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<h1> BEOWULF </h1>
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<h2> By Anonymous </h2>
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<h3> Translated by Gummere </h3>
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<hr />
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<h3> BEOWULF<br/><br/> PRELUDE OF THE FOUNDER OF THE DANISH HOUSE </h3>
<p>LO, praise of the prowess of people-kings<br/> of spear-armed Danes, in
days long sped,<br/> we have heard, and what honor the athelings won!<br/>
Oft Scyld the Scefing from squadroned foes,<br/> from many a tribe, the
mead-bench tore,<br/> awing the earls. Since erst he lay<br/> friendless,
a foundling, fate repaid him:<br/> for he waxed under welkin, in wealth he
throve,<br/> till before him the folk, both far and near,<br/> who house
by the whale-path, heard his mandate,<br/> gave him gifts: a good king he!<br/>
To him an heir was afterward born,<br/> a son in his halls, whom heaven
sent<br/> to favor the folk, feeling their woe<br/> that erst they had
lacked an earl for leader<br/> so long a while; the Lord endowed him,<br/>
the Wielder of Wonder, with world’s renown.<br/> Famed was this
Beowulf: <SPAN name="linkcitation0a" id="linkcitation0a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote0a">{0a}</SPAN> far flew the boast of him,<br/> son of
Scyld, in the Scandian lands.<br/> So becomes it a youth to quit him well<br/>
with his father’s friends, by fee and gift,<br/> that to aid him,
aged, in after days,<br/> come warriors willing, should war draw nigh,<br/>
liegemen loyal: by lauded deeds<br/> shall an earl have honor in every
clan.</p>
<p>Forth he fared at the fated moment,<br/> sturdy Scyld to the shelter of
God.<br/> Then they bore him over to ocean’s billow,<br/> loving
clansmen, as late he charged them,<br/> while wielded words the winsome
Scyld,<br/> the leader beloved who long had ruled....<br/> In the
roadstead rocked a ring-dight vessel,<br/> ice-flecked, outbound, atheling’s
barge:<br/> there laid they down their darling lord<br/> on the breast of
the boat, the breaker-of-rings, <SPAN name="linkcitation0b" id="linkcitation0b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote0b">{0b}</SPAN><br/> by the
mast the mighty one. Many a treasure<br/> fetched from far was freighted
with him.<br/> No ship have I known so nobly dight<br/> with weapons of
war and weeds of battle,<br/> with breastplate and blade: on his bosom lay<br/>
a heaped hoard that hence should go<br/> far o’er the flood with him
floating away.<br/> No less these loaded the lordly gifts,<br/> thanes’
huge treasure, than those had done<br/> who in former time forth had sent
him<br/> sole on the seas, a suckling child.<br/> High o’er his head
they hoist the standard,<br/> a gold-wove banner; let billows take him,<br/>
gave him to ocean. Grave were their spirits,<br/> mournful their mood. No
man is able<br/> to say in sooth, no son of the halls,<br/> no hero
’neath heaven, -- who harbored that freight!</p>
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<p>I</p>
<p>Now Beowulf bode in the burg of the Scyldings,<br/> leader beloved, and
long he ruled<br/> in fame with all folk, since his father had gone<br/>
away from the world, till awoke an heir,<br/> haughty Healfdene, who held
through life,<br/> sage and sturdy, the Scyldings glad.<br/> Then, one
after one, there woke to him,<br/> to the chieftain of clansmen, children
four:<br/> Heorogar, then Hrothgar, then Halga brave;<br/> and I heard
that -- was -- ’s queen,<br/> the Heathoscylfing’s helpmate
dear.<br/> To Hrothgar was given such glory of war,<br/> such honor of
combat, that all his kin<br/> obeyed him gladly till great grew his band<br/>
of youthful comrades. It came in his mind<br/> to bid his henchmen a hall
uprear,<br/> a master mead-house, mightier far<br/> than ever was seen by
the sons of earth,<br/> and within it, then, to old and young<br/> he
would all allot that the Lord had sent him,<br/> save only the land and
the lives of his men.<br/> Wide, I heard, was the work commanded,<br/> for
many a tribe this mid-earth round,<br/> to fashion the folkstead. It fell,
as he ordered,<br/> in rapid achievement that ready it stood there,<br/>
of halls the noblest: Heorot <SPAN name="linkcitation1a" id="linkcitation1a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote1a">{1a}</SPAN> he named it<br/> whose message had might
in many a land.<br/> Not reckless of promise, the rings he dealt,<br/>
treasure at banquet: there towered the hall,<br/> high, gabled wide, the
hot surge waiting<br/> of furious flame. <SPAN name="linkcitation1b" id="linkcitation1b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote1b">{1b}</SPAN> Nor far was
that day<br/> when father and son-in-law stood in feud<br/> for warfare
and hatred that woke again. <SPAN name="linkcitation1c" id="linkcitation1c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote1c">{1c}</SPAN><br/> With envy and anger an evil spirit<br/>
endured the dole in his dark abode,<br/> that he heard each day the din of
revel<br/> high in the hall: there harps rang out,<br/> clear song of the
singer. He sang who knew <SPAN name="linkcitation1d" id="linkcitation1d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote1d">{1d}</SPAN><br/> tales of the early time of man,<br/>
how the Almighty made the earth,<br/> fairest fields enfolded by water,<br/>
set, triumphant, sun and moon<br/> for a light to lighten the
land-dwellers,<br/> and braided bright the breast of earth<br/> with limbs
and leaves, made life for all<br/> of mortal beings that breathe and move.<br/>
So lived the clansmen in cheer and revel<br/> a winsome life, till one
began<br/> to fashion evils, that field of hell.<br/> Grendel this monster
grim was called,<br/> march-riever <SPAN name="linkcitation1e" id="linkcitation1e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote1e">{1e}</SPAN> mighty, in
moorland living,<br/> in fen and fastness; fief of the giants<br/> the
hapless wight a while had kept<br/> since the Creator his exile doomed.<br/>
On kin of Cain was the killing avenged<br/> by sovran God for slaughtered
Abel.<br/> Ill fared his feud, <SPAN name="linkcitation1f" id="linkcitation1f"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote1f">{1f}</SPAN> and far was he driven,<br/> for the
slaughter’s sake, from sight of men.<br/> Of Cain awoke all that
woful breed,<br/> Etins <SPAN name="linkcitation1g" id="linkcitation1g"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote1g">{1g}</SPAN> and elves and evil-spirits,<br/> as well
as the giants that warred with God<br/> weary while: but their wage was
paid them!</p>
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<p>II</p>
<p>WENT he forth to find at fall of night<br/> that haughty house, and heed
wherever<br/> the Ring-Danes, outrevelled, to rest had gone.<br/> Found
within it the atheling band<br/> asleep after feasting and fearless of
sorrow,<br/> of human hardship. Unhallowed wight,<br/> grim and greedy, he
grasped betimes,<br/> wrathful, reckless, from resting-places,<br/> thirty
of the thanes, and thence he rushed<br/> fain of his fell spoil, faring
homeward,<br/> laden with slaughter, his lair to seek.<br/> Then at the
dawning, as day was breaking,<br/> the might of Grendel to men was known;<br/>
then after wassail was wail uplifted,<br/> loud moan in the morn. The
mighty chief,<br/> atheling excellent, unblithe sat,<br/> labored in woe
for the loss of his thanes,<br/> when once had been traced the trail of
the fiend,<br/> spirit accurst: too cruel that sorrow,<br/> too long, too
loathsome. Not late the respite;<br/> with night returning, anew began<br/>
ruthless murder; he recked no whit,<br/> firm in his guilt, of the feud
and crime.<br/> They were easy to find who elsewhere sought<br/> in room
remote their rest at night,<br/> bed in the bowers, <SPAN name="linkcitation2a" id="linkcitation2a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote2a">{2a}</SPAN>
when that bale was shown,<br/> was seen in sooth, with surest token, --<br/>
the hall-thane’s <SPAN name="linkcitation2b" id="linkcitation2b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote2b">{2b}</SPAN> hate. Such held themselves<br/> far and
fast who the fiend outran!<br/> Thus ruled unrighteous and raged his fill<br/>
one against all; until empty stood<br/> that lordly building, and long it
bode so.<br/> Twelve years’ tide the trouble he bore,<br/> sovran of
Scyldings, sorrows in plenty,<br/> boundless cares. There came unhidden<br/>
tidings true to the tribes of men,<br/> in sorrowful songs, how
ceaselessly Grendel<br/> harassed Hrothgar, what hate he bore him,<br/>
what murder and massacre, many a year,<br/> feud unfading, -- refused
consent<br/> to deal with any of Daneland’s earls,<br/> make pact of
peace, or compound for gold:<br/> still less did the wise men ween to get<br/>
great fee for the feud from his fiendish hands.<br/> But the evil one
ambushed old and young<br/> death-shadow dark, and dogged them still,<br/>
lured, or lurked in the livelong night<br/> of misty moorlands: men may
say not<br/> where the haunts of these Hell-Runes <SPAN name="linkcitation2c" id="linkcitation2c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote2c">{2c}</SPAN> be.<br/> Such
heaping of horrors the hater of men,<br/> lonely roamer, wrought
unceasing,<br/> harassings heavy. O’er Heorot he lorded,<br/>
gold-bright hall, in gloomy nights;<br/> and ne’er could the prince
<SPAN name="linkcitation2d" id="linkcitation2d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote2d">{2d}</SPAN>
approach his throne,<br/> -- ’twas judgment of God, -- or have joy
in his hall.<br/> Sore was the sorrow to Scyldings’-friend,<br/>
heart-rending misery. Many nobles<br/> sat assembled, and searched out
counsel<br/> how it were best for bold-hearted men<br/> against harassing
terror to try their hand.<br/> Whiles they vowed in their heathen fanes<br/>
altar-offerings, asked with words <SPAN name="linkcitation2e" id="linkcitation2e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote2e">{2e}</SPAN><br/> that the
slayer-of-souls would succor give them<br/> for the pain of their people.
Their practice this,<br/> their heathen hope; ’twas Hell they
thought of<br/> in mood of their mind. Almighty they knew not,<br/>
Doomsman of Deeds and dreadful Lord,<br/> nor Heaven’s-Helmet heeded
they ever,<br/> Wielder-of-Wonder. -- Woe for that man<br/> who in harm
and hatred hales his soul<br/> to fiery embraces; -- nor favor nor change<br/>
awaits he ever. But well for him<br/> that after death-day may draw to his
Lord,<br/> and friendship find in the Father’s arms!</p>
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<p>III</p>
<p>THUS seethed unceasing the son of Healfdene<br/> with the woe of these
days; not wisest men<br/> assuaged his sorrow; too sore the anguish,<br/>
loathly and long, that lay on his folk,<br/> most baneful of burdens and
bales of the night.</p>
<p>This heard in his home Hygelac’s thane,<br/> great among Geats, of
Grendel’s doings.<br/> He was the mightiest man of valor<br/> in
that same day of this our life,<br/> stalwart and stately. A stout
wave-walker<br/> he bade make ready. Yon battle-king, said he,<br/> far o’er
the swan-road he fain would seek,<br/> the noble monarch who needed men!<br/>
The prince’s journey by prudent folk<br/> was little blamed, though
they loved him dear;<br/> they whetted the hero, and hailed good omens.<br/>
And now the bold one from bands of Geats<br/> comrades chose, the keenest
of warriors<br/> e’er he could find; with fourteen men<br/> the
sea-wood <SPAN name="linkcitation3a" id="linkcitation3a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote3a">{3a}</SPAN> he sought, and, sailor proved,<br/> led
them on to the land’s confines.<br/> Time had now flown; <SPAN name="linkcitation3b" id="linkcitation3b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote3b">{3b}</SPAN>
afloat was the ship,<br/> boat under bluff. On board they climbed,<br/>
warriors ready; waves were churning<br/> sea with sand; the sailors bore<br/>
on the breast of the bark their bright array,<br/> their mail and weapons:
the men pushed off,<br/> on its willing way, the well-braced craft.<br/>
Then moved o’er the waters by might of the wind<br/> that bark like
a bird with breast of foam,<br/> till in season due, on the second day,<br/>
the curved prow such course had run<br/> that sailors now could see the
land,<br/> sea-cliffs shining, steep high hills,<br/> headlands broad.
