- The Project Gutenberg EBook of Beowulf, by Anonymous
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- Title: Beowulf
- Author: Anonymous
- Posting Date: July 23, 2008 [EBook #981]
- Release Date: July, 1997
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: ASCII
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BEOWULF ***
- Produced by Robin Katsuya-Corbet
- BEOWULF
- By Anonymous
- Translated by Gummere
- BEOWULF
- PRELUDE OF THE FOUNDER OF THE DANISH HOUSE
- LO, praise of the prowess of people-kings
- of spear-armed Danes, in days long sped,
- we have heard, and what honor the athelings won!
- Oft Scyld the Scefing from squadroned foes,
- from many a tribe, the mead-bench tore,
- awing the earls. Since erst he lay
- friendless, a foundling, fate repaid him:
- for he waxed under welkin, in wealth he throve,
- till before him the folk, both far and near,
- who house by the whale-path, heard his mandate,
- gave him gifts: a good king he!
- To him an heir was afterward born,
- a son in his halls, whom heaven sent
- to favor the folk, feeling their woe
- that erst they had lacked an earl for leader
- so long a while; the Lord endowed him,
- the Wielder of Wonder, with world's renown.
- Famed was this Beowulf: {0a} far flew the boast of him,
- son of Scyld, in the Scandian lands.
- So becomes it a youth to quit him well
- with his father's friends, by fee and gift,
- that to aid him, aged, in after days,
- come warriors willing, should war draw nigh,
- liegemen loyal: by lauded deeds
- shall an earl have honor in every clan.
- Forth he fared at the fated moment,
- sturdy Scyld to the shelter of God.
- Then they bore him over to ocean's billow,
- loving clansmen, as late he charged them,
- while wielded words the winsome Scyld,
- the leader beloved who long had ruled....
- In the roadstead rocked a ring-dight vessel,
- ice-flecked, outbound, atheling's barge:
- there laid they down their darling lord
- on the breast of the boat, the breaker-of-rings, {0b}
- by the mast the mighty one. Many a treasure
- fetched from far was freighted with him.
- No ship have I known so nobly dight
- with weapons of war and weeds of battle,
- with breastplate and blade: on his bosom lay
- a heaped hoard that hence should go
- far o'er the flood with him floating away.
- No less these loaded the lordly gifts,
- thanes' huge treasure, than those had done
- who in former time forth had sent him
- sole on the seas, a suckling child.
- High o'er his head they hoist the standard,
- a gold-wove banner; let billows take him,
- gave him to ocean. Grave were their spirits,
- mournful their mood. No man is able
- to say in sooth, no son of the halls,
- no hero 'neath heaven, -- who harbored that freight!
- I
- Now Beowulf bode in the burg of the Scyldings,
- leader beloved, and long he ruled
- in fame with all folk, since his father had gone
- away from the world, till awoke an heir,
- haughty Healfdene, who held through life,
- sage and sturdy, the Scyldings glad.
- Then, one after one, there woke to him,
- to the chieftain of clansmen, children four:
- Heorogar, then Hrothgar, then Halga brave;
- and I heard that -- was -- 's queen,
- the Heathoscylfing's helpmate dear.
- To Hrothgar was given such glory of war,
- such honor of combat, that all his kin
- obeyed him gladly till great grew his band
- of youthful comrades. It came in his mind
- to bid his henchmen a hall uprear,
- a master mead-house, mightier far
- than ever was seen by the sons of earth,
- and within it, then, to old and young
- he would all allot that the Lord had sent him,
- save only the land and the lives of his men.
- Wide, I heard, was the work commanded,
- for many a tribe this mid-earth round,
- to fashion the folkstead. It fell, as he ordered,
- in rapid achievement that ready it stood there,
- of halls the noblest: Heorot {1a} he named it
- whose message had might in many a land.
- Not reckless of promise, the rings he dealt,
- treasure at banquet: there towered the hall,
- high, gabled wide, the hot surge waiting
- of furious flame. {1b} Nor far was that day
- when father and son-in-law stood in feud
- for warfare and hatred that woke again. {1c}
- With envy and anger an evil spirit
- endured the dole in his dark abode,
- that he heard each day the din of revel
- high in the hall: there harps rang out,
- clear song of the singer. He sang who knew {1d}
- tales of the early time of man,
- how the Almighty made the earth,
- fairest fields enfolded by water,
- set, triumphant, sun and moon
- for a light to lighten the land-dwellers,
- and braided bright the breast of earth
- with limbs and leaves, made life for all
- of mortal beings that breathe and move.
- So lived the clansmen in cheer and revel
- a winsome life, till one began
- to fashion evils, that field of hell.
- Grendel this monster grim was called,
- march-riever {1e} mighty, in moorland living,
- in fen and fastness; fief of the giants
- the hapless wight a while had kept
- since the Creator his exile doomed.
- On kin of Cain was the killing avenged
- by sovran God for slaughtered Abel.
- Ill fared his feud, {1f} and far was he driven,
- for the slaughter's sake, from sight of men.
- Of Cain awoke all that woful breed,
- Etins {1g} and elves and evil-spirits,
- as well as the giants that warred with God
- weary while: but their wage was paid them!
- II
- WENT he forth to find at fall of night
- that haughty house, and heed wherever
- the Ring-Danes, outrevelled, to rest had gone.
- Found within it the atheling band
- asleep after feasting and fearless of sorrow,
- of human hardship. Unhallowed wight,
- grim and greedy, he grasped betimes,
- wrathful, reckless, from resting-places,
- thirty of the thanes, and thence he rushed
- fain of his fell spoil, faring homeward,
- laden with slaughter, his lair to seek.
- Then at the dawning, as day was breaking,
- the might of Grendel to men was known;
- then after wassail was wail uplifted,
- loud moan in the morn. The mighty chief,
- atheling excellent, unblithe sat,
- labored in woe for the loss of his thanes,
- when once had been traced the trail of the fiend,
- spirit accurst: too cruel that sorrow,
- too long, too loathsome. Not late the respite;
- with night returning, anew began
- ruthless murder; he recked no whit,
- firm in his guilt, of the feud and crime.
- They were easy to find who elsewhere sought
- in room remote their rest at night,
- bed in the bowers, {2a} when that bale was shown,
- was seen in sooth, with surest token, --
- the hall-thane's {2b} hate. Such held themselves
- far and fast who the fiend outran!
- Thus ruled unrighteous and raged his fill
- one against all; until empty stood
- that lordly building, and long it bode so.
- Twelve years' tide the trouble he bore,
- sovran of Scyldings, sorrows in plenty,
- boundless cares. There came unhidden
- tidings true to the tribes of men,
- in sorrowful songs, how ceaselessly Grendel
- harassed Hrothgar, what hate he bore him,
- what murder and massacre, many a year,
- feud unfading, -- refused consent
- to deal with any of Daneland's earls,
- make pact of peace, or compound for gold:
- still less did the wise men ween to get
- great fee for the feud from his fiendish hands.
- But the evil one ambushed old and young
- death-shadow dark, and dogged them still,
- lured, or lurked in the livelong night
- of misty moorlands: men may say not
- where the haunts of these Hell-Runes {2c} be.
- Such heaping of horrors the hater of men,
- lonely roamer, wrought unceasing,
- harassings heavy. O'er Heorot he lorded,
- gold-bright hall, in gloomy nights;
- and ne'er could the prince {2d} approach his throne,
- -- 'twas judgment of God, -- or have joy in his hall.
- Sore was the sorrow to Scyldings'-friend,
- heart-rending misery. Many nobles
- sat assembled, and searched out counsel
- how it were best for bold-hearted men
- against harassing terror to try their hand.
- Whiles they vowed in their heathen fanes
- altar-offerings, asked with words {2e}
- that the slayer-of-souls would succor give them
- for the pain of their people. Their practice this,
- their heathen hope; 'twas Hell they thought of
- in mood of their mind. Almighty they knew not,
- Doomsman of Deeds and dreadful Lord,
- nor Heaven's-Helmet heeded they ever,
- Wielder-of-Wonder. -- Woe for that man
- who in harm and hatred hales his soul
- to fiery embraces; -- nor favor nor change
- awaits he ever. But well for him
- that after death-day may draw to his Lord,
- and friendship find in the Father's arms!
- III
- THUS seethed unceasing the son of Healfdene
- with the woe of these days; not wisest men
- assuaged his sorrow; too sore the anguish,
- loathly and long, that lay on his folk,
- most baneful of burdens and bales of the night.
- This heard in his home Hygelac's thane,
- great among Geats, of Grendel's doings.
- He was the mightiest man of valor
- in that same day of this our life,
- stalwart and stately. A stout wave-walker
- he bade make ready. Yon battle-king, said he,
- far o'er the swan-road he fain would seek,
- the noble monarch who needed men!
- The prince's journey by prudent folk
- was little blamed, though they loved him dear;
- they whetted the hero, and hailed good omens.
- And now the bold one from bands of Geats
- comrades chose, the keenest of warriors
- e'er he could find; with fourteen men
- the sea-wood {3a} he sought, and, sailor proved,
- led them on to the land's confines.
- Time had now flown; {3b} afloat was the ship,
- boat under bluff. On board they climbed,
- warriors ready; waves were churning
- sea with sand; the sailors bore
- on the breast of the bark their bright array,
- their mail and weapons: the men pushed off,
- on its willing way, the well-braced craft.
- Then moved o'er the waters by might of the wind
- that bark like a bird with breast of foam,
- till in season due, on the second day,
- the curved prow such course had run
- that sailors now could see the land,
- sea-cliffs shining, steep high hills,
- headlands broad. Their haven was found,
- their journey ended. Up then quickly
- the Weders' {3c} clansmen climbed ashore,
- anchored their sea-wood, with armor clashing
- and gear of battle: God they thanked
- or passing in peace o'er the paths of the sea.
- Now saw from the cliff a Scylding clansman,
- a warden that watched the water-side,
- how they bore o'er the gangway glittering shields,
- war-gear in readiness; wonder seized him
- to know what manner of men they were.
- Straight to the strand his steed he rode,
- Hrothgar's henchman; with hand of might
- he shook his spear, and spake in parley.
- "Who are ye, then, ye armed men,
- mailed folk, that yon mighty vessel
- have urged thus over the ocean ways,
- here o'er the waters? A warden I,
- sentinel set o'er the sea-march here,
- lest any foe to the folk of Danes
- with harrying fleet should harm the land.
- No aliens ever at ease thus bore them,
- linden-wielders: {3d} yet word-of-leave
- clearly ye lack from clansmen here,
- my folk's agreement. -- A greater ne'er saw I
- of warriors in world than is one of you, --
- yon hero in harness! No henchman he
- worthied by weapons, if witness his features,
- his peerless presence! I pray you, though, tell
- your folk and home, lest hence ye fare
- suspect to wander your way as spies
- in Danish land. Now, dwellers afar,
- ocean-travellers, take from me
- simple advice: the sooner the better
- I hear of the country whence ye came."
- IV
- To him the stateliest spake in answer;
- the warriors' leader his word-hoard unlocked: --
- "We are by kin of the clan of Geats,
- and Hygelac's own hearth-fellows we.
- To folk afar was my father known,
- noble atheling, Ecgtheow named.
- Full of winters, he fared away
- aged from earth; he is honored still
- through width of the world by wise men all.
- To thy lord and liege in loyal mood
- we hasten hither, to Healfdene's son,
- people-protector: be pleased to advise us!
- To that mighty-one come we on mickle errand,
- to the lord of the Danes; nor deem I right
- that aught be hidden. We hear -- thou knowest
- if sooth it is -- the saying of men,
- that amid the Scyldings a scathing monster,
- dark ill-doer, in dusky nights
- shows terrific his rage unmatched,
- hatred and murder. To Hrothgar I
- in greatness of soul would succor bring,
- so the Wise-and-Brave {4a} may worst his foes, --
- if ever the end of ills is fated,
- of cruel contest, if cure shall follow,
- and the boiling care-waves cooler grow;
- else ever afterward anguish-days
- he shall suffer in sorrow while stands in place
- high on its hill that house unpeered!"
- Astride his steed, the strand-ward answered,
- clansman unquailing: "The keen-souled thane
- must be skilled to sever and sunder duly
- words and works, if he well intends.
- I gather, this band is graciously bent
- to the Scyldings' master. March, then, bearing
- weapons and weeds the way I show you.
- I will bid my men your boat meanwhile
- to guard for fear lest foemen come, --
- your new-tarred ship by shore of ocean
- faithfully watching till once again
- it waft o'er the waters those well-loved thanes,
- -- winding-neck'd wood, -- to Weders' bounds,
- heroes such as the hest of fate
- shall succor and save from the shock of war."
- They bent them to march, -- the boat lay still,
- fettered by cable and fast at anchor,
- broad-bosomed ship. -- Then shone the boars {4b}
- over the cheek-guard; chased with gold,
- keen and gleaming, guard it kept
- o'er the man of war, as marched along
- heroes in haste, till the hall they saw,
- broad of gable and bright with gold:
- that was the fairest, 'mid folk of earth,
- of houses 'neath heaven, where Hrothgar lived,
- and the gleam of it lightened o'er lands afar.
- The sturdy shieldsman showed that bright
- burg-of-the-boldest; bade them go
- straightway thither; his steed then turned,
- hardy hero, and hailed them thus: --
- "'Tis time that I fare from you. Father Almighty
- in grace and mercy guard you well,
- safe in your seekings. Seaward I go,
- 'gainst hostile warriors hold my watch."
- V
- STONE-BRIGHT the street: {5a} it showed the way
- to the crowd of clansmen. Corselets glistened
- hand-forged, hard; on their harness bright
- the steel ring sang, as they strode along
- in mail of battle, and marched to the hall.
- There, weary of ocean, the wall along
- they set their bucklers, their broad shields, down,
- and bowed them to bench: the breastplates clanged,
- war-gear of men; their weapons stacked,
- spears of the seafarers stood together,
- gray-tipped ash: that iron band
- was worthily weaponed! -- A warrior proud
- asked of the heroes their home and kin.
- "Whence, now, bear ye burnished shields,
- harness gray and helmets grim,
- spears in multitude? Messenger, I,
- Hrothgar's herald! Heroes so many
- ne'er met I as strangers of mood so strong.
- 'Tis plain that for prowess, not plunged into exile,
- for high-hearted valor, Hrothgar ye seek!"
- Him the sturdy-in-war bespake with words,
- proud earl of the Weders answer made,
- hardy 'neath helmet: -- "Hygelac's, we,
- fellows at board; I am Beowulf named.
- I am seeking to say to the son of Healfdene
- this mission of mine, to thy master-lord,
- the doughty prince, if he deign at all
- grace that we greet him, the good one, now."
- Wulfgar spake, the Wendles' chieftain,
- whose might of mind to many was known,
- his courage and counsel: "The king of Danes,
- the Scyldings' friend, I fain will tell,
- the Breaker-of-Rings, as the boon thou askest,
- the famed prince, of thy faring hither,
- and, swiftly after, such answer bring
- as the doughty monarch may deign to give."
- Hied then in haste to where Hrothgar sat
- white-haired and old, his earls about him,
- till the stout thane stood at the shoulder there
- of the Danish king: good courtier he!
- Wulfgar spake to his winsome lord: --
- "Hither have fared to thee far-come men
- o'er the paths of ocean, people of Geatland;
- and the stateliest there by his sturdy band
- is Beowulf named. This boon they seek,
- that they, my master, may with thee
- have speech at will: nor spurn their prayer
- to give them hearing, gracious Hrothgar!
- In weeds of the warrior worthy they,
- methinks, of our liking; their leader most surely,
- a hero that hither his henchmen has led."
- VI
- HROTHGAR answered, helmet of Scyldings: --
- "I knew him of yore in his youthful days;
- his aged father was Ecgtheow named,
- to whom, at home, gave Hrethel the Geat
- his only daughter. Their offspring bold
- fares hither to seek the steadfast friend.
- And seamen, too, have said me this, --
- who carried my gifts to the Geatish court,
- thither for thanks, -- he has thirty men's
- heft of grasp in the gripe of his hand,
- the bold-in-battle. Blessed God
- out of his mercy this man hath sent
- to Danes of the West, as I ween indeed,
- against horror of Grendel. I hope to give
- the good youth gold for his gallant thought.
- Be thou in haste, and bid them hither,
- clan of kinsmen, to come before me;
- and add this word, -- they are welcome guests
- to folk of the Danes."
- [To the door of the hall
- Wulfgar went] and the word declared: --
- "To you this message my master sends,
- East-Danes' king, that your kin he knows,
- hardy heroes, and hails you all
- welcome hither o'er waves of the sea!
- Ye may wend your way in war-attire,
- and under helmets Hrothgar greet;
- but let here the battle-shields bide your parley,
- and wooden war-shafts wait its end."
- Uprose the mighty one, ringed with his men,
- brave band of thanes: some bode without,
- battle-gear guarding, as bade the chief.
- Then hied that troop where the herald led them,
- under Heorot's roof: [the hero strode,]
- hardy 'neath helm, till the hearth he neared.
- Beowulf spake, -- his breastplate gleamed,
- war-net woven by wit of the smith: --
- "Thou Hrothgar, hail! Hygelac's I,
- kinsman and follower. Fame a plenty
- have I gained in youth! These Grendel-deeds
- I heard in my home-land heralded clear.
- Seafarers say how stands this hall,
- of buildings best, for your band of thanes
- empty and idle, when evening sun
- in the harbor of heaven is hidden away.
- So my vassals advised me well, --
- brave and wise, the best of men, --
- O sovran Hrothgar, to seek thee here,
- for my nerve and my might they knew full well.
- Themselves had seen me from slaughter come
- blood-flecked from foes, where five I bound,
- and that wild brood worsted. I' the waves I slew
- nicors {6a} by night, in need and peril
- avenging the Weders, {6b} whose woe they sought, --
- crushing the grim ones. Grendel now,
- monster cruel, be mine to quell
- in single battle! So, from thee,
- thou sovran of the Shining-Danes,
- Scyldings'-bulwark, a boon I seek, --
- and, Friend-of-the-folk, refuse it not,
- O Warriors'-shield, now I've wandered far, --
- that I alone with my liegemen here,
- this hardy band, may Heorot purge!
- More I hear, that the monster dire,
- in his wanton mood, of weapons recks not;
- hence shall I scorn -- so Hygelac stay,
- king of my kindred, kind to me! --
- brand or buckler to bear in the fight,
- gold-colored targe: but with gripe alone
- must I front the fiend and fight for life,
- foe against foe. Then faith be his
- in the doom of the Lord whom death shall take.
