“O Foe of the Gods,”
said Sigurd, “wouldst thou hide the evil thing,
And the curse that is greater
than thou, lest death end thy labouring,
Lest the night should come
upon thee amidst thy toil for nought?
It is me, it is me that thou
fearest, if indeed I know thy thought;
Yea me, who would utterly
light the face of all good and ill,
If not with the fruitful beams
that the summer shall fulfill,
Then at least with the world
a-blazing, and the glare of the grinded
sword.”
And he sprang aloft to the saddle
as he spake the latest word,
And the Wrath sang loud in the sheath as it ne’er
had sung before,
And the cloudy flecks were scattered like flames
on the heaven’s floor,
And all was kindled at once, and that trench of
the mountains grey
Was filled with the living light as the low sun
lit the way:
But Regin turned from the glory with blinded eyes
and dazed,
And lo, on the cloudy war-steed how another light
there blazed,
And a great voice came from amidst it:
“O
Regin, in good sooth,
I have hearkened not nor heeded the words of thy
fear and thy ruth:
Thou hast told thy tale and thy longing, and thereto
I hearkened
well:—
Let it lead thee up to heaven, let it lead thee
down to hell,
The deed shall be done tomorrow: thou shalt
have that measureless Gold,
And devour the garnered wisdom that blessed thy
realm of old,
That hath lain unspent and begrudged in the very
heart of hate:
With the blood and the might of thy brother thine
hunger shalt thou
sate;
And this deed shall be mine and thine; but take
heed for what
followeth then!
Let each do after his kind! I shall do the
deeds of men;
I shall harvest the field of their sowing, in
the bed of their
strewing shall sleep;
To them shall I give my life-days, to the Gods
my glory to keep.
But thou with the wealth and the wisdom that the
best of the Gods
might praise,
If thou shalt indeed excel them and become the
hope of the days,
Then me in turn hast thou conquered, and I shall
be in turn
Thy fashioned brand of the battle through good
and evil to burn,
Or the flame that sleeps in thy stithy for the
gathered winds to blow,
When thou listest to do and undo and thine uttermost
cunning to show.
But indeed I wot full surely that thou shalt follow
thy kind;
And for all that cometh after, the Norns shall
loose and bind.”
Then his bridle-reins rang
sweetly, and the warding-walls of death,
And Regin drew up to him,
and the Wrath sang loud in the sheath,
And forth from that trench
in the mountains by the westward way they
ride;
And little and black goes
Regin by the golden Volsung’s side;
But no more his head is drooping,
for he seeth the Elf-king’s Gold;
The garnered might and the
wisdom e’en now his eyes behold.