Their haven was found,<br/> their journey ended. Up then quickly<br/> the
Weders’ <SPAN name="linkcitation3c" id="linkcitation3c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote3c">{3c}</SPAN> clansmen climbed ashore,<br/> anchored
their sea-wood, with armor clashing<br/> and gear of battle: God they
thanked<br/> or passing in peace o’er the paths of the sea.<br/> Now
saw from the cliff a Scylding clansman,<br/> a warden that watched the
water-side,<br/> how they bore o’er the gangway glittering shields,<br/>
war-gear in readiness; wonder seized him<br/> to know what manner of men
they were.<br/> Straight to the strand his steed he rode,<br/> Hrothgar’s
henchman; with hand of might<br/> he shook his spear, and spake in parley.<br/>
“Who are ye, then, ye armed men,<br/> mailed folk, that yon mighty
vessel<br/> have urged thus over the ocean ways,<br/> here o’er the
waters? A warden I,<br/> sentinel set o’er the sea-march here,<br/>
lest any foe to the folk of Danes<br/> with harrying fleet should harm the
land.<br/> No aliens ever at ease thus bore them,<br/> linden-wielders:
<SPAN name="linkcitation3d" id="linkcitation3d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote3d">{3d}</SPAN>
yet word-of-leave<br/> clearly ye lack from clansmen here,<br/> my folk’s
agreement. -- A greater ne’er saw I<br/> of warriors in world than
is one of you, --<br/> yon hero in harness! No henchman he<br/> worthied
by weapons, if witness his features,<br/> his peerless presence! I pray
you, though, tell<br/> your folk and home, lest hence ye fare<br/> suspect
to wander your way as spies<br/> in Danish land. Now, dwellers afar,<br/>
ocean-travellers, take from me<br/> simple advice: the sooner the better<br/>
I hear of the country whence ye came.”</p>
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<p>IV</p>
<p>To him the stateliest spake in answer;<br/> the warriors’ leader his
word-hoard unlocked: --<br/> “We are by kin of the clan of Geats,<br/>
and Hygelac’s own hearth-fellows we.<br/> To folk afar was my father
known,<br/> noble atheling, Ecgtheow named.<br/> Full of winters, he fared
away<br/> aged from earth; he is honored still<br/> through width of the
world by wise men all.<br/> To thy lord and liege in loyal mood<br/> we
hasten hither, to Healfdene’s son,<br/> people-protector: be pleased
to advise us!<br/> To that mighty-one come we on mickle errand,<br/> to
the lord of the Danes; nor deem I right<br/> that aught be hidden. We hear
-- thou knowest<br/> if sooth it is -- the saying of men,<br/> that amid
the Scyldings a scathing monster,<br/> dark ill-doer, in dusky nights<br/>
shows terrific his rage unmatched,<br/> hatred and murder. To Hrothgar I<br/>
in greatness of soul would succor bring,<br/> so the Wise-and-Brave <SPAN name="linkcitation4a" id="linkcitation4a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote4a">{4a}</SPAN>
may worst his foes, --<br/> if ever the end of ills is fated,<br/> of
cruel contest, if cure shall follow,<br/> and the boiling care-waves
cooler grow;<br/> else ever afterward anguish-days<br/> he shall suffer in
sorrow while stands in place<br/> high on its hill that house unpeered!”<br/>
Astride his steed, the strand-ward answered,<br/> clansman unquailing:
“The keen-souled thane<br/> must be skilled to sever and sunder duly<br/>
words and works, if he well intends.<br/> I gather, this band is
graciously bent<br/> to the Scyldings’ master. March, then, bearing<br/>
weapons and weeds the way I show you.<br/> I will bid my men your boat
meanwhile<br/> to guard for fear lest foemen come, --<br/> your new-tarred
ship by shore of ocean<br/> faithfully watching till once again<br/> it
waft o’er the waters those well-loved thanes,<br/> -- winding-neck’d
wood, -- to Weders’ bounds,<br/> heroes such as the hest of fate<br/>
shall succor and save from the shock of war.”<br/> They bent them to
march, -- the boat lay still,<br/> fettered by cable and fast at anchor,<br/>
broad-bosomed ship. -- Then shone the boars <SPAN name="linkcitation4b" id="linkcitation4b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote4b">{4b}</SPAN><br/> over the
cheek-guard; chased with gold,<br/> keen and gleaming, guard it kept<br/>
o’er the man of war, as marched along<br/> heroes in haste, till the
hall they saw,<br/> broad of gable and bright with gold:<br/> that was the
fairest, ’mid folk of earth,<br/> of houses ’neath heaven,
where Hrothgar lived,<br/> and the gleam of it lightened o’er lands
afar.<br/> The sturdy shieldsman showed that bright<br/>
burg-of-the-boldest; bade them go<br/> straightway thither; his steed then
turned,<br/> hardy hero, and hailed them thus: --<br/> “’Tis
time that I fare from you. Father Almighty<br/> in grace and mercy guard
you well,<br/> safe in your seekings. Seaward I go,<br/> ’gainst
hostile warriors hold my watch.”</p>
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<p>V</p>
<p>STONE-BRIGHT the street: <SPAN name="linkcitation5a" id="linkcitation5a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote5a">{5a}</SPAN> it showed the way<br/> to the crowd of
clansmen. Corselets glistened<br/> hand-forged, hard; on their harness
bright<br/> the steel ring sang, as they strode along<br/> in mail of
battle, and marched to the hall.<br/> There, weary of ocean, the wall
along<br/> they set their bucklers, their broad shields, down,<br/> and
bowed them to bench: the breastplates clanged,<br/> war-gear of men; their
weapons stacked,<br/> spears of the seafarers stood together,<br/>
gray-tipped ash: that iron band<br/> was worthily weaponed! -- A warrior
proud<br/> asked of the heroes their home and kin.<br/> “Whence,
now, bear ye burnished shields,<br/> harness gray and helmets grim,<br/>
spears in multitude? Messenger, I,<br/> Hrothgar’s herald! Heroes so
many<br/> ne’er met I as strangers of mood so strong.<br/> ’Tis
plain that for prowess, not plunged into exile,<br/> for high-hearted
valor, Hrothgar ye seek!”<br/> Him the sturdy-in-war bespake with
words,<br/> proud earl of the Weders answer made,<br/> hardy ’neath
helmet: -- “Hygelac’s, we,<br/> fellows at board; I am Beowulf
named.<br/> I am seeking to say to the son of Healfdene<br/> this mission
of mine, to thy master-lord,<br/> the doughty prince, if he deign at all<br/>
grace that we greet him, the good one, now.”<br/> Wulfgar spake, the
Wendles’ chieftain,<br/> whose might of mind to many was known,<br/>
his courage and counsel: “The king of Danes,<br/> the Scyldings’
friend, I fain will tell,<br/> the Breaker-of-Rings, as the boon thou
askest,<br/> the famed prince, of thy faring hither,<br/> and, swiftly
after, such answer bring<br/> as the doughty monarch may deign to give.”<br/>
Hied then in haste to where Hrothgar sat<br/> white-haired and old, his
earls about him,<br/> till the stout thane stood at the shoulder there<br/>
of the Danish king: good courtier he!<br/> Wulfgar spake to his winsome
lord: --<br/> “Hither have fared to thee far-come men<br/> o’er
the paths of ocean, people of Geatland;<br/> and the stateliest there by
his sturdy band<br/> is Beowulf named. This boon they seek,<br/> that
they, my master, may with thee<br/> have speech at will: nor spurn their
prayer<br/> to give them hearing, gracious Hrothgar!<br/> In weeds of the
warrior worthy they,<br/> methinks, of our liking; their leader most
surely,<br/> a hero that hither his henchmen has led.”</p>
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<p>VI</p>
<p>HROTHGAR answered, helmet of Scyldings: --<br/> “I knew him of yore
in his youthful days;<br/> his aged father was Ecgtheow named,<br/> to
whom, at home, gave Hrethel the Geat<br/> his only daughter. Their
offspring bold<br/> fares hither to seek the steadfast friend.<br/> And
seamen, too, have said me this, --<br/> who carried my gifts to the
Geatish court,<br/> thither for thanks, -- he has thirty men’s<br/>
heft of grasp in the gripe of his hand,<br/> the bold-in-battle. Blessed
God<br/> out of his mercy this man hath sent<br/> to Danes of the West, as
I ween indeed,<br/> against horror of Grendel. I hope to give<br/> the
good youth gold for his gallant thought.<br/> Be thou in haste, and bid
them hither,<br/> clan of kinsmen, to come before me;<br/> and add this
word, -- they are welcome guests<br/> to folk of the Danes.”<br/>
[To the door of the hall<br/> Wulfgar went] and the word declared: --<br/>
“To you this message my master sends,<br/> East-Danes’ king,
that your kin he knows,<br/> hardy heroes, and hails you all<br/> welcome
hither o’er waves of the sea!<br/> Ye may wend your way in
war-attire,<br/> and under helmets Hrothgar greet;<br/> but let here the
battle-shields bide your parley,<br/> and wooden war-shafts wait its end.”<br/>
Uprose the mighty one, ringed with his men,<br/> brave band of thanes:
some bode without,<br/> battle-gear guarding, as bade the chief.<br/> Then
hied that troop where the herald led them,<br/> under Heorot’s roof:
[the hero strode,]<br/> hardy ’neath helm, till the hearth he
neared.<br/> Beowulf spake, -- his breastplate gleamed,<br/> war-net woven
by wit of the smith: --<br/> “Thou Hrothgar, hail! Hygelac’s
I,<br/> kinsman and follower. Fame a plenty<br/> have I gained in youth!
These Grendel-deeds<br/> I heard in my home-land heralded clear.<br/>
Seafarers say how stands this hall,<br/> of buildings best, for your band
of thanes<br/> empty and idle, when evening sun<br/> in the harbor of
heaven is hidden away.<br/> So my vassals advised me well, --<br/> brave
and wise, the best of men, --<br/> O sovran Hrothgar, to seek thee here,<br/>
for my nerve and my might they knew full well.<br/> Themselves had seen me
from slaughter come<br/> blood-flecked from foes, where five I bound,<br/>
and that wild brood worsted. I’ the waves I slew<br/> nicors <SPAN name="linkcitation6a" id="linkcitation6a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote6a">{6a}</SPAN>
by night, in need and peril<br/> avenging the Weders, <SPAN name="linkcitation6b" id="linkcitation6b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote6b">{6b}</SPAN>
whose woe they sought, --<br/> crushing the grim ones. Grendel now,<br/>
monster cruel, be mine to quell<br/> in single battle! So, from thee,<br/>
thou sovran of the Shining-Danes,<br/> Scyldings’-bulwark, a boon I
seek, --<br/> and, Friend-of-the-folk, refuse it not,<br/> O Warriors’-shield,
now I’ve wandered far, --<br/> that I alone with my liegemen here,<br/>
this hardy band, may Heorot purge!<br/> More I hear, that the monster
dire,<br/> in his wanton mood, of weapons recks not;<br/> hence shall I
scorn -- so Hygelac stay,<br/> king of my kindred, kind to me! --<br/>
brand or buckler to bear in the fight,<br/> gold-colored targe: but with
gripe alone<br/> must I front the fiend and fight for life,<br/> foe
against foe. Then faith be his<br/> in the doom of the Lord whom death
shall take.<br/> Fain, I ween, if the fight he win,<br/> in this hall of
gold my Geatish band<br/> will he fearless eat, -- as oft before, --<br/>
my noblest thanes. Nor need’st thou then<br/> to hide my head; <SPAN name="linkcitation6c" id="linkcitation6c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote6c">{6c}</SPAN>
for his shall I be,<br/> dyed in gore, if death must take me;<br/> and my
blood-covered body he’ll bear as prey,<br/> ruthless devour it, the
roamer-lonely,<br/> with my life-blood redden his lair in the fen:<br/> no
further for me need’st food prepare!<br/> To Hygelac send, if Hild
<SPAN name="linkcitation6d" id="linkcitation6d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote6d">{6d}</SPAN>
should take me,<br/> best of war-weeds, warding my breast,<br/> armor
excellent, heirloom of Hrethel<br/> and work of Wayland. <SPAN name="linkcitation6e" id="linkcitation6e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote6e">{6e}</SPAN>
Fares Wyrd <SPAN name="linkcitation6f" id="linkcitation6f"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote6f">{6f}</SPAN> as she must.”</p>
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<p>VII</p>
<p>HROTHGAR spake, the Scyldings’-helmet: --<br/> “For fight
defensive, Friend my Beowulf,<br/> to succor and save, thou hast sought us
here.<br/> Thy father’s combat <SPAN name="linkcitation7a" id="linkcitation7a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote7a">{7a}</SPAN> a feud
enkindled<br/> when Heatholaf with hand he slew<br/> among the Wylfings;
his Weder kin<br/> for horror of fighting feared to hold him.<br/>
Fleeing, he sought our South-Dane folk,<br/> over surge of ocean the
Honor-Scyldings,<br/> when first I was ruling the folk of Danes,<br/>
wielded, youthful, this widespread realm,<br/> this hoard-hold of heroes.
Heorogar was dead,<br/> my elder brother, had breathed his last,<br/>
Healfdene’s bairn: he was better than I!<br/> Straightway the feud
with fee <SPAN name="linkcitation7b" id="linkcitation7b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote7b">{7b}</SPAN> I settled,<br/> to the Wylfings sent, o’er
watery ridges,<br/> treasures olden: oaths he <SPAN name="linkcitation7c" id="linkcitation7c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote7c">{7c}</SPAN> swore me.<br/>
Sore is my soul to say to any<br/> of the race of man what ruth for me<br/>
in Heorot Grendel with hate hath wrought,<br/> what sudden harryings.
