House of the Wolfings: The William Morris Book that Inspired J. R. R. Tolkiena *s The Lord of the Rings

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House of the Wolfings: The William Morris Book that Inspired J. R. R. Tolkiena *s The Lord of the Rings Page 22

by Perry, Michael W.


  “Thou art wise,” she said; “Wilt thou go to battle to-day?”

  “So it seemeth,” said he.

  She said: “And wilt thou bear the Dwarf-wrought Hauberk? for if thou dost, thou wilt live, and if thou dost not, thou wilt die.”

  “I will bear it,” said he, “that I may live to love thee.”

  “Thinkest thou that any evil goes with it?” said she.

  There came into his face a flash of his ancient boldness as he answered: “So it seemed to me yesterday, when I fought clad in it the first time; and I fell unsmitten on the meadow, and was shamed, and would have slain myself but for thee. And yet it is not so that any evil goes with it; for thou thyself didst say that past night that there was no evil weird in it.”

  She said: “How then if I lied that night?”

  Said he; “It is the wont of the Gods to lie, and be unashamed, and men-folk must bear with it.”

  “Ah! how wise thou art!” she said; and was silent for a while, and drew away from him a little, and clasped her hands together and wrung them for grief and anger. Then she grew calm again, and said:

  “Wouldest thou die at my bidding?”

  “Yea,” said he, “not because thou art of the Gods, but because thou hast become a woman to me, and I love thee.”

  Then was she silent some while, and at last she said, “Thiodolf, wilt thou do off the Hauberk if I bid thee?”

  “Yea, yea,” said he, “and let us depart from the Wolfings, and their strife, for they need us not.”

  She was silent once more for a longer while still, and at last she said in a cold voice; “Thiodolf, I bid thee arise, and put off the Hauberk from thee.”

  He looked at her wondering, not at her words, but at the voice wherewith she spake them; but he arose from the stone nevertheless, and stood stark in the moonlight; he set his hand to the collar of the war-coat, and undid its clasps, which were of gold and blue stones, and presently he did the coat from off him and let it slide to the ground where it lay in a little grey heap that looked but a handful. Then he sat down on the stone again, and took her hand and kissed her and caressed her fondly, and she him again, and they spake no word for a while: but at the last he spake in measure and rhyme in a low voice, but so sweet and clear that it might have been heard far in the hush of the last hour of the night:

  Dear now are this dawn-dusk’s moments as is the last of the light

  When the foemen’s ranks are wavering, and the victory feareth night;

  And of all the time I have loved thee of these am I most fain,

  When I know not what shall betide me, nor what shall be my gain.

  But dear as they are, they are waning, and at last the time is come

  When no more shall I behold thee till I wend to Odin’s Home.

  Now is the time so little that once hath been so long

  That I fain would ask thee pardon wherein I have done thee wrong,

  That thy longing might be softer, and thy love more sweet to have.

  But in nothing have I wronged thee, there is nought that I may crave.

  Strange too! as the minutes fail me, so do my speech-words fail,

  Yet strong is the joy within me for this hour that crowns the tale.

  Therewith he clipped her and caressed her, and she spake nothing for a while; and he said; “Thy face is fair and bright; art thou not joyous of these minutes?”

  She said: “Thy words are sweet; but they pierce my heart like a sharp knife; for they tell me of thy death and the ending of our love.”

  Said he; “I tell thee nothing, beloved, that thou hast not known: is it not for this that we have met here once more?”

  She answered after a while; “Yea, yea; yet mightest thou have lived.”

  He laughed, but not scornfully or bitterly and said:

  “So thought I in time past: but hearken, beloved; If I fall to-day, shall there not yet be a minute after the stroke hath fallen on me, wherein I shall know that the day is won and see the foemen fleeing, and wherein I shall once again deem I shall never die, whatever may betide afterwards, and though the sword lieth deep in my breast? And shall I not see then and know that our love hath no end?”

  Bitter grief was in her face as she heard him. But she spake and said: “Lo here the Hauberk which thou hast done off thee, that thy breast might be the nearer to mine! Wilt thou not wear it in the fight for my sake?”