- Fain, I ween, if the fight he win,
- in this hall of gold my Geatish band
- will he fearless eat, -- as oft before, --
- my noblest thanes. Nor need'st thou then
- to hide my head; {6c} for his shall I be,
- dyed in gore, if death must take me;
- and my blood-covered body he'll bear as prey,
- ruthless devour it, the roamer-lonely,
- with my life-blood redden his lair in the fen:
- no further for me need'st food prepare!
- To Hygelac send, if Hild {6d} should take me,
- best of war-weeds, warding my breast,
- armor excellent, heirloom of Hrethel
- and work of Wayland. {6e} Fares Wyrd {6f} as she must."
- VII
- HROTHGAR spake, the Scyldings'-helmet: --
- "For fight defensive, Friend my Beowulf,
- to succor and save, thou hast sought us here.
- Thy father's combat {7a} a feud enkindled
- when Heatholaf with hand he slew
- among the Wylfings; his Weder kin
- for horror of fighting feared to hold him.
- Fleeing, he sought our South-Dane folk,
- over surge of ocean the Honor-Scyldings,
- when first I was ruling the folk of Danes,
- wielded, youthful, this widespread realm,
- this hoard-hold of heroes. Heorogar was dead,
- my elder brother, had breathed his last,
- Healfdene's bairn: he was better than I!
- Straightway the feud with fee {7b} I settled,
- to the Wylfings sent, o'er watery ridges,
- treasures olden: oaths he {7c} swore me.
- Sore is my soul to say to any
- of the race of man what ruth for me
- in Heorot Grendel with hate hath wrought,
- what sudden harryings. Hall-folk fail me,
- my warriors wane; for Wyrd hath swept them
- into Grendel's grasp. But God is able
- this deadly foe from his deeds to turn!
- Boasted full oft, as my beer they drank,
- earls o'er the ale-cup, armed men,
- that they would bide in the beer-hall here,
- Grendel's attack with terror of blades.
- Then was this mead-house at morning tide
- dyed with gore, when the daylight broke,
- all the boards of the benches blood-besprinkled,
- gory the hall: I had heroes the less,
- doughty dear-ones that death had reft.
- -- But sit to the banquet, unbind thy words,
- hardy hero, as heart shall prompt thee."
- Gathered together, the Geatish men
- in the banquet-hall on bench assigned,
- sturdy-spirited, sat them down,
- hardy-hearted. A henchman attended,
- carried the carven cup in hand,
- served the clear mead. Oft minstrels sang
- blithe in Heorot. Heroes revelled,
- no dearth of warriors, Weder and Dane.
- VIII
- UNFERTH spake, the son of Ecglaf,
- who sat at the feet of the Scyldings' lord,
- unbound the battle-runes. {8a} -- Beowulf's quest,
- sturdy seafarer's, sorely galled him;
- ever he envied that other men
- should more achieve in middle-earth
- of fame under heaven than he himself. --
- "Art thou that Beowulf, Breca's rival,
- who emulous swam on the open sea,
- when for pride the pair of you proved the floods,
- and wantonly dared in waters deep
- to risk your lives? No living man,
- or lief or loath, from your labor dire
- could you dissuade, from swimming the main.
- Ocean-tides with your arms ye covered,
- with strenuous hands the sea-streets measured,
- swam o'er the waters. Winter's storm
- rolled the rough waves. In realm of sea
- a sennight strove ye. In swimming he topped thee,
- had more of main! Him at morning-tide
- billows bore to the Battling Reamas,
- whence he hied to his home so dear
- beloved of his liegemen, to land of Brondings,
- fastness fair, where his folk he ruled,
- town and treasure. In triumph o'er thee
- Beanstan's bairn {8b} his boast achieved.
- So ween I for thee a worse adventure
- -- though in buffet of battle thou brave hast been,
- in struggle grim, -- if Grendel's approach
- thou darst await through the watch of night!"
- Beowulf spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --
- "What a deal hast uttered, dear my Unferth,
- drunken with beer, of Breca now,
- told of his triumph! Truth I claim it,
- that I had more of might in the sea
- than any man else, more ocean-endurance.
- We twain had talked, in time of youth,
- and made our boast, -- we were merely boys,
- striplings still, -- to stake our lives
- far at sea: and so we performed it.
- Naked swords, as we swam along,
- we held in hand, with hope to guard us
- against the whales. Not a whit from me
- could he float afar o'er the flood of waves,
- haste o'er the billows; nor him I abandoned.
- Together we twain on the tides abode
- five nights full till the flood divided us,
- churning waves and chillest weather,
- darkling night, and the northern wind
- ruthless rushed on us: rough was the surge.
- Now the wrath of the sea-fish rose apace;
- yet me 'gainst the monsters my mailed coat,
- hard and hand-linked, help afforded, --
- battle-sark braided my breast to ward,
- garnished with gold. There grasped me firm
- and haled me to bottom the hated foe,
- with grimmest gripe. 'Twas granted me, though,
- to pierce the monster with point of sword,
- with blade of battle: huge beast of the sea
- was whelmed by the hurly through hand of mine.
- IX
- ME thus often the evil monsters
- thronging threatened. With thrust of my sword,
- the darling, I dealt them due return!
- Nowise had they bliss from their booty then
- to devour their victim, vengeful creatures,
- seated to banquet at bottom of sea;
- but at break of day, by my brand sore hurt,
- on the edge of ocean up they lay,
- put to sleep by the sword. And since, by them
- on the fathomless sea-ways sailor-folk
- are never molested. -- Light from east,
- came bright God's beacon; the billows sank,
- so that I saw the sea-cliffs high,
- windy walls. For Wyrd oft saveth
- earl undoomed if he doughty be!
- And so it came that I killed with my sword
- nine of the nicors. Of night-fought battles
- ne'er heard I a harder 'neath heaven's dome,
- nor adrift on the deep a more desolate man!
- Yet I came unharmed from that hostile clutch,
- though spent with swimming. The sea upbore me,
- flood of the tide, on Finnish land,
- the welling waters. No wise of thee
- have I heard men tell such terror of falchions,
- bitter battle. Breca ne'er yet,
- not one of you pair, in the play of war
- such daring deed has done at all
- with bloody brand, -- I boast not of it! --
- though thou wast the bane {9a} of thy brethren dear,
- thy closest kin, whence curse of hell
- awaits thee, well as thy wit may serve!
- For I say in sooth, thou son of Ecglaf,
- never had Grendel these grim deeds wrought,
- monster dire, on thy master dear,
- in Heorot such havoc, if heart of thine
- were as battle-bold as thy boast is loud!
- But he has found no feud will happen;
- from sword-clash dread of your Danish clan
- he vaunts him safe, from the Victor-Scyldings.
- He forces pledges, favors none
- of the land of Danes, but lustily murders,
- fights and feasts, nor feud he dreads
- from Spear-Dane men. But speedily now
- shall I prove him the prowess and pride of the Geats,
- shall bid him battle. Blithe to mead
- go he that listeth, when light of dawn
- this morrow morning o'er men of earth,
- ether-robed sun from the south shall beam!"
- Joyous then was the Jewel-giver,
- hoar-haired, war-brave; help awaited
- the Bright-Danes' prince, from Beowulf hearing,
- folk's good shepherd, such firm resolve.
- Then was laughter of liegemen loud resounding
- with winsome words. Came Wealhtheow forth,
- queen of Hrothgar, heedful of courtesy,
- gold-decked, greeting the guests in hall;
- and the high-born lady handed the cup
- first to the East-Danes' heir and warden,
- bade him be blithe at the beer-carouse,
- the land's beloved one. Lustily took he
- banquet and beaker, battle-famed king.
- Through the hall then went the Helmings' Lady,
- to younger and older everywhere
- carried the cup, till come the moment
- when the ring-graced queen, the royal-hearted,
- to Beowulf bore the beaker of mead.
- She greeted the Geats' lord, God she thanked,
- in wisdom's words, that her will was granted,
- that at last on a hero her hope could lean
- for comfort in terrors. The cup he took,
- hardy-in-war, from Wealhtheow's hand,
- and answer uttered the eager-for-combat.
- Beowulf spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --
- "This was my thought, when my thanes and I
- bent to the ocean and entered our boat,
- that I would work the will of your people
- fully, or fighting fall in death,
- in fiend's gripe fast. I am firm to do
- an earl's brave deed, or end the days
- of this life of mine in the mead-hall here."
- Well these words to the woman seemed,
- Beowulf's battle-boast. -- Bright with gold
- the stately dame by her spouse sat down.
- Again, as erst, began in hall
- warriors' wassail and words of power,
- the proud-band's revel, till presently
- the son of Healfdene hastened to seek
- rest for the night; he knew there waited
- fight for the fiend in that festal hall,
- when the sheen of the sun they saw no more,
- and dusk of night sank darkling nigh,
- and shadowy shapes came striding on,
- wan under welkin. The warriors rose.
- Man to man, he made harangue,
- Hrothgar to Beowulf, bade him hail,
- let him wield the wine hall: a word he added: --
- "Never to any man erst I trusted,
- since I could heave up hand and shield,
- this noble Dane-Hall, till now to thee.
- Have now and hold this house unpeered;
- remember thy glory; thy might declare;
- watch for the foe! No wish shall fail thee
- if thou bidest the battle with bold-won life."
- X
- THEN Hrothgar went with his hero-train,
- defence-of-Scyldings, forth from hall;
- fain would the war-lord Wealhtheow seek,
- couch of his queen. The King-of-Glory
- against this Grendel a guard had set,
- so heroes heard, a hall-defender,
- who warded the monarch and watched for the monster.
- In truth, the Geats' prince gladly trusted
- his mettle, his might, the mercy of God!
- Cast off then his corselet of iron,
- helmet from head; to his henchman gave, --
- choicest of weapons, -- the well-chased sword,
- bidding him guard the gear of battle.
- Spake then his Vaunt the valiant man,
- Beowulf Geat, ere the bed be sought: --
- "Of force in fight no feebler I count me,
- in grim war-deeds, than Grendel deems him.
- Not with the sword, then, to sleep of death
- his life will I give, though it lie in my power.
- No skill is his to strike against me,
- my shield to hew though he hardy be,
- bold in battle; we both, this night,
- shall spurn the sword, if he seek me here,
- unweaponed, for war. Let wisest God,
- sacred Lord, on which side soever
- doom decree as he deemeth right."
- Reclined then the chieftain, and cheek-pillows held
- the head of the earl, while all about him
- seamen hardy on hall-beds sank.
- None of them thought that thence their steps
- to the folk and fastness that fostered them,
- to the land they loved, would lead them back!
- Full well they wist that on warriors many
- battle-death seized, in the banquet-hall,
- of Danish clan. But comfort and help,
- war-weal weaving, to Weder folk
- the Master gave, that, by might of one,
- over their enemy all prevailed,
- by single strength. In sooth 'tis told
- that highest God o'er human kind
- hath wielded ever! -- Thro' wan night striding,
- came the walker-in-shadow. Warriors slept
- whose hest was to guard the gabled hall, --
- all save one. 'Twas widely known
- that against God's will the ghostly ravager
- him {10a} could not hurl to haunts of darkness;
- wakeful, ready, with warrior's wrath,
- bold he bided the battle's issue.
- XI
- THEN from the moorland, by misty crags,
- with God's wrath laden, Grendel came.
- The monster was minded of mankind now
- sundry to seize in the stately house.
- Under welkin he walked, till the wine-palace there,
- gold-hall of men, he gladly discerned,
- flashing with fretwork. Not first time, this,
- that he the home of Hrothgar sought, --
- yet ne'er in his life-day, late or early,
- such hardy heroes, such hall-thanes, found!
- To the house the warrior walked apace,
- parted from peace; {11a} the portal opended,
- though with forged bolts fast, when his fists had
- struck it,
- and baleful he burst in his blatant rage,
- the house's mouth. All hastily, then,
- o'er fair-paved floor the fiend trod on,
- ireful he strode; there streamed from his eyes
- fearful flashes, like flame to see.
- He spied in hall the hero-band,
- kin and clansmen clustered asleep,
- hardy liegemen. Then laughed his heart;
- for the monster was minded, ere morn should dawn,
- savage, to sever the soul of each,
- life from body, since lusty banquet
- waited his will! But Wyrd forbade him
- to seize any more of men on earth
- after that evening. Eagerly watched
- Hygelac's kinsman his cursed foe,
- how he would fare in fell attack.
- Not that the monster was minded to pause!
- Straightway he seized a sleeping warrior
- for the first, and tore him fiercely asunder,
- the bone-frame bit, drank blood in streams,
- swallowed him piecemeal: swiftly thus
- the lifeless corse was clear devoured,
- e'en feet and hands. Then farther he hied;
- for the hardy hero with hand he grasped,
- felt for the foe with fiendish claw,
- for the hero reclining, -- who clutched it boldly,
- prompt to answer, propped on his arm.
- Soon then saw that shepherd-of-evils
- that never he met in this middle-world,
- in the ways of earth, another wight
- with heavier hand-gripe; at heart he feared,
- sorrowed in soul, -- none the sooner escaped!
- Fain would he flee, his fastness seek,
- the den of devils: no doings now
- such as oft he had done in days of old!
- Then bethought him the hardy Hygelac-thane
- of his boast at evening: up he bounded,
- grasped firm his foe, whose fingers cracked.
- The fiend made off, but the earl close followed.
- The monster meant -- if he might at all --
- to fling himself free, and far away
- fly to the fens, -- knew his fingers' power
- in the gripe of the grim one. Gruesome march
- to Heorot this monster of harm had made!
- Din filled the room; the Danes were bereft,
- castle-dwellers and clansmen all,
- earls, of their ale. Angry were both
- those savage hall-guards: the house resounded.
- Wonder it was the wine-hall firm
- in the strain of their struggle stood, to earth
- the fair house fell not; too fast it was
- within and without by its iron bands
- craftily clamped; though there crashed from sill
- many a mead-bench -- men have told me --
- gay with gold, where the grim foes wrestled.
- So well had weened the wisest Scyldings
- that not ever at all might any man
- that bone-decked, brave house break asunder,
- crush by craft, -- unless clasp of fire
- in smoke engulfed it. -- Again uprose
- din redoubled. Danes of the North
- with fear and frenzy were filled, each one,
- who from the wall that wailing heard,
- God's foe sounding his grisly song,
- cry of the conquered, clamorous pain
- from captive of hell. Too closely held him
- he who of men in might was strongest
- in that same day of this our life.
- XII
- NOT in any wise would the earls'-defence {12a}
- suffer that slaughterous stranger to live,
- useless deeming his days and years
- to men on earth. Now many an earl
- of Beowulf brandished blade ancestral,
- fain the life of their lord to shield,
- their praised prince, if power were theirs;
- never they knew, -- as they neared the foe,
- hardy-hearted heroes of war,
- aiming their swords on every side
- the accursed to kill, -- no keenest blade,
- no farest of falchions fashioned on earth,
- could harm or hurt that hideous fiend!
- He was safe, by his spells, from sword of battle,
- from edge of iron. Yet his end and parting
- on that same day of this our life
- woful should be, and his wandering soul
- far off flit to the fiends' domain.
- Soon he found, who in former days,
- harmful in heart and hated of God,
- on many a man such murder wrought,
- that the frame of his body failed him now.
- For him the keen-souled kinsman of Hygelac
- held in hand; hateful alive
- was each to other. The outlaw dire
- took mortal hurt; a mighty wound
- showed on his shoulder, and sinews cracked,
- and the bone-frame burst. To Beowulf now
- the glory was given, and Grendel thence
- death-sick his den in the dark moor sought,
- noisome abode: he knew too well
- that here was the last of life, an end
- of his days on earth. -- To all the Danes
- by that bloody battle the boon had come.
- From ravage had rescued the roving stranger
- Hrothgar's hall; the hardy and wise one
- had purged it anew. His night-work pleased him,
- his deed and its honor. To Eastern Danes
- had the valiant Geat his vaunt made good,
- all their sorrow and ills assuaged,
- their bale of battle borne so long,
- and all the dole they erst endured
- pain a-plenty. -- 'Twas proof of this,
- when the hardy-in-fight a hand laid down,
- arm and shoulder, -- all, indeed,
- of Grendel's gripe, -- 'neath the gabled roof.
- XIII
- MANY at morning, as men have told me,
- warriors gathered the gift-hall round,
- folk-leaders faring from far and near,
- o'er wide-stretched ways, the wonder to view,
- trace of the traitor. Not troublous seemed
- the enemy's end to any man
- who saw by the gait of the graceless foe
- how the weary-hearted, away from thence,
- baffled in battle and banned, his steps
- death-marked dragged to the devils' mere.
- Bloody the billows were boiling there,
- turbid the tide of tumbling waves
- horribly seething, with sword-blood hot,
- by that doomed one dyed, who in den of the moor
- laid forlorn his life adown,
- his heathen soul, and hell received it.
- Home then rode the hoary clansmen
- from that merry journey, and many a youth,
- on horses white, the hardy warriors,
- back from the mere. Then Beowulf's glory
- eager they echoed, and all averred
- that from sea to sea, or south or north,
- there was no other in earth's domain,
- under vault of heaven, more valiant found,
- of warriors none more worthy to rule!
- (On their lord beloved they laid no slight,
- gracious Hrothgar: a good king he!)
- From time to time, the tried-in-battle
- their gray steeds set to gallop amain,
- and ran a race when the road seemed fair.
- From time to time, a thane of the king,
- who had made many vaunts, and was mindful of verses,
- stored with sagas and songs of old,
- bound word to word in well-knit rime,
- welded his lay; this warrior soon
- of Beowulf's quest right cleverly sang,
- and artfully added an excellent tale,
- in well-ranged words, of the warlike deeds
- he had heard in saga of Sigemund.
- Strange the story: he said it all, --
- the Waelsing's wanderings wide, his struggles,
- which never were told to tribes of men,
- the feuds and the frauds, save to Fitela only,
- when of these doings he deigned to speak,
- uncle to nephew; as ever the twain
- stood side by side in stress of war,
- and multitude of the monster kind
- they had felled with their swords. Of Sigemund grew,
- when he passed from life, no little praise;
- for the doughty-in-combat a dragon killed
- that herded the hoard: {13a} under hoary rock
- the atheling dared the deed alone
- fearful quest, nor was Fitela there.
