Beowulf (Bilingual Edition)

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Beowulf (Bilingual Edition) Page 24

by Seamus Heaney


  1440 a strange lake-birth, a loathsome catch

  men gazed at in awe.

  Beowulf arms for the underwater fight

  Beowulf got ready,

  donned his war-gear, indifferent to death;

  his mighty, hand-forged, fine-webbed mail

  would soon meet with the menace underwater.

  It would keep the bone-cage of his body safe:

  no enemy’s clasp could crush him in it,

  no vicious armlock choke his life out.

  To guard his head he had a glittering helmet

  that was due to be muddied on the mere bottom

  1450 and blurred in the upswirl. It was of beaten gold,

  princely headgear hooped and hasped

  by a weapon-smith who had worked wonders

  in days gone by and adorned it with boar-shapes;

  since then it had resisted every sword.

  And another item lent by Unferth

  at that moment of need was of no small importance:

  the brehon handed him a hilted weapon,

  a rare and ancient sword named Hrunting.

  The iron blade with its ill-boding patterns

  1460 had been tempered in blood. It had never failed

  the hand of anyone who hefted it in battle,

  anyone who had fought and faced the worst

  in the gap of danger. This was not the first time

  it had been called to perform heroic feats.

  When he lent that blade to the better swordsman,

  Unferth, the strong-built son of Ecglaf,

  could hardly have remembered the ranting speech

  he had made in his cups. He was not man enough

  to face the turmoil of a fight under water

  1470 and the risk to his life. So there he lost

  fame and repute. It was different for the other

  rigged out in his gear, ready to do battle.

  Beowulf takes his leave

  Beowulf, son of Ecgtheow, spoke:

  “Wisest of kings, now that I have come

  to the point of action, I ask you to recall

  what we said earlier: that you, son of Halfdane

  and gold-friend to retainers, that you, if I should fall

  and suffer death while serving your cause,

  would act like a father to me afterwards.

  1480 If this combat kills me, take care

  of my young company, my comrades in arms.

  And be sure also, my beloved Hrothgar,

  to send Hygelac the treasures I received.

  Let the lord of the Geats gaze on that gold,

  let Hrethel’s son take note of it and see

  that I found a ring-giver of rare magnificence

  and enjoyed the good of his generosity.

  And Unferth is to have what I inherited:

  to that far-famed man I bequeath my own

  1490 sharp-honed, wave-sheened wonderblade.

  With Hrunting I shall gain glory or die.”

  After these words, the prince of the Weather-Geats

  was impatient to be away and plunged suddenly:

  without more ado, he dived into the heaving

  depths of the lake. It was the best part of a day

  before he could see the solid bottom.

  Beowulf is captured by Grendel’s mother

  Quickly the one who haunted those waters,

  who had scavenged and gone her gluttonous rounds

  for a hundred seasons, sensed a human

  1500 observing her outlandish lair from above.

  So she lunged and clutched and managed to catch him

  in her brutal grip; but his body, for all that,

  remained unscathed: the mesh of the chain-mail

  saved him on the outside. Her savage talons

  failed to rip the web of his warshirt.

  Then once she touched bottom, that wolfish swimmer

  carried the ring-mailed prince to her court

  so that for all his courage he could never use

  the weapons he carried; and a bewildering horde

  1510 came at him from the depths, droves of sea-beasts

  who attacked with tusks and tore at his chain-mail

  in a ghastly onslaught. The gallant man

  could see he had entered some hellish turn-hole

  and yet the water did not work against him

  because the hall-roofing held off the force of

  the current; then he saw firelight,

  a gleam and flare-up, a glimmer of brightness.

  His sword fails to do damage

  The hero observed that swamp-thing from hell,

  the tarn-hag in all her terrible strength,

  1520 then heaved his war-sword and swung his arm:

  the decorated blade came down ringing

  and singing on her head. But he soon found

  his battle-torch extinguished: the shining blade

  refused to bite. It spared her and failed

  the man in his need. It had gone through many

  hand-to-hand fights, had hewed the armour

  and helmets of the doomed, but here at last

  the fabulous powers of that heirloom failed.

  Hygelac’s kinsman kept thinking about

  1530 his name and fame: he never lost heart.

  Then, in a fury, he flung his sword away.

  He fights back with his bare hands

  The keen, inlaid, worm-loop-patterned steel

  was hurled to the ground: he would have to rely

  on the might of his arm. So must a man do

  who intends to gain enduring glory

  in a combat. Life doesn’t cost him a thought.

  Then the prince of War-Geats, warming to this fight

  with Grendel’s mother, gripped her shoulder

  and laid about him in a battle frenzy:

  1540 he pitched his killer opponent to the floor

  but she rose quickly and retaliated,

  grappled him tightly in her grim embrace.

  The sure-footed fighter felt daunted,

  the strongest of warriors stumbled and fell.