Hall-folk fail me,<br/> my warriors wane; for Wyrd hath swept them<br/>
into Grendel’s grasp. But God is able<br/> this deadly foe from his
deeds to turn!<br/> Boasted full oft, as my beer they drank,<br/> earls o’er
the ale-cup, armed men,<br/> that they would bide in the beer-hall here,<br/>
Grendel’s attack with terror of blades.<br/> Then was this
mead-house at morning tide<br/> dyed with gore, when the daylight broke,<br/>
all the boards of the benches blood-besprinkled,<br/> gory the hall: I had
heroes the less,<br/> doughty dear-ones that death had reft.<br/> -- But
sit to the banquet, unbind thy words,<br/> hardy hero, as heart shall
prompt thee.”</p>
<p>Gathered together, the Geatish men<br/> in the banquet-hall on bench
assigned,<br/> sturdy-spirited, sat them down,<br/> hardy-hearted. A
henchman attended,<br/> carried the carven cup in hand,<br/> served the
clear mead. Oft minstrels sang<br/> blithe in Heorot. Heroes revelled,<br/>
no dearth of warriors, Weder and Dane.</p>
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<p>VIII</p>
<p>UNFERTH spake, the son of Ecglaf,<br/> who sat at the feet of the
Scyldings’ lord,<br/> unbound the battle-runes. <SPAN name="linkcitation8a" id="linkcitation8a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote8a">{8a}</SPAN>
-- Beowulf’s quest,<br/> sturdy seafarer’s, sorely galled him;<br/>
ever he envied that other men<br/> should more achieve in middle-earth<br/>
of fame under heaven than he himself. --<br/> “Art thou that
Beowulf, Breca’s rival,<br/> who emulous swam on the open sea,<br/>
when for pride the pair of you proved the floods,<br/> and wantonly dared
in waters deep<br/> to risk your lives? No living man,<br/> or lief or
loath, from your labor dire<br/> could you dissuade, from swimming the
main.<br/> Ocean-tides with your arms ye covered,<br/> with strenuous
hands the sea-streets measured,<br/> swam o’er the waters. Winter’s
storm<br/> rolled the rough waves. In realm of sea<br/> a sennight strove
ye. In swimming he topped thee,<br/> had more of main! Him at morning-tide<br/>
billows bore to the Battling Reamas,<br/> whence he hied to his home so
dear<br/> beloved of his liegemen, to land of Brondings,<br/> fastness
fair, where his folk he ruled,<br/> town and treasure. In triumph o’er
thee<br/> Beanstan’s bairn <SPAN name="linkcitation8b" id="linkcitation8b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote8b">{8b}</SPAN> his boast
achieved.<br/> So ween I for thee a worse adventure<br/> -- though in
buffet of battle thou brave hast been,<br/> in struggle grim, -- if
Grendel’s approach<br/> thou darst await through the watch of night!”</p>
<p>Beowulf spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --<br/> “What a deal hast uttered,
dear my Unferth,<br/> drunken with beer, of Breca now,<br/> told of his
triumph! Truth I claim it,<br/> that I had more of might in the sea<br/>
than any man else, more ocean-endurance.<br/> We twain had talked, in time
of youth,<br/> and made our boast, -- we were merely boys,<br/> striplings
still, -- to stake our lives<br/> far at sea: and so we performed it.<br/>
Naked swords, as we swam along,<br/> we held in hand, with hope to guard
us<br/> against the whales. Not a whit from me<br/> could he float afar o’er
the flood of waves,<br/> haste o’er the billows; nor him I
abandoned.<br/> Together we twain on the tides abode<br/> five nights full
till the flood divided us,<br/> churning waves and chillest weather,<br/>
darkling night, and the northern wind<br/> ruthless rushed on us: rough
was the surge.<br/> Now the wrath of the sea-fish rose apace;<br/> yet me
’gainst the monsters my mailed coat,<br/> hard and hand-linked, help
afforded, --<br/> battle-sark braided my breast to ward,<br/> garnished
with gold. There grasped me firm<br/> and haled me to bottom the hated
foe,<br/> with grimmest gripe. ’Twas granted me, though,<br/> to
pierce the monster with point of sword,<br/> with blade of battle: huge
beast of the sea<br/> was whelmed by the hurly through hand of mine.</p>
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<p>IX</p>
<p>ME thus often the evil monsters<br/> thronging threatened. With thrust of
my sword,<br/> the darling, I dealt them due return!<br/> Nowise had they
bliss from their booty then<br/> to devour their victim, vengeful
creatures,<br/> seated to banquet at bottom of sea;<br/> but at break of
day, by my brand sore hurt,<br/> on the edge of ocean up they lay,<br/>
put to sleep by the sword. And since, by them<br/> on the fathomless
sea-ways sailor-folk<br/> are never molested. -- Light from east,<br/>
came bright God’s beacon; the billows sank,<br/> so that I saw the
sea-cliffs high,<br/> windy walls. For Wyrd oft saveth<br/> earl undoomed
if he doughty be!<br/> And so it came that I killed with my sword<br/>
nine of the nicors. Of night-fought battles<br/> ne’er heard I a
harder ’neath heaven’s dome,<br/> nor adrift on the deep a
more desolate man!<br/> Yet I came unharmed from that hostile clutch,<br/>
though spent with swimming. The sea upbore me,<br/> flood of the tide, on
Finnish land,<br/> the welling waters. No wise of thee<br/> have I heard
men tell such terror of falchions,<br/> bitter battle. Breca ne’er
yet,<br/> not one of you pair, in the play of war<br/> such daring deed
has done at all<br/> with bloody brand, -- I boast not of it! --<br/>
though thou wast the bane <SPAN name="linkcitation9a" id="linkcitation9a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote9a">{9a}</SPAN> of thy brethren dear,<br/> thy closest
kin, whence curse of hell<br/> awaits thee, well as thy wit may serve!<br/>
For I say in sooth, thou son of Ecglaf,<br/> never had Grendel these grim
deeds wrought,<br/> monster dire, on thy master dear,<br/> in Heorot such
havoc, if heart of thine<br/> were as battle-bold as thy boast is loud!<br/>
But he has found no feud will happen;<br/> from sword-clash dread of your
Danish clan<br/> he vaunts him safe, from the Victor-Scyldings.<br/> He
forces pledges, favors none<br/> of the land of Danes, but lustily
murders,<br/> fights and feasts, nor feud he dreads<br/> from Spear-Dane
men. But speedily now<br/> shall I prove him the prowess and pride of the
Geats,<br/> shall bid him battle. Blithe to mead<br/> go he that listeth,
when light of dawn<br/> this morrow morning o’er men of earth,<br/>
ether-robed sun from the south shall beam!”<br/> Joyous then was the
Jewel-giver,<br/> hoar-haired, war-brave; help awaited<br/> the
Bright-Danes’ prince, from Beowulf hearing,<br/> folk’s good
shepherd, such firm resolve.<br/> Then was laughter of liegemen loud
resounding<br/> with winsome words. Came Wealhtheow forth,<br/> queen of
Hrothgar, heedful of courtesy,<br/> gold-decked, greeting the guests in
hall;<br/> and the high-born lady handed the cup<br/> first to the
East-Danes’ heir and warden,<br/> bade him be blithe at the
beer-carouse,<br/> the land’s beloved one. Lustily took he<br/>
banquet and beaker, battle-famed king.</p>
<p>Through the hall then went the Helmings’ Lady,<br/> to younger and
older everywhere<br/> carried the cup, till come the moment<br/> when the
ring-graced queen, the royal-hearted,<br/> to Beowulf bore the beaker of
mead.<br/> She greeted the Geats’ lord, God she thanked,<br/> in
wisdom’s words, that her will was granted,<br/> that at last on a
hero her hope could lean<br/> for comfort in terrors. The cup he took,<br/>
hardy-in-war, from Wealhtheow’s hand,<br/> and answer uttered the
eager-for-combat.<br/> Beowulf spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --<br/> “This
was my thought, when my thanes and I<br/> bent to the ocean and entered
our boat,<br/> that I would work the will of your people<br/> fully, or
fighting fall in death,<br/> in fiend’s gripe fast. I am firm to do<br/>
an earl’s brave deed, or end the days<br/> of this life of mine in
the mead-hall here.”<br/> Well these words to the woman seemed,<br/>
Beowulf’s battle-boast. -- Bright with gold<br/> the stately dame by
her spouse sat down.<br/> Again, as erst, began in hall<br/> warriors’
wassail and words of power,<br/> the proud-band’s revel, till
presently<br/> the son of Healfdene hastened to seek<br/> rest for the
night; he knew there waited<br/> fight for the fiend in that festal hall,<br/>
when the sheen of the sun they saw no more,<br/> and dusk of night sank
darkling nigh,<br/> and shadowy shapes came striding on,<br/> wan under
welkin. The warriors rose.<br/> Man to man, he made harangue,<br/>
Hrothgar to Beowulf, bade him hail,<br/> let him wield the wine hall: a
word he added: --<br/> “Never to any man erst I trusted,<br/> since
I could heave up hand and shield,<br/> this noble Dane-Hall, till now to
thee.<br/> Have now and hold this house unpeered;<br/> remember thy glory;
thy might declare;<br/> watch for the foe! No wish shall fail thee<br/> if
thou bidest the battle with bold-won life.”</p>
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<p>X</p>
<p>THEN Hrothgar went with his hero-train,<br/> defence-of-Scyldings, forth
from hall;<br/> fain would the war-lord Wealhtheow seek,<br/> couch of his
queen. The King-of-Glory<br/> against this Grendel a guard had set,<br/>
so heroes heard, a hall-defender,<br/> who warded the monarch and watched
for the monster.<br/> In truth, the Geats’ prince gladly trusted<br/>
his mettle, his might, the mercy of God!<br/> Cast off then his corselet
of iron,<br/> helmet from head; to his henchman gave, --<br/> choicest of
weapons, -- the well-chased sword,<br/> bidding him guard the gear of
battle.<br/> Spake then his Vaunt the valiant man,<br/> Beowulf Geat, ere
the bed be sought: --<br/> “Of force in fight no feebler I count me,<br/>
in grim war-deeds, than Grendel deems him.<br/> Not with the sword, then,
to sleep of death<br/> his life will I give, though it lie in my power.<br/>
No skill is his to strike against me,<br/> my shield to hew though he
hardy be,<br/> bold in battle; we both, this night,<br/> shall spurn the
sword, if he seek me here,<br/> unweaponed, for war. Let wisest God,<br/>
sacred Lord, on which side soever<br/> doom decree as he deemeth right.”<br/>
Reclined then the chieftain, and cheek-pillows held<br/> the head of the
earl, while all about him<br/> seamen hardy on hall-beds sank.<br/> None
of them thought that thence their steps<br/> to the folk and fastness that
fostered them,<br/> to the land they loved, would lead them back!<br/>
Full well they wist that on warriors many<br/> battle-death seized, in the
banquet-hall,<br/> of Danish clan. But comfort and help,<br/> war-weal
weaving, to Weder folk<br/> the Master gave, that, by might of one,<br/>
over their enemy all prevailed,<br/> by single strength. In sooth ’tis
told<br/> that highest God o’er human kind<br/> hath wielded ever!
-- Thro’ wan night striding,<br/> came the walker-in-shadow.
