fire-side."
Then answered Granmar, "In nowise knowest thou
how to speak seemly things, and to tell of matters remembered
from of old, whereas thou layest lies on chiefs and lords;
most like it is that thou must have long been nourished with
wolf-meat abroad in the wild-woods, and has slain thy
brethren; and a marvel it is to behold that thou darest to
join thyself to the company of good men and true, thou, who
hast sucked the blood of many a cold corpse."
Sinfjotli answered, "Dim belike is grown thy
memory now, of how thou wert a witch-wife on Varinsey, and
wouldst fain have a man to thee, and chose me to that same
office of all the world; and how thereafter thou wert a
Valkyria (1) in Asgarth, and it well- nigh came to this, that
for thy sweet sake should all men fight; and nine wolf whelps
I begat on thy body in Lowness, and was the father to them
all."
Granmar answers, "Great skill of lying hast
thou; yet belike the father of naught at all mayst thou be,
since thou wert gelded by the giant's daughters of Thrasness;
and lo thou art the stepson of King Siggeir, and were wont to
lie abroad in wilds and woods with the kin of wolves; and
unlucky was the hand wherewith thou slewest thy brethren
making for thyself an exceeding evil name."
Said Sinfjotli, "Mindest thou not then, when
thou were stallion Grani's mare, and how I rode thee an amble
on Bravoli, and that afterwards thou wert giant Golnir's goat
herd?"
Granmar says, "Rather would I feed fowls with
the flesh of thee than wrangle any longer with thee."
Then spake King Helgi, "Better were it for ye,
and a more manly deed, to fight, rather than to speak such
things as it is a shame even to hearken to; Granmar's sons are
no friends of me and of mine, yet are they hardy men none the
less."
So Granmar rode away to meet King Hodbrod, at a
stead called Sunfells, and the horses of the twain were named
Sveipud and Sveggjud. The brothers met in the castle-porch,
and Granmar told Hodbrod of the war-news. King Hodbrod was
clad in a byrny, and had his helm on his head; he asked --
"What men are anigh, why look ye so wrathful?"
Granmar says, "Here are come the Volsungs, and
twelve thousand men of them are afloat off the coast, and
seven thousand are at the island called Sok, but at the stead
called Grindur is the greatest company of all, and now I deem
withal that Helgi and his fellowship have good will to give
battle."
Then said the king, "Let us send a message
through all our realm, and go against them, neither let any
who is fain of fight sit idle at home; let us send word to the
sons of Ring, and to King Hogni, and to Alf the Old, for they
are mighty warriors."
So the hosts met at Wolfstone, and fierce fight
befell there; Helgi rushed forth through the host of his foes,
and many a man fell there; at last folk saw a great company of
shield-maidens, like burning flames to look on, and there was
come Sigrun, the king's daughter. Then King Helgi fell on King
Hodbrod, and smote him, and slew him even under his very
banner; and Sigrun cried out --
"Have thou thanks for thy so manly deed! Now
shall we share the land between us, and a day of great good
hap this is to me, and for this deed shalt thou get honour and
renown, in that thou hast felled to earth so mighty a king."
So Helgi took to him that realm and dwelt there
long, when he had wedded Sigrun, and became a king of great
honour and renown, though he has naught more to do with this
story.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Valkyrja, "Chooser of the elected." The women were so
called whom Odin sent to choose those for death in battle who
were to join the "Einherjar" in the hall of the elected,
"Val-holl."
CHAPTER X. The ending of Sinfjatli, Sigmund's
Son.
Now the Volsungs fare back home, and have
gained great renown by these deeds. But Sinfjotli betook
himself to warfare anew; and therewith he had sight of an
exceeding fair woman, and yearned above all things for her,
but that same woman was wooed also of the brother of Borghild,
the king's wife: and this matter they fought out betwixt them,
and Sinfjotli slew that king; and thereafter he harried far
and wide, and had many a battle and even gained the day; and
he became hereby honoured and renowned above all men; but in
autumn tide he came home with many ships and abundant wealth.
Then he told his tidings to the king his
father, and he again to the queen, and she for her part bids
him get him gone from the realm, and made as if she would in
nowise see him. But Sigmund said he would not drive him away,
and offered her atonement of gold and great wealth for her
brother's life, albeit he said he had never erst given
weregild (1) to any for the slaying of a man, but no fame it
was to uphold wrong against a woman.
So seeing she might not get her own way herein,
she said, "Have thy will in this matter, O my lord, for it is
seemly so to be."
And now she holds the funeral feast for her
brother by the aid and counsel of the king, and makes ready
all things thereœor in the best of wise, and bade thither many
great men.
At that feast, Borghild the queen bare the
drink to folk, and she came over against Sinfjofli with a
great horn, and said --
"Fall to now and drink, fair stepson!"
Then he took the horn to him, and looked
therein, and said --
"Nay, for the drink is charmed drink"
Then said Sigmund, "Give it unto me then;" and
therewith he took the horn and drank it off.
But the queen said to Sinfjotli, "Why must
other men needs drink thine ale for thee?" And she came again
the second time with the horn, and said, "Come now and drink!"
and goaded him with many words.
And he took the horn, and said --
"Guile is in the drink."
And thereon, Sigmund cried out --
"Give it then unto me!"
Again, the third time, she came to him, and
bade him drink off his drink, if he had the heart of a
Volsung; then he laid hand on the horn, but said --
"Venom is therein."
"Nay, let the lip strain it out then, O son,"
quoth Sigmund; and by then was he exceeding drunk with drink,
and therefore spake he in that wise.
So Sinfjotli drank, and straightway fell down
dead to the ground.
Sigmund rose up, and sorrowed nigh to death
over him; then he took the corpse in his arms and fared away
to the wood, and went till he came to a certain firth; and
then he saw a man in a little boat; and that man asked if he
would be wafted by him over the firth, and he said yes
thereto; but so little was the boat, that they might not all
go in it at once, so the corpse was first laid therein, while
Sigmund went by the firth-side. But therewith the boat and the
man therein vanished away from before Sigmund's eyes. (2)
So thereafter Sigmund turned back home, and
drave away the queen, and a little after she died. But Sigmund
the king yet ruled his realm, and is deemed ever the greatest
champion and king of the old law.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Weregild, fine for man-slaying ("wer", man, and "gild", a
payment).
(2) The man in the boat is Odin, doubtless.
CHAPTER XI. Of King Sigmund's last Battle, and of
how he must yield up his Sword again.
There was a king called Eylimi, mighty and of
great fame, and his daughter was called Hjordis, the fairest
and wisest of womankind; and Sigmund hears it told of her that
she was meet to be his wife, yea if none else were. So he goes
to the house of King Eylimi, who would make a great feast for
him, if so be he comes not thither in the guise of a foe. So
messages were sent from one to the other that this present
journey was a peaceful one, and not for war; so the feast was
held in the best of wise and with many a man thereat; fairs
were in every place established for King Sigmund, and all
things else were done to the aid and comfort of his journey:
so he came to the feast, and both kings hold their state in
one hall; thither also was come King Lyngi, son of King
Hunding, and he also is a-wooing the daughter of King Eylimi.
Now the king deemed he knew that the twain had
come thither but for one errand, and thought withal that war
and trouble might be looked for from the hands of him who
brought not his end about; so he spake to his daughter, and
said --
"Thou art a wise woman, and I have spoken it,
that thou alone shalt choose a husband for thyself; choose
therefore between these two kings, and my rede shall be even
as thine."
"A hard and troublous matter," says she; "yet
will I choose him who is of greatest fame, King Sigmund to
wife albeit he is well stricken in years."
So to him was she betrothed, and King Lyngi gat
him gone. Then was Sigmund wedded to Hjordis, and now each day
was the feast better and more glorious than on the day before
it. But thereafter Sigmund went back home to Hunland, and King
Eylimi, his father-in-law, with him, and King Sigmund betakes
himself to the due ruling of his realm.
But King Lyngi and his brethren gather an army
together to fall on Sigmund, for as in all matters they were
wont to have the worser lot, so did this bite the sorest of
all; and they would fain prevail over the might and pride of
the Volsungs. So they came to Hunland, and sent King Sigmund
word how that they would not steal upon him and that they
deemed he would scarce slink away from them. So Sigmund said
he would come and meet them in battle, and drew his power
together; but Hjordis was borne into the wood with a certain
bondmaid, and mighty wealth went with them; and there she
abode the while they fought.
Now the vikings rushed from their ships in
numbers not to be borne up against, but Sigmund the King, and
Eylimi set up their banners, and the horns blew up to battle;
but King Sigmund let blow the horn his father erst had had,
and cheered on his men to the fight, but his army was far the
fewest.
Now was that battle fierce and fell, and though
Sigmund were old, yet most hardily he fought, and was ever the
foremost of his men; no shield or byrny might hold against
him, and he went ever through the ranks of his foemen on that
day, and no man might see how things would fare between them;
many an arrow and many a spear was aloft in air that day, and
so his spae-wrights wrought for him that he got no wound, and
none can tell over the tale of those who fell before him, and
both his arms were red with blood, even to the shoulders.
But now whenas the battle had dured a while,
there came a man into the fight clad in a blue cloak, and with
a slouched hat on his head, one-eyed he was, (1) and bare a
bill in his hand; and he came against Sigmund the King, and
have up his bill against him, and as Sigmund smote fiercely
with the sword it fell upon the bill and burst asunder in the
midst: thenceforth the slaughter and dismay turned to his
side, for the good-hap of King Sigmund had departed from him,
and his men fell fast about him; naught did the king spare
himself, but the rather cheered on his men; but even as the
saw says, "No might 'gainst many", so was it now proven; and
in this fight fell Sigmund the King, and King Eylimi, his
father-in-law, in the fore-front of their battle, and
therewith the more part of their folk.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Odin coming to change the ownership of the sword he had
given Sigmund. See Chapter 3.
CHAPTER XII. Of the Shards of the Sword Gram, and
how Hjordis went to King Alf.
Now King Lyngi made for the king's abode, and
was minded to take the king's daughter there, but failed
herein, for there he found neither wife nor wealth; so he
fared through all the realm, and gave his men rule thereover,
and now deemed that he had slain all the kin of the Volsungs,
and that he need dread them no more from henceforth.
Now Hjordis went amidst the slain that night of
the battle, and came whereas lay King Sigmund, and asked if he
might be healed; but he answered --
"Many a man lives after hope has grown little;
but my good-hap has departed from me, nor will I suffer myself
to be healed, nor wills Odin that I should ever draw sword
again, since this my sword and his is broken; lo now, I have
waged war while it was his will."
"Naught ill would I deem matters," said she,
"if thou mightest be healed and avenge my father."
The king said, "That is fated for another man;
behold now, thou art great with a man-child; nourish him well;
and with good heed, and the child shall be the noblest and
most famed of all our kin: and keep well withal the shards of
the sword: thereof shall a goodly sword be made, and it shall
be called Gram, and our son shall bear it, and shall work many
a great work therewith, even such as eld shall never minish;
for his name shall abide and flourish as long as the world
shall endure: and let this be enow for thee. But now I grow
weary with my wounds, and I will go see our kin that have gone
before me."
So Hjordis sat over him till he died at the
day-dawning; and then she looked, and behold, there came many
ships sailing to the land: then she spake to the handmaid --
"Let us now change raiment, and be thou called
by my name, and say that thou art the king's daughter."
And thus they did; but now the vikings behold
the great slaughter of men there, and see where two women fare
away thence into the wood; and they deem that some great
tidings must have befallen, and they leaped ashore from out
their ships. Now the captain of these folks was Alf, son of
Hjalprek, king of Denmark, who was sailing with his power
along the land. So they came into the field among the slain,
and saw how many men lay dead there; then the king bade go
seek for the women and bring them thither, and they did so. He
asked them what women they were; and, little as the thing
seems like to be, the bondmaid answered for the twain, telling
of the fall of King Sigmund and King Eylimi, and many another
great man, and who they were withal who had wrought the deed.
Then the king asks if they wotted where the wealth of the king
was bestowed; and then says the bondmaid --
"It may well be deemed that we know full surely
thereof."
And therewith she guides them to the place
where the treasure lay: and there they found exceeding great
wealth; so that men deem they have never seen so many things
of price heaped up together in one place. All this they bore
to the ships of King Alf, and Hjordis and bondmaid went them.
Therewith these sail away to their own realm, and talk how
that surely on that field had fallen the most renowned of
kings.
So the king sits by the tiller, but the women
abide in the forecastle; but talk he had with the women and
held their counsels of much account.
In such wise the king came home to his realm
with great wealth, and he himself was a man exceeding goodly
to look on. But when he had been but a little while at home,
the queen, his mother, asked him why the fairest of the two
women had the fewer rings and the less worthy attire.
"I deem," she said, "that she whom ye have held
of least account is the noblest of the twain."
He answered: "I too have misdoubted me, that
she is little like a bondwoman, and when we first met, in
seemly wise she greeted noble men. Lo now, we will make trial
of the thing."
So on a time as men sat at the drink, the king
sat down to talk with the women, and said: --
"In what wise do ye note the wearing of the
hours, whenas night grows old, if ye may not see the lights of
heaven?"
Then says the bondwoman, "This sign have I,
that whenas in my youth I was wont to drink much in the dawn,
so now when I no longer use that manner, I am yet wont to wake
up at that very same tide, and by that token do I know
thereof."
Then the king laughed and said, "Ill manners
for a king's daughter!" And therewith he turned to Hjordis,
and asked her even the same question; but she answered --
"My father erst gave me a little gold ring of
such nature, that it groweth cold on my finger in the
day-dawning; and that is the sign that I have to know
thereof."
The king answered: "Enow of gold there, where a
very bondmaid bore it! But come now, thou hast been long enow
hid from me; yet if thou hadst told me all from the beginning,
I would have done to thee as though we had both been one
king's children: but better than thy deeds will I deal with
thee, for thou shalt be my wife, and due jointure will I pay
thee whenas thou hast borne me a child."
She spake therewith and told out the whole
truth about herself: so there was she held in great honour,
and deemed the worthiest of women.
CHAPTER XIII. Of the Birth and Waxing of Sigurd
Fafnir's-bane.
The tale tells that Hjordis brought forth a
man-child, who was straightly borne before King Hjalprek, and
then was the king glad thereof, when he saw the keen eyes in
the head of him, and he said that few men would be equal to
him or like unto him in any wise. So he was sprinkled with
water, and had to name Sigurd, of whom all men speak with one
speech and say that none was ever his like for growth and
goodliness. He was brought up in the house of King Hjalprek in
great love and honour; and so it is, that whenso all the
noblest men and greatest kings are named in the olden tales,
Sigurd is ever put before them all for might and prowess, for
high mind and stout heart; wherewith he was far more
abundantly gifted than any man of the northern parts of the
wide world.
So Sigurd waxed in King Hjalprek's house, and
there was no child but loved him; through him was Hjordis
betrothed to King Alf, and jointure meted to her.
Now Sigurd's foster-father was hight Regin, the
son of Hreidmar; he taught him all manner of arts, the chess
play, and the lore of runes, and the talking of many tongues,
even as the wont was with kings' sons in those days. But on a
day when they were together, Regin asked Sigurd, if he knew
how much wealth his father had owned, and who had the ward
thereof; Sigurd answered, and said that the kings kept the
ward thereof.
Said Regin, "Dost thou trust them all utterly?"
Sigurd said, "It is seemly that they keep it
till I may do somewhat therewith, for better they wot how to
guard it than I do."
Another time came Regin to talk to Sigurd, and
said --
"A marvellous thing truly that thou must needs
be a horse-boy to the kings, and go about like a running
knave."
"Nay," said Sigurd, "it is not so, for in all
things I have my will, and whatso thing I desire is granted me
with good will."
"Well, then," said Regin, "ask for a horse of
them."
"Yea," quoth Sigurd, "and that shall I have,
whenso I have need thereof."
Thereafter Sigurd went to the king, and the
king said --
"What wilt thou have of us?"
Then said Sigurd, "I would even a horse of thee
for my disport."
Then said the king, "Choose for thyself a
horse, and whatso thing else thou desirest among my matters."
So the next day went Sigurd to the wood, and
met on the way an old man, long-bearded, that he knew not, who
asked him whither away.
Sigurd said, "I am minded to choose me a horse;
come thou, and counsel me thereon."
"Well then," said he, "go we and drive them to
the river which is called Busil-tarn."
They did so, and drave the horses down into the
deeps of the river, and all swam back to land but one horse;
and that horse Sigurd chose for himself; grey he was of hue,
and young of years, great of growth, and fair to look on, nor
had any man yet crossed his back.
Then spake the grey-beard, "From Sleipnir's kin
is this horse come, and he must be nourished heedfully, for it
will be the best of all horses;" and therewithal he vanished
away.
So Sigurd called the horse Grani, the best of
all the horses of the world; nor was the man he met other than
Odin himself.
Now yet again spake Regin to Sigurd, and said
--
"Not enough is thy wealth, and I grieve right
sore, that thou must needs run here and there like s churl's
son; but I can tell thee where there is much wealth for the
winning, and great name and honour to be won in getting of
it."
Sigurd asked where that might be, and who had
watch and ward over it.
Regin answered, "Fafnir is his name, and but a
little way hence he lies, on the waste of Gnita-heath; and
when thou comest there thou mayst well say that thou hast
never seen more gold heaped together in one place, and that
none might desire more treasure, though he were the most
ancient and famed of all kings."
"Young am I," says Sigurd, "yet know I the
fashion of this worm, and how that none durst go against him,
so huge and evil is he."
Regin said, "Nay it is not so, the fashion and
the growth of him is even as of other lingworms, (1) and an
over great tale men make of it; and even so would thy
forefathers have deemed; but thou, though thou be of the kin
of the Volsungs, shalt scarce have the heart and mind of
those, who are told of as the first in all deeds of fame."
Sigurd said, "Yea, belike I have little of
their hardihood and prowess, but thou hast naught to do, to
lay a coward's name upon me, when I am scarce out of my
childish years. Why dost thou egg me on hereto so busily?"
Regin said, "Therein lies a tale which I must
needs tell thee."
"Let me hear the same," said Sigurd.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Lingworm -- longworm, dragon.
CHAPTER XIV. Regin's tale of his Brothers, and of
the Gold called Andvari's Hoard.
"The tale begins," said Regin. "Hreidmar was my
father's name, a mighty man and z wealthy: and his first son
was named Fafnir, his second Otter, and I was the third, and
the least of them all both for prowess and good conditions,
but I was cunning to work in iron, and silver, and gold,
whereof I could make matters that availed somewhat. Other
skill my brother Otter followed, and had another nature
withal, for he was a great fisher, and above other men herein;
in that he had the likeness of an otter by day, and dwelt ever
in the river, and bare fish to bank in his mouth, and his prey
would he ever bring to our father, and that availed him much:
for the most part he kept him in his otter-gear, and then he
would come home, and eat alone, and slumbering, for on the dry
land he might see naught. But Fafnir was by far the greatest
and grimmest, and would have all things about called his.
"Now," says Regin, "there was a dwarf called
Andvari, who ever abode in that force, (1) which was called
Andvari's force, in the likeness of a pike, and got meat for
himself, for many fish there were in the force; now Otter, my
brother, was ever wont to enter into the force, and bring fish
aland, and lay them one by one on the bank. And so it befell
that Odin, Loki, and Hoenir, as they went their ways, came to
Andvari's force, and Otter had taken a salmon, and ate it
slumbering upon the river bank; then Loki took a stone and
cast it at Otter, so that he gat his death thereby; the gods
were well content with their prey, and fell to flaying off the
otter's skin; and in the evening they came to Hreidmar's
house, and showed him what they had taken: thereon he laid
hands on them, and doomed them to such ransom, as that they
should fill the otter skin with gold, and cover it over
without with red gold; so they sent Loki to gather gold
together for them; he came to Ran, (2) and got her net, and
went therewith to Andvari's force, and cast the net before the
pike, and the pike ran into the net and was taken. Then said
Loki --
"`What fish of all fishes,
Swims strong in the flood,
But hath learnt little wit to beware?
Thine head must thou buy,
From abiding in hell,
And find me the wan waters flame.'
"He answered --
"`Andvari folk call me,
Call Oinn my father,
Over many a force have I fared;
For a Norn of ill-luck,
This life on me lay
Through wet ways ever to wade.'
"So Loki beheld the gold of Andvari, and when
he had given up the gold, he had but one ring left, and that
also Loki took from him; then the dwarf went into a hollow of
the rocks, and cried out, that that gold-ring, yea and all the
gold withal, should be the bane of every man who should own it
thereafter.
"Now the gods rode with the treasure to
Hreidmar, and fulfilled the otter-skin, and set it on its
feet, and they must cover it over utterly with gold: but when
this was done then Hreidmar came forth, and beheld yet one of
the muzzle hairs, and bade them cover that withal; then Odin
drew the ring, Andvari's loom, from his hand, and covered up
the hair therewith; then sang Loki --
"`Gold enow, gold enow,
A great weregild, thou hast,
That my head in good hap I may hold;
But thou and thy son
Are naught fated to thrive,
The bane shall it be of you both.'
"Thereafter," says Regin, "Fafnir slew his
father and murdered him, nor got I aught of the treasure, and
so evil he grew, that he fell to lying abroad, and begrudged
any share in the wealth to any man, and so became the worst of
all worms, and ever now lies brooding upon that treasure: but
for me, I went to the king and became his master-smith; and
thus is the tale told of how I lost the heritage of my father,
and the weregild for my brother."
So spake Regin; but since that time gold is
called Ottergild, and for no other cause than this.
But Sigurd answered, "Much hast thou lost, and
exceeding evil have thy kinsmen been! But now, make a sword by
thy craft, such a sword as that none can be made like unto it;
so that I may do great deeds therewith, if my heart avail
thereto, and thou wouldst have me slay this mighty dragon."
Regin says, "Trust me well herein; and with
that same sword shalt thou slay Fafnir."
ENDNOTES:
(1) Waterfall (Ice. "foss", "fors").
(2) Ran is the goddess of the sea, wife of Aegir. The otter
was held sacred by Norsefolk and figures in the myth and
legend of most races besides; to this day its killing is held
a great crime by the Parsees (Haug. "Religion of the Parsees",
page 212). Compare penalty above with that for killing the
Welsh king's cat ("Ancient Laws and Institutes of Wales". Ed.,
Aneurin Owen. Longman, London, 1841, 2 vols. 8vo).
CHAPTER XV. Of the Welding together of the Shards
of the Sward Gram.
So Regin makes a sword, and gives it into
Sigurd's hands. He took the sword, and said --
"Behold thy smithying, Regin!" and therewith
smote it into the anvil, and the sword brake; so he cast down
the brand, and bade him forge a better.
Then Regin forged another sword, and brought it
to Sigurd, who looked thereon.
Then said Regin, "Belike thou art well content
therewith, hard master though thou be in smithying."
So Sigurd proved the sword, and brake it even
as the first; then he said to Regin --
"Ah, art thou, mayhappen, a traitor and a liar
like to those former kin of thine?"
Therewith he went to his mother, and she
welcomed him in seemly wise, and they talked and drank
together.
Then spake Sigurd, "Have I heard aright, that
King Sigmund gave thee the good sword Gram in two pieces?"
"True enough," she said.
So Sigurd said, "Deliver them into my hands,
for I would have them."
She said he looked like to win great fame, and
gave him the sword. Therewith went Sigurd to Regin, and bade
him make a good sword thereof as he best might; Regin grew
wroth thereat, but went into the smithy with the pieces of the
sword, thinking well meanwhile that Sigurd pushed his head far
enow into the matter of smithying. So he made a sword, and as
he bore it forth from the forge, it seemed to the smiths as
though fire burned along the edges thereof. Now he bade Sigurd
take the sword, and said he knew not how to make a sword if
this one failed. Then Sigurd smote it into the anvil, and
cleft it down to the stock thereof, and neither burst the
sword nor brake it. Then he praised the sword much, and
thereafter went to the river with a lock of wool, and threw it
up against the stream, and it fell asunder when it met the
sword. Then was Sigurd glad, and went home.
But Regin said, "Now whereas I have made the
sword for thee, belike thou wilt hold to thy troth given, and
wilt go meet Fafnir?"
"Surely will I hold thereto," said Sigurd, "yet
first must I avenge my father."
Now Sigurd the older he grew, the more he grew
in the love of all men, so that every child loved him well.
CHAPTER XVI. The prophecy of Grifir.
There was a man hight Grifir,(1) who was
Sigurd's mother's brother, and a little after the forging of
the sword Sigurd went to Grifir, because he was a man who knew
things to come, and what was fated to men: of him Sigurd asked
diligently how his life should go; but Grifir was long or he
spake, yet at the last, by reason of Sigurd's exceeding great
prayers, he told him all his life and the fate thereof, even
as afterwards came to pass. So when Grifir had told him all
even as he would, he went back home; and a little after he and
Regin met.
Then said Regin, "Go thou and slay Fafnir, even
as thou hast given thy word."
Sigurd said, "That work shall be wrought; but
another is first to be done, the avenging of Sigmund the king
and the other of my kinsmen who fell in that their last
fight."
ENDNOTES:
(1) Called "Gripir" in the Edda.
CHAPTER XVII. Of Sigurd's Avenging of Sigmund his
Father.
