Hero Tales of the Far North eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 215 pages of information about Hero Tales of the Far North.

Hero Tales of the Far North eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 215 pages of information about Hero Tales of the Far North.

[Footnote 1:  Pronounce as Strangle, with the l left out.]

The daughter kept her vow.  Never was queen more beloved of her people than Dagmar.  That was the name they gave her in Denmark, for the Bohemian Dragomir was strange to them.  Dagmar meant daybreak in their ancient tongue, and it really seemed as if a new and beautiful day dawned upon the land in her coming.  The dry pages of history have little enough to tell of her beyond the simple fact of her marriage and untimely death, though they are filled with her famous husband’s deeds; but not all of his glorious campaigns that earned for him the name of “The Victor” have sunk so deep into the people’s memory, or have taken such hold of their hearts, as the lovely queen who

     Came without burden, she came with peace;
     She came the good peasant to cheer.

Through all the centuries the people have sung her praise, and they sing it yet.  Of the many folk-songs that have come down from the middle ages, those that tell of Queen Dagmar are the sweetest, as they are the most mournful, for her happiness was as brief as her life was beautiful.

They sailed homeward over sunny seas, until they came to the shore where the royal lover awaited his bride, impatiently scanning the horizon for the gilded dragon’s head of the ship that bore her.  The minstrel sings of the great wedding that was held in the old city of Ribe.[2] The gray old cathedral in which they knelt together still stands; but of Valdemar’s strong castle only a grass-grown hill is left.  It was the privilege of a bride in those days to ask a gift of her husband on the morning after the wedding, and have it granted without question.  Two boons did Dagmar crave,

   “right early in the morning, long before it was day”: 

one, that the plow-tax might be forgiven the peasant, and that those who for rising against it had been laid in irons be set free; the other, that the prison door of Bishop Valdemar be opened.  Bishop Valdemar was the arch-enemy of the King.  The first request he granted; but the other he refused for cause: 

     An’ he comes out, Bishop Valdemar,
     Widow he makes you this year.

And he did his worst; for in the end the King yielded to Dagmar’s prayers, and much mischief came of it.

[Footnote 2:  Pronounced Reebe, in two syllables.]

Seven years the good queen lived.  Seven centuries have not dimmed the memory of them, or of her.  The King was away in a distant part of the country when they sent to him in haste with the message that the queen was dying.  The ballad tells of his fears as he sees Dagmar’s page coming, and they proved only too true.

     The king his checker-board shut in haste,
     The dice they rattled and rung. 
     Forbid it God, who dwells in heaven,
     That Dagmar should die so young.

In the wild ride over field and moor, the King left his men far behind: 

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Hero Tales of the Far North from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.