Warriors slept<br/> whose hest was to guard the gabled hall, --<br/> all
save one. ’Twas widely known<br/> that against God’s will the
ghostly ravager<br/> him <SPAN name="linkcitation10a" id="linkcitation10a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote10a">{10a}</SPAN> could not hurl to haunts of darkness;<br/>
wakeful, ready, with warrior’s wrath,<br/> bold he bided the battle’s
issue.</p>
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<p>XI</p>
<p>THEN from the moorland, by misty crags,<br/> with God’s wrath laden,
Grendel came.<br/> The monster was minded of mankind now<br/> sundry to
seize in the stately house.<br/> Under welkin he walked, till the
wine-palace there,<br/> gold-hall of men, he gladly discerned,<br/>
flashing with fretwork. Not first time, this,<br/> that he the home of
Hrothgar sought, --<br/> yet ne’er in his life-day, late or early,<br/>
such hardy heroes, such hall-thanes, found!<br/> To the house the warrior
walked apace,<br/> parted from peace; <SPAN name="linkcitation11a" id="linkcitation11a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote11a">{11a}</SPAN> the portal
opended,<br/> though with forged bolts fast, when his fists had<br/>
struck it,<br/> and baleful he burst in his blatant rage,<br/> the house’s
mouth. All hastily, then,<br/> o’er fair-paved floor the fiend trod
on,<br/> ireful he strode; there streamed from his eyes<br/> fearful
flashes, like flame to see.</p>
<p>He spied in hall the hero-band,<br/> kin and clansmen clustered asleep,<br/>
hardy liegemen. Then laughed his heart;<br/> for the monster was minded,
ere morn should dawn,<br/> savage, to sever the soul of each,<br/> life
from body, since lusty banquet<br/> waited his will! But Wyrd forbade him<br/>
to seize any more of men on earth<br/> after that evening. Eagerly watched<br/>
Hygelac’s kinsman his cursed foe,<br/> how he would fare in fell
attack.<br/> Not that the monster was minded to pause!<br/> Straightway he
seized a sleeping warrior<br/> for the first, and tore him fiercely
asunder,<br/> the bone-frame bit, drank blood in streams,<br/> swallowed
him piecemeal: swiftly thus<br/> the lifeless corse was clear devoured,<br/>
e’en feet and hands. Then farther he hied;<br/> for the hardy hero
with hand he grasped,<br/> felt for the foe with fiendish claw,<br/> for
the hero reclining, -- who clutched it boldly,<br/> prompt to answer,
propped on his arm.<br/> Soon then saw that shepherd-of-evils<br/> that
never he met in this middle-world,<br/> in the ways of earth, another
wight<br/> with heavier hand-gripe; at heart he feared,<br/> sorrowed in
soul, -- none the sooner escaped!<br/> Fain would he flee, his fastness
seek,<br/> the den of devils: no doings now<br/> such as oft he had done
in days of old!<br/> Then bethought him the hardy Hygelac-thane<br/> of
his boast at evening: up he bounded,<br/> grasped firm his foe, whose
fingers cracked.<br/> The fiend made off, but the earl close followed.<br/>
The monster meant -- if he might at all --<br/> to fling himself free, and
far away<br/> fly to the fens, -- knew his fingers’ power<br/> in
the gripe of the grim one. Gruesome march<br/> to Heorot this monster of
harm had made!<br/> Din filled the room; the Danes were bereft,<br/>
castle-dwellers and clansmen all,<br/> earls, of their ale. Angry were
both<br/> those savage hall-guards: the house resounded.<br/> Wonder it
was the wine-hall firm<br/> in the strain of their struggle stood, to
earth<br/> the fair house fell not; too fast it was<br/> within and
without by its iron bands<br/> craftily clamped; though there crashed from
sill<br/> many a mead-bench -- men have told me --<br/> gay with gold,
where the grim foes wrestled.<br/> So well had weened the wisest Scyldings<br/>
that not ever at all might any man<br/> that bone-decked, brave house
break asunder,<br/> crush by craft, -- unless clasp of fire<br/> in smoke
engulfed it. -- Again uprose<br/> din redoubled. Danes of the North<br/>
with fear and frenzy were filled, each one,<br/> who from the wall that
wailing heard,<br/> God’s foe sounding his grisly song,<br/> cry of
the conquered, clamorous pain<br/> from captive of hell. Too closely held
him<br/> he who of men in might was strongest<br/> in that same day of
this our life.</p>
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<p>XII</p>
<p>NOT in any wise would the earls’-defence <SPAN name="linkcitation12a" id="linkcitation12a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote12a">{12a}</SPAN><br/> suffer
that slaughterous stranger to live,<br/> useless deeming his days and
years<br/> to men on earth. Now many an earl<br/> of Beowulf brandished
blade ancestral,<br/> fain the life of their lord to shield,<br/> their
praised prince, if power were theirs;<br/> never they knew, -- as they
neared the foe,<br/> hardy-hearted heroes of war,<br/> aiming their swords
on every side<br/> the accursed to kill, -- no keenest blade,<br/> no
farest of falchions fashioned on earth,<br/> could harm or hurt that
hideous fiend!<br/> He was safe, by his spells, from sword of battle,<br/>
from edge of iron. Yet his end and parting<br/> on that same day of this
our life<br/> woful should be, and his wandering soul<br/> far off flit to
the fiends’ domain.<br/> Soon he found, who in former days,<br/>
harmful in heart and hated of God,<br/> on many a man such murder wrought,<br/>
that the frame of his body failed him now.<br/> For him the keen-souled
kinsman of Hygelac<br/> held in hand; hateful alive<br/> was each to
other. The outlaw dire<br/> took mortal hurt; a mighty wound<br/> showed
on his shoulder, and sinews cracked,<br/> and the bone-frame burst. To
Beowulf now<br/> the glory was given, and Grendel thence<br/> death-sick
his den in the dark moor sought,<br/> noisome abode: he knew too well<br/>
that here was the last of life, an end<br/> of his days on earth. -- To
all the Danes<br/> by that bloody battle the boon had come.<br/> From
ravage had rescued the roving stranger<br/> Hrothgar’s hall; the
hardy and wise one<br/> had purged it anew. His night-work pleased him,<br/>
his deed and its honor. To Eastern Danes<br/> had the valiant Geat his
vaunt made good,<br/> all their sorrow and ills assuaged,<br/> their bale
of battle borne so long,<br/> and all the dole they erst endured<br/> pain
a-plenty. -- ’Twas proof of this,<br/> when the hardy-in-fight a
hand laid down,<br/> arm and shoulder, -- all, indeed,<br/> of Grendel’s
gripe, -- ’neath the gabled roof.</p>
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<p>XIII</p>
<p>MANY at morning, as men have told me,<br/> warriors gathered the gift-hall
round,<br/> folk-leaders faring from far and near,<br/> o’er
wide-stretched ways, the wonder to view,<br/> trace of the traitor. Not
troublous seemed<br/> the enemy’s end to any man<br/> who saw by the
gait of the graceless foe<br/> how the weary-hearted, away from thence,<br/>
baffled in battle and banned, his steps<br/> death-marked dragged to the
devils’ mere.<br/> Bloody the billows were boiling there,<br/>
turbid the tide of tumbling waves<br/> horribly seething, with sword-blood
hot,<br/> by that doomed one dyed, who in den of the moor<br/> laid
forlorn his life adown,<br/> his heathen soul, and hell received it.<br/>
Home then rode the hoary clansmen<br/> from that merry journey, and many a
youth,<br/> on horses white, the hardy warriors,<br/> back from the mere.
Then Beowulf’s glory<br/> eager they echoed, and all averred<br/>
that from sea to sea, or south or north,<br/> there was no other in earth’s
domain,<br/> under vault of heaven, more valiant found,<br/> of warriors
none more worthy to rule!<br/> (On their lord beloved they laid no slight,<br/>
gracious Hrothgar: a good king he!)<br/> From time to time, the
tried-in-battle<br/> their gray steeds set to gallop amain,<br/> and ran a
race when the road seemed fair.<br/> From time to time, a thane of the
king,<br/> who had made many vaunts, and was mindful of verses,<br/>
stored with sagas and songs of old,<br/> bound word to word in well-knit
rime,<br/> welded his lay; this warrior soon<br/> of Beowulf’s quest
right cleverly sang,<br/> and artfully added an excellent tale,<br/> in
well-ranged words, of the warlike deeds<br/> he had heard in saga of
Sigemund.<br/> Strange the story: he said it all, --<br/> the Waelsing’s
wanderings wide, his struggles,<br/> which never were told to tribes of
men,<br/> the feuds and the frauds, save to Fitela only,<br/> when of
these doings he deigned to speak,<br/> uncle to nephew; as ever the twain<br/>
stood side by side in stress of war,<br/> and multitude of the monster
kind<br/> they had felled with their swords. Of Sigemund grew,<br/> when
he passed from life, no little praise;<br/> for the doughty-in-combat a
dragon killed<br/> that herded the hoard: <SPAN name="linkcitation13a" id="linkcitation13a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote13a">{13a}</SPAN> under hoary
rock<br/> the atheling dared the deed alone<br/> fearful quest, nor was
Fitela there.<br/> Yet so it befell, his falchion pierced<br/> that
wondrous worm, -- on the wall it struck,<br/> best blade; the dragon died
in its blood.<br/> Thus had the dread-one by daring achieved<br/> over the
ring-hoard to rule at will,<br/> himself to pleasure; a sea-boat he
loaded,<br/> and bore on its bosom the beaming gold,<br/> son of Waels;
the worm was consumed.<br/> He had of all heroes the highest renown<br/>
among races of men, this refuge-of-warriors,<br/> for deeds of daring that
decked his name<br/> since the hand and heart of Heremod<br/> grew slack
in battle. He, swiftly banished<br/> to mingle with monsters at mercy of
foes,<br/> to death was betrayed; for torrents of sorrow<br/> had lamed
him too long; a load of care<br/> to earls and athelings all he proved.<br/>
Oft indeed, in earlier days,<br/> for the warrior’s wayfaring wise
men mourned,<br/> who had hoped of him help from harm and bale,<br/> and
had thought their sovran’s son would thrive,<br/> follow his father,
his folk protect,<br/> the hoard and the stronghold, heroes’ land,<br/>
home of Scyldings. -- But here, thanes said,<br/> the kinsman of Hygelac
kinder seemed<br/> to all: the other <SPAN name="linkcitation13b" id="linkcitation13b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote13b">{13b}</SPAN> was urged to
crime!<br/> And afresh to the race, <SPAN name="linkcitation13c" id="linkcitation13c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote13c">{13c}</SPAN> the fallow
roads<br/> by swift steeds measured! The morning sun<br/> was climbing
higher. Clansmen hastened<br/> to the high-built hall, those hardy-minded,<br/>
the wonder to witness. Warden of treasure,<br/> crowned with glory, the
king himself,<br/> with stately band from the bride-bower strode;<br/> and
with him the queen and her crowd of maidens<br/> measured the path to the
mead-house fair.</p>
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<p>XIV</p>
<p>HROTHGAR spake, -- to the hall he went,<br/> stood by the steps, the steep
roof saw,<br/> garnished with gold, and Grendel’s hand: --<br/>
“For the sight I see to the Sovran Ruler<br/> be speedy thanks! A
throng of sorrows<br/> I have borne from Grendel; but God still works<br/>
wonder on wonder, the Warden-of-Glory.<br/> It was but now that I never
more<br/> for woes that weighed on me waited help<br/> long as I lived,
when, laved in blood,<br/> stood sword-gore-stained this stateliest house,
--<br/> widespread woe for wise men all,<br/> who had no hope to hinder
ever<br/> foes infernal and fiendish sprites<br/> from havoc in hall. This
hero now,<br/> by the Wielder’s might, a work has done<br/> that not
all of us erst could ever do<br/> by wile and wisdom. Lo, well can she say<br/>
whoso of women this warrior bore<br/> among sons of men, if still she
liveth,<br/> that the God of the ages was good to her<br/> in the birth of
her bairn. Now, Beowulf, thee,<br/> of heroes best, I shall heartily love<br/>
as mine own, my son; preserve thou ever<br/> this kinship new: thou shalt
never lack<br/> wealth of the world that I wield as mine!<br/> Full oft
for less have I largess showered,<br/> my precious hoard, on a punier man,<br/>
less stout in struggle. Thyself hast now<br/> fulfilled such deeds, that
thy fame shall endure<br/> through all the ages. As ever he did,<br/> well
may the Wielder reward thee still!”<br/> Beowulf spake, bairn of
Ecgtheow: --<br/> “This work of war most willingly<br/> we have
fought, this fight, and fearlessly dared<br/> force of the foe. Fain, too,
were I<br/> hadst thou but seen himself, what time<br/> the fiend in his
trappings tottered to fall!<br/> Swiftly, I thought, in strongest gripe<br/>
on his bed of death to bind him down,<br/> that he in the hent of this
hand of mine<br/> should breathe his last: but he broke away.<br/> Him I
might not -- the Maker willed not --<br/> hinder from flight, and firm
enough hold<br/> the life-destroyer: too sturdy was he,<br/> the ruthless,
in running! For rescue, however,<br/> he left behind him his hand in
pledge,<br/> arm and shoulder; nor aught of help<br/> could the cursed one
thus procure at all.<br/> None the longer liveth he, loathsome fiend,<br/>
sunk in his sins, but sorrow holds him<br/> tightly grasped in gripe of
anguish,<br/> in baleful bonds, where bide he must,<br/> evil outlaw, such
awful doom<br/> as the Mighty Maker shall mete him out.”</p>
<p>More silent seemed the son of Ecglaf <SPAN name="linkcitation14a" id="linkcitation14a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote14a">{14a}</SPAN><br/> in
boastful speech of his battle-deeds,<br/> since athelings all, through the
earl’s great prowess,<br/> beheld that hand, on the high roof
gazing,<br/> foeman’s fingers, -- the forepart of each<br/> of the
sturdy nails to steel was likest, --<br/> heathen’s “hand-spear,”
hostile warrior’s<br/> claw uncanny. ’Twas clear, they said,<br/>
that him no blade of the brave could touch,<br/> how keen soever, or cut
away<br/> that battle-hand bloody from baneful foe.</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
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<p>XV</p>
<p>THERE was hurry and hest in Heorot now<br/> for hands to bedeck it, and
dense was the throng<br/> of men and women the wine-hall to cleanse,<br/>
the guest-room to garnish. Gold-gay shone the hangings<br/> that were wove
on the wall, and wonders many<br/> to delight each mortal that looks upon
them.<br/> Though braced within by iron bands,<br/> that building bright
was broken sorely; <SPAN name="linkcitation15a" id="linkcitation15a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote15a">{15a}</SPAN><br/> rent were its hinges; the roof
alone<br/> held safe and sound, when, seared with crime,<br/> the fiendish
foe his flight essayed,<br/> of life despairing. -- No light thing that,<br/>
the flight for safety, -- essay it who will!<br/> Forced of fate, he shall
find his way<br/> to the refuge ready for race of man,<br/> for
soul-possessors, and sons of earth;<br/> and there his body on bed of
death<br/> shall rest after revel.<br/> Arrived was the hour<br/> when to
hall proceeded Healfdene’s son:<br/> the king himself would sit to
banquet.<br/> Ne’er heard I of host in haughtier throng<br/> more
graciously gathered round giver-of-rings!<br/> Bowed then to bench those
bearers-of-glory,<br/> fain of the feasting. Featly received<br/> many a
mead-cup the mighty-in-spirit,<br/> kinsmen who sat in the sumptuous hall,<br/>
Hrothgar and Hrothulf. Heorot now<br/> was filled with friends; the folk
of Scyldings<br/> ne’er yet had tried the traitor’s deed.<br/>
To Beowulf gave the bairn of Healfdene<br/> a gold-wove banner, guerdon of
triumph,<br/> broidered battle-flag, breastplate and helmet;<br/> and a
splendid sword was seen of many<br/> borne to the brave one. Beowulf took<br/>
cup in hall: <SPAN name="linkcitation15b" id="linkcitation15b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote15b">{15b}</SPAN> for such costly gifts<br/> he suffered
no shame in that soldier throng.<br/> For I heard of few heroes, in
heartier mood,<br/> with four such gifts, so fashioned with gold,<br/> on
the ale-bench honoring others thus!<br/> O’er the roof of the helmet
high, a ridge,<br/> wound with wires, kept ward o’er the head,<br/>
lest the relict-of-files <SPAN name="linkcitation15c" id="linkcitation15c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote15c">{15c}</SPAN> should fierce invade,<br/> sharp in the
strife, when that shielded hero<br/> should go to grapple against his
foes.<br/> Then the earls’-defence <SPAN name="linkcitation15d" id="linkcitation15d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote15d">{15d}</SPAN> on the floor
<SPAN name="linkcitation15e" id="linkcitation15e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote15e">{15e}</SPAN> bade lead<br/> coursers eight, with
carven head-gear,<br/> adown the hall: one horse was decked<br/> with a
saddle all shining and set in jewels;<br/> ’twas the battle-seat of
the best of kings,<br/> when to play of swords the son of Healfdene<br/>
was fain to fare. Ne’er failed his valor<br/> in the crush of combat
when corpses fell.<br/> To Beowulf over them both then gave<br/> the
refuge-of-Ingwines right and power,<br/> o’er war-steeds and
weapons: wished him joy of them.<br/> Manfully thus the mighty prince,<br/>
hoard-guard for heroes, that hard fight repaid<br/> with steeds and
treasures contemned by none<br/> who is willing to say the sooth aright.</p>
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<p>XVI</p>
<p>AND the lord of earls, to each that came<br/> with Beowulf over the briny
ways,<br/> an heirloom there at the ale-bench gave,<br/> precious gift;
and the price <SPAN name="linkcitation16a" id="linkcitation16a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16a">{16a}</SPAN> bade pay<br/> in gold for him whom
Grendel erst<br/> murdered, -- and fain of them more had killed,<br/> had
not wisest God their Wyrd averted,<br/> and the man’s <SPAN name="linkcitation16b" id="linkcitation16b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16b">{16b}</SPAN>
brave mood. The Maker then<br/> ruled human kind, as here and now.<br/>
Therefore is insight always best,<br/> and forethought of mind. How much
awaits him<br/> of lief and of loath, who long time here,<br/> through
days of warfare this world endures!</p>
<p>Then song and music mingled sounds<br/> in the presence of Healfdene’s
head-of-armies <SPAN name="linkcitation16c" id="linkcitation16c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16c">{16c}</SPAN><br/> and harping was heard with the
hero-lay<br/> as Hrothgar’s singer the hall-joy woke<br/> along the
mead-seats, making his song<br/> of that sudden raid on the sons of Finn.