Now Sigurd went to the kings, and spake thus --
"Here have I abode a space with you, and I owe
you thanks and reward, for great love and many gifts and all
due honour; but now will I away from the land and go meet the
sons of Hunding, and do them to wit that the Volsungs are not
all dead; and your might would I have to strengthen me
therein."
So the kings said that they would give him all
things soever that he desired, and therewith was a great army
got ready, and all things wrought in the most heedful wise,
ships and all war-gear, so that his journey might be of the
stateliest: but Sigurd himself steered the dragon-keel which
was the greatest and noblest; richly wrought were their sails,
and glorious to look on.
So they sail and have wind at will; but when a
few days were overpast, there arose a great storm on the sea,
and the waves were to behold even as the foam of men's blood;
but Sigurd bade take in no sail, howsoever they might be
riven, but rather to lay on higher than heretofore. But as
they sailed past the rocks of a ness, a certain man hailed the
ships, and asked who was captain over that navy; then was it
told him that the chief and lord was Sigurd, the son of
Sigmund, the most famed of all the young men who now are.
Then said the man, "Naught but one thing,
certes do all say of him, that none among the sons of kings
may be likened unto him; now fain were I that ye would shorten
sail on some of the ships, and take me aboard."
Then they asked him of his name, and he sang --
"Hnikar I hight,
When I gladdened Huginn,
And went to battle,
Bright son of Volsung;
Now may ye call
The carl on the cliff top,
Feng or Fjolnir:
Fain would I with you."
They made for land therewith, and took that man
aboard.
Then quoth Sigurd,(1) as the song says --
"Tell me this, O Hnikar,
Since full well thou knowest
Fate of Gods, good and ill of mankind,
What best our hap foresheweth,
When amid the battle
About us sweeps the sword edge."
Quoth Hnikar --
"Good are many tokens
If thereof men wotted
When the swords are sweeping:
Fair fellow deem I
The dark-winged raven,
In war, to weapon-wielder.
"The second good thing:
When abroad thou goest
For the long road well arrayed,
Good if thou seest
Two men standing,
Fain of fame within the forecourt.
"A third thing:
Good hearing,
The wolf a howling
Abroad under ash boughs;
Good hap shalt thou have
Dealing with helm-staves,
If thou seest these fare before thee.
"No man in fight
His face shall turn
Against the moon's sister
Low, late-shining,
For he winneth battle
Who best beholdeth
Through the midmost sword-play,
And the sloping ranks best shapeth.
"Great is the trouble
Of foot ill-tripping,
When arrayed for fight thou farest,
For on both sides about
Are the Disir (2) by thee,
Guileful, wishful of thy wounding.
"Fair-combed, well washen
Let each warrior be,
Nor lack meat in the morning,
For who can rule
The eve's returning,
And base to fall before fate grovelling."
Then the storm abated, and on they fared till
they came aland in the realm of Hunding's sons, and then
Fjolnir vanished away.
Then they let loose fire and sword, and slew
men and burnt their abodes, and did waste all before them: a
great company of folk fled before the face of them to Lyngi
the King, and tell him that men of war are in the land, and
are faring with such rage and fury that the like has never
been heard of; and that the sons of King Hunding had no great
forecast in that they said they would never fear the Volsungs
more, for here was come Sigurd, the son of Sigmund, as captain
over this army.
So King Lyngi let send the war-message all
throughout his realm, and has no will to flee, but summons to
him all such as would give him aid. So he came against Sigurd
with a great army, he and his brothers with him, and an
exceeding fierce fight befell; many a spear and many an arrow
might men see there raised aloft, axes hard driven, shields
cleft and byrnies torn, helmets were shivered, skulls split
atwain, and many a man felled to the cold earth.
And now when the fight has long dured in such
wise, Sigurd goes forth before the banners, and has the good
sword Gram in his hand, and smites down both men and horses,
and goes through the thickest of the throng with both arms red
with blood to the shoulder; and folk shrank aback before him
wheresoever he went, nor would either helm or byrny hold
before him, and no man deemed he had ever seen his like. So a
long while the battle lasted, and many a man was slain, and
furious was the onset; till at last it befell, even as seldom
comes to hand, when a land army falls on, that, do whatso they
might, naught was brought about; but so many men fell of the
sons of Hunding that the tale of them may not be told; and now
whenas Sigurd was among the foremost, came the sons of Hunding
against him, and Sigurd smote therewith at Lyngi the king, and
clave him down, both helm and head, and mail- clad body, and
thereafter he smote Hjorward his brother atwain, and then slew
all the other sons of Hunding who were yet alive, and the more
part of their folk withal.
Now home goes Sigurd with fair victory won, and
plenteous wealth and great honour, which he had gotten to him
in this journey, and feasts were made for him against he came
back to the realm.
But when Sigurd had been at home but a little,
came Regin to talk with him, and said --
"Belike thou wilt now have good will to bow
down Fafnir's crest according to thy word plighted, since thou
hast thus revenged thy father and the others of thy kin."
Sigurd answered, "That will we hold to, even as
we have promised, nor did it ever fall from our memory."
ENDNOTES:
(1) This and verses following were inserted from the
"Reginsmal" by the translators.
(2) "Disir", sing. "Dis". These are the guardian beings who
follow a man from his birth to his death. The word originally
means sister, and is used throughout the Eddaic poems as a
dignified synonym for woman, lady.
CHAPTER XVIII. Of the Slaying of the Worm Fafnir.
Now Sigurd and Regin ride up the heath along
that same way wherein Fafnir was wont to creep when he fared
to the water; and folk say that thirty fathoms was the height
of that cliff along which he lay when he drank of the water
below. Then Sigurd spake --
"How sayedst thou, Regin, that this drake (1)
was no greater than other lingworms; methinks the track of him
is marvellous great?"
Then said Regin, "Make thee a hole, and sit
down therein, and whenas the worm comes to the water, smite
him into the heart, and so do him to death, and win thee great
fame thereby."
But Sigurd said, "What will betide me if I be
before the blood of the worm?"
Says Regin, "Of what avail to counsel thee if
thou art still afeard of everything? Little art thou like thy
kin in stoutness of heart."
Then Sigurd rides right over the heath; but
Regin gets him gone, sore afeard.
But Sigurd fell to digging him a pit, and
whiles he was at that work, there came to him an old man with
a long beard, and asked what he wrought there, and he told
him.
Then answered the old man and said, "Thou doest
after sorry counsel: rather dig thee many pits, and let the
blood run therein; but sit thee down in one thereof, and so
thrust the worm's heart through."
And therewithal he vanished away; but Sigurd
made the pits even as it was shown to him.
Now crept the worm down to his place of
watering, and the earth shook all about him, and he snorted
forth venom on all the way before him as he went; but Sigurd
neither trembled nor was adrad at the roaring of him. So
whenas the worm crept over the pits, Sigurd thrust his sword
under his left shoulder, so that it sank in up to the hilts;
then up leapt Sigurd from the pit and drew the sword back
again unto him, and therewith was his arm all bloody, up to
the very shoulder.
Now when that mighty worm was ware that he had
his death-wound, then he lashed out head and tail, so that all
things soever that were before him were broken to pieces.
So whenas Fafnir had his death-wound, he asked
"Who art thou? And who is thy father? And what thy kin, that
thou wert so hardy as to bear weapons against me?"
Sigurd answered, "Unknown to men is my kin. I
am called a noble beast: (2) neither father have I nor mother,
and all alone have I fared hither."
Said Fafnir, "Whereas thou hast neither father
nor mother, of what wonder weft thou born then? But now,
though thou tellest me not thy name on this my death-day, yet
thou knowest verily that thou liest unto me."
He answered, "Sigurd am I called, and my father
was Sigmund."
Says Fafnir, "Who egged thee on to this deed,
and why wouldst thou be driven to it? Hadst thou never heard
how that all folk were adrad of me, and of the awe of my
countenance? But an eager father thou hadst, O bright eyed
swain!"
Sigurd answered, "A hardy heart urged me on
hereto, and a strong hand and this sharp sword, which well
thou knowest now, stood me in stead in the doing of the deed.
`Seldom hath hardy eld a faint-heart youth.'"
Fafnir said, "Well, I wot that hadst thou waxed
amid thy kin, thou mightest have good skill to slay folk in
thine anger; but more of a marvel is it, that thou, a bondsman
taken in war, shouldst have the heart to set on me, `for few
among bondsmen have heart for the fight.'"
Said 8igurd, "Wilt thou then cast it in my
teeth that I am far away from my kin? Albeit I was a bondsman,
yet was I never shackled. God wot thou hast found me free
enow."
Fafnir answered, "In angry wise dost thou take
my speech; but hearken, for that same gold which I have owned
shall be thy bane too."
Quoth Sigurd, "Fain would we keep all our
wealth til that day of days; yet shall each man die once for
all."
Said Fafnir, "Few things wilt thou do after my
counsel, but take heed that thou shalt be drowned if thou
farest unwarily over the sea; so bide thou rather on the dry
land for the coming of the calm tide."
Then said Sigurd, "Speak, Fafnir, and say, if
thou art so exceeding wise, who are the Norns who rule the lot
of all mothers' sons."
Fafnir answers, "Many there be and wide apart;
for some are of the kin of the Aesir, and some are of Elfin
kin, and some there are who are daughters of Dvalin."
Said Sigurd, "How namest thou the holm whereon
Surt (3) and the Aesir mix and mingle the water of the sword?"
"Unshapen is that holm hight," said Fafnir.
And yet again he said, "Regin, my brother, has
brought about my end, and it gladdens my heart that thine too
he bringeth about; for thus will things be according to his
will."
And once again he spake, "A countenance of
terror I bore up before all folk, after that I brooded over
the heritage of my brother, and on every side did I spout out
poison, so that none durst come anigh me, and of no weapon was
I adrad, nor ever had I so many men before me, as that I
deemed myself not stronger than all; for all men were sore
afeard of me."
Sigurd answered and said, "Few may have victory
by means of that same countenance of terror, for whoso comes
amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far
the mightiest of all."
Then says Fafnir, "Such counsel I give thee,
that thou take thy horse and ride away at thy speediest, for
ofttimes it fails out so, that he who gets a death-wound
avenges himself none the less."
Sigurd answered, "Such as thy redes are I will
nowise do after them; nay, I will ride now to thy lair and
take to me that great treasure of thy kin."
"Ride there then," said Fafnir, "and thou shalt
find gold enow to suffice thee for all thy life-days; yet
shall that gold be thy bane, and the bane of every one soever
who owns it."
Then up stood Sigurd, and said, "Home would I
ride and lose all that wealth, if I deemed that by the losing
thereof I should never die; but every brave and true man will
fain have his hand on wealth till that last day that thou,
Fafnir, wallow in the death-pain til Death and Hell have
thee."
And therewithal Fafnir died.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Lat. "draco", a dragon.
(2) "Unknown to men is my kin." Sigurd refusing to tell his
name is to be referred to the superstition that a dying man
could throw a curse on his enemy.
(3) Surt; a fire-giant, who will destroy the world at the
Ragnarok, or destruction of all things. Aesir; the gods.
CHAPTER XIX. Of the Slaying of Regin, Son of
Hreidmar.
Thereafter came Regin to Sigurd, and said,
"Hail, lord and master, a noble victory hast thou won in the
slaying of Fafnir, whereas none durst heretofore abide in the
path of him; and now shall this deed of fame be of renown
while the world stands fast."
Then stood Regin staring on the earth a long
while, and presently thereafter spake from heavy-mood: "Mine
own brother hast thou slain, and scarce may I be called
sackless of the deed."
Then Sigurd took his sword Gram and dried it on
the earth, and spake to Regin --
"Afar thou faredst when I wrought this deed and
tried this sharp sword with the hand and the might of me; with
all the might and main of a dragon must I strive, while thou
wert laid alow in the heather-bush, wotting not if it were
earth or heaven."
Said Regin, "Long might this worm have lain in
his lair, if the sharp sword I forged with my hand had not
been good at need to thee; had that not been, neither thou nor
any man would have prevailed against him as at this time."
Sigurd answers, "Whenas men meet foes in fight,
better is stout heart than sharp sword."
Then said Regin, exceeding heavily, "Thou hast
slain my brother, and scarce may I be sackless of the deed."
Therewith Sigurd cut out the heart of the worm
with the sword called Ridil; but Regin drank of Fafnir's
blood, and spake, "Grant me a boon, and do a thing little for
thee to do. Bear the heart to the fire, and roast it, and give
me thereof to eat."
Then Sigurd went his ways and roasted it on a
rod; and when the blood bubbled out he laid his finger thereon
to essay it, if it were fully done; and then he set his finger
in his mouth, and lo, when the heart-blood of the worm touched
his tongue, straightway he knew the voice of all fowls, and
heard withal how the wood- peckers chattered in the brake
beside him --
"There sittest thou, Sigurd, roasting Fafnir's
heart for another, that thou shouldest eat thine ownself, and
then thou shouldest become the wisest of all men."
And another spake: "There lies Regin, minded to
beguile the man who trusts in him."
But yet again said the third, "Let him smite
the head from off him then, and be only lord of all that
gold."
And once more the fourth spake and said, "Ah,
the wiser were he if he followed after that good counsel, and
rode thereafter to Fafnir's lair, and took to him that mighty
treasure that lieth there, and then rode over Hindfell,
whereas sleeps Brynhild; for there would he get great wisdom.
Ah, wise he were, if he did after your redes, and bethought
him of his own weal; `for where wolf's ears are, wolf's teeth
are near.'"
Then cried the fifth: "Yea, yea, not so wise is
he as I deem him, if he spareth him whose brother he hath
slain already."
At last spake the sixth: "Handy and good rede
to slay him, and be lord of the treasure!"
Then said Sigurd, "The time is unborn wherein
Regin shall be my bane; nay, rather one road shall both these
brothers fare."
And therewith he drew his sword Gram and struck
off Regin's head.
Then heard Sigurd the wood-peckers a-singing,
even as the song says. (1)
For the first sang:
"Bind thou, Sigurd,
The bright red rings!
Not meet it is
Many things to fear.
A fair may know I,
Fair of all the fairest
Girt about with gold,
Good for thy getting."
And the second:
"Green go the ways
Toward the hall of Giuki
That the fates show forth
To those who fare thither;
There the rich king
Reareth a daughter;
Thou shalt deal, Sigurd,
With gold for thy sweetling."
And the third:
"A high hall is there
Reared upon Hindfell,
Without all around it
Sweeps the red flame aloft.
Wise men wrought
That wonder of halls
With the unhidden gleam
Of the glory of gold."
Then the fourth sang:
"Soft on the fell
A shield-may sleepeth
The lime-trees' red plague
Playing about her:
The sleep-thorn set Odin
Into that maiden
For her choosing in war
The one he willed not.
"Go, son, behold
That may under helm
Whom from battle
Vinskornir bore,
From her may not turn
The torment of sleep.
Dear offspring of kings
In the dread Norns' despite."
Then Sigurd ate some deal of Fafnir's heart,
and the remnant he kept. Then he leapt on his horse and rode
along the trail of the worm Fafnir, and so right unto his
abiding-place; and he found it open, and beheld all the doors
and the gear of them that they were wrought of iron: yea, and
all the beams of the house; and it was dug down deep into the
earth: there found Sigurd gold exceeding plenteous, and the
sword Rotti; and thence he took the Helm of Awe, and the Gold
Byrny, and many things fair and good. So much gold he found
there, that he thought verily that scarce might two horses, or
three belike, bear it thence. So he took all the gold and laid
it in two great chests, and set them on the horse Grani, and
took the reins of him, but nowise will he stir, neither will
he abide smiting. Then Sigurd knows the mind of the horse, and
leaps on the back of him, and smites and spurs into him, and
off the horse goes even as if he were unladen.
ENDNOTES:
(1) The Songs of the Birds were inserted from "Reginsmal" by
the translators.
CHAPTER XX. Of Sigurd's Meeting with Brynhild on
the Mountain.
By long roads rides Sigurd, till he comes at
the last up on to Hindfell, and wends his way south to the
land of the Franks; and he sees before him on the fell a great
light, as of fire burning, and flaming up even unto the
heavens; and when he came thereto, lo, a shield hung castle
before him, and a banner on the topmost thereof: into the
castle went Sigurd, and saw one lying there asleep, and
all-armed. Therewith he takes the helm from off the head of
him, and sees that it is no man, but a woman; and she was clad
in a byrny as closely set on her as though it had gown to her
flesh; so he rent it from the collar downwards; and then the
sleeves thereof, and ever the sword bit on it as if it were
cloth. Then said Sigurd that over-long had she lain asleep;
but she asked --
"What thing of great might is it that has
prevailed to rend my byrny, and draw me from my sleep?"
Even as sings the song (1)
"What bit on the byrny,
Why breaks my sleep away,
Who has turned from me
My wan tormenting?"
"Ah, is it so, that here is come Sigurd
Sigmundson, bearing Fafnir's helm on his head and Fafnir's
bane in his hand?"
Then answered Sigurd --
"Sigmund's son
With Sigurd's sword
E'en now rent down
The raven's wall."
"Of the Volsung's kin is he who has done the
deed; but now I have heard that thou art daughter of a mighty
king, and folk have told us that thou wert lovely and full of
lore, and now I will try the same."
Then Brynhild sang --
"Long have I slept
And slumbered long,
Many and long are the woes of mankind,
By the might of Odin
Must I bide helpless
To shake from off me the spells of slumber.
"Hail to the day come back!
Hail, sons of the daylight!
Hail to thee, dark night, and thy daughter!
Look with kind eyes a-down,
On us sitting here lonely,
And give unto us the gain that we long for.
"Hail to the Aesir,
And the sweet Asyniur! (2)
Hail to the fair earth fulfilled of plenty!
Fair words, wise hearts,
Would we win from you,
And healing hands while life we hold."
Then Brynhild speaks again and says, "Two kings
fought, one hight Helm Gunnar, an old man, and the greatest of
warriors, and Odin had promised the victory unto him; but his
foe was Agnar, or Audi's brother, and so I smote down Helm
Gunnar in the fight; and Odin, in vengeance for that deed,
stuck the sleep-thorn into me, and said that I should never
again have the victory, but should be given away in marriage;
but there against I vowed a vow, that never would I wed one
who knew the name of fear."
Then said Sigurd, "Teach us the lore of mighty
matters!"
She said, "Belike thou cannest more skill in
all than I; yet will I teach thee; yea, and with thanks, if
there be aught of my cunning that will in anywise pleasure
thee, either of runes or of other matters that are the root of
things; but now let us drink together, and may the Gods give
to us twain a good day, that thou mayst win good help and fame
from my wisdom, and that thou mayst hereafter mind thee of
that which we twain speak together."
Then Brynhild filled a beaker and bore it to
Sigurd, and gave him the drink of love, and spake --
"Beer bring I to thee,
Fair fruit of the byrnies' clash,
Mixed is it mightily,
Mingled with fame,
Brimming with bright lays
And pitiful runes,
Wise words, sweet words,
Speech of great game.
"Runes of war know thou,
If great thou wilt be!
Cut them on hilt of hardened sword,
Some on the brand's back,
Some on its shining side,
Twice name Tyr therein.
"Sea-runes good at need,
Learnt for ship's saving,
For the good health of the swimming horse;
On the stern cut them,
Cut them on the rudder-blade
And set flame to shaven oar:
Howso big be the sea-hills,
Howso blue beneath,
Hail from the main then comest thou home.
"Word-runes learn well
If thou wilt that no man
Pay back grief for the grief thou gavest;
Wind thou these,
Weave thou these,
Cast thou these all about thee,
At the Thing,
Where folk throng,
Unto the full doom faring.
"Of ale-runes know the wisdom
If thou wilt that another's wife
Should not bewray thine heart that trusteth:
Cut them on the mead-horn,
On the back of each hand,
And nick an N upon thy nail.
"Ale have thou heed
To sign from all harm
Leek lay thou in the liquor,
Then I know for sure
Never cometh to thee,
Mead with hurtful matters mingled.
"Help-runes shalt thou gather
If skill thou wouldst gain
To loosen child from low-laid mother;
Cut be they in hands hollow,
Wrapped the joints round about;
Call for the Good-folks' gainsome helping.
"Learn the bough-runes wisdom
If leech-lore thou lovest;
And wilt wot about wounds' searching
On the bark be they scored;
On the buds of trees
Whose boughs look eastward ever.
"Thought-runes shalt thou deal with
If thou wilt be of all men
Fairest-souled wight, and wisest,
These areded
These first cut
These first took to heart high Hropt.
"On the shield were they scored
That stands before the shining God,
On Early-waking's ear,
On All-knowing's hoof,
On the wheel which runneth
Under Rognir's chariot;
On Sleipnir's jaw-teeth,
On the sleigh's traces.
"On the rough bear's paws,
And on Bragi's tongue,
On the wolfs claws,
And on eagle's bill,
On bloody wings,
And bridge's end;
On loosing palms,
And pity's path:
"On glass, and on gold,
And on goodly silver,
In wine and in wort,
And the seat of the witch-wife;
On Gungnir's point,
And Grani's bosom;
On the Norn's nail,
And the neb of the night-owl.
"All these so cut,
Were shaven and sheared,
And mingled in with holy mead,
And sent upon wide ways enow;
Some abide with the Elves,
Some abide with the Aesir,
Or with the wise Vanir,
Some still hold the sons of mankind.
"These be the book-runes,
And the runes of good help,
And all the ale-runes,
And the runes of much might;
To whomso they may avail,
Unbewildered unspoilt;
They are wholesome to have:
Thrive thou with these then.
When thou hast learnt their lore,
Till the Gods end thy life-days.
"Now shalt thou choose thee
E'en as choice is bidden,
Sharp steel's root and stem,
Choose song or silence;
See to each in thy heart,
All hurt has been heeded."
Then answered Sigurd --
"Ne'er shall I flee,
Though thou wottest me fey;
Never was I born for blenching,
Thy loved rede will I
Hold aright in my heart
Even as long as I may live."
ENDNOTES:
(1) The stanzas on the two following pages were inserted here
from "Sigrdrifasmal" by the translators.
(2) Goddesses.
CHAPTER XXI. More Wise Words of Brynhild.
Sigurd spake now, "Sure no wiser woman than
thou art one may be found in the wide world; yea, yea, teach
me more yet of thy wisdom!"
She answers, "Seemly is it that I do according
to thy will, and show thee forth more redes of great avail,
for thy prayer's sake and thy wisdom ;" and she spake withal
--
"Be kindly to friend and kin, and reward not
their trespasses against thee; bear and forbear, and win for
thee thereby long enduring praise of men.
"Take good heed of evil things: a may's love,
and a man's wife; full oft thereof doth ill befall!
"Let not thy mind be overmuch crossed by unwise
men at thronged meetings of folk; for oft these speak worse
than they wot of; lest thou be called a dastard, and art
minded to think that thou art even as is said; slay such an
one on another day, and so reward his ugly talk.
"If thou farest by the way whereas bide evil
things, be well ware of thyself; take not harbour near the
highway, though thou be benighted, for oft abide there ill
wights for men's bewilderment.
"Let not fair women beguile thee, such as thou
mayst meet at the feast, so that the thought thereof stand
thee in stead of sleep, and a quiet mind; yea, draw them not
to thee with kisses or other sweet things of love.
"If thou hearest the fool's word of a drunken
man, strive not with him being drunk with drink and witless;
many a grief, yea, and the very death, groweth from out such
things.
"Fight thy foes in the field, nor be burnt in
thine house.
'Never swear thou wrongsome oath; great and
grim is the reward for the breaking of plighted troth.
"Give kind heed to dead men, -- sick-dead,
Sea-dead, or ~word- dead; deal heedfully with their dead
corpses.
"Trow never in him for whom thou hast slain
father, brother, or whatso near kin, yea, though young he be;
`for oft waxes wolf in youngling'.
"Look thou with good heed to the wiles of thy
friends; but little skill is given to me, that I should
foresee the ways of thy life; yet good it were that hate fell
not on thee from those of thy wife's house."
Sigurd spake, "None among the sons of men can
be found wiser than thou; and thereby swear I, that thee will
I have as my own, for near to my heart thou liest."
She answers, "Thee would I fainest choose,
though I had all men's sons to choose from."
And thereto they plighted troth both of them.
CHAPTER XXII. Of the Semblance and Array of
Sigurd Fafnir's bane.
(1)
Now Sigurd rides away; many-folded is his
shield, an blazing with red gold, and the image of a dragon is
drawn thereon; and this same was dark brown above, and bright
red below; and with even such-like image was adorned helm, and
saddle, and coat-armour; and he was clad in the golden byrny,
and all his weapons were gold wrought.
Now for this cause was the drake drawn on all
his weapons, that when he was seen of men, all folk might know
who went there; yea, all those who had heard of his slaying of
that great dragon, that the Voerings call Fafnir, and for that
cause are his weapons gold-wrought, and brown of hue, and that
he was by far above other men in courtesy and goodly manners,
and well-nigh in all things else; and whenas folk tell of all
the mightiest champions, and the noblest chiefs, then ever is
he named the foremost, and his name goes wide about on all
tongues north of the sea of the Greek-lands, and even so shall
it be while the world endures.
