And his heart was exceeding wrathful with the tarrying of the stroke:
And he strode to the chamber of Sigurd, and again they heeded well
How the clash, in the cloister awakened, by the threshold died and
fell.
But Guttorm gazed from the
threshold, and the moon was fading away
From the golden bed of Sigurd,
and the Niblung woman lay
On the bosom of the Volsung,
and her hand lay light on her lord;
But dread were his eyes wide-open,
and they gleamed against the sword,
And Guttorm shrank from before
them, and back to the hall he came:
There the biding brethren
behold him flash wild in the torches’ flame,
Nor stir their lips to question;
but their swords on their knees are
laid;
The torches faint in the dawning,
and they see his unstained blade.
Now dieth moon and candle,
and though the day be nigh
The roof of the hall fair-builded
seems far aloof as the sky,
But a glimmer grows on the
pavement and the ernes on the roof-ridge
stir:
Then the brethren hist and
hearken, for a sound of feet they hear,
And into the hall of the Niblungs
a white thing cometh apace:
But the sword of Guttorm upriseth,
and he wendeth from his place,
And the clash of steel goes
with him; yet loud as it may sound
Still more they hear those
footsteps light-falling on the ground,
And the hearts of the Niblungs
waver, and their pride is smitten acold,
For they look on that latest
comer, and Brynhild they behold:
But she sits by their side
in silence, and heeds them nothing more
Than the grey soft-footed
morning heeds yester-even’s war.
But Guttorm clashed in the
cloisters and through the silence strode
And scarce on the threshold
of Sigurd a little while abode:
There the moon from the floor
hath departed and heaven without is grey,
And afar in the eastern quarter
faint glimmer streaks of day.
Close over the head of Sigurd
the Wrath gleams wan and bare,
And the Niblung woman stirreth,
and her brow is knit with fear;
But the King’s closed
eyes are hidden, loose lie his empty hands,
There is nought ’twixt
the sword of the slayer and the Wonder of all
Lands.
Then Guttorm laughed in his
war-rage, and his sword leapt up on high,
As he sprang to the bed from
the threshold and cried a wordless cry,
And with all the might of
the Niblungs through Sigurd’s body thrust,
And turned and fled from the
chamber, and fell amid the dust,
Within the door and without
it, the slayer slain by the slain;
For the cast of the sword
of Sigurd had smitten his body atwain
While yet his cry of onset
through the echoing chambers went.