Then Sigurd awhile was silent;
but at last he answered and said:
“Thou shalt have thy
will and the treasure, and shalt take the curse
on thine head
If a curse the gold enwrappeth:
but the deed will I surely do,
For today the dreams of my
childhood hath bloomed in my heart anew:
And I long to look on the
world and the glory of the earth
And to deal in the dealings
of men, and garner the harvest of worth.
But tell me, thou Master of
Masters, where lieth this measureless
wealth;
Is it guarded by swords of
the earl-folk, or kept by cunning and
stealth?
Is it over the main sea’s
darkness, or beyond the mountain wall?
Or e’en in these peaceful
acres anigh to the hands of all?”
Then Regin answered sweetly:
“Hereof must a tale be told:
Bide sitting, thou son of
Sigmund, on the heap of unwrought gold,
And hearken of wondrous matters,
and of things unheard, unsaid,
And deeds of my beholding
ere the first of Kings was made.
“And first ye shall
know of a sooth, that I never was born of the race
Which the masters of God-home
have made to cover the fair earth’s face;
But I come of the Dwarfs departed;
and fair was the earth whileome
Ere the short-lived thralls
of the Gods amidst its dales were come:—
And how were we worse than
the Gods, though maybe we lived not as long?
Yet no weight of memory maimed
us; nor aught we knew of wrong.
What felt our souls of shaming,
what knew our hearts of love?
We did and undid at pleasure,
and repented nought thereof.
—Yea we were exceeding
mighty—bear with me yet, my son;
For whiles can I scarcely
think it that our days are wholly done.
And trust not thy life in
my hands in the day when most I seem
Like the Dwarfs that are long
departed, and most of my kindred I dream.
“So as we dwelt came
tidings that the Gods amongst us were,
And the people came from Asgard:
then rose up hope and fear,
And strange shapes of things
went flitting betwixt the night and the
eve,
And our sons waxed wild and
wrathful, and our daughters learned to
grieve.
Then we fell to the working
of metal, and the deeps of the earth
would know,
And we dealt with venom and
leechcraft, and we fashioned spear and bow,
And we set the ribs to the
oak-keel, and looked on the landless sea;
And the world began to be
such-like as the Gods would have it to be.
In the womb of the woeful
earth had they quickened the grief and the
gold.
“It was Reidmar the
Ancient begat me; and now was he waxen old,
And a covetous man and a king;
and he bade, and I built him a hall,
And a golden glorious house;
and thereto his sons did he call,
And he bade them be evil and
wise, that his will through them might
be wrought.
Then he gave unto Fafnir my
brother the soul that feareth nought,
And the brow of the hardened
iron, and the hand that may never fail,
And the greedy heart of a
king, and the ear that hears no wail.