Now the hair of this Sigurd was golden-red of
hue, fair of fashion, and falling down in great locks; thick
and short was his beard, and of no other colour, high-nosed he
was, broad and high- boned of face; so keen were his eyes,
that few durst gaze up under the brows of him; his shoulders
were as broad to look on as the shoulders of two; most duly
was his body fashioned betwixt height and breadth, and in such
wise as was seemliest; and this is the sign told of his
height, that when he was girt with his sword Gram, which same
was seven spans long, as he went through the full-grown
rye-fields, the dew-shoe of the said sword smote the ears of
the standing corn; and, for all that, ;~greater was his
strength than his growth: well could he wield sword, and cast
forth spear, shoot shaft, and hold shield, bend bow, back
horse, and do all the goodly deeds that he learned in his
youth's days.
Wise he was to know things yet undone; and the
voice of all fowls he knew, wherefore few things fell on him
unawares.
Of many words he was and so fair of speech
withal, that whensoever he made it his business to speak, he
never left speaking before that to all men it seemed full
sure, that no otherwise must the matter be than as he said.
His sport and pleasure it was to give aid to
his own folk, and to prove himself in mighty matters, to take
wealth from his unfriends, and give the same to his friends.
Never did he lose heart, and of naught was he
adrad.
ENDNOTES:
(1) This chapter is nearly literally the same as chapter 166
of the "Wilkinasaga"; Ed.: Perinskiold, Stockholm, 1715.
CHAPTER XXIII. Sigurd comes to Hlymdale.
Forth Sigurd fides till he comes to a great and
goodly dwelling, the lord whereof was a mighty chief called
Heimir; he had to wife a sister of Brynhild, who was hight
Bekkhild, because she had bidden at home, and learned
handicraft, whereas Brynhild fared with helm and byrny, unto
the wars, wherefore was she called Brynhild.
Heimir and Bekkhild had a son called Alswid,
the most courteous of men.
Now at this stead were men disporting them
abroad, but when they see the man riding thereto, they leave
their play to wonder at him, for none such had they ever seen
erst, so they went to meet him, and gave him good welcome.
Alswid bade him abide and have such things at his hands as he
would; and he takes his bidding blithesomely; due service
withal was established for him; four men bore the treasure of
gold from off the horse, and the fifth took it to him to guard
the same; therein were many things to behold, things of great
price, and seldom seen; and great game and joy men had to look
on byrnies and helms, and mighty rings, and wondrous great
golden stoups, and all kinds of war weapons.
So there dwelt Sigurd long in great honour
holden; and tidings of that deed of fame spread wide through
all lands, of how he had slain that hideous and fearful
dragon. So good joyance had they there together, and each was
leal to other; and their sport was in the arraying of their
weapons, and the shafting of their arrows, and the flying of
their falcons.
CHAPTER XXIV. Sigurd sees Brynhild at Hlymdale.
In those days came home to Heimir, Brynhild,
his foster daughter, and she sat in her bower with her
maidens, and could do more skill in handycraft than other
women; she sat, overlaying cloth with gold, and sewing therein
the great deeds which Sigurd had wrought, the slaying of the
Worm, and the taking of the wealth of him, and the death of
Regin withal.
Now tells the tale, that on a day Sigurd rode
into the wood with hawk, and hound, and men thronging; and
whenas he came home his hawk flew up to a high tower and sat
him down on a certain window. Then fared Sigurd after his
hawk, and he saw where sat a fair woman, and knew that it was
Brynhild, and he deems all things he sees there to be worthy
together, both her fairness, and the fair things she wrought:
and therewith he goes into the hall, but has no more joyance
in the games of the men folk.
Then spake Alswid, "Why art thou so bare of
bliss; this manner of thine grieveth us thy friends; why then
wilt thou not hold to thy gleesome ways? Lo, thy hawks pine
now, and thy horse Grani droops; and long will it be ere we
are booted thereof?"
Sigurd answered, "Good friend, hearken to what
lies on my mind; for my hawk flew up into a certain tower; and
when I came thereto and took him, lo there I saw a fair woman,
and she sat by a needlework of gold, and did thereon, my deeds
that are passed, and my deeds that are to come,"
Then said Alswid, "Thou has seen Brynhild,
Budli's daughter, the greatest of great women."
"Yea, verily," said Sigurd; "but how came she
hither?"
Aswid answered, "Short space there was betwixt
the coming hither of the twain of you."
Says Sigurd, "Yea, but a few, days agone I knew
her for the best of the world's women."
Alswid said, "Give not all thine heed to one
woman, being such a man as thou art; ill life to sit lamenting
for what we may not have."
"I shall go meet her," says Sigurd, "and get
from her love like my love, and give her a gold ring in token
thereof."
Alswid answered, "None has ever yet been known
whom she would let sit beside her, or to whom she would give
drink; for ever will she hold to warfare and to the winning of
all kinds of fame."
Sigurd said, "We know not for sure whether she
will give us answer or not, or grant us a seat beside her."
So the next day after, Sigurd went to the
bower, but Alswid stood outside the bower door, fitting shafts
to his arrows.
Now Sigurd spake, "Abide, fair and hale lady,
-- how farest thou?"
She answered, "Well it fares; my kin and my
friends live yet: but who shall say what goodhap folk may bear
to their life's end?"
He sat him down by her, and there came in four
damsels with great golden beakers, and the best of wine
therein; and these stood before the twain.
Then said Brynhild, "This seat is for few, but
and if my father come."
He answered, "Yet is it granted to one that
likes me well."
Now that chamber was hung with the best and
fairest of hanging, and the floor thereof was all covered with
cloth.
Sigurd spake, "Now has it come to pass even as
thou didst promise."
"O be thou welcome here!" said she, and arose
there with, and the four damsels with her, and bore the golden
beaker to him, and bade him drink; he stretched oui his hand
to the beaker, and took it, and her hand withal, and drew her
down beside him; and cast his arms round about her neck and
kissed her, and said --
"Thou art the fairest that was ever born!"
But Brynhild said, "Ah, wiser is it not to cast
faith and troth into a woman's power, for ever shall they
break that they have promised."
He said, "That day would dawn the best of days
over our heads whereon each of each should be made happy."
Brynhild answered, "It is not fated that we
should abide together; I am a shield-may, and wear helm on
head even as the kings of war, and them full oft I help,
neither is the battle become loathsome to me."
Sigurd answered, "What fruit shall be of our
life, if we live not together: harder to bear this pain that
lies hereunder, than the stroke of sharp sword."
Brynhild answers, "I shall gaze on the hosts of
the war kings, but thou shalt wed Gudrun, the daughter of
Giuki."
Sigurd answered, "What king's daughter lives to
beguile me? Neither am I double-hearted herein; and now I
swear by the Gods that thee shall I have for mine own, or no
woman else.
And even suchlike wise spake she.
8igurd thanked her for her speech, and gave her
a gold ring, and now they swore oath anew, and so he went his
ways to his men, and is with them awhile in great bliss.
CHAPTER XXV. Of the Dream of Gudrun, Giuki's
daughter.
There was a king hight Giuki, who ruled a realm
south of the Rhine; three sons he had, thus named: Gunnar,
Hogni, and Guttorm, and Gudrun was the name of his daughter,
the fairest of maidens; and all these children were far before
all other king's children in all prowess, and in goodliness
and growth withal; ever were his sons at the wars and wrought
many a deed of fame. But Giuki had wedded Grimhild the
Wise-wife.
Now Budli was the name of a king mightier than
Giuki, mighty though they both were: and Atli was the brother
of Brynhild: Atli was a fierce man and a grim, great and black
to look on, yet noble of mien withal, and the greatest of
warriors. Grimhild was a fierce-heart woman.
Now the days of the Giukings bloomed fair, and
chiefly because of those children, so far before the sons of
men.
On a day Gudrun says to her mays that she may
have no joy of heart; then a certain woman asked her wherefore
her joy was departed.
She answered, "Grief came to me in my dreams,
therefore is there sorrow in my heart, since thou must needs
ask thereof."
"Tell it me, then, thy dream," said the woman,
"for dreams oft forecast but the weather."
Gudrun answers, "Nay, nay, no weather is this;
I dreamed that I had a fair hawk on my wrist, feathered with
feathers of gold."
Says the woman, "Many have heard tell of thy
beauty, thy wisdom, and thy courtesy; some king's son abides
thee, then."
Gudrun answers, "I dreamed that naught was so
dear to me as this hawk, and all my wealth had I cast aside
rather than him."
The woman said, "Well, then, the man thou shalt
have will be of the goodliest, and well shalt thou love him."
Gudrun answered, "It grieves me that I know not
who he shall be; let us go seek Brynhild, for she belike will
wot thereof."
So they arrayed them in gold and many a fair
thing, and she went with her damsels till they came to the
hall of Brynhild, and that hall was dight with gold, and stood
on a high hill; and whenas their goings were seen, it was told
Brynhild, that a company of women drove toward the burg in
gilded waggons.
"That shall be Gudrun, Giuki's daughter," says
she: "I dreamed of her last night; let us go meet her! No
fairer woman may come to our house."
So they went abroad to meet them, and gave them
good greeting, and they went into the goodly hall together;
fairly painted it was within, and well adorned with silver
vessel; cloths were spread under the feet of them, and all
folk served them, and in many wise they sported.
But Gudrun was somewhat silent.
Then said Brynhild, "Ill to abash folk of their
mirth; prithee do not so; let us talk together for our disport
of mighty kings and their great deeds."
"Good talk," says Gudrun, "let us do even so;
what kings deemest thou to have been the first of all men?"
Brynhild says, "The sons of Haki, and Hagbard
withal; they brought to pass many a deed of fame in the
warfare."
Gudrun answers, "Great men certes, and of noble
fame! Yet Sigar took their one sister, and burned the other,
house and all; and they may be called slow to revenge the
deed; why didst thou not name my brethren who are held to be
the first of men as at this time?"
Brynhild says, "Men of good hope are they
surely though but little proven hitherto; but one I know far
before them, Sigurd, the son of Sigmund the king; a youngling
was he in the days when he slew the sons of Hunding, and
revenged his father, and Eylimi, his mother's father."
Said Gudrun, "By what token tellest thou that?"
Brynhild answered, "His mother went amid the
dead and found Sigmund the king sore wounded, and would bind
up his hurts; but he said he grew over old for war; and bade
her lay this comfort to her heart, that she should bear the
most famed of sons; and wise was the wise man's word therein:
for after the death of King Sigmund, she went to King Alf, and
there was Sigurd nourished in great honour, and day by day he
wrought some deed of fame, and is the man most renowned of all
the wide world."
Gudrun says, "From love hast thou gained these
tidings of him; but for this cause came I here, to tell thee
dreams of mine which have brought me great grief."
Says Brynhild, "Let not such matters sadden
thee: abide with thy friends who wish thee blithesome, all of
them!"
"This I dreamed," said Gudrun, "that we went, a
many of us in company, from the bower, and we saw an exceeding
great hart, that far excelled all other deer ever seen, and
the hair of him was golden; and this deer we were all fain to
take, but I alone got him; and he seemed to me better than all
things else; but sithence thou, Byrnhild, didst shoot and slay
my deer even at my very knees, and such grief was that to me
that scarce might I bear it; and then afterwards thou gavest
me a wolf-cub, which besprinkled me with the blood of my
brethren."
Brynhild answers, "I will arede thy dream, even
as things shall come to pass hereafter; for Sigurd shall come
to thee, even he whom I have chosen for my well-beloved; and
Grimhild shall give him mead mingled with hurtful things,
which shall cast us all into mighty strife. Him shalt thou
have, and him shalt thou quickly miss; and Atli the king shalt
thou wed; and thy brethren shalt thou lose, and slay Atli
withal in the end."
Dudrun answers, "Grief and woe to know that
such things shall be!"
And therewith she and hers get them gone home
to King Giuki.
CHAPTER XXVI.
Now Sigurd goes his ways with all that great
treasure, and in friendly wise he departs from them; and on
Grani he rides with all his war-gear and the burden withal;
and thus he rides until he comes to the hall of King Giuki;
there he rides into the burg, and that sees one of the king's
men, and he spake withal --
"Sure it may be deemed that here is come one of
the Gods, for his array is all done with gold, and his horse
is far mightier than other horses, and the manner of his
weapons is most exceeding goodly, and most of all the man
himself far excels all other men ever seen."
So the king goes out with his court and greets
the man, and asks --
"Who art thou who thus ridest into my burg, as
none has durst hitherto without the leave of my sons?"
He answered, "I am called Sigurd, son of King
Sigmund."
Then said King Giuki, "Be thou welcome here
then, and take at our hands whatso thou wiliest."
So he went into the king's hall, and all men
seemed little beside him, and all men served him, and there he
abode in great joyance.
Now oft they all ride abroad together, Sigurd
and Gunnar and Hogni, and ever is Sigurd far the foremost of
them, mighty men of their hands though they were.
But Grimhild finds how heartily Sigurd loved
Brynhild, and how oft he talks of her; and she falls to
thinking how well it were, if he might abide there and wed the
daughter of King Giuki, for she saw that none might come anigh
to his goodliness, and what faith and goodhelp there was in
him, and how that he had more wealth withal than folk might
tell of any man; and the king did to him even as unto his own
sons, and they for their parts held him of more worth than
themselves.
So on a night as they sat at the drink, the
queen arose, and went before Sigurd, and said --
"Great joy we have in thine abiding here, and
all good things will we put before thee to take of us; lo now,
take this horn and drink thereof."
So he took it and drank, and therewithal she
said, "Thy father shall be Giuki the king, and I shall be thy
mother, and Gunnar and Hogni shall be thy brethren, and all
this shall be sworn with oaths each to each; and then surely
shall the like of you never be found on earth."
Sigurd took her speech well, for with the
drinking of that drink all memory of Brynhild departed from
him. So there he abode awhile.
And on a day went Grimhild to Giuki the king,
and cast her arms about his neck, and spake --
"Behold, there has now come to us the greatest
of great hearts that the world holds; and needs must he be
trusty and of great avail; give him thy daughter then, with
plenteous wealth, and as much of rule as he will; perchance
thereby he will be well content to abide here ever."
The king answered, "Seldom does it befall that
kings offer their daughters to any; yet in higher wise will it
be done to offer her to this man, than to take lowly prayers
to her from others."
On a night Gudrun pours out the drink, and
Sigurd beholds her how fair she is and how full of all
courtesy.
Five seasons Sigurd abode there, and ever they
passed their days together in good honour and friendship.
And so it befell that the king held talk
together, and Giuki said --
"Great good thou givest us, Sigurd, and with
exceeding strength thou strengthenest our realm."
Then Gunnar said, "All things that may be will
we do for thee, so thou abidest here long; both dominion shall
thou have, and our sister freely and unprayed for, whom
another man would not get for all his prayers."
Sigurd says, "Thanks have ye for this
wherewith; ye honour me, and gladly will I take the same."
Therewith they swore brotherhood together, and
to be even as if they were children of one father and one
mother; and a noble feast was holden, and endured many days,
and Sigurd drank at the wedding of him and Gudrun; and there
might men behold all manner of game and glee, and each day the
feast was better and better.
Now fare these folk wide over the world, and do
many great deeds, and slay many kings' sons, and no man has
ever done such works of prowess as did they; then home they
come again with much wealth won in war.
Sigurd gave of the serpent's heart to Gudrun,
and she ate thereof, and became greater-hearted, and wiser
than ere before: and the son of these twain was called
Sigmund.
Now on a time went Grimhild to Gunnar her son,
and spake --
"Fair blooms the life and fortune of thee, but
for one thing only, and namely whereas thou art unwedded; go
woo Brynhild; good rede is this, and Sigurd will ride with
thee."
Gunnar answered, "Fair in she certes, and I am
fain enow to win her;" and therewith he tells his father, and
his brethren, and Sigurd, and they all prick him on to that
wooing.
CHAPTER XXVII. The Wooing of Brynhild.
Now they array them joyously for their journey,
and ride over hill and dale to the house of King Budli, and
woo his daughter of him; in a good wise he took their speech,
if so be that she herself would not deny them, but he said
withal that so high- minded was she, that that man only might
wed her whom she would.
Then they ride to Hlymdale, and there Heimir
gave them good welcome; so Gunnar tells his errand; Heimir
says, that she must needs wed but him whom she herself chose
freely; and tells them how her abode was but a little way
thence, and that he deemed that him only would she have who
should ride through the flaming fire that was drawn round
about her hall; so they depart and come to the hall and the
fire, and see there a castle with a golden roof-ridge, and all
round about a fire roaring up.
Now Gunnar rode on Goti, but Hogni on Holkvi,
and Gunnar smote his horse to face the fire, but he shrank
aback.
Then said Sigurd, "Why givest thou back,
Gunnar?"
He answered, "The horse will not tread this
fire; but lend me thy horse Grani."
"Yea, with all my good will," says Sigurd.
Then Gunnar rides him at the fire, and yet
nowise will Gram stir, nor may Gunnar any the more ride
through that fire. So now they change semblance, Gunnar and
Sigurd, even as Grimhild had taught them; then Sigurd in the
likeness of Gunnar mounts and rides, Gram in his hand, and
golden spurs on his heels; then leapt Grani into the fire when
he felt the spurs; and a mighty roar arose as the fire burned
ever madder, and the earth trembled, and the flames went up
even unto the heavens, nor had any dared to ride as he rode,
even as it were through the deep mirk.
But now the fire sank withal, and he leapt from
his horse and went into the hall, even as the song says --
"The flame flared at its maddest,
Earth's fields fell a-quaking
As the red flame aloft
Licked the lowest of heaven.
Few had been fain,
Of the rulers of folk,
To ride through that flame,
Or athwart it to tread.
"Then Sigurd smote
Grani with sword,
And the flame was slaked
Before the king;
Low lay the flames
Before the fain of fame;
Bright gleamed the array
That Regin erst owned.
Now when Sigurd had passed through the fire, he
came into a certain fair dwelling, and therein sat Brynhild.
She asked, "What man is it?"
Then he named himself Gunnar, son of Giuki, and
said -- "Thou art awarded to me as my wife, by the good will
and word of thy father and thy foster-father, and I have
ridden through the flame of thy fire, according to thy that
thou hast set forth."
"I wot not clearly," said she, "how I shall
answer thee."
Now Sigurd stood upright on the hall floor, and
leaning on the hilt of his sword, and he spake to Brynhild --
"In reward thereof, shall I pay thee a great
dower in gold and goodly things?"
She answered in heavy mood from her seat,
whereas she sat like unto swan on billow, having a sword in
her hand and a helm on her head, and being clad in a byrny, "O
Gunnar," she says, "speak not to me of such things unless thou
be the first and best of all men; for then shall thou slay
those my wooers, if thou hast heart thereto; I have been in
battles with the king of the Greeks, and weapons were stained
with red blood, and for such things still I yearn."
He answered, "Yea, certes many great deeds hast
thou done; but yet call thou to mind thine oath, concerning
the riding through of this fire, wherein thou didst swear that
thou wouldst go with the man who should do this deed."
So she found that he spoke but the sooth, and
she paid heed to his words, and arose, and greeted him meetly,
and he abode there three nights, and they lay in one bed
together; but he took the sword Gram and laid it betwixt them:
then she asked him why he laid it there; and he answered, that
in that wise must he needs wed his wife or else get his bane.
Then she took from off her the ring Andvari's
loom, which he had given her aforetime, and gave it to him,
but he gave her another ring out of Fafnir's hoard.
Thereafter he rode away through the same fire
unto his Fellows, and he and Gunnar changed semblances again,
and rode unto Hlymdale, and told how it had gone with them.
That same day went Brynhild home to her
foster-father, and tells him as one whom she trusted, how that
there had come a king to her; "And he rode through my flaming
fire, and said he was come to woo me, and named himself
Gunnar; but I said that such a deed might Sigurd alone have
done, with whom I plighted troth on the mountain; and he is my
first troth-plight, and my well-beloved."
Heimir said that things must needs abide even
as now they had now come to pass.
Brynhild said, "Aslaug the daughter of me and
Sigurd shall be nourished here with thee."
Now the kings fare home, but Brynhild goes to
her father; Grimhild welcomes the kings meetly, and thanks
Sigurd for his fellowship; and withal is a great feast made,
and many were the guests thereat; and thither came Budli the
King with his daughter Brynhild, and his son Atli, and for
many days did the feast endure: and at that feast was Gunnar
wedded to Brynhild: but when it was brought to an end, once
more has Sigurd memory of all the oaths that he sware unto
Brynhild, yet withal he let all things abide in rest and
peace.
Brynhild and Gunnar sat together in great game
and glee, and drank goodly wine.
CHAPTER XXVIII. How the Queens held angry
converse together at the Bathing.
On a day as the Queens went to the river to
bathe them, Brynhild waded the farthest out into the river;
then asked Gudrun what that deed might signify.
Brynhild said, "Yea, and why then should I be
equal to thee in this matter more than in others? I am minded
to think that my father is mightier than thine, and my true
love has wrought many wondrous works of fame, and hath ridden
the flaming fire withal, while thy husband was but the thrall
of King Hjalprek."
Gudrun answered full of wrath, "Thou wouldst be
wise if thou shouldst hold thy peace rather than revile my
husband: lo now, the talk of all men it is, that none has ever
abode in this world like unto him in all matters soever; and
little it beseems thee of all folk to mock him who was thy
first beloved: and Fafnir he slew, yea, and he rode thy
flaming fire, whereas thou didst deem that he was Gunnar the
King, and by thy side he lay, and took from thine hand the
ring Andvari's-loom; -- here mayst thou well behold it!"
Then Brynhild saw the ring and knew it, and
waxed as wan as a dead woman, and she went home and spake no
word the evening long.
So when Sigurd came to bed to Gudrun she asked
him why Brynhild's joy was so departed.
He answered, "I know not, but sore I misdoubt
me that soon we shall know thereof overwell."
Gudrun said, "Why may she not love her life,
having wealth and bliss, and the praise of all men, and the
man withal that she would have?"
"Ah, yea!" said Sigurd, "and where in all the
world was she then, when she said that she deemed she had the
noblest of all men, and the dearest to her heart of all?"
Gudrun answers, "Tomorn will I ask her
concerning this, who is the liefest to her of all men for a
husband."
Sigurd said, "Needs must I forbid thee this,
and full surely wilt thou rue the deed if thou doest it."
Now the next morning they sat in the bower, and
Brynhild was silent; then spake Gudrun --
"Be merry, Brynhild! Grievest thou because of
that speech of ours together, or what other thing slayeth thy
bliss?"
Brynhild answers, "With naught but evil intent
thou sayest this, for a cruel heart thou hast."
"Say not so," said Gudrun; "but rather tell me
all the tale."
Brynhild answers, "Ask such things only as are
good for thee to know -- matters meet for mighty dames. Good
to love good things when all goes according to thy heart's
desire!"
Gudrun says, "Early days for me to glory in
that; but this word of thine looketh toward some foreseeing.
What ill dost thou thrust at us? I did naught to grieve thee."
Brynhild answers, "For this shalt thou pay, in
that thou hast got Sigurd to thee, -- nowise can I see thee
living in the bliss thereof, whereas thou hast him, and the
wealth and the might of him."
But Gudrun answered, "Naught knew I of your
words and vows together; and well might my father look to the
mating of me without dealing with thee first."
"No secret speech had we," quoth Brynhild,
"though we swore oath together; and full well didst thou know
that thou wentest about to beguile me; verily thou shalt have
thy reward!"
Says Gudrun, "Thou art mated better than thou
are worthy of; but thy pride and rage shall be hard to slake
belike, and there for shall many a man pay."
"Ah, I should be well content," said Brynhild,
"if thou hadst not the nobler man!"
Gudrun answers, "So noble a husband hast thou,
that who knows of a greater king or a lord of more wealth and
might?"
Says Brynhild, "Sigurd slew Fafnir, and that
only deed is of more worth than all the might of King Gunnar."
(Even as the song says) --
"The worm Sigurd slew,
Nor ere shall that deed
Be worsened by age
While the world is alive.
But thy brother the King
Never durst, never bore
The flame to ride down
Through the fire to fare."
Gudrun answers, "Grani would not abide the fire
under Gunnar the King, but Sigurd durst the deed, and thy
heart may well abide without mocking him."
Brynhild answers, "Nowise will I hide from thee
that I deem no good of Grimhild."
Says Gudrun, "Nay, lay no ill words on her, for
in all things she is to thee as to her own daughter."
"Ah," says Brynhild, "she is the beginning of
all this hale that biteth so; an evil drink she bare to
Sigurd, so that he had no more memory of my very name."
"All wrong thou talkest; a lie without measure
is this," quoth Gudrun.
Brynhild answered, "Have thou joy of Sigurd
according to the measure of the wiles wherewith ye have
beguiled me! Unworthily have ye conspired against me; may all
things go with you as my heart hopes!"
Gudrun says, "More joy shall I have of him than
thy wish would give unto me: but to no man's mind it came,
that he had aforetime his pleasure of me; nay not once."
"Evil speech thou speakest," says Brynhild;
"when thy wrath runs off thou wilt rue it; but come now, let
us no more cast angry words one at the other!"
Says Gudrun, "Thou wert the first to cast such
words at me, and now thou makest as if thou wouldst amend it,
but a cruel and hard heart abides behind."