  He knit his brows somewhat, and said:

  “Nay, it may not be: true it is that thou saidest that no evil weird went with it, but hearken! Yesterday I bore it in the fight, and ere I mingled with the foe, before I might give the token of onset, a cloud came before my eyes and thick darkness wrapped me around, and I fell to the earth unsmitten; and so was I borne out of the fight, and evil dreams beset me of evil things, and the dwarfs that hate mankind. Then I came to myself, and the Hauberk was off me, and I rose up and beheld the battle, that the kindreds were pressing on the foe, and I thought not then of any past time, but of the minutes that were passing; and I ran into the fight straightway: but one followed me with that Hauberk, and I did it on, thinking of nought but the battle. Fierce then was the fray, yet I faltered in it; till the fresh men of the Romans came in upon us and broke up our array. Then my heart almost broke within me, and I faltered no more, but rushed on as of old, and smote great strokes all round about: no hurt I got, but once more came that ugly mist over my eyes, and again I fell unsmitten, and they bore me out of battle: then the men of our folk gave back and were overcome; and when I awoke from my evil dreams, we had gotten away from the fight and the Wolfing dwellings, and were on the mounds above the ford cowering down like beaten men. There then I sat shamed among the men who had chosen me for their best man at the Holy Thing, and lo I was their worst! Then befell that which never till then had befallen me, that life seemed empty and worthless and I longed to die and be done with it, and but for the thought of thy love I had slain myself then and there.

  “Thereafter I went with the host to the assembly of the stay-at-homes and fleers, and sat before the Hall-Sun our daughter, and said the words which were put into my mouth. But now must I tell thee a hard and evil thing; that I loved them not, and was not of them, and outside myself there was nothing: within me was the world and nought without me. Nay, as for thee, I was not sundered from thee, but thou wert a part of me; whereas for the others, yea, even for our daughter, thine and mine, they were but images and shows of men, and I longed to depart from them, and to see thy body and to feel thine heart beating. And by then so evil was I grown that my very shame had fallen from me, and my will to die: nay, I longed to live, thou and I, and death seemed hateful to me, and the deeds before death vain and foolish.

  “Where then was my glory and my happy life, and the hope of the days fresh born every day, though never dying? Where then was life, and Thiodolf that once had lived?

  “But now all is changed once more; I loved thee never so well as now, and great is my grief that we must sunder, and the pain of farewell wrings my heart. Yet since I am once more Thiodolf the Mighty, in my heart there is room for joy also. Look at me, O Wood-Sun, look at me, O beloved! tell me, am I not fair with the fairness of the warrior and the helper of the folk? Is not my voice kind, do not my lips smile, and mine eyes shine? See how steady is mine hand, the friend of the folk! For mine eyes are cleared again, and I can see the kindreds as they are, and their desire of life and scorn of death, and this is what they have made me myself. Now therefore shall they and I together earn the merry days to come, the winter hunting and the spring sowing, the summer haysel, the ingathering of harvest, the happy rest of midwinter, and Yuletide with the memory of the Fathers, wedded to the hope of the days to be. Well may they bid me help them who have holpen me! Well may they bid me die who have made me live!

  “For whereas thou sayest that I am not of their blood, nor of their adoption, once more I heed it not. For I have lived with them, and eaten and drunken with them, and toiled with them, and led them in bat
tle and the place of wounds and slaughter; they are mine and I am theirs; and through them am I of the whole earth, and all the kindreds of it; yea, even of the foemen, whom this day the edges in mine hand shall smite.

  “Therefore I will bear the Hauberk no more in battle; and belike my body but once more: so shall I have lived and death shall not have undone me.

  “Lo thou, is not this the Thiodolf whom thou hast loved? no changeling of the Gods, but the man in whom men have trusted, the friend of Earth, the giver of life, the vanquisher of death?”

  And he cast himself upon her, and strained her to his bosom and kissed her, and caressed her, and awoke the bitter-sweet joy within her, as he cried out:

  “O remember this, and this, when at last I am gone from thee!”

  But when they sundered her face was bright, but the tears were on it, and she said: “O Thiodolf, thou wert fain hadst thou done a wrong to me so that I might forgive thee; now wilt thou forgive me the wrong I have done thee?”