  So she pounced upon him and pulled out

  a broad, whetted knife: now she would avenge

  her only child. But the mesh of chain-mail

  on Beowulf’s shoulder shielded his life,

  turned the edge and tip of the blade.

  1550 The son of Ecgtheow would have surely perished

  and the Geats lost their warrior under the wide earth

  had the strong links and locks of his war-gear

  not helped to save him: holy God

  decided the victory. It was easy for

  the Lord, the Ruler of Heaven, to redress the balance

  once Beowulf got back up on his feet.

  Beowulf discovers a mighty sword and slays his opponent

  Then he saw a blade that boded well,

  a sword in her armoury, an ancient heirloom

  from the days of the giants, an ideal weapon,

  1560 one that any warrior would envy,

  but so huge and heavy of itself

  only Beowulf could wield it in a battle.

  So the Shieldings’ hero, hard-pressed and enraged,

  took a firm hold of the hilt and swung

  the blade in an arc, a resolute blow

  that bit deep into her neck-bone

  and severed it entirely, toppling the doomed

  house of her flesh; she fell to the floor.

  The sword dripped blood, the swordsman was elated.

  He proceeds to behead Grendel’s corpse

  1570 A light appeared and the place brightened

  the way the sky does when heaven’s candle

  is shining clearly. He inspected the vault:

  with sword held high, its hilt raised

  to guard and threaten, Hygelac’s thane

  scouted by the wall in Grendel’s wake.

  Now the we
apon was to prove its worth.

  The warrior determined to take revenge

  for every gross act Grendel had committed—

  and not only for that one occasion

  1580 when he’d come to slaughter the sleeping troops,

  fifteen of Hrothgar’s house-guards

  surprised on their benches and ruthlessly devoured,

  and as many again carried away,

  a brutal plunder. Beowulf in his fury

  now settled that score: he saw the monster

  in his resting place, war-weary and wrecked,

  a lifeless corpse, a casualty

  of the battle in Heorot. The body gaped

  at the stroke dealt to it after death:

  1590 Beowulf cut the corpse’s head off.

  Forebodings of those on the shore

  Immediately the counsellors keeping a lookout

  with Hrothgar, watching the lake water,

  saw a heave-up and surge of waves

  and blood in the backwash. They bowed grey heads,

  spoke in their sage, experienced way

  about the good warrior, how they never again

  expected to see that prince returning

  in triumph to their king. It was clear to many

  that the wolf of the deep had destroyed him forever.

  1600 The ninth hour of the day arrived.

  The brave Shieldings abandoned the cliff-top

  and the king went home; but sick at heart,

  staring at the mere, the strangers held on.

  They wished, without hope, to behold their lord,

  Beowulf himself.

  The sword blade melts

  Meanwhile, the sword

  began to wilt into gory icicles,

  to slather and thaw. It was a wonderful thing,

  the way it all melted as ice melts

  when the Father eases the fetters off the frost

  1610 and unravels the water-ropes. He who wields power

  over time and tide: He is the true Lord.

  Beowulf returns with the sword’s hilt and Grendel’s head

  The Geat captain saw treasure in abundance

  but carried no spoils from those quarters

  except for the head and the inlaid hilt

  embossed with jewels; its blade had melted

  and the scrollwork on it burnt, so scalding was the blood

  of the poisonous fiend who had perished there.

  Then away he swam, the one who had survived

  the fall of his enemies, flailing to the surface.

  1620 The wide water, the waves and pools

  were no longer infested once the wandering fiend

  let go of her life and this unreliable world.

  The seafarers’ leader made for land,

  resolutely swimming, delighted with his prize,

  the mighty load he was lugging to the surface.

  His thanes advanced in a troop to meet him,

  thanking God and taking great delight

  in seeing their prince back safe and sound.

  Quickly the hero’s helmet and mail-shirt

  1630 were loosed and unlaced. The lake settled,

  clouds darkened above the bloodshot depths.

  With high hearts they headed away

  along footpaths and trails through the fields,

  roads that they knew, each of them wrestling

  with the head they were carrying from the lakeside cliff,

  men kingly in their courage and capable

  of difficult work. It was a task for four

  to hoist Grendel’s head on a spear

  and bear it under strain to the bright hall.

  1640 But soon enough they neared the place,

  fourteen Geats in fine fettle,

  striding across the outlying ground

  in a delighted throng around their leader.

  He displays Grendel’s head in Heorot

  In he came then, the thane’s commander,

  the arch-warrior, to address Hrothgar:

  his courage was proven, his glory was secure.

  Grendel’s head was hauled by the hair,

  dragged across the floor where the people were drinking,

  a horror for both queen and company to behold.

  1650 They stared in awe. It was an astonishing sight.

  A brief account of the fight

  Beowulf, son of Ecgtheow, spoke:

 

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