"Let us lay aside vain babble," says Brynhild.
"Long did I hold my peace concerning my sorrow of heart, and,
lo now, thy brother alone do I love; let us fall to other
talk."
Gudrun said, "Far beyond all this doth thine
heart look."
And so ugly ill befell from that going to the
river, and that knowing of the ring, wherefrom did all their
talk arise.
CHAPTER XXIX. Of Brynhild's great Grief and
Mourning.
After this talk Brynhild lay a-bed, and tidings
were brought to King Gunnar that Brynhild was sick; he goes to
see her thereon, and asks what ails her; but she answered him
naught, but lay there as one dead: and when he was hard on her
for an answer, she said --
"What didst thou with that ring that I gave
thee, even the one which King Budli gave me at our last
parting, when thou and King Giuki came to him and threatened
fire and the sword, unless ye had me to wife? Yea, at that
time he led me apart, and asked me which I had chosen of those
who were come; but I prayed him that I might abide to ward the
land and be chief over the third part of his men; then were
there two choices for me to deal betwixt either that I should
be wedded to him whom he would, or lose all my weal and
friendship at his hands; and he said withal that his
friendship would be better to me than his wrath: then I
bethought me whether I should yield to his will, or slay many
a man; and therewithal I deemed that it would avail little to
strive with him, and so it fell out, that I promised to wed
whomsoever should ride the horse Grani with Fafnir's Hoard,
and ride through my flaming fire, and slay those men whom I
called on him to slay, and now so it was, that none durst
ride, save Sigurd only, because he lacked no heart thereto;
yea, and the Worm he flew, and Regin, and five kings beside;
but thou, Gunnar, durst do naught; as pale as a dead man didst
thou wax, and no king thou art, and no champion; so whereas I
made a vow unto my father, that him alone would I love who was
the noblest man alive, and that this is none save Sigurd, lo,
now have I broken my oath and brought it to naught, since he
is none of mine, and for this cause shall I compass thy death;
and a great reward of evil things have I wherewith to reward
Grimhild; -- never, I wot, has woman lived eviler or of lesser
heart than she."
Gunnar answered in such wise that few might
hear him, "Many a vile word hast thou spoken, and an
evil-hearted woman art thou, whereas thou revilest a woman far
better than thou; never would she curse her life as thou dost;
nay, nor has she tormented dead folk, or murdered any; but
lives her life well praised of all."
Brynhild answered, "Never have I dwelt with
evil things privily, or done loathsome deeds; -- yet most fain
I am to slay thee."
And therewith would she slay King Gunnar, but
Hogni laid her in fetters; but then Gunnar spake withal --
"Nay, I will not that she abide in fetters."
Then said she, "Heed it not! For never again
seest thou me glad in thine hall, never drinking, never at the
chess-play, never speaking the words of kindness, never
over-laying the fair cloths with gold, never giving thee good
counsel; -- ah, my sorrow of heart that I might not get Sigurd
to me!"
Then she sat up and smote her needlework, and
rent it asunder, and bade set open her bower doors, that far
away might the wailings of her sorrow be heard; then great
mourning and lamentation there was, so that folk heard far and
wide through that abode.
Now Gudrun asked her bower-maidens why they sat
so joyless and downcast. "What has come to you, that ye fare
ye as witless women, or what unheard-of wonders have befallen
you?"
Then answered a waiting lady, hight Swaflod,
"An untimely, an evil day it is, and our hall is fulfilled of
lamentation."
Then spake Gudrun to one of her handmaids,
"Arise, for we have slept long; go, wake Brynhild, and let us
fall to our needlework and be merry."
"Nay, nay," she says, "nowise may I wake her,
or talk with her; for many days has she drunk neither mead nor
wine; surely the wrath of the Gods has fallen upon her."
Then spake Gudrun to Gunnar, "Go and see her,"
she says, "and bid her know that I am grieved with her grief."
"Nay," says Gunnar, "I am forbid to go see her
or to share her weal."
Nevertheless he went unto her, and strives in
many wise to have speech of her, but gets no answer
whatsoever; therefore he gets him gone and finds Hogni, and
bids him go see her: he said he was loth thereto, but went,
and gat no more of her.
Then they go and find Sigurd, and pray him to
visit her; he answered naught thereto, and so matters abode
for that night.
But the next day, when he came home from
hunting, Sigurd went to Gudrun, and spake --
"In such wise do matters show to me, as though
great and evil things will betide from this trouble and
upheaving; and that Brynhild will surely die."
Gudrun answers, "O my lord, by great wonders is
she encompassed, seven days and seven nights has she slept,
and none has dared wake her."
"Nay, she sleeps not," said Sigurd, "her heart
is dealing rather with dreadful intent against me."
Then said Gudrun, weeping, "Woe worth the while
for thy death! Go and see her; and wot if her fury may not be
abated; give her gold, and smother up her grief and anger
therewith!"
Then Sigurd went out, and found the door of
Brynhild's chamber open; he deemed she slept, and drew the
clothes from off her, and said --
"Awake, Brynhild! The sun shineth now over all
the house, and thou hast slept enough; cast off grief from
thee, and take up gladness!"
She said, "And how then hast thou dared to come
to me? In this treason none was worse to me than thou."
Said Sigurd, "Why wilt thou not speak to folk?
For what cause sorrowest thou?"
Brynhild answers, "Ah, to thee will I tell of
my wrath!"
Sigurd said, "As one under a spell art thou, if
thou deemest that there is aught cruel in my heart against
thee; but thou hast him for husband whom thou didst choose."
"Ah, nay," she said, "never did Gunnar ride
through the fire to me, nor did he give me to dower the host
of the slain: I wondered at the man who came into my hall; for
I deemed indeed that I knew thine eyes; but I might not see
clearly, or divide the good from the evil, because of the veil
that lay heavy on my fortune."
Says Sigurd, "No nobler men are there than the
sons of Giuki, they slew the king of the Danes, and that great
chief, the brother of King Budli."
Brynhild answered, "Surely for many an ill-deed
must I reward them; mind me not of my griefs against them! But
thou, Sigurd, slewest the Worm, and rodest the fire through;
yea, and for my sake, and not one of the sons of King Giuki."
Sigurd answers, "I am not thy husband, and thou
art not my wife; yet did a farfamed king pay dower to thee."
Says Brynhild, "Never looked I at Gunnar in
such a wise that my heart smiled on him; and hard and fell am
I to him, though I hide it from others."
"A marvellous thing," says Sigurd, "not to love
such a king; what angers thee most? For surely his love should
be better to thee than gold."
"This is the sorest sorrow to me," she said,
"that the bitter sword is not reddened in thy blood."
"Have no fear thereof!" says he, "no long while
to wait or the bitter sword stand deep in my heart; and no
worse needest thou to pray for thyself, for thou wilt not live
when I am dead; the days of our two lives shall be few enough
from henceforth."
Brynhild answers, "Enough and to spare of bale
is in thy speech, since thou bewrayedst me, and didst twin (1)
me and all bliss; -- naught do I heed my life or death."
Sigurd answers, "Ah, live, and love King Gunnar
and me withal! And all my wealth will I give thee if thou die
not."
Brynhild answers, "Thou knowest me not, nor the
heart that is in me; for thou art the first and best of all
men, and I am become the most loathsome of all woman to thee."
"This is truer," says Sigurd, "that I loved
thee better than myself, though I fell into the wiles from
whence our lives may not escape; for whenso my own heart and
mind availed me, then I sorrowed sore that thou wert not my
wife; but as I might I put my trouble from me, for in a king's
dwelling was I; and withal and in spite of all I was well
content that we were all together. Well may it be, that that
shall come to pass which is foretold; neither shall I fear the
fulfilment thereof."
Brynhild answered, and said, "Too late thou
tellest me that my grief grieved thee: little pity shall I
find now."
Sigurd said, "This my heart would, that thou
and I should go into one bed together; even so wouldst thou be
my wife."
Said Brynhild, "Such words may nowise be
spoken, nor will I have two kings in one hall; I will lay my
life down rather than beguile Gunnar the King."
And therewith she call to mind how they met,
they two, on the mountain, and swore oath each to each.
"But now is all changed and I will not live."
"I might not call to mind thy name," said
Sigurd, "or know time again, before the time of thy wedding;
the greatest of all griefs is that."
Then said Brynhild, "I swore an oath to wed the
man who should ride my flaming fire, and that oath will I hold
to, or die."
"Rather than thou die, I will wed thee, and put
away Gudrun." said Sigurd.
But therewithal so swelled the heart betwixt
the sides of him, that the rings of his byrny burst asunder.
"I will not have thee," says Brynhild, "nay,
nor any other!"
Then Sigurd got him gone.
So saith the song of Sigurd --
"Out then went Sigurd,
The great kings' well-loved,
From the speech and the sorrow,
Sore drooping, so grieving,
That the shirt round about him
Of iron tings woven,
From the sides brake asunder
Of the brave in the battle."
So when Sigurd came into the hall, Gunnar asked
if he had come to a knowledge of what great grief lay heavy on
her, or if she had power of speech: and Sigurd said that she
lacked it not. So now Gunnar goes to her again, and asked her,
what wrought her woe, or if there were anything that might
amend it.
"I will not live," says Brynhild, "for Sigurd
has bewrayed me, yea, and thee no less, whereas thou didst
suffer him to come into my bed: lo thou, two men in one
dwelling I will not have; and this shall be Sigurd's death, or
thy death, or my death; -- for now has he told Gudrun all, and
she is mocking me even now!"
ENDNOTES:
(1) Sunder.
CHAPTER XXX. Of the Slaying of Sigurd
Fafnir's-bane.
Thereafter Brynhild went out, and sat under her
bower-wall, and had many words of wailing to say, and still
she cried that all things were loathsome to her, both land and
lordship alike, so she might not have Sigurd.
But therewith came Gunnar to her yet again, and
Brynhild spake, "Thou shalt lose both realm and wealth, and
thy life and me, for I shall fare home to my kin, and abide
there in sorrow, unless thou slayest Sigurd and his son; never
nourish thou a wolfcub."
Gunnar grew sick at heart thereat, and might
nowise see what fearful thing lay beneath it all; he was bound
to Sigurd by oath, and this way and that way swung the heart
within him; but at the last he bethought him of the
measureless shame if his wife went from him, and he said
within himself, "Brynhild is better to me than all things
else, and the fairest woman of all women, and I will lay down
my life rather than lose the love of her." And herewith he
called to him his brother and spake, --
"Trouble is heavy on me," and he tells him that
he must needs slay Sigurd, for that he has failed him where in
he trusted him; "so let us be lords of the gold and the realm
withal."
Hogni answers, "Ill it behoves us to break our
oaths with wrack and wrong, and withal great aid we have in
him; no kings shall be as great as we, if so be the King of
the Hun-folk may live; such another brother-in-law never may
we get again; bethink thee how good it is to have such a
brother-in-law, and such sons to our sister! But well I see
how things stand, for this has Brynhild stirred thee up to,
and surely shall her counsel drag us into huge shame and
scathe."
Gunnar says, "Yet shall it be brought about:
and, lo, a rede thereto; -- let us egg on our brother Guttorm
to the deed; he is young, and of little knowledge, and is
clean out of all the oaths moreover."
"Ah, set about in ill wise," says Hogni, "and
though indeed it may well be compassed, a due reward shall we
gain for the bewrayal of such a man as is Sigurd."
Gunnar says, "Sigurd shall die, or I shall
die."
And therewith he bids Brynhild arise and be
glad at heart: so she arose, and still ever she said that
Gunnar should come no more into her bed till the deed was
done.
So the brothers fall to talk, and Gunnar says
that it is a deed well worthy of death, that taking of
Brynhild's maidenhead; "So come now, let us prick on Guttorm
to do the deed."
Therewith they call him to them, and offer him
gold and great dominion, as they well have might to do. Yea,
and they took a certain worm and somewhat of wolf's flesh and
let seethe them together, and gave him to eat of the same,
even as the singer sings --
"Fish of the wild-wood,
Worm smooth crawling,
With wolf-meat mingled,
They minced for Guttorm;
Then in the beaker,
In the wine his mouth knew,
They set it, still doing
More deeds of wizards.
Wherefore with the eating of this meat he grew
so wild and eager, and with all things about him, and with the
heavy words of Grimhild, that he gave his word to do the deed;
and mighty honour they promised him in reward thereof.
But of these evil wiles naught at all knew
Sigurd, for he might not deal with his shapen fate, nor the
measure of his life-days, neither deemed he that he was worthy
such things at their hands.
So Guttorm went in to Sigurd the next morning
as he lay upon his bed, yet durst he not do aught against him,
but shrank back out again; yea, and even so he fared a second
time, for so bright and eager were the eyes of Sigurd that few
durst look upon him. But the third time he went in, and there
lay Sigurd asleep; then Guttorm drew his sword and thrust
Sigurd through in such wise that the sword point smote into
the bed beneath him; then Sigurd awoke with that wound, and
Guttorm gat him unto the door; but therewith Sigurd caught up
the sword Gram, and cast it after him, and it smote him on the
back, and struck him asunder in the midst, so that the feet of
him fell one way, and the head and hands back into the
chamber.
Now Gudrun lay asleep on Sigurd's bosom, but
she woke up unto woe that may not be told of, all swimming in
the blood of him, and in such wise did she bewail her with
weeping and words of sorrow, that Sigurd rose up on the
bolster, and spake.
"Weep not," said he, "for thy brothers live for
thy delight; but a young son have I, too young to be ware of
his foes; and an ill turn have these played against their own
fortune; for never will they get a mightier brother-in-law to
ride abroad with them; nay, nor a better son to their sister,
than this one, if he may grow to man's estate. Lo, now is that
come to pass which was foretold me long ago, but from mine
eyes has it been hidden, for none may fight against his fate
and prevail. Behold this has Brynhild brought to pass, even
she who loves me before all men; but this may I swear, that
never have I wrought ill to Gunnar, but rather have ever held
fast to my oath with him, nor was I ever too much a friend to
his wife. And now if I had been forewarned, and had been afoot
with my weapons, then should many a man have lost his life or
ever I had fallen, and all those brethren should have been
slain, and a harder work would the slaying of me have been
than the slaying of the mightiest bull or the mightiest boar
of the wild-wood."
And even therewithal life left the King; but
Gudrun moaned and drew a weary breath, and Brynhild heard it
and laughed when she heard her moaning.
Then said Gunnar, "Thou laughest not because
thy heart-roots are gladdened, or else why doth thy visage wax
so wan? Sure an evil creature thou art; most like thou art
nigh to thy death! Lo now, how meet would it be for thee to
behold thy brother Atli slain before thine eyes, and that thou
shouldst stand over him dead; whereas we must needs now stand
over our brother-in-law in such a case our brother-in-law and
our brother's bane."
She answered, "None need mock at the measure of
slaughter being unfulfilled; yet heedeth not Atli your wrath
or your threats; yea, he shall live longer than ye, and be a
mightier man."
Hogni spake and said, "Now hath come to pass
the soothsaying of Brynhild; an ill work not to be atoned
for."
And Gudrun said, "My kinsmen have slain my
husband; but ye, when ye next ride to the war and are come
into the battle, then shall ye look about and see that Sigurd
is neither on the fight hand nor the left, and ye shall know
that he was your good-hap and your strength; and if he had
lived and had sons, then should ye have been strengthened by
his offspring and his kin."
CHAPTER XXXI. Of the Lamentation of Gudrun over
Sigurd's dead, as it is told told in ancient Songs. (1)
Gudrun of old days
Drew near to dying
As she sat in sorrow
Over Sigurd;
Yet she sighed not
Nor smote hand on hand,
Nor wailed she aught
As other women.
Then went earls to her.
Full of all wisdom,
Fain help to deal
To her dreadful heart:
Hushed was Gudrun
Of wail, or greeting,
But with a heavy woe
Was her heart a-breaking.
Bright and fair
Sat the great earls' brides,
Gold arrayed
Before Gudrun;
Each told the tale
Of her great trouble,
The bitterest bale
She erst abode.
Then spake Giaflaug,
Giuki's sister:
"Lo upon earth
I live most loveless
Who of five mates
Must see the ending,
Of daughters twain
And three sisters,
Of brethren eight,
And abide behind lonely."
Naught gat Gudrun
Of wail and greeting,
So heavy was she
For her dead husband,
So dreadful-hearted
For the King laid dead there.
Then spake Herborg
Queen of Hunland --
"Crueller tale
Have I to tell of,
Of my seven sons
Down in the Southlands,
And the eighth man, my mate,
Felled in the death-mead.
"Father and mother,
And four brothers,
On the wide sea
The winds and death played with;
The billows beat
On the bulwark boards.
"Alone must I sing o'er them,
Alone must I array them,
Alone must my hands deal with
Their departing;
And all this was
In one season's wearing,
And none was left
For love or solace.
"Then was I bound
A prey of the battle,
When that same season
Wore to its ending;
As a tiring may
Must I bind the shoon
Of the duke's high dame,
Every day at dawning.
"From her jealous hate
Gat I heavy mocking,
Cruel lashes
She laid upon me,
Never met I
Better master
Or mistress worser
In all the wide world."
Naught gat Gudrun
Of wail or greeting,
So heavy was she
For her dead husband,
So dreadful-hearted
For the King laid dead there.
Then spake Gullrond,
Giuki's daughter --
"O foster-mother,
Wise as thou mayst be,
Naught canst thou better
The young wife's bale."
And she bade uncover
The dead King's corpse.
She swept the sheet
Away from Sigurd,
And turned his cheek
Towards his wife's knees --
"Look on thy loved one
Lay lips to his lips,
E'en as thou wert clinging
To thy king alive yet!"
Once looked Gudrun --
One look only,
And saw her lord's locks
Lying all bloody,
The great man's eyes
Glazed and deadly,
And his heart's bulwark
Broken by sword-edge.
Back then sank Gudrun,
Back on the bolster,
Loosed was her head array,
Red did her cheeks grow,
And the rain-drops ran
Down over her knees.
Then wept Gudrun,
Giuki's daughter,
So that the tears flowed
Through the pillow;
As the geese withal
That were in the homefield,
The fair fowls the may owned,
Fell a-screaming.
Then spake Gullrond,
Giuki's daughter --
"Surely knew I
No love like your love
Among all men,
On the mould abiding;
Naught wouldst thou joy in
Without or within doors,
O my sister,
Save beside Sigurd."
Then spake Gudrun,
Giuki's daughter --
"Such was my Sigurd
Among the sons of Giuki,
As is the king leek
O'er the low grass waxing,
Or a bright stone
Strung on band,
Or a pearl of price
On a prince's brow.
"Once was I counted
By the king's warriors
Higher than any
Of Herjan's mays;
Now am I as little
As the leaf may be,
Amid wind-swept wood
Now when dead he lieth.
I miss from my seat,
I miss from my bed,
My darling of sweet speech.
Wrought the sons of Giuki,
Wrought the sons of Giuki,
This sore sorrow,
Yea, for their sister,
Most sore sorrow.
"So may your lands
Lie waste on all sides,
As ye have broken
Your bounden oaths!
Ne'er shalt thou, Gunnar,
The gold have joy of;
The dear-bought rings
Shall drag thee to death,
Whereon thou swarest
Oath unto Sigurd.
Ah, in the days by-gone
Great mirth in the homefield
When my Sigurd
Set saddle on Grani,
And they went their ways
For the wooing of Brynhild!
An ill day, an ill woman,
And most ill hap!"
Then spake Brynhild,
Budli's daughter --
"May the woman lack
Both love and children,
Who gained greeting
For thee, O Gudrun!
Who gave thee this morning
Many words!"
Then spake Gullrond,
Giuki's daughter --
"Hold peace of such words
Thou hated of all folk!
The bane of brave men
Hast thou been ever,
All waves of ill
Wash over thy mind,
To seven great kings
Hast thou been a sore sorrow,
And the death of good will
To wives and women."
Then spake Brynhild,
Budli's daughter --
"None but Atli
Brought bale upon us,
My very brother
Born of Budli.
When we saw in the hall
Of the Hunnish people
The gold a-gleaming
On the kingly Giukings;
I have paid for that faring
Oft and Full,
And for the sight
That then I saw."
By a pillar she stood
And strained its wood to her;
From the eyes of Brynhild,
Budli's daughter,
Flashed out fire,
And she snorted forth venom,
As the sore wounds she gazed on
Of the dead-slain Sigurd.
ENDNOTES:
(1) This chapter is the Eddaic poem, called the first Lay of
Gudrun, inserted here by the translators.
CHAPTER XXXII. Of the Ending of Brynhild.
And now none might know for what cause Brynhild
must bewail with weeping for what she had prayed for with
laughter: but she spake --
"Such a dream I had, Gunnar, as that my bed was
acold, and that thou didst ride into the hands of thy foes: lo
now, ill shall it go with thee and all thy kin, O ye breakers
of oaths; for on the day thou slayedst him, dimly didst thou
remember how thou didst blend thy blood with the blood of
Sigurd, and with an ill reward hast thou rewarded him for all
that he did well to thee; whereas he gave unto thee to be the
mightiest of men; and well was it proven how fast he held to
his oath sworn, when he came to me and laid betwixt us the
sharp-edged sword that in venom had been made hard. All too
soon did ye fall to working wrong against him and against me,
whenas I abode at home with my father, and had all that I
would, and had no will that any one of you should be any of
mine, as ye rode into our garth, ye three kings together; but
then Atli led me apart privily, and asked me if I would not
have him who rode Grani; yea, a man nowise like unto you; but
in those days I plighted myself to the son of King Sigmund and
no other; and lo, now, no better shall ye fare for the death
of me."
Then rose up Gunnar, and laid his arms about
her neck, and besought her to live and have wealth from him;
and all others in likewise letted her from dying; but she
thrust them all from her, and said that it was not the part of
any to let her in that which was her will.
Then Gunnar called to Hogni, and prayed him for
counsel, and bade him go to her, and see if he might perchance
soften her dreadful heart, saying withal, that now they had
need enough on their hands in the slaking of her grief, till
time might get over.
But Hogni answered, "Nay, let no man hinder her
from dying; for no gain will she be to us, nor has she been
gainsome since she came hither!
Now she bade bring forth much gold, and bade
all those come thither who would have wealth: then she caught
up a sword, and thrust it under her armpit, and sank aside
upon the pillows, and said, "Come, take gold whoso will!"
But all held their peace, and she said, "Take
the gold, and be glad thereof!"
And therewith she spake unto Gunnar, "Now for a
little while will I tell of that which shall come to pass
hereafter; for speedily shall ye be at one again with Gudrun
by the rede of Grimhild the Wise-wife; and the daughter of
Gudrun and Sigurd shall be called Swanhild, the fairest of all
women born. Gudrun shall be given to Atli, yet not with her
good will. Thou shalt be fain to get Oddrun, but that shall
Atli forbid thee; but privily shall ye meet, and much shall
she love thee. Atli shall bewray thee, and cast thee into a
worm-close, and thereafter shall Atli and his Sons be slain,
and Gudrun shall be their slayer; and afterwards shall the
great waves bear her to the burg of King Jonakr, to whom she
shall bear sons of great fame: Swanhild shall be sent from the
land and given to King Jormunrek; and her shall bite the rede
of Bikki, and therewithal is the kin of you clean gone; and
more sorrow therewith for Gudrun.
"And now I pray thee, Gunnar, one last boon. --
Let make a great bale on the plain meads for all of us; for me
and for Sigurd, and for those who were slain with him, and let
that be covered over with cloth dyed red by the folk of the
Gauls, (1) and burn me thereon on one side of the King of the
Huns, and on the other those men of mine, two at the head and
two at the feet, and two hawks withal; and even so is all
shared equally; and lay there betwixt us a drawn sword, as in
the other days when we twain stepped into one bed together;
and then may we have the name of man and wife, nor shall the
door swing to at the heel of him as I go behind him. Nor shall
that be a niggard company if there follow him those five
bond-women and eight bondmen, whom my father gave me, and
those burn there withal who were slain with Sigurd.
"Now more yet would I say, but for my wounds,
but my life-breath flits; the wounds open, -- yet have I said
sooth."
Now is the dead corpse of Sigurd arrayed in
olden wise, and a mighty bale is raised, and when it was
somewhat kindled, there was laid thereon the dead corpse of
Sigurd Fafnir's-bane, and his son of three winters whom
Brynhild had let slay, and Guttorm withal; and when the bale
was all ablaze, thereunto was Brynhild borne out, when she had
spoken with her bower-maidens, and bid them take the gold that
she would give; and then died Brynhild, and was burned there
by the side of Sigurd, and thus their life- days ended.
ENDNOTES:
(1) The original has "raudu manna blodi", red-dyed in the
blood of men; the Sagaman's original error in dealing with the
word "Valaript" in the corresponding passage of the short lay
of Sigurd. -- Tr.
CHAPTER XXXIII. Gudrun wedded to Alii.
Now so it is, that whoso heareth these tidings
sayeth, that no such an one as was Sigurd was left behind him
in the world, nor ever was such a man brought forth because of
all the worth of him, nor may his name ever minish by eld in
the Dutch Tongue nor in all the Northern Lands, while the
world standeth fast.
