“’O hearken Gods of the Goths!
ye shall die, and we shall be Gods,
And rule your men beloved with bitter-heavy
rods,
And make them beasts beneath us, save
today ye do our will,
And pay us the ransom of blood, and our
hearts with the gold fulfill.’
“But Odin spake in answer, and his
voice was awful and cold:
‘Give righteous doom, O Reidmar!
say what ye will of the Gold!’
“Then Reidmar laughed in his heart,
and his wrath and his wisdom fled,
And nought but his greed abided; and he
spake from his throne and said:
“’Now hearken the doom I shall
speak! Ye stranger-folk shall be free
When ye give me the Flame of the Waters,
the gathered Gold of the Sea,
That Andvari hideth rejoicing in the wan
realm pale as the grave;
And the Master of Sleight shall fetch
it, and the hand that never gave,
And the heart that begrudgeth for ever
shall gather and give and rue.
—Lo this is the doom of the
wise, and no doom shall be spoken anew.’
“Then Odin spake: ’It
is well; the Curser shall seek for the curse;
And the Greedy shall cherish the evil—and
the seed of the Great they shall
nurse.’
“No word spake Reidmar the great,
for the eyes of his heart were turned
To the edge of the outer desert, so sore
for the gold he yearned.
But Loki I loosed from the toils, and
he goeth his way abroad;
And the heart of Odin he knoweth, and
where he shall seek the Hoard.
“There is a desert of dread in the
uttermost part of the world,
Where over a wall of mountains is a mighty
water hurled,
Whose hidden head none knoweth, nor where
it meeteth the sea;
And that force is the Force of Andvari,
and an Elf of the Dark is he.
In the cloud and the desert he dwelleth
amid that land alone;
And his work is the storing of treasure
within his house of stone.
Time was when he knew of wisdom, and had
many a tale to tell
Of the days before the Dwarf-age, and
of what in that world befell:
And he knew of the stars and the sun,
and the worlds that come and go
On the nether rim of heaven, and whence
the wind doth blow,
And how the sea hangs balanced betwixt
the curving lands,
And how all drew together for the first
Gods’ fashioning hands.
But now is all gone from him, save the
craft of gathering gold,
And he heedeth nought of the summer, nor
knoweth the winter cold,
Nor looks to the sun nor the snowfall,
nor ever dreams of the sea,
Nor hath heard of the making of men-folk,
nor of where the high Gods be;
But ever he gripeth and gathereth, and
he toileth hour by hour,
Nor knoweth the noon from the midnight
as he looks on his stony bower,
And saith: ’It is short, it
is narrow for all I shall gather and get;
For the world is but newly fashioned,
and long shall its years be yet.’