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The House of the Wolfings
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Текст книги "The House of the Wolfings"


Автор книги: William Morris



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Текущая страница: 15 (всего у книги 15 страниц)

  Forth then fared the host by the West gate, where Thiodolf had done so valiantly that day, and out on to the green amidst the booths and lesser dwellings.  Sore then was the heart of the Hall-Sun, as she looked forth over dwelling, and acre, and meadow, and the blue line of the woods beyond the water, and bethought her of all the familiar things that were within the compass of her eyesight, and remembered the many days of her father’s loving-kindness, and the fair words wherewith he had solaced her life-days.  But of the sorrow that wrung her heart nothing showed in her face, nor was she paler now than her wont was.  For high was her courage, and she would in no wise mar that fair day and victory of the kindreds with grief for what was gone, whereas so much of what once was, yet abided and should abide for ever.

  Then fared they down through the acres, where what was yet left of the wheat was yellowing toward harvest, and the rye hung grey and heavy; for bright and hot had the weather been all through these tidings.  Howbeit much of the corn was spoiled by the trampling of the Roman bands.

  So came they into the fair open meadow and saw before them the wains coming to meet them with their folk; to wit a throng of stout carles of the thrall-folk led by the war-wise and ripe men of the Steerings.  Bright was the gleaming of the banner-wains, though for the lack of wind the banners hung down about their staves; the sound of the lowing of the bulls and the oxen, the neighing of horses and bleating of the flocks came up to the ears of the host as they wended over the meadow.

  They made stay at last on the rising ground, all trampled and in parts bloody, where yesterday Thiodolf had come on the fight between the remnant of Otter’s men and the Romans: there they opened their ranks, and made a ring round about a space, amidmost of which was a little mound whereon was set the bier of Thiodolf.  The wains and their warders came up with them and drew a garth of the wains round about the ring of men with the banners of the kindreds in their due places.

  There was the Wolf and the Elk, the Falcon, the Swan, the Boar, the Bear, and the Green-tree: the Willow-bush, the Gedd, the Water-bank and the Wood-Ousel, the Steer, the Mallard and the Roe-deer: all these were of the Mid-mark.  But of the Upper-mark were the Horse and the Spear, and the Shield, and the Daybreak, and the Dale, and the Mountain, and the Brook, and the Weasel, and the Cloud, and the Hart.

  Of the Nether-mark were the Salmon, and the Lynx, and the Ling worm, the Seal, the Stone, and the Sea-mew; the Buck-goat, the Apple-tree, the Bull, the Adder, and the Crane.

  There they stood in the hot sunshine three hours after noon; and a little wind came out of the west and raised the pictured cloths upon the banner-staves, so that the men could now see the images of the tokens of their Houses and the Fathers of old time.

  Now was there silence in the ring of men; but it opened presently and through it came all-armed warriors bearing another bier, and lo, Otter upon it, dead in his war-gear with many a grievous wound upon his body.  For men had found him in an ingle of the wall of the Great Roof, where he had been laid yesterday by the Romans when his company and the Bearings with the Wormings made their onset: for the Romans had noted his exceeding valour, and when they had driven off the Goths some of them brought him dead inside their garth, for they would know the name and dignity of so valorous a man.

  So now they bore him to the mound where Thiodolf lay and set the bier down beside Thiodolf’s, and the two War-dukes of the Markmen lay there together: and when the warriors beheld that sight, they could not forbear, but some groaned aloud, and some wept great tears, and they clashed their swords on their shields and the sound of their sorrow and their praise went up to the summer heavens.

  Now the Hall-Sun holding aloft the waxen torch lifted up her voice and said:

  “O warriors of the Wolfings, by the token of the flame

That here in my right hand flickers, ye are back at the House of the Name,

And there yet burneth the Hall-Sun beneath the Wolfing Roof,

And the flame that the foemen quickened hath died out far aloof.

Ye gleanings of the battle, lift up your hearts on high,

For the House of the War-wise Wolfings and the Folk undoomed to die.

But ye kindreds of the Markmen, the Wolfing guests are ye,

And to-night we hold the high-tide, and great shall the feasting be,

For to-day by the road that we know not a many wend their ways

To the Gods and the ancient Fathers, and the hope of the latter days.

And how shall their feet be cumbered if we tangle them with woe,

And the heavy rain of sorrow drift o’er the road they go?

They have toiled, and their toil was troublous to make the days to come;

Use ye their gifts in gladness, lest they grieve for the Ancient Home!

