<h2 id="c3"><span class="h2line1">Chapter III</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">King Bele and Thorsten</span></h2>
<p>King Bele and Thorsten, his faithful
old brother-in-arms, were now bowed with
the weight of years, like two ruined
temples upon whose walls are graven
runes of wisdom still powerful to stir the hearts of
reverent beholders.</p>
<p>One day the King said to Thorsten: “My friend,
the evening of life draws on; no longer has the
mead its wonted flavor, and heavy grows the helm
upon my weary head. The world grows dim before
my eyes, but clear and bright toward me
streams the light of Valhalla. Therefore I have
summoned our sons hither. As we have ever
stood fast by each other, so it is my wish that
they should do. With this and other matters I
would charge the young eagles ere my lips are
sealed by death.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_27">27</div>
<p>The three youths soon entered the royal hall,
Helge, the eldest first. Pale and gloomy of countenance
was he, as if the terrors of the death-kingdom
had set their seal upon him. With
blood-stained hands, fresh from the sacrificial grove
he came, for he was wont to tarry there, communing
with seers and soothsayers. Behind him followed
Halfdan, his brother, whose bright locks framed a
face noble, indeed, of feature but weak and effeminate
in expression. The sword at his side seemed
worn but in jest, and he looked like some fair maid
who had sportively donned the garb of a hero.
Last came Frithiof, a blue mantle hanging from his
shoulders and taller by a head than his companions.
As the three stood before the King, it was like the
bright noonday between rosy morn and dusky night.</p>
<p>Then the King began: “My end is nigh, O sons,
wherefore I charge ye, govern the land in harmony;
for union is like the lance-ring, without which the
strength of the lance is lost. Let force stand guard
before the country’s gate; but within its boundaries
cherish the holy blossoms of peace. Lift not your
swords save against the foe. Let your shields be the
safeguard of the peasant’s home. A foolish prince
is he who oppresses his own people; for as their
strength is, so is his own. The leafy crown of a tree
whose sapless trunk is rooted in bare rock soon
withers. Four pillars of stone support the dome
of heaven; the throne rests only upon one, the law.
Woe to the land where violence reigns; for thereby
shall both ruler and people perish.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
<p>“The gods, O Helge, do indeed dwell in temples,
but not in them alone. So far as voice can reach,
so far as the sun’s golden beams can penetrate, or
the thoughts of man can fly, so wide are the halls of
their boundless sanctuaries. The blood of sacrificial
victims oft deceives; runes, howsoever deeply graven,
sometimes prove false; but upon a just and upright
heart, O Helge, Odin hath inscribed runes which
god and man may trust. As flowers adorn the brazen
shield, so doth gentleness become strength. It
is not Winter, but balmy Spring, that opens the bud
of life. Make to yourself true friends! A friendless
chief, be he ever so mighty, is like a tree whose
bark has been stripped away by storms; but he who
is blessed with true friendship is like the forest giant,
shielded from tempests by the companions that surround
it. Boast not of thy ancestors’ deeds and
honors. What avails the heritage of a mighty bow
which thou hast neither the strength nor the skill
to bend? The fame of thy sires rests with them in
the grave: in its own waves the rushing stream
flows onward to the sea!” Then turning to his
second son the King continued: “Thou too, O
Halfdan, hear my words and treasure them in thy
heart. A pleasant wit is the adornment of the wise;
but idle chatter befits none, least of all a prince’s son.
Honey is sweet; but without hops no mead can be
brewed. Put steel into thy sword, Halfdan, and
earnestness into thy play! Never yet lived there
man who knew too much, however famed for wisdom;
but countless is the number of those who
know too little. Disregarded at the feast sits the
fool who holds the seat of honor by right of birth
alone; ’tis to the wise man the guests lend ear,
however lowly be his seat. Choose not every man
to be thy blood-brother: an empty house stands
open to all who pass; the rich man’s door is barred.
Entrust thy confidence to but one; what is known
to three is known to all the world.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
<p>The old King ceased, and Thorsten arose. “To
permit thee, King Bele, to wander alone through
Odin’s halls, befits not one who hath ever been thy
comrade upon earth. Together we have shared life’s
changes, and in death methinks we shall not be
parted.”</p>
<p>Then to Frithiof his son, he said: “The years
have whispered many a counsel in my ear for thee,
my son. As Odin’s birds hover about the burial
mound, so do the teachings of experience linger on
the lips of age. This above all else lay thou to
heart: honor the gods. From them alone spring
all blessing and prosperity, even as it is they who
send the storm-wind and the life-giving sun-rays.
They gaze into the heart’s most secret depths,
whither no man’s eye can penetrate. Avoid evil:
long years must oft do penance for one hour’s sin.
Obey the King: one must be lord over all if the
land would prosper; the night hath many lights;
the day but one; willingly should the better man do
homage to the best.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
<p>“One handle only hath the sword; he who grasps
it elsewhere wounds his hand. Strength is a gift of
the gods; but without judgment, force is of small
avail. The bear has the strength of twelve men, yet
he is slain by one. Against the sword-thrust hold
the shield; against violence, the law. Guard thy
heart from pride; few are moved to fear thereby, but
all to hate. The more arrogant thou growest, the
nearer is thy fall. Many have I seen soar high,
who now must go on crutches. Praise not the day
before its end, the mead before ’tis drunk, nor the
counsel before ’tis proved. Youth is prone to trust
the lightest word; but battle tests the value of a
blade, and friendship is tried by need.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
<p>“Trust neither the ice of a night nor the snows of
Spring. It is true of all men that strength of body
and mind must pass away, but the fame of an upright
man lives on forever. Therefore, O my son,
resolve only what is noble, do only what is right.”</p>
<p>So spake the aged heroes, whose sage warnings are
still passed from mouth to mouth in the Northland.
They further charged their sons to perpetuate the
friendship that had bound them together, through
life, in weal and woe.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_32">32</div>
<p>“Ever back to back we stood when danger
threatened,” said King Bele, “and if it came still
closer, then with one shield we met it. Hold fast
together as one man, ye three, and never shall the
Northland see your overmatch; for strength bound
to kingly rank and power is like the steel rim that
encircles the shield of gold. Fail not to greet for
me my fair rose Ingeborg, who in peace and quiet
hath bloomed as becomes a royal maiden. Shield
her well with brotherly love and loyalty, that no
rude tempest bear away my tender flower. Be
thou a father to her, Helge; guard her as your own
child, yet forget not that harsh constraint will oft revolt
a noble heart, which by gentleness may easily
be guided in the path of virtue and of custom.
Let our weary bodies be laid to rest beneath two
grave-mounds, on either side of the stream, that its
rushing waters may chant for us eternal praises of
the heroes. Oft at the midnight hour, when the
pale moon sheds her silvery splendors and the cooling
dews descend upon our mounds, shall thou and
I, my Thorsten, discourse of olden days across the
flood, and our voices will mingle with the murmuring
of the waves. And now, dear sons, farewell!
farewell! Leave us in peace, that far from the
court we may prepare ourselves to enter into the
glories of Valhalla.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_33">33</div>
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