- Yet so it befell, his falchion pierced
- that wondrous worm, -- on the wall it struck,
- best blade; the dragon died in its blood.
- Thus had the dread-one by daring achieved
- over the ring-hoard to rule at will,
- himself to pleasure; a sea-boat he loaded,
- and bore on its bosom the beaming gold,
- son of Waels; the worm was consumed.
- He had of all heroes the highest renown
- among races of men, this refuge-of-warriors,
- for deeds of daring that decked his name
- since the hand and heart of Heremod
- grew slack in battle. He, swiftly banished
- to mingle with monsters at mercy of foes,
- to death was betrayed; for torrents of sorrow
- had lamed him too long; a load of care
- to earls and athelings all he proved.
- Oft indeed, in earlier days,
- for the warrior's wayfaring wise men mourned,
- who had hoped of him help from harm and bale,
- and had thought their sovran's son would thrive,
- follow his father, his folk protect,
- the hoard and the stronghold, heroes' land,
- home of Scyldings. -- But here, thanes said,
- the kinsman of Hygelac kinder seemed
- to all: the other {13b} was urged to crime!
- And afresh to the race, {13c} the fallow roads
- by swift steeds measured! The morning sun
- was climbing higher. Clansmen hastened
- to the high-built hall, those hardy-minded,
- the wonder to witness. Warden of treasure,
- crowned with glory, the king himself,
- with stately band from the bride-bower strode;
- and with him the queen and her crowd of maidens
- measured the path to the mead-house fair.
- XIV
- HROTHGAR spake, -- to the hall he went,
- stood by the steps, the steep roof saw,
- garnished with gold, and Grendel's hand: --
- "For the sight I see to the Sovran Ruler
- be speedy thanks! A throng of sorrows
- I have borne from Grendel; but God still works
- wonder on wonder, the Warden-of-Glory.
- It was but now that I never more
- for woes that weighed on me waited help
- long as I lived, when, laved in blood,
- stood sword-gore-stained this stateliest house, --
- widespread woe for wise men all,
- who had no hope to hinder ever
- foes infernal and fiendish sprites
- from havoc in hall. This hero now,
- by the Wielder's might, a work has done
- that not all of us erst could ever do
- by wile and wisdom. Lo, well can she say
- whoso of women this warrior bore
- among sons of men, if still she liveth,
- that the God of the ages was good to her
- in the birth of her bairn. Now, Beowulf, thee,
- of heroes best, I shall heartily love
- as mine own, my son; preserve thou ever
- this kinship new: thou shalt never lack
- wealth of the world that I wield as mine!
- Full oft for less have I largess showered,
- my precious hoard, on a punier man,
- less stout in struggle. Thyself hast now
- fulfilled such deeds, that thy fame shall endure
- through all the ages. As ever he did,
- well may the Wielder reward thee still!"
- Beowulf spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --
- "This work of war most willingly
- we have fought, this fight, and fearlessly dared
- force of the foe. Fain, too, were I
- hadst thou but seen himself, what time
- the fiend in his trappings tottered to fall!
- Swiftly, I thought, in strongest gripe
- on his bed of death to bind him down,
- that he in the hent of this hand of mine
- should breathe his last: but he broke away.
- Him I might not -- the Maker willed not --
- hinder from flight, and firm enough hold
- the life-destroyer: too sturdy was he,
- the ruthless, in running! For rescue, however,
- he left behind him his hand in pledge,
- arm and shoulder; nor aught of help
- could the cursed one thus procure at all.
- None the longer liveth he, loathsome fiend,
- sunk in his sins, but sorrow holds him
- tightly grasped in gripe of anguish,
- in baleful bonds, where bide he must,
- evil outlaw, such awful doom
- as the Mighty Maker shall mete him out."
- More silent seemed the son of Ecglaf {14a}
- in boastful speech of his battle-deeds,
- since athelings all, through the earl's great prowess,
- beheld that hand, on the high roof gazing,
- foeman's fingers, -- the forepart of each
- of the sturdy nails to steel was likest, --
- heathen's "hand-spear," hostile warrior's
- claw uncanny. 'Twas clear, they said,
- that him no blade of the brave could touch,
- how keen soever, or cut away
- that battle-hand bloody from baneful foe.
- XV
- THERE was hurry and hest in Heorot now
- for hands to bedeck it, and dense was the throng
- of men and women the wine-hall to cleanse,
- the guest-room to garnish. Gold-gay shone the hangings
- that were wove on the wall, and wonders many
- to delight each mortal that looks upon them.
- Though braced within by iron bands,
- that building bright was broken sorely; {15a}
- rent were its hinges; the roof alone
- held safe and sound, when, seared with crime,
- the fiendish foe his flight essayed,
- of life despairing. -- No light thing that,
- the flight for safety, -- essay it who will!
- Forced of fate, he shall find his way
- to the refuge ready for race of man,
- for soul-possessors, and sons of earth;
- and there his body on bed of death
- shall rest after revel.
- Arrived was the hour
- when to hall proceeded Healfdene's son:
- the king himself would sit to banquet.
- Ne'er heard I of host in haughtier throng
- more graciously gathered round giver-of-rings!
- Bowed then to bench those bearers-of-glory,
- fain of the feasting. Featly received
- many a mead-cup the mighty-in-spirit,
- kinsmen who sat in the sumptuous hall,
- Hrothgar and Hrothulf. Heorot now
- was filled with friends; the folk of Scyldings
- ne'er yet had tried the traitor's deed.
- To Beowulf gave the bairn of Healfdene
- a gold-wove banner, guerdon of triumph,
- broidered battle-flag, breastplate and helmet;
- and a splendid sword was seen of many
- borne to the brave one. Beowulf took
- cup in hall: {15b} for such costly gifts
- he suffered no shame in that soldier throng.
- For I heard of few heroes, in heartier mood,
- with four such gifts, so fashioned with gold,
- on the ale-bench honoring others thus!
- O'er the roof of the helmet high, a ridge,
- wound with wires, kept ward o'er the head,
- lest the relict-of-files {15c} should fierce invade,
- sharp in the strife, when that shielded hero
- should go to grapple against his foes.
- Then the earls'-defence {15d} on the floor {15e} bade lead
- coursers eight, with carven head-gear,
- adown the hall: one horse was decked
- with a saddle all shining and set in jewels;
- 'twas the battle-seat of the best of kings,
- when to play of swords the son of Healfdene
- was fain to fare. Ne'er failed his valor
- in the crush of combat when corpses fell.
- To Beowulf over them both then gave
- the refuge-of-Ingwines right and power,
- o'er war-steeds and weapons: wished him joy of them.
- Manfully thus the mighty prince,
- hoard-guard for heroes, that hard fight repaid
- with steeds and treasures contemned by none
- who is willing to say the sooth aright.
- XVI
- AND the lord of earls, to each that came
- with Beowulf over the briny ways,
- an heirloom there at the ale-bench gave,
- precious gift; and the price {16a} bade pay
- in gold for him whom Grendel erst
- murdered, -- and fain of them more had killed,
- had not wisest God their Wyrd averted,
- and the man's {16b} brave mood. The Maker then
- ruled human kind, as here and now.
- Therefore is insight always best,
- and forethought of mind. How much awaits him
- of lief and of loath, who long time here,
- through days of warfare this world endures!
- Then song and music mingled sounds
- in the presence of Healfdene's head-of-armies {16c}
- and harping was heard with the hero-lay
- as Hrothgar's singer the hall-joy woke
- along the mead-seats, making his song
- of that sudden raid on the sons of Finn. {16d}
- Healfdene's hero, Hnaef the Scylding,
- was fated to fall in the Frisian slaughter. {16e}
- Hildeburh needed not hold in value
- her enemies' honor! {16f} Innocent both
- were the loved ones she lost at the linden-play,
- bairn and brother, they bowed to fate,
- stricken by spears; 'twas a sorrowful woman!
- None doubted why the daughter of Hoc
- bewailed her doom when dawning came,
- and under the sky she saw them lying,
- kinsmen murdered, where most she had kenned
- of the sweets of the world! By war were swept, too,
- Finn's own liegemen, and few were left;
- in the parleying-place {16g} he could ply no longer
- weapon, nor war could he wage on Hengest,
- and rescue his remnant by right of arms
- from the prince's thane. A pact he offered:
- another dwelling the Danes should have,
- hall and high-seat, and half the power
- should fall to them in Frisian land;
- and at the fee-gifts, Folcwald's son
- day by day the Danes should honor,
- the folk of Hengest favor with rings,
- even as truly, with treasure and jewels,
- with fretted gold, as his Frisian kin
- he meant to honor in ale-hall there.
- Pact of peace they plighted further
- on both sides firmly. Finn to Hengest
- with oath, upon honor, openly promised
- that woful remnant, with wise-men's aid,
- nobly to govern, so none of the guests
- by word or work should warp the treaty, {16h}
- or with malice of mind bemoan themselves
- as forced to follow their fee-giver's slayer,
- lordless men, as their lot ordained.
- Should Frisian, moreover, with foeman's taunt,
- that murderous hatred to mind recall,
- then edge of the sword must seal his doom.
- Oaths were given, and ancient gold
- heaped from hoard. -- The hardy Scylding,
- battle-thane best, {16i} on his balefire lay.
- All on the pyre were plain to see
- the gory sark, the gilded swine-crest,
- boar of hard iron, and athelings many
- slain by the sword: at the slaughter they fell.
- It was Hildeburh's hest, at Hnaef's own pyre
- the bairn of her body on brands to lay,
- his bones to burn, on the balefire placed,
- at his uncle's side. In sorrowful dirges
- bewept them the woman: great wailing ascended.
- Then wound up to welkin the wildest of death-fires,
- roared o'er the hillock: {16j} heads all were melted,
- gashes burst, and blood gushed out
- from bites {16k} of the body. Balefire devoured,
- greediest spirit, those spared not by war
- out of either folk: their flower was gone.
- XVII
- THEN hastened those heroes their home to see,
- friendless, to find the Frisian land,
- houses and high burg. Hengest still
- through the death-dyed winter dwelt with Finn,
- holding pact, yet of home he minded,
- though powerless his ring-decked prow to drive
- over the waters, now waves rolled fierce
- lashed by the winds, or winter locked them
- in icy fetters. Then fared another
- year to men's dwellings, as yet they do,
- the sunbright skies, that their season ever
- duly await. Far off winter was driven;
- fair lay earth's breast; and fain was the rover,
- the guest, to depart, though more gladly he pondered
- on wreaking his vengeance than roaming the deep,
- and how to hasten the hot encounter
- where sons of the Frisians were sure to be.
- So he escaped not the common doom,
- when Hun with "Lafing," the light-of-battle,
- best of blades, his bosom pierced:
- its edge was famed with the Frisian earls.
- On fierce-heart Finn there fell likewise,
- on himself at home, the horrid sword-death;
- for Guthlaf and Oslaf of grim attack
- had sorrowing told, from sea-ways landed,
- mourning their woes. {17a} Finn's wavering spirit
- bode not in breast. The burg was reddened
- with blood of foemen, and Finn was slain,
- king amid clansmen; the queen was taken.
- To their ship the Scylding warriors bore
- all the chattels the chieftain owned,
- whatever they found in Finn's domain
- of gems and jewels. The gentle wife
- o'er paths of the deep to the Danes they bore,
- led to her land.
- The lay was finished,
- the gleeman's song. Then glad rose the revel;
- bench-joy brightened. Bearers draw
- from their "wonder-vats" wine. Comes Wealhtheow forth,
- under gold-crown goes where the good pair sit,
- uncle and nephew, true each to the other one,
- kindred in amity. Unferth the spokesman
- at the Scylding lord's feet sat: men had faith in his spirit,
- his keenness of courage, though kinsmen had found him
- unsure at the sword-play. The Scylding queen spoke:
- "Quaff of this cup, my king and lord,
- breaker of rings, and blithe be thou,
- gold-friend of men; to the Geats here speak
- such words of mildness as man should use.
- Be glad with thy Geats; of those gifts be mindful,
- or near or far, which now thou hast.
- Men say to me, as son thou wishest
- yon hero to hold. Thy Heorot purged,
- jewel-hall brightest, enjoy while thou canst,
- with many a largess; and leave to thy kin
- folk and realm when forth thou goest
- to greet thy doom. For gracious I deem
- my Hrothulf, {17b} willing to hold and rule
- nobly our youths, if thou yield up first,
- prince of Scyldings, thy part in the world.
- I ween with good he will well requite
- offspring of ours, when all he minds
- that for him we did in his helpless days
- of gift and grace to gain him honor!"
- Then she turned to the seat where her sons wereplaced,
- Hrethric and Hrothmund, with heroes' bairns,
- young men together: the Geat, too, sat there,
- Beowulf brave, the brothers between.
- XVIII
- A CUP she gave him, with kindly greeting
- and winsome words. Of wounden gold,
- she offered, to honor him, arm-jewels twain,
- corselet and rings, and of collars the noblest
- that ever I knew the earth around.
- Ne'er heard I so mighty, 'neath heaven's dome,
- a hoard-gem of heroes, since Hama bore
- to his bright-built burg the Brisings' necklace,
- jewel and gem casket. -- Jealousy fled he,
- Eormenric's hate: chose help eternal.
- Hygelac Geat, grandson of Swerting,
- on the last of his raids this ring bore with him,
- under his banner the booty defending,
- the war-spoil warding; but Wyrd o'erwhelmed him
- what time, in his daring, dangers he sought,
- feud with Frisians. Fairest of gems
- he bore with him over the beaker-of-waves,
- sovran strong: under shield he died.
- Fell the corpse of the king into keeping of Franks,
- gear of the breast, and that gorgeous ring;
- weaker warriors won the spoil,
- after gripe of battle, from Geatland's lord,
- and held the death-field.
- Din rose in hall.
- Wealhtheow spake amid warriors, and said: --
- "This jewel enjoy in thy jocund youth,
- Beowulf lov'd, these battle-weeds wear,
- a royal treasure, and richly thrive!
- Preserve thy strength, and these striplings here
- counsel in kindness: requital be mine.
- Hast done such deeds, that for days to come
- thou art famed among folk both far and near,
- so wide as washeth the wave of Ocean
- his windy walls. Through the ways of life
- prosper, O prince! I pray for thee
- rich possessions. To son of mine
- be helpful in deed and uphold his joys!
- Here every earl to the other is true,
- mild of mood, to the master loyal!
- Thanes are friendly, the throng obedient,
- liegemen are revelling: list and obey!"
- Went then to her place. -- That was proudest of feasts;
- flowed wine for the warriors. Wyrd they knew not,
- destiny dire, and the doom to be seen
- by many an earl when eve should come,
- and Hrothgar homeward hasten away,
- royal, to rest. The room was guarded
- by an army of earls, as erst was done.
- They bared the bench-boards; abroad they spread
- beds and bolsters. -- One beer-carouser
- in danger of doom lay down in the hall. --
- At their heads they set their shields of war,
- bucklers bright; on the bench were there
- over each atheling, easy to see,
- the high battle-helmet, the haughty spear,
- the corselet of rings. 'Twas their custom so
- ever to be for battle prepared,
- at home, or harrying, which it were,
- even as oft as evil threatened
- their sovran king. -- They were clansmen good.
- XIX
- THEN sank they to sleep. With sorrow one bought
- his rest of the evening, -- as ofttime had happened
- when Grendel guarded that golden hall,
- evil wrought, till his end drew nigh,
- slaughter for sins. 'Twas seen and told
- how an avenger survived the fiend,
- as was learned afar. The livelong time
- after that grim fight, Grendel's mother,
- monster of women, mourned her woe.
- She was doomed to dwell in the dreary waters,
- cold sea-courses, since Cain cut down
- with edge of the sword his only brother,
- his father's offspring: outlawed he fled,
- marked with murder, from men's delights
- warded the wilds. -- There woke from him
- such fate-sent ghosts as Grendel, who,
- war-wolf horrid, at Heorot found
- a warrior watching and waiting the fray,
- with whom the grisly one grappled amain.
- But the man remembered his mighty power,
- the glorious gift that God had sent him,
- in his Maker's mercy put his trust
- for comfort and help: so he conquered the foe,
- felled the fiend, who fled abject,
- reft of joy, to the realms of death,
- mankind's foe. And his mother now,
- gloomy and grim, would go that quest
- of sorrow, the death of her son to avenge.
- To Heorot came she, where helmeted Danes
- slept in the hall. Too soon came back
- old ills of the earls, when in she burst,
- the mother of Grendel. Less grim, though, that terror,
- e'en as terror of woman in war is less,
- might of maid, than of men in arms
- when, hammer-forged, the falchion hard,
- sword gore-stained, through swine of the helm,
- crested, with keen blade carves amain.
- Then was in hall the hard-edge drawn,
- the swords on the settles, {19a} and shields a-many
- firm held in hand: nor helmet minded
- nor harness of mail, whom that horror seized.
- Haste was hers; she would hie afar
- and save her life when the liegemen saw her.
- Yet a single atheling up she seized
- fast and firm, as she fled to the moor.
- He was for Hrothgar of heroes the dearest,
- of trusty vassals betwixt the seas,
- whom she killed on his couch, a clansman famous,
- in battle brave. -- Nor was Beowulf there;
- another house had been held apart,
- after giving of gold, for the Geat renowned. --
- Uproar filled Heorot; the hand all had viewed,
- blood-flecked, she bore with her; bale was returned,
- dole in the dwellings: 'twas dire exchange
- where Dane and Geat were doomed to give
- the lives of loved ones. Long-tried king,
- the hoary hero, at heart was sad
- when he knew his noble no more lived,
- and dead indeed was his dearest thane.
- To his bower was Beowulf brought in haste,
- dauntless victor. As daylight broke,
- along with his earls the atheling lord,
- with his clansmen, came where the king abode
- waiting to see if the Wielder-of-All
- would turn this tale of trouble and woe.
- Strode o'er floor the famed-in-strife,
- with his hand-companions, -- the hall resounded, --
- wishing to greet the wise old king,
- Ingwines' lord; he asked if the night
- had passed in peace to the prince's mind.
- XX
- HROTHGAR spake, helmet-of-Scyldings: --
- "Ask not of pleasure! Pain is renewed
- to Danish folk. Dead is Aeschere,
- of Yrmenlaf the elder brother,
- my sage adviser and stay in council,
- shoulder-comrade in stress of fight
- when warriors clashed and we warded our heads,
- hewed the helm-boars; hero famed
- should be every earl as Aeschere was!
