“Now give me the sword, O maidens,
wherewith I sheared the wind
When the Kings of Earth were gathered
to know the Chooser’s mind.”
All sheathed the maidens brought it, and
feared the hidden blade,
But the naked blue-white edges across
her knees she laid,
And spake: “The heaped-up riches,
the gear my fathers left,
All dear-bought woven wonders, all rings
from battle reft,
All goods of men desired, now strew them
on the floor,
And so share among you, maidens, the gifts
of Brynhild’s store.”
* * * * *
Then upright by the bed of the Niblungs
for a moment doth she stand,
And the blade flasheth bright in the chamber,
but no more they hinder her
hand
Than if a God were smiting to rend the
world in two:
Then dulled are the glittering edges,
and the bitter point cleaves through
The breast of the all-wise Brynhild, and
her feet from the pavement fail,
And the sigh of her heart is hearkened
mid the hush of the maidens’ wail.
Chill, deep is the fear upon them, but
they bring her aback to the bed,
And her hand is yet on the hilts, and
sidelong droopeth her head.
Then there cometh a cry from withoutward,
and Gunnar’s hurrying feet
Are swift on the kingly threshold, and
Brynhild’s blood they meet.
Low down o’er the bed he hangeth
and hearkeneth for her word,
And her heavy lids are opened to look
on the Niblung lord,
And she saith:
“I
pray thee a prayer, the last word in the world I speak,
That ye bear me forth to Sigurd, and the
hand my hand would seek;
The bale for the dead is builded, it is
wrought full wide on the plain,
It is raised for Earth’s best Helper,
and thereon is room for twain:
Ye have hung the shields about it, and
the Southland hangings spread,
There lay me adown by Sigurd and my head
beside his head.”
* * * * *
Then they took the body of Brynhild in
the raiment that she wore,
And out through the gate of the Niblungs
the holy corpse they bore,
And thence forth to the mead of the people,
and the high-built shielded
bale;
Then afresh in the open meadows breaks
forth the women’s wail
When they see the bed of Sigurd and the
glittering of his gear;
And fresh is the wail of the people as
Brynhild draweth anear,
And the tidings go before her that for
twain the bale is built,
That for twain is the oak-wood shielded
and the pleasant odours spilt.
There is peace on the bale of Sigurd,
and the Gods look down from on high,
And they see the lids of the Volsung close
shut against the sky,
As he lies with his shield beside him
in the Hauberk all of gold,
That has not its like in the heavens,
nor has earth of its fellow told;
And forth from the Helm of Aweing are
the sunbeams flashing wide,