<SPAN name="linkcitation16d" id="linkcitation16d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16d">{16d}</SPAN><br/> Healfdene’s hero, Hnaef the
Scylding,<br/> was fated to fall in the Frisian slaughter. <SPAN name="linkcitation16e" id="linkcitation16e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16e">{16e}</SPAN><br/>
Hildeburh needed not hold in value<br/> her enemies’ honor! <SPAN name="linkcitation16f" id="linkcitation16f"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16f">{16f}</SPAN>
Innocent both<br/> were the loved ones she lost at the linden-play,<br/>
bairn and brother, they bowed to fate,<br/> stricken by spears; ’twas
a sorrowful woman!<br/> None doubted why the daughter of Hoc<br/> bewailed
her doom when dawning came,<br/> and under the sky she saw them lying,<br/>
kinsmen murdered, where most she had kenned<br/> of the sweets of the
world! By war were swept, too,<br/> Finn’s own liegemen, and few
were left;<br/> in the parleying-place <SPAN name="linkcitation16g" id="linkcitation16g"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16g">{16g}</SPAN> he could ply
no longer<br/> weapon, nor war could he wage on Hengest,<br/> and rescue
his remnant by right of arms<br/> from the prince’s thane. A pact he
offered:<br/> another dwelling the Danes should have,<br/> hall and
high-seat, and half the power<br/> should fall to them in Frisian land;<br/>
and at the fee-gifts, Folcwald’s son<br/> day by day the Danes
should honor,<br/> the folk of Hengest favor with rings,<br/> even as
truly, with treasure and jewels,<br/> with fretted gold, as his Frisian
kin<br/> he meant to honor in ale-hall there.<br/> Pact of peace they
plighted further<br/> on both sides firmly. Finn to Hengest<br/> with
oath, upon honor, openly promised<br/> that woful remnant, with wise-men’s
aid,<br/> nobly to govern, so none of the guests<br/> by word or work
should warp the treaty, <SPAN name="linkcitation16h" id="linkcitation16h"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16h">{16h}</SPAN><br/> or with malice of mind bemoan
themselves<br/> as forced to follow their fee-giver’s slayer,<br/>
lordless men, as their lot ordained.<br/> Should Frisian, moreover, with
foeman’s taunt,<br/> that murderous hatred to mind recall,<br/> then
edge of the sword must seal his doom.</p>
<p>Oaths were given, and ancient gold<br/> heaped from hoard. -- The hardy
Scylding,<br/> battle-thane best, <SPAN name="linkcitation16i" id="linkcitation16i"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16i">{16i}</SPAN> on his
balefire lay.<br/> All on the pyre were plain to see<br/> the gory sark,
the gilded swine-crest,<br/> boar of hard iron, and athelings many<br/>
slain by the sword: at the slaughter they fell.<br/> It was Hildeburh’s
hest, at Hnaef’s own pyre<br/> the bairn of her body on brands to
lay,<br/> his bones to burn, on the balefire placed,<br/> at his uncle’s
side. In sorrowful dirges<br/> bewept them the woman: great wailing
ascended.<br/> Then wound up to welkin the wildest of death-fires,<br/>
roared o’er the hillock: <SPAN name="linkcitation16j" id="linkcitation16j"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16j">{16j}</SPAN> heads all
were melted,<br/> gashes burst, and blood gushed out<br/> from bites <SPAN name="linkcitation16k" id="linkcitation16k"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote16k">{16k}</SPAN>
of the body. Balefire devoured,<br/> greediest spirit, those spared not by
war<br/> out of either folk: their flower was gone.</p>
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<br/><br/></div>
<p>XVII</p>
<p>THEN hastened those heroes their home to see,<br/> friendless, to find the
Frisian land,<br/> houses and high burg. Hengest still<br/> through the
death-dyed winter dwelt with Finn,<br/> holding pact, yet of home he
minded,<br/> though powerless his ring-decked prow to drive<br/> over the
waters, now waves rolled fierce<br/> lashed by the winds, or winter locked
them<br/> in icy fetters. Then fared another<br/> year to men’s
dwellings, as yet they do,<br/> the sunbright skies, that their season
ever<br/> duly await. Far off winter was driven;<br/> fair lay earth’s
breast; and fain was the rover,<br/> the guest, to depart, though more
gladly he pondered<br/> on wreaking his vengeance than roaming the deep,<br/>
and how to hasten the hot encounter<br/> where sons of the Frisians were
sure to be.<br/> So he escaped not the common doom,<br/> when Hun with
“Lafing,” the light-of-battle,<br/> best of blades, his bosom
pierced:<br/> its edge was famed with the Frisian earls.<br/> On
fierce-heart Finn there fell likewise,<br/> on himself at home, the horrid
sword-death;<br/> for Guthlaf and Oslaf of grim attack<br/> had sorrowing
told, from sea-ways landed,<br/> mourning their woes. <SPAN name="linkcitation17a" id="linkcitation17a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote17a">{17a}</SPAN>
Finn’s wavering spirit<br/> bode not in breast. The burg was
reddened<br/> with blood of foemen, and Finn was slain,<br/> king amid
clansmen; the queen was taken.<br/> To their ship the Scylding warriors
bore<br/> all the chattels the chieftain owned,<br/> whatever they found
in Finn’s domain<br/> of gems and jewels. The gentle wife<br/> o’er
paths of the deep to the Danes they bore,<br/> led to her land.<br/> The
lay was finished,<br/> the gleeman’s song. Then glad rose the revel;<br/>
bench-joy brightened. Bearers draw<br/> from their “wonder-vats”
wine. Comes Wealhtheow forth,<br/> under gold-crown goes where the good
pair sit,<br/> uncle and nephew, true each to the other one,<br/> kindred
in amity. Unferth the spokesman<br/> at the Scylding lord’s feet
sat: men had faith in his spirit,<br/> his keenness of courage, though
kinsmen had found him<br/> unsure at the sword-play. The Scylding queen
spoke:<br/> “Quaff of this cup, my king and lord,<br/> breaker of
rings, and blithe be thou,<br/> gold-friend of men; to the Geats here
speak<br/> such words of mildness as man should use.<br/> Be glad with thy
Geats; of those gifts be mindful,<br/> or near or far, which now thou
hast.</p>
<p>Men say to me, as son thou wishest<br/> yon hero to hold. Thy Heorot
purged,<br/> jewel-hall brightest, enjoy while thou canst,<br/> with many
a largess; and leave to thy kin<br/> folk and realm when forth thou goest<br/>
to greet thy doom. For gracious I deem<br/> my Hrothulf, <SPAN name="linkcitation17b" id="linkcitation17b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote17b">{17b}</SPAN>
willing to hold and rule<br/> nobly our youths, if thou yield up first,<br/>
prince of Scyldings, thy part in the world.<br/> I ween with good he will
well requite<br/> offspring of ours, when all he minds<br/> that for him
we did in his helpless days<br/> of gift and grace to gain him honor!”<br/>
Then she turned to the seat where her sons wereplaced,<br/> Hrethric and
Hrothmund, with heroes’ bairns,<br/> young men together: the Geat,
too, sat there,<br/> Beowulf brave, the brothers between.</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
<br/><br/></div>
<p>XVIII</p>
<p>A CUP she gave him, with kindly greeting<br/> and winsome words. Of
wounden gold,<br/> she offered, to honor him, arm-jewels twain,<br/>
corselet and rings, and of collars the noblest<br/> that ever I knew the
earth around.<br/> Ne’er heard I so mighty, ’neath heaven’s
dome,<br/> a hoard-gem of heroes, since Hama bore<br/> to his bright-built
burg the Brisings’ necklace,<br/> jewel and gem casket. -- Jealousy
fled he,<br/> Eormenric’s hate: chose help eternal.<br/> Hygelac
Geat, grandson of Swerting,<br/> on the last of his raids this ring bore
with him,<br/> under his banner the booty defending,<br/> the war-spoil
warding; but Wyrd o’erwhelmed him<br/> what time, in his daring,
dangers he sought,<br/> feud with Frisians. Fairest of gems<br/> he bore
with him over the beaker-of-waves,<br/> sovran strong: under shield he
died.<br/> Fell the corpse of the king into keeping of Franks,<br/> gear
of the breast, and that gorgeous ring;<br/> weaker warriors won the spoil,<br/>
after gripe of battle, from Geatland’s lord,<br/> and held the
death-field.<br/> Din rose in hall.<br/> Wealhtheow spake amid warriors,
and said: --<br/> “This jewel enjoy in thy jocund youth,<br/>
Beowulf lov’d, these battle-weeds wear,<br/> a royal treasure, and
richly thrive!<br/> Preserve thy strength, and these striplings here<br/>
counsel in kindness: requital be mine.<br/> Hast done such deeds, that for
days to come<br/> thou art famed among folk both far and near,<br/> so
wide as washeth the wave of Ocean<br/> his windy walls. Through the ways
of life<br/> prosper, O prince! I pray for thee<br/> rich possessions. To
son of mine<br/> be helpful in deed and uphold his joys!<br/> Here every
earl to the other is true,<br/> mild of mood, to the master loyal!<br/>
Thanes are friendly, the throng obedient,<br/> liegemen are revelling:
list and obey!”<br/> Went then to her place. -- That was proudest of
feasts;<br/> flowed wine for the warriors. Wyrd they knew not,<br/>
destiny dire, and the doom to be seen<br/> by many an earl when eve should
come,<br/> and Hrothgar homeward hasten away,<br/> royal, to rest. The
room was guarded<br/> by an army of earls, as erst was done.<br/> They
bared the bench-boards; abroad they spread<br/> beds and bolsters. -- One
beer-carouser<br/> in danger of doom lay down in the hall. --</p>
<p>At their heads they set their shields of war,<br/> bucklers bright; on the
bench were there<br/> over each atheling, easy to see,<br/> the high
battle-helmet, the haughty spear,<br/> the corselet of rings. ’Twas
their custom so<br/> ever to be for battle prepared,<br/> at home, or
harrying, which it were,<br/> even as oft as evil threatened<br/> their
sovran king. -- They were clansmen good.</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
<br/><br/></div>
<p>XIX</p>
<p>THEN sank they to sleep. With sorrow one bought<br/> his rest of the
evening, -- as ofttime had happened<br/> when Grendel guarded that golden
hall,<br/> evil wrought, till his end drew nigh,<br/> slaughter for sins.
’Twas seen and told<br/> how an avenger survived the fiend,<br/> as
was learned afar. The livelong time<br/> after that grim fight, Grendel’s
mother,<br/> monster of women, mourned her woe.<br/> She was doomed to
dwell in the dreary waters,<br/> cold sea-courses, since Cain cut down<br/>
with edge of the sword his only brother,<br/> his father’s
offspring: outlawed he fled,<br/> marked with murder, from men’s
delights<br/> warded the wilds. -- There woke from him<br/> such fate-sent
ghosts as Grendel, who,<br/> war-wolf horrid, at Heorot found<br/> a
warrior watching and waiting the fray,<br/> with whom the grisly one
grappled amain.<br/> But the man remembered his mighty power,<br/> the
glorious gift that God had sent him,<br/> in his Maker’s mercy put
his trust<br/> for comfort and help: so he conquered the foe,<br/> felled
the fiend, who fled abject,<br/> reft of joy, to the realms of death,<br/>
mankind’s foe. And his mother now,<br/> gloomy and grim, would go
that quest<br/> of sorrow, the death of her son to avenge.<br/> To Heorot
came she, where helmeted Danes<br/> slept in the hall. Too soon came back<br/>
old ills of the earls, when in she burst,<br/> the mother of Grendel. Less
grim, though, that terror,<br/> e’en as terror of woman in war is
less,<br/> might of maid, than of men in arms<br/> when, hammer-forged,
the falchion hard,<br/> sword gore-stained, through swine of the helm,<br/>
crested, with keen blade carves amain.<br/> Then was in hall the hard-edge
drawn,<br/> the swords on the settles, <SPAN name="linkcitation19a" id="linkcitation19a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote19a">{19a}</SPAN> and shields
a-many<br/> firm held in hand: nor helmet minded<br/> nor harness of mail,
whom that horror seized.<br/> Haste was hers; she would hie afar<br/> and
save her life when the liegemen saw her.<br/> Yet a single atheling up she
seized<br/> fast and firm, as she fled to the moor.<br/> He was for
Hrothgar of heroes the dearest,<br/> of trusty vassals betwixt the seas,<br/>
whom she killed on his couch, a clansman famous,<br/> in battle brave. --
Nor was Beowulf there;<br/> another house had been held apart,<br/> after
giving of gold, for the Geat renowned. --<br/> Uproar filled Heorot; the
hand all had viewed,<br/> blood-flecked, she bore with her; bale was
returned,<br/> dole in the dwellings: ’twas dire exchange<br/> where
Dane and Geat were doomed to give<br/> the lives of loved ones. Long-tried
king,<br/> the hoary hero, at heart was sad<br/> when he knew his noble no
more lived,<br/> and dead indeed was his dearest thane.<br/> To his bower
was Beowulf brought in haste,<br/> dauntless victor. As daylight broke,<br/>
along with his earls the atheling lord,<br/> with his clansmen, came where
the king abode<br/> waiting to see if the Wielder-of-All<br/> would turn
this tale of trouble and woe.<br/> Strode o’er floor the
famed-in-strife,<br/> with his hand-companions, -- the hall resounded, --<br/>
wishing to greet the wise old king,<br/> Ingwines’ lord; he asked if
the night<br/> had passed in peace to the prince’s mind.</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
<br/><br/></div>
<p>XX</p>
<p>HROTHGAR spake, helmet-of-Scyldings: --<br/> “Ask not of pleasure!
