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I. | |
THE LIFE AND DEATH OF SCYLD. | |
{The famous race of Spear-Danes.} | |
Lo! the Spear-Danes' glory through splendid achievements | |
The folk-kings' former fame we have heard of, | |
How princes displayed then their prowess-in-battle. | |
{Scyld, their mighty king, in honor of whom they are often called | |
Scyldings. He is the great-grandfather of Hrothgar, so prominent in the | |
poem.} | |
Oft Scyld the Scefing from scathers in numbers | |
5 From many a people their mead-benches tore. | |
Since first he found him friendless and wretched, | |
The earl had had terror: comfort he got for it, | |
Waxed 'neath the welkin, world-honor gained, | |
Till all his neighbors o'er sea were compelled to | |
10 Bow to his bidding and bring him their tribute: | |
An excellent atheling! After was borne him | |
{A son is born to him, who receives the name of Beowulf--a name afterwards | |
made so famous by the hero of the poem.} | |
A son and heir, young in his dwelling, | |
Whom God-Father sent to solace the people. | |
He had marked the misery malice had caused them, | |
15 [1]That reaved of their rulers they wretched had erstwhile[2] | |
Long been afflicted. The Lord, in requital, | |
Wielder of Glory, with world-honor blessed him. | |
Famed was Beowulf, far spread the glory | |
Of Scyld's great son in the lands of the Danemen. | |
[2] | |
{The ideal Teutonic king lavishes gifts on his vassals.} | |
20 So the carle that is young, by kindnesses rendered | |
The friends of his father, with fees in abundance | |
Must be able to earn that when age approacheth | |
Eager companions aid him requitingly, | |
When war assaults him serve him as liegemen: | |
25 By praise-worthy actions must honor be got | |
'Mong all of the races. At the hour that was fated | |
{Scyld dies at the hour appointed by Fate.} | |
Scyld then departed to the All-Father's keeping | |
Warlike to wend him; away then they bare him | |
To the flood of the current, his fond-loving comrades, | |
30 As himself he had bidden, while the friend of the Scyldings | |
Word-sway wielded, and the well-lovèd land-prince | |
Long did rule them.[3] The ring-stemmèd vessel, | |
Bark of the atheling, lay there at anchor, | |
Icy in glimmer and eager for sailing; | |
{By his own request, his body is laid on a vessel and wafted seaward.} | |
35 The belovèd leader laid they down there, | |
Giver of rings, on the breast of the vessel, | |
The famed by the mainmast. A many of jewels, | |
Of fretted embossings, from far-lands brought over, | |
Was placed near at hand then; and heard I not ever | |
40 That a folk ever furnished a float more superbly | |
With weapons of warfare, weeds for the battle, | |
Bills and burnies; on his bosom sparkled | |
Many a jewel that with him must travel | |
On the flush of the flood afar on the current. | |
45 And favors no fewer they furnished him soothly, | |
Excellent folk-gems, than others had given him | |
{He leaves Daneland on the breast of a bark.} | |
Who when first he was born outward did send him | |
Lone on the main, the merest of infants: | |
And a gold-fashioned standard they stretched under heaven | |
[3] 50 High o'er his head, let the holm-currents bear him, | |
Seaward consigned him: sad was their spirit, | |
Their mood very mournful. Men are not able | |
{No one knows whither the boat drifted.} | |
Soothly to tell us, they in halls who reside,[4] | |
Heroes under heaven, to what haven he hied. | |
[1] For the 'Þæt' of verse 15, Sievers suggests 'Þá' (= which). If | |
this be accepted, the sentence 'He had ... afflicted' will read: _He_ | |
(_i.e._ God) _had perceived the malice-caused sorrow which they, | |
lordless, had formerly long endured_. | |
[2] For 'aldor-léase' (15) Gr. suggested 'aldor-ceare': _He perceived | |
their distress, that they formerly had suffered life-sorrow a long | |
while_. | |
[3] A very difficult passage. 'Áhte' (31) has no object. H. supplies | |
'geweald' from the context; and our translation is based upon this | |
assumption, though it is far from satisfactory. Kl. suggests | |
'lændagas' for 'lange': _And the beloved land-prince enjoyed (had) his | |
transitory days (i.e. lived)_. B. suggests a dislocation; but this is | |
a dangerous doctrine, pushed rather far by that eminent scholar. | |
[4] The reading of the H.-So. text has been quite closely followed; | |
but some eminent scholars read 'séle-rædenne' for 'sele-rædende.' If | |
that be adopted, the passage will read: _Men cannot tell us, indeed, | |
the order of Fate, etc._ 'Sele-rædende' has two things to support it: | |
(1) v. 1347; (2) it affords a parallel to 'men' in v. 50. | |
II. | |
SCYLD'S SUCCESSORS.--HROTHGAR'S GREAT MEAD-HALL. | |
{Beowulf succeeds his father Scyld} | |
In the boroughs then Beowulf, bairn of the Scyldings, | |
Belovèd land-prince, for long-lasting season | |
Was famed mid the folk (his father departed, | |
The prince from his dwelling), till afterward sprang | |
5 Great-minded Healfdene; the Danes in his lifetime | |
He graciously governed, grim-mooded, agèd. | |
{Healfdene's birth.} | |
Four bairns of his body born in succession | |
Woke in the world, war-troopers' leader | |
Heorogar, Hrothgar, and Halga the good; | |
10 Heard I that Elan was Ongentheow's consort, | |
{He has three sons--one of them, Hrothgar--and a daughter named Elan. | |
Hrothgar becomes a mighty king.} | |
The well-beloved bedmate of the War-Scylfing leader. | |
Then glory in battle to Hrothgar was given, | |
Waxing of war-fame, that willingly kinsmen | |
Obeyed his bidding, till the boys grew to manhood, | |
15 A numerous band. It burned in his spirit | |
To urge his folk to found a great building, | |
A mead-hall grander than men of the era | |
{He is eager to build a great hall in which he may feast his retainers} | |
Ever had heard of, and in it to share | |
With young and old all of the blessings | |
20 The Lord had allowed him, save life and retainers. | |
Then the work I find afar was assigned | |
[4] To many races in middle-earth's regions, | |
To adorn the great folk-hall. In due time it happened | |
Early 'mong men, that 'twas finished entirely, | |
25 The greatest of hall-buildings; Heorot he named it | |
{The hall is completed, and is called Heort, or Heorot.} | |
Who wide-reaching word-sway wielded 'mong earlmen. | |
His promise he brake not, rings he lavished, | |
Treasure at banquet. Towered the hall up | |
High and horn-crested, huge between antlers: | |
30 It battle-waves bided, the blasting fire-demon; | |
Ere long then from hottest hatred must sword-wrath | |
Arise for a woman's husband and father. | |
Then the mighty war-spirit[1] endured for a season, | |
{The Monster Grendel is madly envious of the Danemen's joy.} | |
Bore it bitterly, he who bided in darkness, | |
35 That light-hearted laughter loud in the building | |
Greeted him daily; there was dulcet harp-music, | |
Clear song of the singer. He said that was able | |
{[The course of the story is interrupted by a short reference to some old | |
account of the creation.]} | |
To tell from of old earthmen's beginnings, | |
That Father Almighty earth had created, | |
40 The winsome wold that the water encircleth, | |
Set exultingly the sun's and the moon's beams | |
To lavish their lustre on land-folk and races, | |
And earth He embellished in all her regions | |
With limbs and leaves; life He bestowed too | |
45 On all the kindreds that live under heaven. | |
{The glee of the warriors is overcast by a horrible dread.} | |
So blessed with abundance, brimming with joyance, | |
The warriors abided, till a certain one gan to | |
Dog them with deeds of direfullest malice, | |
A foe in the hall-building: this horrible stranger[2] | |
50 Was Grendel entitled, the march-stepper famous | |
Who[3] dwelt in the moor-fens, the marsh and the fastness; | |
The wan-mooded being abode for a season | |
[5] In the land of the giants, when the Lord and Creator | |
Had banned him and branded. For that bitter murder, | |
55 The killing of Abel, all-ruling Father | |
{Cain is referred to as a progenitor of Grendel, and of monsters in | |
general.} | |
The kindred of Cain crushed with His vengeance; | |
In the feud He rejoiced not, but far away drove him | |
From kindred and kind, that crime to atone for, | |
Meter of Justice. Thence ill-favored creatures, | |
60 Elves and giants, monsters of ocean, | |
Came into being, and the giants that longtime | |
Grappled with God; He gave them requital. | |
[1] R. and t. B. prefer 'ellor-gæst' to 'ellen-gæst' (86): _Then the | |
stranger from afar endured, etc._ | |
[2] Some authorities would translate '_demon_' instead of | |
'_stranger_.' | |
[3] Some authorities arrange differently, and render: _Who dwelt in | |
the moor-fens, the marsh and the fastness, the land of the | |
giant-race._ | |
III. | |
GRENDEL THE MURDERER. | |
{Grendel attacks the sleeping heroes} | |
When the sun was sunken, he set out to visit | |
The lofty hall-building, how the Ring-Danes had used it | |
For beds and benches when the banquet was over. | |
Then he found there reposing many a noble | |
5 Asleep after supper; sorrow the heroes,[1] | |
Misery knew not. The monster of evil | |
Greedy and cruel tarried but little, | |
{He drags off thirty of them, and devours them} | |
Fell and frantic, and forced from their slumbers | |
Thirty of thanemen; thence he departed | |
10 Leaping and laughing, his lair to return to, | |
With surfeit of slaughter sallying homeward. | |
In the dusk of the dawning, as the day was just breaking, | |
Was Grendel's prowess revealed to the warriors: | |
{A cry of agony goes up, when Grendel's horrible deed is fully realized.} | |
Then, his meal-taking finished, a moan was uplifted, | |
15 Morning-cry mighty. The man-ruler famous, | |
The long-worthy atheling, sat very woful, | |
Suffered great sorrow, sighed for his liegemen, | |
[6] When they had seen the track of the hateful pursuer, | |
The spirit accursèd: too crushing that sorrow, | |
{The monster returns the next night.} | |
20 Too loathsome and lasting. Not longer he tarried, | |
But one night after continued his slaughter | |
Shameless and shocking, shrinking but little | |
From malice and murder; they mastered him fully. | |
He was easy to find then who otherwhere looked for | |
25 A pleasanter place of repose in the lodges, | |
A bed in the bowers. Then was brought to his notice | |
Told him truly by token apparent | |
The hall-thane's hatred: he held himself after | |
Further and faster who the foeman did baffle. | |
30 [2]So ruled he and strongly strove against justice | |
Lone against all men, till empty uptowered | |
{King Hrothgar's agony and suspense last twelve years.} | |
The choicest of houses. Long was the season: | |
Twelve-winters' time torture suffered | |
The friend of the Scyldings, every affliction, | |
35 Endless agony; hence it after[3] became | |
Certainly known to the children of men | |
Sadly in measures, that long against Hrothgar | |
Grendel struggled:--his grudges he cherished, | |
Murderous malice, many a winter, | |
40 Strife unremitting, and peacefully wished he | |
[4]Life-woe to lift from no liegeman at all of | |
The men of the Dane-folk, for money to settle, | |
No counsellor needed count for a moment | |
[7] On handsome amends at the hands of the murderer; | |
{Grendel is unremitting in his persecutions.} | |
45 The monster of evil fiercely did harass, | |
The ill-planning death-shade, both elder and younger, | |
Trapping and tricking them. He trod every night then | |
The mist-covered moor-fens; men do not know where | |
Witches and wizards wander and ramble. | |
50 So the foe of mankind many of evils | |
Grievous injuries, often accomplished, | |
Horrible hermit; Heort he frequented, | |
Gem-bedecked palace, when night-shades had fallen | |
{God is against the monster.} | |
(Since God did oppose him, not the throne could he touch,[5] | |
55 The light-flashing jewel, love of Him knew not). | |
'Twas a fearful affliction to the friend of the Scyldings | |
{The king and his council deliberate in vain.} | |
Soul-crushing sorrow. Not seldom in private | |
Sat the king in his council; conference held they | |
What the braves should determine 'gainst terrors unlooked for. | |
{They invoke the aid of their gods.} | |
60 At the shrines of their idols often they promised | |
Gifts and offerings, earnestly prayed they | |
The devil from hell would help them to lighten | |
Their people's oppression. Such practice they used then, | |
Hope of the heathen; hell they remembered | |
65 In innermost spirit, God they knew not, | |
{The true God they do not know.} | |
Judge of their actions, All-wielding Ruler, | |
No praise could they give the Guardian of Heaven, | |
The Wielder of Glory. Woe will be his who | |
Through furious hatred his spirit shall drive to | |
70 The clutch of the fire, no comfort shall look for, | |
Wax no wiser; well for the man who, | |
Living his life-days, his Lord may face | |
And find defence in his Father's embrace! | |
[1] The translation is based on 'weras,' adopted by H.-So.--K. and Th. | |
read 'wera' and, arranging differently, render 119(2)-120: _They knew | |
not sorrow, the wretchedness of man, aught of misfortune_.--For | |
'unhælo' (120) R. suggests 'unfælo': _The uncanny creature, greedy and | |
cruel, etc_. | |
[2] S. rearranges and translates: _So he ruled and struggled unjustly, | |
one against all, till the noblest of buildings stood useless (it was a | |
long while) twelve years' time: the friend of the Scyldings suffered | |
distress, every woe, great sorrows, etc_. | |
[3] For 'syððan,' B. suggests 'sárcwidum': _Hence in mournful words it | |
became well known, etc_. Various other words beginning with 's' have | |
been conjectured. | |
[4] The H.-So. glossary is very inconsistent in referring to this | |
passage.--'Sibbe' (154), which H.-So. regards as an instr., B. takes | |
as accus., obj. of 'wolde.' Putting a comma after Deniga, he renders: | |
_He did not desire peace with any of the Danes, nor did he wish to | |
remove their life-woe, nor to settle for money_. | |
[5] Of this difficult passage the following interpretations among | |
others are given: (1) Though Grendel has frequented Heorot as a demon, | |
he could not become ruler of the Danes, on account of his hostility to | |
God. (2) Hrothgar was much grieved that Grendel had not appeared | |
before his throne to receive presents. (3) He was not permitted to | |
devastate the hall, on account of the Creator; _i.e._ God wished to | |
make his visit fatal to him.--Ne ... wisse (169) W. renders: _Nor had | |
he any desire to do so_; 'his' being obj. gen. = danach. | |
[8] | |
IV. | |
BEOWULF GOES TO HROTHGAR'S ASSISTANCE. | |
{Hrothgar sees no way of escape from the persecutions of Grendel.} | |
So Healfdene's kinsman constantly mused on | |
His long-lasting sorrow; the battle-thane clever | |
Was not anywise able evils to 'scape from: | |
Too crushing the sorrow that came to the people, | |
5 Loathsome and lasting the life-grinding torture, | |
{Beowulf, the Geat, hero of the poem, hears of Hrothgar's sorrow, and | |
resolves to go to his assistance.} | |
Greatest of night-woes. So Higelac's liegeman, | |
Good amid Geatmen, of Grendel's achievements | |
Heard in his home:[1] of heroes then living | |
He was stoutest and strongest, sturdy and noble. | |
10 He bade them prepare him a bark that was trusty; | |
He said he the war-king would seek o'er the ocean, | |
The folk-leader noble, since he needed retainers. | |
For the perilous project prudent companions | |
Chided him little, though loving him dearly; | |
15 They egged the brave atheling, augured him glory. | |
{With fourteen carefully chosen companions, he sets out for Dane-land.} | |
The excellent knight from the folk of the Geatmen | |
Had liegemen selected, likest to prove them | |
Trustworthy warriors; with fourteen companions | |
The vessel he looked for; a liegeman then showed them, | |
20 A sea-crafty man, the bounds of the country. | |
Fast the days fleeted; the float was a-water, | |
The craft by the cliff. Clomb to the prow then | |
Well-equipped warriors: the wave-currents twisted | |
The sea on the sand; soldiers then carried | |
25 On the breast of the vessel bright-shining jewels, | |
Handsome war-armor; heroes outshoved then, | |
Warmen the wood-ship, on its wished-for adventure. | |
[9] | |
{The vessel sails like a bird} | |
The foamy-necked floater fanned by the breeze, | |
Likest a bird, glided the waters, | |
{In twenty four hours they reach the shores of Hrothgar's dominions} | |
30 Till twenty and four hours thereafter | |
The twist-stemmed vessel had traveled such distance | |
That the sailing-men saw the sloping embankments, | |
The sea cliffs gleaming, precipitous mountains, | |
Nesses enormous: they were nearing the limits | |
35 At the end of the ocean.[2] Up thence quickly | |
The men of the Weders clomb to the mainland, | |
Fastened their vessel (battle weeds rattled, | |
War burnies clattered), the Wielder they thanked | |
That the ways o'er the waters had waxen so gentle. | |
{They are hailed by the Danish coast guard} | |
40 Then well from the cliff edge the guard of the Scyldings | |
Who the sea-cliffs should see to, saw o'er the gangway | |
Brave ones bearing beauteous targets, | |
Armor all ready, anxiously thought he, | |
Musing and wondering what men were approaching. | |
45 High on his horse then Hrothgar's retainer | |
Turned him to coastward, mightily brandished | |
His lance in his hands, questioned with boldness. | |
{His challenge} | |
"Who are ye men here, mail-covered warriors | |
Clad in your corslets, come thus a-driving | |
50 A high riding ship o'er the shoals of the waters, | |
[3]And hither 'neath helmets have hied o'er the ocean? | |
[10] I have been strand-guard, standing as warden, | |
Lest enemies ever anywise ravage | |
Danish dominions with army of war-ships. | |
55 More boldly never have warriors ventured | |
Hither to come; of kinsmen's approval, | |
Word-leave of warriors, I ween that ye surely | |
{He is struck by Beowulf's appearance.} | |
Nothing have known. Never a greater one | |
Of earls o'er the earth have _I_ had a sight of | |
60 Than is one of your number, a hero in armor; | |
No low-ranking fellow[4] adorned with his weapons, | |
But launching them little, unless looks are deceiving, | |
And striking appearance. Ere ye pass on your journey | |
As treacherous spies to the land of the Scyldings | |
65 And farther fare, I fully must know now | |
What race ye belong to. Ye far-away dwellers, | |
Sea-faring sailors, my simple opinion | |
Hear ye and hearken: haste is most fitting | |
Plainly to tell me what place ye are come from." | |
[1] 'From hám' (194) is much disputed. One rendering is: _Beowulf, | |
being away from home, heard of Hrothgar's troubles, etc_. Another, | |
that adopted by S. and endorsed in the H.-So. notes, is: _B. heard | |
from his neighborhood (neighbors),_ i.e. _in his home, etc_. A third | |
is: _B., being at home, heard this as occurring away from home_. The | |
H.-So. glossary and notes conflict. | |
[2] 'Eoletes' (224) is marked with a (?) by H.-So.; our rendering | |
simply follows his conjecture.--Other conjectures as to 'eolet' are: | |
(1) _voyage_, (2) _toil_, _labor_, (3) _hasty journey_. | |
[3] The lacuna of the MS at this point has been supplied by various | |
conjectures. The reading adopted by H.-So. has been rendered in the | |
above translation. W., like H.-So., makes 'ic' the beginning of a new | |
sentence, but, for 'helmas bæron,' he reads 'hringed stefnan.' This | |
has the advantage of giving a parallel to 'brontne ceol' instead of a | |
kenning for 'go.'--B puts the (?) after 'holmas', and begins a new | |
sentence at the middle of the line. Translate: _What warriors are ye, | |
clad in armor, who have thus come bringing the foaming vessel over the | |
water way, hither over the seas? For some time on the wall I have been | |
coast guard, etc_. S. endorses most of what B. says, but leaves out | |
'on the wall' in the last sentence. If W.'s 'hringed stefnan' be | |
accepted, change line 51 above to, _A ring-stemmed vessel hither | |
o'ersea_. | |
[4] 'Seld-guma' (249) is variously rendered: (1) _housecarle_; (2) | |
_home-stayer_; (3) _common man_. Dr. H. Wood suggests _a man-at-arms | |
in another's house_. | |
V. | |
THE GEATS REACH HEOROT. | |
{Beowulf courteously replies.} | |
The chief of the strangers rendered him answer, | |
War-troopers' leader, and word-treasure opened: | |
{We are Geats.} | |
"We are sprung from the lineage of the people of Geatland, | |
And Higelac's hearth-friends. To heroes unnumbered | |
{My father Ecgtheow was well-known in his day.} | |
5 My father was known, a noble head-warrior | |
Ecgtheow titled; many a winter | |
He lived with the people, ere he passed on his journey, | |
Old from his dwelling; each of the counsellors | |
Widely mid world-folk well remembers him. | |
{Our intentions towards King Hrothgar are of the kindest.} | |
10 We, kindly of spirit, the lord of thy people, | |
The son of King Healfdene, have come here to visit, | |
[11] Folk-troop's defender: be free in thy counsels! | |
To the noble one bear we a weighty commission, | |
The helm of the Danemen; we shall hide, I ween, | |
{Is it true that a monster is slaying Danish heroes?} | |
15 Naught of our message. Thou know'st if it happen, | |
As we soothly heard say, that some savage despoiler, | |
Some hidden pursuer, on nights that are murky | |
By deeds very direful 'mid the Danemen exhibits | |
Hatred unheard of, horrid destruction | |
20 And the falling of dead. From feelings least selfish | |
{I can help your king to free himself from this horrible creature.} | |
I am able to render counsel to Hrothgar, | |
How he, wise and worthy, may worst the destroyer, | |
If the anguish of sorrow should ever be lessened,[1] | |
Comfort come to him, and care-waves grow cooler, | |
25 Or ever hereafter he agony suffer | |
And troublous distress, while towereth upward | |
The handsomest of houses high on the summit." | |
{The coast-guard reminds Beowulf that it is easier to say than to do.} | |
Bestriding his stallion, the strand-watchman answered, | |
The doughty retainer: "The difference surely | |
30 'Twixt words and works, the warlike shield-bearer | |
Who judgeth wisely well shall determine. | |
This band, I hear, beareth no malice | |
{I am satisfied of your good intentions, and shall lead you to the | |
palace.} | |
To the prince of the Scyldings. Pass ye then onward | |
With weapons and armor. I shall lead you in person; | |
35 To my war-trusty vassals command I shall issue | |
To keep from all injury your excellent vessel, | |
{Your boat shall be well cared for during your stay here.} | |
Your fresh-tarred craft, 'gainst every opposer | |
Close by the sea-shore, till the curved-neckèd bark shall | |
Waft back again the well-beloved hero | |
40 O'er the way of the water to Weder dominions. | |
{He again compliments Beowulf.} | |
To warrior so great 'twill be granted sure | |
In the storm of strife to stand secure." | |
Onward they fared then (the vessel lay quiet, | |
The broad-bosomed bark was bound by its cable, | |
[12] 45 Firmly at anchor); the boar-signs glistened[2] | |
Bright on the visors vivid with gilding, | |
Blaze-hardened, brilliant; the boar acted warden. | |
The heroes hastened, hurried the liegemen, | |
{The land is perhaps rolling.} | |
Descended together, till they saw the great palace, | |
50 The well-fashioned wassail-hall wondrous and gleaming: | |
{Heorot flashes on their view.} | |
'Mid world-folk and kindreds that was widest reputed | |
Of halls under heaven which the hero abode in; | |
Its lustre enlightened lands without number. | |
Then the battle-brave hero showed them the glittering | |
55 Court of the bold ones, that they easily thither | |
Might fare on their journey; the aforementioned warrior | |
Turning his courser, quoth as he left them: | |
{The coast-guard, having discharged his duty, bids them God-speed.} | |
"'Tis time I were faring; Father Almighty | |
Grant you His grace, and give you to journey | |
60 Safe on your mission! To the sea I will get me | |
'Gainst hostile warriors as warden to stand." | |
[1] 'Edwendan' (280) B. takes to be the subs. 'edwenden' (cf. 1775); | |
and 'bisigu' he takes as gen. sing., limiting 'edwenden': _If | |
reparation for sorrows is ever to come_. This is supported by t.B. | |
[2] Combining the emendations of B. and t.B., we may read: _The | |
boar-images glistened ... brilliant, protected the life of the | |
war-mooded man_. They read 'ferh-wearde' (305) and 'gúðmódgum men' | |
(306). | |
VI. | |
BEOWULF INTRODUCES HIMSELF AT THE PALACE. | |
The highway glistened with many-hued pebble, | |
A by-path led the liegemen together. | |
[1]Firm and hand-locked the war-burnie glistened, | |
The ring-sword radiant rang 'mid the armor | |
5 As the party was approaching the palace together | |
{They set their arms and armor against the wall.} | |
In warlike equipments. 'Gainst the wall of the building | |
Their wide-fashioned war-shields they weary did set then, | |
[13] Battle-shields sturdy; benchward they turned then; | |
Their battle-sarks rattled, the gear of the heroes; | |
10 The lances stood up then, all in a cluster, | |
The arms of the seamen, ashen-shafts mounted | |
With edges of iron: the armor-clad troopers | |
{A Danish hero asks them whence and why they are come.} | |
Were decked with weapons. Then a proud-mooded hero | |
Asked of the champions questions of lineage: | |
15 "From what borders bear ye your battle-shields plated, | |
Gilded and gleaming, your gray-colored burnies, | |
Helmets with visors and heap of war-lances?-- | |
To Hrothgar the king I am servant and liegeman. | |
'Mong folk from far-lands found I have never | |
{He expresses no little admiration for the strangers.} | |
20 Men so many of mien more courageous. | |
I ween that from valor, nowise as outlaws, | |
But from greatness of soul ye sought for King Hrothgar." | |
{Beowulf replies.} | |
Then the strength-famous earlman answer rendered, | |
The proud-mooded Wederchief replied to his question, | |
{We are Higelac's table-companions, and bear an important commission to | |
your prince.} | |
25 Hardy 'neath helmet: "Higelac's mates are we; | |
Beowulf hight I. To the bairn of Healfdene, | |
The famous folk-leader, I freely will tell | |
To thy prince my commission, if pleasantly hearing | |
He'll grant we may greet him so gracious to all men." | |
30 Wulfgar replied then (he was prince of the Wendels, | |
His boldness of spirit was known unto many, | |
His prowess and prudence): "The prince of the Scyldings, | |
{Wulfgar, the thane, says that he will go and ask Hrothgar whether he will | |
see the strangers.} | |
The friend-lord of Danemen, I will ask of thy journey, | |
The giver of rings, as thou urgest me do it, | |
35 The folk-chief famous, and inform thee early | |
What answer the good one mindeth to render me." | |
He turned then hurriedly where Hrothgar was sitting, | |
[2]Old and hoary, his earlmen attending him; | |
The strength-famous went till he stood at the shoulder | |
40 Of the lord of the Danemen, of courteous thanemen | |
The custom he minded. Wulfgar addressed then | |
His friendly liegelord: "Folk of the Geatmen | |
[14] | |
{He thereupon urges his liegelord to receive the visitors courteously.} | |
O'er the way of the waters are wafted hither, | |
Faring from far-lands: the foremost in rank | |
45 The battle-champions Beowulf title. | |
They make this petition: with thee, O my chieftain, | |
To be granted a conference; O gracious King Hrothgar, | |
Friendly answer refuse not to give them! | |
{Hrothgar, too, is struck with Beowulf's appearance.} | |
In war-trappings weeded worthy they seem | |
