- The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Tale of Beowulf, by Anonymous, Translated
- by William Morris and Alfred John Wyatt
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
- almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
- re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
- with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
- Title: The Tale of Beowulf
- Sometime King of the Folk of the Weder Geats
- Author: Anonymous
- Release Date: January 23, 2007 [eBook #20431]
- Language: English
- ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TALE OF BEOWULF***
- E-text prepared by Louise Hope, R. Cedron, and the Project Gutenberg
- Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/c/)
- Transcriber's note:
- In the printed book, line numbering was determined by the physical
- length of a line. Sometimes the numbered line was one or even two
- lines above or below the nearest multiple of 10. Where a stanza ended
- on a multiple of 10, the first line of the following stanza was
- numbered instead. Line numbers have been regularized for this e-text.
- THE TALE OF BEOWULF
- Sometime King of the
- Folk of the Weder Geats
- Translated by
- WILLIAM MORRIS and A. J. WYATT
- Longmans, Green, and Co.
- 39 Paternoster Row, London
- New York and Bombay
- MCMIV
- Bibliographical Note
- First printed at the Kelmscott Press, January 1895
- Ordinary Edition . . . . . . . . . . . August 1898
- Reprinted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . August 1904
- ARGUMENT
- Hrothgar, king of the Danes, lives happily and peacefully, and bethinks
- him to build a glorious hall called Hart. But a little after, one
- Grendel, of the kindred of the evil wights that are come of Cain, hears
- the merry noise of Hart and cannot abide it; so he enters thereinto by
- night, and slays and carries off and devours thirty of Hrothgar's
- thanes. Thereby he makes Hart waste for twelve years, and the tidings of
- this mishap are borne wide about lands. Then comes to the helping of
- Hrothgar Beowulf, the son of Ecgtheow, a thane of King Hygelac of the
- Geats, with fourteen fellows. They are met on the shore by the
- land-warder, and by him shown to Hart and the stead of Hrothgar, who
- receives them gladly, and to whom Beowulf tells his errand, that he will
- help him against Grendel. They feast in the hall, and one Unferth, son
- of Ecglaf, taunts Beowulf through jealousy that he was outdone by Breca
- in swimming. Beowulf tells the true tale thereof. And a little after, at
- nightfall, Hrothgar and his folk leave the hall Hart, and it is given in
- charge to Beowulf, who with his Geats abides there the coming of
- Grendel.
- Soon comes Grendel to the hall, and slays a man of the Geats, hight
- Handshoe, and then grapples with Beowulf, who will use no weapon against
- him: Grendel feels himself over-mastered and makes for the door, and
- gets out, but leaves his hand and arm behind him with Beowulf: men on
- the wall hear the great noise of this battle and the wailing of Grendel.
- In the morning the Danes rejoice, and follow the bloody slot of Grendel,
- and return to Hart racing and telling old tales, as of Sigemund and the
- Worm. Then come the king and his thanes to look on the token of victory,
- Grendel's hand and arm, which Beowulf has let fasten: to the hall-gable.
- The king praises Beowulf and rewards him, and they feast in Hart, and
- the tale of Finn and Hengest is told. Then Hrothgar leaves Hart, and so
- does Beowulf also with his Geats, but the Danes keep guard there.
- In the night comes in Grendel's Mother, and catches up Aeschere, a thane
- of Hrothgar, and carries him off to her lair. In the morning is Beowulf
- fetched to Hrothgar, who tells him of this new grief and craves his
- help.
- Then they follow up the slot and come to a great water-side, and find
- thereby Aeschere's head, and the place is known for the lair of those
- two: monsters are playing in the deep, and Beowulf shoots one of them to
- death. Then Beowulf dights him and leaps into the water, and is a day's
- while reaching the bottom. There he is straightway caught hold of by
- Grendel's Mother, who bears him into her hall. When he gets free he
- falls on her, but the edge of the sword Hrunting (lent to him by
- Unferth) fails him, and she casts him to the ground and draws her sax to
- slay him; but he rises up, and sees an old sword of the giants hanging
- on the wall; he takes it and smites off her head therewith. He sees
- Grendel lying dead, and his head also he strikes off; but the blade of
- the sword is molten in his venomous blood. Then Beowulf strikes upward,
- taking with him the head of Grendel and the hilts of the sword. When he
- comes to the shore he finds his Geats there alone; for the Danes fled
- when they saw the blood floating in the water.
- They go up to Hrothgar's stead, and four men must needs bear the head.
- They come to Hrothgar, and Beowulf gives him the hilts and tells him
- what he has done. Much praise is given to Beowulf; and they feast
- together.
- On the morrow Beowulf bids farewell to Hrothgar, more gifts are given,
- and messages are sent to Hygelac: Beowulf departs with the full love of
- Hrothgar. The Geats come to their ship and reward the ship-warder, and
- put off and sail to their own land. Beowulf comes to Hygelac's house.
- Hygelac is told of, and his wife Hygd, and her good conditions, against
- whom is set as a warning the evil Queen Thrytho.
- Beowulf tells all the tale of his doings in full to Hygelac, and gives
- him his gifts, and the precious-gemmed collar to Hygd. Here is told of
- Beowulf, and how he was contemned in his youth, and is now grown so
- renowned.
- Time wears; Hygelac is slain in battle; Heardred, his son, reigns in his
- stead, he is slain by the Swedes, and Beowulf is made king. When he is
- grown old, and has been king for fifty years, come new tidings. A great
- dragon finds on the sea-shore a mound wherein is stored the treasure of
- ancient folk departed. The said dragon abides there, and broods the gold
- for 300 years.
- Now a certain thrall, who had misdone against his lord and was fleeing
- from his wrath, haps on the said treasure and takes a cup thence, which
- he brings to his lord to appease his wrath. The Worm waketh, and findeth
- his treasure lessened, but can find no man who hath done the deed.
- Therefore he turns on the folk, and wars on them, and burns Beowulf's
- house.
- Now Beowulf will go and meet the Worm. He has an iron shield made, and
- sets forth with eleven men and the thrall the thirteenth. He comes to
- the ness, and speaks to his men, telling them of his past days, and
- gives them his last greeting: then he cries out a challenge to the Worm,
- who comes forth, and the battle begins: Beowulf's sword will not bite on
- the Worm. Wiglaf eggs on the others to come to Beowulf's help, and goes
- himself straightway, and offers himself to Beowulf; the Worm comes on
- again, and Beowulf breaks his sword Nægling on him, and the Worm wounds
- Beowulf. Wiglaf smites the Worm in the belly; Beowulf draws his ax, and
- between them they slay the Worm.
- Beowulf now feels his wounds, and knows that he is hurt deadly; he sits
- down by the wall, and Wiglaf bathes his wounds. Beowulf speaks, tells
- how he would give his armour to his son if he had one; thanks God that
- he has not sworn falsely or done guilefully; and prays Wiglaf to bear
- out the treasure that he may see it before he dies.
- Wiglaf fetches out the treasure, and again bathes Beowulf's wounds;
- Beowulf speaks again, rejoices over the sight of the treasure; gives to
- Wiglaf his ring and his armour, and bids the manner of his bale-fire.
- With that he passes away. Now the dastards come thereto and find Wiglaf
- vainly bathing his dead lord. He casteth shame upon them with great
- wrath. Thence he sends a messenger to the barriers of the town, who
- comes to the host, and tells them of the death of Beowulf. He tells
- withal of the old feud betwixt the Geats and the Swedes, and how these,
- when they hear of the death of the king, will be upon them. The warriors
- go to look on Beowulf, and find him and the Worm lying dead together.
- Wiglaf chooses out seven of them to go void the treasure-house, after
- having bidden them gather wood for the bale-fire. They shove the Worm
- over the cliff into the sea, and bear off the treasure in wains. Then
- they bring Beowulf's corpse to bale, and they kindle it; a woman called
- the wife of aforetime, it may be Hygd, widow of Hygelac, bemoans him:
- and twelve children of the athelings ride round the bale, and bemoan
- Beowulf and praise him: and thus ends the poem.
- THE STORY OF BEOWULF
- I. AND FIRST OF THE KINDRED OF HROTHGAR.
- What! we of the Spear-Danes of yore days, so was it
- That we learn'd of the fair fame of kings of the folks
- And the athelings a-faring in framing of valour.
- Oft then Scyld the Sheaf-son from the hosts of the scathers,
- From kindreds a many the mead-settles tore;
- It was then the earl fear'd them, sithence was he first
- Found bare and all-lacking; so solace he bided,
- Wax'd under the welkin in worship to thrive,
- Until it was so that the round-about sitters
- All over the whale-road must hearken his will 10
- And yield him the tribute. A good king was that,
- By whom then thereafter a son was begotten,
- A youngling in garth, whom the great God sent thither
- To foster the folk; and their crime-need he felt
- The load that lay on them while lordless they lived
- For a long while and long. He therefore, the Life-lord,
- The Wielder of glory, world's worship he gave him:
- Brim Beowulf waxed, and wide the weal upsprang
- Of the offspring of Scyld in the parts of the Scede-lands.
- Such wise shall a youngling with wealth be a-working 20
- With goodly fee-gifts toward the friends of his father,
- That after in eld-days shall ever bide with him,
- Fair fellows well-willing when wendeth the war-tide,
- Their lief lord a-serving. By praise-deeds it shall be
- That in each and all kindreds a man shall have thriving.
- Then went his ways Scyld when the shapen while was,
- All hardy to wend him to the lord and his warding:
- Out then did they bear him to the side of the sea-flood,
- The dear fellows of him, as he himself pray'd them
- While yet his word wielded the friend of the Scyldings, 30
- The dear lord of the land; a long while had he own'd it.
- With stem all be-ringed at the hythe stood the ship,
- All icy and out-fain, the Atheling's ferry.
- There then did they lay him, the lord well beloved,
- The gold-rings' bestower, within the ship's barm,
- The mighty by mast. Much there was the treasure,
- From far ways forsooth had the fret-work been led:
- Never heard I of keel that was comelier dighted
- With weapons of war, and with weed of the battle,
- With bills and with byrnies. There lay in his barm 40
- Much wealth of the treasure that with him should be,
- And he into the flood's might afar to depart.
- No lesser a whit were the wealth-goods they dight him
- Of the goods of the folk, than did they who aforetime,
- When was the beginning, first sent him away
- Alone o'er the billows, and he but a youngling.
- Moreover they set him up there a sign golden
- High up overhead, and let the holm bear him,
- Gave all to the Spearman. Sad mind they had in them,
- And mourning their mood was. Now never knew men, 50
- For sooth how to say it, rede-masters in hall,
- Or heroes 'neath heaven, to whose hands came the lading.
- II. CONCERNING HROTHGAR,
- AND HOW HE BUILT THE HOUSE CALLED HART.
- ALSO GRENDEL IS TOLD OF.
- In the burgs then was biding Beowulf the Scylding,
- Dear King of the people, for long was he dwelling
- Far-famed of folks (his father turn'd elsewhere,
- From his stead the Chief wended) till awoke to him after
- Healfdene the high, and long while he held it,
- Ancient and war-eager, o'er the glad Scyldings:
- Of his body four bairns are forth to him rimed;
- Into the world woke the leader of war-hosts 60
- Heorogar; eke Hrothgar, and Halga the good;
- Heard I that Elan queen was she of Ongentheow,
- That Scylding of battle, the bed-mate behalsed.
- Then was unto Hrothgar the war-speed given,
- Such worship of war that his kin and well-willers
- Well hearken'd his will till the younglings were waxen,
- A kin-host a many. Then into his mind ran
- That he would be building for him now a hall-house,
- That men should be making a mead-hall more mighty
- Than the children of ages had ever heard tell of: 70
- And there within eke should he be out-dealing
- To young and to old all things God had given,
- Save the share of the folk and the life-days of men.
- Then heard I that widely the work was a-banning
- To kindreds a many the Middle-garth over
- To fret o'er that folk-stead. So befell to him timely
- Right soon among men that made was it yarely
- The most of hall-houses, and Hart its name shap'd he,
- Who wielded his word full widely around.
- His behest he belied not; it was he dealt the rings, 80
- The wealth at the high-tide. Then up rose the hall-house,
- High up and horn-gabled. Hot surges it bided
- Of fire-flame the loathly, nor long was it thenceforth
- Ere sorely the edge-hate 'twixt Son and Wife's Father
- After the slaughter-strife there should awaken.
- Then the ghost heavy-strong bore with it hardly
- E'en for a while of time, bider in darkness,
- That there on each day of days heard he the mirth-tide
- Loud in the hall-house. There was the harp's voice,
- And clear song of shaper. Said he who could it 90
- To tell the first fashion of men from aforetime;
- Quoth how the Almighty One made the Earth's fashion,
- The fair field and bright midst the bow of the Waters,
- And with victory beglory'd set Sun and Moon,
- Bright beams to enlighten the biders on land:
- And how he adorned all parts of the earth
- With limbs and with leaves; and life withal shaped
- For the kindred of each thing that quick on earth wendeth.
- So liv'd on all happy the host of the kinsmen
- In game and in glee, until one wight began, 100
- A fiend out of hell-pit, the framing of evil,
- And Grendel forsooth the grim guest was hight,
- The mighty mark-strider, the holder of moorland,
- The fen and the fastness. The stead of the fifel
- That wight all unhappy a while of time warded,
- Sithence that the Shaper him had for-written.
- On the kindred of Cain the Lord living ever
- Awreaked the murder of the slaying of Abel.
- In that feud he rejoic'd not, but afar him He banish'd,
- The Maker, from mankind for the crime he had wrought. 110
- But offspring uncouth thence were they awoken
- Eotens and elf-wights, and ogres of ocean,
- And therewith the Giants, who won war against God
- A long while; but He gave them their wages therefor.
- III. HOW GRENDEL FELL UPON HART AND WASTED IT.
- Now went he a-spying, when come was the night-tide,
- The house on high builded, and how there the Ring-Danes
- Their beer-drinking over had boune them to bed;
- And therein he found them, the atheling fellows,
- Asleep after feasting. Then sorrow they knew not
- Nor the woe of mankind: but the wight of wealth's waning, 120
- The grim and the greedy, soon yare was he gotten,
- All furious and fierce, and he raught up from resting
- A thirty of thanes, and thence aback got him
- Right fain of his gettings, and homeward to fare,
- Fulfilled of slaughter his stead to go look on.
- Thereafter at dawning, when day was yet early,
- The war-craft of Grendel to men grew unhidden,
- And after his meal was the weeping uphoven,
- Mickle voice of the morning-tide: there the Prince mighty,
- The Atheling exceeding good, unblithe he sat, 130
- Tholing the heavy woe; thane-sorrow dreed he
- Since the slot of the loathly wight there they had look'd on,
- The ghost all accursed. O'er grisly the strife was,
- So loathly and longsome. No longer the frist was
- But after the wearing of one night; then fram'd he
- Murder-bales more yet, and nowise he mourned
- The feud and the crime; over fast therein was he.
- Then easy to find was the man who would elsewhere
- Seek out for himself a rest was more roomsome,
- Beds end-long the bowers, when beacon'd to him was, 140
- And soothly out told by manifest token,
- The hate of the hell-thane. He held himself sithence
- Further and faster who from the fiend gat him.
- In such wise he rul'd it and wrought against right,
- But one against all, until idle was standing
- The best of hall-houses; and mickle the while was,
- Twelve winter-tides' wearing; and trouble he tholed,
- That friend of the Scyldings, of woes every one
- And wide-spreading sorrows: for sithence it fell
- That unto men's children unbidden 'twas known 150
- Full sadly in singing, that Grendel won war
- 'Gainst Hrothgar a while of time, hate-envy waging,
- And crime-guilts and feud for seasons no few,
- And strife without stinting. For the sake of no kindness
- Unto any of men of the main-host of Dane-folk
- Would he thrust off the life-bale, or by fee-gild allay it,
- Nor was there a wise man that needed to ween
- The bright boot to have at the hand of the slayer.
- The monster the fell one afflicted them sorely,
- That death-shadow darksome the doughty and youthful 160
- Enfettered, ensnared; night by night was he faring
- The moorlands the misty. But never know men
- Of spell-workers of Hell to and fro where they wander.
- So crime-guilts a many the foeman of mankind,
- The fell alone-farer, fram'd oft and full often,
- Cruel hard shames and wrongful, and Hart he abode in,
- The treasure-stain'd hall, in the dark of the night-tide;
- But never the gift-stool therein might he greet,
- The treasure before the Creator he trow'd not.
- Mickle wrack was it soothly for the friend of the Scyldings, 170
- Yea heart and mood breaking. Now sat there a many
- Of the mighty in rune, and won them the rede
- Of what thing for the strong-soul'd were best of all things
- Which yet they might frame 'gainst the fear and the horror.
- And whiles they behight them at the shrines of the heathen
- To worship the idols; and pray'd they in words,
- That he, the ghost-slayer, would frame for them helping
- 'Gainst the folk-threats and evil So far'd they their wont,
- The hope of the heathen; nor hell they remember'd
- In mood and in mind. And the Maker they knew not, 180
- The Doomer of deeds: nor of God the Lord wist they,
- Nor the Helm of the Heavens knew aught how to hery,
- The Wielder of Glory. Woe worth unto that man
- Who through hatred the baneful his soul shall shove into
- The fire's embrace; nought of fostering weens he,
- Nor of changing one whit. But well is he soothly
- That after the death-day shall seek to the Lord,
- In the breast of the Father all peace ever craving.
- IV. NOW COMES BEOWULF ECGTHEOW'S SON
- TO THE LAND OF THE DANES,
- AND THE WALL-WARDEN SPEAKETH WITH HIM.
- So care that was time-long the kinsman of Healfdene
- Still seeth'd without ceasing, nor might the wise warrior 190
- Wend otherwhere woe, for o'er strong was the strife
- All loathly so longsome late laid on the people,
- Need-wrack and grim nithing, of night-bales the greatest.
- Now that from his home heard the Hygelac's thane,
- Good midst of the Geat-folk; of Grendel's deeds heard he.
- But he was of mankind of might and main mightiest
- In the day that we tell of, the day of this life,
- All noble, strong-waxen. He bade a wave-wearer
- Right good to be gear'd him, and quoth he that the war-king
- Over the swan-road he would be seeking, 200
- The folk-lord far-famed, since lack of men had he.
- Forsooth of that faring the carles wiser-fashion'd
- Laid little blame on him, though lief to them was he;
- The heart-hardy whetted they, heeded the omen.
- There had the good one, e'en he of the Geat-folk,
- Champions out-chosen of them that he keenest
- Might find for his needs; and he then the fifteenth,
- Sought to the sound-wood. A swain thereon show'd him,
- A sea-crafty man, all the make of the land-marks.
- Wore then a while, on the waves was the floater, 210
- The boat under the berg, and yare then the warriors
- Strode up on the stem; the streams were a-winding
- The sea 'gainst the sands. Upbore the swains then
- Up into the bark's barm the bright-fretted weapons,
- The war-array stately; then out the lads shov'd her,
- The folk on the welcome way shov'd out the wood-bound.
- Then by the wind driven out o'er the wave-holm
- Far'd the foamy-neck'd floater most like to a fowl,
- Till when was the same tide of the second day's wearing
- The wound-about-stemm'd one had waded her way, 220
- So that then they that sail'd her had sight of the land,
- Bleak shine of the sea-cliffs, bergs steep up above,
- Sea-nesses wide reaching; the sound was won over,
- The sea-way was ended: then up ashore swiftly
- The band of the Weder-folk up on earth wended;
- They bound up the sea-wood, their sarks on them rattled,
- Their weed of the battle, and God there they thanked
- For that easy the wave-ways were waxen unto them.
- But now from the wall saw the Scylding-folks' warder,
- E'en he whom the holm-cliffs should ever be holding, 230
- Men bear o'er the gangway the bright shields a-shining,
- Folk-host gear all ready. Then mind-longing wore him,
- And stirr'd up his mood to wot who were the men-folk.
- So shoreward down far'd he his fair steed a-riding,
- Hrothgar's Thane, and full strongly then set he a-quaking
- The stark wood in his hands, and in council-speech speer'd he:
- What men be ye then of them that have war-gear,
- With byrnies bewarded, who the keel high up-builded
- Over the Lake-street thus have come leading.
- Hither o'er holm-ways hieing in ring-stem? 240
- End-sitter was I, a-holding the sea-ward,
- That the land of the Dane-folk none of the loathly
- Faring with ship-horde ever might scathe it.
- None yet have been seeking more openly hither
- Of shield-havers than ye, and ye of the leave-word
- Of the framers of war naught at all wotting,
- Or the manners of kinsmen. But no man of earls greater
- Saw I ever on earth than one of you yonder,
- The warrior in war-gear: no hall-man, so ween I,
- Is that weapon-beworthy'd, but his visage belie him, 250
- The sight seen once only. Now I must be wotting
- The spring of your kindred ere further ye cast ye,
- And let loose your false spies in the Dane-land a-faring
- Yet further afield. So now, ye far-dwellers,
- Ye wenders o'er sea-flood, this word do ye hearken
- Of my one-folded thought: and haste is the handiest
- To do me to wit of whence is your coming.
- V. HERE BEOWULF MAKES ANSWER TO THE LAND-WARDEN,
- WHO SHOWETH HIM THE WAY TO THE KING'S ABODE.
- He then that was chiefest in thus wise he answer'd,
- The war-fellows' leader unlock'd he the word-hoard:
- We be a people of the Weder-Geats' man-kin 260
- And of Hygelac be we the hearth-fellows soothly.
- My father before me of folks was well-famed
- Van-leader and atheling, Ecgtheow he hight.
- Many winters abode he, and on the way wended
- An old man from the garths, and him well remembers
- Every wise man well nigh wide yond o'er the earth.
- Through our lief mood and friendly the lord that is thine,
- Even Healfdene's son, are we now come a-seeking,
- Thy warder of folk. Learn us well with thy leading,
- For we have to the mighty an errand full mickle, 270
- To the lord of the Dane-folk: naught dark shall it be,
- That ween I full surely. If it be so thou wottest,
- As soothly for our parts we now have heard say,
- That one midst of the Scyldings, who of scathers I wot not,
- A deed-hater secret, in the dark of the night-tide
- Setteth forth through the terror the malice untold of,
- The shame-wrong and slaughter. I therefore to Hrothgar
- Through my mind fashion'd roomsome the rede may now learn him,
- How he, old-wise and good, may get the fiend under,
- If once more from him awayward may turn 280
- The business of bales, and the boot come again,
- And the weltering of care wax cooler once more;
- Or for ever sithence time of stress he shall thole,
- The need and the wronging, the while yet there abideth
- On the high stead aloft the best of all houses.
- Then spake out the warden on steed there a-sitting,
- The servant all un-fear'd: It shall be of either
- That the shield-warrior sharp the sundering wotteth,
- Of words and of works, if he think thereof well.
- I hear it thus said that this host here is friendly 290
- To the lord of the Scyldings; forth fare ye then, bearing
- Your weed and your weapons, of the way will I wise you;
- Likewise mine own kinsmen I will now be bidding
- Against every foeman your floater before us,
- Your craft but new-tarred, the keel on the sand,
- With honour to hold, until back shall be bearing
- Over the lake-streams this one, the lief man,
- The wood of the wounden-neck back unto Wedermark.
- Unto such shall be granted amongst the good-doers
- To win the way out all whole from the war-race. 300
- Then boun they to faring, the bark biding quiet;
- Hung upon hawser the wide-fathom'd ship
- Fast at her anchor. Forth shone the boar-shapes
- Over the check-guards golden adorned,
- Fair-shifting, fire-hard; ward held the farrow.
- Snorted the war-moody, hasten'd the warriors
- And trod down together until the hall timbered,
- Stately and gold-bestain'd, gat they to look on,
- That was the all-mightiest unto earth's dwellers
- Of halls 'neath the heavens, wherein bode the mighty; 310
- Glisten'd the gleam thereof o'er lands a many.
- Unto them then the war-deer the court of the proud one
- Full clearly betaught it, that they therewithal
- Might wend their ways thither. Then he of the warriors
- Round wended his steed, and spake a word backward:
- Time now for my faring; but the Father All-wielder
- May He with all helping henceforward so hold you
- All whole in your wayfaring. Will I to sea-side
- Against the wroth folk to hold warding ever.
- VI. BEOWULF AND THE GEATS COME INTO HART.
- Stone-diverse the street was, straight uplong the path led 320
- The warriors together. There shone the war-byrny
- The hard and the hand-lock'd; the ring-iron sheer
- Sang over their war-gear, when they to the hall first
- In their gear the all-fearful had gat them to ganging.
- So then the sea-weary their wide shields set down,
- Their war-rounds the mighty, against the hall's wall.
- Then bow'd they to bench, and rang there the byrnies,
- The war-weed of warriors, and up-stood the spears,
- The war-gear of the sea-folk all gather'd together.
- The ash-holt grey-headed; that host of the iron 330
- With weapons was worshipful. There then a proud chief
- Of those lads of the battle speer'd after their line:
- Whence ferry ye then the shields golden-faced,
- The grey sarks therewith, and the helms all bevisor'd,
- And a heap of the war-shafts? Now am I of Hrothgar
- The man and the messenger: ne'er saw I of aliens
- So many of men more might-like of mood.
- I ween that for pride-sake, no wise for wrack-wending
- But for high might of mind, ye to Hrothgar have sought.
- Unto him then the heart-hardy answer'd and spake, 340
- The proud earl of the Weders the word gave aback,
- The hardy neath helm: Now of Hygelac are we
- The board-fellows; Beowulf e'en is my name,
- And word will I say unto Healfdene's son,
- To the mighty, the folk-lord, what errand is mine,
- Yea unto thy lord, if to us he will grant it
- That him, who so good is, anon we may greet.
- Spake Wulfgar the word, a lord of the Wendels,
- And the mood of his heart of a many was kenned,
- His war and his wisdom: I therefore the Danes' friend 350
- Will lightly be asking, of the lord of the Scyldings,
- The dealer of rings, since the boon thou art bidding,
- The mighty folk-lord, concerning thine errand,
- And swiftly the answer shall do thee to wit
- Which the good one to give thee aback may deem meetest.
- Then turn'd he in haste to where Hrothgar was sitting
- Right old and all hoary mid the host of his earl-folk:
- Went the valour-stark; stood he the shoulders before
- Of the Dane-lord: well could he the doughty ones' custom.
- So Wulfgar spake forth to his lord the well-friendly: 360
- Hither are ferry'd now, come from afar off
- O'er the field of the ocean, a folk of the Geats;
- These men of the battle e'en Beowulf name they
- Their elder and chiefest, and to thee are they bidding
- That they, O dear lord, with thee may be dealing
- In word against word. Now win them no naysay
- Of thy speech again-given, O Hrothgar the glad-man:
- For they in their war-gear, methinketh, be worthy
- Of good deeming of earls; and forsooth naught but doughty
- Is he who hath led o'er the warriors hither. 370
- VII. BEOWULF SPEAKETH WITH HROTHGAR,
- AND TELLETH HOW HE WILL MEET GRENDEL.
- Word then gave out Hrothgar the helm of the Scyldings:
- I knew him in sooth when he was but a youngling,
- And his father, the old man, was Ecgtheow hight;
- Unto whom at his home gave Hrethel the Geat-lord
- His one only daughter; and now hath his offspring
- All hardy come hither a lief lord to seek him.
- For that word they spake then, the sea-faring men,
- E'en they who the gift-seat for the Geat-folk had ferry'd,
- Brought thither for thanks, that of thirty of menfolk
- The craft of might hath he within his own handgrip, 380
- That war-strong of men. Now him holy God
- For kind help hath sent off here even to us,
- We men of the West Danes, as now I have weening,
- 'Gainst the terror of Grendel. So I to that good one
- For his mighty mood-daring shall the dear treasure bid.
- Haste now and be speedy, and bid them in straightway,
- The kindred-band gather'd together, to see us,
- And in words say thou eke that they be well comen
- To the folk of the Danes. To the door of the hall then
- Went Wulfgar, and words withinward he flitted: 390
- He bade me to say you, my lord of fair battle,
- The elder of East-Danes, that he your blood knoweth,
- And that unto him are ye the sea-surges over,
- Ye lads hardy-hearted, well come to land hither;
- And now may ye wend you all in war-raiment
- Under the battle-mask Hrothgar to see.
- But here let your battle-boards yet be abiding,
- With your war-weed and slaughter-shafts, issue of words.
- Then rose up the rich one, much warriors around him,
- Chosen heap of the thanes, but there some abided 400
- The war-gear to hold, as the wight one was bidding.
- Swift went they together, as the warrior there led them,
- Under Hart's roof: went the stout-hearted,
- The hardy neath helm, till he stood by the high-seat.
- Then Beowulf spake out, on him shone the byrny,
- His war-net besown by the wiles of the smith:
- Hail to thee, Hrothgar! I am of Hygelac
- Kinsman and folk-thane; fair deeds have I many
- Begun in my youth-tide, and this matter of Grendel
- On the turf of mine own land undarkly I knew. 410
- 'Tis the seafarers' say that standeth this hall,
- The best house forsooth, for each one of warriors
- All idle and useless, after the even-light
- Under the heaven-loft hidden becometh.
- Then lightly they learn'd me, my people, this lore,
- E'en the best that there be of the wise of the churls,
- O Hrothgar the kingly, that thee should I seek to,
- Whereas of the might of my craft were they cunning;
- For they saw me when came I from out of my wargear,
- Blood-stain'd from the foe whenas five had I bounden, 420
- Quell'd the kin of the eotens, and in the wave slain
- The nicors by night-tide: strait need then I bore,
- Wreak'd the grief of the Weders, the woe they had gotten;
- I ground down the wrathful; and now against Grendel
- I here with the dread one alone shall be dooming,
- In Thing with the giant. I now then with thee,
- O lord of the bright Danes, will fall to my bidding,
- O berg of Scyldings, and bid thee one boon,
- Which, O refuge of warriors, gainsay me not now,
- Since, O free friend of folks, from afar have I come, 430
- That I alone, I and my band of the earls,
- This hard heap of men, may cleanse Hart of ill.
- This eke have I heard say, that he, the fell monster,
- In his wan-heed recks nothing of weapons of war;
- Forgo I this therefore (if so be that Hygelac
- Will still be my man-lord, and he blithe of mood)
- To bear the sword with me, or bear the broad shield,
- Yellow-round to the battle; but with naught save the hand-grip
- With the foe shall I grapple, and grope for the life
- The loathly with loathly. There he shall believe 440
- In the doom of the Lord whom death then shall take.
- Now ween I that he, if he may wield matters,
- E'en there in the war-hall the folk of the Geats
- Shall eat up unafear'd, as oft he hath done it
- With the might of the Hrethmen: no need for thee therefore
- My head to be hiding; for me will he have
- With gore all bestain'd, if the death of men get me;
- He will bear off my bloody corpse minded to taste it;
- Unmournfully then will the Lone-goer eat it,
- Will blood-mark the moor-ways; for the meat of my body 450
- Naught needest thou henceforth in any wise grieve thee.
- But send thou to Hygelac, if the war have me,
- The best of all war-shrouds that now my breast wardeth,
- The goodliest of railings, the good gift of Hrethel,
- The hand-work of Weland. Weird wends as she willeth.
- VIII. HROTHGAR ANSWERETH BEOWULF
- AND BIDDETH HIM SIT TO THE FEAST.
- Spake out then Hrothgar the helm of the Scyldings:
- Thou Beowulf, friend mine, for battle that wardeth
- And for help that is kindly hast sought to us hither.
- Fought down thy father the most of all feuds;
- To Heatholaf was he forsooth for a hand-bane 460
- Amidst of the Wylfings. The folk of the Weders
- Him for the war-dread that while might not hold.
- So thence did he seek to the folk of the South-Danes
- O'er the waves' wallow, to the Scyldings be-worshipped.
- Then first was I wielding the weal of the Dane-folk,
- That time was I holding in youth-tide the gem-rich
- Hoard-burg of the heroes. Dead then was Heorogar,
- Mine elder of brethren; unliving was he,
- The Healfdene's bairn that was better than I.
- That feud then thereafter with fee did I settle; 470
- I sent to the Wylfing folk over the waters' back
- Treasures of old time; he swore the oaths to me.
- Sorrow is in my mind that needs must I say it
- To any of grooms, of Grendel what hath he
- Of shaming in Hart, and he with his hate-wiles
- Of sudden harms framed; the host of my hall-floor,
- The war-heap, is waned; Weird swept them away
- Into horror of Grendel. It is God now that may lightly
- The scather the doltish from deeds thrust aside.
- Full oft have they boasted with beer well bedrunken, 480
- My men of the battle all over the ale-stoup,
- That they in the beer-hall would yet be abiding
- The onset of Grendel with the terror of edges.
- But then was this mead-hall in the tide of the morning,
- This warrior-hall, gore-stain'd when day at last gleamed,
- All the boards of the benches with blood besteam'd over,
- The hall laid with sword-gore: of lieges less had I
- Of dear and of doughty, for them death had gotten.
- Now sit thou to feast and unbind thy mood freely,
- Thy war-fame unto men as the mind of thee whetteth. 490
- Then was for the Geat-folk and them all together
- There in the beer-hall a bench bedight roomsome,
- There the stout-hearted hied them to sitting
- Proud in their might: a thane minded the service,
- Who in hand upbare an ale-stoup adorned,
- Skinked the sheer mead; whiles sang the shaper
- Clear out in Hart-hall; joy was of warriors,
- Men doughty no little of Danes and of Weders.
- IX. UNFERTH CONTENDETH IN WORDS WITH BEOWULF.
- Spake out then Unferth that bairn was of Ecglaf,
- And he sat at the feet of the lord of the Scyldings, 500
- He unbound the battle-rune; was Beowulf's faring,
- Of him the proud mere-farer, mickle unliking,
- Whereas he begrudg'd it of any man other
- That he glories more mighty the middle-garth over
- Should hold under heaven than he himself held:
- Art thou that Beowulf who won strife with Breca
- On the wide sea contending in swimming,
- When ye two for pride's sake search'd out the floods
- And for a dolt's cry into deep water
- Thrust both your life-days? No man the twain of you, 510
- Lief or loth were he, might lay wyte to stay you
- Your sorrowful journey, when on the sea row'd ye;
- Then when the ocean-stream ye with your arms deck'd,
- Meted the mere-streets, there your hands brandish'd!
- O'er the Spearman ye glided; the sea with waves welter'd,
- The surge of the winter. Ye twain in the waves' might
- For a seven nights swink'd. He outdid thee in swimming,
- And the more was his might; but him in the morn-tide
- To the Heatho-Remes' land the holm bore ashore.
- And thence away sought he to his dear land and lovely, 520
- The lief to his people sought the land of the Brondings,
- The fair burg peace-warding, where he the folk owned,
- The burg and the gold rings. What to theeward he boasted,
- Beanstan's son, for thee soothly he brought it about.
- Now ween I for thee things worser than erewhile,
- Though thou in the war-race wert everywhere doughty,
- In the grim war, if thou herein Grendel darest
- Night-long for a while of time nigh to abide.
- Then Beowulf spake out, the Ecgtheow's bairn:
- What! thou no few of things, O Unferth my friend, 530
- And thou drunken with beer, about Breca hast spoken,
- Saidest out of his journey; so the sooth now I tell:
- To wit, that the more might ever I owned,
- Hard wearing on wave more than any man else.
- We twain then, we quoth it, while yet we were younglings,
- And we boasted between us, the twain of us being yet
- In our youth-days, that we out onto the Spearman
- Our lives would adventure; and e'en so we wrought It.
- We had a sword naked, when on the sound row'd we,
- Hard in hand, as we twain against the whale-fishes 540
- Had mind to be warding us. No whit from me
- In the waves of the sea-flood afar might he float
- The hastier in holm, nor would I from him hie me.
- Then we two together, we were in the sea
- For a five nights, till us twain the flood drave asunder,
- The weltering of waves. Then the coldest of weathers
- In the dusking of night and the wind from the northward
- Battle-grim turn'd against us, rough grown were the billows.
- Of the mere-fishes then was the mood all up-stirred;
- There me 'gainst the loathly the body-sark mine, 550
- The hard and the hand-lock'd, was framing me help,
- My battle-rail braided, it lay on my breast
- Gear'd graithly with gold. But me to the ground tugg'd
- A foe and fiend-scather; fast he had me In hold
- That grim one in grip: yet to me was it given.
- That the wretch there, the monster, with point might I reach,
- With my bill of the battle, and the war-race off bore
- The mighty mere-beast through the hand that was mine.
- X. BEOWULF MAKES AN END OF HIS TALE OF THE SWIMMING.
- WEALHTHEOW, HROTHGAR'S QUEEN, GREETS HIM;
- AND HROTHGAR DELIVERS TO HIM THE WARDING OF THE HALL.
- Thus oft and oft over the doers of evil
- They threatened me hard; thane-service I did them 560
- With the dear sword of mine, as forsooth it was meet,
- That nowise of their fill did they win them the joy
- The evil fordoers in swallowing me down,
- Sitting round at the feast nigh the ground of the sea.
- Yea rather, a morning-tide, mangled by sword-edge
- Along the waves' leaving up there did they lie
- Lull'd asleep with the sword, so that never sithence
- About the deep floods for the farers o'er ocean
- The way have they letted. Came the light from the eastward,
- The bright beacon of God, and grew the seas calm, 570
- So that the sea-nesses now might I look on,
- The windy walls. Thuswise Weird oft will be saving
- The earl that is unfey, when his valour availeth.
- Whatever, it happ'd me that I with the sword slew
- Nicors nine. Never heard I of fighting a night-tide
- 'Neath the vault of the heavens was harder than that,
- Nor yet on the sea-streams of woefuller wight.
- Whatever, forth won I with life from the foes' clutch
- All of wayfaring weary. But me the sea upbore,
- The flood downlong the tide with the weltering of waters, 580
- All onto the Finnland. No whit of thee ever
- Mid such strife of the battle-gear have I heard say,
- Such terrors of bills. Nor never yet Breca
- In the play of the battle, nor both you, nor either,
- So dearly the deeds have framed forsooth
- With the bright flashing swords; though of this naught I boast me.
- But thou of thy brethren the banesman becamest,
- Yea thine head-kin forsooth, for which in hell shalt thou
- Dree weird of damnation, though doughty thy wit be;
- For unto thee say I forsooth, son of Ecglaf, 590
- That so many deeds never Grendel had done,
- That monster the loathly, against thine own lord,
- The shaming in Hart-hall, if suchwise thy mind were,
- And thy soul e'en as battle-fierce, such as thou sayest.
- But he, he hath fram'd it that the feud he may heed not,
- The fearful edge-onset that is of thy folk,
- Nor sore need be fearful of the Victory-Scyldings.
- The need-pledges taketh he, no man he spareth
- Of the folk of the Danes, driveth war as he lusteth,
- Slayeth and feasteth unweening of strife 600
- With them of the Spear-Danes. But I, I shall show it,
- The Geats' wightness and might ere the time weareth old,
- Shall bide him in war-tide. Then let him go who may go
- High-hearted to mead, sithence when the morn-light
- O'er the children of men of the second day hence,
- The sun clad in heaven's air, shines from the southward.
- Then merry of heart was the meter of treasures,
- The hoary-man'd war-renown'd, help now he trow'd in;
- The lord of the Bright-Danes on Beowulf hearken'd,
- The folk-shepherd knew him, his fast-ready mind. 610
- There was laughter of heroes, and high the din rang
- And winsome the words were. Went Wealhtheow forth,
- The Queen she of Hrothgar, of courtesies mindful,
- The gold-array'd greeted the grooms in the hall,
- The free and frank woman the beaker there wended,
- And first to the East-Dane-folk's fatherland's warder,
- And bade him be blithe at the drinking of beer,
- To his people beloved, and lustily took he
- The feast and the hall-cup, that victory-fam'd King.
- Then round about went she, the Dame of the Helmings, 620
- And to doughty and youngsome, each deal of the folk there,
- Gave cups of the treasure, till now it betid
- That to Beowulf duly the Queen the ring-dighted,
- Of mind high uplifted, the mead-beaker bare.
- Then she greeted the Geat-lord, and gave God the thank,
- She, the wisefast In words, that the will had wax'd in her
- In one man of the earls to have trusting and troth
- For comfort from crimes. But the cup then he took,
- The slaughter-fierce warrior, from Wealhtheow the Queen.
- And then rim'd he the word, making ready for war, 630
- And Beowulf spake forth, the Ecgtheow's bairn:
- E'en that in mind had I when up on holm strode I,
- And in sea-boat sat down with a band of my men,
- That for once and for all the will of your people
- Would I set me to work, or on slaughter-field cringe
- Fast in grip of the fiend; yea and now shall I frame
- The valour of earl-folk, or else be abiding
- The day of mine end, here down in the mead-hall.
- To the wife those his words well liking they were,
- The big word of the Geat; and the gold-adorn'd wended, 640
- The frank and free Queen to sit by her lord.
- And thereafter within the high hall was as erst
- The proud word outspoken and bliss on the people,
- Was the sound of the victory-folk, till on a sudden
- The Healfdene's son would now be a-seeking
- His rest of the even: wotted he for the Evil
- Within the high hall was the Hild-play bedight,
- Sithence that the sun-light no more should they see,
- When night should be darkening, and down over all
- The shapes of the shadow-helms should be a-striding 650
- Wan under the welkin. Uprose then all war-folk;
- Then greeted the glad-minded one man the other,
- Hrothgar to Beowulf, bidding him hail,
- And the wine-hall to wield, and withal quoth the word:
- Never to any man erst have I given,
- Since the hand and the shield's round aloft might I heave,
- This high hall of the Dane-folk, save now unto thee.
- Have now and hold the best of all houses,
- Mind thee of fame, show the might of thy valour!
- Wake the wroth one: no lack shall there be to thy willing 660
- If that wight work thou win and life therewithal.
- XI. NOW IS BEOWULF LEFT IN THE HALL ALONE WITH HIS MEN.
- Then wended him Hrothgar with the band of his warriors,
- The high-ward of the Scyldings from out of the hall,
- For then would the war-lord go seek unto Wealhtheow
- The Queen for a bed-mate. The glory of king-folk
- Against Grendel had set, as men have heard say,
- A hall-ward who held him a service apart
- In the house of the Dane-lord, for eoten-ward held he.
- Forsooth he, the Geat-lord, full gladly he trowed
- In the might of his mood and the grace of the Maker. 670
- Therewith he did off him his byrny of iron
- And the helm from his head, and his dighted sword gave,
- The best of all irons, to the thane that abode him,
- And bade him to hold that harness of battle.
- Bespake then the good one, a big word he gave out,
- Beowulf the Geat, ere on the bed strode he:
- Nowise in war I deem me more lowly
- In the works of the battle than Grendel, I ween;
- So not with the sword shall I lull him to slumber,
- Or take his life thuswise, though to me were it easy; 680
- Of that good wise he wots not, to get the stroke on me,
- To hew on my shield, for as stark as he shall be
- In the works of the foeman. So we twain a night-tide
- Shall forgo the sword, if he dare yet to seek
- The war without weapons. Sithence the wise God,
- The Lord that is holy, on which hand soever
- The glory may doom as due to him seemeth.
- Bowed down then the war-deer, the cheek-bolster took
- The face of the earl; and about him a many
- Of sea-warriors bold to their hall-slumber bow'd them; 690
- No one of them thought that thence away should he
- Seek ever again to his home the beloved,
- His folk or his free burg, where erst he was fed;
- For of men had they learn'd that o'er mickle a many
- In that wine-hall aforetime the fell death had gotten
- Of the folk of the Danes; but the Lord to them gave it,
- To the folk of the Weders, the web of war-speeding,
- Help fair and good comfort, e'en so that their foeman
- Through the craft of one man all they overcame,
- By the self-might of one. So is manifest truth 700
- That God the Almighty the kindred of men
- Hath wielded wide ever. Now by wan night there came,
- There strode in the shade-goer; slept there the shooters,
- They who that horn-house should be a-holding,
- All men but one man: to men was that known,
- That them indeed might not, since will'd not the Maker,
- The scather unceasing drag off 'neath the shadow;
- But he ever watching in wrath 'gainst the wroth one
- Mood-swollen abided the battle-mote ever.
- XII. GRENDEL COMETH INTO HART:
- OF THE STRIFE BETWIXT HIM AND BEOWULF.
- Came then from the moor-land, all under the mist-bents, 710
- Grendel a-going there, bearing God's anger.
- The scather the ill one was minded of mankind
- To have one in his toils from the high hall aloft.
- 'Neath the welkin he waded, to the place whence the wine-house,
- The gold-hall of men, most yarely he wist
- With gold-plates fair coloured; nor was it the first time
- That he unto Hrothgar's high home had betook him.
- Never he in his life-days, either erst or thereafter,
- Of warriors more hardy or hall-thanes had found.
- Came then to the house the wight on his ways, 720
- Of all joys bereft; and soon sprang the door open,
- With fire-bands made fast, when with hand he had touch'd it;
- Brake the bale-heedy, he with wrath bollen,
- The mouth of the house there, and early thereafter
- On the shiny-fleck'd floor thereof trod forth the fiend;
- On went he then mood-wroth, and out from his eyes stood
- Likest to fire-flame light full unfair.
- In the high house beheld he a many of warriors,
- A host of men sib all sleeping together,
- Of man-warriors a heap; then laugh'd out his mood; 730
- In mind deem'd he to sunder, or ever came day,
- The monster, the fell one, from each of the men there
- The life from the body; for befell him a boding
- Of fulfilment of feeding: but weird now it was not
- That he any more of mankind thenceforward
- Should eat, that night over. Huge evil beheld then
- The Hygelac's kinsman, and how the foul scather
- All with his fear-grips would fare there before him;
- How never the monster was minded to tarry,
- For speedily gat he, and at the first stour, 740
- A warrior a-sleeping, and unaware slit him,
- Bit his bone-coffer, drank blood a-streaming,
- Great gobbets swallow'd in; thenceforth soon had he
- Of the unliving one every whit eaten
- To hands and feet even: then forth strode he nigher,
- And took hold with his hand upon him the highhearted.
- The warrior a-resting; reach'd out to himwards
- The fiend with his hand, gat fast on him rathely
- With thought of all evil, and besat him his arm.
- Then swiftly was finding the herdsman of fouldeeds 750
- That forsooth he had met not in Middle-garth ever,
- In the parts of the earth, in any man else
- A hand-grip more mighty; then wax'd he of mood
- Heart-fearful, but none the more outward might he;
- Hence-eager his heart was to the darkness to hie him,
- And the devil-dray seek: not there was his service
- E'en such as he found in his life-days before.
- Then to heart laid the good one, the Hygelac's kinsman,
- His speech of the even-tide; uplong he stood
- And fast with him grappled, till bursted his fingers. 760
- The eoten was out-fain, but on strode the earl.
- The mighty fiend minded was, whereso he might,
- To wind him about more widely away thence,
- And flee fenwards; he found then the might of his fingers
- In the grip of the fierce one; sorry faring was that
- Which he, the harm-scather, had taken to Hart.
- The warrior-hall dinn'd now; unto all Danes there waxed,
- To the castle-abiders, to each of the keen ones,
- To all earls, as an ale-dearth. Now angry were both
- Of the fierce mighty warriors, far rang out the hall-house; 770
- Then mickle the wonder it was that the wine-hall
- Withstood the two war-deer, nor welter'd to earth
- The fair earthly dwelling; but all fast was it builded
- Within and without with the banding of iron
- By crafty thought smithy'd. But there from the sill bow'd
- Fell many a mead-bench, by hearsay of mine,
- With gold well adorned, where strove they the wrothful.