Pain is renewed<br/> to Danish folk. Dead is Aeschere,<br/> of Yrmenlaf
the elder brother,<br/> my sage adviser and stay in council,<br/>
shoulder-comrade in stress of fight<br/> when warriors clashed and we
warded our heads,<br/> hewed the helm-boars; hero famed<br/> should be
every earl as Aeschere was!<br/> But here in Heorot a hand hath slain him<br/>
of wandering death-sprite. I wot not whither, <SPAN name="linkcitation20a" id="linkcitation20a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote20a">{20a}</SPAN><br/> proud
of the prey, her path she took,<br/> fain of her fill. The feud she
avenged<br/> that yesternight, unyieldingly,<br/> Grendel in grimmest
grasp thou killedst, --<br/> seeing how long these liegemen mine<br/> he
ruined and ravaged. Reft of life,<br/> in arms he fell. Now another comes,<br/>
keen and cruel, her kin to avenge,<br/> faring far in feud of blood:<br/>
so that many a thane shall think, who e’er<br/> sorrows in soul for
that sharer of rings,<br/> this is hardest of heart-bales. The hand lies
low<br/> that once was willing each wish to please.<br/> Land-dwellers
here <SPAN name="linkcitation20b" id="linkcitation20b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote20b">{20b}</SPAN> and liegemen mine,<br/> who house by
those parts, I have heard relate<br/> that such a pair they have sometimes
seen,<br/> march-stalkers mighty the moorland haunting,<br/> wandering
spirits: one of them seemed,<br/> so far as my folk could fairly judge,<br/>
of womankind; and one, accursed,<br/> in man’s guise trod the
misery-track<br/> of exile, though huger than human bulk.<br/> Grendel in
days long gone they named him,<br/> folk of the land; his father they knew
not,<br/> nor any brood that was born to him<br/> of treacherous spirits.
Untrod is their home;<br/> by wolf-cliffs haunt they and windy headlands,<br/>
fenways fearful, where flows the stream<br/> from mountains gliding to
gloom of the rocks,<br/> underground flood. Not far is it hence<br/> in
measure of miles that the mere expands,<br/> and o’er it the
frost-bound forest hanging,<br/> sturdily rooted, shadows the wave.<br/>
By night is a wonder weird to see,<br/> fire on the waters. So wise lived
none<br/> of the sons of men, to search those depths!<br/> Nay, though the
heath-rover, harried by dogs,<br/> the horn-proud hart, this holt should
seek,<br/> long distance driven, his dear life first<br/> on the brink he
yields ere he brave the plunge<br/> to hide his head: ’tis no happy
place!<br/> Thence the welter of waters washes up<br/> wan to welkin when
winds bestir<br/> evil storms, and air grows dusk,<br/> and the heavens
weep. Now is help once more<br/> with thee alone! The land thou knowst
not,<br/> place of fear, where thou findest out<br/> that sin-flecked
being. Seek if thou dare!<br/> I will reward thee, for waging this fight,<br/>
with ancient treasure, as erst I did,<br/> with winding gold, if thou
winnest back.”</p>
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<p>XXI</p>
<p>BEOWULF spake, bairn of Ecgtheow:<br/> “Sorrow not, sage! It beseems
us better<br/> friends to avenge than fruitlessly mourn them.<br/> Each of
us all must his end abide<br/> in the ways of the world; so win who may<br/>
glory ere death! When his days are told,<br/> that is the warrior’s
worthiest doom.<br/> Rise, O realm-warder! Ride we anon,<br/> and mark the
trail of the mother of Grendel.<br/> No harbor shall hide her -- heed my
promise! --<br/> enfolding of field or forested mountain<br/> or floor of
the flood, let her flee where she will!<br/> But thou this day endure in
patience,<br/> as I ween thou wilt, thy woes each one.”<br/> Leaped
up the graybeard: God he thanked,<br/> mighty Lord, for the man’s
brave words.<br/> For Hrothgar soon a horse was saddled<br/> wave-maned
steed. The sovran wise<br/> stately rode on; his shield-armed men<br/>
followed in force. The footprints led<br/> along the woodland, widely
seen,<br/> a path o’er the plain, where she passed, and trod<br/>
the murky moor; of men-at-arms<br/> she bore the bravest and best one,
dead,<br/> him who with Hrothgar the homestead ruled.<br/> On then went
the atheling-born<br/> o’er stone-cliffs steep and strait defiles,<br/>
narrow passes and unknown ways,<br/> headlands sheer, and the haunts of
the Nicors.<br/> Foremost he <SPAN name="linkcitation21a" id="linkcitation21a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote21a">{21a}</SPAN> fared, a few at his side<br/> of the
wiser men, the ways to scan,<br/> till he found in a flash the forested
hill<br/> hanging over the hoary rock,<br/> a woful wood: the waves below<br/>
were dyed in blood. The Danish men<br/> had sorrow of soul, and for
Scyldings all,<br/> for many a hero, ’twas hard to bear,<br/> ill
for earls, when Aeschere’s head<br/> they found by the flood on the
foreland there.<br/> Waves were welling, the warriors saw,<br/> hot with
blood; but the horn sang oft<br/> battle-song bold. The band sat down,<br/>
and watched on the water worm-like things,<br/> sea-dragons strange that
sounded the deep,<br/> and nicors that lay on the ledge of the ness --<br/>
such as oft essay at hour of morn<br/> on the road-of-sails their ruthless
quest, --<br/> and sea-snakes and monsters. These started away,<br/>
swollen and savage that song to hear,<br/> that war-horn’s blast.
The warden of Geats,<br/> with bolt from bow, then balked of life,<br/> of
wave-work, one monster, amid its heart<br/> went the keen war-shaft; in
water it seemed<br/> less doughty in swimming whom death had seized.<br/>
Swift on the billows, with boar-spears well<br/> hooked and barbed, it was
hard beset,<br/> done to death and dragged on the headland,<br/>
wave-roamer wondrous. Warriors viewed<br/> the grisly guest.<br/> Then
girt him Beowulf<br/> in martial mail, nor mourned for his life.<br/> His
breastplate broad and bright of hues,<br/> woven by hand, should the
waters try;<br/> well could it ward the warrior’s body<br/> that
battle should break on his breast in vain<br/> nor harm his heart by the
hand of a foe.<br/> And the helmet white that his head protected<br/> was
destined to dare the deeps of the flood,<br/> through wave-whirl win:
’twas wound with chains,<br/> decked with gold, as in days of yore<br/>
the weapon-smith worked it wondrously,<br/> with swine-forms set it, that
swords nowise,<br/> brandished in battle, could bite that helm.<br/> Nor
was that the meanest of mighty helps<br/> which Hrothgar’s orator
offered at need:<br/> “Hrunting” they named the hilted sword,<br/>
of old-time heirlooms easily first;<br/> iron was its edge, all etched
with poison,<br/> with battle-blood hardened, nor blenched it at fight<br/>
in hero’s hand who held it ever,<br/> on paths of peril prepared to
go<br/> to folkstead <SPAN name="linkcitation21b" id="linkcitation21b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote21b">{21b}</SPAN> of foes. Not first time this<br/> it was
destined to do a daring task.<br/> For he bore not in mind, the bairn of
Ecglaf<br/> sturdy and strong, that speech he had made,<br/> drunk with
wine, now this weapon he lent<br/> to a stouter swordsman. Himself,
though, durst not<br/> under welter of waters wager his life<br/> as loyal
liegeman. So lost he his glory,<br/> honor of earls. With the other not
so,<br/> who girded him now for the grim encounter.</p>
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<p>XXII</p>
<p>BEOWULF spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --<br/> “Have mind, thou honored
offspring of Healfdene<br/> gold-friend of men, now I go on this quest,<br/>
sovran wise, what once was said:<br/> if in thy cause it came that I<br/>
should lose my life, thou wouldst loyal bide<br/> to me, though fallen, in
father’s place!<br/> Be guardian, thou, to this group of my thanes,<br/>
my warrior-friends, if War should seize me;<br/> and the goodly gifts thou
gavest me,<br/> Hrothgar beloved, to Hygelac send!<br/> Geatland’s
king may ken by the gold,<br/> Hrethel’s son see, when he stares at
the treasure,<br/> that I got me a friend for goodness famed,<br/> and
joyed while I could in my jewel-bestower.<br/> And let Unferth wield this
wondrous sword,<br/> earl far-honored, this heirloom precious,<br/> hard
of edge: with Hrunting I<br/> seek doom of glory, or Death shall take me.”</p>
<p>After these words the Weder-Geat lord<br/> boldly hastened, biding never<br/>
answer at all: the ocean floods<br/> closed o’er the hero. Long
while of the day<br/> fled ere he felt the floor of the sea.</p>
<p>Soon found the fiend who the flood-domain<br/> sword-hungry held these
hundred winters,<br/> greedy and grim, that some guest from above,<br/>
some man, was raiding her monster-realm.<br/> She grasped out for him with
grisly claws,<br/> and the warrior seized; yet scathed she not<br/> his
body hale; the breastplate hindered,<br/> as she strove to shatter the
sark of war,<br/> the linked harness, with loathsome hand.<br/> Then bore
this brine-wolf, when bottom she touched,<br/> the lord of rings to the
lair she haunted<br/> whiles vainly he strove, though his valor held,<br/>
weapon to wield against wondrous monsters<br/> that sore beset him;
sea-beasts many<br/> tried with fierce tusks to tear his mail,<br/> and
swarmed on the stranger. But soon he marked<br/> he was now in some hall,
he knew not which,<br/> where water never could work him harm,<br/> nor
through the roof could reach him ever<br/> fangs of the flood. Firelight
he saw,<br/> beams of a blaze that brightly shone.<br/> Then the warrior
was ware of that wolf-of-the-deep,<br/> mere-wife monstrous. For mighty
stroke<br/> he swung his blade, and the blow withheld not.<br/> Then sang
on her head that seemly blade<br/> its war-song wild. But the warrior
found<br/> the light-of-battle <SPAN name="linkcitation22a" id="linkcitation22a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote22a">{22a}</SPAN> was loath to
bite,<br/> to harm the heart: its hard edge failed<br/> the noble at need,
yet had known of old<br/> strife hand to hand, and had helmets cloven,<br/>
doomed men’s fighting-gear. First time, this,<br/> for the gleaming
blade that its glory fell.<br/> Firm still stood, nor failed in valor,<br/>
heedful of high deeds, Hygelac’s kinsman;<br/> flung away fretted
sword, featly jewelled,<br/> the angry earl; on earth it lay<br/>
steel-edged and stiff. His strength he trusted,<br/> hand-gripe of might.
So man shall do<br/> whenever in war he weens to earn him<br/> lasting
fame, nor fears for his life!<br/> Seized then by shoulder, shrank not
from combat,<br/> the Geatish war-prince Grendel’s mother.<br/>
Flung then the fierce one, filled with wrath,<br/> his deadly foe, that
she fell to ground.<br/> Swift on her part she paid him back<br/> with
grisly grasp, and grappled with him.<br/> Spent with struggle, stumbled
the warrior,<br/> fiercest of fighting-men, fell adown.<br/> On the
hall-guest she hurled herself, hent her short sword,<br/> broad and
brown-edged, <SPAN name="linkcitation22b" id="linkcitation22b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote22b">{22b}</SPAN> the bairn to avenge,<br/> the sole-born
son. -- On his shoulder lay<br/> braided breast-mail, barring death,<br/>
withstanding entrance of edge or blade.<br/> Life would have ended for
Ecgtheow’s son,<br/> under wide earth for that earl of Geats,<br/>
had his armor of war not aided him,<br/> battle-net hard, and holy God<br/>
wielded the victory, wisest Maker.<br/> The Lord of Heaven allowed his
cause;<br/> and easily rose the earl erect.</p>
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<p>XXIII</p>
<p>’MID the battle-gear saw he a blade triumphant,<br/> old-sword of
Eotens, with edge of proof,<br/> warriors’ heirloom, weapon
unmatched,<br/> -- save only ’twas more than other men<br/> to
bandy-of-battle could bear at all --<br/> as the giants had wrought it,
ready and keen.<br/> Seized then its chain-hilt the Scyldings’
chieftain,<br/> bold and battle-grim, brandished the sword,<br/> reckless
of life, and so wrathfully smote<br/> that it gripped her neck and grasped
her hard,<br/> her bone-rings breaking: the blade pierced through<br/>
that fated-one’s flesh: to floor she sank.<br/> Bloody the blade: he
was blithe of his deed.<br/> Then blazed forth light. ’Twas bright
within<br/> as when from the sky there shines unclouded<br/> heaven’s
candle. The hall he scanned.<br/> By the wall then went he; his weapon
raised<br/> high by its hilts the Hygelac-thane,<br/> angry and eager.