The story tells that, on a day, as Gudrun sat
in her bower, she fell to saying, "Better was life in those
days when I had Sigurd; he who was far above other men as gold
is above iron, or the leek over other grass of the field, or
the hart over other wild things; until my brethren begrudged
me such a man, the first and best of all men; and so they
might not sleep or they had slain him. Huge clamour made Grani
when he saw his master and lord sore wounded, and then I spoke
to him even as with a man, but he fell drooping down to the
earth, for he knew that Sigurd was slain."
Thereafter Gudrun gat her gone into the wild
woods, and heard on all ways round about her the howling of
wolves, and deemed death a merrier thing than life. Then she
went till she came to the hall of King Alf, and sat there in
Denmark with Thora, the daughter of Hakon, for seven seasons,
and abode with good welcome. And she set forth her needlework
before her and did thereinto many deeds and great, and fair
plays after the fashion of those days, swords and byrnies, and
all the gear of kings, and the ship of King Sigmund sailing
along the land; yea, and they wrought there how they fought,
Sigar and Siggeir, south in Fion. Such was their disport; and
now Gudrun was somewhat solaced of her grief.
So Grimhild comes to hear where Gudrun has take
up her abode, and she calls her sons to talk with her, and
asks whether they will make atonement to Gudrun for her son
and her husband, and said that it was but meet and right to do
so.
Then Gunnar spake, and said that he would atone
for her sorrows with gold.
So they send for their friends, and array their
horses, their helms, and their shields, and their byrnies, and
all their war- gear; and their journey was furnished forth in
the noblest wise, and no champion who was of the great men
might abide at home; and their horses were clad in mail-coats,
and every knight of them had his helm done over with gold or
with silver.
Grimhild was of their company, for she said
that their errand would never be brought fairly to pass if she
sat at home.
There were well five hundred men, and noble men
rode with them. There was Waldemar of Denmark, and Eymod and
Jarisleif withal. So they went into the hall of King Alf, and
there abode them the Longbeards and Franks, and Saxons: they
fared with all their war- gear, and had over them red
fur-coats. Even as the song says --
"Byrnies short cut,
Strong helms hammered,
Girt with good swords,
Red hair gleaming."
They were fain to choose good gifts for their
sister, and spake softly to her, but in none of them would she
trow. Then Gunnar brought unto her a drink mingled with
hurtful things, and this she must needs drink, and with the
king thereof she had no more memory of their guilt against
her.
But in that drink was blended the might of the
earth and the sea with the blood of her son; and in that horn
were all letters cut and reddened with blood, as is said
hereunder --
"On the horn's face were there
All the kin of letters
Cut aright and reddened,
How should I rede them rightly?
The ling-fish long
Of the land of Hadding,
Wheat-ears unshorn,
And wild things' inwards.
In that beer were mingled
Many ills together,
Blood of all the wood
And brown-burnt acorns,
The black dew of the hearth,
The God-doomed dead beast's inwards,
And the swine's liver sodden
Because all wrongs that deadens.
And so now, when their hearts are-brought anigh
to each other, great cheer they made: then came Grimhild to
Gudrun, and spake.
"All hail to thee, daughter! I give thee gold
and all kinds of good things to take to thee after thy father,
dear bought rings and bed-gear of the maids of the Huns, the
most courteous and well dight of all women; and thus is thy
husband atoned for: and thereafter shalt thou be given to
Atli, the mighty king, and be mistress of all his might. Cast
not all thy friends aside for one man's sake, but do according
to our bidding."
Gudrun answers, "Never will I wed Atli the
King; unseemly it is for us to get offspring betwixt us."
Grimhild says, "Nourish not thy wrath; it shall
be to thee as if Sigurd and Sigmund were alive when thou hast
borne sons."
Gudrun says, "I cannot take my heart from
thoughts of him, for he was the first of all men."
Grimhild says, "So it is shapen that thou must
have this king and none else."
Says Gudrun, "Give not this man to me, for an
evil thing shall come upon thy kin from him, and to his own
sons shall he deal evil, and be rewarded with a grim revenge
thereafter."
Then waxed Grimhild fell at those words, and
spake, "Do even as we bid thee, and take therefore great
honour, and our friendship, and the steads withal called
Vinbjorg and Valbjorg."
And such might was in the words of her, that
even so must it come to pass.
Then Gudrun spake, "Thus then must it needs
befall, howsoever against the will of me, and for little joy
shall it be and for great grief."
Then men leaped on their horses, and their
women were set in wains. So they fared four days a-riding and
other four a-shipboard, and yet four more again by land and
road, till at the last they came to a certain high-built hall;
then came to meet Gudrun many folk thronging; and an
exceedingly goodly feast was there made, even as the word had
gone between either kin, and it passed forth in most proud and
stately wise. And at that feast drinks Atli his bridal with
Gudrun, but never did her heart laugh on him, and little sweet
and kind was their life together.
CHAPTER XXXIV. Atli bids the Giukings to him.
Now tells the tale that on a night King Atli
woke from sleep and spake to Gudrun --
"Medreamed," said he, "that thou didst thrust
me through with a sword."
Then Gudrun areded the dream, and said that it
betokened fire, whenas folk dreamed of iron. "It befalls of
thy pride belike, in that thou deemest thyself the first of
men,"
Atli said, "Moreover I dreamed that here waxed
two sorb-tree (1) saplings, and fain I was that they should
have no scathe of me; then these were riven up by the roots
and reddened with blood, and borne to the bench, and I was
bidden eat thereof.
"Yea, yet again I dreamed that two hawks flew
from my hand hungry and unfed, and fared to hell, and meseemed
their hearts were mingled with honey, and that I ate thereof.
"And then again I dreamed that two fair whelps
lay before me yelling aloud, and that the flesh of them I ate,
though my will went not with the eating."
Gudrun says, "Nowise good are these dreams, yet
shall they come to pass; surely thy sons are nigh to death,
and many heavy things shall fall upon us."
"Yet again I dreamed," said he, "and methought
I lay in a bath, and folk took counsel to slay me."
Now these things wear away with time, but in
nowise was their life together fond.
Now falls Atli to thinking of where may be
gotten that plenteous gold which Sigurd had owned, but King
Gunnar and his brethren were lords thereof now.
Atli was a great king and mighty, wise, and a
lord of many men; and now he falls to counsel with his folk as
to the ways of them. He wotted well that Gunnar and his
brethren had more wealth than any others might have, and so he
falls to the rede of sending men to them, and bidding them to
a great feast, and honouring them in diverse wise, and the
chief of those messengers was hight Vingi.
Now the queen wots of their conspiring, and
misdoubts her that this would mean some beguiling of her
brethren: so she cut runes, and took a gold ring, and knit
therein a wolf's hair, and gave it into the hands of the
king's messengers.
Thereafter they go their ways according to the
king's bidding: and or ever they came aland Vingi beheld the
runes, and turned them about in such wise as if Gudrun prayed
her brethren in her runes to go meet King Atli.
Thereafter they came to the hall of King
Gunnar, and had good welcome at his hands, and great fires
were made for them, and in great joyance they drank of the
best of drink.
Then spake Vingi, "King Atli sends me hither,
and is fain that ye go to his house and home in all glory, and
take of him exceeding honours, helms and shields, swords and
byrnies, gold and goodly raiment, horses, hosts of war, and
great and wide lands, for, saith he, he is fainest of all
things to bestow his realm and lordship upon you."
Then Gunnar turned his head aside, and spoke to
Hogni --
"In what wise shall we take this bidding? Might
and wealth he bids us take; but no kings know I who have so
much gold as we have, whereas we have all the hoard which lay
once on Gnitaheath; and great are our chambers, and full of
gold, and weapons for smiting, and all kinds of raiment of
war, and well I wot that amidst all men my horse is the best,
and my sword the sharpest and my gold the most glorious."
Hogni answers, "A marvel is it to me of his
bidding, for seldom hath he done in such a wise, and ill
counselled will it be to wend to him; lo now, when I saw those
dear-bought things the king sends us I wondered to behold a
wolfs hair knit to a certain gold ring; belike Gudrun deems
him to be minded as a wolf towards us, and will have naught of
our faring."
But withal Vingi shows him the runes which he
said Gudrun had sent.
Now the most of folk go to bed, but these drank
on still with certain others; and Kostbera, the wife of Hogni,
the fairest of women, came to them, and looked on the runes.
But the wife of Gunnar was Glaumvor, a great
hearted wife.
So these twain poured out, and the kings drank
and were exceeding drunken, and Vingi notes it, and says --
"Naught may I hide that King Atli is heavy of
foot and over-old for the warding of his realm; but his sons
are young and of no account: now will he give you rule over
his realms while they are yet thus young, and most fain will
he be that ye have the joy thereof before all others."
Now so it befell both that Gunnar was drunk,
and that dominion was held out to him, nor might he work
against the fate shapen for him; so he gave his word to go,
and tells Hogni his brother thereof.
But he answered, "Thy word given must even
stand now, nor will I fail to follow thee, but most loth am I
to journey."
ENDNOTES:
(1) Service-tree; "pyrus sorbus domestica", or "p. s.
tormentalis.
CHAPTER XXXV. The Dreams of the Wives of the
Giukings.
So when men had drunk their fill, they fared to
sleep; then falls Kostbera to beholding the runes, and
spelling over the letters, and sees that beneath were other
things cut, and that the runes are guileful, yet because of
her wisdom she had skill to read them aright. So then she goes
to bed by her husband; but when they awoke, she spake unto
Hogni --
"Thou art minded to wend away from home --
ill-counselled is that; abide till another time! Scarce a keen
reader of runes art thou, if thou deemest thou hast beheld in
them the bidding of thy sister to this journey: lo, I read
them the runes, and had marvel of so wise a woman as Gudrun
is, that she should have miscut them; but that which lieth
underneath beareth your bane with it, -- yea, either she
lacked a letter, or others have dealt guilefully with the
runes.
"And now hearken to my dream; for therein
methought there fell in upon us here a river exceeding strong,
and brake up the timbers of the hall."
He answered, "Full oft are ye evil of mind, ye
women, but for me, I was not made in such wise as to meet men
with evil who deserve no evil; belike he will give us good
welcome."
She answered, "Well, the thing must ye
yourselves prove, but no friendship follows this bidding: --
but yet again I dreamed that another river fell in here with a
great and grimly rush, and tore up the dais of the hall, and
brake the legs of both you brethren; surely that betokeneth
somewhat."
He answers, "Meadows along our way, whereas
thou didst dream of the river; for when we go through the
meadows, plentifully doth the seeds of the hay hang about our
legs."
"Again I dreamed," she says, "that thy cloak
was afire, and that the flame blazed up above the hall."
Says he, "Well, I wot what that shall betoken;
here lieth my fair-dyed raiment, and it shall burn and blaze,
whereas thou dreamedst of the cloak."
"Methought a bear came in," she says, "and
brake up the king's high-seat, and shook his paws in such a
wise that we were all adrad thereat, and he gat us all
together into the mouth of him, so that we might avail us
naught, and thereof fell great horror on us."
He answered, "Some great storm will befall,
whereas thou hadst a white bear in thy mind."
"An erne methought came in," she says, "and
swept adown the hall, and drenched me and all of us with
blood, and ill shall that betoken, for methought it was the
double of King Atli."
He answered, "Full oft do we slaughter beasts
freely, and smite down great neat for our cheer, and the dream
of the erne has but to do with oxen; yea, Atli is heart-whole
toward us."
And therewithal they cease this talk.
CHAPTER XXXVI. Of the Journey of the Giukings to
King Atli.
Now tells the tale of Gunnar, that in the same
wise it fared with him; for when they awoke, Glaumvor his wife
told him many dreams which seemed to her like to betoken guile
coming; but Gunnar areded them all in other wise.
"This was one of them," said she; "methought a
bloody sword was borne into the hall here, wherewith thou wert
thrust through, and at either end of that wolves howled."
The king answered, "Our dogs shall bite me
belike; blood-stained weapons oft betoken dogs' snappings."
She said, "Yet again I dreamed -- that women
came in, heavy and drooping, and chose thee for their mate;
may-happen these would be thy fateful women."
He answered, "Hard to arede is this, and none
may set aside the fated measure of his days, nor is it unlike
that my time is short." (1)
So in the morning they arose, and were minded
for the journey, but some letted them herein.
Then cried Gunnar to the man who is called
Fjornir --
"Arise, and give us to drink goodly wine from
great tuns, because may happen this shall be very last of all
our feasts; belike if we die the old wolf shall come by the
gold, and that bear shall nowise spare the bite of his
war-tusks."
Then all the folk of his household brought them
on their way weeping.
The son of Hogni said --
"Fare ye well with merry tide."
The more part of their folk were left behind;
Solar and Gnoevar, the sons of Hogni, fared with them, and a
great champion, named Orkning, who was the brother of
Kostbera.
So folk followed them down to the ships, and
all fetted them of their journey, but attained to naught
therein.
Then spake Glaumvor, and said --
"O Vingi, most like that great ill hap will
come of thy coming, and mighty and evil things shall betide in
thy travelling."
He answered, "Hearken to my answer; that I lie
not aught: and may the high gallows and all things of grame
have me, if I lie one word!"
Then cried Kostbera, "Fare ye well with merry
days."
And Hogni answered, "Be glad of heart,
howsoever it may fare with us!"
And therewith they parted, each to their own
fate. Then away they rowed, so hard and fast, that well-nigh
the half of the keel slipped away from the ship, and so hard
they laid on to the oars that thole and gunwale brake.
But when they came aland they made their ship
fast, and then they rode awhile on their noble steeds through
the murk wild-wood.
And now they behold the king's army, and huge
uproar, and the clatter of weapons they hear from thence; and
they see there a mighty host of men, and the manifold array of
them, even as they wrought there: and all the gates of the
burg were full of men.
So they rode up to the burg, and the gates
thereof were shut; then Hogni brake open the gates, and
therewith they ride into the burg.
Then spake Vingi, "Well might ye have left this
deed undone; go to now, bide ye here while I go seek your
gallows-tree! Softly and sweetly I base you hither, but an
evil thing abode thereunder; short while to bide ere ye are
tied up to that same tree!"
Hogni answered, "None the more shall we waver
for that cause; for little methinks have we shrunk aback
whenas men fell to fight; and naught shall it avail thee to
make us afeard, -- and for an ill fate hast thou wrought."
And therewith they cast him down to earth, and
smote him with their axe-hammers till he died.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Parallel beliefs to those in the preceding chapters, and
elsewhere in this book, as to spells, dreams, drinks, etc.,
among the English people may be found in "Leechdoms,
Wortcunning, and Starcraft of the Anglo-Saxons; being a
collection of Documents illustrating the History of Science in
this Country before the Norman Conquest". Ed: Rev. T. O.
Cockayne, M.A. (3 vols.) Longmans, London, 1864, 8vo.
CHAPTER XXXVII. The Battle in the Burg of King
Atli.
Then they rode unto the king's hall, and King
Atli arrayed his host for battle, and the ranks were so set
forth that a certain wall there was betwixt them and the
brethren.
"Welcome hither," said he. "Deliver unto me
that plenteous gold which is mine of right; even the wealth
which Sigurd once owned, and which is now Gudrun's of right."
Gunnar answered, "Never gettest thou that
wealth; and men of might must thou meet here, or ever we lay
by life if thou wilt deal with us in battle; ah, belike thou
settest forth this feast like a great man, and wouldst not
hold thine hand from erne and wolf!"
"Long ago I had it in my mind," said Atli, to
take the lives of you, and be lord of the gold, and reward you
for that deed of shame, wherein ye beguiled the best of all
your affinity; but now shall I revenge him."
Hogni answered, "Little will it avail to lie
long brooding over that rede, leaving the work undone."
And therewith they fell to hard fighting, at
the first brunt with shot.
But therewithal came the tidings to Gudrun, and
when she heard thereof she grew exceeding wroth, and cast her
mantle from her, and ran out and greeted those new-comers, and
kissed her brethren, and showed them all love, -- and the last
of all greetings was that betwixt them.
Then said she, "I thought I had set forth
counsel whereby ye should not come hither, but none may deal
with his shapen fate." And withal she said, "Will it avail
aught to seek for peace?"
But stoutly and grimly they said nay thereto.
So she sees that the game goeth sorely against her brethren,
and she gathers to her great stoutness of heart, and does on
her a mail-coat and takes to her a sword, and fights by her
brethren, and goes as far forward as the bravest of man-folk;
and all spoke in one wise that never saw any fairer defence
than in her.
Now the men fell thick, and far before all
others was the fighting of those brethren, and the battle
endured a long while unto midday; Gunnar and Hogni went right
through the folk of Atli, and so tells the tale that all the
mead ran red with blood; the sons of Hogni withal set on
stoutly.
Then spake Atli the king, "A fair host and a
great have we, and mighty champions withal, and yet have many
of us fallen, and but evil am I apaid in that nineteen of my
champions are slain, and but left six alive."
And therewithal was there a lull in the battle.
Then spake Atli the king, "Four brethren were
we, and now am I left alone; great affinity I gat to me, and
deemed my fortune well sped thereby; a wife I had, fair and
wise, high of mind, and great of heart; but no joyance may I
have of her wisdom, for little peace is betwixt us, -- but ye
-- ye have slain many of my kin, and beguiled me of realm and
riches, and for the greatest of all woes have slain my sister
withal."
Quoth Hogni, "Why babblest thou thus? Thou wert
the first to break the peace. Thou didst take my kinswoman and
pine her to death by hunger, and didst murder her, and take
her wealth; an ugly deed for a king! -- meet for mocking and
laughter I deem it, that thou must needs make long tale of thy
woes; rather will I give thanks to the Gods that thou fallest
into ill."
CHAPTER XXXVIII. Of the slaying of the Giukings.
Now King Atli eggs on his folk to set on
fiercely, and eagerly they fight; but the Giukings fell on so
hard that King Atli gave back into the hall, and within doors
was the fight, and fierce beyond all fights.
That battle was the death of many a man, but
such was the ending thereof, that there fell all the folk of
those brethren, and they twain alone stood up on their feet,
and yet many more must fare to hell first before their
weapons.
And now they fell on Gunnar the king, and
because of the host of men that set on him was hand laid on
him, and he was cast into fetters; afterwards fought Hogni,
with the stoutest heart and the greatest manlihood; and he
felled to earth twenty of the stoutest of the champions of
King Atli, and many he thrust into the fire that burnt amidst
the hall, and all were of one accord that such a man might
scarce be seen; yet in the end was he borne down by many and
taken.
Then said King Atli, "A marvellous thing how
many men have gone their ways before him! Cut the heart from
out of him, and let that be his bane!"
Hogni said, "Do according to thy will; merrily
will I abide whatso thou writ do against me; and thou shalt
see that my heart is not adrad, for hard matters have I made
trial of ere now, and all things that may try a man was I fain
to bear, whiles yet I was unhurt; but now sorely am I hurt,
and thou alone henceforth will bear mastery in our dealings
together."
Then spake a counsellor of King Atli, "Better
rede I see thereto; take we the thrall Hjalli, and give
respite to Hogni; for this thrall is made to die, since the
longer he lives the less worth shall he be."
The thrall hearkened, and cried out aloft, and
fled away anywhither where he might hope for shelter, crying
out that a hard portion was his because of their strife and
wild doings, and an ill day for him whereon he must be dragged
to death from his sweet life and his swine-keeping. But they
caught him, and turned a knife against him, and he yelled and
screamed or ever he felt the point thereof.
Then in such wise spake Hogni as a man seldom
speaketh who is fallen into hard need, for he prayed for the
thrall's life, and said that these shrieks he could not away
with, and that it were a lesser matter to him to play out the
play to the end; and therewithal the thrall gat his life as
for that time: but Gunnar and Hogni are both laid in fetters.
Then spake King Atli with Gunnar the king, and
bade him tell out concerning the gold, and where it was, if he
would have his life.
But he answered, "Nay, first will I behold the
bloody heart of Hogni, my brother."
So now they caught hold of the thrall again,
and cut the heart from out of him, and bore it unto King
Gunnar, but he said --
"The faint heart of Hjalli may ye here behold,
little like the proud heart of Hogni, for as much as it
trembleth now more by the half it trembled whenas it lay in
the breast of him."
So now they fell on Hogni even as Atli urged
them, and cut the heart from out of him, but such was the
might of his manhood, that he laughed while he abode that
torment, and all wondered at his worth, and in perpetual
memory is it held sithence. (1)
Then they showed it to Gunnar, and he said --
"The mighty heart of Hogni, little like the
faint heart of Hjalli, for little as it trembleth now, less it
trembled whenas in his breast it lay! But now, O Atli, even as
we die so shalt thou die; and lo, I alone wot where the gold
is, nor shall Hogni be to tell thereof now; to and fro played
the matter in my mind whiles we both lived, but now have I
myself determined for myself, and the Rhine river shall rule
over the gold, rather than that the Huns shall bear it on the
hands of them."
Then said King Atli, "Have away the bondsman;"
and so they did.
But Gudrun called to her men, and came to Atli,
and said --
"May it fare ill with thee now and from
henceforth, even as thou hast ill held to thy word with me!"
So Gunnar was cast into a worm-close, and many
worms abode him there, and his hands were fast bound; but
Gudrun sent him a harp, and in such wise did he set forth his
craft, that wisely he smote the harp, smiting it with his
foes, and so excellently well he played, that few deemed they
had heard such playing, even when the hand had done it. And
with such might and power he played, that all worms fell
asleep in the end, save one adder only, great and evil of
aspect, that crept unto him and thrust its sting into him
until it smote his heart; and in such wise with great
hardihood he ended his life days.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Since ("sidh", after, and "dham", that.).
CHAPTER XXXIX. The End of Atli and his Kin and
Folk.
Now thought Atli the King that he had gained a
mighty victory, and spake to Gudrun even as mocking her
greatly, or as making himself great before her. "Gudrun,"
saith he, "thus hast thou lost thy brethren, and thy very self
hast brought it about."
She answers, "In good liking livest thou,
whereas thou thrustest these slayings before me, but mayhappen
thou wilt rue it, when thou hast tried what is to come
hereafter; and of all I have, the longest-lived matter shall
be the memory of thy cruel heart, nor shall it go well with
thee whiles I live."
He answered and said, "Let there be peace
betwixt us; I will atone for thy brethren with gold and
dear-bought things, even as thy heart may wish."
She answers, "Hard for a long while have I been
in our dealings together, and now I say, that while Hogni was
yet alive thou mightest have brought it to pass; but now
mayest thou never atone for my brethren in my heart; yet oft
must we women be overborne by the might of you men; and now
are all my kindred dead and gone, and thou alone art left to
rule over me: wherefore now this is my counsel that we make a
great feast; wherein I will hold the funeral of my brother and
of thy kindred withal."
In such wise did she make herself soft and kind
in words, though far other things forsooth lay thereunder, but
he hearkened to her gladly, and trusted in her words, whereas
she made herself sweet of speech.
So Gudrun held the funeral feast for her
brethren, and King Atli for his men, and exceeding proud and
great was this feast.
But Gudrun forgat not her woe, but brooded over
it, how she might work some mighty shame against the king; and
at nightfall she took to her the sons of King Atli and her as
they played about the floor; the younglings waxed heavy of
cheer, and asked what she would with them.
"Ask me not," she said; "ye shall die, the
twain of you!"
Then they answered, "Thou mayest do with thy
children even as thou wilt, nor shall any hinder thee, but
shame there is to thee in the doing of this deed."
Yet for all that she cut the throats of them.
Then the king asked where his sons were, and
Gudrun answered, "I will tell thee, and gladden thine heart by
the telling; lo now, thou didst make a great woe spring up for
me in the slaying of my brethren; now hearken and hear my rede
and my deed; thou hast lost thy sons, and their heads are
become beakers on the board here, and thou thyself hast
drunken the blood of them blended with wine; and their hearts
I took and roasted them on a spit, and thou hast eaten
thereof."
King Atli answered, "Grim art thou in that thou
hast murdered thy sons, and given me their flesh to eat, and
little space passes betwixt ill deed of thine and ill deed."
Gudrun said, "My heart is set on the doing to
thee of as great shame as may be; never shall the measure ill
be of full to such a king as thou art."
The king said, "Worser deeds hast thou done
than men have to tell of, and great unwisdom is there in such
fearful redes; most meet art thou to be burned on bale when
thou hast first been smitten to death with stones, for in such
wise wouldst thou have what thou hast gone a weary way to
seek."
She answered, "Thine own death thou
foretellest, but another death is fated for me."
And many other words they spake in their wrath.
Now Hogni had a son left alive, hight Niblung,
and great wrath of heart he bare against King Atli; and he did
Gudrun to wit that he would avenge his father. And she took
his words well, and they fell to counsel together thereover,
and she said it would be great goodhap if it might be brought
about.
So on a night, when the king had drunken, he
gat him in bed, and when he was laid asleep, thither to him
came Gudrun and the son of Hogni.
Gudrun took a sword and thrust it through the
breast of King Atli, and they both of them set their hands to
the deed, both she and the son of Hogni.
Then Atli the king awoke with the wound, and
cried out; "No need of binding or salving here! -- who art
thou who hast done the deed?"
Gudrun says, "Somewhat have I, Gudrun, wrought
therein, and somewhat withal the son of Hogni."
