Now or ever the sun shone
houseward, unto King Volsung’s bed
Came Signy stealing barefoot,
and she spake the word and said:
“Awake and hearken,
my father, for though the wedding be done,
And I am the wife of the Goth-king,
yet the Volsungs are not gone.
So I come as a dream of the
night, with a word that the Gods would say,
And think thou thereof in
the day-tide, and let Siggeir go on his way
With me and the gifts and
the gold, but do ye abide in the land,
Nor trust in the guileful
heart and the murder-loving hand,
Lest the kin of the Volsungs
perish, and the world be nothing worth.”
So came the word unto Volsung,
and wit in his heart had birth;
And he sat upright in the
bed and kissed her on the lips;
But he said: “My
word is given, it is gone like the spring-tide ships:
To death or to life must I
journey when the months are come to an end.
Yet my sons my words shall
hearken, and shall nowise with me wend.”
Then she answered, speaking
swiftly: “Nay, have thy sons with thee;
Gather an host together and
a mighty company,
And meet the guile and the
death-snare with battle and with wrack.”
He said: “Nay,
my troth-word plighted e’en so should I draw
aback:
I shall go a guest, as my
word was; of whom shall I be afraid?
For an outworn elder’s
ending shall no mighty moan be made.”
Then answered Signy, weeping:
“I shall see thee yet again
When the battle thou arrayest
on the Goth-folks’ strand in vain.
Heavy and hard are the Norns:
but each man his burden bears;
And what am I to fashion the
fate of the coming years?”
She wept and she wended back
to the Goth-king’s bolster blue,
And Volsung pondered awhile
till slumber over him drew;
But when once more he wakened,
the kingly house was up,
And the homemen gathered together
to drink the parting cup:
And grand amid the hall-floor
was the Goth king in his gear,
And Signy clad for faring
stood by the Branstock dear
With the earls of the Goths
about her: so queenly did she seem,
So calm and ruddy coloured,
that Volsung well might deem
That her words were a fashion
of slumber, a vision of the night.
But they drank the wine of
departing, and brought the horses dight,
And forth abroad the Goth-folk
and the Volsung Children rode,
Nor ever once would Signy
look back to that abode.
So down over acre and heath
they rode to the side of the sea,
And there by the long-ships’
bridges was the ship-host’s company.
Then Signy kissed her brethren
with ruddy mouth and warm,
Nor was there one of the Goth-folk
but blessed her from all harm;
Then sweet she kissed her
father and hung about his neck,
And sure she whispered him
somewhat ere she passed forth toward the