That edge was not useless<br/> to the warrior now. He wished with speed<br/>
Grendel to guerdon for grim raids many,<br/> for the war he waged on
Western-Danes<br/> oftener far than an only time,<br/> when of Hrothgar’s
hearth-companions<br/> he slew in slumber, in sleep devoured,<br/> fifteen
men of the folk of Danes,<br/> and as many others outward bore,<br/> his
horrible prey. Well paid for that<br/> the wrathful prince! For now prone
he saw<br/> Grendel stretched there, spent with war,<br/> spoiled of life,
so scathed had left him<br/> Heorot’s battle. The body sprang far<br/>
when after death it endured the blow,<br/> sword-stroke savage, that
severed its head.<br/> Soon, <SPAN name="linkcitation23a" id="linkcitation23a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote23a">{23a}</SPAN> then, saw the sage companions<br/> who
waited with Hrothgar, watching the flood,<br/> that the tossing waters
turbid grew,<br/> blood-stained the mere. Old men together,<br/>
hoary-haired, of the hero spake;<br/> the warrior would not, they weened,
again,<br/> proud of conquest, come to seek<br/> their mighty master. To
many it seemed<br/> the wolf-of-the-waves had won his life.<br/> The ninth
hour came. The noble Scyldings<br/> left the headland; homeward went<br/>
the gold-friend of men. <SPAN name="linkcitation23b" id="linkcitation23b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote23b">{23b}</SPAN> But the guests sat on,<br/> stared at
the surges, sick in heart,<br/> and wished, yet weened not, their winsome
lord<br/> again to see.</p>
<p>Now that sword began,<br/> from blood of the fight, in battle-droppings,
<SPAN name="linkcitation23c" id="linkcitation23c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote23c">{23c}</SPAN><br/> war-blade, to wane: ’twas a
wondrous thing<br/> that all of it melted as ice is wont<br/> when frosty
fetters the Father loosens,<br/> unwinds the wave-bonds, wielding all<br/>
seasons and times: the true God he!<br/> Nor took from that dwelling the
duke of the Geats<br/> save only the head and that hilt withal<br/>
blazoned with jewels: the blade had melted,<br/> burned was the bright
sword, her blood was so hot,<br/> so poisoned the hell-sprite who perished
within there.<br/> Soon he was swimming who safe saw in combat<br/>
downfall of demons; up-dove through the flood.<br/> The clashing waters
were cleansed now,<br/> waste of waves, where the wandering fiend<br/> her
life-days left and this lapsing world.<br/> Swam then to strand the
sailors’-refuge,<br/> sturdy-in-spirit, of sea-booty glad,<br/> of
burden brave he bore with him.<br/> Went then to greet him, and God they
thanked,<br/> the thane-band choice of their chieftain blithe,<br/> that
safe and sound they could see him again.<br/> Soon from the hardy one
helmet and armor<br/> deftly they doffed: now drowsed the mere,<br/> water
’neath welkin, with war-blood stained.<br/> Forth they fared by the
footpaths thence,<br/> merry at heart the highways measured,<br/>
well-known roads. Courageous men<br/> carried the head from the cliff by
the sea,<br/> an arduous task for all the band,<br/> the firm in fight,
since four were needed<br/> on the shaft-of-slaughter <SPAN name="linkcitation23d" id="linkcitation23d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote23d">{23d}</SPAN>
strenuously<br/> to bear to the gold-hall Grendel’s head.<br/> So
presently to the palace there<br/> foemen fearless, fourteen Geats,<br/>
marching came. Their master-of-clan<br/> mighty amid them the meadow-ways
trod.<br/> Strode then within the sovran thane<br/> fearless in fight, of
fame renowned,<br/> hardy hero, Hrothgar to greet.<br/> And next by the
hair into hall was borne<br/> Grendel’s head, where the henchmen
were drinking,<br/> an awe to clan and queen alike,<br/> a monster of
marvel: the men looked on.</p>
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<p>XXIV</p>
<p>BEOWULF spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --<br/> “Lo, now, this sea-booty,
son of Healfdene,<br/> Lord of Scyldings, we’ve lustily brought
thee,<br/> sign of glory; thou seest it here.<br/> Not lightly did I with
my life escape!<br/> In war under water this work I essayed<br/> with
endless effort; and even so<br/> my strength had been lost had the Lord
not shielded me.<br/> Not a whit could I with Hrunting do<br/> in work of
war, though the weapon is good;<br/> yet a sword the Sovran of Men
vouchsafed me<br/> to spy on the wall there, in splendor hanging,<br/>
old, gigantic, -- how oft He guides<br/> the friendless wight! -- and I
fought with that brand,<br/> felling in fight, since fate was with me,<br/>
the house’s wardens. That war-sword then<br/> all burned, bright
blade, when the blood gushed o’er it,<br/> battle-sweat hot; but the
hilt I brought back<br/> from my foes. So avenged I their fiendish deeds<br/>
death-fall of Danes, as was due and right.<br/> And this is my hest, that
in Heorot now<br/> safe thou canst sleep with thy soldier band,<br/> and
every thane of all thy folk<br/> both old and young; no evil fear,<br/>
Scyldings’ lord, from that side again,<br/> aught ill for thy earls,
as erst thou must!”<br/> Then the golden hilt, for that gray-haired
leader,<br/> hoary hero, in hand was laid,<br/> giant-wrought, old. So
owned and enjoyed it<br/> after downfall of devils, the Danish lord,<br/>
wonder-smiths’ work, since the world was rid<br/> of that
grim-souled fiend, the foe of God,<br/> murder-marked, and his mother as
well.<br/> Now it passed into power of the people’s king,<br/> best
of all that the oceans bound<br/> who have scattered their gold o’er
Scandia’s isle.<br/> Hrothgar spake -- the hilt he viewed,<br/>
heirloom old, where was etched the rise<br/> of that far-off fight when
the floods o’erwhelmed,<br/> raging waves, the race of giants<br/>
(fearful their fate!), a folk estranged<br/> from God Eternal: whence
guerdon due<br/> in that waste of waters the Wielder paid them.<br/> So on
the guard of shining gold<br/> in runic staves it was rightly said<br/>
for whom the serpent-traced sword was wrought,<br/> best of blades, in
bygone days,<br/> and the hilt well wound. -- The wise-one spake,<br/> son
of Healfdene; silent were all: --<br/> “Lo, so may he say who sooth
and right<br/> follows ’mid folk, of far times mindful,<br/> a
land-warden old, <SPAN name="linkcitation24a" id="linkcitation24a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote24a">{24a}</SPAN> that this earl belongs<br/> to the
better breed! So, borne aloft,<br/> thy fame must fly, O friend my
Beowulf,<br/> far and wide o’er folksteads many. Firmly thou<br/>
shalt all maintain,<br/> mighty strength with mood of wisdom. Love of<br/>
mine will I assure thee,<br/> as, awhile ago, I promised; thou shalt prove
a stay<br/> in future,<br/> in far-off years, to folk of thine,<br/> to
the heroes a help. Was not Heremod thus<br/> to offspring of Ecgwela,
Honor-Scyldings,<br/> nor grew for their grace, but for grisly slaughter,<br/>
for doom of death to the Danishmen.</p>
<p>He slew, wrath-swollen, his shoulder-comrades,<br/> companions at board!
So he passed alone,<br/> chieftain haughty, from human cheer.<br/> Though
him the Maker with might endowed,<br/> delights of power, and uplifted
high<br/> above all men, yet blood-fierce his mind,<br/> his breast-hoard,
grew, no bracelets gave he<br/> to Danes as was due; he endured all
joyless<br/> strain of struggle and stress of woe,<br/> long feud with his
folk. Here find thy lesson!<br/> Of virtue advise thee! This verse I have
said for thee,<br/> wise from lapsed winters. Wondrous seems<br/> how to
sons of men Almighty God<br/> in the strength of His spirit sendeth
wisdom,<br/> estate, high station: He swayeth all things.<br/> Whiles He
letteth right lustily fare<br/> the heart of the hero of high-born race,
--<br/> in seat ancestral assigns him bliss,<br/> his folk’s sure
fortress in fee to hold,<br/> puts in his power great parts of the earth,<br/>
empire so ample, that end of it<br/> this wanter-of-wisdom weeneth none.<br/>
So he waxes in wealth, nowise can harm him<br/> illness or age; no evil
cares<br/> shadow his spirit; no sword-hate threatens<br/> from ever an
enemy: all the world<br/> wends at his will, no worse he knoweth,<br/>
till all within him obstinate pride<br/> waxes and wakes while the warden
slumbers,<br/> the spirit’s sentry; sleep is too fast<br/> which
masters his might, and the murderer nears,<br/> stealthily shooting the
shafts from his bow!</p>
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<p>XXV</p>
<p>“UNDER harness his heart then is hit indeed<br/> by sharpest shafts;
and no shelter avails<br/> from foul behest of the hellish fiend. <SPAN name="linkcitation25a" id="linkcitation25a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote25a">{25a}</SPAN><br/>
Him seems too little what long he possessed.<br/> Greedy and grim, no
golden rings<br/> he gives for his pride; the promised future<br/> forgets
he and spurns, with all God has sent him,<br/> Wonder-Wielder, of wealth
and fame.<br/> Yet in the end it ever comes<br/> that the frame of the
body fragile yields,<br/> fated falls; and there follows another<br/> who
joyously the jewels divides,<br/> the royal riches, nor recks of his
forebear.<br/> Ban, then, such baleful thoughts, Beowulf dearest,<br/>
best of men, and the better part choose,<br/> profit eternal; and temper
thy pride,<br/> warrior famous! The flower of thy might<br/> lasts now a
while: but erelong it shall be<br/> that sickness or sword thy strength
shall minish,<br/> or fang of fire, or flooding billow,<br/> or bite of
blade, or brandished spear,<br/> or odious age; or the eyes’ clear
beam<br/> wax dull and darken: Death even thee<br/> in haste shall o’erwhelm,
thou hero of war!<br/> So the Ring-Danes these half-years a hundred I
ruled,<br/> wielded ’neath welkin, and warded them bravely<br/> from
mighty-ones many o’er middle-earth,<br/> from spear and sword, till
it seemed for me<br/> no foe could be found under fold of the sky.<br/>
Lo, sudden the shift! To me seated secure<br/> came grief for joy when
Grendel began<br/> to harry my home, the hellish foe;<br/> for those
ruthless raids, unresting I suffered<br/> heart-sorrow heavy. Heaven be
thanked,<br/> Lord Eternal, for life extended<br/> that I on this head all
hewn and bloody,<br/> after long evil, with eyes may gaze!<br/> -- Go to
the bench now! Be glad at banquet,<br/> warrior worthy! A wealth of
treasure<br/> at dawn of day, be dealt between us!”<br/> Glad was
the Geats’ lord, going betimes<br/> to seek his seat, as the Sage
commanded.<br/> Afresh, as before, for the famed-in-battle,<br/> for the
band of the hall, was a banquet dight<br/> nobly anew. The Night-Helm
darkened<br/> dusk o’er the drinkers.<br/> The doughty ones rose:<br/>
for the hoary-headed would hasten to rest,<br/> aged Scylding; and eager
the Geat,<br/> shield-fighter sturdy, for sleeping yearned.<br/> Him
wander-weary, warrior-guest<br/> from far, a hall-thane heralded forth,<br/>
who by custom courtly cared for all<br/> needs of a thane as in those old
days<br/> warrior-wanderers wont to have.<br/> So slumbered the
stout-heart. Stately the hall<br/> rose gabled and gilt where the guest
slept on<br/> till a raven black the rapture-of-heaven <SPAN name="linkcitation25b" id="linkcitation25b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote25b">{25b}</SPAN><br/>
blithe-heart boded. Bright came flying<br/> shine after shadow. The
swordsmen hastened,<br/> athelings all were eager homeward<br/> forth to
fare; and far from thence<br/> the great-hearted guest would guide his
keel.<br/> Bade then the hardy-one Hrunting be brought<br/> to the son of
Ecglaf, the sword bade him take,<br/> excellent iron, and uttered his
thanks for it,<br/> quoth that he counted it keen in battle,<br/> “war-friend”
winsome: with words he slandered not<br/> edge of the blade: ’twas a
big-hearted man!<br/> Now eager for parting and armed at point<br/>
warriors waited, while went to his host<br/> that Darling of Danes. The
doughty atheling<br/> to high-seat hastened and Hrothgar greeted.</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
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<p>XXVI</p>
<p>BEOWULF spake, bairn of Ecgtheow: --<br/> “Lo, we seafarers say our
will,<br/> far-come men, that we fain would seek<br/> Hygelac now. We here
have found<br/> hosts to our heart: thou hast harbored us well.<br/> If
ever on earth I am able to win me<br/> more of thy love, O lord of men,<br/>
aught anew, than I now have done,<br/> for work of war I am willing still!<br/>
If it come to me ever across the seas<br/> that neighbor foemen annoy and
fright thee, --<br/> as they that hate thee erewhile have used, --<br/>
thousands then of thanes I shall bring,<br/> heroes to help thee. Of
Hygelac I know,<br/> ward of his folk, that, though few his years,<br/>
the lord of the Geats will give me aid<br/> by word and by work, that well
I may serve thee,<br/> wielding the war-wood to win thy triumph<br/> and
lending thee might when thou lackest men.<br/> If thy Hrethric should come
to court of Geats,<br/> a sovran’s son, he will surely there<br/>
find his friends. A far-off land<br/> each man should visit who vaunts him
brave.”<br/> Him then answering, Hrothgar spake: --<br/> “These
words of thine the wisest God<br/> sent to thy soul! No sager counsel<br/>
from so young in years e’er yet have I heard.<br/> Thou art strong
of main and in mind art wary,<br/> art wise in words! I ween indeed<br/>
if ever it hap that Hrethel’s heir<br/> by spear be seized, by
sword-grim battle,<br/> by illness or iron, thine elder and lord,<br/>
people’s leader, -- and life be thine, --<br/> no seemlier man will
the Sea-Geats find<br/> at all to choose for their chief and king,<br/>
for hoard-guard of heroes, if hold thou wilt<br/> thy kinsman’s
kingdom! Thy keen mind pleases me<br/> the longer the better, Beowulf
loved!</p>
<p>Thou hast brought it about that both our peoples,<br/> sons of the Geat
and Spear-Dane folk,<br/> shall have mutual peace, and from murderous
strife,<br/> such as once they waged, from war refrain.<br/> Long as I
rule this realm so wide,<br/> let our hoards be common, let heroes with
gold<br/> each other greet o’er the gannet’s-bath,<br/> and
the ringed-prow bear o’er rolling waves<br/> tokens of love. I trow
my landfolk<br/> towards friend and foe are firmly joined,<br/> and honor
they keep in the olden way.”<br/> To him in the hall, then,
Healfdene’s son<br/> gave treasures twelve, and the trust-of-earls<br/>
bade him fare with the gifts to his folk beloved,<br/> hale to his home,
and in haste return.<br/> Then kissed the king of kin renowned,<br/>
Scyldings’ chieftain, that choicest thane,<br/> and fell on his
neck. Fast flowed the tears<br/> of the hoary-headed. Heavy with winters,<br/>
he had chances twain, but he clung to this, <SPAN name="linkcitation26a" id="linkcitation26a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote26a">{26a}</SPAN> --<br/> that
each should look on the other again,<br/> and hear him in hall. Was this
hero so dear to him.<br/> his breast’s wild billows he banned in
vain;<br/> safe in his soul a secret longing,<br/> locked in his mind, for
that loved man<br/> burned in his blood. Then Beowulf strode,<br/> glad of
his gold-gifts, the grass-plot o’er,<br/> warrior blithe. The
wave-roamer bode<br/> riding at anchor, its owner awaiting.<br/> As they
hastened onward, Hrothgar’s gift<br/> they lauded at length. --
’Twas a lord unpeered,<br/> every way blameless, till age had broken<br/>
-- it spareth no mortal -- his splendid might.</p>
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<p>XXVII</p>
<p>CAME now to ocean the ever-courageous<br/> hardy henchmen, their harness
bearing,<br/> woven war-sarks. The warden marked,<br/> trusty as ever, the
earl’s return.<br/> From the height of the hill no hostile words<br/>
reached the guests as he rode to greet them;<br/> but “Welcome!”
