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Beowulf (Bilingual Edition)

Page 31

by Seamus Heaney


  of the monster with his sword. Wiglaf sits

  at Beowulf’s side, the son of Weohstan,

  the living warrior watching by the dead,

  keeping weary vigil, holding a wake

  2910 for the loved and the loathed.

  He foresees wars with the Franks and the Frisians

  Now war is looming

  over our nation, soon it will be known

  to Franks and Frisians, far and wide,

  that the king is gone. Hostility has been great

  among the Franks since Hygelac sailed forth

  at the head of a war-fleet into Friesland:

  there the Hetware harried and attacked

  and overwhelmed him with great odds.

  The leader in his war-gear was laid low,

  fell amongst followers; that lord did not favour

  2920 his company with spoils. The Merovingian king

  has been an enemy to us ever since.

  The Swedes too will strike to avenge the slaughter of Ongentheow

  “Nor do I expect peace or pact-keeping

  of any sort from the Swedes. Remember:

  at Ravenswood, Ongentheow

  slaughtered Haethcyn, Hrethel’s son,

  when the Geat people in their arrogance

  first attacked the fierce Shylfings.

  The return blow was quickly struck

  by Ohthere’s father. Old and terrible,

  2930 he felled the sea-king and saved his own

  aged wife, the mother of Onela

  and of Ohthere, bereft of her gold rings.

  Ongentheow’s last engagement at Ravenswood: he cornered a Geatish force

  Then he kept hard on the heels of the foe

  and drove them, leaderless, lucky to get away,

  in a desperate rout into Ravenswood.

  His army surrounded the weary remnant

  where they nursed their wounds; all through the night

  he howled threats at those huddled survivors,

  promised to axe their bodies open

  2940 when dawn broke, dangle them from gallows

  to feed the birds. But at first light

  when their spirits were lowest, relief arrived.

  They heard the sound of Hygelac’s horn,

  his trumpet calling as he came to find them,

  the hero in pursuit, at hand with troops.

  Hygelac relieved the besieged Geats

  “The bloody swathe that Swedes and Geats

  cut through each other was everywhere.

  No one could miss their murderous feuding.

  Then the old man made his move,

  2950 pulled back, barred his people in:

  Ongentheow withdrew to higher ground.

  Ongentheow withdrew

  Hygelac’s pride and prowess as a fighter

  were known to the earl; he had no confidence

  that he could hold out against that horde of seamen,

  defend wife and the ones he loved

  from the shock of the attack. He retreated for shelter

  behind the earthwall. Then Hygelac swooped

  on the Swedes at bay, his banners swarmed

  into their refuge, his Geat forces

  2960 drove forward to destroy the camp.

  There in his grey hairs, Ongentheow

  was cornered, ringed around with swords.

  The Swedish king fought for his life. He survived a blow from Wulf, hit back, but was killed by Wulf’s brother, Eofor

  And it came to pass that the king’s fate

  was in Eofor’s hands, and in his alone.

  Wulf, son of Wonred, went for him in anger,

  split him open so that blood came spurting

  from under his hair. The old hero

  still did not flinch, but parried fast,

  hit back with a harder stroke:

  2970 the king turned and took him on.

  Then Wonred’s son, the brave Wulf,

  could land no blow against the aged lord.

  Ongentheow divided his helmet

  so that he buckled and bowed his bloodied head

  and dropped to the ground. But his doom held off.

  Though he was cut deep, he recovered again.

  “With his brother down, the undaunted Eofor,

  Hygelac’s thane, hefted his sword

  and smashed murderously at the massive helmet

  2980 past the lifted shield. And the king collapsed,

  The shepherd of people was sheared of life.

  “Many then hurried to help Wulf,

  bandaged and lifted him, now that they were left

  masters of the blood-soaked battleground.

  One warrior stripped the other,

  looted Ongentheow’s iron mail-coat,

  his hard sword-hilt, his helmet too,

  and carried the graith to King Hygelac;

  he accepted the prize, promised fairly

  2990 that reward would come, and kept his word.

  The victorious Geats returned home

  For their bravery in action, when they arrived home

  Eofor and Wulf were overloaded

  by Hrethel’s son, Hygelac the Geat,

  with gifts of land and linked rings

  that were worth a fortune. They had won glory,

  so there was no gainsaying his generosity.

  And he gave Eofor his only daughter

  to bide at home with him, an honour and a bond.

  The messenger predicts that the Swedes will soon retaliate

  “So this bad blood between us and the Swedes,

  3000 this vicious feud, I am convinced,

  is bound to revive; they will cross our borders

  and attack in force when they find out

  that Beowulf is dead. In days gone by

  when our warriors fell and we were undefended

  he kept our coffers and our kingdom safe.