  “Yea,” he said, “Even so would I do, were we both to live, and how much more if this be the dawn of our sundering day! What hast thou done?”

  She said: “I lied to thee concerning the Hauberk when I said that no evil weird went with it: and this I did for the saving of thy life.”

  He laid his hand fondly on her head, and spake smiling: “Such is the wont of the God-kin, because they know not the hearts of men. Tell me all the truth of it now at last.”

  She said:

  Hear then the tale of the Hauberk and the truth there is to tell:

  There was a maid of the God-kin, and she loved a man right well,

  Who unto the battle was wending; and she of her wisdom knew

  That thence to the folk-hall threshold should come back but a very few;

  And she feared for her love, for she doubted that of these he should not be;

  So she wended the wilds lamenting, as I have lamented for thee;

  And many wise she pondered, how to bring her will to pass

  (E’en as I for thee have pondered), as her feet led over the grass,

  Till she lifted her eyes in the wild-wood, and lo! she stood before

  The Hall of the Hollow-places; and the Dwarf-lord stood in the door

  And held in his hand the Hauberk, whereon the hammer’s blow

  The last of all had been smitten, and the sword should be hammer now.

  Then the Dwarf beheld her fairness, and the wild-wood many-leaved

  Before his eyes was reeling at the hope his heart conceived;

  So sorely he longed for her body; and he laughed before her and cried,

  ‘O Lady of the Disir, thou farest wandering wide

  Lamenting thy beloved and the folkmote of the spear,

  But if amidst of the battle this child of the hammer he bear

  He shall laugh at the foemen’s edges and come back to thy lily breast

  And of all the days of his life-time shall his coming years be best.’

  Then she bowed adown her godhead and sore for the Hauberk she prayed;

  But his greedy eyes devoured her as he stood in the door and said;

  ‘Come lie in mine arms! Come hither, and we twain the night to wake!

  And then as a gift of the morning the Hauberk shall ye take.’

  So she humbled herself before him, and entered into the cave,

  The dusky, the deep-gleaming, the gem-strewn golden grave.

  But he saw not her girdle loosened, or her bosom gleam on his love,

  For she set the sleep-thorn in him, that he saw, but might not move,

  Though the bitter salt tears burned him for the anguish of his greed;

  And she took the hammer’s offspring, her unearned morning meed,

  And went her ways from the rock-hall and was glad for her warrior’s sake.

  But behind her dull speech followed, and the voice of the hollow spake:

  ‘Thou hast left me bound in anguish, and hast gained thine heart’s desire;

  Now I would that the dewy night-grass might be to thy feet as the fire,

  And shrivel thy raiment about thee, and leave thee bare to the flame,

  And no way but a fiery furnace for the road whereby ye came!

  But since the folk of God-home we may not slay nor smite,

  And that fool of the folk that thou lovest, thou hast saved in my despite,

  Take with thee, thief of God-home, this other word I say:

  Since the safeguard wrought in the ring-mail I may not do away

  I lay this curse upon it, that whoso weareth the same,

  Shall save his life in the battle, and have the battle’s shame;

  He shall live through wrack and ruin, and ever have the worse,

  And drag adown his kindred, and bear the people’s curse.’

  Lo, this the tale of the Hauberk, and I knew it for the truth:

  And little I thought of the kindreds; of their day I had no ruth;

  For I said, They are doomed to departure; in a little while must they wane,

  And nought it helpeth or hindreth if I hold my hand or refrain.

  Yea, thou wert become the kindred, both thine and mine; and thy birth

  To me was the roofing of heaven, and the building up of earth.

  I have loved, and I must sorrow; thou hast lived, and thou must die;

  Ah, wherefore were there others in the world than thou and I?

  He turned round to her and clasped her strongly in his arms again, and kissed her many times and said:

  Lo, here art thou forgiven; and here I say farewell!

  Here the token of my wonder which my words may never tell;

  The wonder past all thinking, that my love and thine should blend;

  That thus our lives should mingle, and sunder in the end!

  Lo, this, for the last remembrance of the mighty man I was,

  Of thy love and thy forbearing, and all that came to pass!