- But here in Heorot a hand hath slain him
- of wandering death-sprite. I wot not whither, {20a}
- proud of the prey, her path she took,
- fain of her fill. The feud she avenged
- that yesternight, unyieldingly,
- Grendel in grimmest grasp thou killedst, --
- seeing how long these liegemen mine
- he ruined and ravaged. Reft of life,
- in arms he fell. Now another comes,
- keen and cruel, her kin to avenge,
- faring far in feud of blood:
- so that many a thane shall think, who e'er
- sorrows in soul for that sharer of rings,
- this is hardest of heart-bales. The hand lies low
- that once was willing each wish to please.
- Land-dwellers here {20b} and liegemen mine,
- who house by those parts, I have heard relate
- that such a pair they have sometimes seen,
- march-stalkers mighty the moorland haunting,
- wandering spirits: one of them seemed,
- so far as my folk could fairly judge,
- of womankind; and one, accursed,
- in man's guise trod the misery-track
- of exile, though huger than human bulk.
- Grendel in days long gone they named him,
- folk of the land; his father they knew not,
- nor any brood that was born to him
- of treacherous spirits. Untrod is their home;
- by wolf-cliffs haunt they and windy headlands,
- fenways fearful, where flows the stream
- from mountains gliding to gloom of the rocks,
- underground flood. Not far is it hence
- in measure of miles that the mere expands,
- and o'er it the frost-bound forest hanging,
- sturdily rooted, shadows the wave.
- By night is a wonder weird to see,
- fire on the waters. So wise lived none
- of the sons of men, to search those depths!
- Nay, though the heath-rover, harried by dogs,
- the horn-proud hart, this holt should seek,
- long distance driven, his dear life first
- on the brink he yields ere he brave the plunge
- to hide his head: 'tis no happy place!
- Thence the welter of waters washes up
- wan to welkin when winds bestir
- evil storms, and air grows dusk,
- and the heavens weep. Now is help once more
- with thee alone! The land thou knowst not,
- place of fear, where thou findest out
- that sin-flecked being. Seek if thou dare!
- I will reward thee, for waging this fight,
- with ancient treasure, as erst I did,
- with winding gold, if thou winnest back."
- XXI
- BEOWULF spake, bairn of Ecgtheow:
- "Sorrow not, sage! It beseems us better
- friends to avenge than fruitlessly mourn them.
- Each of us all must his end abide
- in the ways of the world; so win who may
- glory ere death! When his days are told,
- that is the warrior's worthiest doom.
- Rise, O realm-warder! Ride we anon,
- and mark the trail of the mother of Grendel.
- No harbor shall hide her -- heed my promise! --
- enfolding of field or forested mountain
- or floor of the flood, let her flee where she will!
- But thou this day endure in patience,
- as I ween thou wilt, thy woes each one."
- Leaped up the graybeard: God he thanked,
- mighty Lord, for the man's brave words.
- For Hrothgar soon a horse was saddled
- wave-maned steed. The sovran wise
- stately rode on; his shield-armed men
- followed in force. The footprints led
- along the woodland, widely seen,
- a path o'er the plain, where she passed, and trod
- the murky moor; of men-at-arms
- she bore the bravest and best one, dead,
- him who with Hrothgar the homestead ruled.
- On then went the atheling-born
- o'er stone-cliffs steep and strait defiles,
- narrow passes and unknown ways,
- headlands sheer, and the haunts of the Nicors.
- Foremost he {21a} fared, a few at his side
- of the wiser men, the ways to scan,
- till he found in a flash the forested hill
- hanging over the hoary rock,
- a woful wood: the waves below
- were dyed in blood. The Danish men
- had sorrow of soul, and for Scyldings all,
- for many a hero, 'twas hard to bear,
- ill for earls, when Aeschere's head
- they found by the flood on the foreland there.
- Waves were welling, the warriors saw,
- hot with blood; but the horn sang oft
- battle-song bold. The band sat down,
- and watched on the water worm-like things,
- sea-dragons strange that sounded the deep,
- and nicors that lay on the ledge of the ness --
- such as oft essay at hour of morn
- on the road-of-sails their ruthless quest, --
- and sea-snakes and monsters. These started away,
- swollen and savage that song to hear,
- that war-horn's blast. The warden of Geats,
- with bolt from bow, then balked of life,
- of wave-work, one monster, amid its heart
- went the keen war-shaft; in water it seemed
- less doughty in swimming whom death had seized.
- Swift on the billows, with boar-spears well
- hooked and barbed, it was hard beset,
- done to death and dragged on the headland,
- wave-roamer wondrous. Warriors viewed
- the grisly guest.
- Then girt him Beowulf
- in martial mail, nor mourned for his life.
- His breastplate broad and bright of hues,
- woven by hand, should the waters try;
- well could it ward the warrior's body
- that battle should break on his breast in vain
- nor harm his heart by the hand of a foe.
- And the helmet white that his head protected
- was destined to dare the deeps of the flood,
- through wave-whirl win: 'twas wound with chains,
- decked with gold, as in days of yore
- the weapon-smith worked it wondrously,
- with swine-forms set it, that swords nowise,
- brandished in battle, could bite that helm.
- Nor was that the meanest of mighty helps
- which Hrothgar's orator offered at need:
- "Hrunting" they named the hilted sword,
- of old-time heirlooms easily first;
- iron was its edge, all etched with poison,
- with battle-blood hardened, nor blenched it at fight
- in hero's hand who held it ever,
- on paths of peril prepared to go
- to folkstead {21b} of foes. Not first time this
- it was destined to do a daring task.
- For he bore not in mind, the bairn of Ecglaf
- sturdy and strong, that speech he had made,
- drunk with wine, now this weapon he lent
- to a stouter swordsman. Himself, though, durst not
- under welter of waters wager his life
- as loyal liegeman. So lost he his glory,
- honor of earls. With the other not so,
- who girded him now for the grim encounter.
- XXII
- BEOWULF spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --
- "Have mind, thou honored offspring of Healfdene
- gold-friend of men, now I go on this quest,
- sovran wise, what once was said:
- if in thy cause it came that I
- should lose my life, thou wouldst loyal bide
- to me, though fallen, in father's place!
- Be guardian, thou, to this group of my thanes,
- my warrior-friends, if War should seize me;
- and the goodly gifts thou gavest me,
- Hrothgar beloved, to Hygelac send!
- Geatland's king may ken by the gold,
- Hrethel's son see, when he stares at the treasure,
- that I got me a friend for goodness famed,
- and joyed while I could in my jewel-bestower.
- And let Unferth wield this wondrous sword,
- earl far-honored, this heirloom precious,
- hard of edge: with Hrunting I
- seek doom of glory, or Death shall take me."
- After these words the Weder-Geat lord
- boldly hastened, biding never
- answer at all: the ocean floods
- closed o'er the hero. Long while of the day
- fled ere he felt the floor of the sea.
- Soon found the fiend who the flood-domain
- sword-hungry held these hundred winters,
- greedy and grim, that some guest from above,
- some man, was raiding her monster-realm.
- She grasped out for him with grisly claws,
- and the warrior seized; yet scathed she not
- his body hale; the breastplate hindered,
- as she strove to shatter the sark of war,
- the linked harness, with loathsome hand.
- Then bore this brine-wolf, when bottom she touched,
- the lord of rings to the lair she haunted
- whiles vainly he strove, though his valor held,
- weapon to wield against wondrous monsters
- that sore beset him; sea-beasts many
- tried with fierce tusks to tear his mail,
- and swarmed on the stranger. But soon he marked
- he was now in some hall, he knew not which,
- where water never could work him harm,
- nor through the roof could reach him ever
- fangs of the flood. Firelight he saw,
- beams of a blaze that brightly shone.
- Then the warrior was ware of that wolf-of-the-deep,
- mere-wife monstrous. For mighty stroke
- he swung his blade, and the blow withheld not.
- Then sang on her head that seemly blade
- its war-song wild. But the warrior found
- the light-of-battle {22a} was loath to bite,
- to harm the heart: its hard edge failed
- the noble at need, yet had known of old
- strife hand to hand, and had helmets cloven,
- doomed men's fighting-gear. First time, this,
- for the gleaming blade that its glory fell.
- Firm still stood, nor failed in valor,
- heedful of high deeds, Hygelac's kinsman;
- flung away fretted sword, featly jewelled,
- the angry earl; on earth it lay
- steel-edged and stiff. His strength he trusted,
- hand-gripe of might. So man shall do
- whenever in war he weens to earn him
- lasting fame, nor fears for his life!
- Seized then by shoulder, shrank not from combat,
- the Geatish war-prince Grendel's mother.
- Flung then the fierce one, filled with wrath,
- his deadly foe, that she fell to ground.
- Swift on her part she paid him back
- with grisly grasp, and grappled with him.
- Spent with struggle, stumbled the warrior,
- fiercest of fighting-men, fell adown.
- On the hall-guest she hurled herself, hent her short sword,
- broad and brown-edged, {22b} the bairn to avenge,
- the sole-born son. -- On his shoulder lay
- braided breast-mail, barring death,
- withstanding entrance of edge or blade.
- Life would have ended for Ecgtheow's son,
- under wide earth for that earl of Geats,
- had his armor of war not aided him,
- battle-net hard, and holy God
- wielded the victory, wisest Maker.
- The Lord of Heaven allowed his cause;
- and easily rose the earl erect.
- XXIII
- 'MID the battle-gear saw he a blade triumphant,
- old-sword of Eotens, with edge of proof,
- warriors' heirloom, weapon unmatched,
- -- save only 'twas more than other men
- to bandy-of-battle could bear at all --
- as the giants had wrought it, ready and keen.
- Seized then its chain-hilt the Scyldings' chieftain,
- bold and battle-grim, brandished the sword,
- reckless of life, and so wrathfully smote
- that it gripped her neck and grasped her hard,
- her bone-rings breaking: the blade pierced through
- that fated-one's flesh: to floor she sank.
- Bloody the blade: he was blithe of his deed.
- Then blazed forth light. 'Twas bright within
- as when from the sky there shines unclouded
- heaven's candle. The hall he scanned.
- By the wall then went he; his weapon raised
- high by its hilts the Hygelac-thane,
- angry and eager. That edge was not useless
- to the warrior now. He wished with speed
- Grendel to guerdon for grim raids many,
- for the war he waged on Western-Danes
- oftener far than an only time,
- when of Hrothgar's hearth-companions
- he slew in slumber, in sleep devoured,
- fifteen men of the folk of Danes,
- and as many others outward bore,
- his horrible prey. Well paid for that
- the wrathful prince! For now prone he saw
- Grendel stretched there, spent with war,
- spoiled of life, so scathed had left him
- Heorot's battle. The body sprang far
- when after death it endured the blow,
- sword-stroke savage, that severed its head.
- Soon, {23a} then, saw the sage companions
- who waited with Hrothgar, watching the flood,
- that the tossing waters turbid grew,
- blood-stained the mere. Old men together,
- hoary-haired, of the hero spake;
- the warrior would not, they weened, again,
- proud of conquest, come to seek
- their mighty master. To many it seemed
- the wolf-of-the-waves had won his life.
- The ninth hour came. The noble Scyldings
- left the headland; homeward went
- the gold-friend of men. {23b} But the guests sat on,
- stared at the surges, sick in heart,
- and wished, yet weened not, their winsome lord
- again to see.
- Now that sword began,
- from blood of the fight, in battle-droppings, {23c}
- war-blade, to wane: 'twas a wondrous thing
- that all of it melted as ice is wont
- when frosty fetters the Father loosens,
- unwinds the wave-bonds, wielding all
- seasons and times: the true God he!
- Nor took from that dwelling the duke of the Geats
- save only the head and that hilt withal
- blazoned with jewels: the blade had melted,
- burned was the bright sword, her blood was so hot,
- so poisoned the hell-sprite who perished within there.
- Soon he was swimming who safe saw in combat
- downfall of demons; up-dove through the flood.
- The clashing waters were cleansed now,
- waste of waves, where the wandering fiend
- her life-days left and this lapsing world.
- Swam then to strand the sailors'-refuge,
- sturdy-in-spirit, of sea-booty glad,
- of burden brave he bore with him.
- Went then to greet him, and God they thanked,
- the thane-band choice of their chieftain blithe,
- that safe and sound they could see him again.
- Soon from the hardy one helmet and armor
- deftly they doffed: now drowsed the mere,
- water 'neath welkin, with war-blood stained.
- Forth they fared by the footpaths thence,
- merry at heart the highways measured,
- well-known roads. Courageous men
- carried the head from the cliff by the sea,
- an arduous task for all the band,
- the firm in fight, since four were needed
- on the shaft-of-slaughter {23d} strenuously
- to bear to the gold-hall Grendel's head.
- So presently to the palace there
- foemen fearless, fourteen Geats,
- marching came. Their master-of-clan
- mighty amid them the meadow-ways trod.
- Strode then within the sovran thane
- fearless in fight, of fame renowned,
- hardy hero, Hrothgar to greet.
- And next by the hair into hall was borne
- Grendel's head, where the henchmen were drinking,
- an awe to clan and queen alike,
- a monster of marvel: the men looked on.
- XXIV
- BEOWULF spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --
- "Lo, now, this sea-booty, son of Healfdene,
- Lord of Scyldings, we've lustily brought thee,
- sign of glory; thou seest it here.
- Not lightly did I with my life escape!
- In war under water this work I essayed
- with endless effort; and even so
- my strength had been lost had the Lord not shielded me.
- Not a whit could I with Hrunting do
- in work of war, though the weapon is good;
- yet a sword the Sovran of Men vouchsafed me
- to spy on the wall there, in splendor hanging,
- old, gigantic, -- how oft He guides
- the friendless wight! -- and I fought with that brand,
- felling in fight, since fate was with me,
- the house's wardens. That war-sword then
- all burned, bright blade, when the blood gushed o'er it,
- battle-sweat hot; but the hilt I brought back
- from my foes. So avenged I their fiendish deeds
- death-fall of Danes, as was due and right.
- And this is my hest, that in Heorot now
- safe thou canst sleep with thy soldier band,
- and every thane of all thy folk
- both old and young; no evil fear,
- Scyldings' lord, from that side again,
- aught ill for thy earls, as erst thou must!"
- Then the golden hilt, for that gray-haired leader,
- hoary hero, in hand was laid,
- giant-wrought, old. So owned and enjoyed it
- after downfall of devils, the Danish lord,
- wonder-smiths' work, since the world was rid
- of that grim-souled fiend, the foe of God,
- murder-marked, and his mother as well.
- Now it passed into power of the people's king,
- best of all that the oceans bound
- who have scattered their gold o'er Scandia's isle.
- Hrothgar spake -- the hilt he viewed,
- heirloom old, where was etched the rise
- of that far-off fight when the floods o'erwhelmed,
- raging waves, the race of giants
- (fearful their fate!), a folk estranged
- from God Eternal: whence guerdon due
- in that waste of waters the Wielder paid them.
- So on the guard of shining gold
- in runic staves it was rightly said
- for whom the serpent-traced sword was wrought,
- best of blades, in bygone days,
- and the hilt well wound. -- The wise-one spake,
- son of Healfdene; silent were all: --
- "Lo, so may he say who sooth and right
- follows 'mid folk, of far times mindful,
- a land-warden old, {24a} that this earl belongs
- to the better breed! So, borne aloft,
- thy fame must fly, O friend my Beowulf,
- far and wide o'er folksteads many. Firmly thou
- shalt all maintain,
- mighty strength with mood of wisdom. Love of
- mine will I assure thee,
- as, awhile ago, I promised; thou shalt prove a stay
- in future,
- in far-off years, to folk of thine,
- to the heroes a help. Was not Heremod thus
- to offspring of Ecgwela, Honor-Scyldings,
- nor grew for their grace, but for grisly slaughter,
- for doom of death to the Danishmen.
- He slew, wrath-swollen, his shoulder-comrades,
- companions at board! So he passed alone,
- chieftain haughty, from human cheer.
- Though him the Maker with might endowed,
- delights of power, and uplifted high
- above all men, yet blood-fierce his mind,
- his breast-hoard, grew, no bracelets gave he
- to Danes as was due; he endured all joyless
- strain of struggle and stress of woe,
- long feud with his folk. Here find thy lesson!
- Of virtue advise thee! This verse I have said for thee,
- wise from lapsed winters. Wondrous seems
- how to sons of men Almighty God
- in the strength of His spirit sendeth wisdom,
- estate, high station: He swayeth all things.
- Whiles He letteth right lustily fare
- the heart of the hero of high-born race, --
- in seat ancestral assigns him bliss,
- his folk's sure fortress in fee to hold,
- puts in his power great parts of the earth,
- empire so ample, that end of it
- this wanter-of-wisdom weeneth none.
- So he waxes in wealth, nowise can harm him
- illness or age; no evil cares
- shadow his spirit; no sword-hate threatens
- from ever an enemy: all the world
- wends at his will, no worse he knoweth,
- till all within him obstinate pride
- waxes and wakes while the warden slumbers,
- the spirit's sentry; sleep is too fast
- which masters his might, and the murderer nears,
- stealthily shooting the shafts from his bow!
- XXV
- "UNDER harness his heart then is hit indeed
- by sharpest shafts; and no shelter avails
- from foul behest of the hellish fiend. {25a}
- Him seems too little what long he possessed.
- Greedy and grim, no golden rings
- he gives for his pride; the promised future
- forgets he and spurns, with all God has sent him,
- Wonder-Wielder, of wealth and fame.
- Yet in the end it ever comes
- that the frame of the body fragile yields,
- fated falls; and there follows another
- who joyously the jewels divides,
- the royal riches, nor recks of his forebear.
- Ban, then, such baleful thoughts, Beowulf dearest,
- best of men, and the better part choose,
- profit eternal; and temper thy pride,
- warrior famous! The flower of thy might
- lasts now a while: but erelong it shall be
- that sickness or sword thy strength shall minish,
- or fang of fire, or flooding billow,
- or bite of blade, or brandished spear,
- or odious age; or the eyes' clear beam
- wax dull and darken: Death even thee
- in haste shall o'erwhelm, thou hero of war!
- So the Ring-Danes these half-years a hundred I ruled,
- wielded 'neath welkin, and warded them bravely
- from mighty-ones many o'er middle-earth,
- from spear and sword, till it seemed for me
- no foe could be found under fold of the sky.
