The Story of Sigurd the Volsung and the Fall of the Niblungs by William Morris
page 41 of 442 (09%)
page 41 of 442 (09%)
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So he came to the house of the Goth-kings, and spake with Signy the
Queen, Nor told he to any other the things he had heard and seen, For the heart of a king's son had he. But Signy hearkened his word; And long she pondered and said: "What is it my heart hath feared? And how shall it be with earth's people if the kin of the Volsungs die, And King Volsung unavenged in his mound by the sea-strand lie? I have given my best and bravest, as my heart's blood I would give, And my heart and my fame and my body, that the name of Volsung might live. Lo the first gift cast aback: and how shall it be with the last,-- --If I find out the gift for the giving before the hour be passed?" Long while she mused and pondered while day was thrust on day, Till the king and the earls of the strangers seemed shades of the dreamtide grey And gone seemed all earth's people, save that woman mid the gold And that man in the depths of the forest in the cave of the Dwarfs of old. And once in the dark she murmured: "Where then was the ancient song That the Gods were but twin-born once, and deemed it nothing wrong To mingle for the world's sake, whence had the Æsir birth, And the Vanir and the Dwarf-kind, and all the folk of earth?" Now amidst those days that she pondered came a wife of the witch-folk there, A woman young and lovesome, and shaped exceeding fair, And she spake with Signy the Queen, and told her of deeds of her craft, And how the might was with her her soul from her body to waft |
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