50 Of earls to be honored; sure the atheling is doughty | |
Who headed the heroes hitherward coming." | |
[1] Instead of the punctuation given by H.-So, S. proposed to insert a | |
comma after 'scír' (322), and to take 'hring-íren' as meaning | |
'ring-mail' and as parallel with 'gúð-byrne.' The passage would then | |
read: _The firm and hand-locked war-burnie shone, bright ring-mail, | |
rang 'mid the armor, etc_. | |
[2] Gr. and others translate 'unhár' by 'bald'; _old and bald_. | |
VII. | |
HROTHGAR AND BEOWULF. | |
{Hrothgar remembers Beowulf as a youth, and also remembers his father.} | |
Hrothgar answered, helm of the Scyldings: | |
"I remember this man as the merest of striplings. | |
His father long dead now was Ecgtheow titled, | |
Him Hrethel the Geatman granted at home his | |
5 One only daughter; his battle-brave son | |
Is come but now, sought a trustworthy friend. | |
Seafaring sailors asserted it then, | |
{Beowulf is reported to have the strength of thirty men.} | |
Who valuable gift-gems of the Geatmen[1] carried | |
As peace-offering thither, that he thirty men's grapple | |
10 Has in his hand, the hero-in-battle. | |
{God hath sent him to our rescue.} | |
The holy Creator usward sent him, | |
To West-Dane warriors, I ween, for to render | |
'Gainst Grendel's grimness gracious assistance: | |
I shall give to the good one gift-gems for courage. | |
15 Hasten to bid them hither to speed them,[2] | |
To see assembled this circle of kinsmen; | |
Tell them expressly they're welcome in sooth to | |
The men of the Danes." To the door of the building | |
[15] | |
{Wulfgar invites the strangers in.} | |
Wulfgar went then, this word-message shouted: | |
20 "My victorious liegelord bade me to tell you, | |
The East-Danes' atheling, that your origin knows he, | |
And o'er wave-billows wafted ye welcome are hither, | |
Valiant of spirit. Ye straightway may enter | |
Clad in corslets, cased in your helmets, | |
25 To see King Hrothgar. Here let your battle-boards, | |
Wood-spears and war-shafts, await your conferring." | |
The mighty one rose then, with many a liegeman, | |
An excellent thane-group; some there did await them, | |
And as bid of the brave one the battle-gear guarded. | |
30 Together they hied them, while the hero did guide them, | |
'Neath Heorot's roof; the high-minded went then | |
Sturdy 'neath helmet till he stood in the building. | |
Beowulf spake (his burnie did glisten, | |
His armor seamed over by the art of the craftsman): | |
{Beowulf salutes Hrothgar, and then proceeds to boast of his youthful | |
achievements.} | |
35 "Hail thou, Hrothgar! I am Higelac's kinsman | |
And vassal forsooth; many a wonder | |
I dared as a stripling. The doings of Grendel, | |
In far-off fatherland I fully did know of: | |
Sea-farers tell us, this hall-building standeth, | |
40 Excellent edifice, empty and useless | |
To all the earlmen after evenlight's glimmer | |
'Neath heaven's bright hues hath hidden its glory. | |
This my earls then urged me, the most excellent of them, | |
Carles very clever, to come and assist thee, | |
45 Folk-leader Hrothgar; fully they knew of | |
{His fight with the nickers.} | |
The strength of my body. Themselves they beheld me | |
When I came from the contest, when covered with gore | |
Foes I escaped from, where five[3] I had bound, | |
[16] The giant-race wasted, in the waters destroying | |
50 The nickers by night, bore numberless sorrows, | |
The Weders avenged (woes had they suffered) | |
Enemies ravaged; alone now with Grendel | |
{He intends to fight Grendel unaided.} | |
I shall manage the matter, with the monster of evil, | |
The giant, decide it. Thee I would therefore | |
55 Beg of thy bounty, Bright-Danish chieftain, | |
Lord of the Scyldings, this single petition: | |
Not to refuse me, defender of warriors, | |
Friend-lord of folks, so far have I sought thee, | |
That _I_ may unaided, my earlmen assisting me, | |
60 This brave-mooded war-band, purify Heorot. | |
I have heard on inquiry, the horrible creature | |
{Since the monster uses no weapons,} | |
From veriest rashness recks not for weapons; | |
I this do scorn then, so be Higelac gracious, | |
My liegelord belovèd, lenient of spirit, | |
65 To bear a blade or a broad-fashioned target, | |
A shield to the onset; only with hand-grip | |
{I, too, shall disdain to use any.} | |
The foe I must grapple, fight for my life then, | |
Foeman with foeman; he fain must rely on | |
The doom of the Lord whom death layeth hold of. | |
{Should he crush me, he will eat my companions as he has eaten thy | |
thanes.} | |
70 I ween he will wish, if he win in the struggle, | |
To eat in the war-hall earls of the Geat-folk, | |
Boldly to swallow[4] them, as of yore he did often | |
The best of the Hrethmen! Thou needest not trouble | |
A head-watch to give me;[5] he will have me dripping | |
[17] | |
{In case of my defeat, thou wilt not have the trouble of burying me.} | |
75 And dreary with gore, if death overtake me,[6] | |
Will bear me off bleeding, biting and mouthing me, | |
The hermit will eat me, heedless of pity, | |
Marking the moor-fens; no more wilt thou need then | |
{Should I fall, send my armor to my lord, King Higelac.} | |
Find me my food.[7] If I fall in the battle, | |
80 Send to Higelac the armor that serveth | |
To shield my bosom, the best of equipments, | |
Richest of ring-mails; 'tis the relic of Hrethla, | |
{Weird is supreme} | |
The work of Wayland. Goes Weird as she must go!" | |
[1] Some render 'gif-sceattas' by 'tribute.'--'Géata' B. and Th. | |
emended to 'Géatum.' If this be accepted, change '_of_ the Geatmen' to | |
'_to_ the Geatmen.' | |
[2] If t.B.'s emendation of vv. 386, 387 be accepted, the two lines, | |
'Hasten ... kinsmen' will read: _Hasten thou, bid the throng of | |
kinsmen go into the hall together_. | |
[3] For 420 (_b_) and 421 (_a_), B. suggests: Þær ic (on) fífelgeban | |
ýðde eotena cyn = _where I in the ocean destroyed the | |
eoten-race_.--t.B. accepts B.'s "brilliant" 'fífelgeban,' omits 'on,' | |
emends 'cyn' to 'hám,' arranging: Þær ic fífelgeban ýðde, eotena hám = | |
_where I desolated the ocean, the home of the eotens_.--This would be | |
better but for changing 'cyn' to 'hám.'--I suggest: Þær ic fífelgeband | |
(cf. nhd. Bande) ýðde, eotena cyn = _where I conquered the monster | |
band, the race of the eotens_. This makes no change except to read | |
'_fífel_' for '_fífe_.' | |
[4] 'Unforhte' (444) is much disputed.--H.-So. wavers between adj. and | |
adv. Gr. and B. take it as an adv. modifying _etan: Will eat the Geats | |
fearlessly_.--Kl. considers this reading absurd, and proposes | |
'anforhte' = timid.--Understanding 'unforhte' as an adj. has this | |
advantage, viz. that it gives a parallel to 'Geátena leóde': but to | |
take it as an adv. is more natural. Furthermore, to call the Geats | |
'brave' might, at this point, seem like an implied thrust at the | |
Danes, so long helpless; while to call his own men 'timid' would be | |
befouling his own nest. | |
[5] For 'head-watch,' cf. H.-So. notes and cf. v. 2910.--Th. | |
translates: _Thou wilt not need my head to hide_ (i.e., thou wilt have | |
no occasion to bury me, as Grendel will devour me whole).--Simrock | |
imagines a kind of dead-watch.--Dr. H. Wood suggests: _Thou wilt not | |
have to bury so much as my head_ (for Grendel will be a thorough | |
undertaker),--grim humor. | |
[6] S. proposes a colon after 'nimeð' (l. 447). This would make no | |
essential change in the translation. | |
[7] Owing to the vagueness of 'feorme' (451), this passage is | |
variously translated. In our translation, H.-So.'s glossary has been | |
quite closely followed. This agrees substantially with B.'s | |
translation (P. and B. XII. 87). R. translates: _Thou needst not take | |
care longer as to the consumption of my dead body._ 'Líc' is also a | |
crux here, as it may mean living body or dead body. | |
VIII. | |
HROTHGAR AND BEOWULF.--_Continued_. | |
{Hrothgar responds.} | |
Hrothgar discoursed, helm of the Scyldings: | |
"To defend our folk and to furnish assistance,[1] | |
Thou soughtest us hither, good friend Beowulf. | |
{Reminiscences of Beowulf's father, Ecgtheow.} | |
The fiercest of feuds thy father engaged in, | |
5 Heatholaf killed he in hand-to-hand conflict | |
'Mid Wilfingish warriors; then the Wederish people | |
For fear of a feud were forced to disown him. | |
Thence flying he fled to the folk of the South-Danes, | |
[18] The race of the Scyldings, o'er the roll of the waters; | |
10 I had lately begun then to govern the Danemen, | |
The hoard-seat of heroes held in my youth, | |
Rich in its jewels: dead was Heregar, | |
My kinsman and elder had earth-joys forsaken, | |
Healfdene his bairn. He was better than I am! | |
15 That feud thereafter for a fee I compounded; | |
O'er the weltering waters to the Wilfings I sent | |
Ornaments old; oaths did he swear me. | |
{Hrothgar recounts to Beowulf the horrors of Grendel's persecutions.} | |
It pains me in spirit to any to tell it, | |
What grief in Heorot Grendel hath caused me, | |
20 What horror unlooked-for, by hatred unceasing. | |
Waned is my war-band, wasted my hall-troop; | |
Weird hath offcast them to the clutches of Grendel. | |
God can easily hinder the scather | |
From deeds so direful. Oft drunken with beer | |
{My thanes have made many boasts, but have not executed them.} | |
25 O'er the ale-vessel promised warriors in armor | |
They would willingly wait on the wassailing-benches | |
A grapple with Grendel, with grimmest of edges. | |
Then this mead-hall at morning with murder was reeking, | |
The building was bloody at breaking of daylight, | |
30 The bench-deals all flooded, dripping and bloodied, | |
The folk-hall was gory: I had fewer retainers, | |
Dear-beloved warriors, whom death had laid hold of. | |
{Sit down to the feast, and give us comfort.} | |
Sit at the feast now, thy intents unto heroes,[2] | |
Thy victor-fame show, as thy spirit doth urge thee!" | |
{A bench is made ready for Beowulf and his party.} | |
35 For the men of the Geats then together assembled, | |
In the beer-hall blithesome a bench was made ready; | |
There warlike in spirit they went to be seated, | |
Proud and exultant. A liegeman did service, | |
[19] Who a beaker embellished bore with decorum, | |
{The gleeman sings} | |
40 And gleaming-drink poured. The gleeman sang whilom | |
{The heroes all rejoice together.} | |
Hearty in Heorot; there was heroes' rejoicing, | |
A numerous war-band of Weders and Danemen. | |
[1] B. and S. reject the reading given in H.-So., and suggested by | |
Grtvg. B. suggests for 457-458: | |
wáere-ryhtum Þú, wine mín Béowulf, | |
and for ár-stafum úsic sóhtest. | |
This means: _From the obligations of clientage, my friend Beowulf, and | |
for assistance thou hast sought us_.--This gives coherence to | |
Hrothgar's opening remarks in VIII., and also introduces a new motive | |
for Beowulf's coming to Hrothgar's aid. | |
[2] _Sit now at the feast, and disclose thy purposes to the victorious | |
heroes, as thy spirit urges_.--Kl. reaches the above translation by | |
erasing the comma after 'meoto' and reading 'sige-hrèðsecgum.'--There | |
are other and bolder emendations and suggestions. Of these the boldest | |
is to regard 'meoto' as a verb (imperative), and read 'on sæl': _Think | |
upon gayety, etc_.--All the renderings are unsatisfactory, the one | |
given in our translation involving a zeugma. | |
IX. | |
UNFERTH TAUNTS BEOWULF. | |
{Unferth, a thane of Hrothgar, is jealous of Beowulf, and undertakes to | |
twit him.} | |
Unferth spoke up, Ecglaf his son, | |
Who sat at the feet of the lord of the Scyldings, | |
Opened the jousting (the journey[1] of Beowulf, | |
Sea-farer doughty, gave sorrow to Unferth | |
5 And greatest chagrin, too, for granted he never | |
That any man else on earth should attain to, | |
Gain under heaven, more glory than he): | |
{Did you take part in a swimming-match with Breca?} | |
"Art thou that Beowulf with Breca did struggle, | |
On the wide sea-currents at swimming contended, | |
10 Where to humor your pride the ocean ye tried, | |
{'Twas mere folly that actuated you both to risk your lives on the ocean.} | |
From vainest vaunting adventured your bodies | |
In care of the waters? And no one was able | |
Nor lief nor loth one, in the least to dissuade you | |
Your difficult voyage; then ye ventured a-swimming, | |
15 Where your arms outstretching the streams ye did cover, | |
The mere-ways measured, mixing and stirring them, | |
Glided the ocean; angry the waves were, | |
With the weltering of winter. In the water's possession, | |
Ye toiled for a seven-night; he at swimming outdid thee, | |
20 In strength excelled thee. Then early at morning | |
On the Heathoremes' shore the holm-currents tossed him, | |
Sought he thenceward the home of his fathers, | |
Beloved of his liegemen, the land of the Brondings, | |
The peace-castle pleasant, where a people he wielded, | |
[20] 25 Had borough and jewels. The pledge that he made thee | |
{Breca outdid you entirely.} | |
The son of Beanstan hath soothly accomplished. | |
Then I ween thou wilt find thee less fortunate issue, | |
{Much more will Grendel outdo you, if you vie with him in prowess.} | |
Though ever triumphant in onset of battle, | |
A grim grappling, if Grendel thou darest | |
30 For the space of a night near-by to wait for!" | |
{Beowulf retaliates.} | |
Beowulf answered, offspring of Ecgtheow: | |
"My good friend Unferth, sure freely and wildly, | |
{O friend Unferth, you are fuddled with beer, and cannot talk coherently.} | |
Thou fuddled with beer of Breca hast spoken, | |
Hast told of his journey! A fact I allege it, | |
35 That greater strength in the waters I had then, | |
Ills in the ocean, than any man else had. | |
We made agreement as the merest of striplings | |
Promised each other (both of us then were | |
{We simply kept an engagement made in early life.} | |
Younkers in years) that we yet would adventure | |
40 Out on the ocean; it all we accomplished. | |
While swimming the sea-floods, sword-blade unscabbarded | |
Boldly we brandished, our bodies expected | |
To shield from the sharks. He sure was unable | |
{He _could_ not excel me, and I _would_ not excel him.} | |
To swim on the waters further than I could, | |
45 More swift on the waves, nor _would_ I from him go. | |
Then we two companions stayed in the ocean | |
{After five days the currents separated us.} | |
Five nights together, till the currents did part us, | |
The weltering waters, weathers the bleakest, | |
And nethermost night, and the north-wind whistled | |
50 Fierce in our faces; fell were the billows. | |
The mere fishes' mood was mightily ruffled: | |
And there against foemen my firm-knotted corslet, | |
Hand-jointed, hardy, help did afford me; | |
My battle-sark braided, brilliantly gilded, | |
{A horrible sea-beast attacked me, but I slew him.} | |
55 Lay on my bosom. To the bottom then dragged me, | |
A hateful fiend-scather, seized me and held me, | |
Grim in his grapple: 'twas granted me, nathless, | |
To pierce the monster with the point of my weapon, | |
My obedient blade; battle offcarried | |
60 The mighty mere-creature by means of my hand-blow. | |
[1] It has been plausibly suggested that 'síð' (in 501 and in 353) | |
means 'arrival.' If so, translate the bracket: _(the arrival of | |
Beowulf, the brave seafarer, was a source of great chagrin to Unferth, | |
etc.)_. | |
[21] | |
X. | |
BEOWULF SILENCES UNFERTH.--GLEE IS HIGH. | |
"So ill-meaning enemies often did cause me | |
Sorrow the sorest. I served them, in quittance, | |
{My dear sword always served me faithfully.} | |
With my dear-lovèd sword, as in sooth it was fitting; | |
They missed the pleasure of feasting abundantly, | |
5 Ill-doers evil, of eating my body, | |
Of surrounding the banquet deep in the ocean; | |
But wounded with edges early at morning | |
They were stretched a-high on the strand of the ocean, | |
{I put a stop to the outrages of the sea-monsters.} | |
Put to sleep with the sword, that sea-going travelers | |
10 No longer thereafter were hindered from sailing | |
The foam-dashing currents. Came a light from the east, | |
God's beautiful beacon; the billows subsided, | |
That well I could see the nesses projecting, | |
{Fortune helps the brave earl.} | |
The blustering crags. Weird often saveth | |
15 The undoomed hero if doughty his valor! | |
But me did it fortune[1] to fell with my weapon | |
Nine of the nickers. Of night-struggle harder | |
'Neath dome of the heaven heard I but rarely, | |
Nor of wight more woful in the waves of the ocean; | |
20 Yet I 'scaped with my life the grip of the monsters, | |
{After that escape I drifted to Finland.} | |
Weary from travel. Then the waters bare me | |
To the land of the Finns, the flood with the current, | |
{I have never heard of your doing any such bold deeds.} | |
The weltering waves. Not a word hath been told me | |
Of deeds so daring done by thee, Unferth, | |
25 And of sword-terror none; never hath Breca | |
At the play of the battle, nor either of you two, | |
Feat so fearless performèd with weapons | |
Glinting and gleaming . . . . . . . . . . . . | |
[22] . . . . . . . . . . . . I utter no boasting; | |
{You are a slayer of brothers, and will suffer damnation, wise as you may | |
be.} | |
30 Though with cold-blooded cruelty thou killedst thy brothers, | |
Thy nearest of kin; thou needs must in hell get | |
Direful damnation, though doughty thy wisdom. | |
I tell thee in earnest, offspring of Ecglaf, | |
Never had Grendel such numberless horrors, | |
35 The direful demon, done to thy liegelord, | |
Harrying in Heorot, if thy heart were as sturdy, | |
{Had your acts been as brave as your words, Grendel had not ravaged your | |
land so long.} | |
Thy mood as ferocious as thou dost describe them. | |
He hath found out fully that the fierce-burning hatred, | |
The edge-battle eager, of all of your kindred, | |
40 Of the Victory-Scyldings, need little dismay him: | |
Oaths he exacteth, not any he spares | |
{The monster is not afraid of the Danes,} | |
Of the folk of the Danemen, but fighteth with pleasure, | |
Killeth and feasteth, no contest expecteth | |
{but he will soon learn to dread the Geats.} | |
From Spear-Danish people. But the prowess and valor | |
45 Of the earls of the Geatmen early shall venture | |
To give him a grapple. He shall go who is able | |
Bravely to banquet, when the bright-light of morning | |
{On the second day, any warrior may go unmolested to the mead-banquet.} | |
Which the second day bringeth, the sun in its ether-robes, | |
O'er children of men shines from the southward!" | |
50 Then the gray-haired, war-famed giver of treasure | |
{Hrothgar's spirits are revived.} | |
Was blithesome and joyous, the Bright-Danish ruler | |
Expected assistance; the people's protector | |
{The old king trusts Beowulf. The heroes are joyful.} | |
Heard from Beowulf his bold resolution. | |
There was laughter of heroes; loud was the clatter, | |
55 The words were winsome. Wealhtheow advanced then, | |
{Queen Wealhtheow plays the hostess.} | |
Consort of Hrothgar, of courtesy mindful, | |
Gold-decked saluted the men in the building, | |
And the freeborn woman the beaker presented | |
{She offers the cup to her husband first.} | |
To the lord of the kingdom, first of the East-Danes, | |
60 Bade him be blithesome when beer was a-flowing, | |
Lief to his liegemen; he lustily tasted | |
Of banquet and beaker, battle-famed ruler. | |
The Helmingish lady then graciously circled | |
'Mid all the liegemen lesser and greater: | |
[23] | |
{She gives presents to the heroes.} | |
65 Treasure-cups tendered, till time was afforded | |
That the decorous-mooded, diademed folk-queen | |
{Then she offers the cup to Beowulf, thanking God that aid has come.} | |
Might bear to Beowulf the bumper o'errunning; | |
She greeted the Geat-prince, God she did thank, | |
Most wise in her words, that her wish was accomplished, | |
70 That in any of earlmen she ever should look for | |
Solace in sorrow. He accepted the beaker, | |
Battle-bold warrior, at Wealhtheow's giving, | |
{Beowulf states to the queen the object of his visit.} | |
Then equipped for combat quoth he in measures, | |
Beowulf spake, offspring of Ecgtheow: | |
75 "I purposed in spirit when I mounted the ocean, | |
{I determined to do or die.} | |
When I boarded my boat with a band of my liegemen, | |
I would work to the fullest the will of your people | |
Or in foe's-clutches fastened fall in the battle. | |
Deeds I shall do of daring and prowess, | |
80 Or the last of my life-days live in this mead-hall." | |
These words to the lady were welcome and pleasing, | |
The boast of the Geatman; with gold trappings broidered | |
Went the freeborn folk-queen her fond-lord to sit by. | |
{Glee is high.} | |
Then again as of yore was heard in the building | |
85 Courtly discussion, conquerors' shouting, | |
Heroes were happy, till Healfdene's son would | |
Go to his slumber to seek for refreshing; | |
For the horrid hell-monster in the hall-building knew he | |
A fight was determined,[2] since the light of the sun they | |
90 No longer could see, and lowering darkness | |
O'er all had descended, and dark under heaven | |
Shadowy shapes came shying around them. | |
{Hrothgar retires, leaving Beowulf in charge of the hall.} | |
The liegemen all rose then. One saluted the other, | |
Hrothgar Beowulf, in rhythmical measures, | |
95 Wishing him well, and, the wassail-hall giving | |
To his care and keeping, quoth he departing: | |
[24] "Not to any one else have I ever entrusted, | |
But thee and thee only, the hall of the Danemen, | |
Since high I could heave my hand and my buckler. | |
100 Take thou in charge now the noblest of houses; | |
Be mindful of honor, exhibiting prowess, | |
Watch 'gainst the foeman! Thou shalt want no enjoyments, | |
Survive thou safely adventure so glorious!" | |
[1] The repetition of 'hwæðere' (574 and 578) is regarded by some | |
scholars as a defect. B. suggests 'swá Þær' for the first: _So there | |
it befell me, etc._ Another suggestion is to change the second | |
'hwæðere' into 'swá Þær': _So there I escaped with my life, etc._ | |
[2] Kl. suggests a period after 'determined.' This would give the | |
passage as follows: _Since they no longer could see the light of the | |
sun, and lowering darkness was down over all, dire under the heavens | |
shadowy beings came going around them_. | |
XI. | |
ALL SLEEP SAVE ONE. | |
{Hrothgar retires.} | |
Then Hrothgar departed, his earl-throng attending him, | |
Folk-lord of Scyldings, forth from the building; | |
The war-chieftain wished then Wealhtheow to look for, | |
The queen for a bedmate. To keep away Grendel | |
{God has provided a watch for the hall.} | |
5 The Glory of Kings had given a hall-watch, | |
As men heard recounted: for the king of the Danemen | |
He did special service, gave the giant a watcher: | |
And the prince of the Geatmen implicitly trusted | |
{Beowulf is self-confident} | |
His warlike strength and the Wielder's protection. | |
{He prepares for rest.} | |
10 His armor of iron off him he did then, | |
His helmet from his head, to his henchman committed | |
His chased-handled chain-sword, choicest of weapons, | |
And bade him bide with his battle-equipments. | |
The good one then uttered words of defiance, | |
15 Beowulf Geatman, ere his bed he upmounted: | |
{Beowulf boasts of his ability to cope with Grendel.} | |
"I hold me no meaner in matters of prowess, | |
In warlike achievements, than Grendel does himself; | |
Hence I seek not with sword-edge to sooth him to slumber, | |
Of life to bereave him, though well I am able. | |
{We will fight with nature's weapons only.} | |
20 No battle-skill[1] has he, that blows he should strike me, | |
To shatter my shield, though sure he is mighty | |
[25] In strife and destruction; but struggling by night we | |
Shall do without edges, dare he to look for | |
Weaponless warfare, and wise-mooded Father | |
25 The glory apportion, God ever-holy, | |
{God may decide who shall conquer} | |
On which hand soever to him seemeth proper." | |
Then the brave-mooded hero bent to his slumber, | |
The pillow received the cheek of the noble; | |
{The Geatish warriors lie down.} | |
And many a martial mere-thane attending | |
30 Sank to his slumber. Seemed it unlikely | |
{They thought it very unlikely that they should ever see their homes | |
again.} | |
That ever thereafter any should hope to | |
Be happy at home, hero-friends visit | |
Or the lordly troop-castle where he lived from his childhood; | |
They had heard how slaughter had snatched from the wine-hall, | |
35 Had recently ravished, of the race of the Scyldings | |
{But God raised up a deliverer.} | |
Too many by far. But the Lord to them granted | |
The weaving of war-speed, to Wederish heroes | |
Aid and comfort, that every opponent | |
By one man's war-might they worsted and vanquished, | |
{God rules the world.} | |
40 By the might of himself; the truth is established | |
That God Almighty hath governed for ages | |
Kindreds and nations. A night very lurid | |
{Grendel comes to Heorot.} | |
The trav'ler-at-twilight came tramping and striding. | |
The warriors were sleeping who should watch the horned-building, | |
{Only one warrior is awake.} | |
45 One only excepted. 'Mid earthmen 'twas 'stablished, | |
Th' implacable foeman was powerless to hurl them | |
To the land of shadows, if the Lord were unwilling; | |
But serving as warder, in terror to foemen, | |
He angrily bided the issue of battle.[2] | |
[1] Gr. understood 'gódra' as meaning 'advantages in battle.' This | |
rendering H.-So. rejects. The latter takes the passage as meaning that | |
Grendel, though mighty and formidable, has no skill in the art of war. | |
[2] B. in his masterly articles on Beowulf (P. and B. XII.) rejects | |
the division usually made at this point, 'Þá.' (711), usually rendered | |
'then,' he translates 'when,' and connects its clause with the | |
foregoing sentence. These changes he makes to reduce the number of | |
'cóm's' as principal verbs. (Cf. 703, 711, 721.) With all deference to | |
this acute scholar, I must say that it seems to me that the poet is | |
exhausting his resources to bring out clearly the supreme event on | |
which the whole subsequent action turns. First, he (Grendel) came _in | |
the wan night_; second, he came _from the moor_; third, he came _to | |
the hall_. Time, place from which, place to which, are all given. | |
[26] | |
XII. | |
GRENDEL AND BEOWULF. | |
{Grendel comes from the fens.} | |
'Neath the cloudy cliffs came from the moor then | |
Grendel going, God's anger bare he. | |
The monster intended some one of earthmen | |
In the hall-building grand to entrap and make way with: | |
{He goes towards the joyous building.} | |
5 He went under welkin where well he knew of | |
The wine-joyous building, brilliant with plating, | |
Gold-hall of earthmen. Not the earliest occasion | |
{This was not his first visit there.} | |
He the home and manor of Hrothgar had sought: | |
Ne'er found he in life-days later nor earlier | |
10 Hardier hero, hall-thanes[1] more sturdy! | |
Then came to the building the warrior marching, | |
{His horrid fingers tear the door open.} | |
Bereft of his joyance. The door quickly opened | |
On fire-hinges fastened, when his fingers had touched it; | |
The fell one had flung then--his fury so bitter-- | |
15 Open the entrance. Early thereafter | |
The foeman trod the shining hall-pavement, | |
{He strides furiously into the hall.} | |
Strode he angrily; from the eyes of him glimmered | |
A lustre unlovely likest to fire. | |
He beheld in the hall the heroes in numbers, | |
20 A circle of kinsmen sleeping together, | |
{He exults over his supposed prey.} | |
A throng of thanemen: then his thoughts were exultant, | |