Atli said, "Ill it beseemed to thee to do this,
though somewhat of wrong was between us; for thou wert wedded
to me by the rede of thy kin, and dower paid I for thee; yea,
thirty goodly knights, and seemly maidens, and many men
besides; and yet wert thou not content, but if thou should
rule over the lands King Budli owned: and thy mother-in-law
full oft thou lettest sit a-weeping."
Gudrun said, "Many false words hast thou
spoken, and of naught I account them; oft, indeed, was I fell
of mood, but much didst thou add thereto. Full oft in this thy
house did frays befall, and kin fought kin, and friend fought
friend, and made themselves big one against the other; better
days had I whenas I abode with Sigurd, when we slew kings, and
took their wealth to us, but gave peace to whomso would, and
the great men laid themselves under our hands, and might we
gave to him of them who would have it; then I lost him, and a
little thing was it that I should bear a widow's name, but the
greatest of griefs that I should come to thee -- I who had
aforetime the noblest of all kings, while for thee, thou never
barest out of the battle aught but the worser lot."
King Atli answered, "Naught true are thy words,
nor will this our speech better the lot of either of us, for
all is fallen now to naught; but now do to me in seemly wise,
and array my dead corpse in noble fashion."
"Yea, that will I," she says, "and let make for
thee a goodly grave, and build for thee a worthy abiding place
of stone, and wrap thee in fair linen, and care for all that
needful is."
So therewithal he died, and she did according
to her word: and then they cast fire into the hall.
And when the folk and men of estate awoke amid
that dread and trouble, naught would they abide the fire, but
smote each the other down, and died in such wise; so there
Atli the king, and all his folk, ended their life-days. But
Gudrun had no will to live longer after this deed so wrought,
but nevertheless her ending day was not yet come upon her.
Now the Volsungs and the Giukings, as folk tell
in tale, have been the greatest-hearted and the mightiest of
all men, as ye may well behold written in the songs of old
time.
But now with the tidings just told were these
troubles stayed.
CHAPTER XL. How Gudrun cast herself into the Sea,
but was brought ashore again.
Gudrun had a daughter by Sigurd hight Swanhild;
she was the fairest of all women, eager-eyed as her father, so
that few durst look under the brows of her; and as far did she
excel other woman-kind as the sun excels the other lights of
heaven.
But on a day went Gudrun down to the sea, and
caught up stones in her arms, and went out into the sea, for
she had will to end her life. But mighty billows drave her
forth along the sea, and by means of their upholding was she
borne along till she came at the last to the burg of King
Jonakr, a mighty king, and lord of many folk. And he took
Gudrun to wife, and their children were Hamdir, and Sorli, and
Erp; and there was Swanhild nourished withal.
CHAPTER XLI. Of the Wedding and Slaying of
Swanhild.
Jormunrek was the name of a mighty king of
those days, and his son was called Randver. Now this king
called his son to talk with him, and said, "Thou shalt fair on
an errand of mine to King Jonakr, with my counsellor Bikki,
for with King Jonakr is nourished Swanhild, the daughter of
Sigurd Fafnir's-bane; and I know for sure that she is the
fairest may dwelling under the sun of this world; her above
all others would I have to my wife, and thou shalt go woo her
for me"
Randver answered, "Meet and right, fair lord,
that I should go on thine errands."
So the king set forth this journey in seemly
wise, and they fare till they come to King Jonakr's abode, and
behold Swanhild, and have many thoughts concerning the
treasure of her goodliness.
But on a day Randver called the king to talk
with him, and said, "Jormunrek the King would fain be thy
brother-in-law, for he has heard tell of Swanhild, and his
desire it is to have her to wife, nor may it be shown that she
may be given to any mightier man than he is one."
The King says, "This is an alliance of great
honour, for a man of fame he is."
Gudrun says, "A wavering trust, the trust in
luck that change not!"
Yet because of the king's furthering, and all
the matters that went herewith, is the wooing accomplished;
and Swanhild went to the ship with a goodly company, and sat
in the stem beside the king's son.
Then spake Bikki to Randver, "How good and
right it were if thou thyself had to wife so lovely a woman
rather than the old man there."
Good seemed that word to the heart of the
king's son, and he spake to her with sweet words, and she to
him like wise.
So they came aland and go unto the king, and
Bikki said to him, "Meet and right it is, lord, that thou
shouldst know what is befallen, though hard it be to tell of,
for the tale must be concerning thy beguiling, whereas thy son
has gotten to him the full love of Swanhild, nor is she other
than his harlot; but thou, let not the deed be unavenged."
Now many an ill rede had he given the king or
this, but of all his ill redes did this sting home the most;
and still would the king hearken to all his evil redes;
wherefore he, who might nowise still the wrath within him,
cried out that Randver should be taken and tied up to the
gallows-tree.
And as he was led to the gallows he took his
hawk and plucked the feathers from off it, and bade show it to
his father; and when the king saw it, then he said, "Now may
folk behold that he deemeth my honour to be gone away from me,
even as the feathers of this hawk;" and therewith he bade
deliver him from the gallows.
But in that while had Bikki wrought his will,
and Randver was dead-slain.
Ane, moreover, Bikki spake, "Against none hast
thou more wrongs to avenge thee of than against Swanhild; let
her die a shameful death."
"Yea," said the king, "we will do after thy
counsel."
So she was bound in the gate of the burg, and
horse were driven at her to tread her down; but when she
opened her eyes wide, then the horses durst not trample her;
so when Bikki beheld that, he bade draw a bag over the head of
her; and they did so, and therewith she lost her life. (1)
ENDNOTES
(1) In the prose Edda the slaying of Swanhild is a spontaneous
and sudden act on the part of the king. As he came back from
hunting one day, there sat Swanhild washing her linen, and it
came into the king's mind how that she was the cause of all
his woe, so he and his men rode over her and slew her. -- Tr.
CHAPTER XLII. Gudrun sends her Sons to avenge
Swanhild.
Now Gudrun heard of the slaying of Swanhild,
and spake to her sons, "Why sit ye here in peace amid many
words, whereas Jormunrek hath slain your sister, and trodden
her under foot of horses in shameful wise? No heart ye have in
you like to Gunnar or Hogni; verily they would have avenged
their kinswoman!"
Hamdir answered, "Little didst thou praise
Gunnar and Hogni, whereas they slew Sigurd, and thou wert
reddened in the blood of him, and ill were thy brethren
avenged by the slaying of thine own sons: yet not so ill a
deed were it for us to slay King Jormunrek, and so hard thou
pushest on to this that we may naught abide thy hard words."
Gudrun went about laughing now, and gave them
to drink from mighty beakers, and thereafter she got for them
great byrnies and good, and all other weed (1) of war.
Then spake Hamdir, "Lo now, this is our last
parting, for thou shalt hear tidings of us, and drink one
grave-ale (2) over us and over Swanhild."
So therewith they went their ways.
But Gudrun went unto her bower, with heart
swollen with sorrow, and spake --
"To three men was I wedded, and first to Sigurd
Fafnir's-bane, and he was bewrayed and slain, and of all
griefs was that the greatest grief. Then was I given to King
Atli, and so fell was my heart toward him that I slew in the
fury of my grief his children and mine. Then gave I myself to
the sea, but the billows thereof cast me out aland, and to
this king then was I given; then gave I Swanhild away out of
the land with mighty wealth; and lo, my next greatest sorrow
after Sigurd, for under horses feet was she trodden and slain;
but the grimmest and ugliest of woes was the casting of Gunnar
into the Worm-close, and the hardest was the cutting of
Hogni's heart from him.
"Ah, better would it be if Sigurd came to meet
me, and I went my ways with him, for here bideth now behind
with me neither son nor daughter to comfort me. Oh, mindest
thou not, Sigurd, the words we spoke when we went into one bed
together, that thou wouldst come and look on me; yea, even
from thine abiding place among the dead?
And thus had the words of her sorrow an end.
ENDNOTE:
(1) Weed (A.S. "weodo"), clothing.
(2) Grave-ale, burial-feast.
CHAPTER XLIII. The Latter End of all the Kin of
the Giukings.
Now telleth the tale concerning the sons of
Gudrun, that she had arrayed their war-raiment in such wise,
that no steel would bite thereon; and she bade them play not
with stones or other heavy matters, for that it would be to
their scathe if they did so.
And now, as they went on their way, they met
Erp, their brother, and asked him in what wise he would help
them.
He answered, "Even as hand helps hand, or foot
helps foot."
But that they deemed naught at all, and slew
him there and then. Then they went their ways, nor was it long
or ever Hamdir stumbled, and thrust down his hand to steady
himself, and spake therewith --
"Naught but a true thing spake Erp, for now
should I have fallen, had not hand been to steady me."
A little after Sorli stumbled, but turned about
on his feet, and so stood, and spake --
"Yea now had I fallen, but that I steadied
myself with both feet."
And they said they had done evilly with Erp
their brother.
But on they fare till they come to the abode of
King Jormunrek, and they went up to him and set on him
forthwith, and Hamdir cut both hands from him and Sorli both
feet. Then spake Hamdir --
"Off were the head if Erp were alive; our
brother whom we slew on the way, and found out our deed too
late." Even as the Song says, --
"Off were the head
If Erp were alive yet,
Our brother the bold,
Whom we slew by the way,
The well-famed in warfare."
Now in this must they turn away from the words
of their mother, whereas they had to deal with stones. For now
men fell on them, and they defended themselves in good and
manly wise, and were the scathe of many a man, nor would iron
bite on them.
But there came thereto a certain man, old of
aspect and one-eyed, (1) and he spake --
"No wise men are ye, whereas ye cannot bring
these men to their end."
Then the king said, "Give us rede thereto, if
thou canst."
He said, "Smite them to the death with stones."
In such wise was it done, for the stones flew
thick and fast from every side, and that was the end of their
life-days.
And now has come to an end the whole root and
stem of the Giukings. (2)
NOW MAY ALL EARLS
BE BETTERED IN MIND,
MAY THE GRIEF OF ALL MAIDENS
EVER BE MINISHED,
FOR THIS TALE OF TROUBLE
SO TOLD TO ITS ENDING.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Odin; he ends the tale as he began it.
(2) "And now," etc., inserted by translators from the prose
Edda, the stanza at the end from the Whetting of Gudrun.
APPENDIX:
EXCERPTS FROM THE POETIC EDDA.
PART
OF THE SECOND LAY OF HELGI HUNDINGS-BANE (1)
Helgi wedded Sigrun, and they begate sons
together, but Helgi lived not to be old; for Dag, (2) the son
of Hogni, sacrificed to Odin, praying that he might avenge his
father. So Odin lent Dag his spear, and Dag met Helgi, his
brother-in-law, at a place called Fetter-grove, and thrust him
through with that spear, and there fell Helgi dead; but Dag
rode to Sevafell, and told Sigrun of the news.
DAG:
Loth am I, sister
Of sorrow to tell the,
For by hard need driven
Have I drawn on the greeting;
This morning fell
In Fetter-grove
The king well deemed
The best in the wide world,
Yea, he who stood
On the necks of the strong."
SIGRUN:
All oaths once sworn
Shall bite thee sore,
The oaths that to Helgi
Once thou swarest
At the bright white
Water of Lightening, (3)
And at the cold rock
That the sea runneth over.
May the ship sweep not on
That should sweep at its swiftest,
Though the wind desired
Behind thee driveth!
May the horse never run
That should run at his most might
When from thy foe's face
Thou hast most need to flee!
May the sword never bite
That thou drawest from scabbard
But and if round thine head
In wrath it singeth!
Then should meet price be paid
For Helgi's slaying
When a wolf thou wert
Out in the wild-wood,
Empty of good things
Empty of gladness,
With no meat for thy mouth
But dead men's corpses!
DAG:
With mad words thou ravest,
Thy wits are gone from thee,
When thou for thy brother
Such ill fate biddest;
Odin alone
Let all this bale loose,
Casting the strife-runes
'Twixt friends and kindred.
Rings of red gold
Will thy brother give thee,
And the stead of Vandil
And the lands of Vigdale;
Have half of the land
For thy sorrow's healing,
O ring-arrayed sweetling
For thee and thy sons!
SIGRUN:
No more sit I happy
At Sevafell;
At day-dawn, at night
Naught love I my life
Till broad o'er the people
My lord's light breaketh;
Till his war-horse runneth
Beneath him hither,
Well wont to the gold bit --
Till my king I welcome.
In such wise did Helgi
Deal fear around
To all his foes
And all their friends
As when the goat runneth
Before the wolf's rage
Filled with mad fear
Down from the fell.
As high above all lords
Did Helgi beat him
As the ash-tree's glory
From the thorn ariseth,
Or as the fawn
With the dew-fell sprinkled
Is far above
All other wild things,
As his horns go gleaming
'Gainst the very heavens.
A barrow was raised above Helgi, but when he came in Valhall,
then Odin bade him be lord of all things there, even as he; so
Helgi sang --
HELGI:
Now shalt thou, Hunding
For the help of each man
Get ready the foot-bath,
And kindle the fire;
The hounds shalt thou bind
And give heed to the horses,
Give wash to the swine
Ere to sleep thou goest.
A bondmaid of Sigrun went in the evening-tide by Helgi's
mound, and there saw how Helgi rode toward it with a great
company; then she sang --
BONDMAID:
It is vain things' beguilling
That methinks I behold,
Or the ending of all things,
As ye ride, O ye dead men,
Smiting with spurs
Your horses' sides?
Or may dead warriors
Wend their ways homeward?
THE DEAD:
No vain things' beguiling
Is that thou beholdest,
Nor the ruin of all things;
Though thou lookest upon us,
Though we smite with spurs
Our horses' sides;
Rather dead warriors
May wend their ways homeward.
Then went the bondmaid home, and told Sigrun, and sang --
BONDMAID:
Go out, Sigrun
From Sevafell,
If thou listest to look on
The lord of thy people!
For the mound is uncovered
Thither is Helgi come,
And his wounds are bleeding,
But the king thee biddeth
To come and stay
That stream of sorrow.
So Sigrun went into the mound to Helgi, and sang --
SIGRUN:
Now am I as fain
Of this fair meeting,
As are the hungry
Hawks of Odin,
When they wot of the slaying
Of the yet warm quarry,
Or bright with dew
See the day a-dawning.
Ah, I will kiss
My king laid lifeless,
Ere thou castest by
Thy blood-stained byrny.
O Helgi, thy hair
Is thick with death's rime,
With the dew of the dead
Is my love all dripping;
Dead-cold are the hands
Of the son of Hogni;
How for thee, O my king,
May I win healing?
HELGI:
Thou alone, Sigrun
Of Sevafell,
Hast so done that Helgi
With grief's dew drippeth;
O clad in gold
Cruel tears thou weepest,
Bright May of the Southlands,
Or ever thou sleepest;
Each tear in blood falleth
On the breast of thy lord,
Cold wet and bitter-sharp
Swollen with sorrow.
Ah, we shall drink
Dear draughts and lovely,
Though, we have lost
Both life and lands;
Neither shall any
Sing song of sorrow,
Though in my breast
Be wounds wide to behold:
For now are brides
In the mound abiding;
Kings' daughters sit
By us departed.
Bow Sigrun arrayed a bed in the mound, and sang --
SIGRUN:
Here, Helgi, for thee
A bed have I dight,
Kind without woe,
O kin of the Ylfings!
To thy bosom, O king,
Will I come and sleep soft,
As I was wont
When my lord was living.
HELGI:
Now will I call
Naught not to be hoped for
Early or late
At Sevafell,
When thou in the arms
Of a dead man art laid,
White maiden of Hogni,
Here in the mound:
And thou yet quick,
O King's daughter!
Now needs must I ride
On the reddening ways;
My pale horse must tread
The highway aloft;
West must I go
To Windhelm's bridge
Ere the war-winning crowd
Hall-crower (4) waketh.
So Helgi rode his ways: and the others gat them gone home to
the house. But the next night Sigrun bade the bondwoman have
heed of the mound. So at nightfall, thenas Sigrun came to the
mound, she sang:
SIGRUN:
Here now would he come,
If to come he were minded;
Sigmund's offspring
From the halls of Odin.
O me the hope waneth
Of Helgi's coming;
For high on the ash-boughs
Are the ernes abiding,
And all folk drift
Toward the Thing of the dreamland.
BONDMAID:
Be not foolish of heart,
And fare all alone
To the house of the dead,
O Hero's daughter!
For more strong and dreadful
In the night season
Are all dead warriors
Than in the daylight.
But a little while lived Sigrun, because of her sorrow and
trouble. But in old time folk trowed that men should be born
again, though their troth be now deemed but an old wife's
dotting. And so, as folk say, Helgi and Sigrun were born
again, and at that tide was he called Helgi the Scathe of
Hadding, and she Kara the daughter of Halfdan; and she was a
Valkyrie, even as is said in the Lay of Kara.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Only that part of the song is given which completes the
episodes of Helgi Hunding's-bane; the earlier part of the song
differs little from the Saga.
(2) Hogni, the father of Dar and Sigrun, had been slain by
Helgi in battle, and Helgi had given peace to, and taken oaths
of Dag.
(3) One of the rivers of the under-world.
(4) Hall-crower, "Salgofnir": lit. Hall-gaper, the cock of
Valhall.
PART OF THE LAY OF SIGRDRIFA (1)
Now this is my first counsel,
That thou with thy kin
Be guiltless, guileless ever,
Nor hasty of wrath,
Despite of wrong done --
Unto the dead good that doeth.
Lo the second counsel,
That oath thou swearest never,
But trusty oath and true:
Grim tormenting
Gripes troth-breakers;
Cursed wretch is the wolf of vows.
This is my third rede,
That thou at the Thing
Deal not with the fools of folk;
For unwise man
From mouth lets fall Worser word than well he wotteth.
Yet hard it is
That holding of peace
When men shall deem thee dastard,
Or deem the lie said soothly;
But woeful is home-witness,
Unless right good thou gettest it.
Ah, on another day
Drive the life from out him,
And pay the liar back for his lying.
Now behold the fourth rede:
If ill witch thee bideth,
Woe-begatting by the way,
Good going further
Rather than guesting,
Though thick night be on thee.
Far-seeing eyes
Need all sons of men
Who wend in wrath to war;
For baleful women
Bide oft by the highway,
Swords and hearts to soften.
And now the fifth rede:
As fair as thou seest
Brides on the bench abiding,
Let not love's silver
Rule over thy sleeping;
Draw no woman to kind kissing!
For the sixth thing, I rede
When men sit a-drinking
Amid ale-words and ill-words,
Dead thou naught
With the drunken fight-staves
For wine stealeth wit from many.
Brawling and drink
Have brought unto men
Sorrow sore oft enow;
Yea, bane unto some,
And to some weary bale;
Many are the griefs of mankind.
For the seventh, I rede thee,
If strife thou raisest
With a man right high of heart,
Better fight a-field
Than burn in the fire
Within thine hall fair to behold.
The eighth rede that I give thee:
Unto all ill look thou,
And hold thine heart from all beguiling;
Draw to thee no maiden,
No man's wife bewray thou,
Urge them not unto unmeet pleasure.
This is the ninth counsel:
That thou have heed of dead folk
Whereso thou findest them a-field;
Be they sick-dead,
Be they sea-dead,
Or come to ending by war-weapons.
Let bath be made
For such men fordone,
Wash thou hands and feet thereof,
Comb their hair and dry them
Ere the coffin has them;
Then bid them sleep full sweetly.
This for the tenth counsel:
That thou give trust never
Unto oaths of foeman's kin,
Be'st thou bane of his brother,
Or hast thou felled his father;
Wolf in young son waxes,
Though he with gold be gladdened.
For wrong and hatred
Shall rest them never,
Nay, nor sore sorrow.
Both wit and weapons
Well must the king have
Who is fain to be the foremost.
The last rede and eleventh:
Until all ill look thou.
And watch thy friends' ways ever
Scarce durst I look
For long life for thee, king:
Strong trouble ariseth now already.
ENDNOTES:
(1) This continues the first part of the lay given in Chapter
XX of the Saga; and is, in fact, the original verse of Chapter
XXI.
THE LAY CALLED THE SHORT LAY OF SIGURD.
Sigurd of yore,
Sought the dwelling of Giuki,
As he fared, the young Volsung,
After fight won;
Troth he took
From the two brethren;
Oath swore they betwixt them,
Those bold ones of deed.
A may they gave to him
And wealth manifold,
Gudrun the young,
Giuki's daughter:
They drank and gave doom
Many days together,
Sigurd the young,
And the sons of Giuki.
Until they wended
For Brynhild's wooing,
Sigurd a-riding
Amidst their rout;
The wise young Volsung
Who knew of all ways --
Ah! He had wed her,
Had fate so willed it.
Southlander Sigurd
A naked sword,
Bright, well grinded,
Laid betwixt them;
No kiss he won
From the fair woman,
Nor in arms of his
Did the Hun King hold her,
Since he gat the young maid
For the son of Giuki.
No lack in her life
She wotted of now,
And at her death-day
No dreadful thing
For a shame indeed
Or a shame in seeming;
But about and betwixt
Went baleful fate.
Alone, abroad,
She sat of an evening,
Of full many things
She fall a-talking:
"O for my Sigurd!
I shall have death,
Or my fair, my lovely,
Laid in mine arms.
"For the word once spoken,
I sorrow sorely --
His queen is Gudrun,
I am wed to Gunnar;
The dread Norns wrought for us
A long while of woe."
Oft with heart deep
In dreadful thoughts,
O'er ice-fields and ice-hills
She fared a-night time,
When he and Gudrun
Were gone to their fair bed,
And Sigurd wrapped
The bed-gear round her.
"Ah! Now the Hun King
His queen in arms holdeth,
While love I go lacking,
And all things longed for
With no delight
But in dreadful thought."
These dreadful things
Thrust her toward murder:
-- "Listen, Gunnar,
For thou shalt lose
My wide lands,
Yea, me myself!
Never love I my life,
With thee for my lord --
"I will fare back thither
From whence I came,
To my nighest kin
And those that know me
There shall I sit
Sleeping my life away,
Unless thou slayest
Sigurd the Hun King,
Making thy might more
E'en than his might was!
"Yea, let the son fare
After the father,
And no young wolf
A long while nourish!
For on earth man lieth
Vengeance lighter,
And peace shall be surer
If the son live not."
Adrad was Gunnar,
Heavy-hearted was he,
And in doubtful mood
Day-long he sat.
For naught he wotted,
Nor might see clearly
What was the seemliest
Of deeds to set hand to;
What of all deeds
Was best to be done:
For he minded the vows
Sworn to the Volsung,
And the sore wrong
To be wrought against Sigurd.
Wavered his mind
A weary while,
No wont it was
Of those days worn by,
That queens should flee
From the realms of their kings.
"Brynhild to me
Is better than all,
The child of Budli
Is the best of women.
Yea, and my life
Will I lay down,
Ere I am twinned
From that woman's treasure."
He bade call Hogni
To the place where he bided;
With all the trust that might be,
Trowed he in him.
"Wilt thou bewray Sigurd
For his wealth's sake?
Good it is to rule
O'er the Rhine's metal;
And well content
Great wealth to wield,
Biding in peace
And blissful days."
One thing alone Hogni
Had for an answer:
"Such doings for us
Are naught seemly to do;
To rend with sword
Oaths once sworn,
Oaths once sworn,
And troth once plighted.
"Nor know we on mould,
Men of happier days,
The while we four
Rule over the folk;
While the bold in battle,
The Hun King, bides living.
"And no nobler kin
Shall be known afield,
If our five sons
We long may foster;
Yea, a goodly stem
Shall surely wax.
-- But I clearly see
In what wise it standeth,
Brynhild's sore urging
O'ermuch on thee beareth.
"Guttorm shall we
Get for the slaying,
Our younger brother
Bare of wisdom;
For he was out of
All the oaths sworn,
All the oaths sworn,
And the plighted troth."
Easy to rouse him
Who of naught recketh!
-- Deep stood the sword
In the heart of Sigurd.
There, in the hall,
Gat the high-hearted vengeance;
For he can his sword
At the reckless slayer:
Out at Guttorm
Flew Gram the mighty,
The gleaming steel
From Sigurd's hand.
Down fell the slayer
Smitten asunder;
The heavy head
And the hands fell one way,
But the feet and such like
Aback where they stood.
Gudrun was sleeping
Soft in the bed,
Empty of sorrow
By the side of Sigurd:
When she awoke
With all pleasure gone,
Swimming in blood
Of Frey's beloved.
So sore her hands
She smote together,
That the great-hearted
Gat raised in bed;
-- "O Gudrun, weep not
So woefully,
Sweet lovely bride,
For thy brethren live for thee!
"A young child have I
For heritor;
Too young to win forth
From the house of his foes. --
Black deeds and ill
Have they been a-doing,
Evil rede
Have they wrought at last.
"Late, late, rideth with them
Unto the Thing,
Such sister's son,
Though seven thou bear, --
-- But well I wot
Which way all goeth;
Alone wrought Brynhild
This bale against us.
"That maiden loved me
Far before all men,
Yet wrong to Gunnar
I never wrought;
Brotherhood I heeded
And all bounden oaths,
That none should deem me
His queen's darling."
Weary sighed Gudrun,
As the king gat ending,
And so sore her hands
She smote together,
That the cups arow
Rang out therewith,
And the geese cried on high
That were in the homefield.