- Lo, sudden the shift! To me seated secure
- came grief for joy when Grendel began
- to harry my home, the hellish foe;
- for those ruthless raids, unresting I suffered
- heart-sorrow heavy. Heaven be thanked,
- Lord Eternal, for life extended
- that I on this head all hewn and bloody,
- after long evil, with eyes may gaze!
- -- Go to the bench now! Be glad at banquet,
- warrior worthy! A wealth of treasure
- at dawn of day, be dealt between us!"
- Glad was the Geats' lord, going betimes
- to seek his seat, as the Sage commanded.
- Afresh, as before, for the famed-in-battle,
- for the band of the hall, was a banquet dight
- nobly anew. The Night-Helm darkened
- dusk o'er the drinkers.
- The doughty ones rose:
- for the hoary-headed would hasten to rest,
- aged Scylding; and eager the Geat,
- shield-fighter sturdy, for sleeping yearned.
- Him wander-weary, warrior-guest
- from far, a hall-thane heralded forth,
- who by custom courtly cared for all
- needs of a thane as in those old days
- warrior-wanderers wont to have.
- So slumbered the stout-heart. Stately the hall
- rose gabled and gilt where the guest slept on
- till a raven black the rapture-of-heaven {25b}
- blithe-heart boded. Bright came flying
- shine after shadow. The swordsmen hastened,
- athelings all were eager homeward
- forth to fare; and far from thence
- the great-hearted guest would guide his keel.
- Bade then the hardy-one Hrunting be brought
- to the son of Ecglaf, the sword bade him take,
- excellent iron, and uttered his thanks for it,
- quoth that he counted it keen in battle,
- "war-friend" winsome: with words he slandered not
- edge of the blade: 'twas a big-hearted man!
- Now eager for parting and armed at point
- warriors waited, while went to his host
- that Darling of Danes. The doughty atheling
- to high-seat hastened and Hrothgar greeted.
- XXVI
- BEOWULF spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --
- "Lo, we seafarers say our will,
- far-come men, that we fain would seek
- Hygelac now. We here have found
- hosts to our heart: thou hast harbored us well.
- If ever on earth I am able to win me
- more of thy love, O lord of men,
- aught anew, than I now have done,
- for work of war I am willing still!
- If it come to me ever across the seas
- that neighbor foemen annoy and fright thee, --
- as they that hate thee erewhile have used, --
- thousands then of thanes I shall bring,
- heroes to help thee. Of Hygelac I know,
- ward of his folk, that, though few his years,
- the lord of the Geats will give me aid
- by word and by work, that well I may serve thee,
- wielding the war-wood to win thy triumph
- and lending thee might when thou lackest men.
- If thy Hrethric should come to court of Geats,
- a sovran's son, he will surely there
- find his friends. A far-off land
- each man should visit who vaunts him brave."
- Him then answering, Hrothgar spake: --
- "These words of thine the wisest God
- sent to thy soul! No sager counsel
- from so young in years e'er yet have I heard.
- Thou art strong of main and in mind art wary,
- art wise in words! I ween indeed
- if ever it hap that Hrethel's heir
- by spear be seized, by sword-grim battle,
- by illness or iron, thine elder and lord,
- people's leader, -- and life be thine, --
- no seemlier man will the Sea-Geats find
- at all to choose for their chief and king,
- for hoard-guard of heroes, if hold thou wilt
- thy kinsman's kingdom! Thy keen mind pleases me
- the longer the better, Beowulf loved!
- Thou hast brought it about that both our peoples,
- sons of the Geat and Spear-Dane folk,
- shall have mutual peace, and from murderous strife,
- such as once they waged, from war refrain.
- Long as I rule this realm so wide,
- let our hoards be common, let heroes with gold
- each other greet o'er the gannet's-bath,
- and the ringed-prow bear o'er rolling waves
- tokens of love. I trow my landfolk
- towards friend and foe are firmly joined,
- and honor they keep in the olden way."
- To him in the hall, then, Healfdene's son
- gave treasures twelve, and the trust-of-earls
- bade him fare with the gifts to his folk beloved,
- hale to his home, and in haste return.
- Then kissed the king of kin renowned,
- Scyldings' chieftain, that choicest thane,
- and fell on his neck. Fast flowed the tears
- of the hoary-headed. Heavy with winters,
- he had chances twain, but he clung to this, {26a} --
- that each should look on the other again,
- and hear him in hall. Was this hero so dear to him.
- his breast's wild billows he banned in vain;
- safe in his soul a secret longing,
- locked in his mind, for that loved man
- burned in his blood. Then Beowulf strode,
- glad of his gold-gifts, the grass-plot o'er,
- warrior blithe. The wave-roamer bode
- riding at anchor, its owner awaiting.
- As they hastened onward, Hrothgar's gift
- they lauded at length. -- 'Twas a lord unpeered,
- every way blameless, till age had broken
- -- it spareth no mortal -- his splendid might.
- XXVII
- CAME now to ocean the ever-courageous
- hardy henchmen, their harness bearing,
- woven war-sarks. The warden marked,
- trusty as ever, the earl's return.
- From the height of the hill no hostile words
- reached the guests as he rode to greet them;
- but "Welcome!" he called to that Weder clan
- as the sheen-mailed spoilers to ship marched on.
- Then on the strand, with steeds and treasure
- and armor their roomy and ring-dight ship
- was heavily laden: high its mast
- rose over Hrothgar's hoarded gems.
- A sword to the boat-guard Beowulf gave,
- mounted with gold; on the mead-bench since
- he was better esteemed, that blade possessing,
- heirloom old. -- Their ocean-keel boarding,
- they drove through the deep, and Daneland left.
- A sea-cloth was set, a sail with ropes,
- firm to the mast; the flood-timbers moaned; {27a}
- nor did wind over billows that wave-swimmer blow
- across from her course. The craft sped on,
- foam-necked it floated forth o'er the waves,
- keel firm-bound over briny currents,
- till they got them sight of the Geatish cliffs,
- home-known headlands. High the boat,
- stirred by winds, on the strand updrove.
- Helpful at haven the harbor-guard stood,
- who long already for loved companions
- by the water had waited and watched afar.
- He bound to the beach the broad-bosomed ship
- with anchor-bands, lest ocean-billows
- that trusty timber should tear away.
- Then Beowulf bade them bear the treasure,
- gold and jewels; no journey far
- was it thence to go to the giver of rings,
- Hygelac Hrethling: at home he dwelt
- by the sea-wall close, himself and clan.
- Haughty that house, a hero the king,
- high the hall, and Hygd {27b} right young,
- wise and wary, though winters few
- in those fortress walls she had found a home,
- Haereth's daughter. Nor humble her ways,
- nor grudged she gifts to the Geatish men,
- of precious treasure. Not Thryth's pride showed she,
- folk-queen famed, or that fell deceit.
- Was none so daring that durst make bold
- (save her lord alone) of the liegemen dear
- that lady full in the face to look,
- but forged fetters he found his lot,
- bonds of death! And brief the respite;
- soon as they seized him, his sword-doom was spoken,
- and the burnished blade a baleful murder
- proclaimed and closed. No queenly way
- for woman to practise, though peerless she,
- that the weaver-of-peace {27c} from warrior dear
- by wrath and lying his life should reave!
- But Hemming's kinsman hindered this. --
- For over their ale men also told
- that of these folk-horrors fewer she wrought,
- onslaughts of evil, after she went,
- gold-decked bride, to the brave young prince,
- atheling haughty, and Offa's hall
- o'er the fallow flood at her father's bidding
- safely sought, where since she prospered,
- royal, throned, rich in goods,
- fain of the fair life fate had sent her,
- and leal in love to the lord of warriors.
- He, of all heroes I heard of ever
- from sea to sea, of the sons of earth,
- most excellent seemed. Hence Offa was praised
- for his fighting and feeing by far-off men,
- the spear-bold warrior; wisely he ruled
- over his empire. Eomer woke to him,
- help of heroes, Hemming's kinsman,
- Grandson of Garmund, grim in war.
- XXVIII
- HASTENED the hardy one, henchmen with him,
- sandy strand of the sea to tread
- and widespread ways. The world's great candle,
- sun shone from south. They strode along
- with sturdy steps to the spot they knew
- where the battle-king young, his burg within,
- slayer of Ongentheow, shared the rings,
- shelter-of-heroes. To Hygelac
- Beowulf's coming was quickly told, --
- that there in the court the clansmen's refuge,
- the shield-companion sound and alive,
- hale from the hero-play homeward strode.
- With haste in the hall, by highest order,
- room for the rovers was readily made.
- By his sovran he sat, come safe from battle,
- kinsman by kinsman. His kindly lord
- he first had greeted in gracious form,
- with manly words. The mead dispensing,
- came through the high hall Haereth's daughter,
- winsome to warriors, wine-cup bore
- to the hands of the heroes. Hygelac then
- his comrade fairly with question plied
- in the lofty hall, sore longing to know
- what manner of sojourn the Sea-Geats made.
- "What came of thy quest, my kinsman Beowulf,
- when thy yearnings suddenly swept thee yonder
- battle to seek o'er the briny sea,
- combat in Heorot? Hrothgar couldst thou
- aid at all, the honored chief,
- in his wide-known woes? With waves of care
- my sad heart seethed; I sore mistrusted
- my loved one's venture: long I begged thee
- by no means to seek that slaughtering monster,
- but suffer the South-Danes to settle their feud
- themselves with Grendel. Now God be thanked
- that safe and sound I can see thee now!"
- Beowulf spake, the bairn of Ecgtheow: --
- "'Tis known and unhidden, Hygelac Lord,
- to many men, that meeting of ours,
- struggle grim between Grendel and me,
- which we fought on the field where full too many
- sorrows he wrought for the Scylding-Victors,
- evils unending. These all I avenged.
- No boast can be from breed of Grendel,
- any on earth, for that uproar at dawn,
- from the longest-lived of the loathsome race
- in fleshly fold! -- But first I went
- Hrothgar to greet in the hall of gifts,
- where Healfdene's kinsman high-renowned,
- soon as my purpose was plain to him,
- assigned me a seat by his son and heir.
- The liegemen were lusty; my life-days never
- such merry men over mead in hall
- have I heard under heaven! The high-born queen,
- people's peace-bringer, passed through the hall,
- cheered the young clansmen, clasps of gold,
- ere she sought her seat, to sundry gave.
- Oft to the heroes Hrothgar's daughter,
- to earls in turn, the ale-cup tendered, --
- she whom I heard these hall-companions
- Freawaru name, when fretted gold
- she proffered the warriors. Promised is she,
- gold-decked maid, to the glad son of Froda.
- Sage this seems to the Scylding's-friend,
- kingdom's-keeper: he counts it wise
- the woman to wed so and ward off feud,
- store of slaughter. But seldom ever
- when men are slain, does the murder-spear sink
- but briefest while, though the bride be fair! {28a}
- "Nor haply will like it the Heathobard lord,
- and as little each of his liegemen all,
- when a thane of the Danes, in that doughty throng,
- goes with the lady along their hall,
- and on him the old-time heirlooms glisten
- hard and ring-decked, Heathobard's treasure,
- weapons that once they wielded fair
- until they lost at the linden-play {28b}
- liegeman leal and their lives as well.
- Then, over the ale, on this heirloom gazing,
- some ash-wielder old who has all in mind
- that spear-death of men, {28c} -- he is stern of mood,
- heavy at heart, -- in the hero young
- tests the temper and tries the soul
- and war-hate wakens, with words like these: --
- Canst thou not, comrade, ken that sword
- which to the fray thy father carried
- in his final feud, 'neath the fighting-mask,
- dearest of blades, when the Danish slew him
- and wielded the war-place on Withergild's fall,
- after havoc of heroes, those hardy Scyldings?
- Now, the son of a certain slaughtering Dane,
- proud of his treasure, paces this hall,
- joys in the killing, and carries the jewel {28d}
- that rightfully ought to be owned by thee!_
- Thus he urges and eggs him all the time
- with keenest words, till occasion offers
- that Freawaru's thane, for his father's deed,
- after bite of brand in his blood must slumber,
- losing his life; but that liegeman flies
- living away, for the land he kens.
- And thus be broken on both their sides
- oaths of the earls, when Ingeld's breast
- wells with war-hate, and wife-love now
- after the care-billows cooler grows.
- "So {28e} I hold not high the Heathobards' faith
- due to the Danes, or their during love
- and pact of peace. -- But I pass from that,
- turning to Grendel, O giver-of-treasure,
- and saying in full how the fight resulted,
- hand-fray of heroes. When heaven's jewel
- had fled o'er far fields, that fierce sprite came,
- night-foe savage, to seek us out
- where safe and sound we sentried the hall.
- To Hondscio then was that harassing deadly,
- his fall there was fated. He first was slain,
- girded warrior. Grendel on him
- turned murderous mouth, on our mighty kinsman,
- and all of the brave man's body devoured.
- Yet none the earlier, empty-handed,
- would the bloody-toothed murderer, mindful of bale,
- outward go from the gold-decked hall:
- but me he attacked in his terror of might,
- with greedy hand grasped me. A glove hung by him {28f}
- wide and wondrous, wound with bands;
- and in artful wise it all was wrought,
- by devilish craft, of dragon-skins.
- Me therein, an innocent man,
- the fiendish foe was fain to thrust
- with many another. He might not so,
- when I all angrily upright stood.
- 'Twere long to relate how that land-destroyer
- I paid in kind for his cruel deeds;
- yet there, my prince, this people of thine
- got fame by my fighting. He fled away,
- and a little space his life preserved;
- but there staid behind him his stronger hand
- left in Heorot; heartsick thence
- on the floor of the ocean that outcast fell.
- Me for this struggle the Scyldings'-friend
- paid in plenty with plates of gold,
- with many a treasure, when morn had come
- and we all at the banquet-board sat down.
- Then was song and glee. The gray-haired Scylding,
- much tested, told of the times of yore.
- Whiles the hero his harp bestirred,
- wood-of-delight; now lays he chanted
- of sooth and sadness, or said aright
- legends of wonder, the wide-hearted king;
- or for years of his youth he would yearn at times,
- for strength of old struggles, now stricken with age,
- hoary hero: his heart surged full
- when, wise with winters, he wailed their flight.
- Thus in the hall the whole of that day
- at ease we feasted, till fell o'er earth
- another night. Anon full ready
- in greed of vengeance, Grendel's mother
- set forth all doleful. Dead was her son
- through war-hate of Weders; now, woman monstrous
- with fury fell a foeman she slew,
- avenged her offspring. From Aeschere old,
- loyal councillor, life was gone;
- nor might they e'en, when morning broke,
- those Danish people, their death-done comrade
- burn with brands, on balefire lay
- the man they mourned. Under mountain stream
- she had carried the corpse with cruel hands.
- For Hrothgar that was the heaviest sorrow
- of all that had laden the lord of his folk.
- The leader then, by thy life, besought me
- (sad was his soul) in the sea-waves' coil
- to play the hero and hazard my being
- for glory of prowess: my guerdon he pledged.
- I then in the waters -- 'tis widely known --
- that sea-floor-guardian savage found.
- Hand-to-hand there a while we struggled;
- billows welled blood; in the briny hall
- her head I hewed with a hardy blade
- from Grendel's mother, -- and gained my life,
- though not without danger. My doom was not yet.
- Then the haven-of-heroes, Healfdene's son,
- gave me in guerdon great gifts of price.
- XXIX
- "So held this king to the customs old,
- that I wanted for nought in the wage I gained,
- the meed of my might; he made me gifts,
- Healfdene's heir, for my own disposal.
- Now to thee, my prince, I proffer them all,
- gladly give them. Thy grace alone
- can find me favor. Few indeed
- have I of kinsmen, save, Hygelac, thee!"
- Then he bade them bear him the boar-head standard,
- the battle-helm high, and breastplate gray,
- the splendid sword; then spake in form: --
- "Me this war-gear the wise old prince,
- Hrothgar, gave, and his hest he added,
- that its story be straightway said to thee. --
- A while it was held by Heorogar king,
- for long time lord of the land of Scyldings;
- yet not to his son the sovran left it,
- to daring Heoroweard, -- dear as he was to him,
- his harness of battle. -- Well hold thou it all!"
- And I heard that soon passed o'er the path of this treasure,
- all apple-fallow, four good steeds,
- each like the others, arms and horses
- he gave to the king. So should kinsmen be,
- not weave one another the net of wiles,
- or with deep-hid treachery death contrive
- for neighbor and comrade. His nephew was ever
- by hardy Hygelac held full dear,
- and each kept watch o'er the other's weal.
- I heard, too, the necklace to Hygd he presented,
- wonder-wrought treasure, which Wealhtheow gave him
- sovran's daughter: three steeds he added,
- slender and saddle-gay. Since such gift
- the gem gleamed bright on the breast of the queen.
- Thus showed his strain the son of Ecgtheow
- as a man remarked for mighty deeds
- and acts of honor. At ale he slew not
- comrade or kin; nor cruel his mood,
- though of sons of earth his strength was greatest,
- a glorious gift that God had sent
- the splendid leader. Long was he spurned,
- and worthless by Geatish warriors held;
- him at mead the master-of-clans
- failed full oft to favor at all.
- Slack and shiftless the strong men deemed him,
- profitless prince; but payment came,
- to the warrior honored, for all his woes. --
- Then the bulwark-of-earls {29a} bade bring within,
- hardy chieftain, Hrethel's heirloom
- garnished with gold: no Geat e'er knew
- in shape of a sword a statelier prize.
- The brand he laid in Beowulf's lap;
- and of hides assigned him seven thousand, {29b}
- with house and high-seat. They held in common
- land alike by their line of birth,
- inheritance, home: but higher the king
- because of his rule o'er the realm itself.
- Now further it fell with the flight of years,
- with harryings horrid, that Hygelac perished, {29c}
- and Heardred, too, by hewing of swords
- under the shield-wall slaughtered lay,
- when him at the van of his victor-folk
- sought hardy heroes, Heatho-Scilfings,
- in arms o'erwhelming Hereric's nephew.
- Then Beowulf came as king this broad
- realm to wield; and he ruled it well
- fifty winters, {29d} a wise old prince,
- warding his land, until One began
- in the dark of night, a Dragon, to rage.
- In the grave on the hill a hoard it guarded,
- in the stone-barrow steep. A strait path reached it,
- unknown to mortals. Some man, however,
- came by chance that cave within
- to the heathen hoard. {29e} In hand he took
- a golden goblet, nor gave he it back,
- stole with it away, while the watcher slept,
- by thievish wiles: for the warden's wrath
- prince and people must pay betimes!
- XXX
- THAT way he went with no will of his own,
- in danger of life, to the dragon's hoard,
- but for pressure of peril, some prince's thane.
- He fled in fear the fatal scourge,
- seeking shelter, a sinful man,
- and entered in. At the awful sight
- tottered that guest, and terror seized him;
- yet the wretched fugitive rallied anon
- from fright and fear ere he fled away,
- and took the cup from that treasure-hoard.
- Of such besides there was store enough,
- heirlooms old, the earth below,
- which some earl forgotten, in ancient years,
- left the last of his lofty race,
- heedfully there had hidden away,
- dearest treasure. For death of yore
- had hurried all hence; and he alone
- left to live, the last of the clan,
- weeping his friends, yet wished to bide
- warding the treasure, his one delight,
- though brief his respite. The barrow, new-ready,
- to strand and sea-waves stood anear,
- hard by the headland, hidden and closed;
- there laid within it his lordly heirlooms
- and heaped hoard of heavy gold
- that warden of rings. Few words he spake:
- "Now hold thou, earth, since heroes may not,
- what earls have owned! Lo, erst from thee
- brave men brought it! But battle-death seized
- and cruel killing my clansmen all,
- robbed them of life and a liegeman's joys.
- None have I left to lift the sword,
- or to cleanse the carven cup of price,
- beaker bright. My brave are gone.
- And the helmet hard, all haughty with gold,
- shall part from its plating. Polishers sleep
- who could brighten and burnish the battle-mask;
- and those weeds of war that were wont to brave
- over bicker of shields the bite of steel
- rust with their bearer. The ringed mail
- fares not far with famous chieftain,
- at side of hero! No harp's delight,
- no glee-wood's gladness! No good hawk now
- flies through the hall! Nor horses fleet
- stamp in the burgstead! Battle and death
- the flower of my race have reft away."
- Mournful of mood, thus he moaned his woe,
- alone, for them all, and unblithe wept
- by day and by night, till death's fell wave
- o'erwhelmed his heart. His hoard-of-bliss
- that old ill-doer open found,
- who, blazing at twilight the barrows haunteth,
- naked foe-dragon flying by night
- folded in fire: the folk of earth
- dread him sore. 'Tis his doom to seek
- hoard in the graves, and heathen gold
- to watch, many-wintered: nor wins he thereby!
- Powerful this plague-of-the-people thus
- held the house of the hoard in earth
- three hundred winters; till One aroused
- wrath in his breast, to the ruler bearing
- that costly cup, and the king implored
- for bond of peace. So the barrow was plundered,
- borne off was booty. His boon was granted
- that wretched man; and his ruler saw
- first time what was fashioned in far-off days.
- When the dragon awoke, new woe was kindled.
- O'er the stone he snuffed. The stark-heart found
- footprint of foe who so far had gone
- in his hidden craft by the creature's head. --
- So may the undoomed easily flee
- evils and exile, if only he gain
- the grace of The Wielder! -- That warden of gold
- o'er the ground went seeking, greedy to find
- the man who wrought him such wrong in sleep.
- Savage and burning, the barrow he circled
- all without; nor was any there,
- none in the waste.... Yet war he desired,
- was eager for battle. The barrow he entered,
- sought the cup, and discovered soon
- that some one of mortals had searched his treasure,
- his lordly gold. The guardian waited
- ill-enduring till evening came;
- boiling with wrath was the barrow's keeper,
- and fain with flame the foe to pay
- for the dear cup's loss. -- Now day was fled
- as the worm had wished. By its wall no more
- was it glad to bide, but burning flew
- folded in flame: a fearful beginning
- for sons of the soil; and soon it came,
- in the doom of their lord, to a dreadful end.
- XXXI
- THEN the baleful fiend its fire belched out,
- and bright homes burned. The blaze stood high
- all landsfolk frighting. No living thing
- would that loathly one leave as aloft it flew.
- Wide was the dragon's warring seen,
- its fiendish fury far and near,
- as the grim destroyer those Geatish people
- hated and hounded. To hidden lair,
- to its hoard it hastened at hint of dawn.
- Folk of the land it had lapped in flame,
- with bale and brand. In its barrow it trusted,
- its battling and bulwarks: that boast was vain!
- To Beowulf then the bale was told
- quickly and truly: the king's own home,
- of buildings the best, in brand-waves melted,
- that gift-throne of Geats. To the good old man
- sad in heart, 'twas heaviest sorrow.
- The sage assumed that his sovran God
- he had angered, breaking ancient law,
- and embittered the Lord. His breast within
- with black thoughts welled, as his wont was never.
- The folk's own fastness that fiery dragon
- with flame had destroyed, and the stronghold all
- washed by waves; but the warlike king,
- prince of the Weders, plotted vengeance.
- Warriors'-bulwark, he bade them work
- all of iron -- the earl's commander --
- a war-shield wondrous: well he knew
- that forest-wood against fire were worthless,
- linden could aid not. -- Atheling brave,
- he was fated to finish this fleeting life, {31a}
- his days on earth, and the dragon with him,
- though long it had watched o'er the wealth of the hoard! --
- Shame he reckoned it, sharer-of-rings,
- to follow the flyer-afar with a host,
- a broad-flung band; nor the battle feared he,
- nor deemed he dreadful the dragon's warring,
- its vigor and valor: ventures desperate
- he had passed a-plenty, and perils of war,
- contest-crash, since, conqueror proud,
- Hrothgar's hall he had wholly purged,
- and in grapple had killed the kin of Grendel,
- loathsome breed! Not least was that
- of hand-to-hand fights where Hygelac fell,
- when the ruler of Geats in rush of battle,
- lord of his folk, in the Frisian land,
- son of Hrethel, by sword-draughts died,
- by brands down-beaten. Thence Beowulf fled
- through strength of himself and his swimming power,
- though alone, and his arms were laden with thirty
- coats of mail, when he came to the sea!
- Nor yet might Hetwaras {31b} haughtily boast
- their craft of contest, who carried against him
- shields to the fight: but few escaped
- from strife with the hero to seek their homes!
- Then swam over ocean Ecgtheow's son
- lonely and sorrowful, seeking his land,
- where Hygd made him offer of hoard and realm,
- rings and royal-seat, reckoning naught
- the strength of her son to save their kingdom
- from hostile hordes, after Hygelac's death.
- No sooner for this could the stricken ones
- in any wise move that atheling's mind
- over young Heardred's head as lord
- and ruler of all the realm to be:
- yet the hero upheld him with helpful words,
- aided in honor, till, older grown,
- he wielded the Weder-Geats. -- Wandering exiles
- sought him o'er seas, the sons of Ohtere,
- who had spurned the sway of the Scylfings'-helmet,
- the bravest and best that broke the rings,
- in Swedish land, of the sea-kings' line,
- haughty hero. {31c} Hence Heardred's end.
- For shelter he gave them, sword-death came,
- the blade's fell blow, to bairn of Hygelac;
- but the son of Ongentheow sought again
- house and home when Heardred fell,
- leaving Beowulf lord of Geats
- and gift-seat's master. -- A good king he!
- XXXII
- THE fall of his lord he was fain to requite
- in after days; and to Eadgils he proved
- friend to the friendless, and forces sent
- over the sea to the son of Ohtere,
- weapons and warriors: well repaid he
- those care-paths cold when the king he slew. {32a}
- Thus safe through struggles the son of Ecgtheow
- had passed a plenty, through perils dire,
- with daring deeds, till this day was come
- that doomed him now with the dragon to strive.
- With comrades eleven the lord of Geats
- swollen in rage went seeking the dragon.
- He had heard whence all the harm arose
- and the killing of clansmen; that cup of price
- on the lap of the lord had been laid by the finder.
- In the throng was this one thirteenth man,
- starter of all the strife and ill,
- care-laden captive; cringing thence
- forced and reluctant, he led them on
- till he came in ken of that cavern-hall,
- the barrow delved near billowy surges,
- flood of ocean. Within 'twas full
- of wire-gold and jewels; a jealous warden,
- warrior trusty, the treasures held,
- lurked in his lair. Not light the task
- of entrance for any of earth-born men!
- Sat on the headland the hero king,
- spake words of hail to his hearth-companions,
- gold-friend of Geats. All gloomy his soul,
- wavering, death-bound. Wyrd full nigh
- stood ready to greet the gray-haired man,
- to seize his soul-hoard, sunder apart
- life and body. Not long would be
- the warrior's spirit enwound with flesh.
- Beowulf spake, the bairn of Ecgtheow: --
- "Through store of struggles I strove in youth,
- mighty feuds; I mind them all.
- I was seven years old when the sovran of rings,
- friend-of-his-folk, from my father took me,
- had me, and held me, Hrethel the king,
- with food and fee, faithful in kinship.
- Ne'er, while I lived there, he loathlier found me,
- bairn in the burg, than his birthright sons,
- Herebeald and Haethcyn and Hygelac mine.
- For the eldest of these, by unmeet chance,
- by kinsman's deed, was the death-bed strewn,
- when Haethcyn killed him with horny bow,
- his own dear liege laid low with an arrow,
- missed the mark and his mate shot down,
- one brother the other, with bloody shaft.
- A feeless fight, {32b} and a fearful sin,
- horror to Hrethel; yet, hard as it was,
- unavenged must the atheling die!
- Too awful it is for an aged man
- to bide and bear, that his bairn so young
- rides on the gallows. A rime he makes,
- sorrow-song for his son there hanging
- as rapture of ravens; no rescue now
- can come from the old, disabled man!
- Still is he minded, as morning breaks,
- of the heir gone elsewhere; {32c} another he hopes not
- he will bide to see his burg within
- as ward for his wealth, now the one has found
- doom of death that the deed incurred.
- Forlorn he looks on the lodge of his son,
- wine-hall waste and wind-swept chambers
- reft of revel. The rider sleepeth,
- the hero, far-hidden; {32d} no harp resounds,
- in the courts no wassail, as once was heard.
- XXXIII
- "THEN he goes to his chamber, a grief-song chants
- alone for his lost. Too large all seems,
- homestead and house. So the helmet-of-Weders
- hid in his heart for Herebeald
- waves of woe. No way could he take
- to avenge on the slayer slaughter so foul;
- nor e'en could he harass that hero at all
- with loathing deed, though he loved him not.
- And so for the sorrow his soul endured,
- men's gladness he gave up and God's light chose.
- Lands and cities he left his sons
- (as the wealthy do) when he went from earth.
- There was strife and struggle 'twixt Swede and Geat
- o'er the width of waters; war arose,
- hard battle-horror, when Hrethel died,
- and Ongentheow's offspring grew
- strife-keen, bold, nor brooked o'er the seas
- pact of peace, but pushed their hosts
- to harass in hatred by Hreosnabeorh.
- Men of my folk for that feud had vengeance,
- for woful war ('tis widely known),
- though one of them bought it with blood of his heart,
- a bargain hard: for Haethcyn proved
- fatal that fray, for the first-of-Geats.
- At morn, I heard, was the murderer killed
- by kinsman for kinsman, {33a} with clash of sword,
- when Ongentheow met Eofor there.
- Wide split the war-helm: wan he fell,
- hoary Scylfing; the hand that smote him
- of feud was mindful, nor flinched from the death-blow.
- -- "For all that he {33b} gave me, my gleaming sword
- repaid him at war, -- such power I wielded, --
- for lordly treasure: with land he entrusted me,
- homestead and house. He had no need
- from Swedish realm, or from Spear-Dane folk,
- or from men of the Gifths, to get him help, --
- some warrior worse for wage to buy!
- Ever I fought in the front of all,
- sole to the fore; and so shall I fight
- while I bide in life and this blade shall last
- that early and late hath loyal proved
- since for my doughtiness Daeghrefn fell,
- slain by my hand, the Hugas' champion.
- Nor fared he thence to the Frisian king
- with the booty back, and breast-adornments;
- but, slain in struggle, that standard-bearer
- fell, atheling brave. Not with blade was he slain,
- but his bones were broken by brawny gripe,
- his heart-waves stilled. -- The sword-edge now,
- hard blade and my hand, for the hoard shall strive."
- Beowulf spake, and a battle-vow made
- his last of all: "I have lived through many
- wars in my youth; now once again,
- old folk-defender, feud will I seek,
- do doughty deeds, if the dark destroyer
- forth from his cavern come to fight me!"
- Then hailed he the helmeted heroes all,
- for the last time greeting his liegemen dear,
- comrades of war: "I should carry no weapon,
- no sword to the serpent, if sure I knew
- how, with such enemy, else my vows
- I could gain as I did in Grendel's day.
- But fire in this fight I must fear me now,
- and poisonous breath; so I bring with me
- breastplate and board. {33c} From the barrow's keeper
- no footbreadth flee I. One fight shall end
- our war by the wall, as Wyrd allots,
- all mankind's master. My mood is bold
- but forbears to boast o'er this battling-flyer.
- -- Now abide by the barrow, ye breastplate-mailed,
- ye heroes in harness, which of us twain
- better from battle-rush bear his wounds.
- Wait ye the finish. The fight is not yours,
- nor meet for any but me alone
- to measure might with this monster here
- and play the hero. Hardily I
- shall win that wealth, or war shall seize,
- cruel killing, your king and lord!"
- Up stood then with shield the sturdy champion,
- stayed by the strength of his single manhood,
- and hardy 'neath helmet his harness bore
- under cleft of the cliffs: no coward's path!
- Soon spied by the wall that warrior chief,
- survivor of many a victory-field
- where foemen fought with furious clashings,
- an arch of stone; and within, a stream
- that broke from the barrow. The brooklet's wave
- was hot with fire. The hoard that way
- he never could hope unharmed to near,
- or endure those deeps, {33d} for the dragon's flame.
- Then let from his breast, for he burst with rage,
- the Weder-Geat prince a word outgo;
- stormed the stark-heart; stern went ringing
- and clear his cry 'neath the cliff-rocks gray.
- The hoard-guard heard a human voice;
- his rage was enkindled. No respite now
- for pact of peace! The poison-breath
- of that foul worm first came forth from the cave,
- hot reek-of-fight: the rocks resounded.
- Stout by the stone-way his shield he raised,
- lord of the Geats, against the loathed-one;
- while with courage keen that coiled foe
- came seeking strife. The sturdy king
- had drawn his sword, not dull of edge,
- heirloom old; and each of the two
- felt fear of his foe, though fierce their mood.
- Stoutly stood with his shield high-raised
- the warrior king, as the worm now coiled
- together amain: the mailed-one waited.
- Now, spire by spire, fast sped and glided
- that blazing serpent. The shield protected,
- soul and body a shorter while
- for the hero-king than his heart desired,
- could his will have wielded the welcome respite
- but once in his life! But Wyrd denied it,
- and victory's honors. -- His arm he lifted
- lord of the Geats, the grim foe smote
- with atheling's heirloom. Its edge was turned
- brown blade, on the bone, and bit more feebly
- than its noble master had need of then
- in his baleful stress. -- Then the barrow's keeper
- waxed full wild for that weighty blow,
- cast deadly flames; wide drove and far
- those vicious fires. No victor's glory
- the Geats' lord boasted; his brand had failed,
- naked in battle, as never it should,
- excellent iron! -- 'Twas no easy path
- that Ecgtheow's honored heir must tread
- over the plain to the place of the foe;
- for against his will he must win a home
- elsewhere far, as must all men, leaving
- this lapsing life! -- Not long it was
- ere those champions grimly closed again.
- The hoard-guard was heartened; high heaved his breast
- once more; and by peril was pressed again,
- enfolded in flames, the folk-commander!
- Nor yet about him his band of comrades,
- sons of athelings, armed stood
- with warlike front: to the woods they bent them,
- their lives to save. But the soul of one
- with care was cumbered. Kinship true
- can never be marred in a noble mind!
- XXXIV
- WIGLAF his name was, Weohstan's son,
- linden-thane loved, the lord of Scylfings,
- Aelfhere's kinsman. His king he now saw
- with heat under helmet hard oppressed.
- He minded the prizes his prince had given him,
- wealthy seat of the Waegmunding line,
- and folk-rights that his father owned
- Not long he lingered. The linden yellow,
- his shield, he seized; the old sword he drew: --
- as heirloom of Eanmund earth-dwellers knew it,
- who was slain by the sword-edge, son of Ohtere,
- friendless exile, erst in fray
- killed by Weohstan, who won for his kin
- brown-bright helmet, breastplate ringed,
- old sword of Eotens, Onela's gift,
- weeds of war of the warrior-thane,
- battle-gear brave: though a brother's child
- had been felled, the feud was unfelt by Onela. {34a}
- For winters this war-gear Weohstan kept,
- breastplate and board, till his bairn had grown
- earlship to earn as the old sire did:
- then he gave him, mid Geats, the gear of battle,
- portion huge, when he passed from life,
- fared aged forth. For the first time now
- with his leader-lord the liegeman young
- was bidden to share the shock of battle.
- Neither softened his soul, nor the sire's bequest
- weakened in war. {34b} So the worm found out
- when once in fight the foes had met!
- Wiglaf spake, -- and his words were sage;
- sad in spirit, he said to his comrades: --
- "I remember the time, when mead we took,
- what promise we made to this prince of ours
- in the banquet-hall, to our breaker-of-rings,
- for gear of combat to give him requital,
- for hard-sword and helmet, if hap should bring
- stress of this sort! Himself who chose us
- from all his army to aid him now,
- urged us to glory, and gave these treasures,
- because he counted us keen with the spear
- and hardy 'neath helm, though this hero-work
- our leader hoped unhelped and alone
- to finish for us, -- folk-defender
- who hath got him glory greater than all men
- for daring deeds! Now the day is come
- that our noble master has need of the might
- of warriors stout. Let us stride along
- the hero to help while the heat is about him
- glowing and grim! For God is my witness
- I am far more fain the fire should seize
- along with my lord these limbs of mine! {34c}
- Unsuiting it seems our shields to bear
- homeward hence, save here we essay
- to fell the foe and defend the life
- of the Weders' lord. I wot 'twere shame
- on the law of our land if alone the king
- out of Geatish warriors woe endured
- and sank in the struggle! My sword and helmet,
- breastplate and board, for us both shall serve!"
- Through slaughter-reek strode he to succor his chieftain,
- his battle-helm bore, and brief words spake: --
- "Beowulf dearest, do all bravely,
- as in youthful days of yore thou vowedst
- that while life should last thou wouldst let no wise
- thy glory droop! Now, great in deeds,
- atheling steadfast, with all thy strength
- shield thy life! I will stand to help thee."