He minded to sunder from each of the thanemen | |
The life from his body, horrible demon, | |
Ere morning came, since fate had allowed him | |
{Fate has decreed that he shall devour no more heroes. Beowulf suffers | |
from suspense.} | |
25 The prospect of plenty. Providence willed not | |
To permit him any more of men under heaven | |
To eat in the night-time. Higelac's kinsman | |
Great sorrow endured how the dire-mooded creature | |
[27] In unlooked-for assaults were likely to bear him. | |
30 No thought had the monster of deferring the matter, | |
{Grendel immediately seizes a sleeping warrior, and devours him.} | |
But on earliest occasion he quickly laid hold of | |
A soldier asleep, suddenly tore him, | |
Bit his bone-prison, the blood drank in currents, | |
Swallowed in mouthfuls: he soon had the dead man's | |
35 Feet and hands, too, eaten entirely. | |
Nearer he strode then, the stout-hearted warrior | |
{Beowulf and Grendel grapple.} | |
Snatched as he slumbered, seizing with hand-grip, | |
Forward the foeman foined with his hand; | |
Caught he quickly the cunning deviser, | |
40 On his elbow he rested. This early discovered | |
The master of malice, that in middle-earth's regions, | |
'Neath the whole of the heavens, no hand-grapple greater | |
{The monster is amazed at Beowulf's strength.} | |
In any man else had he ever encountered: | |
Fearful in spirit, faint-mooded waxed he, | |
45 Not off could betake him; death he was pondering, | |
{He is anxious to flee.} | |
Would fly to his covert, seek the devils' assembly: | |
His calling no more was the same he had followed | |
Long in his lifetime. The liege-kinsman worthy | |
{Beowulf recalls his boast of the evening, and determines to fulfil it.} | |
Of Higelac minded his speech of the evening, | |
50 Stood he up straight and stoutly did seize him. | |
His fingers crackled; the giant was outward, | |
The earl stepped farther. The famous one minded | |
To flee away farther, if he found an occasion, | |
And off and away, avoiding delay, | |
55 To fly to the fen-moors; he fully was ware of | |
The strength of his grapple in the grip of the foeman. | |
{'Twas a luckless day for Grendel.} | |
'Twas an ill-taken journey that the injury-bringing, | |
Harrying harmer to Heorot wandered: | |
{The hall groans.} | |
The palace re-echoed; to all of the Danemen, | |
60 Dwellers in castles, to each of the bold ones, | |
Earlmen, was terror. Angry they both were, | |
Archwarders raging.[2] Rattled the building; | |
[28] 'Twas a marvellous wonder that the wine-hall withstood then | |
The bold-in-battle, bent not to earthward, | |
65 Excellent earth-hall; but within and without it | |
Was fastened so firmly in fetters of iron, | |
By the art of the armorer. Off from the sill there | |
Bent mead-benches many, as men have informed me, | |
Adorned with gold-work, where the grim ones did struggle. | |
70 The Scylding wise men weened ne'er before | |
That by might and main-strength a man under heaven | |
Might break it in pieces, bone-decked, resplendent, | |
Crush it by cunning, unless clutch of the fire | |
In smoke should consume it. The sound mounted upward | |
{Grendel's cries terrify the Danes.} | |
75 Novel enough; on the North Danes fastened | |
A terror of anguish, on all of the men there | |
Who heard from the wall the weeping and plaining, | |
The song of defeat from the foeman of heaven, | |
Heard him hymns of horror howl, and his sorrow | |
80 Hell-bound bewailing. He held him too firmly | |
Who was strongest of main-strength of men of that era. | |
[1] B. and t.B. emend so as to make lines 9 and 10 read: _Never in his | |
life, earlier or later, had he, the hell-thane, found a braver | |
hero_.--They argue that Beowulf's companions had done nothing to merit | |
such encomiums as the usual readings allow them. | |
[2] For 'réðe rén-weardas' (771), t.B. suggests 'réðe, rénhearde.' | |
Translate: _They were both angry, raging and mighty_. | |
XIII. | |
GRENDEL IS VANQUISHED. | |
{Beowulf has no idea of letting Grendel live.} | |
For no cause whatever would the earlmen's defender | |
Leave in life-joys the loathsome newcomer, | |
He deemed his existence utterly useless | |
To men under heaven. Many a noble | |
5 Of Beowulf brandished his battle-sword old, | |
Would guard the life of his lord and protector, | |
The far-famous chieftain, if able to do so; | |
While waging the warfare, this wist they but little, | |
Brave battle-thanes, while his body intending | |
{No weapon would harm Grendel; he bore a charmed life.} | |
10 To slit into slivers, and seeking his spirit: | |
That the relentless foeman nor finest of weapons | |
Of all on the earth, nor any of war-bills | |
[29] Was willing to injure; but weapons of victory | |
Swords and suchlike he had sworn to dispense with. | |
15 His death at that time must prove to be wretched, | |
And the far-away spirit widely should journey | |
Into enemies' power. This plainly he saw then | |
Who with mirth[1] of mood malice no little | |
Had wrought in the past on the race of the earthmen | |
20 (To God he was hostile), that his body would fail him, | |
But Higelac's hardy henchman and kinsman | |
Held him by the hand; hateful to other | |
{Grendel is sorely wounded.} | |
Was each one if living. A body-wound suffered | |
The direful demon, damage incurable | |
{His body bursts.} | |
25 Was seen on his shoulder, his sinews were shivered, | |
His body did burst. To Beowulf was given | |
Glory in battle; Grendel from thenceward | |
Must flee and hide him in the fen-cliffs and marshes, | |
Sick unto death, his dwelling must look for | |
30 Unwinsome and woful; he wist the more fully | |
{The monster flees away to hide in the moors.} | |
The end of his earthly existence was nearing, | |
His life-days' limits. At last for the Danemen, | |
When the slaughter was over, their wish was accomplished. | |
The comer-from-far-land had cleansed then of evil, | |
35 Wise and valiant, the war-hall of Hrothgar, | |
Saved it from violence. He joyed in the night-work, | |
In repute for prowess; the prince of the Geatmen | |
For the East-Danish people his boast had accomplished, | |
Bettered their burdensome bale-sorrows fully, | |
40 The craft-begot evil they erstwhile had suffered | |
And were forced to endure from crushing oppression, | |
Their manifold misery. 'Twas a manifest token, | |
{Beowulf suspends Grendel's hand and arm in Heorot.} | |
When the hero-in-battle the hand suspended, | |
The arm and the shoulder (there was all of the claw | |
45 Of Grendel together) 'neath great-stretching hall-roof. | |
[1] It has been proposed to translate 'myrðe' by _with sorrow_; but | |
there seems no authority for such a rendering. To the present | |
translator, the phrase 'módes myrðe' seems a mere padding for | |
_gladly_; i.e., _he who gladly harassed mankind_. | |
[30] | |
XIV. | |
REJOICING OF THE DANES. | |
{At early dawn, warriors from far and near come together to hear of the | |
night's adventures.} | |
In the mist of the morning many a warrior | |
Stood round the gift-hall, as the story is told me: | |
Folk-princes fared then from far and from near | |
Through long-stretching journeys to look at the wonder, | |
5 The footprints of the foeman. Few of the warriors | |
{Few warriors lamented Grendel's destruction.} | |
Who gazed on the foot-tracks of the inglorious creature | |
His parting from life pained very deeply, | |
How, weary in spirit, off from those regions | |
In combats conquered he carried his traces, | |
10 Fated and flying, to the flood of the nickers. | |
{Grendel's blood dyes the waters.} | |
There in bloody billows bubbled the currents, | |
The angry eddy was everywhere mingled | |
And seething with gore, welling with sword-blood;[1] | |
He death-doomed had hid him, when reaved of his joyance | |
15 He laid down his life in the lair he had fled to, | |
His heathenish spirit, where hell did receive him. | |
Thence the friends from of old backward turned them, | |
And many a younker from merry adventure, | |
Striding their stallions, stout from the seaward, | |
20 Heroes on horses. There were heard very often | |
{Beowulf is the hero of the hour.} | |
Beowulf's praises; many often asserted | |
That neither south nor north, in the circuit of waters, | |
{He is regarded as a probable successor to Hrothgar.} | |
O'er outstretching earth-plain, none other was better | |
'Mid bearers of war-shields, more worthy to govern, | |
25 'Neath the arch of the ether. Not any, however, | |
'Gainst the friend-lord muttered, mocking-words uttered | |
{But no word is uttered to derogate from the old king} | |
Of Hrothgar the gracious (a good king he). | |
Oft the famed ones permitted their fallow-skinned horses | |
[31] To run in rivalry, racing and chasing, | |
30 Where the fieldways appeared to them fair and inviting, | |
Known for their excellence; oft a thane of the folk-lord,[2] | |
{The gleeman sings the deeds of heroes.} | |
[3]A man of celebrity, mindful of rhythms, | |
Who ancient traditions treasured in memory, | |
New word-groups found properly bound: | |
35 The bard after 'gan then Beowulf's venture | |
{He sings in alliterative measures of Beowulf's prowess.} | |
Wisely to tell of, and words that were clever | |
To utter skilfully, earnestly speaking, | |
Everything told he that he heard as to Sigmund's | |
{Also of Sigemund, who has slain a great fire-dragon.} | |
Mighty achievements, many things hidden, | |
40 The strife of the Wælsing, the wide-going ventures | |
The children of men knew of but little, | |
The feud and the fury, but Fitela with him, | |
When suchlike matters he minded to speak of, | |
Uncle to nephew, as in every contention | |
45 Each to other was ever devoted: | |
A numerous host of the race of the scathers | |
They had slain with the sword-edge. To Sigmund accrued then | |
No little of glory, when his life-days were over, | |
Since he sturdy in struggle had destroyed the great dragon, | |
50 The hoard-treasure's keeper; 'neath the hoar-grayish stone he, | |
The son of the atheling, unaided adventured | |
The perilous project; not present was Fitela, | |
Yet the fortune befell him of forcing his weapon | |
Through the marvellous dragon, that it stood in the wall, | |
55 Well-honored weapon; the worm was slaughtered. | |
The great one had gained then by his glorious achievement | |
To reap from the ring-hoard richest enjoyment, | |
[32] As best it did please him: his vessel he loaded, | |
Shining ornaments on the ship's bosom carried, | |
60 Kinsman of Wæls: the drake in heat melted. | |
{Sigemund was widely famed.} | |
He was farthest famed of fugitive pilgrims, | |
Mid wide-scattered world-folk, for works of great prowess, | |
War-troopers' shelter: hence waxed he in honor.[4] | |
{Heremod, an unfortunate Danish king, is introduced by way of contrast.} | |
Afterward Heremod's hero-strength failed him, | |
65 His vigor and valor. 'Mid venomous haters | |
To the hands of foemen he was foully delivered, | |
Offdriven early. Agony-billows | |
{Unlike Sigemund and Beowulf, Heremod was a burden to his people.} | |
Oppressed him too long, to his people he became then, | |
To all the athelings, an ever-great burden; | |
70 And the daring one's journey in days of yore | |
Many wise men were wont to deplore, | |
Such as hoped he would bring them help in their sorrow, | |
That the son of their ruler should rise into power, | |
Holding the headship held by his fathers, | |
75 Should govern the people, the gold-hoard and borough, | |
The kingdom of heroes, the realm of the Scyldings. | |
{Beowulf is an honor to his race.} | |
He to all men became then far more beloved, | |
Higelac's kinsman, to kindreds and races, | |
To his friends much dearer; him malice assaulted.-- | |
{The story is resumed.} | |
80 Oft running and racing on roadsters they measured | |
The dun-colored highways. Then the light of the morning | |
Was hurried and hastened. Went henchmen in numbers | |
To the beautiful building, bold ones in spirit, | |
To look at the wonder; the liegelord himself then | |
85 From his wife-bower wending, warden of treasures, | |
Glorious trod with troopers unnumbered, | |
Famed for his virtues, and with him the queen-wife | |
Measured the mead-ways, with maidens attending. | |
[1] S. emends, suggesting 'déop' for 'déog,' and removing semicolon | |
after 'wéol.' The two half-lines 'welling ... hid him' would then | |
read: _The bloody deep welled with sword-gore_. B. accepts 'déop' for | |
'déog,' but reads 'déað-fæges': _The deep boiled with the sword-gore | |
of the death-doomed one_. | |
[2] Another and quite different rendering of this passage is as | |
follows: _Oft a liegeman of the king, a fame-covered man mindful of | |
songs, who very many ancient traditions remembered (he found other | |
word-groups accurately bound together) began afterward to tell of | |
Beowulf's adventure, skilfully to narrate it, etc_. | |
[3] Might 'guma gilp-hladen' mean 'a man laden with boasts of the | |
deeds of others'? | |
[4] t.B. accepts B.'s 'hé þæs áron þáh' as given by H.-So., but puts a | |
comma after 'þáh,' and takes 'siððan' as introducing a dependent | |
clause: _He throve in honor since Heremod's strength ... had | |
decreased_. | |
[33] | |
XV. | |
HROTHGAR'S GRATITUDE. | |
Hrothgar discoursed (to the hall-building went he, | |
He stood by the pillar,[1] saw the steep-rising hall-roof | |
Gleaming with gold-gems, and Grendel his hand there): | |
{Hrothgar gives thanks for the overthrow of the monster.} | |
"For the sight we behold now, thanks to the Wielder | |
5 Early be offered! Much evil I bided, | |
Snaring from Grendel:[2] God can e'er 'complish | |
Wonder on wonder, Wielder of Glory! | |
{I had given up all hope, when this brave liegeman came to our aid.} | |
But lately I reckoned ne'er under heaven | |
Comfort to gain me for any of sorrows, | |
10 While the handsomest of houses horrid with bloodstain | |
Gory uptowered; grief had offfrightened[3] | |
Each of the wise ones who weened not that ever | |
The folk-troop's defences 'gainst foes they should strengthen, | |
'Gainst sprites and monsters. Through the might of the Wielder | |
15 A doughty retainer hath a deed now accomplished | |
Which erstwhile we all with our excellent wisdom | |
{If his mother yet liveth, well may she thank God for this son.} | |
Failed to perform. May affirm very truly | |
What woman soever in all of the nations | |
Gave birth to the child, if yet she surviveth, | |
20 That the long-ruling Lord was lavish to herward | |
In the birth of the bairn. Now, Beowulf dear, | |
{Hereafter, Beowulf, thou shalt be my son.} | |
Most excellent hero, I'll love thee in spirit | |
As bairn of my body; bear well henceforward | |
The relationship new. No lack shall befall thee | |
25 Of earth-joys any I ever can give thee. | |
Full often for lesser service I've given | |
[34] Hero less hardy hoard-treasure precious, | |
{Thou hast won immortal distinction.} | |
To a weaker in war-strife. By works of distinction | |
Thou hast gained for thyself now that thy glory shall flourish | |
30 Forever and ever. The All-Ruler quite thee | |
With good from His hand as He hitherto did thee!" | |
{Beowulf replies: I was most happy to render thee this service.} | |
Beowulf answered, Ecgtheow's offspring: | |
"That labor of glory most gladly achieved we, | |
The combat accomplished, unquailing we ventured | |
35 The enemy's grapple; I would grant it much rather | |
Thou wert able to look at the creature in person, | |
Faint unto falling, the foe in his trappings! | |
On murder-bed quickly I minded to bind him, | |
With firm-holding fetters, that forced by my grapple | |
40 Low he should lie in life-and-death struggle | |
'Less his body escape; I was wholly unable, | |
{I could not keep the monster from escaping, as God did not will that I | |
should.} | |
Since God did not will it, to keep him from going, | |
Not held him that firmly, hated opposer; | |
Too swift was the foeman. Yet safety regarding | |
45 He suffered his hand behind him to linger, | |
His arm and shoulder, to act as watcher; | |
{He left his hand and arm behind.} | |
No shadow of solace the woe-begone creature | |
Found him there nathless: the hated destroyer | |
Liveth no longer, lashed for his evils, | |
50 But sorrow hath seized him, in snare-meshes hath him | |
Close in its clutches, keepeth him writhing | |
In baleful bonds: there banished for evil | |
The man shall wait for the mighty tribunal, | |
{God will give him his deserts.} | |
How the God of glory shall give him his earnings." | |
55 Then the soldier kept silent, son of old Ecglaf, | |
{Unferth has nothing more to say, for Beowulf's actions speak louder than | |
words.} | |
From boasting and bragging of battle-achievements, | |
Since the princes beheld there the hand that depended | |
'Neath the lofty hall-timbers by the might of the nobleman, | |
Each one before him, the enemy's fingers; | |
60 Each finger-nail strong steel most resembled, | |
The heathen one's hand-spur, the hero-in-battle's | |
Claw most uncanny; quoth they agreeing, | |
[35] | |
{No sword will harm the monster.} | |
That not any excellent edges of brave ones | |
Was willing to touch him, the terrible creature's | |
65 Battle-hand bloody to bear away from him. | |
[1] B. and t.B. read 'staþole,' and translate _stood on the floor_. | |
[2] For 'snaring from Grendel,' 'sorrows at Grendel's hands' has been | |
suggested. This gives a parallel to 'láðes.' 'Grynna' may well be gen. | |
pl. of 'gyrn,' by a scribal slip. | |
[3] The H.-So punctuation has been followed; but B. has been followed | |
in understanding 'gehwylcne' as object of 'wíd-scofen (hæfde).' Gr. | |
construes 'wéa' as nom abs. | |
XVI. | |
HROTHGAR LAVISHES GIFTS UPON HIS DELIVERER. | |
{Heorot is adorned with hands.} | |
Then straight was ordered that Heorot inside[1] | |
With hands be embellished: a host of them gathered, | |
Of men and women, who the wassailing-building | |
The guest-hall begeared. Gold-flashing sparkled | |
5 Webs on the walls then, of wonders a many | |
To each of the heroes that look on such objects. | |
{The hall is defaced, however.} | |
The beautiful building was broken to pieces | |
Which all within with irons was fastened, | |
Its hinges torn off: only the roof was | |
10 Whole and uninjured when the horrible creature | |
Outlawed for evil off had betaken him, | |
Hopeless of living. 'Tis hard to avoid it | |
{[A vague passage of five verses.]} | |
(Whoever will do it!); but he doubtless must come to[2] | |
The place awaiting, as Wyrd hath appointed, | |
15 Soul-bearers, earth-dwellers, earls under heaven, | |
Where bound on its bed his body shall slumber | |
{Hrothgar goes to the banquet.} | |
When feasting is finished. Full was the time then | |
That the son of Healfdene went to the building; | |
[36] The excellent atheling would eat of the banquet. | |
20 Ne'er heard I that people with hero-band larger | |
Bare them better tow'rds their bracelet-bestower. | |
The laden-with-glory stooped to the bench then | |
(Their kinsmen-companions in plenty were joyful, | |
Many a cupful quaffing complaisantly), | |
25 Doughty of spirit in the high-tow'ring palace, | |
{Hrothgar's nephew, Hrothulf, is present.} | |
Hrothgar and Hrothulf. Heorot then inside | |
Was filled with friendly ones; falsehood and treachery | |
The Folk-Scyldings now nowise did practise. | |
{Hrothgar lavishes gifts upon Beowulf.} | |
Then the offspring of Healfdene offered to Beowulf | |
30 A golden standard, as reward for the victory, | |
A banner embossed, burnie and helmet; | |
Many men saw then a song-famous weapon | |
Borne 'fore the hero. Beowulf drank of | |
The cup in the building; that treasure-bestowing | |
35 He needed not blush for in battle-men's presence. | |
{Four handsomer gifts were never presented.} | |
Ne'er heard I that many men on the ale-bench | |
In friendlier fashion to their fellows presented | |
Four bright jewels with gold-work embellished. | |
'Round the roof of the helmet a head-guarder outside | |
40 Braided with wires, with bosses was furnished, | |
That swords-for-the-battle fight-hardened might fail | |
Boldly to harm him, when the hero proceeded | |
{Hrothgar commands that eight finely caparisoned steeds be brought to | |
Beowulf.} | |
Forth against foemen. The defender of earls then | |
Commanded that eight steeds with bridles | |
45 Gold-plated, gleaming, be guided to hallward, | |
Inside the building; on one of them stood then | |
An art-broidered saddle embellished with jewels; | |
'Twas the sovereign's seat, when the son of King Healfdene | |
Was pleased to take part in the play of the edges; | |
50 The famous one's valor ne'er failed at the front when | |
Slain ones were bowing. And to Beowulf granted | |
The prince of the Ingwins, power over both, | |
O'er war-steeds and weapons; bade him well to enjoy them. | |
In so manly a manner the mighty-famed chieftain, | |
[37] 55 Hoard-ward of heroes, with horses and jewels | |
War-storms requited, that none e'er condemneth | |
Who willeth to tell truth with full justice. | |
[1] Kl. suggests 'hroden' for 'háten,' and renders: _Then quickly was | |
Heorot adorned within, with hands bedecked_.--B. suggests 'gefrætwon' | |
instead of 'gefrætwod,' and renders: _Then was it commanded to adorn | |
Heorot within quickly with hands_.--The former has the advantage of | |
affording a parallel to 'gefrætwod': both have the disadvantage of | |
altering the text. | |
[2] The passage 1005-1009 seems to be hopeless. One difficult point is | |
to find a subject for 'gesacan.' Some say 'he'; others supply 'each,' | |
_i.e., every soul-bearer ... must gain the inevitable place_. The | |
genitives in this case are partitive.--If 'he' be subj., the genitives | |
are dependent on 'gearwe' (= prepared).--The 'he' itself is disputed, | |
some referring it to Grendel; but B. takes it as involved in the | |
parenthesis. | |
XVII. | |
BANQUET (_continued_).--THE SCOP'S SONG OF FINN AND HNÆF. | |
{Each of Beowulf's companions receives a costly gift.} | |
And the atheling of earlmen to each of the heroes | |
Who the ways of the waters went with Beowulf, | |
A costly gift-token gave on the mead-bench, | |
Offered an heirloom, and ordered that that man | |
{The warrior killed by Grendel is to be paid for in gold.} | |
5 With gold should be paid for, whom Grendel had erstwhile | |
Wickedly slaughtered, as he more of them had done | |
Had far-seeing God and the mood of the hero | |
The fate not averted: the Father then governed | |
All of the earth-dwellers, as He ever is doing; | |
10 Hence insight for all men is everywhere fittest, | |
Forethought of spirit! much he shall suffer | |
Of lief and of loathsome who long in this present | |
Useth the world in this woful existence. | |
There was music and merriment mingling together | |
{Hrothgar's scop recalls events in the reign of his lord's father.} | |
15 Touching Healfdene's leader; the joy-wood was fingered, | |
Measures recited, when the singer of Hrothgar | |
On mead-bench should mention the merry hall-joyance | |
Of the kinsmen of Finn, when onset surprised them: | |
{Hnæf, the Danish general, is treacherously attacked while staying at | |
Finn's castle.} | |
"The Half-Danish hero, Hnæf of the Scyldings, | |
20 On the field of the Frisians was fated to perish. | |
Sure Hildeburg needed not mention approving | |
The faith of the Jutemen: though blameless entirely, | |
{Queen Hildeburg is not only wife of Finn, but a kinswoman of the murdered | |
Hnæf.} | |
When shields were shivered she was shorn of her darlings, | |
Of bairns and brothers: they bent to their fate | |
25 With war-spear wounded; woe was that woman. | |
Not causeless lamented the daughter of Hoce | |
The decree of the Wielder when morning-light came and | |
She was able 'neath heaven to behold the destruction | |
[38] Of brothers and bairns, where the brightest of earth-joys | |
{Finn's force is almost exterminated.} | |
30 She had hitherto had: all the henchmen of Finn | |
War had offtaken, save a handful remaining, | |
That he nowise was able to offer resistance[1] | |
{Hengest succeeds Hnæf as Danish general.} | |
To the onset of Hengest in the parley of battle, | |
Nor the wretched remnant to rescue in war from | |
35 The earl of the atheling; but they offered conditions, | |
{Compact between the Frisians and the Danes.} | |
Another great building to fully make ready, | |
A hall and a high-seat, that half they might rule with | |
The sons of the Jutemen, and that Folcwalda's son would | |
Day after day the Danemen honor | |
40 When gifts were giving, and grant of his ring-store | |
To Hengest's earl-troop ever so freely, | |
Of his gold-plated jewels, as he encouraged the Frisians | |
{Equality of gifts agreed on.} | |
On the bench of the beer-hall. On both sides they swore then | |
A fast-binding compact; Finn unto Hengest | |
45 With no thought of revoking vowed then most solemnly | |
The woe-begone remnant well to take charge of, | |
His Witan advising; the agreement should no one | |
By words or works weaken and shatter, | |
By artifice ever injure its value, | |
50 Though reaved of their ruler their ring-giver's slayer | |
They followed as vassals, Fate so requiring: | |
{No one shall refer to old grudges.} | |
Then if one of the Frisians the quarrel should speak of | |
In tones that were taunting, terrible edges | |
Should cut in requital. Accomplished the oath was, | |
55 And treasure of gold from the hoard was uplifted. | |
{Danish warriors are burned on a funeral-pyre.} | |
The best of the Scylding braves was then fully | |
Prepared for the pile; at the pyre was seen clearly | |
The blood-gory burnie, the boar with his gilding, | |
The iron-hard swine, athelings many | |
60 Fatally wounded; no few had been slaughtered. | |
Hildeburg bade then, at the burning of Hnæf, | |
[39] | |
{Queen Hildeburg has her son burnt along with Hnæf.} | |
The bairn of her bosom to bear to the fire, | |
That his body be burned and borne to the pyre. | |
The woe-stricken woman wept on his shoulder,[2] | |
65 In measures lamented; upmounted the hero.[3] | |
The greatest of dead-fires curled to the welkin, | |
On the hill's-front crackled; heads were a-melting, | |
Wound-doors bursting, while the blood was a-coursing | |
From body-bite fierce. The fire devoured them, | |
70 Greediest of spirits, whom war had offcarried | |
From both of the peoples; their bravest were fallen. | |
[1] For 1084, R. suggests 'wiht Hengeste wið gefeohtan.'--K. suggests | |
'wið Hengeste wiht gefeohtan.' Neither emendation would make any | |
essential change in the translation. | |
[2] The separation of adjective and noun by a phrase (cf. v. 1118) | |
being very unusual, some scholars have put 'earme on eaxle' with the | |
foregoing lines, inserting a semicolon after 'eaxle.' In this case 'on | |
eaxe' (_i.e._, on the ashes, cinders) is sometimes read, and this | |
affords a parallel to 'on bæl.' Let us hope that a satisfactory | |
rendering shall yet be reached without resorting to any tampering with | |
the text, such as Lichtenheld proposed: 'earme ides on eaxle | |
gnornode.' | |
[3] For 'gúð-rinc,' 'gúð-réc,' _battle-smoke_, has been suggested. | |
XVIII. | |
THE FINN EPISODE (_continued_).--THE BANQUET CONTINUES. | |
{The survivors go to Friesland, the home of Finn.} | |
"Then the warriors departed to go to their dwellings, | |
Reaved of their friends, Friesland to visit, | |
Their homes and high-city. Hengest continued | |
{Hengest remains there all winter, unable to get away.} | |
Biding with Finn the blood-tainted winter, | |
5 Wholly unsundered;[1] of fatherland thought he | |
Though unable to drive the ring-stemmèd vessel | |
[40] O'er the ways of the waters; the wave-deeps were tossing, | |
Fought with the wind; winter in ice-bonds | |