Then laughed Brynhild
Budli's daughter,
Once, once only,
From out her heart;
When to her bed
Was borne the sound
Of the sore greeting
Of Giuki's daughter.
Then, quoth Gunnar,
The king, the hawk-bearer,
"Whereas, thou laughest,
O hateful woman,
Glad on thy bed,
No good it betokeneth:
Why lackest thou else
Thy lovely hue?
Feeder of foul deeds,
Fey do I deem thee,
"Well worthy art thou
Before all women,
That thine eyes should see
Atli slain of us;
That thy brother's wounds
Thou shouldest see a-bleeding,
That his bloody hurts
Thine hands should bind."
"No man blameth thee, Gunnar,
Thou hast fulfilled death's measure
But naught Atli feareth
All thine ill will;
Life shall he lay down
Later than ye,
And still bear more might
Aloft than thy might.
"I shall tell thee, Gunnar,
Though well the tale thou knowest,
In what early days
Ye dealt abroad your wrong:
Young was I then,
Worn with no woe,
Good wealth I had
In the house of my brother!
"No mind had I
That a man should have me,
Or ever ye Giukings,
Rode into our garth;
There ye sat on your steeds
Three kings of the people --
-- Ah! That that faring
Had never befallen!
"Then spake Atli
To me apart,
And said that no wealth
He would give unto me,
Neither gold nor lands
If I would not be wedded;
Nay, and no part
Of the wealth apportioned,
Which in my first days
He gave me duly;
Which in my first days
He counted down.
"Wavered the mind
Within me then,
If to fight I should fall
And the felling of folk,
Bold in Byrny
Because of my brother;
A deed of fame
Had that been to all folk,
But to many a man
Sorrow of mind.
"So I let all sink
Into peace at the last:
More grew I minded
For the mighty treasure,
The red-shining rings
Of Sigmund's son;
For no man's wealth else
Would I take unto me.
"For myself had I given
To that great king
Who sat amid gold
On the back of Grani;
Nought were his eyes
Like to your eyen,
Nor in any wise
Went his visage with yours;
Though ye might deem you
Due kings of men.
"One I loved,
One, and none other,
The gold-decked may
Had no doubtful mind;
Thereof shall Atli
Wot full surely,
When he getteth to know
I am gone to the dead.
"Far be it from me,
Feeble and wavering,
Ever to love
Another's love --
-- Yes shall my woe
Be well avenged."
Up rose Gunnar,
The great men's leader,
And cast his arms
About the queen's neck;
And all went nigh
One after other,
With their whole hearts
Her heart to turn.
But then all these
From her neck she thrust,
Of her long journey
No man should let her.
Then called he Hogni
To have talk with him;
"Let all folk go
Forth into the hall,
Thine with mine --
-- O need sore and mighty! --
To wot if we yet
My wife's parting may stay.
Till with time's wearing
Some hindrance wax."
One answer Hogni
Had for all;
"Nay, let hard need
Have rule thereover,
And no man let her
Of her long journey!
Never born again,
May she come back thence!
"Luckless she came
To the lap of her mother,
Born into the world
For utter woe,
TO many a man
For heart-whole mourning."
Upraised he turned
From the talk and the trouble,
To where the gem-field
Dealt out goodly treasure;
As she looked and beheld
All the wealth that she had,
And the hungry bondmaids,
And maids of the hall.
With no good in her heart
She donned her gold byrny,
Ere she thrust the sword point
Through the midst of her body:
On the boister's far side
Sank she adown,
And, smitten with sword,
Still bethought her of redes.
"Let all come forth
Who are fain the red gold,
Or things less worthy
To win from my hands;
To each one I give
A necklace gilt over,
Wrought hangings and bed=gear,
And bright woven weed."
All they kept silence,
And thought what to speak,
Then all at once
Answer gave:
"Full enow are death-doomed,
Fain are we to live yet,
Maids of the hall
All meet work winning."
"From her wise heart at last
The linen-clad damsel,
The one of few years
Gave forth the word:
"I will that none driven
By hand or by word,
For our sake should lose
Well-loved life.
"Thou on the bones of you
Surely shall burn,
Less dear treasure
At your departing
Nor with Menia's Meal (1)
Shall ye come to see me."
"Sit thee down, Gunnar,
A word must I say to thee
Of the life's ruin
Of thy lightsome bride --
-- Nor shall thy ship
Swim soft and sweetly
For all that I
Lay life adown.
"Sooner than ye might deem
Shall ye make peace with Gudrun,
For the wise woman
Shall full in the young wife
The hard memory
Of her dead husband.
"There is a may born
Reared by her mother,
Whiter and brighter
Than is the bright day;
She shall be Swanhild,
She shall be Sunbeam.
"Thou shalt give Gudrun
Unto a great one,
Noble, well-praised
Of the world's folk;
Not with her goodwill,
Or love shalt thou give her;
Yet will Atli
Come to win her,
My very brother,
Born of Budli.
-- "Ah! Many a memory
Of how ye dealt with me,
How sorely, how evilly
Ye ever beguiled me,
How all pleasure left me
The while my life lasted! --
"Fain wilt thou be
Oddrun to win,
But thy good liking
Shall Atli let;
But in secret wise
Shall ye win together,
And she shall love thee
As I had loved thee,
If in such wise
Fare had willed it.
"But with all ill
Shall Atli sting thee,
Into the strait worm-close
Shall he cast thee.
"But no long space
Shall slip away
Ere Atli too
All life shall lose,
Yea, all his weal
With the life of his sons,
For a dreadful bed
Dights Gudrun for him,
From a heart sore laden,
With the sword's sharp edge.
"More seemly for Gudrun,
Your very sister,
In death to wend after
Her love first wed;
Had but good rede
To her been given,
Or if her heart
Had been like to my heart.
-- "Faint my speech groweth --
But for our sake
Ne'er shall she lose
Her life beloved;
The sea shall have her,
High billows bear her
Forth unto Jonakr's
Fair land of his fathers.
"There shall she bear sons,
Stays of a heritage,
Stays of a heritage,
Jonakr's sons;
And Swanhild shall she
Send from the land,
That may born of her,
The may born of Sigurd.
"Her shall bite
The rede of Bikki,
Whereas for no good
Wins Jormunrek life;
And so is clean perished
All the kin of Sigurd,
Yea, and more greeting,
And more for Gudrun.
"And now one prayer
Yet pray I of thee --
That last word of mine
Here in the world --
So broad on the field
Be the burg of the dead
That fair space may be left
For us all to lie down,
All those that died
At Sigurd's death!
"Hang round that burg
Fair hangings and shields,
Web by Gauls woven,
And folk of the Gauls:
There burn the Hun King
Lying beside me.
"But on the other side
Burn by the Hun King
Those who served me
Strewn with treasure;
Two at the head,
And two at the feet,
Two hounds therewith,
And two hawks moreover:
Then is all dealt
With even dealing.
"Lay there amidst us
The right-dight metal,
The sharp-edged steel,
That so lay erst;
When we both together
Into one bed went,
And were called by the name
Of man and wife.
"Never, then, belike
Shall clash behind him
Valhall's bright door
With rings bedight:
And if my fellowship
Followeth after,
In no wretched wise
Then shall we wend.
"For him shall follow
My five bondmaids,
My eight bondsmen,
No borel folk:
Yea, and my fosterer,
And my father's dower
That Budli of old days
Gave to his dear child.
"Much have I spoken,
More would I speak,
If the sword would give me
Space for speech;
But my words are waning,
My wounds are swelling --
Naught but truth have I told --
-- And now make I ending."
ENDNOTES:
(1) "Menia's Maid" -- periphrasis for gold.
THE HELL-RIDE OF BRYNHILD.
After the death of Brynhild were made two
bales, one for Sigurd, and that was first burned; but Brynhild
was burned on the other, and she was in a chariot hung about
with goodly hangings.
And so folk say that Brynhild drave in her
chariot down along the way to Hell, and passed by an abode
where dwelt a certain giantess, and the giantess spake: --
THE GIANT-WOMAN
"Nay, with my goodwill
Never goest thou
Through this stone-pillared
Stead of mine!
More seemly for thee
To sit sewing the cloth,
Than to go look on
The love of another.
"What dost thou, going
From the land of the Gauls,
O restless head,
To this mine house?
Golden girl, hast thou not,
If thou listest to hearken,
In sweet wise from thy hands
The blood of men washen?"
BRYNHILD
"Nay, blame me naught,
Bride of the rock-hall,
Though I roved a warring
In the days that were;
The higher of us twain
Shall I ever be holden
When of our kind
Men make account."
THE GIANT-WOMAN
"Thou, O Brynhild,
Budli's daughter,
Wert the worst ever born
Into the world;
For Giuki's children
Death hast thou gotten,
And turned to destruction
Their goodly dwelling."
BRYNHILD
"I shall tell thee
True tale from my chariot,
O thou who naught wottest,
If thou listest to wot;
How for me they have gotten
Those heirs of Giuki,
A loveless life,
A life of lies.
"Hild under helm,
The Hlymdale people,
E'en those who knew me,
Ever would call me.
"The changeful shapes
Of us eight sisters,
The wise king bade
Under oak-tree to bear;
Of twelve winters was I,
If thou listest to wot,
When I sware to the young lord
Oaths of love.
"Thereafter gat I
Mid the folk of the Goths,
For Helmgunnar the old,
Swift journey to Hell,
And gave to Aud's brother
The young, gain and glory;
Whereof overwrath
Waxed Odin with me.
"So he shut me in shield-wall
In Skata grove,
Red shields and white
Close set around me;
And bade him alone
My slumber to break
Who in no land
Knew how to fear.
"He set round my hall,
Toward the south quarter,
The Bane of all trees
Burning aloft;
And ruled that he only
Thereover should ride
Who should bring me the gold
O'er which Fafnir brooded.
"Then upon Grani rode
The goodly gold-strewer
To where my fosterer
Ruled his fair dwelling.
He who alone there
Was deemed best of all,
The War-lord of the Danes,
Well worthy of men.
"In peace did we sleep
Soft in one bed,
As though he had been
Naught but my brother:
There as we lay
Through eight nights wearing,
No hand in love
On each other we laid.
"Yet thence blamed me, Gudrun,
Giuki's daughter,
That I had slept
In the arms of Sigurd;
And then I wotted
As I fain had not wotted,
That they had bewrayed me
In my betrothals.
"Ah! For unrest
All too long
Are men and women
Made alive!
Yet we twain together
Shall wear through the ages,
Sigurd and I. --
-- Sink adown, O giant-wife!"
FRAGMENTS OF THE LAY OF BRYNHILD
HOGNI SAID:
"What hath wrought Sigurd
Of any wrong-doing
That the life of the famed one
Thou art fain of taking?"
GUNNAR SAID:
"To me has Sigurd
Sworn many oaths,
Sworn many oaths,
And sworn them lying,
And he bewrayed me
When it behoved him
Of all folk to his troth
To be the most trusty."
HOGNI SAID:
"Thee hath Brynhild
Unto all bale,
And all hate whetted,
And a work of sorrow;
For she grudges to Gudrun
All goodly life;
And to thee the bliss
Of her very body."
Some the wolf roasted,
Some minced the worm,
Some unto Guttorm
Gave the wolf-meat,
Or ever they might
In their lust for murder
On the high king
Lay deadly hand.
Sigurd lay slain
On the south of the Rhine
High from the fair tree
Croaked forth the raven,
"Ah, yet shall Atli
On you redden edges,
The old oaths shall weigh
On your souls, O warriors."
Without stood Gudrun,
Giuki's daughter,
And the first word she said
Was even this word:
"Where then is Sigurd,
Lord of the Warfolk,
Since my kin
Come riding the foremost?
One word Hogni
Had for an answer:
"Our swords have smitten
Sigurd asunder,
And the grey horse hangs drooping
O'er his lord lying dead."
Then quoth Brynhild,
Budli's daughter;
"Good weal shall ye have
Of weapons and lands,
That Sigurd alone
Would surely have ruled
If he had lived
But a little longer.
"Ah, nothing seemly
For Sigurd to rule
Giuki's house
And the folk of the Goths,
When of him five sons
For the slaying of men,
Eager for battle,
Should have been begotten!"
Then laughed Brynhild --
Loud rang the whole house --
One laugh only
From out her heart:
"Long shall your bliss be
Of lands and people,
Whereas the famed lord
You have felled to the earth!"
Then spake Gudrun,
Giuki's daughter;
"Much thou speakest,
Many things fearful,
All grame be on Gunnar
The bane of Sigurd!
From a heart full of hate
Shall come heavy vengeance."
Forth sped the even
Enow there was drunken,
Full enow was there
Of all soft speech;
And all men got sleep
When to bed they were gotten;
Gunnar only lay waking
Long after all men.
His feet fell he to moving,
Fell to speak to himself
The waster of men,
Still turned in his mind
What on the bough
Those twain would be saying,
The raven and erne,
As they rode their ways homeward.
But Brynhild awoke,
Budli's daughter,
May of the shield-folk,
A little ere morning:
"Thrust ye on, hold ye back,
-- Now all harm is wrought, --
To tell of my sorrow,
Or to let all slip by me?"
All kept silence
After her speaking,
None might know
That woman's mind,
Or why she must weep
To tell of the work
That laughing once
Of men she prayed.
BRYNHILD SPAKE:
"In dreams, O Gunnar,
Grim things fell on me;
Dead-cold the hall was,
And my bed was a-cold,
And thou, lord, wert riding
Reft of all bliss,
Laden with fetters
'Mid the host of thy foemen."
"So now all ye,
O House of the Niblungs,
Shall be brought to naught,
O ye oath-breakers!
"Think'st thou not, Gunnar,
How that betid,
When ye let the blood run
Both in one footstep?
With ill reward
Hast thou rewarded
His heart so fain
To be the foremost!
"As well was seen
When he rode his ways,
That king of all worth,
Unto my wooing;
How the host-destroyer
Held to the vows
Sworn beforetime,
Sworn to the young king.
"For his wounding-wand
All wrought with gold,
The king beloved
Laid between us;
Without were its edges
Wrought with fire,
But with venom-drops
Deep dyed within."
Thus this song telleth of the death of Sigurd,
and setteth forth how that they slew him without doors; but
some say that they slew him within doors, sleeping in his bed.
But the Dutch Folk say that they slew him out in the wood: and
so sayeth the ancient song of Gudrun, that Sigurd and the sons
of Giuki were riding to the Thing whenas he was slain. But all
with one accord say that they bewrayed him in their troth with
him, and fell on him as he lay unarrayed and unawares.
THE SECOND OR ANCIENT LAY OF GUDRUN
Thiodrek the King was in Atli's house, and had
lost there the more part of his men: so there Thiodrek and
Gudrun bewailed their troubles one to the other, and she spake
and said: --
A may of all mays
My mother reared me
Bright in bower;
Well loved I my brethren,
Until that Giuki
With gold arrayed me,
With gold arrayed me,
And gave me to Sigurd.
Such was my Sigurd,
Among the sons of Giuki
As is the green leek
O'er the low grass waxen,
Or a hart high-limbed
Over hurrying deer,
Or glede-red gold
Over grey silver.
Till me they begrudged,
Those my brethren,
The fate to have him,
Who was first of all men;
Nor might they sleep,
Nor sit a-dooming,
Ere they let slay
My well-loved Sigurd.
Grani ran to the Thing,
There was clatter to hear,
But never came Sigurd
Himself thereunto;
All the saddle-girt beasts
With blood were besprinkled,
As faint with the way
Neath the slayers they went.
Then greeting I went
With Grani to talk,
And with tear-furrowed cheeks
I bade him tell all;
But drooping laid Grani,
His head in the grass,
For the steed well wotted
Of his master's slaying.
A long while I wandered,
Long my mind wavered,
Ere the kings I might ask
Concerning my king.
Then Gunnar hung head,
But Hogni told
Of the cruel slaying
Of my Sigurd:
"On the water's far side
Lies, smitten to death,
The bane of Guttorm
To the wolves given over.
"Go, look on Sigurd,
On the ways that go southward,
There shalt thou hear
The ernes high screaming,
The ravens a-croaking
As their meat they crave for;
Thou shalt hear the wolves howling
Over thine husband.
"How hast thou, Hogni,
The heart to tell me,
Me of joy made empty,
Of such misery?
Thy wretched heart
May the ravens tear
Wide over the world,
With no men mayst thou wend."
One thing Hogni
Had for answer,
Fallen from his high heart,
Full of all trouble:
"More greeting yet,
O Gudrun, for thee,
If my heart the ravens
Should rend asunder!"
Thence I turned
From the talk and the trouble
To go a leasing (1)
What the wolves had left me;
No sigh I made
No smote hands together,
Nor did I wail
As other women
When I sat over
My Sigurd slain.
Night methought it,
And the moonless dark,
When I sat in sorrow
Over Sigurd;
Better than all things
I deemed it would be
If they would let me
Cast my life by,
Or burn me up
As they burn the birch-wood.
From the fell I wandered
Five days together,
Until the high hall
Of Half lay before me;
Seven seasons there
I sat with Thora,
The daughter of Hacon,
Up in Denmark.
My heart to gladden
With gold she wrought
Southland halls
And swans of the Dane-folk;
There had we painted
The chiefs a-playing;
Fair our hands wrought
Folk of the kings.
Red shields we did,
Doughty knights of the Huns,
Hosts spear-dight, hosts helm-dight,
All a high king's fellows;
And the ships of Sigmund
From the land swift sailing;
Heads gilt over
And prows fair graven.
On the cloth we broidered
That tide of their battling,
Siggeir and Siggar,
South in Fion.
Then heard Grimhild,
The Queen of Gothland,
How I was abiding,
Weighed down with woe;
And she thrust the cloth from her
And called to her sons,
And oft and eagerly
Asked them thereof,
Who for her son
Would their sister atone,
Who for her lord slain
Would lay down weregild.
Fain was Gunnar
Gold to lay down
All wrongs to atone for,
And Hogni in likewise;
Then she asked who was fain
Of faring straightly,
The steed to saddle
To set forth the wain,
The horse to back,
And the hawk to fly,
To shoot forth the arrow
From out the yew-bow.
Valdarr the Dane-king
Came with Jarisleif
Eymod the third went
Then went Jarizskar;
In kingly wise
In they wended,
The host of the Longbeards;
Red cloaks had they,
Byrnies short-cut,
Helms strong hammered,
Girt with glaives,
And hair red-gleaming.
Each would give me
Gifts desired,
Gifts desired,
Speech dear to my heart,
If they might yet,
Despite my sorrow,
Win back my trust,
But in them nought I trusted.
Then brought me Grimhild
A beaker to drink of,
Cold and bitter,
Wrong's memory to quench;
Made great was that drink
With the might of the earth,
With the death-cold sea
And the blood that Son (2) holdeth.
On that horn's face were there
All the kin of letters
Cut aright and reddened,
How should I rede them rightly?
The ling-fish long
Of the land of Hadding,
Wheat-ears unshorn,
And wild things' inwards.
In that mead were mingled
Many ills together,
Blood of all the wood,
And brown-burnt acorns;
The black dew of the hearth, (3)
And god-doomed dead beasts' inwards
And the swine's liver sodden,
For wrongs late done that deadens.
Then waned my memory
When that was within me,
Of my lord 'mid the hall
By the iron laid low.
Three kings came
Before my knees
Ere she herself
Fell to speech with me.
"I will give to thee, Gudrun,
Gold to be glad with,
All the great wealth
Of thy father gone from us,
Rings of red gold
And the great hall of Lodver,
And all fair hangings left
By the king late fallen.
"Maids of the Huns
Woven pictures to make,
And work fair in gold
Till thou deem'st thyself glad.
Alone shalt thou rule
O'er the riches of Budli,
Shalt be made great with gold,
And be given to Atli."
"Never will I
Wend to a husband,
Or wed the brother
Of Queen Brynhild;
Naught it beseems me
With the son of Budli
Kin to bring forth,
Or to live and be merry."
"Nay, the high chiefs
Reward not with hatred,
For take heed that I
Was the first in this tale!
To thy heart shall it be
As if both these had life,
Sigurd and Sigmund,
When thou hast borne sons."
"Naught may I, Grimhild,
Seek after gladness,
Nor deem aught hopeful
Of any high warrior,
Since wolf and raven
Were friends together,
The greedy, the cruel,
O'er great Sigurd's heart-blood."
"Of all men that can be
For the noblest of kin
This king have I found,
And the foremost of all;
Him shalt thou have
Till with eld thou art heavy --
Be thou ever unwed,
If thou wilt naught of him!"
"Nay, nay, bid me not
With thy words long abiding
To take unto me
That balefullest kin;
This king shall bid Gunnar
Be stung to his bane,
And shall cut the heart
From out of Hogni.
"Nor shall I leave life
Ere the keen lord,
The eager in sword-play,
My hand shall make end of."
Grimhild a-weeping
Took up the word then,
When the sore bale she wotted
Awaiting her sons,
And the bane hanging over
Her offspring beloved.
"I will give thee, moreover,
Great lands, many men,
Wineberg and Valberg,
If thou wilt but have them;
Hold them lifelong,
And live happy, O daughter!"
"Then him must I take
From among kingly men,
'Gainst my heart's desire,
From the hands of my kinsfolk;
But no joy I look
To have from that lord:
Scarce may my brother's bane
Be a shield to my sons."
Soon was each warrior
Seen on his horse,
But the Gaulish women
Into wains were gotten;
Then seven days long
O'er a cold land we rode,
And for seven other
Clove we the sea-waves.
But with the third seven
O'er dry land we wended.
There the gate-wardens
Of the burg, high and wide,
Unlooked the barriers
Ere the burg-garth we rode to --
Atli woke me
When meseemed I was
Full evil of heart
For my kin dead slain.
"In such wise did the Norns
Wake me or now." --
Fain was he to know
Of this ill foreshowing --
"That methought, O Gudrun,
Giuki's daughter,
That thou setst in my heart
A sword wrought for guile."
"For fires tokening I deem it
That dreaming of iron,
But for pride and for lust
The wrath of fair women
Against some bale
Belike, I shall burn thee
For thy solace and healing
Though hateful thou art."
"In the fair garth methought
Had saplings fallen
E'en such as I would
Should have waxen ever;
Uprooted were these,
And reddened with blood,
And borne to the bench,
And folk bade me eat of them.
"Methought from my hand then
Went hawks a-flying
Lacking their meat
To the land of all ill;
Methought that their hearts
Mingled with honey,
Swollen with blood
I ate amid sorrow.
"Lo, next two whelps
From my hands I loosened,
Joyless were both,
And both a-howling;
And now their flesh
Became naught but corpses,
Whereof must I eat
But sore against my will."
"O'er the prey of the fishers
Will folk give doom;
From the bright white fish
The heads will they take;
Within a few nights,
Fey as they are,
A little ere day
Of that draught will they eat."
"Ne'er since lay I down,
Ne'er since would I sleep,
Hard of heart, in my bed: --
That deed have I to do. (4)
ENDNOTES:
(1) The original has "a vid lesa". "Leasing" is the word still
used for gleaning in many country sides in England.
(2) Son was the vessel into which was poured the blood of
Quasir, the God of Poetry.
(3) This means soot.
(4) The whole of this latter part is fragmentary and obscure;
there seems wanting to two of the dreams some trivial
interpretation by Gudrun, like those given by Hogni to
Kostbera in the Saga, of which nature, of course, the
interpretation contained in the last stanza but one is, as we
have rendered it: another rendering, from the different
reading of the earlier edition of "Edda" (Copenhagen, 1818)
would make this refer much more directly to the slaying of her
sons by Gudrun.
THE SONG OF ATLI
Gudrun, Giuki's daughter, avenger her brethren,
as is told far and wide; first she slew the sons of Atli, and
then Atli himself; and she burned the hall thereafter, and all
the household with it: and about these matters is this song
made: --
In days long gone
Sent Atli to Gunnar
A crafty one riding,
Knefrud men called him;
To Giuki's garth came he,
To the hall of Gunnar,
To the benches gay-dight,
And the gladsome drinking.
There drank the great folk
'Mid the guileful one's silence,
Drank wine in their fair hall:
The Huns' wrath they feared
When Knefrud cried
In his cold voice,
As he sat on the high seat,
That man of the Southland:
"Atli has sent me
Riding swift on his errands
On the bit-griping steed
Through dark woodways unbeaten,
To bid thee, King Gunnar,
Come to his fair bench
With helm well-adorned,
To the house of King Atli.
"Shield shall ye have there
And spears ashen-shafted,
Helms ruddy with gold,
And hosts of the Huns;
Saddle-gear silver gilt,
Shirts red as blood,
The hedge of the warwife,
And horses bit-griping.
"And he saith he will give you
Gnitaheath widespread,
And whistling spears
And prows well-gilded,
Might wealth
With the stead of Danpi,
And that noble wood
Men name the Murkwood."
Then Gunnar turned head
And spake unto Hogni:
"What rede from thee, high one,
Since such things we hear?
No gold know I
On Gnitaheath,
That we for our parts
Have not portion as great.
"Seven halls we have
Fulfilled of swords,
And hilts of gold
Each sword there has;
My horse is the best,
My blade is the keenest;
Fair my bow o'er the bench is,
Gleams my byrny with gold;
Brightest helm, brightest shield,
From Kiar's dwelling ere brought --
Better all things I have
Than all things of the Huns."