- At the words the worm came once again,
- murderous monster mad with rage,
- with fire-billows flaming, its foes to seek,
- the hated men. In heat-waves burned
- that board {34d} to the boss, and the breastplate failed
- to shelter at all the spear-thane young.
- Yet quickly under his kinsman's shield
- went eager the earl, since his own was now
- all burned by the blaze. The bold king again
- had mind of his glory: with might his glaive
- was driven into the dragon's head, --
- blow nerved by hate. But Naegling {34e} was shivered,
- broken in battle was Beowulf's sword,
- old and gray. 'Twas granted him not
- that ever the edge of iron at all
- could help him at strife: too strong was his hand,
- so the tale is told, and he tried too far
- with strength of stroke all swords he wielded,
- though sturdy their steel: they steaded him nought.
- Then for the third time thought on its feud
- that folk-destroyer, fire-dread dragon,
- and rushed on the hero, where room allowed,
- battle-grim, burning; its bitter teeth
- closed on his neck, and covered him
- with waves of blood from his breast that welled.
- XXXV
- 'TWAS now, men say, in his sovran's need
- that the earl made known his noble strain,
- craft and keenness and courage enduring.
- Heedless of harm, though his hand was burned,
- hardy-hearted, he helped his kinsman.
- A little lower the loathsome beast
- he smote with sword; his steel drove in
- bright and burnished; that blaze began
- to lose and lessen. At last the king
- wielded his wits again, war-knife drew,
- a biting blade by his breastplate hanging,
- and the Weders'-helm smote that worm asunder,
- felled the foe, flung forth its life.
- So had they killed it, kinsmen both,
- athelings twain: thus an earl should be
- in danger's day! -- Of deeds of valor
- this conqueror's-hour of the king was last,
- of his work in the world. The wound began,
- which that dragon-of-earth had erst inflicted,
- to swell and smart; and soon he found
- in his breast was boiling, baleful and deep,
- pain of poison. The prince walked on,
- wise in his thought, to the wall of rock;
- then sat, and stared at the structure of giants,
- where arch of stone and steadfast column
- upheld forever that hall in earth.
- Yet here must the hand of the henchman peerless
- lave with water his winsome lord,
- the king and conqueror covered with blood,
- with struggle spent, and unspan his helmet.
- Beowulf spake in spite of his hurt,
- his mortal wound; full well he knew
- his portion now was past and gone
- of earthly bliss, and all had fled
- of his file of days, and death was near:
- "I would fain bestow on son of mine
- this gear of war, were given me now
- that any heir should after me come
- of my proper blood. This people I ruled
- fifty winters. No folk-king was there,
- none at all, of the neighboring clans
- who war would wage me with 'warriors'-friends' {35a}
- and threat me with horrors. At home I bided
- what fate might come, and I cared for mine own;
- feuds I sought not, nor falsely swore
- ever on oath. For all these things,
- though fatally wounded, fain am I!
- From the Ruler-of-Man no wrath shall seize me,
- when life from my frame must flee away,
- for killing of kinsmen! Now quickly go
- and gaze on that hoard 'neath the hoary rock,
- Wiglaf loved, now the worm lies low,
- sleeps, heart-sore, of his spoil bereaved.
- And fare in haste. I would fain behold
- the gorgeous heirlooms, golden store,
- have joy in the jewels and gems, lay down
- softlier for sight of this splendid hoard
- my life and the lordship I long have held."
- XXXVI
- I HAVE heard that swiftly the son of Weohstan
- at wish and word of his wounded king, --
- war-sick warrior, -- woven mail-coat,
- battle-sark, bore 'neath the barrow's roof.
- Then the clansman keen, of conquest proud,
- passing the seat, {36a} saw store of jewels
- and glistening gold the ground along;
- by the wall were marvels, and many a vessel
- in the den of the dragon, the dawn-flier old:
- unburnished bowls of bygone men
- reft of richness; rusty helms
- of the olden age; and arm-rings many
- wondrously woven. -- Such wealth of gold,
- booty from barrow, can burden with pride
- each human wight: let him hide it who will! --
- His glance too fell on a gold-wove banner
- high o'er the hoard, of handiwork noblest,
- brilliantly broidered; so bright its gleam,
- all the earth-floor he easily saw
- and viewed all these vessels. No vestige now
- was seen of the serpent: the sword had ta'en him.
- Then, I heard, the hill of its hoard was reft,
- old work of giants, by one alone;
- he burdened his bosom with beakers and plate
- at his own good will, and the ensign took,
- brightest of beacons. -- The blade of his lord
- -- its edge was iron -- had injured deep
- one that guarded the golden hoard
- many a year and its murder-fire
- spread hot round the barrow in horror-billows
- at midnight hour, till it met its doom.
- Hasted the herald, the hoard so spurred him
- his track to retrace; he was troubled by doubt,
- high-souled hero, if haply he'd find
- alive, where he left him, the lord of Weders,
- weakening fast by the wall of the cave.
- So he carried the load. His lord and king
- he found all bleeding, famous chief
- at the lapse of life. The liegeman again
- plashed him with water, till point of word
- broke through the breast-hoard. Beowulf spake,
- sage and sad, as he stared at the gold. --
- "For the gold and treasure, to God my thanks,
- to the Wielder-of-Wonders, with words I say,
- for what I behold, to Heaven's Lord,
- for the grace that I give such gifts to my folk
- or ever the day of my death be run!
- Now I've bartered here for booty of treasure
- the last of my life, so look ye well
- to the needs of my land! No longer I tarry.
- A barrow bid ye the battle-fanned raise
- for my ashes. 'Twill shine by the shore of the flood,
- to folk of mine memorial fair
- on Hrones Headland high uplifted,
- that ocean-wanderers oft may hail
- Beowulf's Barrow, as back from far
- they drive their keels o'er the darkling wave."
- From his neck he unclasped the collar of gold,
- valorous king, to his vassal gave it
- with bright-gold helmet, breastplate, and ring,
- to the youthful thane: bade him use them in joy.
- "Thou art end and remnant of all our race
- the Waegmunding name. For Wyrd hath swept them,
- all my line, to the land of doom,
- earls in their glory: I after them go."
- This word was the last which the wise old man
- harbored in heart ere hot death-waves
- of balefire he chose. From his bosom fled
- his soul to seek the saints' reward.
- XXXVII
- IT was heavy hap for that hero young
- on his lord beloved to look and find him
- lying on earth with life at end,
- sorrowful sight. But the slayer too,
- awful earth-dragon, empty of breath,
- lay felled in fight, nor, fain of its treasure,
- could the writhing monster rule it more.
- For edges of iron had ended its days,
- hard and battle-sharp, hammers' leaving; {37a}
- and that flier-afar had fallen to ground
- hushed by its hurt, its hoard all near,
- no longer lusty aloft to whirl
- at midnight, making its merriment seen,
- proud of its prizes: prone it sank
- by the handiwork of the hero-king.
- Forsooth among folk but few achieve,
- -- though sturdy and strong, as stories tell me,
- and never so daring in deed of valor, --
- the perilous breath of a poison-foe
- to brave, and to rush on the ring-board hall,
- whenever his watch the warden keeps
- bold in the barrow. Beowulf paid
- the price of death for that precious hoard;
- and each of the foes had found the end
- of this fleeting life.
- Befell erelong
- that the laggards in war the wood had left,
- trothbreakers, cowards, ten together,
- fearing before to flourish a spear
- in the sore distress of their sovran lord.
- Now in their shame their shields they carried,
- armor of fight, where the old man lay;
- and they gazed on Wiglaf. Wearied he sat
- at his sovran's shoulder, shieldsman good,
- to wake him with water. {37b} Nowise it availed.
- Though well he wished it, in world no more
- could he barrier life for that leader-of-battles
- nor baffle the will of all-wielding God.
- Doom of the Lord was law o'er the deeds
- of every man, as it is to-day.
- Grim was the answer, easy to get,
- from the youth for those that had yielded to fear!
- Wiglaf spake, the son of Weohstan, --
- mournful he looked on those men unloved: --
- "Who sooth will speak, can say indeed
- that the ruler who gave you golden rings
- and the harness of war in which ye stand
- -- for he at ale-bench often-times
- bestowed on hall-folk helm and breastplate,
- lord to liegemen, the likeliest gear
- which near of far he could find to give, --
- threw away and wasted these weeds of battle,
- on men who failed when the foemen came!
- Not at all could the king of his comrades-in-arms
- venture to vaunt, though the Victory-Wielder,
- God, gave him grace that he got revenge
- sole with his sword in stress and need.
- To rescue his life, 'twas little that I
- could serve him in struggle; yet shift I made
- (hopeless it seemed) to help my kinsman.
- Its strength ever waned, when with weapon I struck
- that fatal foe, and the fire less strongly
- flowed from its head. -- Too few the heroes
- in throe of contest that thronged to our king!
- Now gift of treasure and girding of sword,
- joy of the house and home-delight
- shall fail your folk; his freehold-land
- every clansman within your kin
- shall lose and leave, when lords high-born
- hear afar of that flight of yours,
- a fameless deed. Yea, death is better
- for liegemen all than a life of shame!"
- XXXVIII
- THAT battle-toil bade he at burg to announce,
- at the fort on the cliff, where, full of sorrow,
- all the morning earls had sat,
- daring shieldsmen, in doubt of twain:
- would they wail as dead, or welcome home,
- their lord beloved? Little {38a} kept back
- of the tidings new, but told them all,
- the herald that up the headland rode. --
- "Now the willing-giver to Weder folk
- in death-bed lies; the Lord of Geats
- on the slaughter-bed sleeps by the serpent's deed!
- And beside him is stretched that slayer-of-men
- with knife-wounds sick: {38b} no sword availed
- on the awesome thing in any wise
- to work a wound. There Wiglaf sitteth,
- Weohstan's bairn, by Beowulf's side,
- the living earl by the other dead,
- and heavy of heart a head-watch {38c} keeps
- o'er friend and foe. -- Now our folk may look
- for waging of war when once unhidden
- to Frisian and Frank the fall of the king
- is spread afar. -- The strife began
- when hot on the Hugas {38d} Hygelac fell
- and fared with his fleet to the Frisian land.
- Him there the Hetwaras humbled in war,
- plied with such prowess their power o'erwhelming
- that the bold-in-battle bowed beneath it
- and fell in fight. To his friends no wise
- could that earl give treasure! And ever since
- the Merowings' favor has failed us wholly.
- Nor aught expect I of peace and faith
- from Swedish folk. 'Twas spread afar
- how Ongentheow reft at Ravenswood
- Haethcyn Hrethling of hope and life,
- when the folk of Geats for the first time sought
- in wanton pride the Warlike-Scylfings.
- Soon the sage old sire {38e} of Ohtere,
- ancient and awful, gave answering blow;
- the sea-king {38f} he slew, and his spouse redeemed,
- his good wife rescued, though robbed of her gold,
- mother of Ohtere and Onela.
- Then he followed his foes, who fled before him
- sore beset and stole their way,
- bereft of a ruler, to Ravenswood.
- With his host he besieged there what swords had left,
- the weary and wounded; woes he threatened
- the whole night through to that hard-pressed throng:
- some with the morrow his sword should kill,
- some should go to the gallows-tree
- for rapture of ravens. But rescue came
- with dawn of day for those desperate men
- when they heard the horn of Hygelac sound,
- tones of his trumpet; the trusty king
- had followed their trail with faithful band.
- XXXIX
- "THE bloody swath of Swedes and Geats
- and the storm of their strife, were seen afar,
- how folk against folk the fight had wakened.
- The ancient king with his atheling band
- sought his citadel, sorrowing much:
- Ongentheow earl went up to his burg.
- He had tested Hygelac's hardihood,
- the proud one's prowess, would prove it no longer,
- defied no more those fighting-wanderers
- nor hoped from the seamen to save his hoard,
- his bairn and his bride: so he bent him again,
- old, to his earth-walls. Yet after him came
- with slaughter for Swedes the standards of Hygelac
- o'er peaceful plains in pride advancing,
- till Hrethelings fought in the fenced town. {39a}
- Then Ongentheow with edge of sword,
- the hoary-bearded, was held at bay,
- and the folk-king there was forced to suffer
- Eofor's anger. In ire, at the king
- Wulf Wonreding with weapon struck;
- and the chieftain's blood, for that blow, in streams
- flowed 'neath his hair. No fear felt he,
- stout old Scylfing, but straightway repaid
- in better bargain that bitter stroke
- and faced his foe with fell intent.
- Nor swift enough was the son of Wonred
- answer to render the aged chief;
- too soon on his head the helm was cloven;
- blood-bedecked he bowed to earth,
- and fell adown; not doomed was he yet,
- and well he waxed, though the wound was sore.
- Then the hardy Hygelac-thane, {39b}
- when his brother fell, with broad brand smote,
- giants' sword crashing through giants'-helm
- across the shield-wall: sank the king,
- his folk's old herdsman, fatally hurt.
- There were many to bind the brother's wounds
- and lift him, fast as fate allowed
- his people to wield the place-of-war.
- But Eofor took from Ongentheow,
- earl from other, the iron-breastplate,
- hard sword hilted, and helmet too,
- and the hoar-chief's harness to Hygelac carried,
- who took the trappings, and truly promised
- rich fee 'mid folk, -- and fulfilled it so.
- For that grim strife gave the Geatish lord,
- Hrethel's offspring, when home he came,
- to Eofor and Wulf a wealth of treasure,
- Each of them had a hundred thousand {39c}
- in land and linked rings; nor at less price reckoned
- mid-earth men such mighty deeds!
- And to Eofor he gave his only daughter
- in pledge of grace, the pride of his home.
- "Such is the feud, the foeman's rage,
- death-hate of men: so I deem it sure
- that the Swedish folk will seek us home
- for this fall of their friends, the fighting-Scylfings,
- when once they learn that our warrior leader
- lifeless lies, who land and hoard
- ever defended from all his foes,
- furthered his folk's weal, finished his course
- a hardy hero. -- Now haste is best,
- that we go to gaze on our Geatish lord,
- and bear the bountiful breaker-of-rings
- to the funeral pyre. No fragments merely
- shall burn with the warrior. Wealth of jewels,
- gold untold and gained in terror,
- treasure at last with his life obtained,
- all of that booty the brands shall take,
- fire shall eat it. No earl must carry
- memorial jewel. No maiden fair
- shall wreathe her neck with noble ring:
- nay, sad in spirit and shorn of her gold,
- oft shall she pass o'er paths of exile
- now our lord all laughter has laid aside,
- all mirth and revel. Many a spear
- morning-cold shall be clasped amain,
- lifted aloft; nor shall lilt of harp
- those warriors wake; but the wan-hued raven,
- fain o'er the fallen, his feast shall praise
- and boast to the eagle how bravely he ate
- when he and the wolf were wasting the slain."
- So he told his sorrowful tidings,
- and little {39d} he lied, the loyal man
- of word or of work. The warriors rose;
- sad, they climbed to the Cliff-of-Eagles,
- went, welling with tears, the wonder to view.
- Found on the sand there, stretched at rest,
- their lifeless lord, who had lavished rings
- of old upon them. Ending-day
- had dawned on the doughty-one; death had seized
- in woful slaughter the Weders' king.
- There saw they, besides, the strangest being,
- loathsome, lying their leader near,
- prone on the field. The fiery dragon,
- fearful fiend, with flame was scorched.
- Reckoned by feet, it was fifty measures
- in length as it lay. Aloft erewhile
- it had revelled by night, and anon come back,
- seeking its den; now in death's sure clutch
- it had come to the end of its earth-hall joys.
- By it there stood the stoups and jars;
- dishes lay there, and dear-decked swords
- eaten with rust, as, on earth's lap resting,
- a thousand winters they waited there.
- For all that heritage huge, that gold
- of bygone men, was bound by a spell, {39e}
- so the treasure-hall could be touched by none
- of human kind, -- save that Heaven's King,
- God himself, might give whom he would,
- Helper of Heroes, the hoard to open, --
- even such a man as seemed to him meet.
- XL
- A PERILOUS path, it proved, he {40a} trod
- who heinously hid, that hall within,
- wealth under wall! Its watcher had killed
- one of a few, {40b} and the feud was avenged
- in woful fashion. Wondrous seems it,
- what manner a man of might and valor
- oft ends his life, when the earl no longer
- in mead-hall may live with loving friends.
- So Beowulf, when that barrow's warden
- he sought, and the struggle; himself knew not
- in what wise he should wend from the world at last.
- For {40c} princes potent, who placed the gold,
- with a curse to doomsday covered it deep,
- so that marked with sin the man should be,
- hedged with horrors, in hell-bonds fast,
- racked with plagues, who should rob their hoard.
- Yet no greed for gold, but the grace of heaven,
- ever the king had kept in view. {40d}
- Wiglaf spake, the son of Weohstan: --
- "At the mandate of one, oft warriors many
- sorrow must suffer; and so must we.
- The people's-shepherd showed not aught
- of care for our counsel, king beloved!
- That guardian of gold he should grapple not, urged we,
- but let him lie where he long had been
- in his earth-hall waiting the end of the world,
- the hest of heaven. -- This hoard is ours
- but grievously gotten; too grim the fate
- which thither carried our king and lord.
- I was within there, and all I viewed,
- the chambered treasure, when chance allowed me
- (and my path was made in no pleasant wise)
- under the earth-wall. Eager, I seized
- such heap from the hoard as hands could bear
- and hurriedly carried it hither back
- to my liege and lord. Alive was he still,
- still wielding his wits. The wise old man
- spake much in his sorrow, and sent you greetings
- and bade that ye build, when he breathed no more,
- on the place of his balefire a barrow high,
- memorial mighty. Of men was he
- worthiest warrior wide earth o'er
- the while he had joy of his jewels and burg.
- Let us set out in haste now, the second time
- to see and search this store of treasure,
- these wall-hid wonders, -- the way I show you, --
- where, gathered near, ye may gaze your fill
- at broad-gold and rings. Let the bier, soon made,
- be all in order when out we come,
- our king and captain to carry thither
- -- man beloved -- where long he shall bide
- safe in the shelter of sovran God."