Now are our maids arraying that fire-scorched Hall of ours

With the treasure of the Wolfings and the wealth of summer flowers,

And this eve the work before you will be the Hall to throng

And purge its walls of sorrow and quench its scathe and wrong.”

  She looked on the dead Thiodolf a moment, and then glanced from him to Otter and spake again:

  “O kindreds, here before you two mighty bodies lie;

Henceforth no man shall see them in house and field go by

As we were used to behold them, familiar to us then

As the wind beneath the heavens and the sun that shines on men;

Now soon shall there be nothing of their dwelling-place to tell,

Save the billow of the meadows, the flower-grown grassy swell!

Now therefore, O ye kindreds, if amidst you there be one

Who hath known the heart of the War-dukes, and the deeds their hands have done,

Will not the word be with him, while yet your hearts are hot,

Of our praise and long remembrance, and our love that dieth not?

Then let him come up hither and speak the latest word

O’er the limbs of the battle-weary and the hearts outworn with the sword.”

  She held her peace, and there was a stir in the ring of men: for they who were anigh the Dayling banner saw an old warrior sitting on a great black horse and fully armed.  He got slowly off his horse and walked toward the ring of warriors, which opened before him; for all knew him for Asmund the old, the war-wise warrior of the Daylings, even he who had lamented over the Hauberk of Thiodolf.  He had taken horse the day before, and had ridden toward the battle, but was belated, and had come up with them of the wain-burg just as they had crossed the water.

  CHAPTER XXXI—OLD ASMUND SPEAKETH OVER THE WAR-DUKES: THE DEAD ARE LAID IN MOUND

  Now while all looked on, he went to the place where lay the bodies of the War-dukes, and looked down on the face of Otter and said:

  “O Otter, there thou liest! and thou that I knew of old,

When my beard began to whiten, as the best of the keen and the bold,

And thou wert as my youngest brother, and thou didst lead my sons

When we fared forth over the mountains to meet the arrowy Huns,

And I smiled to see thee teaching the lore that I learned thee erst.

O Otter, dost thou remember how the Goth-folk came by the worst,

And with thee in mine arms I waded the wide shaft-harrowed flood

That lapped the feet of the mountains with its water blent with blood;

And how in the hollow places of the mountains hidden away

We abode the kindreds’ coming as the wet night bideth day?

Dost thou remember, Otter, how many a joy we had,

How many a grief remembered has made our high-tide glad?

O fellow of the hall-glee!  O fellow of the field!

Why then hast thou departed and left me under shield?

I the ancient, I the childless, while yet in the Laxing hall

Are thy brother’s sons abiding and their children on thee call.

  “O kindreds of the people! the soul that dwelt herein,

This goodly way-worn body, was keen for you to win

Good days and long endurance.  Who knoweth of his deed

What things for you it hath fashioned from the flame of the fire of need?

But of this at least well wot we, that forth from your hearts it came

And back to your hearts returneth for the seed of thriving and fame.

In the ground wherein ye lay it, the body of this man,

No deed of his abideth, no glory that he wan,

But evermore the Markmen shall bear his deeds o’er earth,

With the joy of the deeds that are coming, the garland of his worth.”

  He was silent a little as he stood looking down on Otter’s face with grievous sorrow, for all that his words were stout.  For indeed, as he had said, Otter had been his battle-fellow and his hall-fellow, though he was much younger than Asmund; and they had been standing foot to foot in that battle wherein old Asmund’s sons were slain by his side.

  After a while he turned slowly from looking at Otter to gaze upon Thiodolf, and his body trembled as he looked, and he opened his mouth to speak; but no word came from it; and he sat down upon the edge of the bier, and the tears began to gush out of his old eyes, and he wept aloud.  Then they that saw him wondered; for all knew the stoutness of his heart, and how he had borne more burdens than that of eld, and had not cowered down under them.  But at last he arose again, and stood firmly on his feet, and faced the folk-mote, and in a voice more like the voice of a man in his prime than of an old man, he sang:

     “Wild the storm is abroad

   Of the edge of the sword!

   Far on runneth the path

   Of the war-stride of wrath!

   The Gods hearken and hear

   The long rumour of fear

   From the meadows beneath

   Running fierce o’er the heath,

Till it beats round their dwelling-place builded aloof

And at last all up-swelling breaks wild o’er their roof,

And quencheth their laughter and crieth on all,

As it rolleth round rafter and beam of the Hall,

Like the speech of the thunder-cloud tangled on high,

When the mountain-halls sunder as dread goeth by.

