“Yet I thought:
’Shall I wed in the world, shall I gather grief
on
the earth?
Then the fearless heart shall
I wed, and bring the best to birth,
And fashion such tales for
the telling, that Earth shall be holpen
at least,
If the Gods think scorn of
its fairness, as they sit at the
changeless feast.’
“Then somewhat smiled
Allfather; and he spake: ’So let it be!
The doom thereof abideth;
the doom of me and thee.
Yet long shall the time pass
over ere thy waking-day be born:
Fare forth, and forget and
be weary ’neath the Sting of the Sleepful
Thorn!’
“So I came to the head
of Hindfell and the ruddy shields and white,
And the wall of the wildfire
wavering around the isle of night;
And there the Sleep-thorn
pierced me, and the slumber on me fell,
And the night of nameless
sorrows that hath no tale to tell.
Now I am she that loveth;
and the day is nigh at hand
When I, who have ridden the
sea-realm and the regions of the land,
And dwelt in the measureless
mountains and the forge of stormy days,
Shall dwell in the house of
my fathers and the land of the people’s
praise;
And there shall hand meet
hand, and heart by heart shall beat,
And the lying-down shall be
joyous, and the morn’s uprising sweet.
Lo now, I look on thine heart
and behold of thine inmost will,
That thou of the days wouldst
hearken that our portion shall fulfill;
But O, be wise of man-folk,
and the hope of thine heart refrain!
As oft in the battle’s
beginning ye vex the steed with the rein,
Lest at last in its latter
ending, when the sword hath hushed the horn,
His limbs should be weary
and fail, and his might be over-worn.
O be wise, lest thy love constrain
me, and my vision wax o’er-clear,
And thou ask of the thing
that thou shouldst not, and the thing that
thou wouldst not
hear.
“Know thou, most mighty
of men, that the Norns shall order all,
And yet without thine helping
shall no whit of their will befall;
Be wise! ’tis a marvel
of words, and a mock for the fool and the blind,
But I saw it writ in the heavens,
and its fashioning there did I find:
And the night of the Norns
and their slumber, and the tide when the
world runs back,
And the way of the sun is
tangled, it is wrought of the dastard’s lack.
But the day when the fair
earth blossoms, and the sun is bright above.
Of the daring deeds is it
fashioned and the eager hearts of love.
“Be wise, and cherish
thine hope in the freshness of the days,
And scatter its seed from
thine hand in the field of the people’s
praise;
Then fair shall it fall in
the furrow, and some the earth shall speed,
And the sons of men shall
marvel at the blossom of the deed: