E’en so many are their pillars; and therein like men alive
Stand the images of god-folk in such raiment as they wore
In the years before the cities and the hidden days of yore.
Ah for the gold that I gazed on! and their store of battle gear,
And strange engines that I knew not, or the end for which they were.
Ah for the ordered wisdom of the war-array of these,
And the folks that are sitting about them in dumb down-trodden peace!
So I thought now fareth war-ward my well-beloved friend,
And the weird of the Gods hath doomed it that no more with him may I
wend!
Woe’s me for the war of the Wolfings wherefrom I am sundered apart,
And the fruitless death of the war-wise, and the doom of the hardy
heart!”
Then he answered, and his eyes grew kind as he looked on her:
“For thy fair love I thank
thee, and thy faithful word, O friend!
But how might it otherwise happen
but we twain must meet in the end,
The God of this mighty people and
the Markmen and their kin?
Lo, this is the weird of the world,
and what may we do herein?”
Then mirth came into her face again as she said:
“Who wotteth of Weird, and what she is till the weird is accomplished? Long hath it been my weird to love thee and to fashion deeds for thee as I may; nor will I depart from it now.” And she sang:
“Keen-edged is the sword of the city, and bitter is its spear, But thy breast in the battle, beloved, hath a wall of the stithy’s gear. What now is thy wont in the handplay with the helm and the hauberk of rings? Farest thou as the thrall and the cot-carle, or clad in the raiment of kings?”
He started, and his face reddened as he answered:
“O Wood-Sun thou wottest our
battle and the way wherein we fare:
That oft at the battle’s beginning
the helm and the hauberk we bear;
Lest the shaft of the fleeing coward
or the bow at adventure bent
Should slay us ere the need be,
ere our might be given and spent.
Yet oft ere the fight is over, and
Doom hath scattered the foe,
No leader of the people by his war-gear
shall ye know,
But by his hurts the rather, from
the cot-carle and the thrall:
For when all is done that a man
may, ’tis the hour for a man to fall.”
She yet smiled as she said in answer:
“O Folk-wolf, heed and hearken;
for when shall thy life be spent
And the Folk wherein thou dwellest
with thy death be well content?
Whenso folk need the fire, do they
hew the apple-tree,
And burn the Mother of Blossom and
the fruit that is to be?
Or me wilt thou bid to thy grave-mound
because thy battle-wrath
May nothing more be bridled than
the whirl wind on his path?
So hearken and do my bidding, for
the hauberk shalt thou bear
E’en when the other warriors
cast off their battle-gear.
So come thou, come unwounded from
the war-field of the south,
And sit with me in the beech-wood,
and kiss me, eyes and mouth.”