     “So they throw the door wide

   Of the Hall where they bide,

   And to murmuring song

   Turns that voice of the wrong,

   And the Gods wait a-gaze

   For that Wearer of Ways:

   For they know he hath gone

   A long journey alone.

Now his feet are they hearkening, and now is he come,

With his battle-wounds darkening the door of his home,

Unbyrnied, unshielded, and lonely he stands,

And the sword that he wielded is gone from his hands—

Hands outstretched and bearing no spoil of the fight,

As speechless, unfearing, he stands in their sight.

     “War-father gleams

   Where the white light streams

   Round kings of old

   All red with gold,

   And the Gods of the name

   With joy aflame.

   All the ancient of men

   Grown glorious again:

Till the Slains-father crieth aloud at the last:

‘Here is one that belieth no hope of the past!

No weapon, no treasure of earth doth he bear,

No gift for the pleasure of Godhome to share;

But life his hand bringeth, well cherished, most sweet;

And hark! the Hall singeth the Folk-wolf to greet!’

     “As the rain of May

   On earth’s happiest day,

   So the fair flowers fall

   On the sun-bright Hall

   As the Gods rise up

   With the greeting-cup,

   And the welcoming crowd

   Falls to murmur aloud.

Then the God of Earth speaketh; sweet-worded he saith,

‘Lo, the Sun ever seeketh Life fashioned of death;

And to-day as he turneth the wide world about

On Wolf-stead he yearneth; for there without doubt

Dwells the death-fashioned story, the flower of all fame.

Come hither new Glory, come Crown of the Name!’”

  All men’s hearts rose high as he sang, and when he had ended arose the clang of sword and shield and went ringing down the meadow, and the mighty shout of the Markmen’s joy rent the heavens: for in sooth at that moment they saw Thiodolf, their champion, sitting among the Gods on his golden chair, sweet savours around him, and sweet sound of singing, and he himself bright-faced and merry as no man on earth had seen him, for as joyous a man as he was.

  But when the sound of their exultation sank down, the Hall-Sun spake again:

  “Now wendeth the sun westward, and weary grows the Earth

Of all the long day’s doings in sorrow and in mirth;

And as the great sun waneth, so doth my candle wane,

And its flickering flame desireth to rest and die again.

Therefore across the meadows wend we aback once more

To the holy Roof of the Wolfings, the shrine of peace and war.

And these that once have loved us, these warriors images,

Shall sit amidst our feasting, and see, as the Father sees

The works that men-folk fashion and the rest of toiling hands,

When his eyes look down from the mountains and the heavens above all lands,

And up from the flowery meadows and the rolling deeps of the sea.

There then at the feast with our champions familiar shall we be

As oft we are with the Godfolk, when in story-rhymes and lays

We laugh as we tell of their laughter, and their deeds of other days.

  “Come then, ye sons of the kindreds who hither bore these twain!

Take up their beds of glory, and fare we home again,

And feast as men delivered from toil unmeet to bear,

Who through the night are looking to the dawn-tide fresh and fair

And the morn and the noon to follow, and the eve and its morrow morn,

All the life of our deliv’rance and the fair days yet unborn.”

  So she spoke, and a murmur arose as those valiant men came forth again.  But lo, now were they dight in fresh and fair raiment and gleaming war-array.  For while all this was a-doing and a-saying, they had gotten them by the Hall-Sun’s bidding unto the wains of their Houses, and had arrayed them from the store therein.

  So now they took up the biers, and the Hall-Sun led them, and they went over the meadow before the throng of the kindreds, who followed them duly ordered, each House about its banner; and when they were come through the garth which the Romans had made to the Man’s-door of the Hall, there were the women of the House freshly attired, who cast flowers on the living men of the host, and on the dead War-dukes, while they wept for pity of them.  So went the freemen of the Houses into the Hall, following the Hall-Sun, and the bearers of the War-dukes; but the banners abode without in the garth made by the Romans; and the thralls arrayed a feast for themselves about the wains of the kindreds in the open place before their cots and the smithying booths and the byres.

  And as the Hall-Sun went into the Hall, she thrust down the candle against the threshold of the Man’s-door, and so quenched it.

  Long were the kindreds entering, and when they were under the Roof of the Wolfings, they looked and beheld Thiodolf set in his chair once more, and Otter set beside him; and the chiefs and leaders of the House took their places on the dais, those to whom it was due, and the Hall-Sun sat under the wondrous Lamp her namesake.

