<h2><SPAN name="chap12"></SPAN>Twelfth Adventure<br/> How Gunther Invited Siegfried to the Hightide</h2>
<p>Now there passed not a day but Gunther’s wife thought, “Surely
Kriemhild beareth her too proudly. Siegfried, her husband, is our vassal.
Little service hath he done for his land.”</p>
<p>She pondered it secretly in her heart; for it irked her that they were
strangers, and she had fain known wherefore Siegfried’s country yielded
no tribute. She prayed the king that she might behold Kriemhild again, and told
him her secret thought. But her word pleased him not. “How could we bid
them hither?” said the great king. “It cannot be. They dwell too
far off. I durst not do it.”</p>
<p>But Brunhild answered proudly, “However mighty a king’s vassal may
be, he must do what his lord commandeth.”</p>
<p>But Gunther laughed, for he took it not as homage when he saw Siegfried.</p>
<p>She said further, “Dear lord, for my love, help me thereto, that
Siegfried and thy sister visit us, and that we see them here. Truly nothing
could rejoice me more. Thy sister’s courtesy, her gentle
breeding—with what delight my heart dwelleth thereon, and how we sat
together the day I became thy wife! That she chose Siegfried to her husband did
her honour.”</p>
<p>She begged the king for it so long that he said, “Certes! no guests would
I gladlier welcome, and willingly I grant it thee. I will bid them hither by my
envoys.”</p>
<p>The queen answered then, “Send not thither without my knowledge, and
inform me, without fail, when my dear friends shall come. And tell me, also,
whom thou wilt charge with the embassy.”</p>
<p>“That will I,” said the king. “I will despatch thirty of my
knights.”</p>
<p>He bade them to his presence, and sent greeting by them to Siegfried’s
country. Brunhild clad them in rich apparel, and the king spake, “Ye
knights shall keep back naught wherewith I charge you, but shall say to stark
Siegfried, and to my sister, that no man in this world is better minded to them
than I be. Bid them both hither to the Rhine. If they come, I and my wife will
cease not to be beholden to them. Or midsummer is here, he and his knights will
find among us many to do them worship. Greet King Siegmund also from me, and
say that I and my friends are his true servants; and entreat my sister that,
without fail, she ride hither to her friends. No hightide were fitter for
her.”</p>
<p>Brunhild and Uta, and their women, commended them to the fair women and the
bold men at Siegfried’s court.</p>
<p>So the envoys made haste to do the king’s bidding. They stood ready for
the road; horses and harness were there, and they took their leave. They pushed
forward with the escort the king gave them. Inside of twelve days they reached
the land and the castle of the Nibelungs, and found Siegfried on the march of
Norway. Horses and men were weary with the long road.</p>
<p>They brought word to both Siegfried and Kriemhild that knights were come, clad
after the manner of the Burgundians.</p>
<p>And Kriemhild sprang from the couch where she lay resting, and bade a maiden
run to the window, who saw Gary standing in the courtyard, and his knights that
were sent with him. They brought welcome news to her anxious heart.</p>
<p>She cried to the king, “Seest thou, standing there in the courtyard, them
that be come with stark Gary, that my brother Gunther hath sent down the
Rhine?”</p>
<p>And Siegfried answered, “They are welcome.”</p>
<p>All the folk ran when they saw the envoys and greeted them with kind words.