- Hereof never ween'd they, the wise of the Scyldings,
- That ever with might should any of men
- The excellent, bone-dight, break into pieces, 780
- Or unlock with cunning, save the light fire's embracing
- In smoke should it swallow. So uprose the roar
- New and enough; now fell on the North-Danes
- Ill fear and the terror, on each and on all men,
- Of them who from wall-top hearken'd the weeping,
- Even God's foeman singing the fear-lay,
- The triumphless song, and the wound-bewailing
- Of the thrall of the Hell; for there now fast held him
- He who of men of main was the mightiest
- In that day which is told of, the day of this life. 790
- XIII. BEOWULF HATH THE VICTORY:
- GRENDEL IS HURT DEADLY
- AND LEAVETH HAND AND ARM IN THE HALL.
- Naught would the earls' help for anything thenceforth
- That murder-comer yet quick let loose of,
- Nor his life-days forsooth to any of folk
- Told he for useful. Out then drew full many
- Of Beowult's earls the heir-loom of old days,
- For their lord and their master's fair life would hey ward,
- That mighty of princes, if so might they do it.
- For this did they know not when they the strife dreed,
- Those hardy-minded men of the battle,
- And on every half there thought to be hewing, 800
- And search out his soul, that the ceaseless scather
- Not any on earth of the choice of all irons,
- Not one of the war-bills, would greet home for ever.
- For he had forsworn him from victory-weapons,
- And each one of edges. But his sundering of soul
- In the days that we tell of, the day of this life,
- Should be weary and woeful, the ghost wending elsewhere
- To the wielding of fiends to wend him afar.
- Then found he out this, he who mickle erst made
- Out of mirth of his mood unto children of men 810
- And had fram'd many crimes, he the foeman of God,
- That the body of him would not bide to avail him,
- But the hardy of mood, even Hygelac's kinsman,
- Had him fast by the hand: now was each to the other
- All loathly while living: his body-sore bided
- The monster: was manifest now on his shoulder
- The unceasing wound, sprang the sinews asunder,
- The bone-lockers bursted. To Beowulf now
- Was the battle-fame given; should Grendel thenceforth
- Flee life-sick awayward and under the fen-bents 820
- Seek his unmerry stead: now wist he more surely
- That ended his life was, and gone over for ever,
- His day-tale told out. But was for all Dane-folk
- After that slaughter-race all their will done.
- Then had he cleans'd for them, he the far-comer,
- Wise and stout-hearted, the high hall of Hrothgar,
- And say'd it from war. So the night-work he joy'd in
- And his doughty deed done. Yea, but he for the East-Danes
- That lord of the Geat-folk his boast's end had gotten,
- Withal their woes bygone all had he booted, 830
- And the sorrow hate-fashion'd that afore they had dreed,
- And the hard need and bitter that erst they must bear,
- The sorrow unlittle. Sithence was clear token
- When the deer of the battle laid down there the hand
- The arm and the shoulder, and all there together
- Of the grip of that Grendel 'neath the great roof upbuilded.
- XIV. THE DANES REJOICE;
- THEY GO TO LOOK ON THE SLOT OF GRENDEL,
- AND COME BACK TO HART, AND ON THE WAY MAKE MERRY
- WITH RACING AND THE TELLING OF TALES.
- There was then on the morning, as I have heard tell it,
- Round the gift-hall a many of men of the warriors:
- Were faring folk-leaders from far and from near
- O'er the wide-away roads the wonder to look on, 840
- The track of the loathly: his life-sundering nowise
- Was deem'd for a sorrow to any of men there
- Who gaz'd on the track of the gloryless wight;
- How he all a-weary of mood thence awayward,
- Brought to naught in the battle, to the mere of the nicors,
- Now fey and forth-fleeing, his life-steps had flitted.
- There all in the blood was the sea-brim a-welling,
- The dread swing of the waves was washing all mingled
- With hot blood; with the gore of the sword was it welling;
- The death-doom'd had dyed it, sithence he unmerry 850
- In his fen-hold had laid down the last of his life,
- His soul of the heathen, and hell gat hold on him.
- Thence back again far'd they those fellows of old,
- With many a young one, from their wayfaring merry,
- Full proud from the mere-side on mares there a-riding
- The warriors on white steeds. There then was of Beowulf
- Set forth the might mighty; oft quoth it a many
- That nor northward nor southward beside the twin sea-floods,
- Over all the huge earth's face now never another,
- Never under the heaven's breadth, was there a better, 860
- Nor of wielders of war-shields a worthier of kingship;
- But neither their friendly lord blam'd they one whit,
- Hrothgar the glad, for good of kings was he.
- There whiles the warriors far-famed let leap
- Their fair fallow horses and fare into flyting
- Where unto them the earth-ways for fair-fashion'd seemed,
- Through their choiceness well kenned; and whiles a king's thane,
- A warrior vaunt-laden, of lays grown bemindful,
- E'en he who all many of tales of the old days
- A multitude minded, found other words also 870
- Sooth-bounden, and boldly the man thus began
- E'en Beowulf's wayfare well wisely to stir,
- With good speed to set forth the spells well areded
- And to shift about words. And well of all told he
- That he of Sigemund erst had heard say,
- Of the deeds of his might; and many things uncouth:
- Of the strife of the Wælsing and his wide wayfarings,
- Of those that men's children not well yet they wist,
- The feud and the crimes, save Fitela with him;
- Somewhat of such things yet would he say, 880
- The eme to the nephew; e'en as they aye were
- In all strife soever fellows full needful;
- And full many had they of the kin of the eotens
- Laid low with the sword. And to Sigemund upsprang
- After his death-day fair doom unlittle
- Sithence that the war-hard the Worm there had quelled,
- The herd of the hoard; he under the hoar stone,
- The bairn of the Atheling, all alone dar'd it,
- That wight deed of deeds; with him Fitela was not.
- But howe'er, his hap was that the sword so through-waded 890
- The Worm the all-wondrous, that in the wall stood
- The iron dear-wrought: and the drake died the murder.
- There had the warrior so won by wightness,
- That he of the ring-hoard the use might be having
- All at his own will. The sea-boat he loaded,
- And into the ship's barm bore the bright fretwork
- Wæls' son. In the hotness the Worm was to-molten.
- Now he of all wanderers was widely the greatest
- Through the peoples of man-kind, the warder of warriors,
- By mighty deeds; erst then and early he throve. 900
- Now sithence the warfare of Heremod waned,
- His might and his valour, amidst of the eotens
- To the wielding of foemen straight was he betrayed,
- And speedily sent forth: by the surges of sorrow
- O'er-long was he lam'd, became he to his lieges,
- To all of the athelings, a life-care thenceforward.
- Withal oft bemoaned in times that were older
- The ways of that stout heart many a carle of the wisest.
- Who trow'd in him boldly for booting of bales,
- And had look'd that the king's bairn should ever be thriving, 910
- His father's own lordship should take, hold the folk,
- The hoard and the ward-burg, and realm of the heroes,
- The own land of the Scyldings. To all men was Beowulf,
- The Hygelac's kinsman to the kindred of menfolk,
- More fair unto friends; but on Heremod crime fell.
- So whiles the men flyting the fallow street there
- With their mares were they meting. There then was the morn-light
- Thrust forth and hasten'd; went many a warrior
- All hardy of heart to the high hall aloft
- The rare wonder to see; and the King's self withal 920
- From the bride-bower wended, the warder of ring-hoards,
- All glorious he trod and a mickle troop had he,
- He for choice ways beknown; and his Queen therewithal
- Meted the mead-path with a meyny of maidens.
- XV. KING HROTHGAR AND HIS THANES
- LOOK ON THE ARM OF GRENDEL.
- CONVERSE BETWIXT HROTHGAR AND BEOWULF
- CONCERNING THE BATTLE.
- Out then spake Hrothgar; for he to the hall went,
- By the staple a-standing the steep roof he saw
- Shining fair with the gold, and the hand there of Grendel:
- For this sight that I see to the All-wielder thanks
- Befall now forthwith, for foul evil I bided,
- All griefs from this Grendel; but God, glory's Herder, 930
- Wonder on wonder ever can work.
- Unyore was it then when I for myself
- Might ween never more, wide all through my life-days,
- Of the booting of woes; when all blood-besprinkled
- The best of all houses stood sword-gory here;
- Wide then had the woe thrust off each of the wise
- Of them that were looking that never life-long
- That land-work of the folk they might ward from the loathly,
- From ill wights and devils. But now hath a warrior
- Through the might of the Lord a deed made thereunto 940
- Which we, and all we together, in nowise
- By wisdom might work. What! well might be saying
- That maid whosoever this son brought to birth
- According to man's kind, if yet she be living,
- That the Maker of old time to her was all-gracious
- In the bearing of bairns. O Beowulf, I now
- Thee best of all men as a son unto me
- Will love in my heart, and hold thou henceforward
- Our kinship new-made now; nor to thee shall be lacking
- As to longings of world-goods whereof I have wielding; 950
- Full oft I for lesser things guerdon have given,
- The worship of hoards, to a warrior was weaker,
- A worser in strife. Now thyself for thyself
- By deeds hast thou fram'd it that liveth thy fair fame
- For ever and ever. So may the All-wielder
- With good pay thee ever, as erst he hath done it.
- Then Beowulf spake out, the Ecgtheow's bairn:
- That work of much might with mickle of love
- We framed with fighting, and frowardly ventur'd
- The might of the uncouth; now I would that rather 960
- Thou mightest have look'd on the very man there,
- The foe in his fret-gear all worn unto falling.
- There him in all haste with hard griping did I
- On the slaughter-bed deem it to bind him indeed,
- That he for my hand-grip should have to be lying
- All busy for life: but his body fled off.
- Him then, I might not (since would not the Maker)
- From his wayfaring sunder, nor naught so well sought I
- The life-foe; o'er-mickle of might was he yet,
- The foeman afoot: but his hand has he left us, 970
- A life-ward, a-warding the ways of his wending,
- His arm and his shoulder therewith. Yet in nowise
- That wretch of the grooms any solace hath got him,
- Nor longer will live the loathly deed-doer,
- Beswinked with sins; for the sore hath him now
- In the grip of need grievous, in strait hold togather'd
- With bonds that be baleful: there shall he abide,
- That wight dyed with all evil-deeds, the doom mickle,
- For what wise to him the bright Maker will write it.
- Then a silenter man was the son there of Ecglaf 980
- In the speech of the boasting of works of the battle,
- After when every atheling by craft of the earl
- Over the high roof had look'd on the hand there,
- Yea, the fiend's fingers before his own eyen,
- Each one of the nail-steads most like unto steel,
- Hand-spur of the heathen one; yea, the own claw
- Uncouth of the war-wight. But each one there quoth it,
- That no iron of the best, of the hardy of folk,
- Would touch him at all, which e'er of the monster
- The battle-hand bloody might bear away thence. 990
- XVI. HROTHGAR GIVETH GIFTS TO BEOWULF.
- Then was speedily bidden that Hart be withinward
- By hand of man well adorn'd; was there a many
- Of warriors and wives, who straightway that wine-house
- The guest-house, bedight them: there gold-shotten shone
- The webs over the walls, many wonders to look on
- For men every one who on such things will stare.
- Was that building the bright all broken about
- All withinward, though fast in the bands of the iron;
- Asunder the hinges rent, only the roof there
- Was saved all sound, when the monster of evil 1000
- The guilty of crime-deeds had gat him to flight
- Never hoping for life. Nay, lightly now may not
- That matter be fled from, frame it whoso may frame it.
- But by strife man shall win of the bearers of souls,
- Of the children of men, compelled by need,
- The abiders on earth, the place made all ready,
- The stead where his body laid fast on his death-bed
- Shall sleep after feast. Now time and place was it
- When unto the hall went that Healfdene's son,
- And the King himself therein the feast should be sharing; 1010
- Never heard I of men-folk in fellowship more
- About their wealth-giver so well themselves bearing.
- Then bow'd unto bench there the abounders in riches
- And were fain of their fill. Full fairly there took
- A many of mead-cups the kin of those men,
- The sturdy of heart in the hall high aloft,
- Hrothgar and Hrothulf. Hart there withinward
- Of friends was fulfilled; naught there that was guilesome
- The folk of the Scyldings for yet awhile framed.
- Gave then to Beowulf Healfdene's bairn 1020
- A golden war-ensign, the victory's guerdon,
- A staff-banner fair-dight, a helm and a byrny:
- The great jewel-sword a many men saw them
- Bear forth to the hero. Then Beowulf took
- The cup on the floor, and nowise of that fee-gift
- Before the shaft-shooters the shame need he have.
- Never heard I how friendlier four of the treasures,
- All gear'd with the gold about, many men erewhile
- On the ale-bench have given to others of men.
- Round the roof of the helm, the burg of the head, 1030
- A wale wound with wires held ward from without-ward,
- So that the file-leavings might not over fiercely,
- Were they never so shower-hard, scathe the shield-bold,
- When he 'gainst the angry in anger should get him.
- Therewith bade the earls' burg that eight of the horses
- With cheek-plates adorned be led down the floor
- In under the fences; on one thereof stood
- A saddle all craft-bedeck'd, seemly with treasure.
- That same was the war-seat of the high King full surely
- Whenas that the sword-play that Healfdene's son 1040
- Would work; never failed in front of the war
- The wide-kenn'd one's war-might, whereas fell the slain.
- So to Beowulf thereon of either of both
- The Ingwines' high warder gave wielding to have,
- Both the war-steeds and weapons, and bade him well brook them.
- Thuswise and so manly the mighty of princes,
- Hoard-warden of heroes, the battle-race paid
- With mares and with gems, so as no man shall blame them,
- E'en he who will say sooth aright as it is.
- XVII. THEY FEAST IN HART.
- THE GLEEMAN SINGS OF FINN AND HENGEST.
- Then the lord of the earl-folk to every and each one 1050
- Of them who with Beowulf the sea-ways had worn
- Then and there on the mead-bench did handsel them treasure,
- An heir-loom to wit; for him also he bade it
- That a were-gild be paid, whom Grendel aforetime
- By wickedness quell'd, as far more of them would he,
- Save from them God all-witting the weird away wended,
- And that man's mood withal. But the Maker all wielded
- Of the kindred of mankind, as yet now he doeth.
- Therefore through-witting will be the best everywhere
- And the forethought of mind. Many things must abide 1060
- Of lief and of loth, he who here a long while
- In these days of the strife with the world shall be dealing.
- There song was and sound all gather'd together
- Of that Healfdene's warrior and wielder of battle,
- The wood of glee greeted, the lay wreaked often,
- Whenas the hall-game the minstrel of Hrothgar
- All down by the mead-bench tale must be making:
- By Finn's sons aforetime, when the fear gat them,
- The hero of Half-Danes, Hnaef of the Scyldings,
- On the slaughter-field Frisian needs must he fall. 1070
- Forsooth never Hildeburh needed to hery
- The troth of the Eotens; she all unsinning
- Was lorne of her lief ones in that play of the linden,
- Her bairns and her brethren, by fate there they fell
- Spear-wounded. That was the all-woeful of women.
- Not unduly without cause the daughter of Hoc
- Mourn'd the Maker's own shaping, sithence came the morn
- When she under the heavens that tide came to see,
- Murder-bale of her kinsmen, where most had she erewhile?
- Of world's bliss. The war-tide took all men away 1080
- Of Finn's thanes that were, save only a few;
- E'en so that he might not on the field of the meeting
- Hold Hengest a war-tide, or fight any whit,
- Nor yet snatch away thence by war the woe-leavings
- From the thane of the King; but terms now they bade him
- That for them other stead all for all should make room,
- A hall and high settle, whereof the half-wielding
- They with the Eotens' bairns henceforth might hold,
- And with fee-gifts moreover the son of Folkwalda
- Each day of the days the Danes should beworthy; 1090
- The war-heap of Hengest with rings should he honour
- Even so greatly with treasure of treasures,
- Of gold all beplated, as he the kin Frisian
- Down in the beer-hall duly should dight.
- Troth then they struck there each of the two halves,
- A peace-troth full fast. There Finn unto Hengest
- Strongly, unstrifeful, with oath-swearing swore,
- That he the woe-leaving by the doom of the wise ones
- Should hold in ail honour, that never man henceforth
- With word or with work the troth should be breaking, 1100
- Nor through craft of the guileful should undo it ever,
- Though their ring-giver's bane they must follow in rank
- All lordless, e'en so need is it to be:
- But if any of Frisians by over-bold speaking
- The murderful hatred should call unto mind,
- Then naught but the edge of the sword should avenge it.
- Then done was the oath there, and gold of the golden
- Heav'd up from the hoard. Of the bold Here-Scyldings
- All yare on the bale was the best battle-warrior;
- On the death-howe beholden was easily there 1110
- The sark stain'd with war-sweat, the all-golden swine,
- The iron-hard boar; there was many an atheling
- With wounds all outworn; some on slaughter-field welter'd.
- But Hildeburh therewith on Hnæf's bale she bade them
- The own son of herself to set fast in the flame,
- His bone-vats to burn up and lay on the bale there:
- On his shoulder all woeful the woman lamented,
- Sang songs of bewailing, as the warrior strode upward,
- Wound up to the welkin that most of death-fires,
- Before the howe howled; there molten the heads were, 1120
- The wound-gates burst open, there blood was out-springing
- From foe-bites of the body; the flame swallow'd all,
- The greediest of ghosts, of them that war gat him
- Of either of folks; shaken off was their life-breath.
- XVIII. THE ENDING OF THE TALE OF FINN.
- Departed the warriors their wicks to visit
- All forlorn of their friends now, Friesland to look on,
- Their homes and their high burg. Hengest a while yet
- Through the slaughter-dyed winter bode dwelling with Finn
- And all without strife: he remember'd his homeland,
- Though never he might o'er the mere be a-driving 1130
- The high prow be-ringed: with storm the holm welter'd,
- Won war 'gainst the winds; winter locked the waves
- With bondage of ice, till again came another
- Of years into the garth, as yet it is ever,
- And the days which the season to watch never cease,
- The glory-bright weather; then gone was the winter,
- And fair was the earth's barm. Now hastened the exile.
- The guest from the garths; he on getting of vengeance
- Of harms thought more greatly than of the sea's highway,
- If he but a wrath-mote might yet be a-wending 1140
- Where the bairns of the Eotens might he still remember.
- The ways of the world forwent he in nowise
- Then, whenas Hunlafing the light of the battle,
- The best of all bills, did into his breast,
- Whereof mid the Eotens were the edges well knowen.
- Withal to the bold-hearted Finn befell after
- Sword-bales the deadly at his very own dwelling,
- When the grim grip of war Guthlaf and Oslaf
- After the sea-fare lamented with sorrow
- And wyted him deal of their woes; nor then might he 1150
- In his breast hold his wavering heart. Was the hall dight
- With the lives of slain foemen, and slain eke was Finn
- The King 'midst of his court-men; and there the Queen, taken,
- The shooters of the Scyldings ferry'd down to the sea-ships,
- And the house-wares and chattels the earth-king had had,
- E'en such as at Finn's home there might they find,
- Of collars and cunning gems. They on the sea-path
- The all-lordly wife to the Danes straightly wended,
- Led her home to their people. So sung was the lay,
- The song of the gleeman; then again arose game, 1160
- The bench-voice wax'd brighter, gave forth the birlers
- Wine of the wonder-vats. Then came forth Wealhtheow
- Under gold ring a-going to where sat the two good ones,
- The uncle and nephew, yet of kindred unsunder'd,
- Each true to the other. Eke Unferth the spokesman
- Sat at feet of the Scyldings' lord; each of his heart trow'd
- That of mickle mood was he, though he to his kinsmen
- Were un-upright in edge-play. Spake the dame of the Scyldings:
- Now take thou this cup, my lord of the kingly,
- Bestower of treasures! Be thou in thy joyance, 1170
- Thou gold-friend of men! and speak to these Geat-folk
- In mild words, as duly behoveth to do;
- Be glad toward the Geat-folk, and mindful of gifts;
- From anigh and from far peace hast thou as now.
- To me one hath said it, that thou for a son wouldst
- This warrior be holding. Lo! Hart now is cleansed,
- The ring-hall bright-beaming. Have joy while thou mayest
- In many a meed, and unto thy kinsmen
- Leave folk and dominion, when forth thou must fare
- To look on the Maker's own making. I know now 1180
- My Hrothulf the gladsome, that he this young man
- Will hold in all honour if thou now before him,
- O friend of the Scyldings, shall fare from the world;
- I ween that good-will yet this man will be yielding
- To our offspring that after us be, if he mind him
- Of all that which we two, for good-will and for worship,
- Unto him erst a child yet have framed of kindness.
- Then along by the bench did she turn, where her boys were,
- Hrethric and Hrothmund, and the bairns of high warriors,
- The young ones together; and there sat the good one, 1190
- Beowulf the Geat, betwixt the two brethren.
- XIX. MORE GIFTS ARE GIVEN TO BEOWULF.
- THE BRISING COLLAR TOLD OF.
- Borne to him then the cup was, and therewith friendly bidding
- In words was put forth; and gold about wounden
- All blithely they bade him bear; arm-gearings twain,
- Rail and rings, the most greatest of fashion of neck-rings
- Of them that on earth I have ever heard tell of:
- Not one under heaven wrought better was heard of
- Midst the hoard-gems of heroes, since bore away Hama
- To the bright burg and brave the neck-gear of the Brisings,
- The gem and the gem-chest: from the foeman's guile fled he 1200
- Of Eormenric then, and chose rede everlasting.
- That ring Hygelac had, e'en he of the Geat-folk,
- The grandson of Swerting, the last time of all times
- When he under the war-sign his treasure defended,
- The slaughter-prey warded. Him weird bore away
- Sithence he for pride-sake the war-woe abided,
- The feud with the Frisians; the fretwork he flitted,
- The gem-stones much worthy, all over the waves' cup.
- The King the full mighty cring'd under the shield;
- Into grasp of the Franks the King's life was gotten 1210
- With the gear of the breast and the ring altogether;
- It was worser war-wolves then reft gear from the slain
- After the war-shearing; there the Geats' war-folk
- Held the house of the dead men. The Hall took the voices;
- Spake out then Wealhtheow; before the host said she:
- Brook thou this roundel, lief Beowulf, henceforth,
- Dear youth, with all hail, and this rail be thou using,
- These gems of folk-treasures, and thrive thou well ever;
- Thy might then make manifest! Be to these lads here
- Kind of lore, and for that will I look to thy guerdon. 1220
- Thou hast won by thy faring, that far and near henceforth,
- Through wide time to come, men will give thee the worship,
- As widely as ever the sea winds about
- The windy land-walls. Be the while thou art living
- An atheling wealthy, and well do I will thee
- Of good of the treasures; be thou to my son
- In deed ever friendly, and uphold thy joyance!
- Lo! each of the earls here to the other is trusty,
- And mild of his mood and to man-lord full faithful,
- Kind friends all the thanes are, the folk ever yare. 1230
- Ye well drunk of folk-grooms, now do ye my biddings.
- To her settle then far'd she; was the feast of the choicest,
- The men drank the wine nothing wotting of weird,
- The grim shaping of old, e'en as forth it had gone
- To a many of earls; sithence came the even,
- And Hrothgar departed to his chamber on high,
- The rich to his rest; and aright the house warded
- Earls untold of number, as oft did they erewhile.
- The bench-boards they bar'd them, and there they spread over
- With beds and with bolsters. Of the beer-skinkers one 1240
- Who fain was and fey bow'd adown to his floor-rest.
- At their heads then they rested their rounds of the battle,
- Their board-woods bright-shining. There on the bench was,
- Over the atheling, easy to look on
- The battle-steep war-helm, the byrny be-ringed,
- The wood of the onset, all-glorious. Their wont was
- That oft and oft were they all yare for the war-tide,
- Both at home and in hosting, were it one were it either,
- And for every such tide as their liege lord unto
- The need were befallen: right good was that folk. 1250
- XX. GRENDEL'S DAM BREAKS INTO HART
- AND BEARS OFF AESCHERE.
- So sank they to slumber; but one paid full sorely
- For his rest of the even, as to them fell full often
- Sithence that the gold-hall Grendel had guarded,
- And won deed of unright, until that the end came
- And death after sinning: but clear was it shown now,
- Wide wotted of men, that e'en yet was a wreaker
- Living after the loathly, a long while of time
- After the battle-care, Grendel's own mother;
- The woman, the monster-wife, minded her woe,
- She who needs must in horror of waters be wonning, 1260
- The streams all a-cold, sithence Cain was become
- For an edge-bane forsooth to his very own brother,
- The own son of his father. Forth bann'd then he fared,
- All marked by murder, from man's joy to flee,
- And dwelt in the waste-land. Thence woke there a many
- Ghosts shapen of old time, of whom one was Grendel,
- The fierce wolf, the hateful, who found him at Hart
- A man there a-watching, abiding the war-tide;
- Where to him the fell ogre to hand-grips befell;
- Howe'er he him minded of the strength of his might, 1270
- The great gift set fast in him given of God,
- And trowed in grace by the All-wielder given,
- His fostering, his staying; so the fiend he o'ercame
- And bow'd down the Hell's ghost, that all humble he wended
- Fordone of all mirth death's house to go look on,
- That fiend of all mankind. But yet was his mother,
- The greedy, the glum-moody, fain to be going
- A sorrowful journey her son's death to wreak.
- So came she to Hart whereas now the Ring-Danes
- Were sleeping adown the hall; soon there befell 1280
- Change of days to the earl-folk, when in she came thrusting,
- Grendel's mother: and soothly was minish'd the terror
- By even so much as the craft-work of maidens,
- The war-terror of wife, is beside the man weapon'd,
- When the sword all hard bounden, by hammers to-beaten,
- The sword all sweat-stain'd, through the swine o'er the war-helm
- With edges full doughty down rightly sheareth.
- But therewith in the hall was tugg'd out the hard edge,
- The sword o'er the settles, and wide shields a many
- Heaved fast in the hand: no one the helm heeded, 1290
- Nor the byrny wide-wrought, when the wild fear fell on them.
- In haste was she then, and out would she thenceforth
- For the saving her life, whenas she should be found there.
- But one of the athelings she speedily handled
- And caught up full fast, and fenward so fared.
- But he was unto Hrothgar the liefest of heroes
- Of the sort of the fellows; betwixt the two sea-floods
- A mighty shield-warrior, whom she at rest brake up,
- A war-wight well famed. There Beowulf was not;
- Another house soothly had erewhile been dighted 1300
- After gift of that treasure to that great one of Geats.
- Uprose cry then in Hart, all 'mid gore had she taken
- The hand, the well-known, and now care wrought anew
- In the wicks was arisen. Naught well was the bargain
- That on both halves they needs must be buying that tide
- With the life-days of friends. Then the lord king, the wise,
- The hoary of war-folk, was harmed of mood
- When his elder of thanes and he now unliving,
- The dearest of all, he knew to be dead.
- To the bower full swiftly was Beowulf brought now, 1310
- The man victory-dower'd; together with day-dawn
- Went he, one of the earls, that champion beworthy'd,
- Himself with his fellows, where the wise was abiding
- To wot if the All-wielder ever will to him
- After the tale of woe happy change work.
- Then went down the floor he the war-worthy
- With the host of his hand, while high dinn'd the hall-wood,
- Till he there the wise one with words had well greeted,
- The lord of the Ingwines, and ask'd had the night been.
- Since sore he was summon'd, a night of sweet easement. 1320
- XXI. HROTHGAR LAMENTS THE SLAYING OF AESCHERE,
- AND TELLS OF GRENDEL'S MOTHER AND HER DEN.
- Spake out then Hrothgar the helm of the Scyldings:
- Ask no more after bliss; for new-made now is sorrow
- For the folk of the Danes; for Aeschere is dead,
- He who was Yrmenlaf's elder of brethren,
- My wise man of runes, my bearer of redes,
- Mine own shoulder-fellow, when we in the war-tide
- Warded our heads and the host on the host fell,
- And the boars were a-crashing; e'en such should an earl be,
- An atheling exceeding good, e'en as was Aeschere.
- Now in Hart hath befallen for a hand-bane unto him 1330
- A slaughter-ghost wandering; naught wot I whither
- The fell one, the carrion-proud, far'd hath her back-fare,
- By her fill made all famous. That feud hath she wreaked
- Wherein yesternight gone by Grendel thou quelledst
- Through thy hardihood fierce with grips hard enow.
- For that he over-long the lief people of me
- Made to wane and undid. In the war then he cringed,
- Being forfeit of life. But now came another,
- An ill-scather mighty, her son to awreak;
- And further hath she now the feud set on foot, 1340
- As may well be deemed of many a thane,
- Who after the wealth-giver weepeth in mind,
- A hard bale of heart. Now the hand lieth low
- Which well-nigh for every joy once did avail you.
- The dwellers in land here, my people indeed,
- The wise-of-rede hall-folk, have I heard say e'en this:
- That they have set eyes on two such-like erewhile,
- Two mickle mark-striders the moorland a-holding,
- Ghosts come from elsewhere, but of them one there was,
- As full certainly might they then know it to be, 1350
- In the likeness of woman; and the other shap'd loathly
- All after man's image trod the tracks of the exile,
- Save that more was he shapen than any man other;
- And in days gone away now they named him Grendel,
- The dwellers in fold; they wot not if a father
- Unto him was born ever in the days of erewhile
- Of dark ghosts. They dwell in a dim hidden land,
- The wolf-bents they bide in, on the nesses the windy,
- The perilous fen-paths where the stream of the fell-side
- Midst the mists of the nesses wends netherward ever, 1360
- The flood under earth. Naught far away hence,
- But a mile-mark forsooth, there standeth the mere,
- And over it ever hang groves all berimed,
- The wood fast by the roots over-helmeth the water.
- But each night may one a dread wonder there see,
- A fire in the flood. But none liveth so wise
- Of the bairns of mankind, that the bottom may know.
- Although the heath-stepper beswinked by hounds,
- The hart strong of horns, that holt-wood should seek to
- Driven fleeing from far, he shall sooner leave life, 1370
- Leave life-breath on the bank, or ever will he
- Therein hide his head. No hallow'd stead is it:
- Thence the blending of water-waves ever upriseth
- Wan up to the welkin, whenso the wind stirreth
- Weather-storms loathly, until the lift darkens
- And weepeth the heavens. Now along the rede wendeth
- Of thee again only. Of that earth yet thou know'st not,
- The fearful of steads, wherein thou mayst find
- That much-sinning wight; seek then if thou dare,
- And thee for that feud will I guerdon with fee, 1380
- The treasures of old time, as erst did I do,
- With the gold all-bewounden, if away thence thou get thee.
- XXII. THEY FOLLOW GRENDEL'S DAM TO HER LAIR.
- Spake out then Beowulf the Ecgtheow's bairn:
- O wise of men, mourn not; for to each man 'tis better
- That his friend he awreak than weep overmuch.
- Lo! each of us soothly abideth the ending
- Of the life of the world. Then let him work who work may
- High deeds ere the death: to the doughty of war-lads
- When he is unliving shall it best be hereafter.
- Rise up, warder of kingdom! and swiftly now wend we 1390
- The Grendel Kinswoman's late goings to look on;
- And this I behote thee, that to holm shall she flee not,
- Nor into earth's fathom, nor into the fell-holt,
- Nor the grounds of the ocean, go whereas she will go.
- For this one of days patience dree thou a while then
- Of each one of thy woes, as I ween it of thee.
- Then leapt up the old man, and lightly gave God thank,
- That mighty of Lords, for the word which the man spake.
- And for Hrothgar straightway then was bitted a horse,
- A wave-maned steed: and the wise of the princes 1400
- Went stately his ways; and stepp'd out the man-troop,
- The linden-board bearers. Now lightly the tracks were
- All through the woodland ways wide to be seen there,
- Her goings o'er ground; she had gotten her forthright
- Over the mirk-moor: bore she of kindred thanes
- The best that there was, all bare of his soul,
- Of them that with Hrothgar heeded the home.
- Overwent then that bairn of the athelings
- Steep bents of the stones, and stridings full narrow,
- Strait paths nothing pass'd over, ways all uncouth, 1410
- Sheer nesses to wit, many houses of nicors.
- He one of the few was going before
- Of the wise of the men the meadow to look on,
- Until suddenly there the trees of the mountains
- Over the hoar-stone found he a-leaning,
- A wood without gladness: the water stood under
- Dreary and troubled. Unto all the Danes was it,
- To the friends of the Scyldings, most grievous in mood
- To many of thanes such a thing to be tholing,
- Sore evil to each one of earls, for of Aeschere 1420
- The head did they find e'en there on the holm-cliff;
- The flood with gore welled (the folk looking on it),
- With hot blood. But whiles then the horn fell to singing
- A song of war eager. There sat down the band;
- They saw down the water a many of worm-kind,
- Sea-drakes seldom seen a-kenning the sound;
- Likewise on the ness-bents nicors a-lying,
- Who oft on the undern-tide wont are to hold them
- A course full of sorrow all over the sail-road.
- Now the worms and the wild-deer away did they speed 1430
- Bitter and wrath-swollen all as they heard it,
- The war-horn a-wailing: but one the Geats' warden
- With his bow of the shafts from his life-days there sunder'd,
- From his strife of the waves; so that stood in his life-parts
- The hard arrow of war; and he in the holm was
- The slower in swimming as death away swept him.
- So swiftly in sea-waves with boar-spears forsooth
- Sharp-hook'd and hard-press'd was he thereupon,
- Set on with fierce battle, and on to the ness tugg'd,
- The wondrous wave-bearer; and men were beholding 1440
- The grisly guest, Beowulf therewith he gear'd him
- With weed of the earls: nowise of life reck'd he:
- Needs must his war-byrny, braided by hands,
- Wide, many-colour'd by cunning, the sound seek,
- E'en that which his bone-coffer knew how to ward,
- So that the war-grip his heart ne'er a while,
- The foe-snatch of the wrathful his life ne'er should scathe;
- Therewith the white war-helm warded his head,
- E'en that which should mingle with ground of the mere,
- And seek the sound-welter, with treasure beworthy'd, 1450
- All girt with the lordly chains, as in days gone by
- The weapon-smith wrought it most wondrously done,
- Beset with the swine-shapes, so that sithence
- The brand or the battle-blades never might bite it.
- Nor forsooth was that littlest of all of his mainstays,
- Which to him in his need lent the spokesman of Hrothgar,
- E'en the battle-sword hafted that had to name Hrunting,
- That in fore days was one of the treasures of old,
- The edges of iron with the poison twigs o'er-stain'd,
- With battle-sweat harden'd; in the brunt never fail'd he 1460
- Any one of the warriors whose hand wound about him,
- Who in grisly wayfarings durst ever to wend him
- To the folk-stead of foemen. Not the first of times was it
- That battle-work doughty it had to be doing.
- Forsooth naught remember'd that son there of Ecglaf,
- The crafty in mighty deeds, what ere he quoth
- All drunken with wine, when the weapon he lent
- To a doughtier sword-wolf: himself naught he durst it
- Under war of the waves there his life to adventure
- And warrior-ship work. So forwent he the glory, 1470
- The fair fame of valour. Naught far'd so the other
- Syth he to the war-tide had gear'd him to wend.
- XXIII. BEOWULF REACHETH THE MERE-BOTTOM IN A DAY'S WHILE,
- AND CONTENDS WITH GRENDEL'S DAM.
- Out then spake Beowulf, Ecgtheow's bairn:
- Forsooth be thou mindful, O great son of Healfdene,
- O praise of the princes, now way-fain am I,
- O gold-friend of men, what we twain spake aforetime:
- If to me for thy need it might so befall
- That I cease from my life-days, thou shouldest be ever
- To me, forth away wended, in the stead of a father.
- Do thou then bear in hand these thanes of my kindred, 1480
- My hand-fellows, if so be battle shall have me;
- Those same treasures withal, which thou gavest me erst,
- O Hrothgar the lief, unto Hygelac send thou;
- By that gold then shall wot the lord of the Geat-folk,
- Shall Hrethel's son see, when he stares on the treasure,
- That I in fair man-deeds a good one have found me,
- A ring-giver; while I might, joy made I thereof.
- And let thou then Unferth the ancient loom have,
- The wave-sword adorned, that man kenned widely,
- The blade of hard edges; for I now with Hrunting 1490
- Will work me the glory, or else shall death get me.
- So after these words the Weder-Geats' chieftain
- With might of heart hasten'd; nor for answer then would he
- Aught tarry; the sea-welter straightway took hold on
- The warrior of men: wore the while of a daytide
- Or ever the ground-plain might he set eyes on.
- Soon did she find, she who the flood-ring
- Sword-ravening had held for an hundred of seasons,
- Greedy and grim, that there one man of grooms
- The abode of the alien-wights sought from above; 1500
- Then toward him she grasp'd and gat hold on the warrior
- With fell clutch, but no sooner she scathed withinward
- The hale body; rings from without-ward it warded,
- That she could in no wise the war-skin clutch through,
- The fast locked limb-sark, with fingers all loathly.
- So bare then that sea-wolf when she came unto bottom
- The king of the rings to the court-hall adown
- In such wise that he might not, though hard-moody was he,
- Be wielding of weapons. But a many of wonders
- In sea-swimming swink'd him, and many a sea-deer 1510
- With his war-tusks was breaking his sark of the battle;
- The fell wights him follow'd. 'Twas then the earl found it
- That in foe-hall there was he, I wot not of which,
- Where never the water might scathe him a whit,
- Nor because of the roof-hall might reach to him there
- The fear-grip of the flood. Now fire-light he saw,
- The bleak beam forsooth all brightly a-shining.
- Then the good one, he saw the wolf of the ground,
- The mere-wife the mighty, and main onset made he
- With his battle-bill; never his hand withheld sword-swing 1520
- So that there on her head sang the ring-sword forsooth
- The song of war greedy. But then found the guest
- That the beam of the battle would bite not therewith,
- Or scathe life at all, but there failed the edge
- The king in his need. It had ere thol'd a many
- Of meetings of hand; oft it sheared the helm,
- The host-rail of the fey one; and then was the first time
- For that treasure dear lov'd that its might lay a-low.
- But therewithal steadfast, naught sluggish of valour,
- All mindful of high deeds was Hygelac's kinsman. 1530
- Cast then the wounden blade bound with the gem-stones
- The warrior all angry, that it lay on the earth there,
- Stiff-wrought and steel-edged. In strength now he trusted,
- The hard hand-grip of might and main; so shall a man do
- When he in the war-tide yet looketh to winning
- The praise that is longsome, nor aught for life careth.
- Then fast by the shoulder, of the feud nothing recking,
- The lord of the War-Geats clutch'd Grendel's mother,
- Cast down the battle-hard, bollen with anger,
- That foe of the life, till she bow'd to the floor; 1540
- But swiftly to him gave she back the hand-guerdon
- With hand-graspings grim, and griped against him;
- Then mood-weary stumbled the strongest of warriors,
- The foot-kemp, until that adown there he fell.
- Then she sat on the hall-guest and tugg'd out her sax,
- The broad and brown-edged, to wreak her her son,
- Her offspring her own. But lay yet on his shoulder
- The breast-net well braided, the berg of his life,
- That 'gainst point and 'gainst edge the entrance withstood.
- Gone amiss then forsooth had been Ecgtheow's son 1550
- Underneath the wide ground there, the kemp of the Geats,
- Save to him his war-byrny had fram'd him a help,
- The hard host-net; and save that the Lord God the Holy
- Had wielded the war-gain, the Lord the All-wise;
- Save that the skies' Ruler had rightwisely doom'd it
- All easily. Sithence he stood up again.
- XXIV. BEOWULF SLAYETH GRENDEL'S DAM,
- SMITETH OFF GRENDEL'S HEAD,
- AND COMETH BACK WITH HIS THANES TO HART.
- Midst the war-gear he saw then a bill victory-wealthy,
- An old sword of eotens full doughty of edges,
- The worship of warriors. That was choice of all weapons,
- Save that more was it made than any man other 1560
- In the battle-play ever might bear it afield,
- So goodly, all glorious, the work of the giants.
- Then the girdled hilt seiz'd he, the Wolf of the Scyldings,
- The rough and the sword-grim, and drew forth the ring-sword,
- Naught weening of life, and wrathful he smote then
- So that there on her halse the hard edge begripped,
- And brake through the bone-rings: the bill all through-waded
- Her flesh-sheathing fey; cring'd she down on the floor;
- The sword was war-sweaty, the man in his work joy'd.
- The bright beam shone forth, the light stood withinward, 1570
- E'en as down from the heavens' clear high aloft shineth
- The sky's candle. He all along the house scanned;
- Then turn'd by the wall along, heav'd up his weapon
- Hard by the hilts the Hygelac's thane there,
- Ireful one-reded; naught worthless the edge was
- Unto the warrior; but rathely now would he
- To Grendel make payment of many war-onsets,
- Of them that he wrought on the folk of the West Danes
- Oftener by mickle than one time alone,
- Whenas he the hearthfellows of Hrothgar the King 1580
- Slew in their slumber and fretted them sleeping,
- Men fifteen to wit of the folk of the Danes,
- And e'en such another deal ferry'd off outward,
- Loathly prey. Now he paid him his guerdon therefor,
- The fierce champion; so well, that abed there he saw
- Where Grendel war-weary was lying adown
- Forlorn of his life, as him ere had scathed
- The battle at Hart; sprang wide the body,
- Sithence after death he suffer'd the stroke,
- The hard swing of sword. Then he smote the head off him. 1590
- Now soon were they seeing, those sage of the carles,
- E'en they who with Hrothgar gaz'd down on the holm,
- That the surge of the billows was blended about,
- The sea stain'd with blood. Therewith the hoar-blended,
- The old men, of the good one gat talking together
- That they of the Atheling ween'd never eft-soon
- That he, glad in his war-gain, should wend him a-seeking
- The mighty king, since unto many it seemed
- That him the mere-she-wolf had sunder'd and broken.
- Came then nones of the day, and the ness there they gave up, 1600
- The Scyldings the brisk; and then busk'd him home thence-ward
- The gold-friend of men. But the guests, there they sat
- All sick of their mood, and star'd on the mere;
- They wist not, they ween'd not if him their own friend-lord
- Himself they should see.
- Now that sword began
- Because of the war-sweat into icicles war-made,
- The war-bill, to wane: that was one of the wonders
- That it melted away most like unto ice
- When the bond of the frost the Father lets loosen,
- Unwindeth the wave-ropes, e'en he that hath wielding 1610
- Of times and of seasons, who is the sooth Shaper.
- In those wicks there he took not, the Weder-Geats' champion,
- Of treasure-wealth more, though he saw there a many,
- Than the off-smitten head and the sword-hilts together
- With treasure made shifting; for the sword-blade was molten,
- The sword broider'd was burn'd up, so hot was that blood,
- So poisonous the alien ghost there that had died.
- Now soon was a-swimming he who erst in the strife bode
- The war-onset of wrath ones; he div'd up through the water;
- And now were the wave-welters cleansed full well, 1620
- Yea the dwellings full wide, where the ghost of elsewhither
- Let go of his life-days and the waning of living.
- Came then unto land the helm of the ship-lads
- Swimming stout-hearted, glad of his sea-spoil,
- The burden so mighty of that which he bore there.
- Yode then against him and gave thanks to God
- That fair heap of thanes, and were fain of their lord,
- For that hale and sound now they might see him with eyen;
- Then was from the bold one the helm and the byrny
- All speedily loosen'd. The lake now was laid, 1630
- The water 'neath welkin with war-gore bestained.
- Forth then they far'd them alongst of the foot-tracks,
- Men fain of heart all, as they meted the earth-way,
- The street the well known; then those king-bold of men
- Away from the holm-cliff the head there they bore
- Uneasily ever to each one that bore it,
- The full stout-heart of men: it was four of them needs must
- On the stake of the slaughter with strong toil there ferry
- Unto the gold-hall the head of that Grendel;
- Until forthright in haste came into that hall, 1640
- Fierce, keen in the hosting, a fourteen of men
- Of the Geat-folk a-ganging; and with them their lord,
- The moody amidst of the throng, trod the mead-plains;
- Came then in a-wending the foreman of thanes,
- The man keen of his deeds all beworshipp'd of doom,
- The hero, the battle-deer, Hrothgar to greet.
- Then was by the fell borne in onto the floor
- Grendel's head, whereas men were a-drinking in hall,
- Aweful before the earls, yea and the woman.
- The sight wondrous to see the warriors there look'd on. 1650
- XXV. CONVERSE OF HROTHGAR WITH BEOWULF.
- Spake out then Beowulf, Ecgtheow's bairn:
- What! we the sea-spoils here to thee, son of Healfdene,
- High lord of the Scyldings, with lust have brought hither
- For a token of glory, e'en these thou beholdest.
- Now I all unsoftly with life I escaped,
- In war under the water dar'd I the work
- Full hard to be worked, and well-nigh there was
- The sundering of strife, save that me God had shielded.
- So it is that in battle naught might I with Hrunting
- One whit do the work, though the weapon be doughty; 1660
- But to me then he granted, the Wielder of men,
- That on wall I beheld there all beauteous hanging
- An ancient sword, might-endow'd (often he leadeth right
- The friendless of men); so forth drew I that weapon.
- In that onset I slew there, as hap then appaid me,
- The herd of the house; then that bill of the host,
- The broider'd sword, burn'd up, and that blood sprang forth
- The hottest of battle-sweats; but the hilts thereof thenceforth
- From the foemen I ferry'd. I wreaked the foul deeds,
- The death-quelling of Danes, e'en as duly behoved. 1670
- Now this I behote thee, that here in Hart mayst thou
- Sleep sorrowless henceforth with the host of thy men
- And the thanes every one that are of thy people
- Of doughty and young; that for them need thou dread not,
- O high lord of Scyldings, on that behalf soothly
- Life-bale for the earls as erst thou hast done.
- Then was the hilt golden to the ancient of warriors,
- The hoary of host-leaders, into hand given,
- The old work of giants; it turn'd to the owning,
- After fall of the Devils, of the lord of the Danes, 1680
- That work of the wonder-smith, syth gave up the world
- The fierce-hearted groom, the foeman of God,
- The murder-beguilted, and there eke his mother;
- Unto the wielding of world-kings it turned,
- The best that there be betwixt of the sea-floods
- Of them that in Scaney dealt out the scat.
- Now spake out Hrothgar, as he look'd on the hilts there,
- The old heir-loom whereon was writ the beginning
- Of the strife of the old time, whenas the flood slew,
- The ocean a-gushing, that kin of the giants 1690
- As fiercely they fared. That was a folk alien
- To the Lord everlasting; so to them a last guerdon
- Through the welling of waters the Wielder did give.
- So was on the sword-guards all of the sheer gold
- By dint of the rune-staves rightly bemarked,
- Set down and said for whom first was that sword wrought,
- And the choice of all irons erst had been done,
- Wreath-hilted and worm-adorn'd. Then spake the wise one,
- Healfdene's son, and all were gone silent:
- Lo that may he say, who the right and the soothfast 1700
- Amid the folk frameth, and far back all remembers,
- The old country's warden, that as for this earl here
- Born better was he. Uprear'd is the fame-blast
- Through wide ways far yonder, O Beowulf, friend mine,
- Of thee o'er all peoples. Thou hold'st all with patience,
- Thy might with mood-wisdom; I shall make thee my love good,
- As we twain at first spake it. For a comfort thou shalt be
- Granted long while and long unto thy people,
- For a help unto heroes. Naught such became Heremod
- To Ecgwela's offspring, the honourful Scyldings; 1710
- For their welfare naught wax'd he, but for felling in slaughter,
- For the quelling of death to the folk of the Danes.
- Mood-swollen he brake there his board-fellows soothly,
- His shoulder-friends, until he sunder'd him lonely,
- That mighty of princes, from the mirth of all men-folk.
- Though him God the mighty in the joyance of might,
- In main strength, exalted high over all-men,
- And framed him forth, yet fast in his heart grew
- A breast-hoard blood-fierce; none of fair rings he gave
- To the Danes as due doom would. Unmerry he dured 1720
- So that yet of that strife the trouble he suffer'd.
- A folk-bale so longsome. By such do thou learn thee,
- Get thee hold of man-valour: this tale for thy teaching
- Old in winters I tell thee. 'Tis wonder to say it,
- How the high God almighty to the kindred of mankind
- Through his mind the wide-fashion'd deals wisdom about,
- Home and earlship; he owneth the wielding of all.
- At whiles unto love he letteth to turn
- The mood-thought of a man that Is mighty of kindred,
- And in his land giveth him joyance of earth, 1730
- And to have and to hold the high ward-burg of men,
- And sets so 'neath his wielding the deals of the world,
- Dominion wide reaching, that he himself may not
- In all his unwisdom of the ending bethink him.
- He wonneth well-faring, nothing him wasteth
- Sickness nor eld, nor the foe-sorrow to him
- Dark in mind waxeth, nor strife any where,
- The edge-hate, appeareth; but all the world for him
- Wends as he willeth, and the worse naught he wotteth.
- XXVI. MORE CONVERSE OF HROTHGAR AND BEOWULF:
- THE GEATS MAKE THEM READY FOR DEPARTURE.
- Until that within him a deal of o'erthink-ing 1740
- Waxeth and groweth while sleepeth the warder,
- The soul's herdsman; that slumber too fast is forsooth,
- Fast bounden by troubles, the banesman all nigh,
- E'en he that from arrow-bow evilly shooteth.
- Then he in his heart under helm is besmitten
- With a bitter shaft; not a whit then may he ward him
- From the wry wonder-biddings of the ghost the all-wicked.
- Too little he deems that which long he hath hold.
- Wrath-greedy he covets; nor e'en for boast-sake gives
- The rings fair beplated; and the forth-coming doom 1750
- Forgetteth, forheedeth, for that God gave him erewhile,
- The Wielder of glory, a deal of the worship.
- At the ending-stave then it after befalleth
- That the shell of his body sinks fleeting away,
- And falleth all fey; and another one fetcheth,
- E'en one that undolefully dealeth the treasure,
- The earl's gains of aforetime, and fear never heedeth.
- From the bale-envy ward thee, lief Beowulf, therefore,
- Thou best of all men, and choose thee the better,
- The redes everlasting; to o'erthinkirig turn not, 1760
- O mighty of champions! for now thy might breatheth
- For a short while of time; but eft-soon it shall be
- That sickness or edges from thy strength thee shall sunder,
- Or the hold of the fire, or the welling of floods,
- Or the grip of the sword-blade, or flight of the spear,
- Or eld the all-evil: or the beaming of eyen
- Shall fail and shall dim: then shall it be forthright
- That thee, lordly man, the death over-masters.
- E'en so I the Ring-Danes for an hundred of seasons
- Did wield under the welkin and lock'd them by war 1770
- From many a kindred the Middle-Garth over
- With ash-spears and edges, in such wise that not ever
- Under the sky's run of my foemen I reckoned.
- What! to me in my land came a shifting of that,
- Came grief after game, sithence Grendel befell,
- My foeman of old, mine ingoer soothly.
- I from that onfall bore ever unceasing
- Mickle mood-care; herefor be thanks to the Maker,
- To the Lord everlasting, that in life I abided,
- Yea, that I on that head all sword-gory there, 1780
- Now the old strife is over, with eyen should stare.
- Go fare thou to settle, the feast-joyance dree thou,
- O war-worshipp'd! unto us twain yet there will be
- Mickle treasure in common when come is the morning.
- Glad of mood then the Geat was, and speedy he gat him
- To go see the settle, as the sage one commanded.
- Then was after as erst, that they of the might-fame,
- The floor-sitters, fairly the feasting bedight them
- All newly. The helm of the night loured over
- Dark over the host-men. Uprose all the doughty, 1790
- For he, the hoar-blended, would wend to his bed,
- That old man of the Scyldings. The Geat without measure,
- The mighty shield-warrior, now willed him rest.
- And soon now the hall-thane him of way-faring weary,
- From far away come, forth show'd him the road,
- E'en he who for courtesy cared for all things
- Of the needs of the thane, e'en such as on that day
- The farers o'er ocean would fainly have had.
- Rested then the wide-hearted; high up the house tower'd
- Wide-gaping all gold-dight; within slept the guest; 1800
- Until the black raven, the blithe-hearted, boded
- The heavens' joy: then was come thither a-hastening
- The bright sun o'er the plains, and hastened the scathers,
- The athelings once more aback to their people
- All fain to be faring; and far away thence
- Would the comer high-hearted go visit his keel.
- Bade then the hard one Hrunting to bear,
- The Ecglaf's son bade to take him his sword,
- The iron well-lov'd; gave him thanks for the lending,
- Quoth he that the war-friend for worthy he told, 1810
- Full of craft in the war; nor with word he aught
- The edge of the sword. Hah! the high-hearted warrior.
- So whenas all way-forward, yare in their war-gear,
- Were the warriors, the dear one then went to the Danes,
- To the high seat went the Atheling, whereas was the other;
- The battle-bold warrior gave greeting to Hrothgar.
- XXVII. BEOWULF BIDS HROTHGAR FAREWELL:
- THE GEATS FARE TO SHIP.
- Out then spake Beowulf, Ecgtheow's bairn:
- As now we sea-farers have will to be saying,
- We from afar come, that now are we fainest
- Of seeking to Hygelac. Here well erst were we 1820
- Serv'd as our wills would, and well thine avail was.
- If I on the earth then, be it e'en but a little,
- Of the love of thy mood may yet more be an-earning,
- O lord of the men-folk, than heretofore might I,
- Of the works of the battle yare then soon shall I be.
- If I should be learning, I over the flood's run,
- That the sitters about thee beset thee with dread,
- Even thee hating as otherwhile did they;
- Then thousands to theeward of thanes shall I bring
- For the helping of heroes. Of Hygelac wot I, 1830
- The lord of the Geat-folk, though he be but a youngling,
- That shepherd of folk, that me will he further
- By words and by works, that well may I ward thee,
- And unto thine helping the spear-holt may bear,
- A main-staying mighty, whenas men thou art needing.
- And if therewith Hrethric in the courts of the Geat-house,
- The King's bairn, take hosting, then may he a many
- Of friends find him soothly: far countries shall be
- Better sought to by him who for himself is doughty.
- Out then spake Hrothgar in answer to himward: 1840
- Thy word-saying soothly the Lord of all wisdom
- Hath sent into thy mind; never heard I more sagely
- In a life that so young was a man word be laying;
- Strong of might and main art thou and sage of thy mood,
- Wise the words of thy framing. Tell I this for a weening,
- If it so come to pass that the spear yet shall take,
- Or the battle all sword-grim, the son of that Hrethel,
- Or sickness or iron thine Alderman have,
- Thy shepherd of folk, and thou fast to life hold thee,
- Then no better than thee may the Sea-Geats be having 1850
- To choose for themselves, no one of the kings,
- Hoard-warden of heroes, if then thou wilt hold
- Thy kinsman's own kingdom. Me liketh thy mood-heart,
- The longer the better, O Beowulf the lief;
- In such wise hast thou fared, that unto the folks now,
- The folk of the Geats and the Gar-Danes withal,
- In common shall peace be, and strife rest appeased
- And the hatreds the doleful which erst they have dreed;
- Shall become, whiles I wield it, this wide realm of ours,
- Treasures common to either folk: many a one other 1860
- With good things shall greet o'er the bath of the gannet;
- And the ring'd bark withal over sea shall be bringing
- The gifts and love-tokens. The twain folks I know
- Toward foeman toward friend fast-fashion'd together,
- In every way blameless as in the old wise.
- Then the refuge of warriors, he gave him withal,
- Gave Healfdene's son of treasures yet twelve;
- And he bade him with those gifts to go his own people
- To seek in all soundness, and swiftly come back.
- Then kissed the king, he of noble kin gotten, 1870
- The lord of the Scyldings, that best of the thanes,
- By the halse then he took him; from him fell the tears
- From the blended of hoar hair. Of both things was there hoping
- To the old, the old wise one; yet most of the other,
- To wit, that they sithence each each might be seeing,
- The high-heart in council. To him so lief was he
- That he his breast-welling might nowise forbear,
- But there in his bosom, bound fast in his heart-bonds,
- After that dear man a longing dim-hidden
- Burn'd against blood-tie. So Beowulf thenceforth, 1880
- The gold-proud of warriors, trod the mould grassy,
- Exulting in gold-store. The sea-ganger bided
- Its owning-lord whereas at anchor it rode.
- Then was there in going the gift of King Hrothgar
- Oft highly accounted; yea, that was a king
- In every wise blameless, till eld took from him eftsoon
- The joyance of might, as it oft scathes a many.
- XXVIII. BEOWULF COMES BACK TO HIS LAND.
- OF THE TALE OF THRYTHO.
- Came a many to flood then all mighty of mood,
- Of the bachelors were they, and ring-nets they bore,
- The limb-sarks belocked. The land-warden noted 1890
- The earls' aback-faring, as erst he beheld them;
- Then nowise with harm from the nose of the cliff
- The guests there he greeted, but rode unto themward,
- And quoth that full welcome to the folk of the Weders
- The bright-coated warriors were wending to ship.
- Then was on the sand there the bark the wide-sided
- With war-weed beladen, the ring-stemm'd as she lay there
- With mares and with treasure; uptower'd the mast
- High over Hrothgar's wealth of the hoards.
- He then to the boat-warden handsel'd a gold-bounden 1900
- Sword, so that sithence was he on mead-bench
- Worthy'd the more for that very same wealth,
- The heirloom. Sithence in the ship he departed
- To stir the deep water; the Dane-land he left.
- Then was by the mast there one of the sea-rails,
- A sail, with rope made fast; thunder'd the sound-wood.
- Not there the wave-floater did the wind o'er the billows
- Waft off from its ways; the sea-wender fared,
- Floated the foamy-neck'd forth o'er the waves,
- The bounden-stemm'd over the streams of the sea; 1910
- Till the cliffs of the Geats there they gat them to wit,
- The nesses well kenned. Throng'd up the keel then
- Driven hard by the lift, and stood on the land.
- Then speedy at holm was the hythe-warden yare,
- E'en he who a long while after the lief men
- Eager at stream's side far off had looked.
- To the sand thereon bound he the wide-fathom'd ship
- With anchor-bands fast, lest from them the waves' might
- The wood that was winsome should drive thence awayward.
- Thereon bade he upbear the athelings' treasures, 1920
- The fretwork and wrought gold. Not far from them thenceforth
- To seek to the giver of treasures it was,
- E'en Hygelac, Hrethel's son, where at home wonneth
- Himself and his fellows hard by the sea-wall.
- Brave was the builded house, bold king the lord was,
- High were the walls, Hygd very young,
- Wise and well-thriven, though few of winters
- Under the burg-locks had she abided,
- The daughter of Hæreth; naught was she dastard;
- Nowise niggard of gifts to the folk of the Geats, 1930
- Of wealth of the treasures. But wrath Thrytho bore,
- The folk-queen the fierce, wrought the crime-deed full fearful.
- No one there durst it, the bold one, to dare,
- Of the comrades beloved, save only her lord,
- That on her by day with eyen he stare,
- But if to him death-bonds predestin'd he count on,
- Hand-wreathed; thereafter all rathely it was
- After the hand-grip the sword-blade appointed,
- That the cunning-wrought sword should show forth the deed,
- Make known the murder-bale. Naught is such queenlike 1940
- For a woman to handle, though peerless she be,
- That a weaver of peace the life should waylay,
- For a shame that was lying, of a lief man of men;
- But the kinsman of Hemming, he hinder'd it surely.
- Yet the drinkers of ale otherwise said they;
- That folk-bales, which were lesser, she framed forsooth,
- Lesser enmity-malice, since thence erst she was
- Given gold-deck'd to the young one of champions,
- She the dear of her lineage, since Offa's floor
- Over the fallow flood by the lore of her father 1950
- She sought in her wayfaring. Well was she sithence
- There on the man-throne mighty with good;
- Her shaping of life well brooked she living;
- High love she held toward the lord of the heroes;
- Of all kindred of men by the hearsay of me
- The best of all was he the twain seas beside,
- Of the measureless kindred; thereof Offa was
- For gifts and for war, the spear-keen of men,
- Full widely beworthy'd, with wisdom he held
- The land of his heritage. Thence awoke Eomær 1960
- For a help unto heroes, the kinsman of Hemming,
- The grandson of Garmund, the crafty in war-strife.
- XXIX. BEOWULF TELLS HYGELAC OF HROTHGAR:
- ALSO OF FREAWARU HIS DAUGHTER.
- Went his ways then the hard one, and he with his hand-shoal,
- Himself over the sand the sea-plain a-treading,
- The warths wide away; shone the world's candle,
- The sun slop'd from the southward; so dreed they their journey,
- And went their ways stoutly unto where the earls' refuge,
- The banesman of Ongentheow all in his burgs there,
- The young king of war, the good, as they heard it.
- Was dealing the rings. Aright unto Hygelac 1970
- Was Beowulf's speeding made knowen full swiftly,
- That there into the house-place that hedge of the warriors,
- His mate of the linden-board, living was come,
- Hale from the battle-play home to him houseward.
- Then rathe was beroomed, as the rich one was bidding,
- For the guests a-foot going the floor all withinward.
- Then sat in the face of him he from the fight sav'd,
- Kinsman by kinsman, whenas his man-lord
- In fair-sounding speech had greeted the faithful
- With mightyful words. With mead-skinking turned 1980
- Through the high house adown the daughter of Hæreth:
- The people she loved: the wine-bucket bare she
- To the hands of the men. But now fell to Hygelac
- His very house-fellow in that hall the high
- To question full fairly, for wit-lust to-brake him,
- Of what like were the journeys the Sea-Geats had wended:
- How befell you the sea-lode, O Beowulf lief,
- When thou on a sudden bethoughtst thee afar
- Over the salt water the strife to be seeking,
- The battle in Hart? or for Hrothgar forsooth 1990
- The wide-kenned woe some whit didst thou mend,
- For that mighty of lords? I therefore the mood-care
- In woe-wellings seethed; trow'd not in the wending
- Of thee the lief man. A long while did I pray thee
- That thou the death-guest there should greet not a whit;
- Wouldst let those same South-Danes their own selves to settle
- The war-tide with Grendel. Now to God say I thank
- That thee, and thee sound, now may I see.
- Out then spake Beowulf, Ecgtheow's bairn:
- All undark it is, O Hygelac lord, 2000
- That meeting the mighty, to a many of men;
- Of what like was the meeting of Grendel and me
- On that field of the deed, where he many a deal
- For the Victory-Scyldings of sorrow had framed,
- And misery for ever; but all that I awreaked,
- So that needeth not boast any kinsman of Grendel
- Any one upon earth of that uproar of dawn-dusk,
- Nay not who lives longest of that kindred the loathly
- Encompass'd of fenland. Thither first did I come
- Unto that ring-hall Hrothgar to greet; 2010
- Soon unto me the great Healfdene's son,
- So soon as my heart he was wotting forsooth.
- Right against his own son a settle there showed.
- All that throng was in joy, nor life-long saw I ever
- Under vault of the heavens amidst any hall-sitters
- More mirth of the mead. There the mighty Queen whiles,
- Peace-sib of the folk, went all over the floor,
- To the young sons bade heart up; oft she there the ring-wreath
- Gave unto a man ere to settle she wended.
- At whiles fore the doughty the daughter of Hrothgar 2020
- To the earls at the end the ale-bucket bore;
- E'en she whom Freawaru the floor-sitters thereat
- Heard I to name; where she the nail'd treasure
- Gave to the warriors. She was behight then
- Youngling and gold-dight to the glad son of Froda.
- This hath seemed fair to the friend of the Scyldings,
- The herd of the realm, and good rede he accounts it,
- That he with that wife of death-feuds a deal
- And of strifes should allay. Oft unseldom eachwhere
- After a lord's fall e'en but for a little 2030
- Bows down the bane-spear, though doughty the bride be.
- XXX. BEOWULF FOREBODES ILL FROM THE WEDDING OF FREAWARU:
- HE TELLS OF GRENDEL AND HIS DAM.
- Ill-liking this may be to the lord of the Heathobards,
- And to each of the thanes of that same people.
- When he with fair bride on the floor of hall wendeth,
- That the Dane's noble bairn his doughty should wait on,
- As on him glisten there the heirlooms of the aged,
- Hard and with rings bedight, Heathobards' treasure,
- Whileas the weapons yet they might wield;
- Till astray did they lead there at the lind-play
- Their own fellows belov'd and their very own lives. 2040
- For then saith at the beer, he who seeth the ring,
- An ancient ash-warrior who mindeth of all
- The spear-death of men; grim is he of mind;
- Sad of mood he beginneth to tell the young champion.
- Through the thought of his heart his mind there to try,
- The war-bale to waken, and sayeth this word:
- Mayest thou, friend mine, wot of the war-sword,
- That which thy father bore in the fight
- Under the war-mask e'en on the last time,
- That the dear iron, whereas the Danes slew him, 2050
- Wielded the death-field, since Withergyld lay,
- After fall of the heroes, the keen-hearted Scyldings?
- Now here of those banesmen the son, whoseso he be,
- All merry in fretwork forth on floor fareth;
- Of the murder he boasteth, and that jewel he beareth,
- E'en that which of right thou shouldest arede.
- Thus he mindeth and maketh word every of times,
- With sore words he telleth, until the time cometh
- That the thane of the fair bride for the deeds of his father
- After bite of the bill sleepeth all blood-stain'd, 2060
- All forfeit of life; but thenceforth the other
- Escapeth alive; the land well he kenneth;
- Then will be broken on both sides forsooth
- The oath-swearing of earls, whenas unto Ingeld
- Well up the death-hatreds, and the wife-loves of him
- Because of the care-wellings cooler become.
- Therefore the Heathobards' faith I account not,
- Their deal of the folk-peace, unguileful to Danes,
- Their fast-bounden friendship. Henceforth must I speak on
- Again about Grendel, that thou get well to know it, 2070
- O treasure-out-dealer, how sithence betided
- The hand-race of heroes: sithence heaven's gem
- All over the grounds glided, came the wroth guest,
- The dire night-angry one us to go look on,
- Whereas we all sound were warding the hall.
- There then for Handshoe was battle abiding,
- Life-bale to the fey; he first lay alow,
- The war-champion girded; unto him became Grendel,
- To the great thane of kindreds, a banesman of mouth,
- Of the man well-beloved the body he swallow'd; 2080
- Nor the sooner therefor out empty-handed
- The bloody-tooth'd banesman, of bales all bemindful,
- Out from that gold-hall yet would he get him;
- But he, mighty of main, made trial of me,
- And gripp'd ready-handed. His glove hung aloft,
- Wondrous and wide, in wily bands fast,
- With cunning wiles was it begeared forsooth,
- With crafts of the devils and fells of the dragons;
- He me withinwards there, me the unsinning,
- The doer of big deeds would do me to be 2090
- As one of the many; but naught so it might be,
- Sithence in mine anger upright I stood.
- 'Tis over-long telling how I to the folkscather
- For each one of evils out paid the hand-gild.
- There I, O my lord king, them thy leal people
- Worthy'd with works: but away he gat loosed
- Out thence for a little while, brooked yet life-joys;
- But his right hand held ward of his track howsoever,
- High upon Hart-hall, and thence away humble
- He sad of his mood to the mere-ground fell downward. 2100
- Me for that slaughter-race the friend of the Scyldings
- With gold that beplated was mickle deal paid,
- With a many of treasures, sithence came the morning,
- And we to the feast-tide had sat us adown;
- Song was and glee there; the elder of Scyldings,
- Asking of many things, told of things o'erpast;
- Whiles hath the battle-deer there the harp's joy,
- The wood of mirth greeted; whiles the lay said he
- Soothfast and sorrowful; whiles a spell seldom told
- Told he by right, the king roomy-hearted; 2110
- Whiles began afterward he by eld bounden,
- The aged hoar warrior, of his youth to bewail him,
- Its might of the battle; his breast well'd within him,
- When he, wont in winters, of many now minded.
- So we there withinward the livelong day's wearing
- Took pleasure amongst us, till came upon men
- Another of nights; then eftsoons again
- Was yare for the harm-wreak the mother of Grendel:
- All sorry she wended, for her son death had taken,
- The war-hate of the Weders: that monster of women 2120
- Awreaked her bairn, and quelled a warrior
- In manner all mighty. Then was there from Aeschere,
- The wise man of old, life waning away;
- Nor him might they even when come was the morning,
- That death-weary wight, the folk of the Danes
- Burn up with the brand, nor lade on the bale
- The man well-belov'd, for his body she bare off
- In her fathom the fiendly all under the fell-stream.
- That was unto Hrothgar of sorrows the heaviest
- Of them which the folk-chieftain long had befallen. 2130
- Then me did the lord king, and e'en by thy life,
- Mood-heavy beseech me that I in the holm-throng
- Should do after earlship, my life to adventure,
- And frame me main-greatness, and meed he behight me.
- Then I of the welling flood, which is well kenned,
- The grim and the grisly ground-herder did find.
- There to us for a while was the blending of hands;
- The holm welled with gore, and the head I becarved
- In that hall of the ground from the Mother of Grendel
- With the all-eked edges; unsoftly out thence 2140
- My life forth I ferry'd, for not yet was I fey.
- But the earls' burg to me was giving thereafter
- Much sort of the treasures, e'en Healfdene's son.
- XXXI. BEOWULF GIVES HROTHGAR'S GIFTS TO HYGELAC,
- AND BY HIM IS REWARDED.
- OF THE DEATH OF HYGELAC AND OF HEARDRED HIS SON,
- AND HOW BEOWULF IS KING OF THE GEATS:
- THE WORM IS FIRST TOLD OF.
- So therewith the folk-king far'd, living full seemly;
- By those wages forsooth ne'er a whit had I lost,
- By the meed of my main, but to me treasure gave he,
- The Healfdene's son, to the doom of myself;
- Which to thee, king of bold ones, will I be a-bringing,
- And gladly will give thee; for of thee is all gotten
- Of favours along, and but little have I 2150
- Of head-kinsmen forsooth, saving, Hygelac, thee.
- Then he bade them bear in the boar-shape, the head-sign,
- The battle-steep war-helm, the byrny all hoary,
- The sword stately-good, and spell after he said:
- This raiment of war Hrothgar gave to my hand,
- The wise of the kings, and therewithal bade me,
- That I first of all of his favour should flit thee;
- He quoth that first had it King Heorogar of old,
- The king of the Scyldings, a long while of time;
- But no sooner would he give it unto his son, 2160
- Heoroward the well-whet, though kind to him were he,
- This weed of the breast. Do thou brook it full well.
- On these fretworks, so heard I, four horses therewith,
- All alike, close followed after the track,
- Steeds apple-fallow. Fair grace he gave him
- Of horses and treasures. E'en thus shall do kinsman,
- And nowise a wile-net shall weave for another
- With craft of the darkness, or do unto death
- His very hand-fellow. But now unto Hygelac
- The bold in the battle was his nephew full faithful, 2170
- And either to other of good deeds was mindful.
- I heard that the neck-ring to Hygd did he give,
- E'en the wonder-gem well-wrought, that Wealh-theow gave him,
- The king's daughter; gave he three steeds therewithal
- Slender, and saddle-bright; sithence to her was,
- After the ring-gift, the breast well beworthy'd.
- Thus boldly he bore him, the Ecgtheow's bairn,
- The groom kenned in battle, in good deeds a-doing;
- After due doom he did, and ne'er slew he the drunken
- Hearth-fellows of him: naught rough was his heart; 2180
- But of all men of mankind with the greatest of might
- The gift fully and fast set, which had God to him given,
- That war-deer did hold. Long was he contemned,
- While the bairns of the Geats naught told him for good,
- Nor him on the mead-bench worthy of mickle
- The lord of the war-hosts would be a-making.
- Weened they strongly that he were but slack then,
- An atheling unkeen; then came about change
- To the fame-happy man for every foul harm.
- Bade then the earls' burg in to be bringing, 2190
- The king battle-famed, the leaving of Hrethel,
- All geared with gold; was not 'mid the Geats then
- A treasure-gem better of them of the sword-kind,
- That which then on Beowulf's harm there he laid;
- And gave to him there seven thousand in gift,
- A built house and king-stool; to both them together
- Was in that folkship land that was kindly,
- Father-right, home; to the other one rather
- A wide realm, to him who was there the better.
- But thereafter it went so in days later worn 2200
- Through the din of the battle, sithence Hygelac lay low
- And unto Heardred swords of the battle
- Under the war-board were for a bane;
- When fell on him midst of this victory-folk
- The hard battle-wolves, the Scyldings of war,
- And by war overwhelmed the nephew of Hereric;
- That sithence unto Beowulf turned the broad realm
- All into his hand. Well then did he hold it
- For a fifty of winters; then was he an old king,
- An old fatherland's warder; until one began 2210
- Through the dark of the night-tide, a drake, to hold sway.
- In a howe high aloft watched over an hoard,
- A stone-burg full steep; thereunder a path sty'd
- Unknown unto men, and therewithin wended
- Who of men do I know not; for his lust there took he,
- From the hoard of the heathen his hand took away
- A hall-bowl gem-flecked, nowise back did he give it
- Though the herd of the hoard him sleeping beguil'd he
- With thief-craft; and this then found out the king,
- The best of folk-heroes, that wrath-bollen was he. 2220
- XXXII. HOW THE WORM CAME TO THE HOWE,
- AND HOW HE WAS ROBBED OF A CUP;
- AND HOW HE FELL ON THE FOLK.
- Not at all with self-wielding the craft of the worm-hoards
- He sought of his own will, who sore himself harmed;
- But for threat of oppression a thrall, of I wot not
- Which bairn of mankind, from blows wrathful fled,
- House-needy forsooth, and hied him therein,
- A man by guilt troubled. Then soon it betided
- That therein to the guest there stood grisly terror;
- However the wretched, of every hope waning
- * * * * *
- The ill-shapen wight, whenas the fear gat him,
- The treasure-vat saw; of such there was a many 2230
- Up in that earth-house of treasures of old,
- As them in the yore-days, though what man I know not,
- The huge leavings and loom of a kindred of high ones,
- Well thinking of thoughts there had hidden away.
- Dear treasures. But all them had death borne away
- In the times of erewhile; and the one at the last
- Of the doughty of that folk that there longest lived,
- There waxed he friend-sad, yet ween'd he to tarry,
- That he for a little those treasures the longsome
- Might brook for himself. But a burg now all ready 2240
- Wonn'd on the plain nigh the waves of the water,
- New by a ness, by narrow-crafts fasten'd;
- Within there then bare of the treasures of earls
- That herd of the rings a deal hard to carry,
- Of gold fair beplated, and few words he quoth:
- Hold thou, O earth, now, since heroes may hold not,
- The owning of earls. What! it erst within thee
- Good men did get to them; now war-death hath gotten,
- Life-bale the fearful, each man and every
- Of my folk; e'en of them who forwent the life: 2250
- The hall-joy had they seen. No man to wear sword
- I own, none to brighten the beaker beplated,
- The dear drink-vat; the doughty have sought to else-whither.
- Now shall the hard war-helm bedight with the gold
- Be bereft of its plating; its polishers sleep,
- They that the battle-mask erewhile should burnish:
- Likewise the war-byrny, which abode in the battle
- O'er break of the war-boards the bite of the irons,
- Crumbles after the warrior; nor may the ring'd byrny
- After the war-leader fare wide afield 2260
- On behalf of the heroes: nor joy of the harp is,
- No game of the glee-wood; no goodly hawk now
- Through the hall swingeth; no more the swift horse
- Beateth the burg-stead. Now hath bale-quelling
- A many of life-kin forth away sent.
- Suchwise sad-moody moaned in sorrow
- One after all, unblithely bemoaning
- By day and by night, till the welling of death
- Touch'd at his heart. The old twilight-scather
- Found the hoard's joyance standing all open, 2270
- E'en he that, burning, seeketh to burgs,
- The evil drake, naked, that flieth a night-tide,
- With fire encompass'd; of him the earth-dwellers
- Are strongly adrad; wont is he to seek to
- The hoard in the earth, where he the gold heathen
- Winter-old wardeth; nor a whit him it betters.
- So then the folk-scather for three hundred winters
- Held in the earth a one of hoard-houses
- All-eked of craft, until him there anger'd
- A man in his mood, who bare to his man-lord 2280
- A beaker beplated, and bade him peace-warding
- Of his lord: then was lightly the hoard searched over,
- And the ring-hoard off borne; and the boon it was granted
- To that wretched-wrought man. There then the lord saw
- That work of men foregone the first time of times.
- Then awaken'd the Worm, and anew the strife was;
- Along the stone stank he, the stout-hearted found
- The foot-track of the foe; he had stept forth o'er-far
- With dark craft, over-nigh to the head of the drake.
- So may the man unfey full easily outlive 2290
- The woe and the wrack-journey, he whom the Wielder's
- Own grace is holding. Now sought the hoard-warden
- Eager over the ground; for the groom he would find
- Who unto him sleeping had wrought out the sore:
- Hot and rough-moody oft he turn'd round the howe
- All on the outward; but never was any man
- On the waste; but however in war he rejoiced,
- In battle-work. Whiles he turn'd back to his howe
- And sought to his treasure-vat; soon he found this,
- That one of the grooms had proven the gold, 2300
- The high treasures; then the hoard-warden abided,
- But hardly forsooth, until come was the even,
- And all anger-bollen was then the burg-warden,
- And full much would the loath one with the fire-flame pay back
- For his drink-vat the dear. Then day was departed
- E'en at will to the Worm, and within wall no longer
- Would he bide, but awayward with burning he fared,
- All dight with the fire: it was fearful beginning
- To the folk in the land, and all swiftly it fell 2310
- On their giver of treasure full grievously ended.
- XXXIII. THE WORM BURNS BEOWULF'S HOUSE,
- AND BEOWULF GETS READY TO GO AGAINST HIM.
- BEOWULF'S EARLY DEEDS IN BATTLE WITH THE HETWARE TOLD OF.
- Began then the guest to spew forth of gleeds,
- The bright dwellings to burn; stood the beam of the burning
- For a mischief to menfolk; now nothing that quick was
- The loathly lift-flier would leave there forsooth;
- The war of the Worm was wide to be seen there,
- The narrowing foe's hatred anigh and afar,
- How he, the fight-scather, the folk of the Geats
- Hated and harm'd; shot he back to the hoard,
- His dark lordly hall, ere yet was the day's while;
- The land-dwellers had he in the light low encompass'd 2320
- With bale and with brand; in his burg yet he trusted,
- His war-might and his wall: but his weening bewray'd him.
- Then Beowulf was done to wit of the terror
- Full swiftly forsooth, that the house of himself,
- Best of buildings, was molten in wellings of fire,
- The gift-stool of the Geats. To the good one was that
- A grief unto heart; of mind-sorrows the greatest.
- Weened the wise one, that Him, e'en the Wielder,
- The Lord everlasting, against the old rights
- He had bitterly anger'd; the breast boil'd within him 2330
- With dark thoughts, that to him were naught duly wonted.
- Now had the fire-drake the own fastness of folk,
- The water-land outward, that ward of the earth,
- With gleeds to ground wasted; so therefore the war-king,
- The lord of the Weder-folk, learned him vengeance.
- Then he bade be work'd for him, that fence of the warriors,
- And that all of iron, the lord of the earls,
- A war-board all glorious, for wissed he yarely
- That the holt-wood hereto might help him no whit,
- The linden 'gainst fire-flame. Of fleeting days now 2340
- The Atheling exceeding good end should abide,
- The end of the world's life, and the Worm with him also,
- Though long he had holden the weal of the hoard.
- Forsooth scorned then the lord of the rings
- That he that wide-flier with war-band should seek,
- With a wide host; he fear'd not that war for himself,
- Nor for himself the Worm's war accounted one whit,
- His might and his valour, for that he erst a many
- Strait-daring of battles had bided, and liv'd,
- Clashings huge of the battle, sithence he of Hrothgar, 2350
- He, the man victory-happy, had cleansed the hall,
- And in war-tide had gripped the kindred of Grendel,
- The loathly of kindreds; nor was that the least
- Of hand-meetings, wherein erst was Hygelac slain,
- Sithence the Geats' king in the onrush of battle,
- The lord-friend of the folks, down away in the Frieslands,
- The offspring of Hrethel, died, drunken of sword-drinks,
- All beaten of bill. Thence Beowulf came forth
- By his own craft forsooth, dreed the work of the swimming;
- He had on his arm, he all alone, thirty 2360
- Of war-gears, when he to the holm went adown.
- Then nowise the Hetware needed to joy them
- Over the foot-war, wherein forth against him
- They bore the war-linden: few went back again
- From that wolf of the battle to wend to their homes.
- O'erswam then the waters' round Ecgtheow's son,
- Came all wretched and byrd-alone back to his people,
- Whereas offer'd him Hygd then the kingdom and hoard,
- The rings and the king-stool: trowed naught in the child,
- That he 'gainst folks outland the fatherland-seats 2370
- Might can how to hold, now was Hygelac dead:
- Yet no sooner therefor might the poor folk prevail
- To gain from the Atheling in any of ways
- That he unto Heardred would be for a lord,
- Or eke that that kingdom henceforward should choose;
- Yet him midst of the folk with friend-lore he held,
- All kindly with honour till older he waxed
- And wielded the Weder-Geats. To him men-waifs thereafter
- Sought from over the sea, the sons they of Ohthere,
- For they erst had withstood the helm of the Scylfings, 2380
- E'en him that was best of the kings of the sea,
- Of them that in Swede-realm dealt out the treasure,
- The mighty of princes. Unto him 'twas a life-mark;
- To him without food there was fated the life-wound,
- That Hygelac's son, by the swinging of swords;
- And him back departed Ongentheow's bairn,
- To go seek to his house, sithence Heardred lay dead,
- And let Beowulf hold the high seat of the king
- And wield there the Geats. Yea, good was that king.
- XXXIV. BEOWULF GOES AGAINST THE WORM.
- HE TELLS OF HEREBEALD AND HÆTHCYN.
- Of that fall of the folk-king he minded the payment 2390
- In days that came after: unto Eadgils he was
- A friend to him wretched; with folk he upheld him
- Over the wide sea, that same son of Ohthere,
- With warriors and weapons. Sithence had he wreaking
- With cold journeys of care: from the king took he life.
- Now each one of hates thus had he outlived,
- And of perilous slaughters, that Ecgtheow's son,
- All works that be doughty, until that one day
- When he with the Worm should wend him to deal.
- So twelvesome he set forth all swollen with anger, 2400
- The lord of the Geats, the drake to go look on.
- Aright had he learnt then whence risen the feud was,
- The bale-hate against men-folk: to his barm then had come
- The treasure-vat famous by the hand of the finder;
- He was in that troop of men the thirteenth
- Who the first of that battle had set upon foot,
- The thrall, the sad-minded; in shame must he thenceforth
- Wise the way to the plain; and against his will went he
- Thereunto, where the earth-hall the one there he wist,
- The howe under earth anigh the holm's welling, 2410
- The wave-strife: there was it now full all within
- With gems and with wires; the monster, the warden,
- The yare war-wolf, he held him therein the hoard golden,
- The old under the earth: it was no easy cheaping
- To go and to gain for any of grooms.
- Sat then on the ness there the strife-hardy king
- While farewell he bade to his fellows of hearth,
- The gold-friend of the Geats; sad was gotten his soul,
- Wavering, death-minded; weird nigh beyond measure,
- Which him old of years gotten now needs must be greeting, 2420
- Must seek his soul's hoard and asunder must deal
- His life from his body: no long while now was
- The life of the Atheling in flesh all bewounden.
- Now spake out Beowulf, Ecgtheow's bairn:
- Many a one in my youth of war-onsets I outliv'd,
- And the whiles of the battle: all that I remember.
- Seven winters had I when the wielder of treasures,
- The lord-friend of folk, from my father me took,
- Held me and had me Hrethel the king,
- Gave me treasure and feast, and remember'd the friendship. 2430
- For life thence I was not to him a whit loather,
- A berne in his burgs than his bairns were, or each one,
- Herebeald, or Hæthcyn, or Hygelac mine.
- For the eldest there was in unseemly wise
- By the mere deed of kinsman a murder-bed strawen,
- Whenas him did Hæthcyn from out of his horn-bow,
- His lord and his friend, with shaft lay alow:
- His mark he miss'd shooting, and shot down his kinsman,
- One brother another with shaft all bebloody'd;
- That was fight feeless by fearful crime sinned, 2440
- Soul-weary to heart, yet natheless then had
- The atheling from life all unwreak'd to be ceasing.
- So sad-like it is for a carle that is aged
- To be biding the while that his boy shall be riding
- Yet young on the gallows; then a lay should he utter,
- A sorrowful song whenas hangeth his son
- A gain unto ravens, and naught good of avail
- May he, old and exceeding old, anywise frame.
- Ever will he be minded on every each morning
- Of his son's faring otherwhere; nothing he heedeth 2450
- Of abiding another withinward his burgs,
- An heritage-warder, then whenas the one
- By the very death's need hath found out the ill.
- Sorrow-careful he seeth within his son's bower
- The waste wine-hall, the resting-place now of the winds,
- All bereft of the revel; the riders are sleeping,
- The heroes in grave, and no voice of the harp is,
- No game in the garths such as erewhile was gotten.
- XXXV. BEOWULF TELLS OF PAST FEUDS,
- AND BIDS FAREWELL TO HIS FELLOWS:
- HE FALLS ON THE WORM, AND THE BATTLE OF THEM BEGINS.
- Then to sleeping-stead wendeth he, singeth he sorrow,
- The one for the other; o'er-roomy all seem'd him 2460
- The meads and the wick-stead. So the helm of the Weders
- For Herebeald's sake the sorrow of heart
- All welling yet bore, and in nowise might he
- On the banesman of that life the feud be a-booting;
- Nor ever the sooner that warrior might hate
- With deeds loathly, though he to him nothing was lief.
- He then with the sorrow wherewith that sore beset him
- Man's joy-tide gave up, and chose him God's light.
- To his offspring he left, e'en as wealthy man doeth,
- His land and his folk-burgs when he from life wended. 2470
- Then sin was and striving of Swedes and of Geats,
- Over the wide water war-tide in common,
- The hard horde-hate to wit sithence Hrethel perish'd;
- And to them ever were the Ongentheow's sons
- Doughty and host-whetting, nowise then would friendship
- Hold over the waters; but round about Hreosnaburgh
- The fierce fray of foeman was oftentimes fram'd.
- Kin of friends that mine were, there they awreaked
- The feud and the evil deed, e'en as was famed;
- Although he, the other, with his own life he bought it, 2480
- A cheaping full hard: unto Hæthcyn it was,
- To the lord of the Geat-folk, a life-fateful war.
- Learned I that the morrow one brother the other
- With the bills' edges wreaked the death on the banesman,
- Whereas Ongentheow is a-seeking of Eofor:
- Glode the war-helm asunder, the aged of Scylfings
- Fell, sword-bleak; e'en so remember'd the hand
- Feud enough; nor e'en then did the life-stroke withhold.
- I to him for the treasure which erewhile he gave me
- Repaid it in warring, as was to me granted, 2490
- With my light-gleaming sword. To me gave he land,
- The hearth and the home-bliss: unto him was no need
- That unto the Gifthas or unto the Spear-Danes
- Or into the Swede-realm he needs must go seeking
- A worse wolf of war for a worth to be cheaping;
- For in the host ever would I be before him
- Alone in the fore-front, and so life-long shall I
- Be a-framing of strife, whileas tholeth the sword,
- Which early and late hath bestead me full often,
- Sithence was I by doughtiness unto Day-raven 2500
- The hand-bane erst waxen, to the champion of Hug-folk;
- He nowise the fretwork to the king of the Frisians,
- The breast-worship to wit, might bring any more,
- But cringed in battle that herd of the banner,
- The Atheling in might: the edge naught was his bane,
- But for him did the war-grip the heart-wellings of him
- Break, the house of the bones. Now shall the bill's edge,
- The hand and hard sword, about the hoard battle.
- So word uttered Beowulf, spake out the boast word
- For the last while as now: Many wars dared I 2510
- In the days of my youth, and now will I yet,
- The old warder of folk, seek to the feud,
- Full gloriously frame, if the scather of foul-deed
- From the hall of the earth me out shall be seeking.
- Greeted he then each one of the grooms,
- The keen wearers of helms, for the last while of whiles,
- His own fellows the dear: No sword would I fare with,
- No weapon against the Worm, wist I but how
- 'Gainst the monster of evil in otherwise might I
- Uphold me my boast, as erst did I with Grendel; 2520
- But there fire of the war-tide full hot do I ween me,
- And the breath, and the venom; I shall bear on me therefore
- Both the board and the byrny; nor the burg's warden shall I
- Overflee for a foot's-breadth, but unto us twain
- It shall be at the wall as to us twain Weird willeth,
- The Maker of each man. Of mood am I eager;
- So that 'gainst that war-flier from boast I withhold me.
- Abide ye upon burg with your byrnies bewarded,
- Ye men in your battle-gear, which may the better
- After the slaughter-race save us from wounding 2530
- Of the twain of us. Naught is it yours to take over,
- Nor the measure of any man save alone me,
- That he on the monster should mete out his might,
- Or work out the earlship: but I with my main might
- Shall gain me the gold, or else gets me the battle,
- The perilous life-bale, e'en me your own lord.
- Arose then by war-round the warrior renowned
- Hard under helm, and the sword-sark he bare
- Under the stone-cliffs: in the strength then he trowed
- Of one man alone; no dastard's way such is. 2540
- Then he saw by the wall (e'en he, who so many,
- The good of man-bounties, of battles had out-liv'd,
- Of crashes of battle whenas hosts were blended)
- A stone-bow a-standing, and from out thence a stream
- Breaking forth from the burg; was that burn's outwelling
- All hot with the war-fire; and none nigh to the hoard then
- Might ever unburning any while bide,
- Live out through the deep for the flame of the drake.
- Out then from his breast, for as bollen as was he,
- Let the Weder-Geats' chief the words be out faring; 2550
- The stout-hearted storm'd and the stave of him enter'd
- Battle-bright sounding in under the hoar stone.
- Then uproused was hate, and the hoard-warden wotted
- The speech of man's word, and no more while there was
- Friendship to fetch. Then forth came there first
- The breath of the evil beast out from the stone,
- The hot sweat of battle, and dinn'd then the earth.
- The warrior beneath the burg swung up his war-round
- Against that grisly guest, the lord of the Geats;
- Then the heart of the ring-bow'd grew eager therewith 2560
- To seek to the strife. His sword ere had he drawn,
- That good lord of the battle, the leaving of old,
- The undull of edges: there was unto either
- Of the bale-minded ones the fear of the other.
- All steadfast of mind stood against his steep shield
- The lord of the friends, when the Worm was a-bowing
- Together all swiftly, in war-gear he bided;
- Then boune was the burning one, bow'd in his going,
- To the fate of him faring. The shield was well warding
- The life and the lyke of the mighty lord king 2570
- For a lesser of whiles than his will would have had it,
- If he at that frist on the first of the day
- Was to wield him, as weird for him never will'd it,
- The high-day of battle. His hand he up braided,
- The lord of the Geats, and the grisly-fleck'd smote he
- With the leaving of Ing, in such wise that the edge fail'd,
- The brown blade on the bone, and less mightily bit
- Than the king of the nation had need in that stour,
- With troubles beset. But then the burg-warden
- After the war-swing all wood of his mood 2580
- Cast forth the slaughter-flame, sprung thereon widely
- The battle-gleams: nowise of victory he boasted,
- The gold-friend of the Geats; his war-bill had falter'd,
- All naked in war, in such wise as it should not,
- The iron exceeding good. Naught was it easy
- For him there, the mighty-great offspring of Ecgtheow,
- That he now that earth-plain should give up for ever;
- But against his will needs must he dwell in the wick
- Of the otherwhere country; as ever must each man
- Let go of his loan-days. Not long was it thenceforth 2590
- Ere the fell ones of fight fell together again.
- The hoard-warden up-hearten'd him, welled his breast
- With breathing anew. Then narrow need bore he,
- Encompass'd with fire, who erst the folk wielded;
- Nowise in a heap his hand-fellows there,
- The bairns of the athelings, stood all about him
- In valour of battle; but they to holt bow'd them;
- Their dear life they warded; but in one of them welled
- His soul with all sorrow. So sib-ship may never
- Turn aside any whit to the one that well thinketh. 2600
- XXXVI. WIGLAF SON OF WEOHSTAN
- GOES TO THE HELP OF BEOWULF:
- NÆGLING, BEOWULF'S SWORD, IS BROKEN ON THE WORM.
- Wiglaf so hight he, the son of Weohstan,
- Lief linden-warrior, and lord of Scylfings,
- The kinsman of Aelfhere: and he saw his man-lord
- Under his host-mask tholing the heat;
- He had mind of the honour that to him gave he erewhile.
- The wick-stead the wealthy of them, the Wægmundings,
- And the folk-rights each one which his father had owned.
- Then he might not withhold him, his hand gripp'd the round,
- Yellow linden; he tugg'd out withal the old sword,
- That was known among men for the heirloom of Eanmund, 2610
- Ohthere's son, unto whom in the strife did become,
- To the exile unfriended, Weohstan for the bane
- With the sword-edge, and unto his kinsmen bare off
- The helm the brown-brindled, the byrny beringed,
- And the old eoten-sword that erst Onela gave him;
- Were they his kinsman's weed of the war,
- Host-fight-gear all ready. Of the feud nothing spake he.
- Though he of his brother the bairn had o'er-thrown.
- But the host-gear befretted he held many seasons,
- The bill and the byrny, until his own boy might 2620
- Do him the earlship as did his ere-father.
- Amidst of the Geats then he gave him the war-weed
- Of all kinds unnumber'd, whenas he from life wended
- Old on the forth-way. Then was the first time
- For that champion the young that he the war-race
- With his high lord the famed e'er he should frame:
- Naught melted his mood, naught the loom of his kinsman
- Weaken'd in war-tide; that found out the Worm
- When they two together had gotten to come.
- Now spake out Wiglaf many words rightwise, 2630
- And said to his fellows: all sad was his soul:
- I remember that while when we gat us the mead,
- And whenas we behight to the high lord of us
- In the beer-hall, e'en he who gave us these rings,
- That we for the war-gear one while would pay,
- If unto him thislike need e'er should befall,
- For these helms and hard swords. So he chose us from host
- To this faring of war by his very own will,
- Of glories he minded us, and gave me these gems here,
- Whereas us of gar-warriors he counted for good, 2640
- And bold bearers of helms. Though our lord e'en for us
- This work of all might was of mind all alone
- Himself to be framing, the herd of the folk,
- Whereas most of all men he hath mightiness framed.
- Of deeds of all daring, yet now is the day come
- Whereon to our man-lord behoveth the main
- Of good battle-warriors; so thereunto wend we,
- And help we the host-chief, whiles that the heat be,
- The gleed-terror grim. Now of me wotteth God
- That to me is much liefer that that, my lyke-body, 2650
- With my giver of gold the gleed should engrip.
- Unmeet it methinketh that we shields should bear
- Back unto our own home, unless we may erst
- The foe fell adown and the life-days defend
- Of the king of the Weders. Well wot I hereof
- That his old deserts naught such were, that he only
- Of all doughty of Geats the grief should be bearing.
- Sink at strife. Unto us shall one sword be, one helm,
- One byrny and shield, to both of us common.
- Through the slaughter-reek waded he then, bare his war-helm 2660
- To the finding his lord, and few words he quoth:
- O Beowulf the dear, now do thee all well,
- As thou in thy youthful life quothest of yore,
- That naught wouldst thou let, while still thou wert living,
- Thy glory fade out. Now shalt thou of deeds famed,
- The atheling of single heart, with all thy main deal
- For the warding thy life, and to stay thee I will.