  Now was the glooming falling upon the earth; but the Hall was bright within even as the Hall-Sun had promised.  Therein was set forth the Treasure of the Wolfings; fair cloths were hung on the walls, goodly broidered garments on the pillars: goodly brazen cauldrons and fair-carven chests were set down in nooks where men could see them well, and vessels of gold and silver were set all up and down the tables of the feast.  The pillars also were wreathed with flowers, and flowers hung garlanded from the walls over the precious hangings; sweet gums and spices were burning in fair-wrought censers of brass, and so many candles were alight under the Roof, that scarce had it looked more ablaze when the Romans had litten the faggots therein for its burning amidst the hurry of the Morning Battle.

  There then they fell to feasting, hallowing in the high-tide of their return with victory in their hands: and the dead corpses of Thiodolf and Otter, clad in precious glistering raiment, looked down on them from the High-seat, and the kindreds worshipped them and were glad; and they drank the Cup to them before any others, were they Gods or men.

  But before the feast was hallowed in, came Ali the son of Grey up to the High-seat, bearing something in his hand: and lo! it was Throng-plough, which he had sought all over the field where the Markmen had been overcome by the Romans, and had found it at last.  All men saw him how he held it in his hand now as he went up to the Hall-Sun and spake to her.  But she kissed the lad on the forehead, and took Throng-plough, and wound the peace-strings round him and laid him on the board before Thiodolf; and then she spake softly as if to herself, yet so that some heard her:

  “O father, no more shalt thou draw Throng-plough from the sheath till the battle is pitched in the last field of fight, and the sons of the fruitful Earth and the sons of Day meet Swart and his children at last, when the change of the World is at hand.  Maybe I shall be with thee then: but now and in meanwhile, farewell, O mighty hand of my father!”

  Thus then the Houses of the Mark held their High-tide of Returning under the Wolfing Roof with none to blame them or make them afraid: and the moon rose and the summer night wore on towards dawn, and within the Roof and without was there feasting and singing and harping and the voice of abundant joyance: for without the Roof feasted the thralls and the strangers, and the Roman war-captives.

  But on the morrow the kindreds laid their dead men in mound betwixt the Great Roof and the Wild-wood.  In one mound they laid them with the War-dukes in their midst, and Arinbiorn by Otter’s right side; and Thiodolf bore Throng-plough to mound with him.

  But a little way from the mound of their own dead, toward the south they laid the Romans, a great company, with their Captain in the midst: and they heaped a long mound over them not right high; so that as years wore, and the feet of men and beasts trod it down, it seemed a mere swelling of the earth not made by men’s hands; and belike men knew not how many bones of valiant men lay beneath; yet it had a name which endured for long, to wit, the Battle-toft.

  But the mound whereunder the Markmen were laid was called Thiodolf’s Howe for many generations of men, and many are the tales told of him; for men were loth to lose him and forget him: and in the latter days men deemed of him that he sits in that Howe not dead but sleeping, with Throng-plough laid before him on the board; and that when the sons of the Goths are at their sorest need and the falcons cease to sit on the ridge of the Great Roof of the Wolfings, he will wake and come forth from the Howe for their helping.  But none have dared to break open that Howe and behold what is therein.

  But that swelling of the meadow where the Goths had their overthrow at the hands of the Romans, and Thiodolf fell to earth unwounded, got a name also, and was called the Swooning Knowe; and it kept that name long after men had forgotten wherefore it was so called.

  Now when all this was done, and the warriors of the kindreds were departed each to his own stead, the Wolfings gathered in wheat-harvest, and set themselves to make good all that the Romans had undone; and they cleansed and mended their Great Roof and made it fairer than before, and took from it all signs of the burning, save that they left the charring and marks of the flames on one tie-beam, the second from the dais, for a token of the past tidings.  Also when Harvest was over the Wolfings, the Beamings, the Galtings, and the Elkings, set to work with the Bearings to rebuild their Great Roof and the other dwellings and booths which the Romans had burned; and right fair was that house.

  But the Wolfings throve in field and fold, and they begat children who grew up to be mighty men and deft of hand, and the House grew more glorious year by year.

  The tale tells not that the Romans ever fell on the Mark again; for about this time they began to stay the spreading of their dominion, or even to draw in its boundaries somewhat.

  AND THIS IS ALL THAT THE TALE HAS TO TELL CONCERNING THE HOUSE OF THE WOLFINGS AND THE KINDREDS OF THE MARK.

 


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