HOGNI SAID:
"What mind has our sister
That a ring she hath sent us
In weed of wolves clad?
Bids she not to be wary?
For a wolf's hair I found
The fair ring wreathed about;
Wolf beset shall the way be
If we wend on this errand."
No sons whetted Gunnar,
Nor none of his kin,
Nor learned men nor wise men,
Nor such as were mighty.
Then spake Gunnar
E'en as a king should speak,
Glorious in mead-hall
From great heart and high:
"Rise up now, Fiornir,
Forth down the benches
Let the gold-cups of great ones
Pass in hands of my good-men!
Well shall we drink wine,
Draughts dear to our hearts,
Though the last of all feasts
In our fair house this be!
"For the wolves shall rule
O'er the wealth of the Niblungs,
With the pine-woods' wardens
In Gunnar perish:
And the black-felled bears
With fierce teeth shall bite
For the glee of the dog kind,
If again comes not Gunnar."
Then good men never shamed,
Greeting aloud,
Led the great king of men
From the garth of his home;
And cried the fair son
Of Hogni the king:
"Fare happy, O Lords,
Whereso your hearts lead you!"
Then the bold knights
Let their bit-griping steeds
Wend swift o'er the fells,
Tread the murk-wood unknown,
All the Hunwood was shaking
As the hardy ones fared there;
O'er the green meads they urged
Their steeds shy of the goad.
Then Atli's land saw they;
Great towers and strong,
And the bold men of Bikki,
Aloft on the burg:
The Southland folks' hall
Set with benches about,
Dight with bucklers well bounden,
And bright white shining shields.
There drank Atli,
The awful Hun king,
Wine in his fair hall;
Without were the warders,
Gunnar's folk to have heed of,
Lest they had fared thither
With the whistling spear
War to wake 'gainst the king.
But first came their sister
As they came to the hall,
Both her brethren she met,
With beer little gladdened:
"Bewrayed art thou, Gunnar!
What dost thou great king
To deal war to the Huns?
Go thou swift from the hall!
Better, brother, hadst thou
Fared here in thy byrny
Than with helm gaily dight
Looked on Atli's great house:
Them hadst sat then in saddle
Through days bright with the sun
Fight to awaken
And fair fields to redden:
"O'er the folk fate makes pale
Should the Norn's tears have fallen,
The shield mays of the Huns
Should have known of all sorrow;
And King Atli himself
To worm-close should be brought;
But now is the worm-close
Kept but for thee."
Then spake Gunnar
Great 'mid the people:
"Over-late sister
The Niblungs to summon;
A long way to seek
The helping of warriors,
The high lord unshamed,
From the hills of the Rhine!"
Seven Hogni beat down
With his sword sharp-grinded,
And the eighth man he thrust
Amidst of the fire.
Ever so shall famed warrior
Flight with his foemen,
As Hogni fought
For the hand of Gunnar.
But on Gunnar they fell,
And set him in fetters,
And bound hard and fast
That friend of Burgundians;
Then the warrior they asked
If he would buy life,
But life with gold
That king of the Goths.
Nobly spake Gunnar,
Great lord of the Niblungs;
"Hogni's bleeding heart first
Shall lie in mine hand,
Cut from the breast
Of the bold-riding lord,
With bitter-sharp knife
From the son of the king."
With guile the great one
Would they beguile,
On the wailing thrall
Laid they hand unwares,
And cut the heart
From out of Hjalli,
Laid it bleeding on trencher
And bare it to Gunnar.
"Here have I the heart
Of Hjalli the trembler,
Little like the heart
Of Hogni the hardy:
As much as it trembleth
Laid on the trencher
By the half more it trembled
In the breast of him hidden."
Then laughed Hogni
When they cut the heart from him,
From the crest-smith yet quick,
Little thought he to quail.
The hard acorn of thought
From the high king they took,
Laid it bleeding on trencher
And bare it Gunnar.
"Here have I the heart
Of Hogni the hardy,
Little like to the heart
Of Hjalli the trembler.
Howso little it quaketh
Laid here on the dish,
Yet far less it quaked
In the breast of him laid.
"So far mayst thou bide
From men's eyen, O Atli,
As from that treasure
Thou shalt abide!
"Behold in my heart
Is hidden for ever
That hoard of the Niblungs,
Now Hogni is dead.
Doubt threw me two ways
While the twain of us lived,
But all that is gone
Now I live on alone.
"The great Rhine shall rule
O'er the hate-raising treasure,
That gold of the Niblungs,
The seed of the gods:
In the weltering water
Shall that wealth lie a-gleaming,
Or it shine on the hands
Of the children of Huns!"
Then cried Atli,
King of the Hun-folk,
"Drive forth your wains now
The slave is fast bounden."
And straightly thence
The bit-shaking steeds
Drew the hoard-warden,
The war-god to his death.
Atli the great king,
Rode upon Glaum,
With shields set round about,
And sharp thorns of battle:
Gudrun, bound by wedlock
To these, victory made gods of,
Held back her tears
As the hall she ran into.
"Let it fare with thee, Atli,
E'en after thine oaths sworn
To Gunnar fell often;
Yea, oaths sworn of old time,
By the sun sloping southward,
By the high burg of Sigry,
By the fair bed of rest,
By the red ring of Ull!"
Now a host of men
Cast the high king alive
Into a close
Crept o'er within
With most foul worms,
Fulfilled of all venom,
Ready grave to dig
In his doughty heart.
Wrathful-hearted he smote
The harp with his hand,
Gunnar laid there alone;
And loud rang the strings. --
In such wise ever
Should hardy ring-scatterer
Keep gold from all folk
In the garth of his foeman.
Then Atli would wend
About his wide land,
On his steed brazen shod,
Back from the murder.
Din there was in the garth,
All thronged with the horses;
High the weapon-song rose
From men come from the heath.
Out then went Gudrun,
'Gainst Atli returning,
With a cup gilded over,
To greet the land's ruler;
"Come, then, and take it,
King glad in thine hall,
From Gudrun's hands,
For the hell-farers groan not!"
Clashed the beakers of Atli,
Wine-laden on bench,
As in hall there a-gathered,
The Huns fell a-talking,
And the long-bearded eager ones
Entered therein,
From a murk den new-come,
From the murder of Gunnar.
Then hastened the sweet-faced
Delight of the shield-folk,
Bright in the fair hall,
Wine to bear to them:
The dreadful woman
Gave dainties withal
To the lords pale with fate,
Laid strange word upon Atli:
"The hearts of thy sons
Hast thou eaten, sword-dealer,
All bloody with death
And drenched with honey:
In most heavy mood
Brood o'er venison of men!
Drink rich draughts therewith,
Down the high benches send it!
"Never callest thou now
From henceforth to thy knee
Fair Erp or fair Eiril,
Bright-faced with the drink;
Never seest thou them now
Amidmost the seat,
Scattering the gold,
Or shafting of spears;
Manes trimming duly,
Or driving steeds forth!"
Din arose from the benches,
Dread song of men was there,
Noise 'mid the fair hangings,
As all Hun's children wept;
All saving Gudrun,
Who never gat greeting,
For her brethren bear-hardy
For her sweet sons and bright,
The young ones, the simple
Once gotten with Atli.
The seed of gold
Sowed the swan-bright woman,
Rings of red gold
She gave to the house-carls;
Fate let she wax,
Let the bright gold flow forth,
In naught spared that woman
The store-houses' wealth.
Atli unaware
Was a-weary with drink;
No weapon had he,
No heeding of Gudrun --
Ah, the pity would be better,
When in soft wise they twain
Would full often embrace
Before the great lords!
To the bed with sword-point
Blood gave she to drink
With a hand fain of death,
And she let the dogs loose:
Then in from the hall-door --
-- Up waked the house-carls --
Hot brands she cast,
Gat revenge for her brethren.
To the flame gave she all
Who therein might be found;
Fell adown the old timbers,
Reeked all treasure-houses;
There the shield-mays were burnt,
Their lives' span brought to naught;
In the fierce fire sank down
All the stead of the Budlungs.
Wide told of is this --
Ne'er sithence in the world,
Thus fared bride clad in byrny
For her brothers' avenging;
For behold, this fair woman
three kings of the people,
Hath brought very death
Or ever she died!
THE WHETTING OF GUDRUN
Gudrun went down unto the sea whenas she had
slain Atli, and she cast herself therein, for she was fain to
end her life: but nowise might she drown. She drave over the
firths to the land of King Jonakr, and he wedded her, and
their sons were Sorli, and Erp, and Hamdir, and there was
Swanhild, Sigurd's daughter, nourished: and she was given to
Jormunrek the Mighty. Now Bikki was a man of his, and gave
such counsel to Randver, the king's son, as that he should
take her; and with that counsel were the young folk well
content.
Then Bikki told the king, and the king let hang
Randver, but bade Swanhild be trodden under horses' feet. But
when Gudrun heard thereof, she spake to her sons --
Words of strife heard I,
Huger than any,
Woeful words spoken,
Sprung from all sorrow,
When Gudrun fierce-hearted
With the grimmest of words
Whetter her sons
Unto the slaying.
"Why are ye sitting here?
Why sleep ye life away?
Why doth it grieve you nought?
Glad words to speak,
Now when your sister --
Young of years was she --
Has Jormunrek trodden
With the treading of horses? --
"Black horses and white
In the highway of warriors;
Grey horses that know
The roads of the Goths. --
"Little like are ye grown
To that Gunnar of old days!
Nought are your hearts
As the heart of Hogni!
Well would ye seek
Vengeance to win
If your mood were in aught
As the mood of my brethren,
Or the hardy hearts
Of the Kings of the Huns!"
Then spake Hamdir,
The high-hearted --
"Little didst thou
Praise Hogni's doings,
When Sigurd woke
From out of sleep,
And the blue-white bed-gear
Upon thy bed
Grew red with man's blood --
With the blood of thy mate!
"Too baleful vengeance
Wroughtest thou for thy brethren
Most sore and evil
When thy sons thou slewedst,
Else all we together
On Jormunrek
Had wrought sore vengeance
For that our sister.
"Come, bring forth quickly
The Hun kings' bright gear,
Since thou has urged us
Unto the sword-Thing!"
Laughing went Gudrun
To the bower of good gear,
Kings' crested helms
From chests she drew,
And wide-wrought byrnies
Bore to her sons:
Then on their horses
Load laid the heroes.
Then spake Hamdir,
The high-hearted --
"Never cometh again
His mother to see
The spear-god laid low
In the land of the Goths.
That one arvel mayst thou
For all of us drink,
For sister Swanhild,
And us thy sons."
Greeted Gudrun
Giuki's daughter;
Sorrowing she went
In the forecourt to sit,
That she might tell,
With cheeks tear-furrowed,
Her weary wail
In many a wise.
"Three fires I knew,
Three hearths I knew,
To three husbands' houses
Have I been carried;
And better than all
Had been Sigurd alone,
He whom my brethren
Brought to his bane.
"Such sore grief as that
Methought never should be,
Yet more indeed
Was left for my torment
Then, when the great ones
Gave me to Atli.
"My fair bright boys
I bade unto speech,
Nor yet might I win
Weregild for my bale,
Ere I had hewn off
Those Niblungs' heads.
"To the sea-strand I went
With the Norns sorely wroth,
For I would thrust from me
The storm of their torment;
But the high billows
Would not drown, but bore me
Forth, till I stepped a-land
Longer to live.
"Then I went a-bed --
-- Ah, better in the old days,
This was the third time! --
To a king of the people;
Offspring I brought forth,
Props of a fair house,
Props of a fair house,
Jonakr's fair sons.
"But around Swanhild
Bond-maidens sat,
Her, that of all mine
Most to my heart was;
Such was my Swanhild,
In my hall's midmost,
As is the sunbeam
Fair to beheld.
"In gold I arrayed her,
And goodly raiment,
Or ever I gave her
To the folk of the Goths.
That was the hardest
Of my heavy woes,
When the bright hair, --
O the bright hair of Swanhild! --
In the mire was trodden
By the treading of horses.
"This was the sorest,
When my love, my Sigurd,
Reft of glory
In his bed gat ending:
But this the grimmest
When glittering worms
Tore their way
Through the heart of Gunnar.
"But this the keenest
When they cut to the quick
Of the hardy heart
Of the unfeared Hogni.
Of much of bale I mind me,
Of many griefs I mind me;
Why should I sit abiding
Yet more bale and more?
"Thy coal-black horse,
O Sigurd, bridle,
The swift on the highway!
O let him speed hither!
Here sitteth no longer
Son or daughter,
More good gifts
To give to Gudrun!
"Mindst thou not, Sigurd,
Of the speech betwixt us,
When on one bed
We both sat together,
O my great king --
That thou wouldst come to me
E'en from the hall of Hell,
I to thee from the fair earth?
"Pile high, O earls
The oaken pile,
Let it be the highest
That ever queen had!
Let the fire burn swift,
My breast with woe laden,
And thaw all my heart,
Hard, heavy with sorrow!"
Now may all earls
Be bettered in mind,
May the grief of all maidens
Ever be minished,
For this tale of sorrow
So told to its ending.
THE LAY OF HAMDIR
Great deeds of bale
In the garth began,
At the sad dawning
The tide of Elves' sorrow
When day is a-waxing
And man's grief awaketh,
And the sorrow of each one
The early day quickeneth.
Not now, not now,
Nor yesterday,
But long ago
Has that day worn by,
That ancientest time,
The first time to tell of,
Then, whenas Gudrun,
Born of Giuki,
Whetter her sons
To Swanhild's avenging.
"Your sister's name
Was naught but Swanhild,
Whom Jormunrek
With horses has trodden! --
White horses and black
On the war-beaten way,
Grey horses that go
On the roads of the Goths.
"All alone am I now
As in holt is the aspen;
As the fir-tree of boughs,
So of kin am I bare;
As bare of things longed for
As the willow of leaves When the bough-breaking wind
The warm day endeth.
"Few, sad, are ye left
O kings of my folk!
Yet alone living
Last shreds of my kin!
"Ah, naught are ye grown
As that Gunnar of old days;
Naught are your hearts
As the heart of Hogni!
Well would ye seek
Vengeance to win
If your hearts were in aught
As the hearts of my brethren!"
Then spake Hamdir
The high-hearted:
"Nought hadst thou to praise
The doings of Hogni,
When they woke up Sigurd
From out of slumber,
And in bed thou sat'st up
'Mid the banes-men's laughter.
"Then when thy bed=gear,
Blue-white, well woven
By art of craftsmen
All swam with thy king's blood;
The Sigurd died,
O'er his dead corpse thou sattest,
Not heeding aught gladsome,
Since Gunnar so willed it.
"Great grief for Atli
Gatst thou by Erp's murder,
And the end of thine Eitil,
But worse grief for thyself.
Good to use sword
For the slaying of others
In such wise that its edge
Shall not turn on ourselves!"
Then well spake Sorli
From a heart full of wisdom:
"No words will I
Make with my mother,
Though both ye twain
Need words belike --
What askest thou, Gudrun,
To let thee go greeting?
"Weep for thy brethren,
Weep for thy sweet sons,
And thy nighest kinsfolk
Laid by the fight-side!
Yea, and thou Gudrun,
May'st greet for us twain
Sitting fey on our steeds
Doomed in far lands to die."
From the garth forth they went
With hearts full of fury,
Sorli and Hamdir,
The sons of Gudrun,
And they met on the way
The wise in all wiles:
"And thou little Erp,
What helping from thee?"
He of alien womb
Spake out in such wise:
"Good help for my kin,
Such as foot gives to foot,
Or flesh-covered hand
Gives unto hand!"
"What helping for foot
That help that foot giveth,
Or for flesh-covered hand
The helping of hand?"
Then spake Erp
Yet once again
Mock spake the prince
As he sat on his steed:
"Fool's deed to show
The way to a dastard!"
"Bold beyond measure,"
Quoth they, "is the base-born!"
Out from the sheath
Drew they the sheath-steel,
And the glaives' edges played
For the pleasure of hell;
By the third part they minished The might that they had,
Their young kin they let lie
A-cold on the earth.
Then their fur-cloaks they shook
And bound fast their swords,
In webs goodly woven
Those great ones were clad;
Young they went o'er the fells
Where the dew was new-fallen
Swift, on steeds of the Huns,
Heavy vengeance to wreak.
Forth stretched the ways,
And an ill way they found,
Yea, their sister's son (1)
Hanging slain upon tree --
Wolf-trees by the wind made cold At the town's westward
Loud with cranes' clatter --
Ill abiding there long!
Din in the king's hall
Of men merry with drink,
And none might hearken
The horses' tramping
Or ever the warders
Their great horn winded.
Then men went forth
To Jormunrek
To tell of the heeding
Of men under helm:
"Give ye good counsel!
Great ones are come hither,
For the wrong of men mighty
Was the may to death trodden."
"Loud Jormunrek laughed,
And laid hand to his beard,
Nor bade bring his byrny,
But with the wine fighting,
Shook his red locks,
On his white shield sat staring,
And in his hand
Swung the gold cup on high.
"Sweet sight for me
Those twain to set eyes on,
Sorli and Hamdir,
Here in my hall!
Then with bowstrings
Would I bind them,
And hang the good Giukings
Aloft on the gallows!"
Then spake Hrothglod
From off the high steps,
Spake the slim-fingered
Unto her son, --
-- For a threat was cast forth
Of what ne'er should fall --
"Shall two men alone
Two hundred Gothfolk
Bind or bear down
In the midst of their burg?"
Strife and din in the hall,
Cups smitten asunder
Men lay low in blood
From the breasts of Goths flowing.
Then spake Hamdir,
The high-hearted:
"Thou cravedst, O king,
From the coming of us,
The sons of one mother,
Amidmost thine hall --
Look on these hands of thine,
Look on these feet of thine,
Cast by us, Jormunrek,
On to the flame!"
Then cried aloud
The high Gods' kinsman (2)
Bold under byrny, --
Roared he as bears roar;
"Stones to the stout ones
That the spears bite not,
Nor the edges of steel,
These sons of Jonakr!"
QUOTH SORLI:
"Bale, brother, wroughtst thou
By that bag's (3) opening,
Oft from that bag
Rede of bale cometh!
Heart hast thou, Hamdir,
If thou hadst heart's wisdom
Great lack in a man
Who lacks wisdom and lore!"
HAMDIR SAID:
"Yes, off were the head
If Erp were alive yet,
Our brother the bold
Whom we slew by the way;
The far-famed through the world --
Ah, the fares drave me on,
And the man war made holy,
There must I slay!"
SORLI SAID:
"Unmeet we should do
As the doings of wolves are,
Raising wrong each 'gainst other
As the dogs of the Norns,
The greedy ones nourished
In waste steads of the world.
In strong wise have we fought,
On Goths' corpses we stand,
Beat down by our edges,
E'en as ernes on the bough.
Great fame our might winneth,
Die we now, or to-morrow, --
No man lives till eve
Whom the fates doom at morning."
At the hall's gable-end
Fell Sorli to earth,
But Hamdir lay low
At the back of the houses.
Now this is called the Ancient Lay of Hamdir.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Randver, the son of their sister's husband.
(2) Odin, namely.
(3) "Bag", his mouth.
THE LAMENT OF ODDRUN
There was a king hight Heidrik, and his
daughter was called Borgny, and the name of her lover was
Vilmund. Now she might nowise be made lighter of a child she
travailed with, before Oddrun, Atil's sister, came to her, --
she who had been the love of Gunnar, Giuki's son. But of their
speech together has this been sung:
I have hear tell
In ancient tales
How a may there came
To Morna-land,
Because no man
On mould abiding
For Heidrik's daughter
Might win healing.
All that heard Oddrun,
Atil's sister,
How that the damsel
Had heavy sickness,
So she led from stall
Her bridled steed,
And on the swart one
Laid the saddle.
She made her horse wend
O'er smooth ways of earth,
Until to a high-built
Hall she came;
Then the saddle she had
From the hungry horse,
And her ways wended
In along the wide hall,
And this word first
Spake forth therewith:
"What is most famed,
Afield in Hunland,
Or what may be
Blithest in Hunland?"
QUOTH THE HANDMAID:
"Here lieth Borgny,
Borne down by trouble,
Thy sweet friend, O Oddrun,
See to her helping!"
ODDRUN SAID:
"Who of the lords
Hath laid this grief on her,
Why is the anguish Of Borgny so weary?"
THE HANDMAID SAID:
"He is hight Vilmund,
Friend of hawk-bearers,
He wrapped the damsel
In the warm bed-gear
Five winters long
Without her father's wotting."
No more than this
They spake methinks;
Kind sat she down
By the damsel's knee;
Mightily sand Oddrun,
Sharp piercing songs
By Borgny's side:
Till a maid and a boy
Might tread on the world's ways,
Blithe babes and sweet
Of Hogni's bane:
Then the damsel forewearied
The word took up,
The first word of all
That had won from her:
"So may help thee
All helpful things,
Fey and Freyia,
And all the fair Gods,
As thou hast thrust
This torment from me
ODDRUN SAID:
"Yet no heart had I
For thy helping,
Since never wert thou
Worthy of helping,
But my word I held to,
That of old was spoken
When the high lords
Dealt out the heritage,
That every soul
I would ever help."
BORGNY SAID:
"Right mad art thou, Oddrun,
And reft of thy wits,
Whereas thou speakest
Hard words to me
Thy fellow ever
Upon the earth
As of brothers twain,
We had been born."
ODDRUN SAID:
"Well I mind me yet,
What thou saidst that evening,
Whenas I bore forth
Fair drink for Gunnar;
Such a thing, saidst thou,
Should fall out never,
For any may
Save for me alone."
Mind had the damsel
Of the weary day
Whenas the high lords
Dealt out the heritage,
And she sat her down,
The sorrowful woman,
To tell of the bale,
And the heavy trouble.
"Nourished was I
In the hall of kings --
Most folk were glad --
'Mid the council of great ones:
In fair life lived I,
And the wealth of my father
For five winters only,
While yet he had life.
"Such were the last words
That ever he spake,
The king forewearied,
Ere his ways he went;
For be bade folk give me
The gold red-gleaming,
And give me in Southlands
To the son of Grimhild.
"But Brynhild he bade
To the helm to betake her,
And said that Death-chooser
She should become;
And that no better
Might ever be born
Into the world,
If fate would not spoil it.
"Brynhild in bower
Sewed at her broidery,
Folk she had
And fair lands about her;
Earth lay a-sleeping,
Slept the heavens aloft
When Fafnir's-bane
The burg first saw.
"Then was war waged
With the Welsh-wrought sword
And the burg all broken
That Brynhild owned;
Nor wore long space,
E'en as well might be,
Ere all those wiles
Full well she knew.
"Hard and dreadful
Was the vengeance she drew down,
So that all we
Have woe enow.
Through all lands of the world
Shall that story fare forth
How she did her to death
For the death of Sigurd.
"But therewithal Gunnar
The gold-scatterer
Did I fall to loving
And should have loved him.
Rings of red gold
Would they give to Atli,
Would give to my brother
Things goodly and great.
"Yea, fifteen steads
Would they give for me,
And the load of Grani
To have as a gift;
But then spake Atli,
That such was his will,
Never gift to take
From the sons of Giuki.
"But we in nowise
Might love withstand,
And mine head must I lay
On my love, the ring-breaker;
And many there were
Among my kin,
Who said that they
Had seen us together.
"Then Atli said
That I surely never
Would fall to crime
Or shameful folly:
But now let no one
For any other,
That shame deny
Where love has dealing.
"For Atli sent
His serving-folk
Wide through the murkwood
Proof to win of me,
And thither they came
Where they ne'er should have come,
Where one bed we twain
Had dight betwixt us.
"To those men had we given
Rings of red gold,
Naught to tell
Thereof to Atli,
But straight they hastened
Home to the house,
And all the tale
To Atli told.
'Whereas from Gudrun
Well they hid it,
Though better by half
Had she have known it.
"Din was there to hear
Of the hoofs gold-shod,
When into the garth
Rode the sons of Giuki.
"There from Hogni
The heart they cut,
But into the worm-close
Cast the other.
There the king, the wise-hearted,
Swept his harp-strings,
For the might king
Had ever mind
That I to his helping
Soon should come.
"But now was I gone
Yet once again
Unto Geirmund,
Good feast to make;
Yet had I hearing,
E'en out from Hlesey,
How of sore trouble
The harp-strings sang.
"So I bade the bondmaids
Be ready swiftly,
For I listed to save
The life of the king,
And we let our ship
Swim over the sound,
Till Atli's dwelling
We saw all clearly.
Then came the wretch (1)
Crawling out,
E'en Atli's mother,
All sorrow upon her!
A grave gat her sting
In the heart of Gunnar,
So that no helping
Was left for my hero.
"O gold-clad woman,
Full oft I wonder
How I my life
Still hold thereafter,
For methought I loved
That light in battle,
The swift with the sword,
As my very self.
"Thou hast sat and hearkened
As I have told thee
Of many an ill-fate,
Mine and theirs --
Each man liveth
E'en as he may live --
Now hath gone forth
The greeting of Oddrun."
ENDNOTES:
(1) Atli's mother took the form of the only adder that was not
lulled to sleep by Gunnar's harp-playing, and who slew him.