Closed up the currents, till there came to the dwelling | |
10 A year in its course, as yet it revolveth, | |
If season propitious one alway regardeth, | |
World-cheering weathers. Then winter was gone, | |
Earth's bosom was lovely; the exile would get him, | |
{He devises schemes of vengeance.} | |
The guest from the palace; on grewsomest vengeance | |
15 He brooded more eager than on oversea journeys, | |
Whe'r onset-of-anger he were able to 'complish, | |
The bairns of the Jutemen therein to remember. | |
Nowise refused he the duties of liegeman | |
When Hun of the Frisians the battle-sword Láfing, | |
20 Fairest of falchions, friendly did give him: | |
Its edges were famous in folk-talk of Jutland. | |
And savage sword-fury seized in its clutches | |
Bold-mooded Finn where he bode in his palace, | |
{Guthlaf and Oslaf revenge Hnæf's slaughter.} | |
When the grewsome grapple Guthlaf and Oslaf | |
25 Had mournfully mentioned, the mere-journey over, | |
For sorrows half-blamed him; the flickering spirit | |
Could not bide in his bosom. Then the building was covered[2] | |
{Finn is slain.} | |
With corpses of foemen, and Finn too was slaughtered, | |
The king with his comrades, and the queen made a prisoner. | |
{The jewels of Finn, and his queen are carried away by the Danes.} | |
30 The troops of the Scyldings bore to their vessels | |
All that the land-king had in his palace, | |
Such trinkets and treasures they took as, on searching, | |
At Finn's they could find. They ferried to Daneland | |
The excellent woman on oversea journey, | |
{The lay is concluded, and the main story is resumed.} | |
35 Led her to their land-folk." The lay was concluded, | |
The gleeman's recital. Shouts again rose then, | |
Bench-glee resounded, bearers then offered | |
{Skinkers carry round the beaker.} | |
Wine from wonder-vats. Wealhtheo advanced then | |
Going 'neath gold-crown, where the good ones were seated | |
[41] | |
{Queen Wealhtheow greets Hrothgar, as he sits beside Hrothulf, his | |
nephew.} | |
40 Uncle and nephew; their peace was yet mutual, | |
True each to the other. And Unferth the spokesman | |
Sat at the feet of the lord of the Scyldings: | |
Each trusted his spirit that his mood was courageous, | |
Though at fight he had failed in faith to his kinsmen. | |
45 Said the queen of the Scyldings: "My lord and protector, | |
Treasure-bestower, take thou this beaker; | |
Joyance attend thee, gold-friend of heroes, | |
{Be generous to the Geats.} | |
And greet thou the Geatmen with gracious responses! | |
So ought one to do. Be kind to the Geatmen, | |
50 In gifts not niggardly; anear and afar now | |
Peace thou enjoyest. Report hath informed me | |
Thou'lt have for a bairn the battle-brave hero. | |
Now is Heorot cleansèd, ring-palace gleaming; | |
{Have as much joy as possible in thy hall, once more purified.} | |
Give while thou mayest many rewards, | |
55 And bequeath to thy kinsmen kingdom and people, | |
On wending thy way to the Wielder's splendor. | |
I know good Hrothulf, that the noble young troopers | |
{I know that Hrothulf will prove faithful if he survive thee.} | |
He'll care for and honor, lord of the Scyldings, | |
If earth-joys thou endest earlier than he doth; | |
60 I reckon that recompense he'll render with kindness | |
Our offspring and issue, if that all he remember, | |
What favors of yore, when he yet was an infant, | |
We awarded to him for his worship and pleasure." | |
Then she turned by the bench where her sons were carousing, | |
65 Hrethric and Hrothmund, and the heroes' offspring, | |
{Beowulf is sitting by the two royal sons.} | |
The war-youth together; there the good one was sitting | |
'Twixt the brothers twain, Beowulf Geatman. | |
[1] For 1130 (1) R. and Gr. suggest 'elne unflitme' as 1098 (1) reads. | |
The latter verse is undisputed; and, for the former, 'elne' would be | |
as possible as 'ealles,' and 'unflitme' is well supported. Accepting | |
'elne unflitme' for both, I would suggest '_very peaceably_' for both | |
places: (1) _Finn to Hengest very peaceably vowed with oaths_, etc. | |
(2) _Hengest then still the slaughter-stained winter remained there | |
with Finn very peaceably_. The two passages become thus correlatives, | |
the second a sequel of the first. 'Elne,' in the sense of very | |
(swíðe), needs no argument; and 'unflitme' (from 'flítan') can, it | |
seems to me, be more plausibly rendered 'peaceful,' 'peaceable,' than | |
'contestable,' or 'conquerable.' | |
[2] Some scholars have proposed 'roden'; the line would then read: | |
_Then the building was reddened, etc._, instead of 'covered.' The 'h' | |
may have been carried over from the three alliterating 'h's.' | |
XIX. | |
BEOWULF RECEIVES FURTHER HONOR. | |
{More gifts are offered Beowulf.} | |
A beaker was borne him, and bidding to quaff it | |
Graciously given, and gold that was twisted | |
Pleasantly proffered, a pair of arm-jewels, | |
[42] Rings and corslet, of collars the greatest | |
5 I've heard of 'neath heaven. Of heroes not any | |
More splendid from jewels have I heard 'neath the welkin, | |
{A famous necklace is referred to, in comparison with the gems presented | |
to Beowulf.} | |
Since Hama off bore the Brosingmen's necklace, | |
The bracteates and jewels, from the bright-shining city,[1] | |
Eormenric's cunning craftiness fled from, | |
10 Chose gain everlasting. Geatish Higelac, | |
Grandson of Swerting, last had this jewel | |
When tramping 'neath banner the treasure he guarded, | |
The field-spoil defended; Fate offcarried him | |
When for deeds of daring he endured tribulation, | |
15 Hate from the Frisians; the ornaments bare he | |
O'er the cup of the currents, costly gem-treasures, | |
Mighty folk-leader, he fell 'neath his target; | |
The[2] corpse of the king then came into charge of | |
The race of the Frankmen, the mail-shirt and collar: | |
20 Warmen less noble plundered the fallen, | |
When the fight was finished; the folk of the Geatmen | |
The field of the dead held in possession. | |
The choicest of mead-halls with cheering resounded. | |
Wealhtheo discoursed, the war-troop addressed she: | |
{Queen Wealhtheow magnifies Beowulf's achievements.} | |
25 "This collar enjoy thou, Beowulf worthy, | |
Young man, in safety, and use thou this armor, | |
Gems of the people, and prosper thou fully, | |
Show thyself sturdy and be to these liegemen | |
Mild with instruction! I'll mind thy requital. | |
30 Thou hast brought it to pass that far and near | |
Forever and ever earthmen shall honor thee, | |
Even so widely as ocean surroundeth | |
The blustering bluffs. Be, while thou livest, | |
[43] A wealth-blessèd atheling. I wish thee most truly | |
{May gifts never fail thee.} | |
35 Jewels and treasure. Be kind to my son, thou | |
Living in joyance! Here each of the nobles | |
Is true unto other, gentle in spirit, | |
Loyal to leader. The liegemen are peaceful, | |
The war-troops ready: well-drunken heroes,[3] | |
40 Do as I bid ye." Then she went to the settle. | |
There was choicest of banquets, wine drank the heroes: | |
{They little know of the sorrow in store for them.} | |
Weird they knew not, destiny cruel, | |
As to many an earlman early it happened, | |
When evening had come and Hrothgar had parted | |
45 Off to his manor, the mighty to slumber. | |
Warriors unnumbered warded the building | |
As erst they did often: the ale-settle bared they, | |
'Twas covered all over with beds and pillows. | |
{A doomed thane is there with them.} | |
Doomed unto death, down to his slumber | |
50 Bowed then a beer-thane. Their battle-shields placed they, | |
Bright-shining targets, up by their heads then; | |
O'er the atheling on ale-bench 'twas easy to see there | |
Battle-high helmet, burnie of ring-mail, | |
{They were always ready for battle.} | |
And mighty war-spear. 'Twas the wont of that people | |
55 To constantly keep them equipped for the battle,[4] | |
At home or marching--in either condition-- | |
At seasons just such as necessity ordered | |
As best for their ruler; that people was worthy. | |
[1] C. suggests a semicolon after 'city,' with 'he' as supplied | |
subject of 'fled' and 'chose.' | |
[2] For 'feorh' S. suggests 'feoh': 'corpse' in the translation would | |
then be changed to '_possessions_,' '_belongings_.' This is a better | |
reading than one joining, in such intimate syntactical relations, | |
things so unlike as 'corpse' and 'jewels.' | |
[3] S. suggests '_wine-joyous heroes_,' '_warriors elated with wine_.' | |
[4] I believe this translation brings out the meaning of the poet, | |
without departing seriously from the H.-So. text. 'Oft' frequently | |
means 'constantly,' 'continually,' not always 'often.'--Why 'an (on) | |
wíg gearwe' should be written 'ánwíg-gearwe' (= ready for single | |
combat), I cannot see. 'Gearwe' occurs quite frequently with 'on'; cf. | |
B. 1110 (_ready for the pyre_), El. 222 (_ready for the glad | |
journey_). Moreover, what has the idea of single combat to do with B. | |
1247 ff.? The poet is giving an inventory of the arms and armor which | |
they lay aside on retiring, and he closes his narration by saying that | |
they were _always prepared for battle both at home and on the march_. | |
[44] | |
XX. | |
THE MOTHER OF GRENDEL. | |
They sank then to slumber. With sorrow one paid for | |
His evening repose, as often betid them | |
While Grendel was holding[1] the gold-bedecked palace, | |
Ill-deeds performing, till his end overtook him, | |
5 Death for his sins. 'Twas seen very clearly, | |
{Grendel's mother is known to be thirsting for revenge.} | |
Known unto earth-folk, that still an avenger | |
Outlived the loathed one, long since the sorrow | |
Caused by the struggle; the mother of Grendel, | |
Devil-shaped woman, her woe ever minded, | |
10 Who was held to inhabit the horrible waters, | |
{[Grendel's progenitor, Cain, is again referred to.]} | |
The cold-flowing currents, after Cain had become a | |
Slayer-with-edges to his one only brother, | |
The son of his sire; he set out then banished, | |
Marked as a murderer, man-joys avoiding, | |
15 Lived in the desert. Thence demons unnumbered | |
{The poet again magnifies Beowulf's valor.} | |
Fate-sent awoke; one of them Grendel, | |
Sword-cursèd, hateful, who at Heorot met with | |
A man that was watching, waiting the struggle, | |
Where a horrid one held him with hand-grapple sturdy; | |
20 Nathless he minded the might of his body, | |
The glorious gift God had allowed him, | |
And folk-ruling Father's favor relied on, | |
His help and His comfort: so he conquered the foeman, | |
The hell-spirit humbled: he unhappy departed then, | |
25 Reaved of his joyance, journeying to death-haunts, | |
Foeman of man. His mother moreover | |
{Grendel's mother comes to avenge her son.} | |
Eager and gloomy was anxious to go on | |
Her mournful mission, mindful of vengeance | |
For the death of her son. She came then to Heorot | |
[45] 30 Where the Armor-Dane earlmen all through the building | |
Were lying in slumber. Soon there became then | |
Return[2] to the nobles, when the mother of Grendel | |
Entered the folk-hall; the fear was less grievous | |
By even so much as the vigor of maidens, | |
35 War-strength of women, by warrior is reckoned, | |
When well-carved weapon, worked with the hammer, | |
Blade very bloody, brave with its edges, | |
Strikes down the boar-sign that stands on the helmet. | |
Then the hard-edgèd weapon was heaved in the building,[3] | |
40 The brand o'er the benches, broad-lindens many | |
Hand-fast were lifted; for helmet he recked not, | |
For armor-net broad, whom terror laid hold of. | |
She went then hastily, outward would get her | |
Her life for to save, when some one did spy her; | |
{She seizes a favorite liegemen of Hrothgar's.} | |
45 Soon she had grappled one of the athelings | |
Fast and firmly, when fenward she hied her; | |
That one to Hrothgar was liefest of heroes | |
In rank of retainer where waters encircle, | |
A mighty shield-warrior, whom she murdered at slumber, | |
50 A broadly-famed battle-knight. Beowulf was absent, | |
{Beowulf was asleep in another part of the palace.} | |
But another apartment was erstwhile devoted | |
To the glory-decked Geatman when gold was distributed. | |
There was hubbub in Heorot. The hand that was famous | |
She grasped in its gore;[4] grief was renewed then | |
[46] 55 In homes and houses: 'twas no happy arrangement | |
In both of the quarters to barter and purchase | |
With lives of their friends. Then the well-agèd ruler, | |
The gray-headed war-thane, was woful in spirit, | |
When his long-trusted liegeman lifeless he knew of, | |
{Beowulf is sent for.} | |
60 His dearest one gone. Quick from a room was | |
Beowulf brought, brave and triumphant. | |
As day was dawning in the dusk of the morning, | |
{He comes at Hrothgar's summons.} | |
Went then that earlman, champion noble, | |
Came with comrades, where the clever one bided | |
65 Whether God all gracious would grant him a respite | |
After the woe he had suffered. The war-worthy hero | |
With a troop of retainers trod then the pavement | |
(The hall-building groaned), till he greeted the wise one, | |
{Beowulf inquires how Hrothgar had enjoyed his night's rest.} | |
The earl of the Ingwins;[5] asked if the night had | |
70 Fully refreshed him, as fain he would have it. | |
[1] Several eminent authorities either read or emend the MS. so as to | |
make this verse read, _While Grendel was wasting the gold-bedecked | |
palace_. So 20_15 below: _ravaged the desert_. | |
[2] For 'sóna' (1281), t.B. suggests 'sára,' limiting 'edhwyrft.' Read | |
then: _Return of sorrows to the nobles, etc_. This emendation supplies | |
the syntactical gap after 'edhwyrft.' | |
[3] Some authorities follow Grein's lexicon in treating 'heard ecg' as | |
an adj. limiting 'sweord': H.-So. renders it as a subst. (So v. 1491.) | |
The sense of the translation would be the same. | |
[4] B. suggests 'under hróf genam' (v. 1303). This emendation, as well | |
as an emendation with (?) to v. 739, he offers, because 'under' | |
baffles him in both passages. All we need is to take 'under' in its | |
secondary meaning of 'in,' which, though not given by Grein, occurs in | |
the literature. Cf. Chron. 876 (March's A.-S. Gram. § 355) and Oro. | |
Amaz. I. 10, where 'under' = _in the midst of_. Cf. modern Eng. 'in | |
such circumstances,' which interchanges in good usage with 'under such | |
circumstances.' | |
[5] For 'néod-laðu' (1321) C. suggests 'néad-láðum,' and translates: | |
_asked whether the night had been pleasant to him after | |
crushing-hostility_. | |
XXI. | |
HROTHGAR'S ACCOUNT OF THE MONSTERS. | |
{Hrothgar laments the death of Æschere, his shoulder-companion.} | |
Hrothgar rejoined, helm of the Scyldings: | |
"Ask not of joyance! Grief is renewed to | |
The folk of the Danemen. Dead is Æschere, | |
Yrmenlaf's brother, older than he, | |
5 My true-hearted counsellor, trusty adviser, | |
Shoulder-companion, when fighting in battle | |
Our heads we protected, when troopers were clashing, | |
{He was my ideal hero.} | |
And heroes were dashing; such an earl should be ever, | |
An erst-worthy atheling, as Æschere proved him. | |
10 The flickering death-spirit became in Heorot | |
His hand-to-hand murderer; I can not tell whither | |
The cruel one turned in the carcass exulting, | |
[47] | |
{This horrible creature came to avenge Grendel's death.} | |
By cramming discovered.[1] The quarrel she wreaked then, | |
That last night igone Grendel thou killedst | |
15 In grewsomest manner, with grim-holding clutches, | |
Since too long he had lessened my liege-troop and wasted | |
My folk-men so foully. He fell in the battle | |
With forfeit of life, and another has followed, | |
A mighty crime-worker, her kinsman avenging, | |
20 And henceforth hath 'stablished her hatred unyielding,[2] | |
As it well may appear to many a liegeman, | |
Who mourneth in spirit the treasure-bestower, | |
Her heavy heart-sorrow; the hand is now lifeless | |
Which[3] availed you in every wish that you cherished. | |
{I have heard my vassals speak of these two uncanny monsters who lived in | |
the moors.} | |
25 Land-people heard I, liegemen, this saying, | |
Dwellers in halls, they had seen very often | |
A pair of such mighty march-striding creatures, | |
Far-dwelling spirits, holding the moorlands: | |
One of them wore, as well they might notice, | |
30 The image of woman, the other one wretched | |
In guise of a man wandered in exile, | |
Except he was huger than any of earthmen; | |
Earth-dwelling people entitled him Grendel | |
In days of yore: they know not their father, | |
35 Whe'r ill-going spirits any were borne him | |
{The inhabit the most desolate and horrible places.} | |
Ever before. They guard the wolf-coverts, | |
Lands inaccessible, wind-beaten nesses, | |
Fearfullest fen-deeps, where a flood from the mountains | |
'Neath mists of the nesses netherward rattles, | |
40 The stream under earth: not far is it henceward | |
Measured by mile-lengths that the mere-water standeth, | |
Which forests hang over, with frost-whiting covered,[4] | |
[48] A firm-rooted forest, the floods overshadow. | |
There ever at night one an ill-meaning portent | |
45 A fire-flood may see; 'mong children of men | |
None liveth so wise that wot of the bottom; | |
Though harassed by hounds the heath-stepper seek for, | |
{Even the hounded deer will not seek refuge in these uncanny regions.} | |
Fly to the forest, firm-antlered he-deer, | |
Spurred from afar, his spirit he yieldeth, | |
50 His life on the shore, ere in he will venture | |
To cover his head. Uncanny the place is: | |
Thence upward ascendeth the surging of waters, | |
Wan to the welkin, when the wind is stirring | |
The weathers unpleasing, till the air groweth gloomy, | |
{To thee only can I look for assistance.} | |
55 And the heavens lower. Now is help to be gotten | |
From thee and thee only! The abode thou know'st not, | |
The dangerous place where thou'rt able to meet with | |
The sin-laden hero: seek if thou darest! | |
For the feud I will fully fee thee with money, | |
60 With old-time treasure, as erstwhile I did thee, | |
With well-twisted jewels, if away thou shalt get thee." | |
[1] For 'gefrægnod' (1334), K. and t.B. suggest 'gefægnod,' rendering | |
'_rejoicing in her fill_.' This gives a parallel to 'æse wlanc' | |
(1333). | |
[2] The line 'And ... yielding,' B. renders: _And she has performed a | |
deed of blood-vengeance whose effect is far-reaching_. | |
[3] 'Sé Þe' (1345) is an instance of masc. rel. with fem. antecedent. | |
So v. 1888, where 'sé Þe' refers to 'yldo.' | |
[4] For 'hrímge' in the H.-So. edition, Gr. and others read 'hrínde' | |
(=hrínende), and translate: _which rustling forests overhang_. | |
XXII. | |
BEOWULF SEEKS GRENDEL'S MOTHER. | |
Beowulf answered, Ecgtheow's son: | |
{Beowulf exhorts the old king to arouse himself for action.} | |
"Grieve not, O wise one! for each it is better, | |
His friend to avenge than with vehemence wail him; | |
Each of us must the end-day abide of | |
5 His earthly existence; who is able accomplish | |
Glory ere death! To battle-thane noble | |
Lifeless lying, 'tis at last most fitting. | |
Arise, O king, quick let us hasten | |
To look at the footprint of the kinsman of Grendel! | |
10 I promise thee this now: to his place he'll escape not, | |
To embrace of the earth, nor to mountainous forest, | |
Nor to depths of the ocean, wherever he wanders. | |
[49] Practice thou now patient endurance | |
Of each of thy sorrows, as I hope for thee soothly!" | |
{Hrothgar rouses himself. His horse is brought.} | |
15 Then up sprang the old one, the All-Wielder thanked he, | |
Ruler Almighty, that the man had outspoken. | |
Then for Hrothgar a war-horse was decked with a bridle, | |
Curly-maned courser. The clever folk-leader | |
{They start on the track of the female monster.} | |
Stately proceeded: stepped then an earl-troop | |
20 Of linden-wood bearers. Her footprints were seen then | |
Widely in wood-paths, her way o'er the bottoms, | |
Where she faraway fared o'er fen-country murky, | |
Bore away breathless the best of retainers | |
Who pondered with Hrothgar the welfare of country. | |
25 The son of the athelings then went o'er the stony, | |
Declivitous cliffs, the close-covered passes, | |
Narrow passages, paths unfrequented, | |
Nesses abrupt, nicker-haunts many; | |
One of a few of wise-mooded heroes, | |
30 He onward advanced to view the surroundings, | |
Till he found unawares woods of the mountain | |
O'er hoar-stones hanging, holt-wood unjoyful; | |
The water stood under, welling and gory. | |
'Twas irksome in spirit to all of the Danemen, | |
35 Friends of the Scyldings, to many a liegeman | |
{The sight of Æschere's head causes them great sorrow.} | |
Sad to be suffered, a sorrow unlittle | |
To each of the earlmen, when to Æschere's head they | |
Came on the cliff. The current was seething | |
With blood and with gore (the troopers gazed on it). | |
40 The horn anon sang the battle-song ready. | |
The troop were all seated; they saw 'long the water then | |
{The water is filled with serpents and sea-dragons.} | |
Many a serpent, mere-dragons wondrous | |
Trying the waters, nickers a-lying | |
On the cliffs of the nesses, which at noonday full often | |
45 Go on the sea-deeps their sorrowful journey, | |
Wild-beasts and wormkind; away then they hastened | |
{One of them is killed by Beowulf.} | |
Hot-mooded, hateful, they heard the great clamor, | |
The war-trumpet winding. One did the Geat-prince | |
[50] Sunder from earth-joys, with arrow from bowstring, | |
50 From his sea-struggle tore him, that the trusty war-missile | |
{The dead beast is a poor swimmer} | |
Pierced to his vitals; he proved in the currents | |
Less doughty at swimming whom death had offcarried. | |
Soon in the waters the wonderful swimmer | |
Was straitened most sorely with sword-pointed boar-spears, | |
55 Pressed in the battle and pulled to the cliff-edge; | |
The liegemen then looked on the loath-fashioned stranger. | |
{Beowulf prepares for a struggle with the monster.} | |
Beowulf donned then his battle-equipments, | |
Cared little for life; inlaid and most ample, | |
The hand-woven corslet which could cover his body, | |
60 Must the wave-deeps explore, that war might be powerless | |
To harm the great hero, and the hating one's grasp might | |
Not peril his safety; his head was protected | |
By the light-flashing helmet that should mix with the bottoms, | |
Trying the eddies, treasure-emblazoned, | |
65 Encircled with jewels, as in seasons long past | |
The weapon-smith worked it, wondrously made it, | |
With swine-bodies fashioned it, that thenceforward no longer | |
Brand might bite it, and battle-sword hurt it. | |
And that was not least of helpers in prowess | |
{He has Unferth's sword in his hand.} | |
70 That Hrothgar's spokesman had lent him when straitened; | |
And the hilted hand-sword was Hrunting entitled, | |
Old and most excellent 'mong all of the treasures; | |
Its blade was of iron, blotted with poison, | |
Hardened with gore; it failed not in battle | |
75 Any hero under heaven in hand who it brandished, | |
Who ventured to take the terrible journeys, | |
The battle-field sought; not the earliest occasion | |
That deeds of daring 'twas destined to 'complish. | |
{Unferth has little use for swords.} | |
Ecglaf's kinsman minded not soothly, | |
80 Exulting in strength, what erst he had spoken | |
Drunken with wine, when the weapon he lent to | |
A sword-hero bolder; himself did not venture | |
'Neath the strife of the currents his life to endanger, | |
[51] To fame-deeds perform; there he forfeited glory, | |
85 Repute for his strength. Not so with the other | |
When he clad in his corslet had equipped him for battle. | |
XXIII. | |
BEOWULF'S FIGHT WITH GRENDEL'S MOTHER. | |
{Beowulf makes a parting speech to Hrothgar.} | |
Beowulf spake, Ecgtheow's son: | |
"Recall now, oh, famous kinsman of Healfdene, | |
Prince very prudent, now to part I am ready, | |
Gold-friend of earlmen, what erst we agreed on, | |
{If I fail, act as a kind liegelord to my thanes,} | |
5 Should I lay down my life in lending thee assistance, | |
When my earth-joys were over, thou wouldst evermore serve me | |
In stead of a father; my faithful thanemen, | |
My trusty retainers, protect thou and care for, | |
Fall I in battle: and, Hrothgar belovèd, | |
{and send Higelac the jewels thou hast given me} | |
10 Send unto Higelac the high-valued jewels | |
Thou to me hast allotted. The lord of the Geatmen | |
May perceive from the gold, the Hrethling may see it | |
{I should like my king to know how generous a lord I found thee to be.} | |
When he looks on the jewels, that a gem-giver found I | |
Good over-measure, enjoyed him while able. | |
15 And the ancient heirloom Unferth permit thou, | |
The famed one to have, the heavy-sword splendid[1] | |
The hard-edgèd weapon; with Hrunting to aid me, | |
I shall gain me glory, or grim-death shall take me." | |
{Beowulf is eager for the fray.} | |
The atheling of Geatmen uttered these words and | |
20 Heroic did hasten, not any rejoinder | |
Was willing to wait for; the wave-current swallowed | |
{He is a whole day reaching the bottom of the sea.} | |
The doughty-in-battle. Then a day's-length elapsed ere | |
He was able to see the sea at its bottom. | |
Early she found then who fifty of winters | |
25 The course of the currents kept in her fury, | |
Grisly and greedy, that the grim one's dominion | |
[52] | |
{Grendel's mother knows that some one has reached her domains.} | |
Some one of men from above was exploring. | |
Forth did she grab them, grappled the warrior | |
With horrible clutches; yet no sooner she injured | |
30 His body unscathèd: the burnie out-guarded, | |
That she proved but powerless to pierce through the armor, | |
The limb-mail locked, with loath-grabbing fingers. | |
The sea-wolf bare then, when bottomward came she, | |
{She grabs him, and bears him to her den.} | |
The ring-prince homeward, that he after was powerless | |
35 (He had daring to do it) to deal with his weapons, | |
But many a mere-beast tormented him swimming, | |
{Sea-monsters bite and strike him.} | |
Flood-beasts no few with fierce-biting tusks did | |
Break through his burnie, the brave one pursued they. | |
The earl then discovered he was down in some cavern | |
40 Where no water whatever anywise harmed him, | |
And the clutch of the current could come not anear him, | |
Since the roofed-hall prevented; brightness a-gleaming | |
Fire-light he saw, flashing resplendent. | |
The good one saw then the sea-bottom's monster, | |
{Beowulf attacks the mother of Grendel.} | |
45 The mighty mere-woman; he made a great onset | |
With weapon-of-battle, his hand not desisted | |
From striking, that war-blade struck on her head then | |
A battle-song greedy. The stranger perceived then | |
{The sword will not bite.} | |
The sword would not bite, her life would not injure, | |
50 But the falchion failed the folk-prince when straitened: | |
Erst had it often onsets encountered, | |
Oft cloven the helmet, the fated one's armor: | |
'Twas the first time that ever the excellent jewel | |
Had failed of its fame. Firm-mooded after, | |
55 Not heedless of valor, but mindful of glory, | |
Was Higelac's kinsman; the hero-chief angry | |
Cast then his carved-sword covered with jewels | |
That it lay on the earth, hard and steel-pointed; | |
{The hero throws down all weapons, and again trusts to his hand-grip.} | |
He hoped in his strength, his hand-grapple sturdy. | |
60 So any must act whenever he thinketh | |
To gain him in battle glory unending, | |
And is reckless of living. The lord of the War-Geats | |
[53] (He shrank not from battle) seized by the shoulder[2] | |
The mother of Grendel; then mighty in struggle | |