  He worked for the people, but as well as that

  With Beowulf gone, a tragic future awaits

  he behaved like a hero.

  We must hurry now

  to take a last look at the king

  and launch him, lord and lavisher of rings,

  3010 on the funeral road. His royal pyre

  will melt no small amount of gold:

  heaped there in a hoard, it was bought at heavy cost,

  and that pile of rings he paid for at the end

  with his own life will go up with the flame,

  be furled in fire: treasure no follower

  will wear in his memory, nor lovely woman

  link and attach as a torque around her neck—

  but often, repeatedly, in the path of exile

  they shall walk bereft, bowed under woe,

  3020 now that their leader’s laugh is silenced,

  high spirits quenched. Many a spear

  dawn-cold to the touch will be taken down

  and waved on high; the swept harp

  won’t waken warriors, but the raven winging

  darkly over the doomed will have news,

  tidings for the eagle of how he hoked and ate,

  how the wolf and he made short work of the dead.”

  Such was the drift of the dire report

  that gallant man delivered. He got little wrong

  3030 in what he told and predicted.

  The whole troop

  rose in tears, then took their way

  to the uncanny scene under Earnaness.

  There, on the sand, where his soul had left him,

  they found him at rest, their ring-giver

  from days gone by. The great man

  had breathed his last. Beowulf the king

  had indeed met with a marvellous death.

  The Geats find the two bodies

  But what they saw first was far stranger:

  the serpent on the ground, gruesome and vile,

  3040 lying facing him. The fire-dragon

  was sca
resomely burnt, scorched all colours.

  From head to tail, his entire length

  was fifty feet. He had shimmered forth

  on the night air once, then winged back

  down to his den; but death owned him now,

  he would never enter his earth-gallery again.

  Beside him stood pitchers and piled-up dishes,

  silent flagons, precious swords

  eaten through with rust, ranged as they had been

  3050 while they waited their thousand winters under ground.

  That huge cache, gold inherited

  from an ancient race, was under a spell—

  which meant no one was ever permitted

  to enter the ring-hall unless God Himself,

  mankind’s Keeper, True King of Triumphs,

  allowed some person pleasing to Him—

  and in His eyes worthy—to open the hoard.

  What came about brought to nothing

  the hopes of the one who had wrongly hidden

  3060 riches under the rock-face. First the dragon slew

  that man among men, who in turn made fierce amends

  and settled the feud. Famous for his deeds

  a warrior may be, but it remains a mystery

  where his life will end, when he may no longer

  dwell in the mead-hall among his own.

  So it was with Beowulf, when he faced the cruelty

  and cunning of the mound-guard. He himself was ignorant

  of how his departure from the world would happen.

  The high-born chiefs who had buried the treasure

  3070 declared it until doomsday so accursed

  that whoever robbed it would be guilty of wrong

  and grimly punished for their transgression,

  hasped in hell-bonds in heathen shrines.

  Yet Beowulf’s gaze at the gold treasure

  when he first saw it had not been selfish.

  Wiglaf ponders Beowulf’s fate

  Wiglaf, son of Weohstan, spoke:

  “Often when one man follows his own will

  many are hurt. This happened to us.

  Nothing we advised could ever convince

  3080 the prince we loved, our land’s guardian,

  not to vex the custodian of the gold,

  let him lie where he was long accustomed,

  lurk there under earth until the end of the world.

  He held to his high destiny. The hoard is laid bare,

  but at a grave cost; it was too cruel a fate

  that forced the king to that encounter.

  I have been inside and seen everything

  amassed in the vault. I managed to enter

  although no great welcome awaited me

  3090 under the earthwall. I quickly gathered up

  a huge pile of the priceless treasures

  handpicked from the hoard and carried them here

  where the king could see them. He was still himself,

  alive, aware, and in spite of his weakness

  he had many requests. He wanted me to greet you

  and order the building of a barrow that would crown

  the site of his pyre, serve as his memorial,

  in a commanding position, since of all men

  to have lived and thrived and lorded it on earth

  3100 his worth and due as a warrior were the greatest.

  He reports Beowulf’s last wishes

  Now let us again go quickly

  and feast our eyes on that amazing fortune

  heaped under the wall. I will show the way

  and take you close to those coffers packed with rings

  and bars of gold. Let a bier be made

  and got ready quickly when we come out

  and then let us bring the body of our lord,

  the man we loved, to where he will lodge

  for a long time in the care of the Almighty.”

  3110 Then Weohstan’s son, stalwart to the end,

  had orders given to owners of dwellings,

  many people of importance in the land,

  to fetch wood from far and wide

  for the good man’s pyre.

  Wiglaf gives orders for the building of a funeral pyre

  “Now shall flame consume

  our leader in battle, the blaze darken

 

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