Siegfried was right glad at their coming. Lodging was given to them, and their
horses were seen to, whereupon they went straightway where Siegfried sat by
Kriemhild. Both were joyful to behold them. The king and his wife rose quickly
to receive Gary and Gunther’s knights of Burgundy. And they bade Gary sit
down.</p>
<p>“Nay, let us way-weary guests stand while we tell thee Gunther’s
message. After, we will sit. Gunther and Brunhild, with whom it is well, and
Queen Uta, your mother, and Giselher, the youth, and eke Gernot, and your
nearest kinsmen, send greeting from Burgundy.”</p>
<p>“Now God reward them,” said Siegfried; “I hold them for good
and true, as a man should trust his friends. The like doth their sister. Say
on, whether they be of good cheer. Hath any done my wife’s brethren a
hurt since we parted? Tell me, for I will stand by them till their foemen rue
my help.”</p>
<p>Margrave Gary, the good knight, answered, “It is well with them, and they
are of good cheer. They bid thee to a hightide, and were right glad if thou
camest. They bid my Lady also. So soon as the winter shall be ended, before
midsummer, they would see you.”</p>
<p>But Siegfried said, “That can hardly be.”</p>
<p>Whereupon Gary the Burgundian answered, “Your mother Uta, Gernot, and
Giselher, pray that ye deny them not. Every day I hear them lament that ye
dwell so far. Brunhild my mistress, and her maidens, rejoice in the hope to see
you.”</p>
<p>The message seemed good to Kriemhild. Gary was her kinsman; and the king bade
him sit, and tarried not longer to let pour the wine for the guests.</p>
<p>Thither came Siegmund also, when he saw the messengers, and he spake to them on
friendly wise. “Ye be welcome, ye knights, Gunther’s men; since
Siegfried won Kriemhild to wife, ye should have been seen here oftener, if you
would have proved your love.”</p>
<p>They answered that, if he willed it, they would come gladly, for that joy had
taken from them their mickle weariness.</p>
<p>Then they bade the envoys sit, and set meats before them, whereof Siegfried
gave order they should have enough. Nine days they were kept at the court, till
at last they murmured, saying that if they tarried longer, they durst not
return again to their land.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Siegfried had let summon his friends. He asked them their mind about
his journey. “Gunther my brother-in-law, and his kinsmen, have bidden me
to a hightide at the Rhine, and Kriemhild also, that she ride with me. And I
were fain to go if his country lay not so far off. Now counsel me, dear
friends, for the best. Had I to harry thirty lands for their sake, my hand were
at their service.”</p>
<p>His knights made answer, “If thou wouldst ride to this hightide, we
counsel thee on this wise: take with thee a thousand knights to the Rhine, that
thou mayest have honour among the Burgundians.”</p>
<p>Then said King Siegmund of the Netherland, “Wherefore has thou not told
me thou wouldest to the hightide? If thou hast naught against it, I will ride
with thee, and will take an hundred knights with me to add to thy train.”</p>
<p>“Wilt thou do so, dear father mine?” said bold Siegfried.
“Right welcome art thou. Inside of twelve days we will forth.”</p>
<p>To them that desired it horses and apparel were given.</p>
<p>Since the king was minded to make the journey, he sent away the swift envoys,
and charged them with a message to his wife’s brethren at the Rhine, that
he would come right gladly to their hightide.</p>
<p>Siegfried and Kriemhild (so runneth the tale) gave so much to the envoys that
their horses scarce sufficed to carry it, for Siegfried was a rich king. So,
well content, they drave their sumpters before them.</p>
<p>Then Siegfried and Siegmund equipped their folk, and Eckewart, the Margrave,
bade bring forth the best women’s vesture that was in Siegfried’s
whole land. They made ready saddles and shields, and to the knights and the
gentlewomen that were to ride with them, they gave freely, that they lacked
naught. Siegfried led many valiant knights to his kinsmen.</p>
<p>The envoys hasted on their way, and when bold Gary was come into Burgundy, they
greeted him fair. The riders sprang from their horses before Gunther’s
hall. And young and old, as their wont is, pressed round them and asked for
news. But the good knight answered, “Ye shall have it when I have told it
to the king.” And he passed on with his comrades to Gunther.</p>
<p>The king sprang from his seat for joy, and Brunhild thanked them that they were
so soon back again. To the envoys spake Gunther then, “How fareth it with
Siegfried, that hath ever done well by me?”</p>
<p>And Gary answered, “He and thy sister waxed red for joy. Kinder greeting
sent man never to his friends than Siegfried and his father Siegmund send to
thee.”</p>
<p>Then said the queen to the Margrave, “Tell me, I prithee; cometh
Kriemhild with them? And hath her body lost nothing of its fairness?”</p>
<p>Whereto Gary answered, “They will both come, and, with them, many
knights.”</p>
<p>Then Uta bade the envoys to her presence, and showed by her questions what most
she desired to know—how it fared with Kriemhild. He told her how he had
found her, and that she would come thither shortly.</p>
<p>They declared also the envoy’s fee that Siegfried had given them: the
apparel and the gold. All the knights of the three kings saw it, and praised
Siegfried.</p>
<p>“It is easy for him to give,” quoth Hagen. “He could not
spend it if he lived for ever, for the hoard of the Nibelungs is in his hand.
Would it came our way!”</p>
<p>All the court, both knights and ladies, were glad at their coming. The servants
of the three kings were not idle, and started to raise the high-seats. Hunolt
and Sindolt had work enow, for they were the sewer and the butler, and they
arranged the chairs; to Ortwin, for that he helped them, Gunther gave thanks.
As for Rumult, the chief cook, I ween he knew how to order his underlings. Ha!
what meats they made ready against the feast, in their huge cauldrons and pots
and pans.</p>
<p>The women too busied them, and saw to their robes, whereon they embroidered
gold and bright shining stones, that, when they wore them, they might be well
esteemed.</p>
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