Therewith was the Wrath of
Sigurd laid soft in a golden sheath
And the peace-strings knit
around it; for that blade was fain of death;
And ’tis ill to show
such edges to the broad blue light of day,
Or to let the hall-glare light
them, if ye list not play the play.
Of Gripir’s Foretelling.
Now Sigurd backeth Greyfell
on the first of the morrow morn,
And he rideth fair and softly
through the acres of the corn;
The Wrath to his side is girded,
but hid are the edges blue,
As he wendeth his ways to
the mountains, and rideth the horse-mead
through.
His wide grey eyes are happy,
and his voice is sweet and soft,
As amid the mead-lark’s
singing he casteth song aloft:
Lo, lo, the horse and the
rider! So once maybe it was,
When over the Earth unpeopled
the youngest God would pass;
But never again meseemeth
shall such a sight betide,
Till over a world unwrongful
new-born shall Baldur ride.
So he comes to that ness of
the mountains, and Gripir’s garden steep,
That bravely Greyfell breasteth,
and adown by the door doth he leap
And his war-gear rattleth
upon him; there is none to ask or forbid
As he wendeth the house clear-lighted,
where no mote of the dust is
hid,
Though the sunlight hath not
entered: the walls are clear and bright,
For they cast back each to
other the golden Sigurd’s light;
Through the echoing ways of
the house bright-eyed he wendeth along,
And the mountain-wind is with
him, and the hovering eagles’ song;
But no sound of the children
of men may the ears of the Volsung hear,
And no sign of their ways
in the world, or their will, or their hope
or their fear.
So he comes to the hall of
Gripir, and gleaming-green is it built
As the house of under-ocean
where the wealth of the greedy is spilt;
Gleaming and green as the
sea, and rich as its rock-strewn floor,
And fresh as the autumn morning
when the burning of summer is o’er.
There he looks and beholdeth
the high-seat, and he sees it strangely
wrought,
Of the tooth of the sea-beast
fashioned ere the Dwarf-kind came to
nought;
And he looks, and thereon
is Gripir, the King exceeding old,
With the sword of his fathers
girded, and his raiment wrought of gold;
With the ivory rod in his
right-hand, with his left on the crystal
laid,
That is round as the world
of men-folk, and after its image made,
And clear is it wrought to
the eyen that may read therein of Fate,
Though little indeed be its
sea, and its earth not wondrous great.
There Sigurd stands in the
hall, on the sheathed Wrath doth he lean.
All his golden light is mirrored
in the gleaming floor and green;
But the smile in his face
upriseth as he looks on the ancient King,
And their glad eyes meet and
their laughter, and sweet is the
welcoming:
And Gripir saith: “Hail
Sigurd! for my bidding hast thou done,
And here in the mountain-dwelling
are two Kings of men alone.”