- Then after these words all wroth came the Worm,
- The dire guest foesome, that second of whiles
- With fire-wellings flecked, his foes to go look on, 2670
- The loath men. With flame was lightly then burnt up
- The board to the boss, and might not the byrny
- To the warrior the young frame any help yet.
- But so the young man under shield of his kinsman
- Went onward with valour, whenas his own was
- All undone with gleeds; then again the war-king
- Remember'd his glories, and smote with mainmight
- With his battle-bill, so that it stood in the head
- Need-driven by war-hate. Then asunder burst Nægling,
- Waxed weak in the war-tide, e'en Beowulf's sword, 2680
- The old and grey-marked; to him was not given
- That to him any whit might the edges of irons
- Be helpful in battle; over-strong was the hand
- Which every of swords, by the hearsay of me,
- With its swing over-wrought, when he bare unto strife
- A wondrous hard weapon; naught it was to him better.
- Then was the folk-scather for the third of times yet,
- The fierce fire-drake, all mindful of feud;
- He rac'd on that strong one, when was room to him given,
- Hot and battle-grim; he all the halse of him gripped 2690
- With bitter-keen bones; all bebloody'd he waxed
- With the gore of his soul. Well'd in waves then the war-sweat.
- XXXVII. THEY TWO SLAY THE WORM.
- BEOWULF IS WOUNDED DEADLY:
- HE BIDDETH WIGLAF BEAR OUT THE TREASURE.
- Then heard I that at need of the high king of folk
- The upright earl made well manifest might,
- His craft and his keenness as kind was to him;
- The head there he heeded not (but the hand burned
- Of that man of high mood when he helped his kinsman),
- Whereas he now the hate-guest smote yet a deal nether,
- That warrior in war-gear, whereby the sword dived,
- The plated, of fair hue, and thereby fell the flame 2700
- To minish thereafter, and once more the king's self
- Wielded his wit, and his slaying-sax drew out,
- The bitter and battle-sharp, borne on his byrny;
- Asunder the Weder's helm smote the Worm midmost;
- They felled the fiend, and force drave the life out,
- And they twain together had gotten him ending,
- Those athelings sib. E'en such should a man be,
- A thane good at need. Now that to the king was
- The last victory-while, by the deeds of himself,
- Of his work of the world. Sithence fell the wound, 2710
- That the earth-drake to him had wrought but erewhile.
- To swell and to sweal; and this soon he found out,
- That down in the breast of him bale-evil welled,
- The venom withinward; then the Atheling wended,
- So that he by the wall, bethinking him wisdom.
- Sat on seat there and saw on the works of the giants,
- How that the stone-bows fast stood on pillars,
- The earth-house everlasting upheld withinward.
- Then with his hand him the sword-gory,
- That great king his thane, the good beyond measure, 2720
- His friend-lord with water washed full well,
- The sated of battle, and unspanned his war-helm.
- Forth then spake Beowulf, and over his wound said,
- His wound piteous deadly; wist he full well,
- That now of his day-whiles all had he dreed,
- Of the joy of the earth; all was shaken asunder
- The tale of his days; death without measure nigh:
- Unto my son now should I be giving
- My gear of the battle, if to me it were granted
- Any ward of the heritage after my days 2730
- To my body belonging. This folk have I holden
- Fifty winters; forsooth was never a folk-king
- Of the sitters around, no one of them soothly,
- Who me with the war-friends durst wend him to greet
- And bear down with the terror. In home have I abided
- The shapings of whiles, and held mine own well.
- No wily hates sought I; for myself swore not many
- Of oaths in unright. For all this may I,
- Sick with the life-wounds, soothly have joy.
- Therefore naught need wyte me the Wielder of men 2740
- With kin murder-bale, when breaketh asunder
- My life from my lyke. And now lightly go thou
- To look on the hoard under the hoar stone,
- Wiglaf mine lief, now that lieth the Worm
- And sleepeth sore wounded, beshorn of his treasure;
- And be hasty that I now the wealth of old time,
- The gold-having may look on, and yarely behold
- The bright cunning gems, that the softlier may I
- After the treasure-weal let go away
- My life, and the folk-ship that long I have held. 2750
- XXXVIII. BEOWULF BEHOLDETH THE TREASURE AND PASSETH AWAY.
- Then heard I that swiftly the son of that Weohstan
- After this word-say his lord the sore wounded,
- Battle-sick, there obeyed, and bare forth his ring-net,
- His battle-sark woven, in under the burg-roof;
- Saw then victory-glad as by the seat went he,
- The kindred-thane moody, sun-jewels a many,
- Much glistering gold lying down on the ground,
- Many wonders on wall, and the den of the Worm,
- The old twilight-flier; there were flagons a-standing,
- The vats of men bygone, of brighteners bereft, 2760
- And maim'd of adornment; was many an helm
- Rusty and old, and of arm-rings a many
- Full cunningly twined. All lightly may treasure,
- The gold in the ground, every one of mankind
- Befool with o'erweening, hide it who will.
- Likewise he saw standing a sign there all-golden
- High over the hoard, the most of hand-wonders,
- With limb-craft belocked, whence light a ray gleamed.
- Whereby the den's ground-plain gat he to look on,
- The fair works scan throughly. Not of the Worm there 2770
- Was aught to be seen now, but the edge had undone him.
- Heard I then that in howe of the hoard was bereaving,
- The old work of the giants, but one man alone,
- Into his barm laded beakers and dishes
- At his very own doom; and the sign eke he took,
- The brightest of beacons. But the bill of the old lord
- (The edge was of iron) erewhile it scathed
- Him who of that treasure hand-bearer was
- A long while, and fared a-bearing the flame-dread
- Before the hoard hot, and welling of fierceness 2780
- In the midnights, until that by murder he died.
- In haste was the messenger, eager of back-fare,
- Further'd with fretted gems. Him longing fordid
- To wot whether the bold man he quick there shall meet
- In that mead-stead, e'en he the king of the Weders,
- All sick of his might, whereas he erst Itft him.
- He fetching the treasure then found the king mighty,
- His own lord, yet there, and him ever all gory
- At end of his life; and he yet once again
- Fell the water to warp o'er him, till the word's point 2790
- Brake through the breast-hoard, and Beowulf spake out.
- The aged, in grief as he gaz'd on the gold:
- Now I for these fretworks to the Lord of all thanking,
- To the King of all glory, in words am yet saying,
- To the Lord ever living, for that which I look on;
- Whereas such I might for the people of mine,
- Ere ever my death-day, get me to own.
- Now that for the treasure-hoard here have I sold
- My life and laid down the same, frame still then ever
- The folk-need, for here never longer I may be. 2800
- So bid ye the war-mighty work me a howe
- Bright after the bale-fire at the sea's nose,
- Which for a remembrance to the people of me
- Aloft shall uplift him at Whale-ness for ever,
- That it the sea-goers sithence may hote
- Beowulf's Howe, e'en they that the high-ships
- Over the flood-mists drive from afar.
- Did off from his halse then a ring was all golden,
- The king the great-hearted, and gave to his thane,
- To the spear-warrior young his war-helm gold-brindled, 2810
- The ring and the byrny, and bade him well brook them:
- Thou art the end-leaving of all of our kindred,
- The Wægmundings; Weird now hath swept all away
- Of my kinsmen, and unto the doom of the Maker
- The earls in their might; now after them shall I.
- That was to the aged lord youngest of words
- Of his breast-thoughts, ere ever he chose him the bale,
- The hot battle-wellings; from his heart now departed
- His soul, to seek out the doom of the soothfast.
- XXXIX. WIGLAF CASTETH SHAME ON THOSE FLEERS.
- But gone was it then with the unaged man 2820
- Full hard that there he beheld on the earth
- The liefest of friends at the ending of life,
- Of bearing most piteous. And likewise lay his bane
- The Earth-drake, the loathly fear, reft of his life,
- By bale laid undone: the ring-hoards no longer
- The Worm, the crook-bowed, ever might wield;
- For soothly the edges of the irons him bare off,
- The hard battle-sharded leavings of hammers,
- So that the wide-flier stilled with wounding
- Fell onto earth anigh to his hoard-hall, 2830
- Nor along the lift ever more playing he turned
- At middle-nights, proud of the owning of treasure,
- Show'd the face of him forth, but to earth there he fell
- Because of the host-leader's work of the hand.
- This forsooth on the land hath thriven to few,
- Of men might and main bearing, by hearsay of mine,
- Though in each of all deeds full daring he were,
- That against venom-scather's fell breathing he set on,
- Or the hall of his rings with hand be a-stirring,
- If so be that he waking the warder had found 2840
- Abiding in burg. By Beowulf was
- His deal of the king-treasure paid for by death;
- There either had they fared on to the end
- Of this loaned life. Long it was not until
- Those laggards of battle the holt were a-leaving,
- Unwarlike troth-liars, the ten there together,
- Who durst not e'en now with darts to be playing
- E'en in their man-lord's most mickle need.
- But shamefully now their shields were they bearing,
- Their weed of the battle, there where lay the aged; 2850
- They gazed on Wiglaf where weary'd he sat,
- The foot-champion, hard by his very lord's shoulder,
- And wak'd him with water: but no whit it sped him;
- Never might he on earth howsoe'er well he will'd it
- In that leader of spears hold the life any more,
- Nor the will of the Wielder change ever a whit;
- But still should God's doom of deeds rule the rede
- For each man of men, as yet ever it doth.
- Then from out of the youngling an answer full grim
- Easy got was for him who had lost heart erewhile, 2860
- And word gave out Wiglaf, Weohstan's son
- The sorrowful-soul'd man: on those unlief he saw:
- Lo that may he say who sooth would be saying,
- That the man-lord who dealt you the gift of those dear things,
- The gear of the war-host wherein there ye stand,
- Whereas he on the ale-bench full oft was a-giving
- Unto the hall-sitters war-helm and byrny,
- The king to his thanes, e'en such as he choicest
- Anywhere, far or near, ever might find:
- That he utterly wrongsome those weeds of the war 2870
- Had cast away, then when the war overtook him.
- Surely never the folk-king of his fellows in battle
- Had need to be boastful; howsoever God gave him,
- The Victory-wielder, that he himself wreaked him
- Alone with the edge, when to him need of might was.
- Unto him of life-warding but little might I
- Give there in the war-tide; and yet I began
- Above measure of my might my kinsman to help;
- Ever worse was the Worm then when I with sword
- Smote the life-foe, and ever the fire less strongly 2880
- Welled out from his wit. Of warders o'er little
- Throng'd about the king when him the battle befell.
- Now shall taking of treasures and giving of swords
- And all joy of your country-home fail from your kindred,
- All hope wane away; of the land-right moreover
- May each of the men of that kinsman's burg ever
- Roam lacking; sithence that the athelings eft-soons
- From afar shall have heard of your faring in flight,
- Your gloryless deed. Yea, death shall be better
- For each of the earls than a life ever ill-fam'd. 2890
- XL. WIGLAF SENDETH TIDING TO THE HOST: THE WORDS OF THE MESSENGER.
- Then he bade them that war-work give out at the barriers
- Up over the sea-cliff, whereas then the earl-host
- The morning-long day sat sad of their mood,
- The bearers of war-boards, in weening of both things,
- Either the end-day, or else the back-coming
- Of the lief man. Forsooth he little was silent
- Of the new-fallen tidings who over the ness rode,
- But soothly he said over all there a-sitting:
- Now is the will-giver of the folk of the Weders,
- The lord of the Geats, fast laid in the death-bed, 2900
- In the slaughter-rest wonneth he by the Worm's doings.
- And beside him yet lieth his very life-winner
- All sick with the sax-wounds; with sword might he never
- On the monster, the fell one, in any of manners
- Work wounding at all. There yet sitteth Wiglaf,
- Weohstan's own boy, over Beowulf king,
- One earl over the other, over him the unliving;
- With heart-honours holdeth he head-ward withal
- Over lief, over loath. But to folk is a weening
- Of war-tide as now, so soon as unhidden 2910
- To Franks and to Frisians the fall of the king
- Is become over widely. Once was the strife shapen
- Hard 'gainst the Hugs, sithence Hygelac came
- Faring with float-host to Frisian land,
- Whereas him the Hetware vanquish'd in war,
- With might gat the gain, with o'er-mickle main;
- The warrior bebyrny'd he needs must bow down:
- He fell in the host, and no fretted war-gear
- Gave that lord to the doughty, but to us was aye sithence
- The mercy ungranted that was of the Merwing. 2920
- Nor do I from the Swede folk of peace or good faith
- Ween ever a whit. For widely 'twas wotted
- That Ongentheow erst had undone the life
- Of Hæthcyn the Hrethel's son hard by the Raven-wood,
- Then when in their pride the Scylfings of war
- Erst gat them to seek to the folk of the Geats.
- Unto him soon the old one, the father of Ohthere,
- The ancient and fearful gave back the hand-stroke,
- Brake up the sea-wise one, rescued his bride.
- The aged his spouse erst, bereft of the gold, 2930
- Mother of Onela, yea and of Ohthere;
- And follow'd up thereon his foemen the deadly,
- Until they betook them and sorrowfully therewith
- Unto the Raven-holt, reft of their lord.
- With huge host then beset he the leaving of swords
- All weary with wounds, and woe he behight them,
- That lot of the wretched, the livelong night through;
- Quoth he that the morrow's morn with the swords' edges
- He would do them to death, hang some on the gallows
- For a game unto fowl. But again befell comfort 2940
- To the sorry of mood with the morrow-day early;
- Whereas they of Hygelac's war-horn and trumpet
- The voice wotted, whenas the good king his ways came
- Faring on in the track of his folk's doughty men.
- XLI. MORE WORDS OF THE MESSENGER.
- HOW HE FEARS THE SWEDES WHEN THEY WOT OF BEOWULF DEAD.
- Was the track of the war-sweat of Swedes and of Geats,
- The men's slaughter-race, right wide to be seen,
- How those folks amongst them were waking the feud.
- Departed that good one, and went with his fellows,
- Old and exceeding sad, fastness to seek;
- The earl Ongentheow upward returned; 2950
- Of Hygelac's battle-might oft had he heard,
- The war-craft of the proud one; in withstanding he trow'd not,
- That he to the sea-folk in fight might debate,
- Or against the sea-farers defend him his hoard,
- His bairns and his bride. He bow'd him aback thence,
- The old under the earth-wall. Then was the chase bidden
- To the Swede-folk, and Hygelac's sign was upreared,
- And the plain of the peace forth on o'er-pass'd they,
- After the Hrethlings onto the hedge throng'd.
- There then was Ongentheow by the swords' edges, 2960
- The blent-hair'd, the hoary one, driven to biding,
- So that the folk-king fain must he take
- Sole doom of Eofor. Him in his wrath then
- Wulf the Wonreding reach'd with his weapon,
- So that from the stroke sprang the war-sweat in streams
- Forth from under his hair; yet naught fearsome was he,
- The aged, the Scylfing, but paid aback rathely
- With chaffer that worse was that war-crash of slaughter,
- Sithence the folk-king turned him thither;
- And nowise might the brisk one that son was of Wonred 2970
- Unto the old carle give back the hand-slaying,
- For that he on Wulf's head the helm erst had sheared,
- So that all with the blood stained needs must he bow,
- And fell on the field; but not yet was he fey,
- But he warp'd himself up, though the wound had touch'd nigh.
- But thereon the hard Hygelac's thane there,
- Whenas down lay his brother, let the broad blade,
- The old sword of eotens, that helm giant-fashion'd
- Break over the board-wall, and down the king bowed,
- The herd of the folk unto fair life was smitten. 2980
- There were many about there who bound up his kinsman,
- Upraised him swiftly when room there was made them,
- That the slaughter-stead there at the stour they might wield,
- That while when was reaving one warrior the other:
- From Ongentheow took he the iron-wrought byrny,
- The hard-hilted sword, with his helm all together:
- The hoary one's harness to Hygelac bare he;
- The fret war-gear then took he, and fairly behight him
- Before the folk due gifts, and even so did it;
- Gild he gave for that war-race, the lord of the Geats, 2990
- The own son of Hrethel, when home was he come,
- To Eofor and Wulf gave he over-much treasure,
- To them either he gave an hundred of thousands,
- Land and lock'd rings. Of the gift none needed to wyte him
- Of mid earth, since the glory they gained by battle.
- Then to Eofor he gave his one only daughter,
- An home-worship soothly, for pledge of his good will.
- That is the feud and the foeship full soothly,
- The dead-hate of men, e'en as I have a weening,
- Wherefor the Swede people against us shall seek, 3000
- Sithence they have learned that lieth our lord
- All lifeless; e'en he that erewhile hath held
- Against all the haters the hoard and the realm;
- Who after the heroes' fall held the fierce Scylfings,
- Framed the folk-rede, and further thereto
- Did earlship-deeds. Now is haste best of all
- That we now the folk-king should fare to be seeing,
- And then that we bring him who gave us the rings
- On his way to the bale: nor shall somewhat alone
- With the moody be molten; but manifold hoard is, 3010
- Gold untold of by tale that grimly is cheapened,
- And now at the last by this one's own life
- Are rings bought, and all these the brand now shall fret,
- The flame thatch them over: no earl shall bear off
- One gem in remembrance; nor any fair maiden
- Shall have on her halse a ring-honour thereof,
- But in grief of mood henceforth, bereaved of gold,
- Shall oft, and not once alone, alien earth tread,
- Now that the host-learn'd hath laid aside laughter,
- The game and the glee-joy. Therefore shall the spear, 3020
- Full many a morn-cold, of hands be bewounden,
- Uphoven in hand; and no swough of the harp
- Shall waken the warriors; but the wan raven rather
- Fain over the fey many tales shall tell forth,
- And say to the erne how it sped him at eating,
- While he with the wolf was a-spoiling the slain.
- So was the keen-whetted a-saying this while
- Spells of speech loathly; he lied not much
- Of weirds or of words. Then uprose all the war-band,
- And unblithe they wended under the Ernes-ness, 3030
- All welling of tears, the wonder to look on.
- Found they then on the sand, now lacking of soul,
- Holding his bed, him that gave them the rings
- In time erewhile gone by. But then was the end-day
- Gone for the good one; since the king of the battle,
- The lord of the Weders, in wonder-death died.
- But erst there they saw a more seldom-seen sight,
- The Worm on the lea-land over against him
- Down lying there loathly; there was the fire-drake,
- The grim of the terrors, with gleeds all beswealed. 3040
- He was of fifty feet of his measure
- Long of his lying. Lift-joyance held he
- In the whiles of the night, but down again wended
- To visit his den. Now fast was he in death,
- He had of the earth-dens the last end enjoyed.
- There by him now stood the beakers and bowls,
- There lay the dishes and dearly-wrought swords,
- Rusty, through-eaten they, as in earth's bosom
- A thousand of winters there they had wonned.
- For that heritage there was, all craftily eked, 3050
- Gold of the yore men, in wizardry wounden;
- So that that ring-hall might none reach thereto,
- Not any of mankind but if God his own self,
- Sooth king of victories, gave unto whom he would
- (He is holder of men) to open that hoard,
- E'en to whichso of mankind should seem to him meet.
- XLII. THEY GO TO LOOK ON THE FIELD OF DEED.
- Then it was to be seen that throve not the way
- To him that unrightly had hidden within there
- The fair gear 'neath the wall. The warder erst slew
- Some few of folk, and the feud then became 3060
- Wrothfully wreaked. A wonder whenas
- A valour-strong earl may reach on the ending
- Of the fashion of life, when he longer in nowise
- One man with his kinsmen may dwell in the mead-hall!
- So to Beowulf was it when the burg's ward he sought.
- For the hate of the weapons: he himself knew not
- Wherethrough forsooth his world's sundering should be.
- So until Doomsday they cursed it deeply,
- Those princes the dread, who erst there had done it,
- That that man should be of sins never sackless, 3070
- A-hoppled in shrines, in hell-bonds fast set,
- With plague-spots be punish'd, who that plain should plunder.
- But naught gold-greedy was he, more gladly had he
- The grace of the Owner erst gotten to see.
- Now spake out Wiglaf, that son was of Weohstan:
- Oft shall many an earl for the will but of one
- Dree the wrack, as to us even now is befallen:
- Nowise might we learn the lief lord of us,
- The herd of the realm, any of rede,
- That he should not go greet that warder of gold, 3080
- But let him live yet, whereas long he was lying,
- And wonne in his wicks until the world's ending;
- But he held to high weird and the hoard hath been seen,
- Grimly gotten: o'er hard forsooth was that giving,
- That the king of the folk e'en thither enticed.
- Lo! I was therein, and I look'd it all over,
- The gear of the house, when for me room was gotten,
- But I lightly in nowise had leave for the passage
- In under the earth-wall; in haste I gat hold
- Forsooth with my hands of a mickle main burden 3090
- Of hoard-treasures, and hither then out did I bear them,
- Out unto my king, and then quick was he yet,
- Wise, and wit-holding: a many things spake he,
- That aged in grief-care, and bade me to greet you,
- And prayed ye would do e'en after your friend's deeds
- Aloft in the bale-stead a howe builded high,
- Most mickle and mighty, as he amongst men was
- The worthfullest warrior wide over the world,
- While he the burg-weal erewhile might brook.
- Then so let us hasten this second of whiles 3100
- To see and to seek the throng of things strange,
- The wonder 'neath wall; I shall wise you the way,
- So that ye from a-near may look on enough
- Of rings and broad gold; and be the bier swiftly
- All yare thereunto, whenas out we shall fare.
- Then let us so ferry the lord that was ours,
- The lief man of men, to where long shall he
- In the All-Wielder's keeping full patiently wait.
- Bade then to bid the bairn of that Weohstan,
- The deer of the battle, to a many of warriors, 3110
- The house-owning wights, that the wood of the bale
- They should ferry from far, e'en the folk-owning men,
- Toward the good one. And now shall the gleed fret away,
- The wan flame a-waxing, the strong one of warriors,
- Him who oft-times abided the shower of iron
- When the storm of the shafts driven on by the strings
- Shook over the shield-wall, and the shaft held its service,
- And eager with feather-gear follow'd the barb.
- Now then the wise one, that son was of Weohstan,
- Forth from the throng then call'd of the king's thanes 3120
- A seven together, the best to be gotten,
- And himself went the eighth in under the foe-roof;
- One man of the battlers in hand there he bare
- A gleam of the fire, of the first went he inward.
- It was nowise allotted who that hoard should despoil,
- Sithence without warden some deal that there was
- The men now beheld in the hall there a-wonning,
- Lying there fleeting; little mourn'd any,
- That they in all haste outward should ferry
- The dear treasures. But forthwith the drake did they shove, 3130
- The Worm, o'er the cliff-wall, and let the wave take him,
- The flood fathom about the fretted works' herd.
- There then was wounden gold on the wain laden
- Untold of each kind, and the Atheling borne,
- The hoary of warriors, out on to Whale-ness.
- XLIII. OF THE BURIAL OF BEOWULF.
- For him then they geared, the folk of the Geats,
- A pile on the earth all unweaklike that was,
- With war-helms behung, and with boards of the battle,
- And bright byrnies, e'en after the boon that he bade.
- Laid down then amidmost their king mighty-famous 3140
- The warriors lamenting, the lief lord of them.
- Began on the burg of bale-fires the biggest
- The warriors to waken: the wood-reek went up
- Swart over the smoky glow, sound of the flame
- Bewound with the weeping (the wind-blending stilled),
- Until it at last the bone-house had broken
- Hot at the heart. All unglad of mind
- With mood-care they mourned their own liege lord's quelling.
- Likewise a sad lay the wife of aforetime
- For Beowulf the king, with her hair all upbounden, 3150
- Sang sorrow-careful; said oft and over
- That harm-days for herself in hard wise she dreaded,
- The slaughter-falls many, much fear of the warrior,
- The shaming and bondage. Heaven swallow'd the reek.
- Wrought there and fashion'd the folk of the Weders
- A howe on the lithe, that high was and broad.