  Night wanes, and heaven dights her for the kiss of sun and earth;

  Look up, look last upon me on this morn of the kindreds’ mirth!

  Therewith he arose and lingered no minute longer, but departed, going as straight towards the Thing-stead and the Folk-mote of his kindred as the swallow goes to her nest in the hall-porch. He looked not once behind him, though a bitter wailing rang through the woods and filled his heart with the bitterness of her woe and the anguish of the hour of sundering.

  Chapter 27

  They Wend to the Morning Battle

  Now when Thiodolf came back to the camp the signs of dawn were plain in the sky, the moon was low and sinking behind the trees, and he saw at once that the men were stirring and getting ready for departure. He looked gladly and blithely at the men he fell in with, and they at him, and scarce could they refrain a shout when they beheld his face and the brightness of it. He went straight up to where the Hall-Sun was yet sitting under her namesake, with Arinbiorn standing before her amidst of a ring of leaders of hundreds and scores: but old Sorli sat by her side clad in all his war-gear.

  When Thiodolf first came into that ring of men they looked doubtfully at him, as if they dreaded somewhat, but when they had well beheld him their faces cleared, and they became joyous.

  He went straight up to Arinbiorn and kissed the old warrior, and said to him, “I give thee good morrow, O leader of the Bearings! Here now is come the War-duke! and meseems that we should get to work as speedily as may be, for lo the dawning!”

  “Hail to thine hand, War-duke!” said Arinbiorn joyously; “there is no more to do but to take thy word concerning the order wherein we shall wend; for all men are armed and ready.”

  Said Thiodolf; “Lo ye, I lack war-gear and weapons! Is there a good sword hereby, a helm, a byrny and a shield? For hard will be the battle, and we must fence ourselves all we may.”

  “Hard by,” said Arinbiorn, “is the war-gear of Ivar of our House, who is dead in the night of his hurts gotten in yesterday’s battle: thou and he are alike in stature, an
d with a good will doth he give them to thee, and they are goodly things, for he comes of smithying blood. Yet is it a pity of Throng-plough that he lieth on the field of the slain.”

  But Thiodolf smiled and said: “Nay, Ivar’s blade shall serve my turn to-day; and thereafter shall it be seen to, for then will be time for many things.”

  So they went to fetch him the weapons; but he said to Arinbiorn, “Hast thou numbered the host? What are the gleanings of the Roman sword?”

  Said Arinbiorn: “Here have we more than three thousand three hundred warriors of the host fit for battle: and besides this here are gathered eighteen hundred of the Wolfings and the Bearings, and of the other Houses, mostly from over the water, and of these nigh upon seven hundred may bear sword or shoot shaft; neither shall ye hinder them from so doing if the battle be joined.”

  Then said Thiodolf: “We shall order us into three battles; the Wolfings and the Bearings to lead the first, for this is our business; but others of the smaller Houses this side the water to be with us; and the Elkings and Galtings and the other Houses of the Mid-mark on the further side of the water to be in the second, and with them the more part of the Nether-mark; but the men of Up-mark to be in the third, and the stay-at-homes to follow on with them: and this third battle to let the wood cover them till they be needed, which may not be till the day of fight draws to an end, when all shall be needed: for no Roman man must be left alive or untaken by this even, or else must we all go to the Gods together. Hearken, Arinbiorn. I am not called fore-sighted, and yet meseems I see somewhat how this day shall go; and it is not to be hidden that I shall not see another battle until the last of all battles is at hand. But be of good cheer, for I shall not die till the end of the fight, and once more I shall be a man’s help unto you. Now the first of the Romans we meet shall not be able to stand before us, for they shall be unready, and when their men are gotten ready and are fighting with us grimly, ye of the second battle shall hear the war-token, and shall fall on, and they shall be dismayed when they see so many fresh men come into the fight; yet shall they stand stoutly; for they are valiant men, and shall not all be taken unawares. Then, if they withstand us long enough, shall the third battle come forth from the wood, and fall on either flank of them, and the day shall be won. But I think not that they shall withstand us so long, but that the men of Up-mark and the stay-at-homes shall have the chasing of them. Now get me my war-gear, and let the first battle get them to the outgate of the garth.”

 

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