65 Swung he his enemy, since his anger was kindled, | |
That she fell to the floor. With furious grapple | |
{Beowulf falls.} | |
She gave him requital[3] early thereafter, | |
And stretched out to grab him; the strongest of warriors | |
Faint-mooded stumbled, till he fell in his traces, | |
{The monster sits on him with drawn sword.} | |
70 Foot-going champion. Then she sat on the hall-guest | |
And wielded her war-knife wide-bladed, flashing, | |
For her son would take vengeance, her one only bairn. | |
{His armor saves his life.} | |
His breast-armor woven bode on his shoulder; | |
It guarded his life, the entrance defended | |
75 'Gainst sword-point and edges. Ecgtheow's son there | |
Had fatally journeyed, champion of Geatmen, | |
In the arms of the ocean, had the armor not given, | |
Close-woven corslet, comfort and succor, | |
{God arranged for his escape.} | |
And had God most holy not awarded the victory, | |
80 All-knowing Lord; easily did heaven's | |
Ruler most righteous arrange it with justice;[4] | |
Uprose he erect ready for battle. | |
[1] Kl. emends 'wæl-sweord.' The half-line would then read, '_the | |
battle-sword splendid_.'--For 'heard-ecg' in next half-verse, see note | |
to 20_39 above. | |
[2] Sw., R., and t.B. suggest 'feaxe' for 'eaxle' (1538) and render: | |
_Seized by the hair_. | |
[3] If 'hand-léan' be accepted (as the MS. has it), the line will | |
read: _She hand-reward gave him early thereafter_. | |
[4] Sw. and S. change H.-So.'s semicolon (v. 1557) to a comma, and | |
translate: _The Ruler of Heaven arranged it in justice easily, after | |
he arose again_. | |
XXIV. | |
BEOWULF IS DOUBLE-CONQUEROR. | |
{Beowulf grasps a giant-sword,} | |
Then he saw mid the war-gems a weapon of victory, | |
An ancient giant-sword, of edges a-doughty, | |
Glory of warriors: of weapons 'twas choicest, | |
Only 'twas larger than any man else was | |
[54] 5 Able to bear to the battle-encounter, | |
The good and splendid work of the giants. | |
He grasped then the sword-hilt, knight of the Scyldings, | |
Bold and battle-grim, brandished his ring-sword, | |
Hopeless of living, hotly he smote her, | |
10 That the fiend-woman's neck firmly it grappled, | |
{and fells the female monster.} | |
Broke through her bone-joints, the bill fully pierced her | |
Fate-cursèd body, she fell to the ground then: | |
The hand-sword was bloody, the hero exulted. | |
The brand was brilliant, brightly it glimmered, | |
15 Just as from heaven gemlike shineth | |
The torch of the firmament. He glanced 'long the building, | |
And turned by the wall then, Higelac's vassal | |
Raging and wrathful raised his battle-sword | |
Strong by the handle. The edge was not useless | |
20 To the hero-in-battle, but he speedily wished to | |
Give Grendel requital for the many assaults he | |
Had worked on the West-Danes not once, but often, | |
When he slew in slumber the subjects of Hrothgar, | |
Swallowed down fifteen sleeping retainers | |
25 Of the folk of the Danemen, and fully as many | |
Carried away, a horrible prey. | |
He gave him requital, grim-raging champion, | |
{Beowulf sees the body of Grendel, and cuts off his head.} | |
When he saw on his rest-place weary of conflict | |
Grendel lying, of life-joys bereavèd, | |
30 As the battle at Heorot erstwhile had scathed him; | |
His body far bounded, a blow when he suffered, | |
Death having seized him, sword-smiting heavy, | |
And he cut off his head then. Early this noticed | |
The clever carles who as comrades of Hrothgar | |
{The waters are gory.} | |
35 Gazed on the sea-deeps, that the surging wave-currents | |
Were mightily mingled, the mere-flood was gory: | |
Of the good one the gray-haired together held converse, | |
{Beowulf is given up for dead.} | |
The hoary of head, that they hoped not to see again | |
The atheling ever, that exulting in victory | |
40 He'd return there to visit the distinguished folk-ruler: | |
[55] Then many concluded the mere-wolf had killed him.[1] | |
The ninth hour came then. From the ness-edge departed | |
The bold-mooded Scyldings; the gold-friend of heroes | |
Homeward betook him. The strangers sat down then | |
45 Soul-sick, sorrowful, the sea-waves regarding: | |
They wished and yet weened not their well-loved friend-lord | |
{The giant-sword melts.} | |
To see any more. The sword-blade began then, | |
The blood having touched it, contracting and shriveling | |
With battle-icicles; 'twas a wonderful marvel | |
50 That it melted entirely, likest to ice when | |
The Father unbindeth the bond of the frost and | |
Unwindeth the wave-bands, He who wieldeth dominion | |
Of times and of tides: a truth-firm Creator. | |
Nor took he of jewels more in the dwelling, | |
55 Lord of the Weders, though they lay all around him, | |
Than the head and the handle handsome with jewels; | |
[56] The brand early melted, burnt was the weapon:[2] | |
So hot was the blood, the strange-spirit poisonous | |
{The hero swims back to the realms of day.} | |
That in it did perish. He early swam off then | |
60 Who had bided in combat the carnage of haters, | |
Went up through the ocean; the eddies were cleansèd, | |
The spacious expanses, when the spirit from farland | |
His life put aside and this short-lived existence. | |
The seamen's defender came swimming to land then | |
65 Doughty of spirit, rejoiced in his sea-gift, | |
The bulky burden which he bore in his keeping. | |
The excellent vassals advanced then to meet him, | |
To God they were grateful, were glad in their chieftain, | |
That to see him safe and sound was granted them. | |
70 From the high-minded hero, then, helmet and burnie | |
Were speedily loosened: the ocean was putrid, | |
The water 'neath welkin weltered with gore. | |
Forth did they fare, then, their footsteps retracing, | |
Merry and mirthful, measured the earth-way, | |
75 The highway familiar: men very daring[3] | |
Bare then the head from the sea-cliff, burdening | |
Each of the earlmen, excellent-valiant. | |
{It takes four men to carry Grendel's head on a spear.} | |
Four of them had to carry with labor | |
The head of Grendel to the high towering gold-hall | |
80 Upstuck on the spear, till fourteen most-valiant | |
And battle-brave Geatmen came there going | |
Straight to the palace: the prince of the people | |
Measured the mead-ways, their mood-brave companion. | |
The atheling of earlmen entered the building, | |
85 Deed-valiant man, adorned with distinction, | |
Doughty shield-warrior, to address King Hrothgar: | |
[57] Then hung by the hair, the head of Grendel | |
Was borne to the building, where beer-thanes were drinking, | |
Loth before earlmen and eke 'fore the lady: | |
90 The warriors beheld then a wonderful sight. | |
[1] 'Þæs monige gewearð' (1599) and 'hafað þæs geworden' (2027).--In a | |
paper published some years ago in one of the Johns Hopkins University | |
circulars, I tried to throw upon these two long-doubtful passages some | |
light derived from a study of like passages in Alfred's prose.--The | |
impersonal verb 'geweorðan,' with an accus. of the person, and a | |
þæt-clause is used several times with the meaning 'agree.' See Orosius | |
(Sweet's ed.) 178_7; 204_34; 208_28; 210_15; 280_20. In the two | |
Beowulf passages, the þæt-clause is anticipated by 'þæs,' which is | |
clearly a gen. of the thing agreed on. | |
The first passage (v. 1599 (b)-1600) I translate literally: _Then many | |
agreed upon this (namely), that the sea-wolf had killed him_. | |
The second passage (v. 2025 (b)-2027): _She is promised ...; to this | |
the friend of the Scyldings has agreed, etc_. By emending 'is' instead | |
of 'wæs' (2025), the tenses will be brought into perfect harmony. | |
In v. 1997 ff. this same idiom occurs, and was noticed in B.'s great | |
article on Beowulf, which appeared about the time I published my | |
reading of 1599 and 2027. Translate 1997 then: _Wouldst let the | |
South-Danes themselves decide about their struggle with Grendel_. Here | |
'Súð-Dene' is accus. of person, and 'gúðe' is gen. of thing agreed on. | |
With such collateral support as that afforded by B. (P. and B. XII. | |
97), I have no hesitation in departing from H.-So., my usual guide. | |
The idiom above treated runs through A.-S., Old Saxon, and other | |
Teutonic languages, and should be noticed in the lexicons. | |
[2] 'Bróden-mæl' is regarded by most scholars as meaning a damaskeened | |
sword. Translate: _The damaskeened sword burned up_. Cf. 25_16 and | |
note. | |
[3] 'Cyning-balde' (1635) is the much-disputed reading of K. and Th. | |
To render this, "_nobly bold_," "_excellently bold_," have been | |
suggested. B. would read 'cyning-holde' (cf. 290), and render: _Men | |
well-disposed towards the king carried the head, etc._ 'Cynebealde,' | |
says t.B., endorsing Gr. | |
XXV. | |
BEOWULF BRINGS HIS TROPHIES.--HROTHGAR'S GRATITUDE. | |
{Beowulf relates his last exploit.} | |
Beowulf spake, offspring of Ecgtheow: | |
"Lo! we blithely have brought thee, bairn of Healfdene, | |
Prince of the Scyldings, these presents from ocean | |
Which thine eye looketh on, for an emblem of glory. | |
5 I came off alive from this, narrowly 'scaping: | |
In war 'neath the water the work with great pains I | |
Performed, and the fight had been finished quite nearly, | |
Had God not defended me. I failed in the battle | |
Aught to accomplish, aided by Hrunting, | |
10 Though that weapon was worthy, but the Wielder of earth-folk | |
{God was fighting with me.} | |
Gave me willingly to see on the wall a | |
Heavy old hand-sword hanging in splendor | |
(He guided most often the lorn and the friendless), | |
That I swung as a weapon. The wards of the house then | |
15 I killed in the conflict (when occasion was given me). | |
Then the battle-sword burned, the brand that was lifted,[1] | |
As the blood-current sprang, hottest of war-sweats; | |
Seizing the hilt, from my foes I offbore it; | |
I avenged as I ought to their acts of malignity, | |
20 The murder of Danemen. I then make thee this promise, | |
{Heorot is freed from monsters.} | |
Thou'lt be able in Heorot careless to slumber | |
With thy throng of heroes and the thanes of thy people | |
Every and each, of greater and lesser, | |
And thou needest not fear for them from the selfsame direction | |
25 As thou formerly fearedst, oh, folk-lord of Scyldings, | |
[58] End-day for earlmen." To the age-hoary man then, | |
{The famous sword is presented to Hrothgar.} | |
The gray-haired chieftain, the gold-fashioned sword-hilt, | |
Old-work of giants, was thereupon given; | |
Since the fall of the fiends, it fell to the keeping | |
30 Of the wielder of Danemen, the wonder-smith's labor, | |
And the bad-mooded being abandoned this world then, | |
Opponent of God, victim of murder, | |
And also his mother; it went to the keeping | |
Of the best of the world-kings, where waters encircle, | |
35 Who the scot divided in Scylding dominion. | |
{Hrothgar looks closely at the old sword.} | |
Hrothgar discoursed, the hilt he regarded, | |
The ancient heirloom where an old-time contention's | |
Beginning was graven: the gurgling currents, | |
The flood slew thereafter the race of the giants, | |
40 They had proved themselves daring: that people was loth to | |
{It had belonged to a race hateful to God.} | |
The Lord everlasting, through lash of the billows | |
The Father gave them final requital. | |
So in letters of rune on the clasp of the handle | |
Gleaming and golden, 'twas graven exactly, | |
45 Set forth and said, whom that sword had been made for, | |
Finest of irons, who first it was wrought for, | |
Wreathed at its handle and gleaming with serpents. | |
The wise one then said (silent they all were) | |
{Hrothgar praises Beowulf.} | |
Son of old Healfdene: "He may say unrefuted | |
50 Who performs 'mid the folk-men fairness and truth | |
(The hoary old ruler remembers the past), | |
That better by birth is this bairn of the nobles! | |
Thy fame is extended through far-away countries, | |
Good friend Beowulf, o'er all of the races, | |
55 Thou holdest all firmly, hero-like strength with | |
Prudence of spirit. I'll prove myself grateful | |
As before we agreed on; thou granted for long shalt | |
Become a great comfort to kinsmen and comrades, | |
{Heremod's career is again contrasted with Beowulf's.} | |
A help unto heroes. Heremod became not | |
60 Such to the Scyldings, successors of Ecgwela; | |
He grew not to please them, but grievous destruction, | |
[59] And diresome death-woes to Danemen attracted; | |
He slew in anger his table-companions, | |
Trustworthy counsellors, till he turned off lonely | |
65 From world-joys away, wide-famous ruler: | |
Though high-ruling heaven in hero-strength raised him, | |
In might exalted him, o'er men of all nations | |
Made him supreme, yet a murderous spirit | |
Grew in his bosom: he gave then no ring-gems | |
{A wretched failure of a king, to give no jewels to his retainers.} | |
70 To the Danes after custom; endured he unjoyful | |
Standing the straits from strife that was raging, | |
Longsome folk-sorrow. Learn then from this, | |
Lay hold of virtue! Though laden with winters, | |
I have sung thee these measures. 'Tis a marvel to tell it, | |
{Hrothgar moralizes.} | |
75 How all-ruling God from greatness of spirit | |
Giveth wisdom to children of men, | |
Manor and earlship: all things He ruleth. | |
He often permitteth the mood-thought of man of | |
The illustrious lineage to lean to possessions, | |
80 Allows him earthly delights at his manor, | |
A high-burg of heroes to hold in his keeping, | |
Maketh portions of earth-folk hear him, | |
And a wide-reaching kingdom so that, wisdom failing him, | |
He himself is unable to reckon its boundaries; | |
85 He liveth in luxury, little debars him, | |
Nor sickness nor age, no treachery-sorrow | |
Becloudeth his spirit, conflict nowhere, | |
No sword-hate, appeareth, but all of the world doth | |
Wend as he wisheth; the worse he knoweth not, | |
90 Till arrant arrogance inward pervading, | |
Waxeth and springeth, when the warder is sleeping, | |
The guard of the soul: with sorrows encompassed, | |
Too sound is his slumber, the slayer is near him, | |
Who with bow and arrow aimeth in malice. | |
[60] | |
[1] Or rather, perhaps, '_the inlaid, or damaskeened weapon_.' Cf. | |
24_57 and note. | |
XXVI. | |
HROTHGAR MORALIZES.--REST AFTER LABOR. | |
{A wounded spirit.} | |
"Then bruised in his bosom he with bitter-toothed missile | |
Is hurt 'neath his helmet: from harmful pollution | |
He is powerless to shield him by the wonderful mandates | |
Of the loath-cursèd spirit; what too long he hath holden | |
5 Him seemeth too small, savage he hoardeth, | |
Nor boastfully giveth gold-plated rings,[1] | |
The fate of the future flouts and forgetteth | |
Since God had erst given him greatness no little, | |
Wielder of Glory. His end-day anear, | |
10 It afterward happens that the bodily-dwelling | |
Fleetingly fadeth, falls into ruins; | |
Another lays hold who doleth the ornaments, | |
The nobleman's jewels, nothing lamenting, | |
Heedeth no terror. Oh, Beowulf dear, | |
15 Best of the heroes, from bale-strife defend thee, | |
And choose thee the better, counsels eternal; | |
{Be not over proud: life is fleeting, and its strength soon wasteth away.} | |
Beware of arrogance, world-famous champion! | |
But a little-while lasts thy life-vigor's fulness; | |
'Twill after hap early, that illness or sword-edge | |
20 Shall part thee from strength, or the grasp of the fire, | |
Or the wave of the current, or clutch of the edges, | |
Or flight of the war-spear, or age with its horrors, | |
Or thine eyes' bright flashing shall fade into darkness: | |
'Twill happen full early, excellent hero, | |
{Hrothgar gives an account of his reign.} | |
25 That death shall subdue thee. So the Danes a half-century | |
I held under heaven, helped them in struggles | |
'Gainst many a race in middle-earth's regions, | |
With ash-wood and edges, that enemies none | |
On earth molested me. Lo! offsetting change, now, | |
[61] | |
{Sorrow after joy.} | |
30 Came to my manor, grief after joyance, | |
When Grendel became my constant visitor, | |
Inveterate hater: I from that malice | |
Continually travailed with trouble no little. | |
Thanks be to God that I gained in my lifetime, | |
35 To the Lord everlasting, to look on the gory | |
Head with mine eyes, after long-lasting sorrow! | |
Go to the bench now, battle-adornèd | |
Joy in the feasting: of jewels in common | |
We'll meet with many when morning appeareth." | |
40 The Geatman was gladsome, ganged he immediately | |
To go to the bench, as the clever one bade him. | |
Then again as before were the famous-for-prowess, | |
Hall-inhabiters, handsomely banqueted, | |
Feasted anew. The night-veil fell then | |
45 Dark o'er the warriors. The courtiers rose then; | |
The gray-haired was anxious to go to his slumbers, | |
The hoary old Scylding. Hankered the Geatman, | |
{Beowulf is fagged, and seeks rest.} | |
The champion doughty, greatly, to rest him: | |
An earlman early outward did lead him, | |
50 Fagged from his faring, from far-country springing, | |
Who for etiquette's sake all of a liegeman's | |
Needs regarded, such as seamen at that time | |
Were bounden to feel. The big-hearted rested; | |
The building uptowered, spacious and gilded, | |
55 The guest within slumbered, till the sable-clad raven | |
Blithely foreboded the beacon of heaven. | |
Then the bright-shining sun o'er the bottoms came going;[2] | |
The warriors hastened, the heads of the peoples | |
Were ready to go again to their peoples, | |
{The Geats prepare to leave Dane-land.} | |
60 The high-mooded farer would faraway thenceward | |
Look for his vessel. The valiant one bade then,[3] | |
[62] | |
{Unferth asks Beowulf to accept his sword as a gift. Beowulf thanks him.} | |
Offspring of Ecglaf, off to bear Hrunting, | |
To take his weapon, his well-beloved iron; | |
He him thanked for the gift, saying good he accounted | |
65 The war-friend and mighty, nor chid he with words then | |
The blade of the brand: 'twas a brave-mooded hero. | |
When the warriors were ready, arrayed in their trappings, | |
The atheling dear to the Danemen advanced then | |
On to the dais, where the other was sitting, | |
70 Grim-mooded hero, greeted King Hrothgar. | |
[1] K. says '_proudly giveth_.'--Gr. says, '_And gives no gold-plated | |
rings, in order to incite the recipient to boastfulness_.'--B. | |
suggests 'gyld' for 'gylp,' and renders: _And gives no beaten rings | |
for reward_. | |
[2] If S.'s emendation be accepted, v. 57 will read: _Then came the | |
light, going bright after darkness: the warriors, etc_. | |
[3] As the passage stands in H.-So., Unferth presents Beowulf with the | |
sword Hrunting, and B. thanks him for the gift. If, however, the | |
suggestions of Grdtvg. and M. be accepted, the passage will read: | |
_Then the brave one (_i.e._ Beowulf) commanded that Hrunting be borne | |
to the son of Ecglaf (Unferth), bade him take his sword, his dear | |
weapon; he (B.) thanked him (U.) for the loan, etc_. | |
XXVII. | |
SORROW AT PARTING. | |
{Beowulf's farewell.} | |
Beowulf spake, Ecgtheow's offspring: | |
"We men of the water wish to declare now | |
Fared from far-lands, we're firmly determined | |
To seek King Higelac. Here have we fitly | |
5 Been welcomed and feasted, as heart would desire it; | |
Good was the greeting. If greater affection | |
I am anywise able ever on earth to | |
Gain at thy hands, ruler of heroes, | |
Than yet I have done, I shall quickly be ready | |
{I shall be ever ready to aid thee.} | |
10 For combat and conflict. O'er the course of the waters | |
Learn I that neighbors alarm thee with terror, | |
As haters did whilom, I hither will bring thee | |
For help unto heroes henchmen by thousands. | |
{My liegelord will encourage me in aiding thee.} | |
I know as to Higelac, the lord of the Geatmen, | |
15 Though young in years, he yet will permit me, | |
By words and by works, ward of the people, | |
Fully to furnish thee forces and bear thee | |
My lance to relieve thee, if liegemen shall fail thee, | |
And help of my hand-strength; if Hrethric be treating, | |
[63] 20 Bairn of the king, at the court of the Geatmen, | |
He thereat may find him friends in abundance: | |
Faraway countries he were better to seek for | |
Who trusts in himself." Hrothgar discoursed then, | |
Making rejoinder: "These words thou hast uttered | |
25 All-knowing God hath given thy spirit! | |
{O Beowulf, thou art wise beyond thy years.} | |
Ne'er heard I an earlman thus early in life | |
More clever in speaking: thou'rt cautious of spirit, | |
Mighty of muscle, in mouth-answers prudent. | |
I count on the hope that, happen it ever | |
30 That missile shall rob thee of Hrethel's descendant, | |
Edge-horrid battle, and illness or weapon | |
Deprive thee of prince, of people's protector, | |
{Should Higelac die, the Geats could find no better successor than thou | |
wouldst make.} | |
And life thou yet holdest, the Sea-Geats will never | |
Find a more fitting folk-lord to choose them, | |
35 Gem-ward of heroes, than _thou_ mightest prove thee, | |
If the kingdom of kinsmen thou carest to govern. | |
Thy mood-spirit likes me the longer the better, | |
Beowulf dear: thou hast brought it to pass that | |
To both these peoples peace shall be common, | |
{Thou hast healed the ancient breach between our races.} | |
40 To Geat-folk and Danemen, the strife be suspended, | |
The secret assailings they suffered in yore-days; | |
And also that jewels be shared while I govern | |
The wide-stretching kingdom, and that many shall visit | |
Others o'er the ocean with excellent gift-gems: | |
45 The ring-adorned bark shall bring o'er the currents | |
Presents and love-gifts. This people I know | |
Tow'rd foeman and friend firmly established,[1] | |
After ancient etiquette everywise blameless." | |
Then the warden of earlmen gave him still farther, | |
{Parting gifts} | |
50 Kinsman of Healfdene, a dozen of jewels, | |
Bade him safely seek with the presents | |
His well-beloved people, early returning. | |
[64] | |
{Hrothgar kisses Beowulf, and weeps.} | |
Then the noble-born king kissed the distinguished, | |
Dear-lovèd liegeman, the Dane-prince saluted him, | |
55 And claspèd his neck; tears from him fell, | |
From the gray-headed man: he two things expected, | |
Agèd and reverend, but rather the second, | |
[2]That bold in council they'd meet thereafter. | |
The man was so dear that he failed to suppress the | |
60 Emotions that moved him, but in mood-fetters fastened | |
{The old king is deeply grieved to part with his benefactor.} | |
The long-famous hero longeth in secret | |
Deep in his spirit for the dear-beloved man | |
Though not a blood-kinsman. Beowulf thenceward, | |
Gold-splendid warrior, walked o'er the meadows | |
65 Exulting in treasure: the sea-going vessel | |
Riding at anchor awaited its owner. | |
As they pressed on their way then, the present of Hrothgar | |
{Giving liberally is the true proof of kingship.} | |
Was frequently referred to: a folk-king indeed that | |
Everyway blameless, till age did debar him | |
70 The joys of his might, which hath many oft injured. | |
[1] For 'geworhte,' the crux of this passage, B. proposes 'geþóhte,' | |
rendering: _I know this people with firm thought every way blameless | |
towards foe and friends_. | |
[2] S. and B. emend so as to negative the verb 'meet.' "Why should | |
Hrothgar weep if he expects to meet Beowulf again?" both these | |
scholars ask. But the weeping is mentioned before the 'expectations': | |
the tears may have been due to many emotions, especially gratitude, | |
struggling for expression. | |
XXVIII. | |
THE HOMEWARD JOURNEY.--THE TWO QUEENS. | |
Then the band of very valiant retainers | |
Came to the current; they were clad all in armor, | |
{The coast-guard again.} | |
In link-woven burnies. The land-warder noticed | |
The return of the earlmen, as he erstwhile had seen them; | |
5 Nowise with insult he greeted the strangers | |
From the naze of the cliff, but rode on to meet them; | |
Said the bright-armored visitors[1] vesselward traveled | |
[65] Welcome to Weders. The wide-bosomed craft then | |
Lay on the sand, laden with armor, | |
10 With horses and jewels, the ring-stemmèd sailer: | |
The mast uptowered o'er the treasure of Hrothgar. | |
{Beowulf gives the guard a handsome sword.} | |
To the boat-ward a gold-bound brand he presented, | |
That he was afterwards honored on the ale-bench more highly | |
As the heirloom's owner. [2]Set he out on his vessel, | |
15 To drive on the deep, Dane-country left he. | |
Along by the mast then a sea-garment fluttered, | |
A rope-fastened sail. The sea-boat resounded, | |
The wind o'er the waters the wave-floater nowise | |
Kept from its journey; the sea-goer traveled, | |
20 The foamy-necked floated forth o'er the currents, | |
The well-fashioned vessel o'er the ways of the ocean, | |
{The Geats see their own land again.} | |
Till they came within sight of the cliffs of the Geatmen, | |
The well-known headlands. The wave-goer hastened | |
Driven by breezes, stood on the shore. | |
{The port-warden is anxiously looking for them.} | |
25 Prompt at the ocean, the port-ward was ready, | |
Who long in the past outlooked in the distance,[3] | |
At water's-edge waiting well-lovèd heroes; | |
He bound to the bank then the broad-bosomed vessel | |
Fast in its fetters, lest the force of the waters | |
30 Should be able to injure the ocean-wood winsome. | |
Bade he up then take the treasure of princes, | |
Plate-gold and fretwork; not far was it thence | |
To go off in search of the giver of jewels: | |
[66] Hrethel's son Higelac at home there remaineth,[4] | |
35 Himself with his comrades close to the sea-coast. | |
The building was splendid, the king heroic, | |
Great in his hall, Hygd very young was, | |
{Hygd, the noble queen of Higelac, lavish of gifts.} | |
Fine-mooded, clever, though few were the winters | |
That the daughter of Hæreth had dwelt in the borough; | |
40 But she nowise was cringing nor niggard of presents, | |
Of ornaments rare, to the race of the Geatmen. | |
{Offa's consort, Thrytho, is contrasted with Hygd.} | |
Thrytho nursed anger, excellent[5] folk-queen, | |
Hot-burning hatred: no hero whatever | |
'Mong household companions, her husband excepted | |
{She is a terror to all save her husband.} | |
45 Dared to adventure to look at the woman | |
With eyes in the daytime;[6] but he knew that death-chains | |
Hand-wreathed were wrought him: early thereafter, | |
When the hand-strife was over, edges were ready, | |
That fierce-raging sword-point had to force a decision, | |
50 Murder-bale show. Such no womanly custom | |
For a lady to practise, though lovely her person, | |
That a weaver-of-peace, on pretence of anger | |
A belovèd liegeman of life should deprive. | |
Soothly this hindered Heming's kinsman; | |
55 Other ale-drinking earlmen asserted | |
That fearful folk-sorrows fewer she wrought them, | |
Treacherous doings, since first she was given | |
Adorned with gold to the war-hero youthful, | |
For her origin honored, when Offa's great palace | |
60 O'er the fallow flood by her father's instructions | |
She sought on her journey, where she afterwards fully, | |
Famed for her virtue, her fate on the king's-seat | |
[67] Enjoyed in her lifetime, love did she hold with | |
The ruler of heroes, the best, it is told me, | |
65 Of all of the earthmen that oceans encompass, | |
Of earl-kindreds endless; hence Offa was famous | |
Far and widely, by gifts and by battles, | |
Spear-valiant hero; the home of his fathers | |
He governed with wisdom, whence Eomær did issue | |
70 For help unto heroes, Heming's kinsman, | |
Grandson of Garmund, great in encounters. | |
[1] For 'scawan' (1896), 'scaðan' has been proposed. Accepting this, | |
we may render: _He said the bright-armored warriors were going to | |
their vessel, welcome, etc_. (Cf. 1804.) | |
[2] R. suggests, 'Gewát him on naca,' and renders: _The vessel set | |
out, to drive on the sea, the Dane-country left_. 'On' bears the | |
alliteration; cf. 'on hafu' (2524). This has some advantages over the | |
H.-So. reading; viz. (1) It adds nothing to the text; (2) it makes | |
'naca' the subject, and thus brings the passage into keeping with the | |
context, where the poet has exhausted his vocabulary in detailing the | |
actions of the vessel.--B.'s emendation (cf. P. and B. XII. 97) is | |
violent. | |
[3] B. translates: _Who for a long time, ready at the coast, had | |
looked out into the distance eagerly for the dear men_. This changes | |
the syntax of 'léofra manna.' | |
[4] For 'wunað' (v. 1924) several eminent critics suggest 'wunade' | |
(=remained). This makes the passage much clearer. | |
[5] Why should such a woman be described as an 'excellent' queen? C. | |
suggests 'frécnu' = dangerous, bold. | |
[6] For 'an dæges' various readings have been offered. If 'and-éges' | |
be accepted, the sentence will read: _No hero ... dared look upon her, | |
eye to eye_. If 'án-dæges' be adopted, translate: _Dared look upon her | |
the whole day_. | |
XXIX. | |
BEOWULF AND HIGELAC. | |
Then the brave one departed, his band along with him, | |
{Beowulf and his party seek Higelac.} | |
Seeking the sea-shore, the sea-marches treading, | |
The wide-stretching shores. The world-candle glimmered, | |
The sun from the southward; they proceeded then onward, | |
5 Early arriving where they heard that the troop-lord, | |
Ongentheow's slayer, excellent, youthful | |
Folk-prince and warrior was distributing jewels, | |
Close in his castle. The coming of Beowulf | |
Was announced in a message quickly to Higelac, | |
10 That the folk-troop's defender forth to the palace | |
The linden-companion alive was advancing, | |
Secure from the combat courtward a-going. | |
The building was early inward made ready | |
For the foot-going guests as the good one had ordered. | |
{Beowulf sits by his liegelord.} | |
15 He sat by the man then who had lived through the struggle, | |
Kinsman by kinsman, when the king of the people | |
Had in lordly language saluted the dear one, | |
{Queen Hygd receives the heroes.} | |
In words that were formal. The daughter of Hæreth | |
Coursed through the building, carrying mead-cups:[1] | |
[68] 20 She loved the retainers, tendered the beakers | |
To the high-minded Geatmen. Higelac 'gan then | |
{Higelac is greatly interested in Beowulf's adventures.} | |
Pleasantly plying his companion with questions | |
In the high-towering palace. A curious interest | |
Tormented his spirit, what meaning to see in | |
25 The Sea-Geats' adventures: "Beowulf worthy, | |
{Give an account of thy adventures, Beowulf dear.} | |
How throve your journeying, when thou thoughtest suddenly | |
Far o'er the salt-streams to seek an encounter, | |
A battle at Heorot? Hast bettered for Hrothgar, | |
The famous folk-leader, his far-published sorrows | |
30 Any at all? In agony-billows | |
{My suspense has been great.} | |
I mused upon torture, distrusted the journey | |
Of the belovèd liegeman; I long time did pray thee | |
By no means to seek out the murderous spirit, | |
To suffer the South-Danes themselves to decide on[2] | |
35 Grappling with Grendel. To God I am thankful | |
To be suffered to see thee safe from thy journey." | |
{Beowulf narrates his adventures.} | |
Beowulf answered, bairn of old Ecgtheow: | |
"'Tis hidden by no means, Higelac chieftain, | |
From many of men, the meeting so famous, | |
40 What mournful moments of me and of Grendel | |
Were passed in the place where he pressing affliction | |
On the Victory-Scyldings scathefully brought, | |
Anguish forever; that all I avengèd, | |
So that any under heaven of the kinsmen of Grendel | |
{Grendel's kindred have no cause to boast.} | |
45 Needeth not boast of that cry-in-the-morning, | |
Who longest liveth of the loth-going kindred,[3] | |
Encompassed by moorland. I came in my journey | |
To the royal ring-hall, Hrothgar to greet there: | |
{Hrothgar received me very cordially.} | |
Soon did the famous scion of Healfdene, | |
50 When he understood fully the spirit that led me, | |
Assign me a seat with the son of his bosom. | |
[69] The troop was in joyance; mead-glee greater | |
'Neath arch of the ether not ever beheld I | |
{The queen also showed up no little honor.} | |
'Mid hall-building holders. The highly-famed queen, | |
55 Peace-tie of peoples, oft passed through the building, | |
Cheered the young troopers; she oft tendered a hero | |
A beautiful ring-band, ere she went to her sitting. | |
{Hrothgar's lovely daughter.} | |
Oft the daughter of Hrothgar in view of the courtiers | |
To the earls at the end the ale-vessel carried, | |
60 Whom Freaware I heard then hall-sitters title, | |
When nail-adorned jewels she gave to the heroes: | |
{She is betrothed to Ingeld, in order to unite the Danes and Heathobards.} | |
Gold-bedecked, youthful, to the glad son of Froda | |
Her faith has been plighted; the friend of the Scyldings, | |
The guard of the kingdom, hath given his sanction,[4] | |
65 And counts it a vantage, for a part of the quarrels, | |
A portion of hatred, to pay with the woman. | |
[5]Somewhere not rarely, when the ruler has fallen, | |
The life-taking lance relaxeth its fury | |
For a brief breathing-spell, though the bride be charming! | |
[1] 'Meodu-scencum' (1981) some would render '_with mead-pourers_.' | |
Translate then: _The daughter of Hæreth went through the building | |
accompanied by mead-pourers_. | |
[2] See my note to 1599, supra, and B. in P. and B. XII. 97. | |
[3] For 'fenne,' supplied by Grdtvg., B. suggests 'fácne' (cf. Jul. | |
350). Accepting this, translate: _Who longest lives of the hated race, | |
steeped in treachery_. | |
[4] See note to v. 1599 above. | |
[5] This is perhaps the least understood sentence in the poem, almost | |
every word being open to dispute. (1) The 'nó' of our text is an | |
emendation, and is rejected by many scholars. (2) 'Seldan' is by some | |
taken as an adv. (= _seldom_), and by others as a noun (= _page_, | |
_companion_). (3) 'Léod-hryre,' some render '_fall of the people_'; | |
others, '_fall of the prince_.' (4) 'Búgeð,' most scholars regard as | |
the intrans. verb meaning '_bend_,' '_rest_'; but one great scholar has | |
translated it '_shall kill_.' (5) 'Hwær,' Very recently, has been | |
attacked, 'wære' being suggested. (6) As a corollary to the above, the | |
same critic proposes to drop 'oft' out of the text.--t.B. suggests: Oft | |
seldan wære after léodhryre: lýtle hwíle bongár búgeð, þéah séo brýd | |
duge = _often has a treaty been (thus) struck, after a prince had | |
fallen: (but only) a short time is the spear (then) wont to rest, | |
however excellent the bride may be_. | |
XXX. | |
BEOWULF NARRATES HIS ADVENTURES TO HIGELAC. | |
"It well may discomfit the prince of the Heathobards | |
And each of the thanemen of earls that attend him, | |
[70] When he goes to the building escorting the woman, | |
That a noble-born Daneman the knights should be feasting: | |
5 There gleam on his person the leavings of elders | |
Hard and ring-bright, Heathobards' treasure, | |
While they wielded their arms, till they misled to the battle | |
Their own dear lives and belovèd companions. | |
He saith at the banquet who the collar beholdeth, | |
10 An ancient ash-warrior who earlmen's destruction | |
Clearly recalleth (cruel his spirit), | |
Sadly beginneth sounding the youthful | |
Thane-champion's spirit through the thoughts of his bosom, | |
War-grief to waken, and this word-answer speaketh: | |
{Ingeld is stirred up to break the truce.} | |
15 'Art thou able, my friend, to know when thou seest it | |
The brand which thy father bare to the conflict | |
In his latest adventure, 'neath visor of helmet, | |
The dearly-loved iron, where Danemen did slay him, | |
And brave-mooded Scyldings, on the fall of the heroes, | |
20 (When vengeance was sleeping) the slaughter-place wielded? | |
E'en now some man of the murderer's progeny | |
Exulting in ornaments enters the building, | |
Boasts of his blood-shedding, offbeareth the jewel | |
Which thou shouldst wholly hold in possession!' | |
25 So he urgeth and mindeth on every occasion | |
With woe-bringing words, till waxeth the season | |
When the woman's thane for the works of his father, | |
The bill having bitten, blood-gory sleepeth, | |
Fated to perish; the other one thenceward | |
30 'Scapeth alive, the land knoweth thoroughly.[1] | |
Then the oaths of the earlmen on each side are broken, | |
When rancors unresting are raging in Ingeld | |
And his wife-love waxeth less warm after sorrow. | |
So the Heathobards' favor not faithful I reckon, | |
35 Their part in the treaty not true to the Danemen, | |
Their friendship not fast. I further shall tell thee | |
[71] | |
{Having made these preliminary statements, I will now tell thee of | |
Grendel, the monster.} | |
More about Grendel, that thou fully mayst hear, | |
Ornament-giver, what afterward came from | |
The hand-rush of heroes. When heaven's bright jewel | |
40 O'er earthfields had glided, the stranger came raging, | |
The horrible night-fiend, us for to visit, | |
Where wholly unharmed the hall we were guarding. | |
{Hondscio fell first} | |
To Hondscio happened a hopeless contention, | |
Death to the doomed one, dead he fell foremost, | |
45 Girded war-champion; to him Grendel became then, | |
To the vassal distinguished, a tooth-weaponed murderer, | |
The well-beloved henchman's body all swallowed. | |
Not the earlier off empty of hand did | |
The bloody-toothed murderer, mindful of evils, | |
50 Wish to escape from the gold-giver's palace, | |
But sturdy of strength he strove to outdo me, | |
Hand-ready grappled. A glove was suspended | |
Spacious and wondrous, in art-fetters fastened, | |
Which was fashioned entirely by touch of the craftman | |
55 From the dragon's skin by the devil's devices: | |
He down in its depths would do me unsadly | |
One among many, deed-doer raging, | |
Though sinless he saw me; not so could it happen | |
When I in my anger upright did stand. | |
60 'Tis too long to recount how requital I furnished | |
For every evil to the earlmen's destroyer; | |
{I reflected honor upon my people.} | |
'Twas there, my prince, that I proudly distinguished | |
Thy land with my labors. He left and retreated, | |
He lived his life a little while longer: | |
65 Yet his right-hand guarded his footstep in Heorot, | |
And sad-mooded thence to the sea-bottom fell he, | |
Mournful in mind. For the might-rush of battle | |
{King Hrothgar lavished gifts upon me.} | |
The friend of the Scyldings, with gold that was plated, | |
With ornaments many, much requited me, | |
70 When daylight had dawned, and down to the banquet | |
We had sat us together. There was chanting and joyance: | |
The age-stricken Scylding asked many questions | |
[72] And of old-times related; oft light-ringing harp-strings, | |
Joy-telling wood, were touched by the brave one; | |
75 Now he uttered measures, mourning and truthful, | |
Then the large-hearted land-king a legend of wonder | |
Truthfully told us. Now troubled with years | |
{The old king is sad over the loss of his youthful vigor.} | |
The age-hoary warrior afterward began to | |
Mourn for the might that marked him in youth-days; | |
80 His breast within boiled, when burdened with winters | |
Much he remembered. From morning till night then | |
We joyed us therein as etiquette suffered, | |
Till the second night season came unto earth-folk. | |
Then early thereafter, the mother of Grendel | |
{Grendel's mother.} | |
85 Was ready for vengeance, wretched she journeyed; | |
Her son had death ravished, the wrath of the Geatmen. | |
The horrible woman avengèd her offspring, | |
And with mighty mainstrength murdered a hero. | |
{Æschere falls a prey to her vengeance.} | |
There the spirit of Æschere, agèd adviser, | |
90 Was ready to vanish; nor when morn had lightened | |
Were they anywise suffered to consume him with fire, | |
Folk of the Danemen, the death-weakened hero, | |
Nor the belovèd liegeman to lay on the pyre; | |
{She suffered not his body to be burned, but ate it.} | |
She the corpse had offcarried in the clutch of the foeman[2] | |
95 'Neath mountain-brook's flood. To Hrothgar 'twas saddest | |
Of pains that ever had preyed on the chieftain; | |
By the life of thee the land-prince then me[3] | |
Besought very sadly, in sea-currents' eddies | |
To display my prowess, to peril my safety, | |
100 Might-deeds accomplish; much did he promise. | |
{I sought the creature in her den,} | |
I found then the famous flood-current's cruel, | |
Horrible depth-warder. A while unto us two | |
[73] Hand was in common; the currents were seething | |
With gore that was clotted, and Grendel's fierce mother's | |
{and hewed her head off.} | |
105 Head I offhacked in the hall at the bottom | |
With huge-reaching sword-edge, hardly I wrested | |
My life from her clutches; not doomed was I then, | |
{Jewels were freely bestowed upon me.} | |
But the warden of earlmen afterward gave me | |
Jewels in quantity, kinsman of Healfdene. | |
[1] For 'lifigende' (2063), a mere conjecture, 'wígende' has been | |
suggested. The line would then read: _Escapeth by fighting, knows the | |
land thoroughly_. | |
[2] For 'fæðmum,' Gr.'s conjecture, B. proposes 'færunga.' These three | |
half-verses would then read: _She bore off the corpse of her foe | |
suddenly under the mountain-torrent_. | |
[3] The phrase 'þíne lýfe' (2132) was long rendered '_with thy | |
(presupposed) permission_.' The verse would read: _The land-prince | |
then sadly besought me, with thy (presupposed) permission, etc_. | |
XXXI. | |
GIFT-GIVING IS MUTUAL. | |
"So the belovèd land-prince lived in decorum; | |
I had missed no rewards, no meeds of my prowess, | |
But he gave me jewels, regarding my wishes, | |
Healfdene his bairn; I'll bring them to thee, then, | |
{All my gifts I lay at thy feet.} | |
5 Atheling of earlmen, offer them gladly. | |
And still unto thee is all my affection:[1] | |
But few of my folk-kin find I surviving | |
But thee, dear Higelac!" Bade he in then to carry[2] | |
The boar-image, banner, battle-high helmet, | |
10 Iron-gray armor, the excellent weapon, | |
{This armor I have belonged of yore to Heregar.} | |
In song-measures said: "This suit-for-the-battle | |
Hrothgar presented me, bade me expressly, | |
Wise-mooded atheling, thereafter to tell thee[3] | |
The whole of its history, said King Heregar owned it, | |
15 Dane-prince for long: yet he wished not to give then | |
[74] The mail to his son, though dearly he loved him, | |
Hereward the hardy. Hold all in joyance!" | |
I heard that there followed hard on the jewels | |
Two braces of stallions of striking resemblance, | |
20 Dappled and yellow; he granted him usance | |
Of horses and treasures. So a kinsman should bear him, | |
No web of treachery weave for another, | |
Nor by cunning craftiness cause the destruction | |
{Higelac loves his nephew Beowulf.} | |
Of trusty companion. Most precious to Higelac, | |
25 The bold one in battle, was the bairn of his sister, | |
And each unto other mindful of favors. | |
{Beowulf gives Hygd the necklace that Wealhtheow had given him.} | |
I am told that to Hygd he proffered the necklace, | |
Wonder-gem rare that Wealhtheow gave him, | |
The troop-leader's daughter, a trio of horses | |
30 Slender and saddle-bright; soon did the jewel | |
Embellish her bosom, when the beer-feast was over. | |
So Ecgtheow's bairn brave did prove him, | |
{Beowulf is famous.} | |
War-famous man, by deeds that were valiant, | |
He lived in honor, belovèd companions | |
35 Slew not carousing; his mood was not cruel, | |
But by hand-strength hugest of heroes then living | |
The brave one retained the bountiful gift that | |
The Lord had allowed him. Long was he wretched, | |
So that sons of the Geatmen accounted him worthless, | |
40 And the lord of the liegemen loth was to do him | |
Mickle of honor, when mead-cups were passing; | |
They fully believed him idle and sluggish, | |
{He is requited for the slights suffered in earlier days.} | |
An indolent atheling: to the honor-blest man there | |
Came requital for the cuts he had suffered. | |
45 The folk-troop's defender bade fetch to the building | |
The heirloom of Hrethel, embellished with gold, | |
{Higelac overwhelms the conqueror with gifts.} | |
So the brave one enjoined it; there was jewel no richer | |
In the form of a weapon 'mong Geats of that era; | |
In Beowulf's keeping he placed it and gave him | |
50 Seven of thousands, manor and lordship. | |
Common to both was land 'mong the people, | |
[75] Estate and inherited rights and possessions, | |
To the second one specially spacious dominions, | |
To the one who was better. It afterward happened | |
55 In days that followed, befell the battle-thanes, | |
{After Heardred's death, Beowulf becomes king.} | |
After Higelac's death, and when Heardred was murdered | |
With weapons of warfare 'neath well-covered targets, | |
When valiant battlemen in victor-band sought him, | |
War-Scylfing heroes harassed the nephew | |
60 Of Hereric in battle. To Beowulf's keeping | |
Turned there in time extensive dominions: | |
{He rules the Geats fifty years.} | |
He fittingly ruled them a fifty of winters | |
(He a man-ruler wise was, manor-ward old) till | |
A certain one 'gan, on gloom-darkening nights, a | |
{The fire-drake.} | |
65 Dragon, to govern, who guarded a treasure, | |
A high-rising stone-cliff, on heath that was grayish: | |
A path 'neath it lay, unknown unto mortals. | |
Some one of earthmen entered the mountain, | |
The heathenish hoard laid hold of with ardor; | |
70 * * * * * * * | |
* * * * * * * | |
* * * * * * * | |
* * * * * * * | |
* * * * * * * | |
[1] This verse B. renders, '_Now serve I again thee alone as my | |
gracious king_.' | |
[2] For 'eafor' (2153), Kl. suggests 'ealdor.' Translate then: _Bade | |
the prince then to bear in the banner, battle-high helmet, etc_. On | |
the other hand, W. takes 'eaforhéafodsegn' as a compound, meaning | |
'helmet': _He bade them bear in the helmet, battle-high helm, gray | |
armor, etc_. | |
[3] The H.-So. rendering (ærest = _history, origin_; 'eft' for 'est'), | |
though liable to objection, is perhaps the best offered. 'That I | |
should very early tell thee of his favor, kindness' sounds well; but | |
'his' is badly placed to limit 'ést.'--Perhaps, 'eft' with verbs of | |
saying may have the force of Lat. prefix 're,' and the H.-So. reading | |
mean, 'that I should its origin rehearse to thee.' | |
XXXII. | |
THE HOARD AND THE DRAGON. | |
* * * * * * * | |
He sought of himself who sorely did harm him, | |
But, for need very pressing, the servant of one of | |
The sons of the heroes hate-blows evaded, | |
5 Seeking for shelter and the sin-driven warrior | |
Took refuge within there. He early looked in it, | |
* * * * * * * | |
* * * * * * * | |
[76] * * * * * * when the onset surprised him, | |
{The hoard.} | |
10 He a gem-vessel saw there: many of suchlike | |
Ancient ornaments in the earth-cave were lying, | |
As in days of yore some one of men of | |
Illustrious lineage, as a legacy monstrous, | |
There had secreted them, careful and thoughtful, | |
15 Dear-valued jewels. Death had offsnatched them, | |
In the days of the past, and the one man moreover | |
Of the flower of the folk who fared there the longest, | |
Was fain to defer it, friend-mourning warder, | |
A little longer to be left in enjoyment | |
20 Of long-lasting treasure.[1] A barrow all-ready | |
Stood on the plain the stream-currents nigh to, | |
New by the ness-edge, unnethe of approaching: | |
The keeper of rings carried within a | |
[2]Ponderous deal of the treasure of nobles, | |
25 Of gold that was beaten, briefly he spake then:[3] | |
{The ring-giver bewails the loss of retainers.} | |
"Hold thou, O Earth, now heroes no more may, | |
The earnings of earlmen. Lo! erst in thy bosom | |
Worthy men won them; war-death hath ravished, | |
Perilous life-bale, all my warriors, | |
30 Liegemen belovèd, who this life have forsaken, | |
Who hall-pleasures saw. No sword-bearer have I, | |
And no one to burnish the gold-plated vessel, | |
The high-valued beaker: my heroes are vanished. | |
The hardy helmet behung with gilding | |
35 Shall be reaved of its riches: the ring-cleansers slumber | |
Who were charged to have ready visors-for-battle, | |
And the burnie that bided in battle-encounter | |
[77] O'er breaking of war-shields the bite of the edges | |
Moulds with the hero. The ring-twisted armor, | |
40 Its lord being lifeless, no longer may journey | |
Hanging by heroes; harp-joy is vanished, | |
The rapture of glee-wood, no excellent falcon | |
Swoops through the building, no swift-footed charger | |
Grindeth the gravel. A grievous destruction | |
45 No few of the world-folk widely hath scattered!" | |
So, woful of spirit one after all | |
Lamented mournfully, moaning in sadness | |
By day and by night, till death with its billows | |
{The fire-dragon} | |
Dashed on his spirit. Then the ancient dusk-scather | |
50 Found the great treasure standing all open, | |
He who flaming and fiery flies to the barrows, | |
Naked war-dragon, nightly escapeth | |
Encompassed with fire; men under heaven | |
Widely beheld him. 'Tis said that he looks for[4] | |
55 The hoard in the earth, where old he is guarding | |
The heathenish treasure; he'll be nowise the better. | |
{The dragon meets his match.} | |
So three-hundred winters the waster of peoples | |
Held upon earth that excellent hoard-hall, | |
Till the forementioned earlman angered him bitterly: | |
60 The beat-plated beaker he bare to his chieftain | |
And fullest remission for all his remissness | |
Begged of his liegelord. Then the hoard[5] was discovered, | |
The treasure was taken, his petition was granted | |
{The hero plunders the dragon's den} | |
The lorn-mooded liegeman. His lord regarded | |
65 The old-work of earth-folk--'twas the earliest occasion. | |
When the dragon awoke, the strife was renewed there; | |
He snuffed 'long the stone then, stout-hearted found he | |
[78] The footprint of foeman; too far had he gone | |
With cunning craftiness close to the head of | |
70 The fire-spewing dragon. So undoomed he may 'scape from | |
Anguish and exile with ease who possesseth | |
The favor of Heaven. The hoard-warden eagerly | |
Searched o'er the ground then, would meet with the person | |
That caused him sorrow while in slumber reclining: | |
75 Gleaming and wild he oft went round the cavern, | |
All of it outward; not any of earthmen | |
Was seen in that desert.[6] Yet he joyed in the battle, | |
Rejoiced in the conflict: oft he turned to the barrow, | |
Sought for the gem-cup;[7] this he soon perceived then | |
{The dragon perceives that some one has disturbed his treasure.} | |
80 That some man or other had discovered the gold, | |
The famous folk-treasure. Not fain did the hoard-ward | |
Wait until evening; then the ward of the barrow | |
Was angry in spirit, the loathèd one wished to | |
Pay for the dear-valued drink-cup with fire. | |
85 Then the day was done as the dragon would have it, | |
He no longer would wait on the wall, but departed | |
{The dragon is infuriated.} | |
Fire-impelled, flaming. Fearful the start was | |
To earls in the land, as it early thereafter | |
To their giver-of-gold was grievously ended. | |
[1] For 'long-gestréona,' B. suggests 'láengestréona,' and renders, | |
_Of fleeting treasures_. S. accepts H.'s 'long-gestréona,' but | |
renders, _The treasure long in accumulating_. | |
[2] For 'hard-fyrdne' (2246), B. first suggested 'hard-fyndne,' | |
rendering: _A heap of treasures ... so great that its equal would be | |
hard to find_. The same scholar suggests later 'hord-wynne dæl' = _A | |
deal of treasure-joy_. | |
[3] Some read 'fec-word' (2247), and render: _Banning words uttered_. | |
[4] An earlier reading of H.'s gave the following meaning to this | |
passage: _He is said to inhabit a mound under the earth, where he, | |
etc._ The translation in the text is more authentic. | |
[5] The repetition of 'hord' in this passage has led some scholars to | |
suggest new readings to avoid the second 'hord.' This, however, is not | |
under the main stress, and, it seems to me, might easily be accepted. | |
[6] The reading of H.-So. is well defended in the notes to that | |
volume. B. emends and renders: _Nor was there any man in that desert | |
who rejoiced in conflict, in battle-work._ That is, the hoard-ward | |
could not find any one who had disturbed his slumbers, for no warrior | |
was there, t.B.'s emendation would give substantially the same | |
translation. | |
[7] 'Sinc-fæt' (2301): this word both here and in v. 2232, t.B. | |
renders 'treasure.' | |
XXXIII. | |
BRAVE THOUGH AGED.--REMINISCENCES. | |
{The dragon spits fire.} | |
The stranger began then to vomit forth fire, | |
To burn the great manor; the blaze then glimmered | |
For anguish to earlmen, not anything living | |
[79] Was the hateful air-goer willing to leave there. | |
5 The war of the worm widely was noticed, | |
The feud of the foeman afar and anear, | |
How the enemy injured the earls of the Geatmen, | |
Harried with hatred: back he hied to the treasure, | |
To the well-hidden cavern ere the coming of daylight. | |
10 He had circled with fire the folk of those regions, | |
With brand and burning; in the barrow he trusted, | |
In the wall and his war-might: the weening deceived him. | |
{Beowulf hears of the havoc wrought by the dragon.} | |
Then straight was the horror to Beowulf published, | |
Early forsooth, that his own native homestead,[1] | |
15 The best of buildings, was burning and melting, | |
Gift-seat of Geatmen. 'Twas a grief to the spirit | |
Of the good-mooded hero, the greatest of sorrows: | |
{He fears that Heaven is punishing him for some crime.} | |
The wise one weened then that wielding his kingdom | |
'Gainst the ancient commandments, he had bitterly angered | |
20 The Lord everlasting: with lorn meditations | |
His bosom welled inward, as was nowise his custom. | |
The fire-spewing dragon fully had wasted | |
The fastness of warriors, the water-land outward, | |
The manor with fire. The folk-ruling hero, | |
25 Prince of the Weders, was planning to wreak him. | |
The warmen's defender bade them to make him, | |
Earlmen's atheling, an excellent war-shield | |
{He orders an iron shield to be made from him, wood is useless.} | |
Wholly of iron: fully he knew then | |
That wood from the forest was helpless to aid him, | |
30 Shield against fire. The long-worthy ruler | |
Must live the last of his limited earth-days, | |
Of life in the world and the worm along with him, | |
Though he long had been holding hoard-wealth in plenty. | |
{He determines to fight alone.} | |
Then the ring-prince disdained to seek with a war-band, | |
35 With army extensive, the air-going ranger; | |
He felt no fear of the foeman's assaults and | |
He counted for little the might of the dragon, | |
[80] His power and prowess: for previously dared he | |
{Beowulf's early triumphs referred to} | |
A heap of hostility, hazarded dangers, | |
40 War-thane, when Hrothgar's palace he cleansèd, | |
Conquering combatant, clutched in the battle | |
The kinsmen of Grendel, of kindred detested.[2] | |
{Higelac's death recalled.} | |
'Twas of hand-fights not least where Higelac was slaughtered, | |
When the king of the Geatmen with clashings of battle, | |
45 Friend-lord of folks in Frisian dominions, | |
Offspring of Hrethrel perished through sword-drink, | |
With battle-swords beaten; thence Beowulf came then | |
On self-help relying, swam through the waters; | |