- Unto the wave-farers wide to be seen:
- Then it they betimber'd in time of ten days,
- The battle-strong's beacon; the brands' very-leavings
- They bewrought with a wall in the worthiest of ways, 3160
- That men of all wisdom might find how to work.
- Into burg then they did the rings and bright sun-gems,
- And all such adornments as in the hoard there
- The war-minded men had taken e'en now;
- The earls' treasures let they the earth to be holding,
- Gold in the grit, wherein yet it liveth,
- As useless to men-folk as ever it erst was.
- Then round the howe rode the deer of the battle,
- The bairns of the athelings, twelve were they in all.
- Their care would they mourn, and bemoan them their king, 3170
- The word-lay would they utter and over the man speak:
- They accounted his earlship and mighty deeds done,
- And doughtily deem'd them; as due as it is
- That each one his friend-lord with words should belaud,
- And love in his heart, whenas forth shall he
- Away from the body be fleeting at last.
- In such wise they grieved, the folk of the Geats,
- For the fall of their lord, e'en they his hearth-fellows;
- Quoth they that he was a world-king forsooth,
- The mildest of all men, unto men kindest, 3180
- To his folk the most gentlest, most yearning of fame.
- PERSONS AND PLACES
- (_Numbers refer to Pages_)
- [Transcriber's Note:
- In this and the following section, page numbers in parentheses are
- accompanied by a line reference in brackets.]
- BEANSTAN, father of Breca (31 [524]).
- Beowulf the Dane (not Beowulf the Geat, the hero of the poem) was the
- grandfather of Hrothgar (2, 4 [18, 53]).
- Beowulf the Geat. _See_ the Argument.
- Breca (30 [506]), who contended with Beowulf in swimming, was a chief of
- the Brondings (31 [521]).
- Brisings' neck-gear (70 [1199]). "This necklace is the Brisinga-men, the
- costly necklace of Freyja, which she won from the dwarfs and which was
- stolen from her by Loki, as is told in the Edda" (Kemble). In our poem,
- it is said that Hama carried off this necklace when he fled from
- Eormenric, king of the Ostrogoths.
- DAYRAVEN (143 [2500]), a brave warrior of the Hugs, and probably the
- slayer of Hygelac, whom, in that case, Beowulf avenged.
- EADGILS, Eanmund (136, 137 [2379, 2391]), "sons of Ohthere," and nephews
- of the Swedish King Onela, by whom they were banished from their native
- land for rebellion. They took refuge at the court of the Geat King
- Heardred, and Onela, "Ongentheow's bairn," enraged at their finding an
- asylum with his hereditary foes, invaded Geatland, and slew Heardred. At
- a later time Beowulf, when king of the Geats, balanced the feud by
- supporting Eadgils in an invasion of Sweden, in which King Onela was
- slain.
- Eanmund (149 [2610]), while in exile at the court of the Geats, was
- slain by Weohstan, father of Wiglaf, and stripped of the armour given
- him by his uncle, the Swedish King Onela. Weohstan "spake not about the
- feud, although he had slain Onela's brother's son," probably because he
- was not proud of having slain an "exile unfriended" in a private
- quarrel.
- Ecglaf, father of Unferth, Hrothgar's spokesman (29 [499]).
- Ecgtheow (22 [373]), father of Beowulf the Geat, by the only daughter of
- Hrethel, king of the Geats. Having slain Heatholaf, a warrior of the
- Wylfings, Ecgtheow sought protection at the court of the Danish King
- Hrothgar, who accepted his fealty and settled the feud by a
- money-payment (27 [463]). Hence the heartiness of Beowulf's welcome at
- Hrothgar's hands.
- Ecgwela. The Scyldings or Danes are once called "Ecgwela's offspring"
- (99 [1710]). He may have been the founder of the older dynasty of Danish
- kings which ended with Heremod.
- Eofor (142, 167-9 [2485, 2963-2996]), a Geat warrior, brother of Wulf.
- He came to the aid of his brother in his single combat with the Swedish
- King Ongentheow, and slew the king, being rewarded by Hygelac with the
- hand of his only daughter.
- Eotens (61, 62, 66 [1072, 1088, 1141]) are the people of Finn, king of
- Friesland. In other passages, it is merely a name for a race of
- monsters.
- FINN (61-7 [1068-1156]). The somewhat obscure Finn episode in _Beowulf_
- appears to be part of a Finn epic, of which only the merest fragment,
- called the _Fight at Finnsburg_, is extant. The following conjectured
- outline of the whole story is based on this fragment and on the Beowulf
- episode; Finn, king of the Frisians, had carried off Hildeburh, daughter
- of Hoc, probably with her consent. Her father, Hoc, seems to have
- pursued the fugitives, and to have been slain in the fight which ensued
- on his overtaking them. After the lapse of some twenty years Hoc's sons,
- Hnæf and Hengest, are old enough to undertake the duty of avenging their
- father's death. They make an inroad into Finn's country, and a battle
- takes place in which many warriors, among them Hnæf and a son of Finn,
- are killed. Peace is then solemnly concluded, and the slain warriors are
- burnt. As the year is too far advanced for Hengest to return home, he
- and those of his men who survive remain for the winter in the Frisian
- country with Finn. But Hengest's thoughts dwell constantly on the death
- of his brother Hnæf, and he would gladly welcome any excuse to break the
- peace which had been sworn by both parties. His ill-concealed desire for
- revenge is noticed by the Frisians, who anticipate it by themselves
- attacking Hengest and his men whilst they are sleeping in the hall. This
- is the night attack described in the _Fight at Finnsburg_. It would seem
- that after a brave and desperate resistance Hengest himself falls in
- this fight at the hands of the son of Hunlaf (66 [1143]), but two of his
- retainers, Guthlaf and Oslaf, succeed in cutting their way through their
- enemies and in escaping to their own land. They return with fresh
- troops, attack and slay Finn, and carry his queen Hildeburh back to the
- Daneland.
- Folkwalda (62 [1089]), father of Finn.
- Franks (70, 165 [1210, 2911]). Hygelac, king of the Geats, was defeated
- and slain early in the sixth century, in his historical invasion of the
- Netherlands, by a combined army of Frisians, Franks, and Hugs.
- Freawaru (116 [2022]), daughter of Hrothgar and Wealhtheow. Beowulf
- tells Hygelac that her father has betrothed her to Ingeld, prince of the
- Heathobards, in the hope of settling the feud between the two peoples.
- But he prophesies that the hope will prove vain: for an old Heathobard
- warrior, seeing a Danish chieftain accompany Freawaru to their court
- laden with Heathobard spoils, will incite the son of the former owner of
- the plundered treasure to revenge, until blood is shed, and the feud is
- renewed. That this was what afterwards befell, we learn from the Old
- English poem _Widsith_. _See also_ ll. 83-5.
- Friesland (65 [1126]), the land of the North Frisians.
- Frieslands (135 [2356]), Frisian land (165 [2914]), the home of the West
- Frisians.
- Frisians. Two tribes are to be distinguished: 1. The North Frisians (61,
- 63 [1070, 1093]), the people of Finn. 2. The West Frisians (143, 165
- [2502, 2911]), who combined with the Franks and Hugs and defeated
- Hygelac, between 512 and 520 A.D.
- Froda (117 [2025]), father of Ingeld. _See_ Freawaru.
- GUTHLAF and Oslaf (66 [1148]). _See_ Finn.
- HÆRETH (112, 114 [1929, 1981]), father of Hygd, wife of Hygelac.
- Hæthcyn (139, 142, 165 [2433, 2481, 2924]), second son of Hrethel, king
- of the Geats, and thus elder brother of Hygelac. He accidentally killed
- his elder brother Herebeald with a bow-shot, to the inconsolable grief
- of Hrethel. He succeeded to the throne at his father's death, but fell
- in battle at Ravenwood (165 [2924]) by the hand of the Swedish King
- Ongentheow.
- Half-Danes (61 [1069]), the tribe to which Hnæf belongs. _See_ Finn.
- Hama (69 [1198]). _See_ Brisings.
- Healfdene (4 [57]), king of the Danes, son of Beowulf the Scylding, and
- father of Hrothgar, "Healfdene's son" (16 [268]).
- Heardred (126, 136-7 [2202, 2374-2387]), son of Hygelac and Hygd. While
- still under age he succeeds his father as king of the Geats, Beowulf,
- who has refused the throne himself, being his counsellor and protector.
- He is slain by "Ongentheow's bairn" (137 [2386]), Onela, king of the
- Swedes.
- Heathobards, Lombards, the tribe of Ingeld, the betrothed of Freawaru,
- Hrothgar's daughter (117 [2032]).
- Heatholaf (27 [460]). _See_ Ecgtheow.
- Helmings. "The Dame of the Helmings" (36 [620]) is Hrothgar's queen,
- Wealhtheow.
- Hemming. "The Kinsman of Hemming" is a name for Offa (112 [1944]) and
- for his son Eomær (113 [1961]).
- Hengest (62-5 [1083-1127]). _See_ Finn.
- Heorogar (5 [61]), elder brother of Hrothgar (27 [467]), did not leave
- his armour to his son Heoroward (124 [2158]); but Hrothgar gives it to
- Beowulf, and Beowulf gives it to Hygelac.
- Herebeald (139, 141 [2433, 2462]), eldest son of the Geat King Hrethel,
- was accidentally shot dead with an arrow by his brother Hæthcyn.
- Heremod (53, 99 [915, 1709]) is twice spoken of as a bad and cruel
- Danish king. In the end he is betrayed into the hands of his foes.
- Hereric may have been brother of Hygd, Hygelac's queen, for their son
- Heardred is spoken of as "the nephew of Hereric" (126 [2206]).
- Here-Scyldings (64 [1108]), Army-Scyldings, a name of the Danes.
- Hetware (135, 165 [2362, 2915]), the Hattuarii of the _Historia
- Francorum_ of Gregory of Tours and of the _Gesta Regum Francorum_, were
- the tribe against which Hygelac was raiding when he was defeated and
- slain by an army of Frisians, Franks, and Hugs.
- Hildeburh (61, 64 [1071, 1114]). _See_ Finn.
- Hnæf (61, 64 [1069, 1114]). _See_ Finn.
- Hoc (62 [1076]). _See_ Finn.
- Hrethel, a former king of the Geats; son of Swerting (70 [1202]), father
- of Hygelac and grandfather of Beowulf (22 [374]), to whom he left his
- coat of mail (26 [454]). He died of grief at the loss of his eldest son
- Herebeald (139-42) [2429-2473], who was accidentally slain by his brother
- Hæthcyn.
- [Transcriber's Note:
- Page 70 [l. 1202] text reads "Hygelac ... grandson of Swerting."
- Hrethel is not named.]
- Hrethlings (167 [2959]), the people of Hrethel, the Geats.
- Hrethmen (26 [445]), Triumph-men, the Danes.
- Hrethric (69, 106 [1189, 1836]), elder son of Hrothgar and Wealhtheow.
- Hrothgar. _See_ the Argument.
- Hrothulf (59, 68 [1017, 1181]), probably the son of Hrothgar's younger
- brother Halga (5 [61]). He lives at the Danish court. Wealhtheow hopes
- that, if he survives Hrothgar, he will be good to their children in
- return for their kindness to him. It would seem that this hope was not
- to be fulfilled ("yet of kindred unsunder'd," 67 [1164]).
- Hygd, daughter of Hæreth, wife of Hygelac, the king of the Geats, and
- mother of Heardred. She may well be "the wife of aforetime" (177
- [3149]).
- Hygelac, third son of Hrethel (139 [2433]) and uncle to Beowulf, is the
- reigning king of the Geats during the greater part of the action of the
- poem. When his brother Hæthcyn was defeated and slain by Ongentheow at
- Ravenwood (165 [2923]), Hygelac quickly went in pursuit and put
- Ongentheow to flight; but although, as leader of the attack, he is
- called "the banesman of Ongentheow" (114 [1986]), the actual slayer was
- Eofor (142, 167 [2485, 2963]), whom Hygelac rewarded with the hand of
- his only daughter (169 [2996]). Hygelac came by his death between 512
- and 520 A.D., in his historical invasion of the Netherlands, which is
- referred to in the poem four times (70, 135, 143, 165 [1207, 2356, 2502,
- 2911]).
- ING (147 [2576]). _See_ Ingwines.
- Ingeld (119 [2064]). _See_ Freawaru.
- Ingwines (60, 77 [1044, 1319]), "friends of Ing," the Danes. Ing,
- according to the Old English _Rune-Poem_, "was first seen by men amid
- the East Danes"; he has been identified with Frea.
- MERWING, The (165 [2920]), the Merovingian king of the Franks.
- OFFA (113 [1949]). _See_ Thrytho.
- Ohthere (136-7, 165 [2379-2393, 2927]), son of the Swedish King
- Ongentheow, and father of Eanmund and Eadgils (_q.v._).
- Onela, "Ongentheow's bairn" (137 [2386]) and elder brother of Ohthere,
- is king of Sweden ("the helm of the Scylfings," 136 [2380]) at the time
- of the rebellion of Eanmund and Eadgils. He invades the land of the
- Geats, which has harboured the rebels, slays Heardred, son of Hygelac,
- and then retreats before Beowulf. At a later time Beowulf avenges the
- death of Heardred by supporting Eadgils, "son of Ohthere" (137 [2393]),
- in an invasion of Sweden, in which Onela is slain. _See also_ Eadgils;
- and compare the slaying of Ali by Athils on the ice of Lake Wener in the
- Icelandic "Heimskringla."
- Ongentheow, father of Onela and Ohthere, was a former king of the
- Swedes. The earlier strife between the Swedes and the Geats, in which he
- is the chief figure, is fully related by the messenger (164 [2891]) who
- brings the tidings of Beowulf's death. In retaliation for the marauding
- invasions of Onela and Ohthere (142 [2474]), Hæthcyn invaded Sweden, and
- took Ongentheow's queen prisoner. Ongentheow in return invaded the land
- of her captor, whom he slew, and rescued his wife (165 [2923]); but in
- his hour of triumph he was attacked in his turn by Hygelac near
- Ravenwood, and fell by the hand of Eofor (168 [2960]).
- SCANEY (97 [1686]), Scede-lands (2 [19]), the most southern portion of
- the Scandinavian peninsula, belonging to the Danes; used in our poem for
- the whole Danish kingdom.
- Scyld (1 [4]), son of Sheaf, was the mythical founder of the royal
- Danish dynasty of Scyldings.
- Scyldings, descendants of Scyld, properly the name of the reigning
- Danish dynasty, is commonly extended to include the Danish people (3
- [30]).
- Scylfing: "the Scylfing" (167 [2967]), "the aged of Scylfings" (142
- [2486]), is Ongentheow.
- Scylfings (136 [2380]), the name of the reigning Swedish dynasty, was
- extended to the Swedish people in the same way as "Scyldings" to the
- Danes. Beowulf's kinsman Wiglaf is called "lord of Scylfings" (149
- [2601]), and in another passage the name is apparently applied to the
- Geats (170 [3004]); this seems to point to a common ancestry of Swedes
- and Geats, or it may be that Beowulf's father Ecgtheow was a "Scylfing."
- THRYTHO (112 [1931]), wife of the Angle King Offa and mother of Eomær,
- is mentioned in contrast to Hygd, just as Heremod is a foil to Beowulf.
- She is at first the type of a cruel, unwomanly queen. But by her
- marriage with Offa, who seems to be her second husband, she is subdued
- and changed until her fame even adds glory to his.
- UNFERTH, son of Ecglaf, is the spokesman of Hrothgar, at whose feet he
- sits. He is of a jealous disposition, and is twice spoken of as the
- murderer of his own brothers (34, 67 [587, 1165]). Taunting Beowulf with
- defeat in his swimming-match with Breca, he is silenced by the hero's
- reply, and more effectually still by the issue of the struggle with
- Grendel (57 [980]). Afterwards, however, he lends his sword Hrunting for
- Beowulf's encounter with Grendel's mother (85, 104 [1465, 1808]).
- WÆGMUNDINGS (149, 160 [2605, 2803]), the family to which both Beowulf
- and Wiglaf belong. Their fathers, Ecgtheow and Weohstan, may have been
- sons of Wægmund.
- Wedermark (17 [298]), the land of the Weder-Geats, _i.e._ the Geats.
- Weders, Weder-Geats (13, 86, 122 [225, 1492, 2120]), Geats.
- Weland (26 [455]), the Völund of the Edda, the famous smith of Teutonic
- legend, was the maker of Beowulf's coat of mail. See the figured casket
- in the British Museum; and compare "Wayland Smith's Cave" near the White
- Horse, in Berkshire.
- Weohstan was the father of Beowulf's kinsman and faithful henchman
- Wiglaf, and the slayer of Eanmund (149 [2601]).
- Wonred, father of "Wulf the Wonreding" (167 [2964]), and of Eofor.
- Wulf (167 [2964]). _See_ Eofor.
- Wulfgar, "a lord of the Wendels" (20 [348]), is an official of
- Hrothgar's court, where he is the first to greet Beowulf and his Geats,
- and introduces them to Hrothgar.
- Wythergyld (118 [2051]) is a warrior of the Heathobards.
- THE MEANING OF SOME WORDS NOT COMMONLY USED NOW
- (_Numbers refer to Pages_)
- [Transcriber's Note:
- In this and the previous section, page numbers in parentheses are
- accompanied by a line reference in brackets.]
- _A-banning, the work was_ (5) [74], orders for the work were given.
- _Arede_ (119) [2056], possess.
- _Atheling_, prince, noble, noble warrior.
- _Barm_, lap, bosom.
- _Behalsed_ (5 [63]), embraced by the neck.
- _Berne_, man, warrior, hero.
- _Bestead_ (143 [2499]), served.
- _Beswealed_, scorched, burnt.
- _Beswinked_, sweated.
- _Birlers_, cup-bearers.
- _Board_, shield.
- _Bode_, announce.
- _Bollen_, swollen, angry.
- _Boot_ (9 [158]), compensation.
- _Boun_ (18 [301]), made ready.
- _Braided_ (147 [2574]), drew, lifted.
- _Brim_, sea.
- _Brook_, use, enjoy.
- _Burg_, fortified place, stronghold, mount, barrow; protection;
- protector; family (163 [2886]).
- _Byrny_, coat of mail.
- _Devil-dray_, nest of devils. Cf. _squirrel's-dray_, common in Berks;
- used by Cowper.
- _Dreary_, bloody.
- _Dree_, do, accomplish, suffer, enjoy, spend (155 [2725]).
- _Ealdor_, chief, lord.
- _Eme_, uncle.
- _Eoten_, giant, monster, enemy.
- _Fathom_, embrace.
- _Feeless_, not to be atoned for with money.
- _Ferry_, bring, carry.
- _Fifel_, monster.
- _Flyting_, contending, scolding.
- _Fold_, the earth.
- _Forheed_, disregard.
- _Forwritten_, proscribed.
- _Frist_, space of time, delay.
- _Gar_, spear.
- _Graithly_, readily, well.
- _Halse_, neck.
- _Hand-shoal_, band of warriors.
- _Hery_, praise.
- _Hild-play_, battle.
- _Holm_, ocean, sea.
- _Holm-throng_, eddy of the sea.
- _Holt_, wood.
- _Hote_, call.
- _Howe_, mound, burial-mound.
- _Hythe_, ferry, haven.
- _Kemp_, champion, fighter.
- _Lithe_, slope.
- _Loom_, heirloom.
- _Low_ (133 [2320]), flame.
- _Lyke_, body.
- _Moody_, brave, proud.
- _Nicors_, sea-monsters.
- _Nithing_ (12 [193]), spite, malice.
- _O'erthinking_, overweening, arrogance.
- _Rail, railings_, coat, armour.
- _Rimed_, counted, reckoned.
- _Sea-lode_, sea-voyage.
- _Sin_, malice, hatred, hostility.
- _Skinked_, poured out.
- _Slot_, track.
- _Staple_, threshold.
- _Stone-bow_, arch of stone.
- _Sty_, stride, ascend, descend.
- _Sweal_, burn.
- _Through-witting_, understanding.
- _Undern_, from 9 o'clock till 12 o'clock; "at undren and at middai,"
- O.E. Miscellany.
- _Warths_, shores, still in use at Wick St. Lawrence, in Somerset.
- _Wick_, dwelling.
- _Wick-stead_, dwelling-place.
- _Wise_, direct, show.
- _Wit-lust_, curiosity.
- _Worth_, shall be.
- _Wreak_, utter.
- _Wyte_, blame, charge with.
- _Yare_, ready.
- _Yode_, went.
- * * * * *
- Errors and Inconsistencies
- List of Names
- Dayraven, Ravenwood
- _both names hyphenated in body text_
- Freawaru
- _text reads "Ereawaru"_
- Hrethel ... at the loss of his eldest son Herebeald (139-42)
- _text reads "-41"_
- Wythergyld
- _name spelled "Withergyld" in body text_
- Glossary
- _Arede_ (119) [2056], possess.
- _text reads "(118)"_
- ***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TALE OF BEOWULF***
- ******* This file should be named 20431-8.txt or 20431-8.zip *******
- This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/0/4/3/20431
- Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
- will be renamed.
- Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
- one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
- (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
- permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
- set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
- copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
- protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
- Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
- charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
- do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
- rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
- such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
- research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
- practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
- subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
- redistribution.
- *** START: FULL LICENSE ***
- THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
- PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
- To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
- distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
- (or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
- Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
- Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
- http://www.gutenberg.org/license).
- Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
- electronic works
- 1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
- electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
- and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
- (trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
- the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
- all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
- If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
- Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
- terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
- entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
- 1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
- used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
- agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
- things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
- even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
- paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
- Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
- and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
- works. See paragraph 1.E below.
- 1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
- or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
- Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
- collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
- individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
- located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
- copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
- works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
- are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
- Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
- freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
- this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
- the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
- keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
- Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
- 1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
- what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
- a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
- the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
- before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
- creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
- Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
- the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
- States.
- 1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
- 1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
- access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
- whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
- phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
- Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
- copied or distributed:
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
- almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
- re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
- with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
- 1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
- from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
- posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
- and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
- or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
- with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
- work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
- through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
- Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
- 1.E.9.
- 1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
- with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
- must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
- terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
- to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
- permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
- 1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
- work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
- 1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
- electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
- prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
- active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
- Gutenberg-tm License.
- 1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
- compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
- word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
- distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
- "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
- posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
- you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
- copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
- request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
- form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
- 1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
- performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
- unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
- 1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
- access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
- that
- - You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
- - You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
- - You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
- - You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
- 1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
- electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
- forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
- both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
- Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
- Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
- 1.F.
- 1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
- effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
- public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
- collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
- works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
- "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
- corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
- property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
- computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
- your equipment.
- 1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
- of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
- Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
- Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
- liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
- fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
- LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
- PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
- TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
- LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
- INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
- DAMAGE.
- 1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
- defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
- receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
- written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
- received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
- your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
- the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
- refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
- providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
- receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
- is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
- opportunities to fix the problem.
- 1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
- in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
- WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
- WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
- 1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
- warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
- If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
- law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
- interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
- the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
- provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
- 1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
- trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
- providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
- with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
- promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
- harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
- that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
- or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
- work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
- Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
- Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
- Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
- electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
- including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
- because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
- people in all walks of life.
- Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
- assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
- goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
- remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
- and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
- To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
- and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
- and the Foundation web page at http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf.
- Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
- Foundation
- The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
- 501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
- state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
- Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
- number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
- permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
- The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
- Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
- throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
- 809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
- business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
- information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
- page at http://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact
- For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
- Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation
- Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
- spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
- increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
- freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
- array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
- ($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
- status with the IRS.
- The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
- charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
- States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
- considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
- with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
- where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
- SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
- particular state visit http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
- While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
- have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
- against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
- approach us with offers to donate.
- International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
- any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
- outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
- Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
- methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
- ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
- To donate, please visit:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
- Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
- works.
- Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
- concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
- with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
- Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
- Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
- editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
- unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
- keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
- Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
- http://www.gutenberg.org
- This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
- including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
- Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
- subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.