Then came the Hall-Sun forth from her room clad in glittering raiment, and summoned no one, but went straight to her place on the dais under her namesake the Lamp, and stood there a little without speaking. Her face was pale now, her lips a little open, her eyes set and staring as if they saw nothing of all that was round about her.
Now went the word through the Hall and the Women’s-Chamber that the Hall-Sun would speak again, and that great tidings were toward; so all folk came flock-meal to the dais, both thralls and free; and scarce were all gathered there, ere the Hall-Sun began speaking, and said:
“The days of the world thrust
onward, and men are born therein
A many and a many, and divers deeds
they win
In the fashioning of stories for
the kindreds of the earth,
A garland interwoven of sorrow and
of mirth.
To the world a warrior cometh; from
the world he passeth away,
And no man then may sunder his good
from his evil day.
By the Gods hath he been tormented,
and been smitten by the foe:
He hath seen his maiden perish,
he hath seen his speech-friend go:
His heart hath conceived a joyance
and hath brought it unto birth:
But he hath not carried with him
his sorrow or his mirth.
He hath lived, and his life hath
fashioned the outcome of the deed,
For the blossom of the people, and
the coming kindreds’ seed.
“Thus-wise the world is fashioned,
and the new sun of the morn
Where earth last night was desert
beholds a kindred born,
That to-morrow and to-morrow blossoms
all gloriously
With many a man and maiden for the
kindreds yet to be,
And fair the Goth-folk groweth.
And yet the story saith
That the deeds that make the summer
make too the winter’s death,
That summer-tides unceasing from
out the grave may grow
And the spring rise up unblemished
from the bosom of the snow.
“Thus as to every kindred
the day comes once for all
When yesterday it was not, and to-day
it builds the hall,
So every kindred bideth the night-tide
of the day,
Whereof it knoweth nothing, e’en
when noon is past away.
E’en thus the House of the
Wolfings ’twixt dusk and dark doth stand,
And narrow is the pathway with the
deep on either hand.
On the left are the days forgotten,
on the right the days to come,
And another folk and their story
in the stead of the Wolfing home.
Do the shadows darken about it,
is the even here at last?
Or is this but a storm of the noon-tide
that the wind is driving past?