He bare on his arm, lone-going, thirty | |
50 Outfits of armor, when the ocean he mounted. | |
The Hetwars by no means had need to be boastful | |
Of their fighting afoot, who forward to meet him | |
Carried their war-shields: not many returned from | |
The brave-mooded battle-knight back to their homesteads. | |
55 Ecgtheow's bairn o'er the bight-courses swam then, | |
Lone-goer lorn to his land-folk returning, | |
Where Hygd to him tendered treasure and kingdom, | |
{Heardred's lack of capacity to rule.} | |
Rings and dominion: her son she not trusted, | |
To be able to keep the kingdom devised him | |
60 'Gainst alien races, on the death of King Higelac. | |
{Beowulf's tact and delicacy recalled.} | |
Yet the sad ones succeeded not in persuading the atheling | |
In any way ever, to act as a suzerain | |
To Heardred, or promise to govern the kingdom; | |
Yet with friendly counsel in the folk he sustained him, | |
65 Gracious, with honor, till he grew to be older, | |
{Reference is here made to a visit which Beowulf receives from Eanmund and | |
Eadgils, why they come is not known.} | |
Wielded the Weders. Wide-fleeing outlaws, | |
Ohthere's sons, sought him o'er the waters: | |
They had stirred a revolt 'gainst the helm of the Scylfings, | |
The best of the sea-kings, who in Swedish dominions | |
70 Distributed treasure, distinguished folk-leader. | |
[81] 'Twas the end of his earth-days; injury fatal[3] | |
By swing of the sword he received as a greeting, | |
Offspring of Higelac; Ongentheow's bairn | |
Later departed to visit his homestead, | |
75 When Heardred was dead; let Beowulf rule them, | |
Govern the Geatmen: good was that folk-king. | |
[1] 'Hám' (2326), the suggestion of B. is accepted by t.B. and other | |
scholars. | |
[2] For 'láðan cynnes' (2355), t.B. suggests 'láðan cynne,' apposition | |
to 'mægum.' From syntactical and other considerations, this is a most | |
excellent emendation. | |
[3] Gr. read 'on feorme' (2386), rendering: _He there at the banquet a | |
fatal wound received by blows of the sword._ | |
XXXIV. | |
BEOWULF SEEKS THE DRAGON.--BEOWULF'S REMINISCENCES. | |
He planned requital for the folk-leader's ruin | |
In days thereafter, to Eadgils the wretched | |
Becoming an enemy. Ohthere's son then | |
Went with a war-troop o'er the wide-stretching currents | |
5 With warriors and weapons: with woe-journeys cold he | |
After avenged him, the king's life he took. | |
{Beowulf has been preserved through many perils.} | |
So he came off uninjured from all of his battles, | |
Perilous fights, offspring of Ecgtheow, | |
From his deeds of daring, till that day most momentous | |
10 When he fate-driven fared to fight with the dragon. | |
{With eleven comrades, he seeks the dragon.} | |
With eleven companions the prince of the Geatmen | |
Went lowering with fury to look at the fire-drake: | |
Inquiring he'd found how the feud had arisen, | |
Hate to his heroes; the highly-famed gem-vessel | |
15 Was brought to his keeping through the hand of th' informer. | |
{A guide leads the way, but} | |
That in the throng was thirteenth of heroes, | |
That caused the beginning of conflict so bitter, | |
Captive and wretched, must sad-mooded thenceward | |
{very reluctantly.} | |
Point out the place: he passed then unwillingly | |
20 To the spot where he knew of the notable cavern, | |
The cave under earth, not far from the ocean, | |
The anger of eddies, which inward was full of | |
Jewels and wires: a warden uncanny, | |
[82] Warrior weaponed, wardered the treasure, | |
25 Old under earth; no easy possession | |
For any of earth-folk access to get to. | |
Then the battle-brave atheling sat on the naze-edge, | |
While the gold-friend of Geatmen gracious saluted | |
His fireside-companions: woe was his spirit, | |
30 Death-boding, wav'ring; Weird very near him, | |
Who must seize the old hero, his soul-treasure look for, | |
Dragging aloof his life from his body: | |
Not flesh-hidden long was the folk-leader's spirit. | |
Beowulf spake, Ecgtheow's son: | |
{Beowulf's retrospect.} | |
35 "I survived in my youth-days many a conflict, | |
Hours of onset: that all I remember. | |
I was seven-winters old when the jewel-prince took me, | |
High-lord of heroes, at the hands of my father, | |
Hrethel the hero-king had me in keeping, | |
{Hrethel took me when I was seven.} | |
40 Gave me treasure and feasting, our kinship remembered; | |
Not ever was I _any_ less dear to him | |
{He treated me as a son.} | |
Knight in the boroughs, than the bairns of his household, | |
Herebald and Hæthcyn and Higelac mine. | |
To the eldest unjustly by acts of a kinsman | |
45 Was murder-bed strewn, since him Hæthcyn from horn-bow | |
{One of the brothers accidentally kills another.} | |
His sheltering chieftain shot with an arrow, | |
Erred in his aim and injured his kinsman, | |
One brother the other, with blood-sprinkled spear: | |
{No fee could compound for such a calamity.} | |
'Twas a feeless fight, finished in malice, | |
50 Sad to his spirit; the folk-prince however | |
Had to part from existence with vengeance untaken. | |
{[A parallel case is supposed.]} | |
So to hoar-headed hero 'tis heavily crushing[1] | |
[83] To live to see his son as he rideth | |
Young on the gallows: then measures he chanteth, | |
55 A song of sorrow, when his son is hanging | |
For the raven's delight, and aged and hoary | |
He is unable to offer any assistance. | |
Every morning his offspring's departure | |
Is constant recalled: he cares not to wait for | |
60 The birth of an heir in his borough-enclosures, | |
Since that one through death-pain the deeds hath experienced. | |
He heart-grieved beholds in the house of his son the | |
Wine-building wasted, the wind-lodging places | |
Reaved of their roaring; the riders are sleeping, | |
65 The knights in the grave; there's no sound of the harp-wood, | |
Joy in the yards, as of yore were familiar. | |
[1] 'Gomelum ceorle' (2445).--H. takes these words as referring to | |
Hrethel; but the translator here departs from his editor by | |
understanding the poet to refer to a hypothetical old man, introduced | |
as an illustration of a father's sorrow. | |
Hrethrel had certainly never seen a son of his ride on the gallows to | |
feed the crows. | |
The passage beginning 'swá bið géomorlic' seems to be an effort to | |
reach a full simile, 'as ... so.' 'As it is mournful for an old man, | |
etc. ... so the defence of the Weders (2463) bore heart-sorrow, etc.' | |
The verses 2451 to 2463-1/2 would be parenthetical, the poet's feelings | |
being so strong as to interrupt the simile. The punctuation of the | |
fourth edition would be better--a comma after 'galgan' (2447). The | |
translation may be indicated as follows: _(Just) as it is sad for an | |
old man to see his son ride young on the gallows when he himself is | |
uttering mournful measures, a sorrowful song, while his son hangs for a | |
comfort to the raven, and he, old and infirm, cannot render him any | |
kelp--(he is constantly reminded, etc., 2451-2463)--so the defence of | |
the Weders, etc._ | |
XXXV. | |
REMINISCENCES (_continued_).--BEOWULF'S LAST BATTLE. | |
"He seeks then his chamber, singeth a woe-song | |
One for the other; all too extensive | |
Seemed homesteads and plains. So the helm of the Weders | |
{Hrethel grieves for Herebald.} | |
Mindful of Herebald heart-sorrow carried, | |
5 Stirred with emotion, nowise was able | |
To wreak his ruin on the ruthless destroyer: | |
He was unable to follow the warrior with hatred, | |
With deeds that were direful, though dear he not held him. | |
[84] Then pressed by the pang this pain occasioned him, | |
10 He gave up glee, God-light elected; | |
He left to his sons, as the man that is rich does, | |
His land and fortress, when from life he departed. | |
{Strife between Swedes and Geats.} | |
Then was crime and hostility 'twixt Swedes and Geatmen, | |
O'er wide-stretching water warring was mutual, | |
15 Burdensome hatred, when Hrethel had perished, | |
And Ongentheow's offspring were active and valiant, | |
Wished not to hold to peace oversea, but | |
Round Hreosna-beorh often accomplished | |
Cruelest massacre. This my kinsman avengèd, | |
20 The feud and fury, as 'tis found on inquiry, | |
Though one of them paid it with forfeit of life-joys, | |
{Hæthcyn's fall at Ravenswood.} | |
With price that was hard: the struggle became then | |
Fatal to Hæthcyn, lord of the Geatmen. | |
Then I heard that at morning one brother the other | |
25 With edges of irons egged on to murder, | |
Where Ongentheow maketh onset on Eofor: | |
The helmet crashed, the hoary-haired Scylfing | |
Sword-smitten fell, his hand then remembered | |
Feud-hate sufficient, refused not the death-blow. | |
{I requited him for the jewels he gave me.} | |
30 The gems that he gave me, with jewel-bright sword I | |
'Quited in contest, as occasion was offered: | |
Land he allowed me, life-joy at homestead, | |
Manor to live on. Little he needed | |
From Gepids or Danes or in Sweden to look for | |
35 Trooper less true, with treasure to buy him; | |
'Mong foot-soldiers ever in front I would hie me, | |
Alone in the vanguard, and evermore gladly | |
Warfare shall wage, while this weapon endureth | |
That late and early often did serve me | |
{Beowulf refers to his having slain Dæghrefn.} | |
40 When I proved before heroes the slayer of Dæghrefn, | |
Knight of the Hugmen: he by no means was suffered | |
To the king of the Frisians to carry the jewels, | |
The breast-decoration; but the banner-possessor | |
Bowed in the battle, brave-mooded atheling. | |
[85] 45 No weapon was slayer, but war-grapple broke then | |
The surge of his spirit, his body destroying. | |
Now shall weapon's edge make war for the treasure, | |
And hand and firm-sword." Beowulf spake then, | |
Boast-words uttered--the latest occasion: | |
{He boasts of his youthful prowess, and declares himself still fearless.} | |
50 "I braved in my youth-days battles unnumbered; | |
Still am I willing the struggle to look for, | |
Fame-deeds perform, folk-warden prudent, | |
If the hateful despoiler forth from his cavern | |
Seeketh me out!" Each of the heroes, | |
55 Helm-bearers sturdy, he thereupon greeted | |
{His last salutations.} | |
Belovèd co-liegemen--his last salutation: | |
"No brand would I bear, no blade for the dragon, | |
Wist I a way my word-boast to 'complish[1] | |
Else with the monster, as with Grendel I did it; | |
60 But fire in the battle hot I expect there, | |
Furious flame-burning: so I fixed on my body | |
Target and war-mail. The ward of the barrow[2] | |
I'll not flee from a foot-length, the foeman uncanny. | |
At the wall 'twill befall us as Fate decreeth, | |
{Let Fate decide between us.} | |
65 Each one's Creator. I am eager in spirit, | |
With the wingèd war-hero to away with all boasting. | |
Bide on the barrow with burnies protected, | |
{Wait ye here till the battle is over.} | |
Earls in armor, which of _us_ two may better | |
Bear his disaster, when the battle is over. | |
70 'Tis no matter of yours, and man cannot do it, | |
But me and me only, to measure his strength with | |
The monster of malice, might-deeds to 'complish. | |
I with prowess shall gain the gold, or the battle, | |
[86] Direful death-woe will drag off your ruler!" | |
75 The mighty champion rose by his shield then, | |
Brave under helmet, in battle-mail went he | |
'Neath steep-rising stone-cliffs, the strength he relied on | |
Of one man alone: no work for a coward. | |
Then he saw by the wall who a great many battles | |
80 Had lived through, most worthy, when foot-troops collided, | |
{The place of strife is described.} | |
Stone-arches standing, stout-hearted champion, | |
Saw a brook from the barrow bubbling out thenceward: | |
The flood of the fountain was fuming with war-flame: | |
Not nigh to the hoard, for season the briefest | |
85 Could he brave, without burning, the abyss that was yawning, | |
The drake was so fiery. The prince of the Weders | |
Caused then that words came from his bosom, | |
So fierce was his fury; the firm-hearted shouted: | |
His battle-clear voice came in resounding | |
90 'Neath the gray-colored stone. Stirred was his hatred, | |
{Beowulf calls out under the stone arches.} | |
The hoard-ward distinguished the speech of a man; | |
Time was no longer to look out for friendship. | |
The breath of the monster issued forth first, | |
Vapory war-sweat, out of the stone-cave: | |
{The terrible encounter.} | |
95 The earth re-echoed. The earl 'neath the barrow | |
Lifted his shield, lord of the Geatmen, | |
Tow'rd the terrible stranger: the ring-twisted creature's | |
Heart was then ready to seek for a struggle. | |
{Beowulf brandishes his sword,} | |
The excellent battle-king first brandished his weapon, | |
100 The ancient heirloom, of edges unblunted,[3] | |
To the death-planners twain was terror from other. | |
{and stands against his shield.} | |
The lord of the troopers intrepidly stood then | |
'Gainst his high-rising shield, when the dragon coiled him | |
{The dragon coils himself.} | |
Quickly together: in corslet he bided. | |
[87] 105 He went then in blazes, bended and striding, | |
Hasting him forward. His life and body | |
The targe well protected, for time-period shorter | |
Than wish demanded for the well-renowned leader, | |
Where he then for the first day was forced to be victor, | |
110 Famous in battle, as Fate had not willed it. | |
The lord of the Geatmen uplifted his hand then, | |
Smiting the fire-drake with sword that was precious, | |
That bright on the bone the blade-edge did weaken, | |
Bit more feebly than his folk-leader needed, | |
115 Burdened with bale-griefs. Then the barrow-protector, | |
{The dragon rages} | |
When the sword-blow had fallen, was fierce in his spirit, | |
Flinging his fires, flamings of battle | |
Gleamed then afar: the gold-friend of Weders | |
{Beowulf's sword fails him.} | |
Boasted no conquests, his battle-sword failed him | |
120 Naked in conflict, as by no means it ought to, | |
Long-trusty weapon. 'Twas no slight undertaking | |
That Ecgtheow's famous offspring would leave | |
The drake-cavern's bottom; he must live in some region | |
Other than this, by the will of the dragon, | |
125 As each one of earthmen existence must forfeit. | |
'Twas early thereafter the excellent warriors | |
{The combat is renewed.} | |
Met with each other. Anew and afresh | |
The hoard-ward took heart (gasps heaved then his bosom): | |
{The great hero is reduced to extremities.} | |
Sorrow he suffered encircled with fire | |
130 Who the people erst governed. His companions by no means | |
Were banded about him, bairns of the princes, | |
{His comrades flee!} | |
With valorous spirit, but they sped to the forest, | |
Seeking for safety. The soul-deeps of one were | |
{Blood is thicker than water.} | |
Ruffled by care: kin-love can never | |
135 Aught in him waver who well doth consider. | |
[88] | |
[1] The clause 2520(2)-2522(1), rendered by 'Wist I ... monster,' Gr., | |
followed by S., translates substantially as follows: _If I knew how | |
else I might combat the boastful defiance of the monster_.--The | |
translation turns upon 'wiðgrípan,' a word not understood. | |
[2] B. emends and translates: _I will not flee the space of a foot | |
from the guard of the barrow, but there shall be to us a fight at the | |
wall, as fate decrees, each one's Creator._ | |
[3] The translation of this passage is based on 'unsláw' (2565), | |
accepted by H.-So., in lieu of the long-standing 'ungléaw.' The former | |
is taken as an adj. limiting 'sweord'; the latter as an adj. c. | |
'gúð-cyning': _The good war-king, rash with edges, brandished his | |
sword, his old relic._ The latter gives a more rhetorical Anglo-Saxon | |
(poetical) sentence. | |
XXXVI. | |
WIGLAF THE TRUSTY.--BEOWULF IS DESERTED BY FRIENDS AND BY SWORD. | |
{Wiglaf remains true--the ideal Teutonic liegeman.} | |
The son of Weohstan was Wiglaf entitled, | |
Shield-warrior precious, prince of the Scylfings, | |
Ælfhere's kinsman: he saw his dear liegelord | |
Enduring the heat 'neath helmet and visor. | |
5 Then he minded the holding that erst he had given him, | |
{Wiglaf recalls Beowulf's generosity.} | |
The Wægmunding warriors' wealth-blessèd homestead, | |
Each of the folk-rights his father had wielded; | |
He was hot for the battle, his hand seized the target, | |
The yellow-bark shield, he unsheathed his old weapon, | |
10 Which was known among earthmen as the relic of Eanmund, | |
Ohthere's offspring, whom, exiled and friendless, | |
Weohstan did slay with sword-edge in battle, | |
And carried his kinsman the clear-shining helmet, | |
The ring-made burnie, the old giant-weapon | |
15 That Onela gave him, his boon-fellow's armor, | |
Ready war-trappings: he the feud did not mention, | |
Though he'd fatally smitten the son of his brother. | |
Many a half-year held he the treasures, | |
The bill and the burnie, till his bairn became able, | |
20 Like his father before him, fame-deeds to 'complish; | |
Then he gave him 'mong Geatmen a goodly array of | |
Weeds for his warfare; he went from life then | |
Old on his journey. 'Twas the earliest time then | |
{This is Wiglaf's first battle as liegeman of Beowulf.} | |
That the youthful champion might charge in the battle | |
25 Aiding his liegelord; his spirit was dauntless. | |
Nor did kinsman's bequest quail at the battle: | |
This the dragon discovered on their coming together. | |
Wiglaf uttered many a right-saying, | |
Said to his fellows, sad was his spirit: | |
{Wiglaf appeals to the pride of the cowards.} | |
30 "I remember the time when, tasting the mead-cup, | |
We promised in the hall the lord of us all | |
[89] Who gave us these ring-treasures, that this battle-equipment, | |
Swords and helmets, we'd certainly quite him, | |
Should need of such aid ever befall him: | |
{How we have forfeited our liegelord's confidence!} | |
35 In the war-band he chose us for this journey spontaneously, | |
Stirred us to glory and gave me these jewels, | |
Since he held and esteemed us trust-worthy spearmen, | |
Hardy helm-bearers, though this hero-achievement | |
Our lord intended alone to accomplish, | |
40 Ward of his people, for most of achievements, | |
Doings audacious, he did among earth-folk. | |
{Our lord is in sore need of us.} | |
The day is now come when the ruler of earthmen | |
Needeth the vigor of valiant heroes: | |
Let us wend us towards him, the war-prince to succor, | |
45 While the heat yet rageth, horrible fire-fight. | |
{I would rather die than go home with out my suzerain.} | |
God wot in me, 'tis mickle the liefer | |
The blaze should embrace my body and eat it | |
With my treasure-bestower. Meseemeth not proper | |
To bear our battle-shields back to our country, | |
50 'Less first we are able to fell and destroy the | |
Long-hating foeman, to defend the life of | |
{Surely he does not deserve to die alone.} | |
The prince of the Weders. Well do I know 'tisn't | |
Earned by his exploits, he only of Geatmen | |
Sorrow should suffer, sink in the battle: | |
55 Brand and helmet to us both shall be common, | |
[1]Shield-cover, burnie." Through the bale-smoke he stalked then, | |
Went under helmet to the help of his chieftain, | |
{Wiglaf reminds Beowulf of his youthful boasts.} | |
Briefly discoursing: "Beowulf dear, | |
Perform thou all fully, as thou formerly saidst, | |
60 In thy youthful years, that while yet thou livedst | |
[90] Thou wouldst let thine honor not ever be lessened. | |
Thy life thou shalt save, mighty in actions, | |
Atheling undaunted, with all of thy vigor; | |
{The monster advances on them.} | |
I'll give thee assistance." The dragon came raging, | |
65 Wild-mooded stranger, when these words had been uttered | |
('Twas the second occasion), seeking his enemies, | |
Men that were hated, with hot-gleaming fire-waves; | |
With blaze-billows burned the board to its edges: | |
The fight-armor failed then to furnish assistance | |
70 To the youthful spear-hero: but the young-agèd stripling | |
Quickly advanced 'neath his kinsman's war-target, | |
Since his own had been ground in the grip of the fire. | |
{Beowulf strikes at the dragon.} | |
Then the warrior-king was careful of glory, | |
He soundly smote with sword-for-the-battle, | |
75 That it stood in the head by hatred driven; | |
Nægling was shivered, the old and iron-made | |
{His sword fails him.} | |
Brand of Beowulf in battle deceived him. | |
'Twas denied him that edges of irons were able | |
To help in the battle; the hand was too mighty | |
80 [2]Which every weapon, as I heard on inquiry, | |
Outstruck in its stroke, when to struggle he carried | |
The wonderful war-sword: it waxed him no better. | |
{The dragon advances on Beowulf again.} | |
Then the people-despoiler--third of his onsets-- | |
Fierce-raging fire-drake, of feud-hate was mindful, | |
85 Charged on the strong one, when chance was afforded, | |
Heated and war-grim, seized on his neck | |
With teeth that were bitter; he bloody did wax with | |
Soul-gore seething; sword-blood in waves boiled. | |
[1] The passage '_Brand ... burnie_,' is much disputed. In the first | |
place, some eminent critics assume a gap of at least two | |
half-verses.--'Úrum' (2660), being a peculiar form, has been much | |
discussed. 'Byrdu-scrúd' is also a crux. B. suggests 'býwdu-scrúd' = | |
_splendid vestments_. Nor is 'bám' accepted by all, 'béon' being | |
suggested. Whatever the individual words, the passage must mean, "_I | |
intend to share with him my equipments of defence_." | |
[2] B. would render: _Which, as I heard, excelled in stroke every | |
sword that he carried to the strife, even the strongest (sword)._ For | |
'Þonne' he reads 'Þone,' rel. pr. | |
[91] | |
XXXVII. | |
THE FATAL STRUGGLE.--BEOWULF'S LAST MOMENTS. | |
{Wiglaf defends Beowulf.} | |
Then I heard that at need of the king of the people | |
The upstanding earlman exhibited prowess, | |
Vigor and courage, as suited his nature; | |
[1]He his head did not guard, but the high-minded liegeman's | |
5 Hand was consumed, when he succored his kinsman, | |
So he struck the strife-bringing strange-comer lower, | |
Earl-thane in armor, that _in_ went the weapon | |
Gleaming and plated, that 'gan then the fire[2] | |
{Beowulf draws his knife,} | |
Later to lessen. The liegelord himself then | |
10 Retained his consciousness, brandished his war-knife, | |
Battle-sharp, bitter, that he bare on his armor: | |
{and cuts the dragon.} | |
The Weder-lord cut the worm in the middle. | |
They had felled the enemy (life drove out then[3] | |
Puissant prowess), the pair had destroyed him, | |
15 Land-chiefs related: so a liegeman should prove him, | |
A thaneman when needed. To the prince 'twas the last of | |
His era of conquest by his own great achievements, | |
[92] | |
{Beowulf's wound swells and burns.} | |
The latest of world-deeds. The wound then began | |
Which the earth-dwelling dragon erstwhile had wrought him | |
20 To burn and to swell. He soon then discovered | |
That bitterest bale-woe in his bosom was raging, | |
Poison within. The atheling advanced then, | |
{He sits down exhausted.} | |
That along by the wall, he prudent of spirit | |
Might sit on a settle; he saw the giant-work, | |
25 How arches of stone strengthened with pillars | |
The earth-hall eternal inward supported. | |
Then the long-worthy liegeman laved with his hand the | |
{Wiglaf bathes his lord's head.} | |
Far-famous chieftain, gory from sword-edge, | |
Refreshing the face of his friend-lord and ruler, | |
30 Sated with battle, unbinding his helmet. | |
Beowulf answered, of his injury spake he, | |
His wound that was fatal (he was fully aware | |
He had lived his allotted life-days enjoying | |
The pleasures of earth; then past was entirely | |
35 His measure of days, death very near): | |
{Beowulf regrets that he has no son.} | |
"My son I would give now my battle-equipments, | |
Had any of heirs been after me granted, | |
Along of my body. This people I governed | |
Fifty of winters: no king 'mong my neighbors | |
40 Dared to encounter me with comrades-in-battle, | |
Try me with terror. The time to me ordered | |
I bided at home, mine own kept fitly, | |
Sought me no snares, swore me not many | |
{I can rejoice in a well-spent life.} | |
Oaths in injustice. Joy over all this | |
45 I'm able to have, though ill with my death-wounds; | |
Hence the Ruler of Earthmen need not charge me | |
With the killing of kinsmen, when cometh my life out | |
Forth from my body. Fare thou with haste now | |
{Bring me the hoard, Wiglaf, that my dying eyes may be refreshed by a | |
sight of it.} | |
To behold the hoard 'neath the hoar-grayish stone, | |
50 Well-lovèd Wiglaf, now the worm is a-lying, | |
Sore-wounded sleepeth, disseized of his treasure. | |
Go thou in haste that treasures of old I, | |
Gold-wealth may gaze on, together see lying | |
[93] The ether-bright jewels, be easier able, | |
55 Having the heap of hoard-gems, to yield my | |
Life and the land-folk whom long I have governed." | |
[1] B. renders: _He_ (_W_.) did not regard his (_the dragon's_) _head_ | |
(since Beowulf had struck it without effect), _but struck the dragon a | |
little lower down.--_One crux is to find out _whose head_ is meant; | |
another is to bring out the antithesis between 'head' and 'hand.' | |
[2] 'Þæt þæt fýr' (2702), S. emends to 'þá þæt fýr' = _when the fire | |
began to grow less intense afterward_. This emendation relieves the | |
passage of a plethora of conjunctive _þæt_'s. | |
[3] For 'gefyldan' (2707), S. proposes 'gefylde.' The passage would | |
read: _He felled the foe (life drove out strength), and they then both | |
had destroyed him, chieftains related_. This gives Beowulf the credit | |
of having felled the dragon; then they combine to annihilate him.--For | |
'ellen' (2707), Kl. suggests 'e(a)llne.'--The reading '_life drove out | |
strength_' is very unsatisfactory and very peculiar. I would suggest | |
as follows: Adopt S.'s emendation, remove H.'s parenthesis, read | |
'ferh-ellen wræc,' and translate: _He felled the foe, drove out his | |
life-strength_ (that is, made him _hors de combat_), _and then they | |
both, etc_. | |
XXXVIII. | |
WIGLAF PLUNDERS THE DRAGON'S DEN.--BEOWULF'S DEATH. | |
{Wiglaf fulfils his lord's behest.} | |
Then heard I that Wihstan's son very quickly, | |
These words being uttered, heeded his liegelord | |
Wounded and war-sick, went in his armor, | |
His well-woven ring-mail, 'neath the roof of the barrow. | |
5 Then the trusty retainer treasure-gems many | |
{The dragon's den.} | |
Victorious saw, when the seat he came near to, | |
Gold-treasure sparkling spread on the bottom, | |
Wonder on the wall, and the worm-creature's cavern, | |
The ancient dawn-flier's, vessels a-standing, | |
10 Cups of the ancients of cleansers bereavèd, | |
Robbed of their ornaments: there were helmets in numbers, | |
Old and rust-eaten, arm-bracelets many, | |
Artfully woven. Wealth can easily, | |
Gold on the sea-bottom, turn into vanity[1] | |
15 Each one of earthmen, arm him who pleaseth! | |
And he saw there lying an all-golden banner | |
High o'er the hoard, of hand-wonders greatest, | |
Linkèd with lacets: a light from it sparkled, | |
That the floor of the cavern he was able to look on, | |
{The dragon is not there.} | |
20 To examine the jewels. Sight of the dragon | |
[94] Not any was offered, but edge offcarried him. | |
{Wiglaf bears the hoard away.} | |
Then I heard that the hero the hoard-treasure plundered, | |
The giant-work ancient reaved in the cavern, | |
Bare on his bosom the beakers and platters, | |
25 As himself would fain have it, and took off the standard, | |
The brightest of beacons;[2] the bill had erst injured | |
(Its edge was of iron), the old-ruler's weapon, | |
Him who long had watched as ward of the jewels, | |
