Then he drank of the Cup of the Promise,
and all men hearkened and deemed
That his speech was great and valiant,
and as one of the wise he seemed.
Then the linen-folded maidens of the earl-folk
lift the gold,
But the earls look each on the other,
and Guttorm’s place behold,
And empty it lieth before them; for the
child hath wearied of peace,
And he sits by the oars in the East-seas,
and winneth fame’s increase.
Nor then, nor ever after, o’er the
Holy Beast he spake,
When mighty hearts were exalted for the
golden Sigurd’s sake.
Sigurd rideth with the Niblungs, and wooeth Brynhild for King Gunnar.
Now it fell on a day of the spring-tide
that followed on these things,
That Sigurd fares to the meadows with
Gunnar and Hogni the Kings;
For afar is Guttorm the youngest, and
he sails the Eastern Seas,
And fares with war-shield hoisted to win
him fame’s increase.
* * * * *
There stay those Kings of the people alone
in weed of war,
And they cut a strip of the greensward
on the meadow’s daisied floor,
And loosen it clean in the midst, while
its ends in the earth abide;
Then they heave its midmost aloft, and
set on either side
An ancient spear of battle writ round
with words of worth;
And these are the posts of the door, whose
threshold is of the earth,
And the skin of the earth is its lintel:
but with war-glaives gleaming bare
The Niblung Kings and Sigurd beneath the
earth-yoke fare;
Then each an arm-vein openeth, and their
blended blood falls down
On Earth the fruitful Mother where they
rent her turfy gown:
And then, when the blood of the Volsungs
hath run with the Niblung blood,
They kneel with their hands upon it and
swear the brotherhood:
Each man at his brother’s bidding
to come with the blade in his hand,
Though the fire and the flood should sunder,
and the very Gods withstand:
Each man to love and cherish his brother’s
hope and will;
Each man to avenge his brother when the
Norns his fate fulfill:
And now are they foster-brethren, and
in such wise have they sworn
As the God-born Goths of aforetime, when
the world was newly born.
But among the folk of the Niblungs goes
forth the tale of the same,
And men deem the tidings a glory and the
garland of their fame.
So is Sigurd yet with the Niblungs, and
he loveth Gudrun his wife,
And wendeth afield with the brethren to
the days of the dooming of life;
And nought his glory waneth, nor falleth
the flood of praise:
To every man he hearkeneth, nor gainsayeth
any grace,
And glad is the poor in the Doom-ring
when he seeth his face mid the Kings,
For the tangle straighteneth before him,
and the maze of crooked things.
But the smile is departed from him, and
the laugh of Sigurd the young,