Spake the Wise-one: “Thus shalt
thou do when thou wendest hence alone:
Thou shalt find a path in the desert,
and a road in the world of stone;
It is smooth and deep and hollow, but
the rain hath riven it not,
And the wild wind hath not worn it, for
it is but Fafnir’s slot,
Whereby he wends to the water and the
fathomless pool of old,
When his heart in the dawn is weary, and
he loathes the ancient Gold:
There think of the great and the fathers,
and bare the whetted Wrath,
And dig a pit in the highway, and a grave
in the Serpent’s path:
Lie thou therein, O Sigurd, and thine
hope from the glooming hide,
And be as the dead for a season, and the
living light abide!
And so shall thine heart avail thee, and
thy mighty fateful hand,
And the Light that lay in the Branstock,
the well-beloved brand.”
Said the child: “I shall do
thy bidding, and for thee shall I strike the
stroke;
For I love thee, friend of my fathers,
Wise Heart of the holy folk.”
So spake the Son of Sigmund, and beheld
no man anear,
And again was the night the midnight,
and the twinkling flame shone clear
In the hush of the Glittering Heath; and
alone went Sigmund’s son
Till he came to the road of Fafnir, and
the highway worn by one,
By the drift of the rain unfurrowed, by
the windy years unrent,
And forth from the dark it came, and into
the dark it went.
Great then was the heart of Sigurd, for
there in the midmost he stayed,
And thought of the ancient fathers, and
bared the bright blue blade,
That shone as a fleck of the day-light,
and the night was all around.
Fair then was the Son of Sigmund as he
toiled and laboured the ground;
Great, mighty he was in his working, and
the Glittering Heath he clave,
And the sword shone blue before him as
he dug the pit and the grave:
There he hid his hope from the night-tide
and lay like one of the dead,
And wise and wary he bided; and the heavens
hung over his head.
Now the night wanes over Sigurd, and the
ruddy rings he sees,
And his war-gear’s fair adornment,
and the God-folk’s images;
But a voice in the desert ariseth, a sound
in the waste has birth,
A changing tinkle and clatter, as of gold
dragged over the earth:
O’er Sigurd widens the day-light,
and the sound is drawing close,
And speedier than the trample of speedy
feet it goes;
But ever deemeth Sigurd that the sun brings
back the day,
For the grave grows lighter and lighter
and heaven o’erhead is grey.
But now, how the rattling waxeth till
he may not heed nor hark!
And the day and the heavens are hidden,
and o’er Sigurd rolls the dark,
As the flood of a pitchy river, and heavy-thick
is the air
With the venom of hate long hoarded, and
lies once fashioned fair:
Then a wan face comes from the darkness,