Who fire-terror carried hot for the treasure, | |
30 Rolling in battle, in middlemost darkness, | |
Till murdered he perished. The messenger hastened, | |
Not loth to return, hurried by jewels: | |
Curiosity urged him if, excellent-mooded, | |
Alive he should find the lord of the Weders | |
35 Mortally wounded, at the place where he left him. | |
'Mid the jewels he found then the famous old chieftain, | |
His liegelord belovèd, at his life's-end gory: | |
He thereupon 'gan to lave him with water, | |
Till the point of his word piercèd his breast-hoard. | |
40 Beowulf spake (the gold-gems he noticed), | |
{Beowulf is rejoiced to see the jewels.} | |
The old one in sorrow: "For the jewels I look on | |
Thanks do I utter for all to the Ruler, | |
Wielder of Worship, with words of devotion, | |
The Lord everlasting, that He let me such treasures | |
45 Gain for my people ere death overtook me. | |
Since I've bartered the agèd life to me granted | |
For treasure of jewels, attend ye henceforward | |
{He desires to be held in memory by his people.} | |
The wants of the war-thanes; I can wait here no longer. | |
The battle-famed bid ye to build them a grave-hill, | |
50 Bright when I'm burned, at the brim-current's limit; | |
As a memory-mark to the men I have governed, | |
[95] Aloft it shall tower on Whale's-Ness uprising, | |
That earls of the ocean hereafter may call it | |
Beowulf's barrow, those who barks ever-dashing | |
55 From a distance shall drive o'er the darkness of waters." | |
{The hero's last gift} | |
The bold-mooded troop-lord took from his neck then | |
The ring that was golden, gave to his liegeman, | |
The youthful war-hero, his gold-flashing helmet, | |
His collar and war-mail, bade him well to enjoy them: | |
{and last words.} | |
60 "Thou art latest left of the line of our kindred, | |
Of Wægmunding people: Weird hath offcarried | |
All of my kinsmen to the Creator's glory, | |
Earls in their vigor: I shall after them fare." | |
'Twas the aged liegelord's last-spoken word in | |
65 His musings of spirit, ere he mounted the fire, | |
The battle-waves burning: from his bosom departed | |
His soul to seek the sainted ones' glory. | |
[1] The word 'oferhígian' (2767) being vague and little understood, | |
two quite distinct translations of this passage have arisen. One takes | |
'oferhígian' as meaning 'to exceed,' and, inserting 'hord' after | |
'gehwone,' renders: _The treasure may easily, the gold in the ground, | |
exceed in value every hoard of man, hide it who will._ The other takes | |
'oferhígian' as meaning 'to render arrogant,' and, giving the sentence | |
a moralizing tone, renders substantially as in the body of this work. | |
(Cf. 28_13 et seq.) | |
[2] The passage beginning here is very much disputed. 'The bill of the | |
old lord' is by some regarded as Beowulf's sword; by others, as that | |
of the ancient possessor of the hoard. 'Ær gescód' (2778), translated | |
in this work as verb and adverb, is by some regarded as a compound | |
participial adj. = _sheathed in brass_. | |
XXXIX. | |
THE DEAD FOES.--WIGLAF'S BITTER TAUNTS. | |
{Wiglaf is sorely grieved to see his lord look so un-warlike.} | |
It had wofully chanced then the youthful retainer | |
To behold on earth the most ardent-belovèd | |
At his life-days' limit, lying there helpless. | |
The slayer too lay there, of life all bereavèd, | |
5 Horrible earth-drake, harassed with sorrow: | |
{The dragon has plundered his last hoard.} | |
The round-twisted monster was permitted no longer | |
To govern the ring-hoards, but edges of war-swords | |
Mightily seized him, battle-sharp, sturdy | |
Leavings of hammers, that still from his wounds | |
10 The flier-from-farland fell to the earth | |
Hard by his hoard-house, hopped he at midnight | |
Not e'er through the air, nor exulting in jewels | |
Suffered them to see him: but he sank then to earthward | |
Through the hero-chief's handwork. I heard sure it throve then | |
[96] | |
{Few warriors dared to face the monster.} | |
15 But few in the land of liegemen of valor, | |
Though of every achievement bold he had proved him, | |
To run 'gainst the breath of the venomous scather, | |
Or the hall of the treasure to trouble with hand-blows, | |
If he watching had found the ward of the hoard-hall | |
20 On the barrow abiding. Beowulf's part of | |
The treasure of jewels was paid for with death; | |
Each of the twain had attained to the end of | |
Life so unlasting. Not long was the time till | |
{The cowardly thanes come out of the thicket.} | |
The tardy-at-battle returned from the thicket, | |
25 The timid truce-breakers ten all together, | |
Who durst not before play with the lances | |
In the prince of the people's pressing emergency; | |
{They are ashamed of their desertion.} | |
But blushing with shame, with shields they betook them, | |
With arms and armor where the old one was lying: | |
30 They gazed upon Wiglaf. He was sitting exhausted, | |
Foot-going fighter, not far from the shoulders | |
Of the lord of the people, would rouse him with water; | |
No whit did it help him; though he hoped for it keenly, | |
He was able on earth not at all in the leader | |
35 Life to retain, and nowise to alter | |
The will of the Wielder; the World-Ruler's power[1] | |
Would govern the actions of each one of heroes, | |
{Wiglaf is ready to excoriate them.} | |
As yet He is doing. From the young one forthwith then | |
Could grim-worded greeting be got for him quickly | |
40 Whose courage had failed him. Wiglaf discoursed then, | |
Weohstan his son, sad-mooded hero, | |
{He begins to taunt them.} | |
Looked on the hated: "He who soothness will utter | |
Can say that the liegelord who gave you the jewels, | |
The ornament-armor wherein ye are standing, | |
45 When on ale-bench often he offered to hall-men | |
Helmet and burnie, the prince to his liegemen, | |
As best upon earth he was able to find him,-- | |
[97] | |
{Surely our lord wasted his armor on poltroons.} | |
That he wildly wasted his war-gear undoubtedly | |
When battle o'ertook him.[2] The troop-king no need had | |
50 To glory in comrades; yet God permitted him, | |
{He, however, got along without you} | |
Victory-Wielder, with weapon unaided | |
Himself to avenge, when vigor was needed. | |
I life-protection but little was able | |
To give him in battle, and I 'gan, notwithstanding, | |
{With some aid, I could have saved our liegelord} | |
55 Helping my kinsman (my strength overtaxing): | |
He waxed the weaker when with weapon I smote on | |
My mortal opponent, the fire less strongly | |
Flamed from his bosom. Too few of protectors | |
Came round the king at the critical moment. | |
{Gift-giving is over with your people: the ring-lord is dead.} | |
60 Now must ornament-taking and weapon-bestowing, | |
Home-joyance all, cease for your kindred, | |
Food for the people; each of your warriors | |
Must needs be bereavèd of rights that he holdeth | |
In landed possessions, when faraway nobles | |
65 Shall learn of your leaving your lord so basely, | |
{What is life without honor?} | |
The dastardly deed. Death is more pleasant | |
To every earlman than infamous life is!" | |
[1] For 'dædum rædan' (2859) B. suggests 'déað árædan,' and renders: | |
_The might (or judgment) of God would determine death for every man, | |
as he still does._ | |
[2] Some critics, H. himself in earlier editions, put the clause, | |
'When ... him' (A.-S. 'þá ... beget') with the following sentence; | |
that is, they make it dependent upon 'þorfte' (2875) instead of upon | |
'forwurpe' (2873). | |
XL. | |
THE MESSENGER OF DEATH. | |
{Wiglaf sends the news of Beowulf's death to liegemen near by.} | |
Then he charged that the battle be announced at the hedge | |
Up o'er the cliff-edge, where the earl-troopers bided | |
The whole of the morning, mood-wretched sat them, | |
Bearers of battle-shields, both things expecting, | |
5 The end of his lifetime and the coming again of | |
The liegelord belovèd. Little reserved he | |
Of news that was known, who the ness-cliff did travel, | |
But he truly discoursed to all that could hear him: | |
[98] | |
{The messenger speaks.} | |
"Now the free-giving friend-lord of the folk of the Weders, | |
10 The folk-prince of Geatmen, is fast in his death-bed, | |
By the deeds of the dragon in death-bed abideth; | |
Along with him lieth his life-taking foeman | |
Slain with knife-wounds: he was wholly unable | |
To injure at all the ill-planning monster | |
{Wiglaf sits by our dead lord.} | |
15 With bite of his sword-edge. Wiglaf is sitting, | |
Offspring of Wihstan, up over Beowulf, | |
Earl o'er another whose end-day hath reached him, | |
Head-watch holdeth o'er heroes unliving,[1] | |
{Our lord's death will lead to attacks from our old foes.} | |
For friend and for foeman. The folk now expecteth | |
20 A season of strife when the death of the folk-king | |
To Frankmen and Frisians in far-lands is published. | |
The war-hatred waxed warm 'gainst the Hugmen, | |
{Higelac's death recalled.} | |
When Higelac came with an army of vessels | |
Faring to Friesland, where the Frankmen in battle | |
25 Humbled him and bravely with overmight 'complished | |
That the mail-clad warrior must sink in the battle, | |
Fell 'mid his folk-troop: no fret-gems presented | |
The atheling to earlmen; aye was denied us | |
Merewing's mercy. The men of the Swedelands | |
30 For truce or for truth trust I but little; | |
But widely 'twas known that near Ravenswood Ongentheow | |
{Hæthcyn's fall referred to.} | |
Sundered Hæthcyn the Hrethling from life-joys, | |
When for pride overweening the War-Scylfings first did | |
Seek the Geatmen with savage intentions. | |
35 Early did Ohthere's age-laden father, | |
Old and terrible, give blow in requital, | |
Killing the sea-king, the queen-mother rescued, | |
The old one his consort deprived of her gold, | |
Onela's mother and Ohthere's also, | |
[99] 40 And then followed the feud-nursing foemen till hardly, | |
Reaved of their ruler, they Ravenswood entered. | |
Then with vast-numbered forces he assaulted the remnant, | |
Weary with wounds, woe often promised | |
The livelong night to the sad-hearted war-troop: | |
45 Said he at morning would kill them with edges of weapons, | |
Some on the gallows for glee to the fowls. | |
Aid came after to the anxious-in-spirit | |
At dawn of the day, after Higelac's bugle | |
And trumpet-sound heard they, when the good one proceeded | |
50 And faring followed the flower of the troopers. | |
[1] 'Hige-méðum' (2910) is glossed by H. as dat. plu. (= for the | |
dead). S. proposes 'hige-méðe,' nom. sing. limiting Wigláf; i.e. _W., | |
mood-weary, holds head-watch o'er friend and foe_.--B. suggests taking | |
the word as dat. inst. plu. of an abstract noun in -'u.' The | |
translation would be substantially the same as S.'s. | |
XLI. | |
THE MESSENGER'S RETROSPECT. | |
{The messenger continues, and refers to the feuds of Swedes and Geats.} | |
"The blood-stainèd trace of Swedes and Geatmen, | |
The death-rush of warmen, widely was noticed, | |
How the folks with each other feud did awaken. | |
The worthy one went then[1] with well-beloved comrades, | |
5 Old and dejected to go to the fastness, | |
Ongentheo earl upward then turned him; | |
Of Higelac's battle he'd heard on inquiry, | |
The exultant one's prowess, despaired of resistance, | |
With earls of the ocean to be able to struggle, | |
10 'Gainst sea-going sailors to save the hoard-treasure, | |
His wife and his children; he fled after thenceward | |
Old 'neath the earth-wall. Then was offered pursuance | |
To the braves of the Swedemen, the banner[2] to Higelac. | |
[100] They fared then forth o'er the field-of-protection, | |
15 When the Hrethling heroes hedgeward had thronged them. | |
Then with edges of irons was Ongentheow driven, | |
The gray-haired to tarry, that the troop-ruler had to | |
Suffer the power solely of Eofor: | |
{Wulf wounds Ongentheow.} | |
Wulf then wildly with weapon assaulted him, | |
20 Wonred his son, that for swinge of the edges | |
The blood from his body burst out in currents, | |
Forth 'neath his hair. He feared not however, | |
Gray-headed Scylfing, but speedily quited | |
{Ongentheow gives a stout blow in return.} | |
The wasting wound-stroke with worse exchange, | |
25 When the king of the thane-troop thither did turn him: | |
The wise-mooded son of Wonred was powerless | |
To give a return-blow to the age-hoary man, | |
But his head-shielding helmet first hewed he to pieces, | |
That flecked with gore perforce he did totter, | |
30 Fell to the earth; not fey was he yet then, | |
But up did he spring though an edge-wound had reached him. | |
{Eofor smites Ongentheow fiercely.} | |
Then Higelac's vassal, valiant and dauntless, | |
When his brother lay dead, made his broad-bladed weapon, | |
Giant-sword ancient, defence of the giants, | |
35 Bound o'er the shield-wall; the folk-prince succumbed then, | |
{Ongentheow is slain.} | |
Shepherd of people, was pierced to the vitals. | |
There were many attendants who bound up his kinsman, | |
Carried him quickly when occasion was granted | |
That the place of the slain they were suffered to manage. | |
40 This pending, one hero plundered the other, | |
His armor of iron from Ongentheow ravished, | |
His hard-sword hilted and helmet together; | |
{Eofor takes the old king's war-gear to Higelac.} | |
The old one's equipments he carried to Higelac. | |
He the jewels received, and rewards 'mid the troopers | |
45 Graciously promised, and so did accomplish: | |
The king of the Weders requited the war-rush, | |
Hrethel's descendant, when home he repaired him, | |
{Higelac rewards the brothers.} | |
To Eofor and Wulf with wide-lavished treasures, | |
To each of them granted a hundred of thousands | |
[101] 50 In land and rings wrought out of wire: | |
{His gifts were beyond cavil.} | |
None upon mid-earth needed to twit him[3] | |
With the gifts he gave them, when glory they conquered; | |
{To Eofor he also gives his only daughter in marriage.} | |
And to Eofor then gave he his one only daughter, | |
The honor of home, as an earnest of favor. | |
55 That's the feud and hatred--as ween I 'twill happen-- | |
The anger of earthmen, that earls of the Swedemen | |
Will visit on us, when they hear that our leader | |
Lifeless is lying, he who longtime protected | |
His hoard and kingdom 'gainst hating assailers, | |
60 Who on the fall of the heroes defended of yore | |
The deed-mighty Scyldings,[4] did for the troopers | |
What best did avail them, and further moreover | |
{It is time for us to pay the last marks of respect to our lord.} | |
Hero-deeds 'complished. Now is haste most fitting, | |
That the lord of liegemen we look upon yonder, | |
65 And _that_ one carry on journey to death-pyre | |
Who ring-presents gave us. Not aught of it all | |
Shall melt with the brave one--there's a mass of bright jewels, | |
Gold beyond measure, grewsomely purchased | |
And ending it all ornament-rings too | |
70 Bought with his life; these fire shall devour, | |
Flame shall cover, no earlman shall wear | |
A jewel-memento, nor beautiful virgin | |
Have on her neck rings to adorn her, | |
But wretched in spirit bereavèd of gold-gems | |
75 She shall oft with others be exiled and banished, | |
Since the leader of liegemen hath laughter forsaken, | |
[102] Mirth and merriment. Hence many a war-spear | |
Cold from the morning shall be clutched in the fingers, | |
Heaved in the hand, no harp-music's sound shall | |
80 Waken the warriors, but the wan-coated raven | |
Fain over fey ones freely shall gabble, | |
Shall say to the eagle how he sped in the eating, | |
When, the wolf his companion, he plundered the slain." | |
So the high-minded hero was rehearsing these stories | |
85 Loathsome to hear; he lied as to few of | |
{The warriors go sadly to look at Beowulf's lifeless body.} | |
Weirds and of words. All the war-troop arose then, | |
'Neath the Eagle's Cape sadly betook them, | |
Weeping and woful, the wonder to look at. | |
They saw on the sand then soulless a-lying, | |
90 His slaughter-bed holding, him who rings had given them | |
In days that were done; then the death-bringing moment | |
Was come to the good one, that the king very warlike, | |
Wielder of Weders, with wonder-death perished. | |
First they beheld there a creature more wondrous, | |
{They also see the dragon.} | |
95 The worm on the field, in front of them lying, | |
The foeman before them: the fire-spewing dragon, | |
Ghostly and grisly guest in his terrors, | |
Was scorched in the fire; as he lay there he measured | |
Fifty of feet; came forth in the night-time[5] | |
100 To rejoice in the air, thereafter departing | |
To visit his den; he in death was then fastened, | |
He would joy in no other earth-hollowed caverns. | |
There stood round about him beakers and vessels, | |
Dishes were lying and dear-valued weapons, | |
105 With iron-rust eaten, as in earth's mighty bosom | |
A thousand of winters there they had rested: | |
{The hoard was under a magic spell.} | |
That mighty bequest then with magic was guarded, | |
Gold of the ancients, that earlman not any | |
The ring-hall could touch, save Ruling-God only, | |
[103] 110 Sooth-king of Vict'ries gave whom He wished to | |
{God alone could give access to it.} | |
[6](He is earth-folk's protector) to open the treasure, | |
E'en to such among mortals as seemed to Him proper. | |
[1] For 'góda,' which seems a surprising epithet for a Geat to apply | |
to the "terrible" Ongentheow, B. suggests 'gomela.' The passage would | |
then stand: '_The old one went then,' etc._ | |
[2] For 'segn Higeláce,' K., Th., and B. propose 'segn Higeláces,' | |
meaning: _Higelac's banner followed the Swedes (in pursuit)._--S. | |
suggests 'sæcc Higeláces,' and renders: _Higelac's pursuit._--The | |
H.-So. reading, as translated in our text, means that the banner of | |
the enemy was captured and brought to Higelac as a trophy. | |
[3] The rendering given in this translation represents the king as | |
being generous beyond the possibility of reproach; but some | |
authorities construe 'him' (2996) as plu., and understand the passage | |
to mean that no one reproached the two brothers with having received | |
more reward than they were entitled to. | |
[4] The name 'Scyldingas' here (3006) has caused much discussion, and | |
given rise to several theories, the most important of which are as | |
follows: (1) After the downfall of Hrothgar's family, Beowulf was king | |
of the Danes, or Scyldings. (2) For 'Scyldingas' read | |
'Scylfingas'--that is, after killing Eadgils, the Scylfing prince, | |
Beowulf conquered his land, and held it in subjection. (3) M. | |
considers 3006 a thoughtless repetition of 2053. (Cf. H.-So.) | |
[5] B. takes 'nihtes' and 'hwílum' (3045) as separate adverbial cases, | |
and renders: _Joy in the air had he of yore by night, etc_. He thinks | |
that the idea of vanished time ought to be expressed. | |
[6] The parenthesis is by some emended so as to read: (1) (_He_ (i.e. | |
_God_) _is the hope of men_); (2) (_he is the hope of heroes_). Gr.'s | |
reading has no parenthesis, but says: ... _could touch, unless God | |
himself, true king of victories, gave to whom he would to open the | |
treasure, the secret place of enchanters, etc_. The last is rejected | |
on many grounds. | |
XLII. | |
WIGLAF'S SAD STORY.--THE HOARD CARRIED OFF. | |
Then 'twas seen that the journey prospered him little | |
Who wrongly within had the ornaments hidden[1] | |
Down 'neath the wall. The warden erst slaughtered | |
Some few of the folk-troop: the feud then thereafter | |
5 Was hotly avengèd. 'Tis a wonder where,[2] | |
When the strength-famous trooper has attained to the end of | |
Life-days allotted, then no longer the man may | |
Remain with his kinsmen where mead-cups are flowing. | |
So to Beowulf happened when the ward of the barrow, | |
10 Assaults, he sought for: himself had no knowledge | |
How his leaving this life was likely to happen. | |
So to doomsday, famous folk-leaders down did | |
Call it with curses--who 'complished it there-- | |
[104] That that man should be ever of ill-deeds convicted, | |
15 Confined in foul-places, fastened in hell-bonds, | |
Punished with plagues, who this place should e'er ravage.[3] | |
He cared not for gold: rather the Wielder's | |
Favor preferred he first to get sight of.[4] | |
{Wiglaf addresses his comrades.} | |
Wiglaf discoursed then, Wihstan his son: | |
20 "Oft many an earlman on one man's account must | |
Sorrow endure, as to us it hath happened. | |
The liegelord belovèd we could little prevail on, | |
Kingdom's keeper, counsel to follow, | |
Not to go to the guardian of the gold-hoard, but let him | |
25 Lie where he long was, live in his dwelling | |
Till the end of the world. Met we a destiny | |
Hard to endure: the hoard has been looked at, | |
Been gained very grimly; too grievous the fate that[5] | |
The prince of the people pricked to come thither. | |
30 _I_ was therein and all of it looked at, | |
The building's equipments, since access was given me, | |
Not kindly at all entrance permitted | |
{He tells them of Beowulf's last moments.} | |
Within under earth-wall. Hastily seized I | |
And held in my hands a huge-weighing burden | |
35 Of hoard-treasures costly, hither out bare them | |
To my liegelord belovèd: life was yet in him, | |
And consciousness also; the old one discoursed then | |
Much and mournfully, commanded to greet you, | |
{Beowulf's dying request.} | |
Bade that remembering the deeds of your friend-lord | |
40 Ye build on the fire-hill of corpses a lofty | |
Burial-barrow, broad and far-famous, | |
As 'mid world-dwelling warriors he was widely most honored | |
While he reveled in riches. Let us rouse us and hasten | |
[105] Again to see and seek for the treasure, | |
45 The wonder 'neath wall. The way I will show you, | |
That close ye may look at ring-gems sufficient | |
And gold in abundance. Let the bier with promptness | |
Fully be fashioned, when forth we shall come, | |
And lift we our lord, then, where long he shall tarry, | |
50 Well-beloved warrior, 'neath the Wielder's protection." | |
{Wiglaf charges them to build a funeral-pyre.} | |
Then the son of Wihstan bade orders be given, | |
Mood-valiant man, to many of heroes, | |
Holders of homesteads, that they hither from far, | |
[6]Leaders of liegemen, should look for the good one | |
55 With wood for his pyre: "The flame shall now swallow | |
(The wan fire shall wax[7]) the warriors' leader | |
Who the rain of the iron often abided, | |
When, sturdily hurled, the storm of the arrows | |
Leapt o'er linden-wall, the lance rendered service, | |
60 Furnished with feathers followed the arrow." | |
Now the wise-mooded son of Wihstan did summon | |
The best of the braves from the band of the ruler | |
{He takes seven thanes, and enters the den.} | |
Seven together; 'neath the enemy's roof he | |
Went with the seven; one of the heroes | |
65 Who fared at the front, a fire-blazing torch-light | |
Bare in his hand. No lot then decided | |
Who that hoard should havoc, when hero-earls saw it | |
Lying in the cavern uncared-for entirely, | |
Rusting to ruin: they rued then but little | |
70 That they hastily hence hauled out the treasure, | |
{They push the dragon over the wall.} | |
The dear-valued jewels; the dragon eke pushed they, | |
The worm o'er the wall, let the wave-currents take him, | |
[106] The waters enwind the ward of the treasures. | |
{The hoard is laid on a wain.} | |
There wounden gold on a wain was uploaded, | |
75 A mass unmeasured, the men-leader off then, | |
The hero hoary, to Whale's-Ness was carried. | |
[1] For 'gehýdde,' B. suggests 'gehýðde': the passage would stand as | |
above except the change of 'hidden' (v. 2) to 'plundered.' The | |
reference, however, would be to the thief, not to the dragon. | |
[2] The passage 'Wundur ... búan' (3063-3066), M. took to be a | |
question asking whether it was strange that a man should die when his | |
appointed time had come.--B. sees a corruption, and makes emendations | |
introducing the idea that a brave man should not die from sickness or | |
from old age, but should find death in the performance of some deed of | |
daring.--S. sees an indirect question introduced by 'hwár' and | |
dependent upon 'wundur': _A secret is it when the hero is to die, | |
etc_.--Why may the two clauses not be parallel, and the whole passage | |
an Old English cry of '_How wonderful is death!'?_--S.'s is the best | |
yet offered, if 'wundor' means 'mystery.' | |
[3] For 'strude' in H.-So., S. suggests 'stride.' This would require | |
'ravage' (v. 16) to be changed to 'tread.' | |
[4] 'He cared ... sight of' (17, 18), S. emends so as to read as | |
follows: _He (Beowulf) had not before seen the favor of the avaricious | |
possessor._ | |
[5] B. renders: _That which drew the king thither_ (i.e. _the | |
treasure_) _was granted us, but in such a way that it overcomes us._ | |
[6] 'Folc-ágende' (3114) B. takes as dat. sing. with 'gódum,' and | |
refers it to Beowulf; that is, _Should bring fire-wood to the place | |
where the good folk-ruler lay_. | |
[7] C. proposes to take 'weaxan' = L. 'vescor,' and translate | |
_devour_. This gives a parallel to 'fretan' above. The parenthesis | |
would be discarded and the passage read: _Now shall the fire consume, | |
the wan-flame devour, the prince of warriors, etc_. | |
XLIII. | |
THE BURNING OF BEOWULF. | |
{Beowulf's pyre.} | |
The folk of the Geatmen got him then ready | |
A pile on the earth strong for the burning, | |
Behung with helmets, hero-knights' targets, | |
And bright-shining burnies, as he begged they should have them; | |
5 Then wailing war-heroes their world-famous chieftain, | |
Their liegelord beloved, laid in the middle. | |
{The funeral-flame.} | |
Soldiers began then to make on the barrow | |
The largest of dead-fires: dark o'er the vapor | |
The smoke-cloud ascended, the sad-roaring fire, | |
10 Mingled with weeping (the wind-roar subsided) | |
Till the building of bone it had broken to pieces, | |
Hot in the heart. Heavy in spirit | |
They mood-sad lamented the men-leader's ruin; | |
And mournful measures the much-grieving widow | |
15 * * * * * * * | |
* * * * * * * | |
* * * * * * * | |
* * * * * * * | |
* * * * * * * | |
20 * * * * * * * | |
{The Weders carry out their lord's last request.} | |
The men of the Weders made accordingly | |
A hill on the height, high and extensive, | |
Of sea-going sailors to be seen from a distance, | |
And the brave one's beacon built where the fire was, | |
25 In ten-days' space, with a wall surrounded it, | |
As wisest of world-folk could most worthily plan it. | |
They placed in the barrow rings and jewels, | |
[107] | |
{Rings and gems are laid in the barrow.} | |
All such ornaments as erst in the treasure | |
War-mooded men had won in possession: | |
30 The earnings of earlmen to earth they entrusted, | |
The gold to the dust, where yet it remaineth | |
As useless to mortals as in foregoing eras. | |
'Round the dead-mound rode then the doughty-in-battle, | |
Bairns of all twelve of the chiefs of the people, | |
{They mourn for their lord, and sing his praises.} | |
35 More would they mourn, lament for their ruler, | |
Speak in measure, mention him with pleasure, | |
Weighed his worth, and his warlike achievements | |
Mightily commended, as 'tis meet one praise his | |
Liegelord in words and love him in spirit, | |
40 When forth from his body he fares to destruction. | |
So lamented mourning the men of the Geats, | |
Fond-loving vassals, the fall of their lord, | |
{An ideal king.} | |
Said he was kindest of kings under heaven, | |
Gentlest of men, most winning of manner, | |
45 Friendliest to folk-troops and fondest of honor. | |
[109] |
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