“Drink, son,” she said, “and
be merry! and I shall tell his name,
Whose death shall crown thy life-days,
and increase thy fame with his fame.”
He drinketh and craveth for battle, and
his hand for a sword doth seek,
And he looketh about on his brethren,
but his lips no word may speak;
They speak the name, and he hears not,
and again he drinks of the cup
And knows not friend nor kindred, and
the wrath in his heart wells up,
That no God may bear unmingled, and he
cries a wordless cry,
As the last of the day is departing and
the dusk time drawing anigh.
Then Grimhild goes from the chamber, and
bringeth his harness of war,
And therewith they array his body, and
he drinketh the cup once more,
And his heart is set on the murder, and
now may he understand
What soul is dight for the slaying, and
what quarry is for his hand.
For again they tell him of Sigurd, and
the man he remembereth,
And praiseth his mighty name and his deeds
that laughed on death.
Now dusk and dark draw over, and through
the glimmering house
They go to the place of the Niblungs,
the high hall and glorious;
For hard by is the chamber of Sigurd:
there dight in their harness of war
In their thrones sit Gunnar and Hogni,
but Guttorm stands on the floor
With his blue blade naked before them:
the torches flare from the wall
And the woven God-folk waver, but the
hush is deep in the hall,
And those Niblung faces change not, though
the slow moon slips from her
height
And earth is acold ere dawning, and new
winds shake the night.
Now it was in the earliest dawn-dusk that
Guttorm stirred in his place,
And the mail-rings tinkled upon him, as
he turned his helm-hid face,
And went forth from the hall and the high-seat;
but the Kings sat still in
their pride
And hearkened the clash of his going and
heeded how it died.
Slow, all alone goeth Guttorm to Sigurd’s
chamber door,
And all is open before him, and the white
moon lies on the floor
And the bed where Sigurd lieth with Gudrun
on his breast,
And light comes her breath from her bosom
in the joy of infinite rest.
Then Guttorm stands on the threshold,
and his heart of the murder is fain,
And he thinks of the deeds of Sigurd,
and praiseth his greatness and gain;
Bright blue is his blade in the moonlight—but
lo, how Sigurd lies,
As the carven dead that die not, with
fair wide-open eyes;
And their glory gleameth on Guttorm, and
the hate in his heart is chilled,
And he shrinketh aback from the threshold
and knoweth not what he willed.
Thereon he turned him again to the hall, and the Kings beheld his unstained sword in the torch-light, but they cast him never a word. Then shame and wrath urged him and he wended the second time to Sigurd’s chamber, but yet again the dread eyes of the Volsung were open and he fled from their light to his biding brethren.