- Then the bairn of Weohstan bade command,
- hardy chief, to heroes many
- that owned their homesteads, hither to bring
- firewood from far -- o'er the folk they ruled --
- for the famed-one's funeral. " Fire shall devour
- and wan flames feed on the fearless warrior
- who oft stood stout in the iron-shower,
- when, sped from the string, a storm of arrows
- shot o'er the shield-wall: the shaft held firm,
- featly feathered, followed the barb."
- And now the sage young son of Weohstan
- seven chose of the chieftain's thanes,
- the best he found that band within,
- and went with these warriors, one of eight,
- under hostile roof. In hand one bore
- a lighted torch and led the way.
- No lots they cast for keeping the hoard
- when once the warriors saw it in hall,
- altogether without a guardian,
- lying there lost. And little they mourned
- when they had hastily haled it out,
- dear-bought treasure! The dragon they cast,
- the worm, o'er the wall for the wave to take,
- and surges swallowed that shepherd of gems.
- Then the woven gold on a wain was laden --
- countless quite! -- and the king was borne,
- hoary hero, to Hrones-Ness.
- XLI
- THEN fashioned for him the folk of Geats
- firm on the earth a funeral-pile,
- and hung it with helmets and harness of war
- and breastplates bright, as the boon he asked;
- and they laid amid it the mighty chieftain,
- heroes mourning their master dear.
- Then on the hill that hugest of balefires
- the warriors wakened. Wood-smoke rose
- black over blaze, and blent was the roar
- of flame with weeping (the wind was still),
- till the fire had broken the frame of bones,
- hot at the heart. In heavy mood
- their misery moaned they, their master's death.
- Wailing her woe, the widow {41a} old,
- her hair upbound, for Beowulf's death
- sung in her sorrow, and said full oft
- she dreaded the doleful days to come,
- deaths enow, and doom of battle,
- and shame. -- The smoke by the sky was devoured.
- The folk of the Weders fashioned there
- on the headland a barrow broad and high,
- by ocean-farers far descried:
- in ten days' time their toil had raised it,
- the battle-brave's beacon. Round brands of the pyre
- a wall they built, the worthiest ever
- that wit could prompt in their wisest men.
- They placed in the barrow that precious booty,
- the rounds and the rings they had reft erewhile,
- hardy heroes, from hoard in cave, --
- trusting the ground with treasure of earls,
- gold in the earth, where ever it lies
- useless to men as of yore it was.
- Then about that barrow the battle-keen rode,
- atheling-born, a band of twelve,
- lament to make, to mourn their king,
- chant their dirge, and their chieftain honor.
- They praised his earlship, his acts of prowess
- worthily witnessed: and well it is
- that men their master-friend mightily laud,
- heartily love, when hence he goes
- from life in the body forlorn away.
- Thus made their mourning the men of Geatland,
- for their hero's passing his hearth-companions:
- quoth that of all the kings of earth,
- of men he was mildest and most beloved,
- to his kin the kindest, keenest for praise.
- Footnotes:
- {0a} Not, of course, Beowulf the Great, hero of the epic.
- {0b} Kenning for king or chieftain of a comitatus: he breaks off
- gold from the spiral rings -- often worn on the arm -- and so
- rewards his followers.
- {1a} That is, "The Hart," or "Stag," so called from decorations in
- the gables that resembled the antlers of a deer. This hall has been
- carefully described in a pamphlet by Heyne. The building was
- rectangular, with opposite doors -- mainly west and east -- and a
- hearth in the middle of th single room. A row of pillars down each
- side, at some distance from the walls, made a space which was raised
- a little above the main floor, and was furnished with two rows of
- seats. On one side, usually south, was the high-seat midway between
- the doors. Opposite this, on the other raised space, was another
- seat of honor. At the banquet soon to be described, Hrothgar sat in
- the south or chief high-seat, and Beowulf opposite to him. The scene
- for a flying (see below, v.499) was thus very effectively set.
- Planks on trestles -- the "board" of later English literature --
- formed the tables just in front of the long rows of seats, and were
- taken away after banquets, when the retainers were ready to stretch
- themselves out for sleep on the benches.
- {1b} Fire was the usual end of these halls. See v. 781 below. One
- thinks of the splendid scene at the end of the Nibelungen, of the
- Nialssaga, of Saxo's story of Amlethus, and many a less famous
- instance.
- {1c} It is to be supposed that all hearers of this poem knew how
- Hrothgar's hall was burnt, -- perhaps in the unsuccessful attack
- made on him by his son-in-law Ingeld.
- {1d} A skilled minstrel. The Danes are heathens, as one is told
- presently; but this lay of beginnings is taken from Genesis.
- {1e} A disturber of the border, one who sallies from his haunt in
- the fen and roams over the country near by. This probably pagan
- nuisance is now furnished with biblical credentials as a fiend or
- devil in good standing, so that all Christian Englishmen might read
- about him. "Grendel" may mean one who grinds and crushes.
- {1f} Cain's.
- {1g} Giants.
- {2a} The smaller buildings within the main enclosure but separate
- from the hall.
- {2b} Grendel.
- {2c} "Sorcerers-of-hell."
- {2d} Hrothgar, who is the "Scyldings'-friend" of 170.
- {2e} That is, in formal or prescribed phrase.
- {3a} Ship.
- {3b} That is, since Beowulf selected his ship and led his men to the
- harbor.
- {3c} One of the auxiliary names of the Geats.
- {3d} Or: Not thus openly ever came warriors hither; yet...
- {4a} Hrothgar.
- {4b} Beowulf's helmet has several boar-images on it; he is the "man
- of war"; and the boar-helmet guards him as typical representative of
- the marching party as a whole. The boar was sacred to Freyr, who was
- the favorite god of the Germanic tribes about the North Sea and the
- Baltic. Rude representations of warriors show the boar on the helmet
- quite as large as the helmet itself.
- {5a} Either merely paved, the strata via of the Romans, or else
- thought of as a sort of mosaic, an extravagant touch like the
- reckless waste of gold on the walls and roofs of a hall.
- {6a} The nicor, says Bugge, is a hippopotamus; a walrus, says Ten
- Brink. But that water-goblin who covers the space from Old Nick of
- jest to the Neckan and Nix of poetry and tale, is all one needs, and
- Nicor is a good name for him.
- {6b} His own people, the Geats.
- {6c} That is, cover it as with a face-cloth. "There will be no need
- of funeral rites."
- {6d} Personification of Battle.
- {6e} The Germanic Vulcan.
- {6f} This mighty power, whom the Christian poet can still revere,
- has here the general force of "Destiny."
- {7a} There is no irrelevance here. Hrothgar sees in Beowulf's
- mission a heritage of duty, a return of the good offices which the
- Danish king rendered to Beowulf's father in time of dire need.
- {7b} Money, for wergild, or man-price.
- {7c} Ecgtheow, Beowulf's sire.
- {8a} "Began the fight."
- {8b} Breca.
- {9a} Murder.
- {10a} Beowulf, -- the "one."
- {11a} That is, he was a "lost soul," doomed to hell.
- {12a} Kenning for Beowulf.
- {13a} "Guarded the treasure."
- {13b} Sc. Heremod.
- {13c} The singer has sung his lays, and the epic resumes its story.
- The time-relations are not altogether good in this long passage
- which describes the rejoicings of "the day after"; but the present
- shift from the riders on the road to the folk at the hall is not
- very violent, and is of a piece with the general style.
- {14a} Unferth, Beowulf's sometime opponent in the flyting.
- {15a} There is no horrible inconsistency here such as the critics
- strive and cry about. In spite of the ruin that Grendel and Beowulf
- had made within the hall, the framework and roof held firm, and
- swift repairs made the interior habitable. Tapestries were hung on
- the walls, and willing hands prepared the banquet.
- {15b} From its formal use in other places, this phrase, to take cup
- in hall, or "on the floor," would seem to mean that Beowulf stood up
- to receive his gifts, drink to the donor, and say thanks.
- {15c} Kenning for sword.
- {15d} Hrothgar. He is also the "refuge of the friends of Ing,"
- below. Ing belongs to myth.
- {15e} Horses are frequently led or ridden into the hall where folk
- sit at banquet: so in Chaucer's Squire's tale, in the ballad of
- King Estmere, and in the romances.
- {16a} Man-price, wergild.
- {16b} Beowulf's.
- {16c} Hrothgar.
- {16d} There is no need to assume a gap in the Ms. As before about
- Sigemund and Heremod, so now, though at greater length, about Finn
- and his feud, a lay is chanted or recited; and the epic poet,
- counting on his readers' familiarity with the story, -- a fragment
- of it still exists, -- simply gives the headings.
- {16e} The exact story to which this episode refers in summary is not
- to be determined, but the following account of it is reasonable and
- has good support among scholars. Finn, a Frisian chieftain, who
- nevertheless has a "castle" outside the Frisian border, marries
- Hildeburh, a Danish princess; and her brother, Hnaef, with many
- other Danes, pays Finn a visit. Relations between the two peoples
- have been strained before. Something starts the old feud anew; and
- the visitors are attacked in their quarters. Hnaef is killed; so is
- a son of Hildeburh. Many fall on both sides. Peace is patched up; a
- stately funeral is held; and the surviving visitors become in a way
- vassals or liegemen of Finn, going back with him to Frisia. So
- matters rest a while. Hengest is now leader of the Danes; but he is
- set upon revenge for his former lord, Hnaef. Probably he is killed
- in feud; but his clansmen, Guthlaf and Oslaf, gather at their home a
- force of sturdy Danes, come back to Frisia, storm Finn's stronghold,
- kill him, and carry back their kinswoman Hildeburh.
- {16f} The "enemies" must be the Frisians.
- {16g} Battlefield. -- Hengest is the "prince's thane," companion of
- Hnaef. "Folcwald's son" is Finn.
- {16h} That is, Finn would govern in all honor the few Danish
- warriors who were left, provided, of course, that none of them tried
- to renew the quarrel or avenge Hnaef their fallen lord. If, again,
- one of Finn's Frisians began a quarrel, he should die by the sword.
- {16i} Hnaef.
- {16j} The high place chosen for the funeral: see description of
- Beowulf's funeral-pile at the end of the poem.
- {16k} Wounds.
- {17a} That is, these two Danes, escaping home, had told the story of
- the attack on Hnaef, the slaying of Hengest, and all the Danish
- woes. Collecting a force, they return to Frisia and kill Finn in his
- home.
- {17b} Nephew to Hrothgar, with whom he subsequently quarrels, and
- elder cousin to the two young sons of Hrothgar and Wealhtheow, --
- their natural guardian in the event of the king's death. There is
- something finely feminine in this speech of Wealhtheow's, apart from
- its somewhat irregular and irrelevant sequence of topics. Both she
- and her lord probably distrust Hrothulf; but she bids the king to be
- of good cheer, and, turning to the suspect, heaps affectionate
- assurances on his probity. "My own Hrothulf" will surely not forget
- these favors and benefits of the past, but will repay them to the
- orphaned boy.
- {19a} They had laid their arms on the benches near where they slept.
- {20a} He surmises presently where she is.
- {20b} The connection is not difficult. The words of mourning, of
- acute grief, are said; and according to Germanic sequence of
- thought, inexorable here, the next and only topic is revenge. But is
- it possible? Hrothgar leads up to his appeal and promise with a
- skillful and often effective description of the horrors which
- surround the monster's home and await the attempt of an avenging
- foe.
- {21a} Hrothgar is probably meant.
- {21b} Meeting place.
- {22a} Kenning for "sword." Hrunting is bewitched, laid under a spell
- of uselessness, along with all other swords.
- {22b} This brown of swords, evidently meaning burnished, bright,
- continues to be a favorite adjective in the popular ballads.
- {23a} After the killing of the monster and Grendel's decapitation.
- {23b} Hrothgar.
- {23c} The blade slowly dissolves in blood-stained drops like
- icicles.
- {23d} Spear.
- {24a} That is, "whoever has as wide authority as I have and can
- remember so far back so many instances of heroism, may well say, as
- I say, that no better hero ever lived than Beowulf."
- {25a} That is, he is now undefended by conscience from the
- temptations (shafts) of the devil.
- {25b} Kenning for the sun. -- This is a strange role for the raven.
- He is the warrior's bird of battle, exults in slaughter and carnage;
- his joy here is a compliment to the sunrise.
- {26a} That is, he might or might not see Beowulf again. Old as he
- was, the latter chance was likely; but he clung to the former,
- hoping to see his young friend again "and exchange brave words in
- the hall."
- {27a} With the speed of the boat.
- {27b} Queen to Hygelac. She is praised by contrast with the
- antitype, Thryth, just as Beowulf was praised by contrast with
- Heremod.
- {27c} Kenning for "wife."
- {28a} Beowulf gives his uncle the king not mere gossip of his
- journey, but a statesmanlike forecast of the outcome of certain
- policies at the Danish court. Talk of interpolation here is absurd.
- As both Beowulf and Hygelac know, -- and the folk for whom the
- Beowulf was put together also knew, -- Froda was king of the
- Heathobards (probably the Langobards, once near neighbors of Angle
- and Saxon tribes on the continent), and had fallen in fight with the
- Danes. Hrothgar will set aside this feud by giving his daughter as
- "peace-weaver" and wife to the young king Ingeld, son of the slain
- Froda. But Beowulf, on general principles and from his observation
- of the particular case, foretells trouble. Note:
- {28b} Play of shields, battle. A Danish warrior cuts down Froda in
- the fight, and takes his sword and armor, leaving them to a son.
- This son is selected to accompany his mistress, the young princess
- Freawaru, to her new home when she is Ingeld's queen. Heedlessly he
- wears the sword of Froda in hall. An old warrior points it out to
- Ingeld, and eggs him on to vengeance. At his instigation the Dane is
- killed; but the murderer, afraid of results, and knowing the land,
- escapes. So the old feud must break out again.
- {28c} That is, their disastrous battle and the slaying of their
- king.
- {28d} The sword.
- {28e} Beowulf returns to his forecast. Things might well go somewhat
- as follows, he says; sketches a little tragic story; and with this
- prophecy by illustration returns to the tale of his adventure.
- {28f} Not an actual glove, but a sort of bag.
- {29a} Hygelac.
- {29b} This is generally assumed to mean hides, though the text
- simply says "seven thousand." A hide in England meant about 120
- acres, though "the size of the acre varied."
- {29c} On the historical raid into Frankish territory between 512 and
- 520 A.D. The subsequent course of events, as gathered from hints of
- this epic, is partly told in Scandinavian legend.
- {29d} The chronology of this epic, as scholars have worked it out,
- would make Beowulf well over ninety years of age when he fights the
- dragon. But the fifty years of his reign need not be taken as
- historical fact.
- {29e} The text is here hopelessly illegible, and only the general
- drift of the meaning can be rescued. For one thing, we have the old
- myth of a dragon who guards hidden treasure. But with this runs the
- story of some noble, last of his race, who hides all his wealth
- within this barrow and there chants his farewell to life's glories.
- After his death the dragon takes possession of the hoard and watches
- over it. A condemned or banished man, desperate, hides in the
- barrow, discovers the treasure, and while the dragon sleeps, makes
- off with a golden beaker or the like, and carries it for
- propitiation to his master. The dragon discovers the loss and exacts
- fearful penalty from the people round about.
- {31a} Literally "loan-days," days loaned to man.
- {31b} Chattuarii, a tribe that dwelt along the Rhine, and took part
- in repelling the raid of (Hygelac) Chocilaicus.
- {31c} Onla, son of Ongentheow, who pursues his two nephews Eanmund
- and Eadgils to Heardred's court, where they have taken refuge after
- their unsuccessful rebellion. In the fighting Heardred is killed.
- {32a} That is, Beowulf supports Eadgils against Onela, who is slain
- by Eadgils in revenge for the "care-paths" of exile into which Onela
- forced him.
- {32b} That is, the king could claim no wergild, or man-price, from
- one son for the killing of the other.
- {32c} Usual euphemism for death.
- {32d} Sc. in the grave.
- {33a} Eofor for Wulf. -- The immediate provocation for Eofor in
- killing "the hoary Scylfing," Ongentheow, is that the latter has
- just struck Wulf down; but the king, Haethcyn, is also avenged by
- the blow. See the detailed description below.
- {33b} Hygelac.
- {33c} Shield.
- {33d} The hollow passage.
- {34a} That is, although Eanmund was brother's son to Onela, the
- slaying of the former by Weohstan is not felt as cause of feud, and
- is rewarded by gift of the slain man's weapons.
- {34b} Both Wiglaf and the sword did their duty. -- The following is
- one of the classic passages for illustrating the comitatus as the
- most conspicuous Germanic institution, and its underlying sense of
- duty, based partly on the idea of loyalty and partly on the
- practical basis of benefits received and repaid.
- {34c} Sc. "than to bide safely here," -- a common figure of
- incomplete comparison.
- {34d} Wiglaf's wooden shield.
- {34e} Gering would translate "kinsman of the nail," as both are made
- of iron.
- {35a} That is, swords.
- {36a} Where Beowulf lay.
- {37a} What had been left or made by the hammer; well-forged.
- {37b} Trying to revive him.
- {38a} Nothing.
- {38b} Dead.
- {38c} Death-watch, guard of honor, "lyke-wake."
- {38d} A name for the Franks.
- {38e} Ongentheow.
- {38f} Haethcyn.
- {39a} The line may mean: till Hrethelings stormed on the hedged
- shields, -- i.e. the shield-wall or hedge of defensive war --
- Hrethelings, of course, are Geats.
- {39b} Eofor, brother to Wulf Wonreding.
- {39c} Sc. "value in" hides and the weight of the gold.
- {39d} Not at all.
- {39e} Laid on it when it was put in the barrow. This spell, or in
- our days the "curse," either prevented discovery or brought dire
- ills on the finder and taker.
- {40a} Probably the fugitive is meant who discovered the hoard. Ten
- Brink and Gering assume that the dragon is meant. "Hid" may well
- mean here "took while in hiding."
- {40b} That is "one and a few others." But Beowulf seems to be
- indicated.
- {40c} Ten Brink points out the strongly heathen character of this
- part of the epic. Beowulf's end came, so the old tradition ran, from
- his unwitting interference with spell-bound treasure.
- {40d} A hard saying, variously interpreted. In any case, it is the
- somewhat clumsy effort of the Christian poet to tone down the
- heathenism of his material by an edifying observation.
- {41a} Nothing is said of Beowulf's wife in the poem, but Bugge
- surmises that Beowulf finally accepted Hygd's offer of kingdom and
- hoard, and, as was usual, took her into the bargain.
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Beowulf, by Anonymous
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