he called to that Weder clan<br/> as the sheen-mailed spoilers to ship
marched on.<br/> Then on the strand, with steeds and treasure<br/> and
armor their roomy and ring-dight ship<br/> was heavily laden: high its
mast<br/> rose over Hrothgar’s hoarded gems.<br/> A sword to the
boat-guard Beowulf gave,<br/> mounted with gold; on the mead-bench since<br/>
he was better esteemed, that blade possessing,<br/> heirloom old. -- Their
ocean-keel boarding,<br/> they drove through the deep, and Daneland left.<br/>
A sea-cloth was set, a sail with ropes,<br/> firm to the mast; the
flood-timbers moaned; <SPAN name="linkcitation27a" id="linkcitation27a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote27a">{27a}</SPAN><br/> nor did wind over billows that
wave-swimmer blow<br/> across from her course. The craft sped on,<br/>
foam-necked it floated forth o’er the waves,<br/> keel firm-bound
over briny currents,<br/> till they got them sight of the Geatish cliffs,<br/>
home-known headlands. High the boat,<br/> stirred by winds, on the strand
updrove.<br/> Helpful at haven the harbor-guard stood,<br/> who long
already for loved companions<br/> by the water had waited and watched
afar.<br/> He bound to the beach the broad-bosomed ship<br/> with
anchor-bands, lest ocean-billows<br/> that trusty timber should tear away.<br/>
Then Beowulf bade them bear the treasure,<br/> gold and jewels; no journey
far<br/> was it thence to go to the giver of rings,<br/> Hygelac
Hrethling: at home he dwelt<br/> by the sea-wall close, himself and clan.<br/>
Haughty that house, a hero the king,<br/> high the hall, and Hygd <SPAN name="linkcitation27b" id="linkcitation27b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote27b">{27b}</SPAN>
right young,<br/> wise and wary, though winters few<br/> in those fortress
walls she had found a home,<br/> Haereth’s daughter. Nor humble her
ways,<br/> nor grudged she gifts to the Geatish men,<br/> of precious
treasure. Not Thryth’s pride showed she,<br/> folk-queen famed, or
that fell deceit.<br/> Was none so daring that durst make bold<br/> (save
her lord alone) of the liegemen dear<br/> that lady full in the face to
look,<br/> but forged fetters he found his lot,<br/> bonds of death! And
brief the respite;<br/> soon as they seized him, his sword-doom was
spoken,<br/> and the burnished blade a baleful murder<br/> proclaimed and
closed. No queenly way<br/> for woman to practise, though peerless she,<br/>
that the weaver-of-peace <SPAN name="linkcitation27c" id="linkcitation27c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote27c">{27c}</SPAN> from warrior dear<br/> by wrath and
lying his life should reave!<br/> But Hemming’s kinsman hindered
this. --<br/> For over their ale men also told<br/> that of these
folk-horrors fewer she wrought,<br/> onslaughts of evil, after she went,<br/>
gold-decked bride, to the brave young prince,<br/> atheling haughty, and
Offa’s hall<br/> o’er the fallow flood at her father’s
bidding<br/> safely sought, where since she prospered,<br/> royal,
throned, rich in goods,<br/> fain of the fair life fate had sent her,<br/>
and leal in love to the lord of warriors.<br/> He, of all heroes I heard
of ever<br/> from sea to sea, of the sons of earth,<br/> most excellent
seemed. Hence Offa was praised<br/> for his fighting and feeing by far-off
men,<br/> the spear-bold warrior; wisely he ruled<br/> over his empire.
Eomer woke to him,<br/> help of heroes, Hemming’s kinsman,<br/>
Grandson of Garmund, grim in war.</p>
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<p>XXVIII</p>
<p>HASTENED the hardy one, henchmen with him,<br/> sandy strand of the sea to
tread<br/> and widespread ways. The world’s great candle,<br/> sun
shone from south. They strode along<br/> with sturdy steps to the spot
they knew<br/> where the battle-king young, his burg within,<br/> slayer
of Ongentheow, shared the rings,<br/> shelter-of-heroes. To Hygelac<br/>
Beowulf’s coming was quickly told, --<br/> that there in the court
the clansmen’s refuge,<br/> the shield-companion sound and alive,<br/>
hale from the hero-play homeward strode.<br/> With haste in the hall, by
highest order,<br/> room for the rovers was readily made.<br/> By his
sovran he sat, come safe from battle,<br/> kinsman by kinsman. His kindly
lord<br/> he first had greeted in gracious form,<br/> with manly words.
The mead dispensing,<br/> came through the high hall Haereth’s
daughter,<br/> winsome to warriors, wine-cup bore<br/> to the hands of the
heroes. Hygelac then<br/> his comrade fairly with question plied<br/> in
the lofty hall, sore longing to know<br/> what manner of sojourn the
Sea-Geats made.<br/> “What came of thy quest, my kinsman Beowulf,<br/>
when thy yearnings suddenly swept thee yonder<br/> battle to seek o’er
the briny sea,<br/> combat in Heorot? Hrothgar couldst thou<br/> aid at
all, the honored chief,<br/> in his wide-known woes? With waves of care<br/>
my sad heart seethed; I sore mistrusted<br/> my loved one’s venture:
long I begged thee<br/> by no means to seek that slaughtering monster,<br/>
but suffer the South-Danes to settle their feud<br/> themselves with
Grendel. Now God be thanked<br/> that safe and sound I can see thee now!”<br/>
Beowulf spake, the bairn of Ecgtheow: --<br/> “’Tis known and
unhidden, Hygelac Lord,<br/> to many men, that meeting of ours,<br/>
struggle grim between Grendel and me,<br/> which we fought on the field
where full too many<br/> sorrows he wrought for the Scylding-Victors,<br/>
evils unending. These all I avenged.<br/> No boast can be from breed of
Grendel,<br/> any on earth, for that uproar at dawn,<br/> from the
longest-lived of the loathsome race<br/> in fleshly fold! -- But first I
went<br/> Hrothgar to greet in the hall of gifts,<br/> where Healfdene’s
kinsman high-renowned,<br/> soon as my purpose was plain to him,<br/>
assigned me a seat by his son and heir.<br/> The liegemen were lusty; my
life-days never<br/> such merry men over mead in hall<br/> have I heard
under heaven! The high-born queen,<br/> people’s peace-bringer,
passed through the hall,<br/> cheered the young clansmen, clasps of gold,<br/>
ere she sought her seat, to sundry gave.<br/> Oft to the heroes Hrothgar’s
daughter,<br/> to earls in turn, the ale-cup tendered, --<br/> she whom I
heard these hall-companions<br/> Freawaru name, when fretted gold<br/> she
proffered the warriors. Promised is she,<br/> gold-decked maid, to the
glad son of Froda.<br/> Sage this seems to the Scylding’s-friend,<br/>
kingdom’s-keeper: he counts it wise<br/> the woman to wed so and
ward off feud,<br/> store of slaughter. But seldom ever<br/> when men are
slain, does the murder-spear sink<br/> but briefest while, though the
bride be fair! <SPAN name="linkcitation28a" id="linkcitation28a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote28a">{28a}</SPAN><br/> “Nor haply will like it the
Heathobard lord,<br/> and as little each of his liegemen all,<br/> when a
thane of the Danes, in that doughty throng,<br/> goes with the lady along
their hall,<br/> and on him the old-time heirlooms glisten<br/> hard and
ring-decked, Heathobard’s treasure,<br/> weapons that once they
wielded fair<br/> until they lost at the linden-play <SPAN name="linkcitation28b" id="linkcitation28b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote28b">{28b}</SPAN><br/>
liegeman leal and their lives as well.<br/> Then, over the ale, on this
heirloom gazing,<br/> some ash-wielder old who has all in mind<br/> that
spear-death of men, <SPAN name="linkcitation28c" id="linkcitation28c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote28c">{28c}</SPAN> -- he is stern of mood,<br/> heavy at
heart, -- in the hero young<br/> tests the temper and tries the soul<br/>
and war-hate wakens, with words like these: --<br/> Canst thou not,
comrade, ken that sword<br/> which to the fray thy father carried<br/> in
his final feud, ’neath the fighting-mask,<br/> dearest of blades,
when the Danish slew him<br/> and wielded the war-place on Withergild’s
fall,<br/> after havoc of heroes, those hardy Scyldings?<br/> Now, the son
of a certain slaughtering Dane,<br/> proud of his treasure, paces this
hall,<br/> joys in the killing, and carries the jewel <SPAN name="linkcitation28d" id="linkcitation28d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote28d">{28d}</SPAN><br/>
that rightfully ought to be owned by thee!_<br/> Thus he urges and eggs
him all the time<br/> with keenest words, till occasion offers<br/> that
Freawaru’s thane, for his father’s deed,<br/> after bite of
brand in his blood must slumber,<br/> losing his life; but that liegeman
flies<br/> living away, for the land he kens.<br/> And thus be broken on
both their sides<br/> oaths of the earls, when Ingeld’s breast<br/>
wells with war-hate, and wife-love now<br/> after the care-billows cooler
grows.<br/> “So <SPAN name="linkcitation28e" id="linkcitation28e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote28e">{28e}</SPAN> I hold not high the Heathobards’
faith<br/> due to the Danes, or their during love<br/> and pact of peace.
-- But I pass from that,<br/> turning to Grendel, O giver-of-treasure,<br/>
and saying in full how the fight resulted,<br/> hand-fray of heroes. When
heaven’s jewel<br/> had fled o’er far fields, that fierce
sprite came,<br/> night-foe savage, to seek us out<br/> where safe and
sound we sentried the hall.<br/> To Hondscio then was that harassing
deadly,<br/> his fall there was fated. He first was slain,<br/> girded
warrior. Grendel on him<br/> turned murderous mouth, on our mighty
kinsman,<br/> and all of the brave man’s body devoured.<br/> Yet
none the earlier, empty-handed,<br/> would the bloody-toothed murderer,
mindful of bale,<br/> outward go from the gold-decked hall:<br/> but me he
attacked in his terror of might,<br/> with greedy hand grasped me. A glove
hung by him <SPAN name="linkcitation28f" id="linkcitation28f"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote28f">{28f}</SPAN><br/> wide and wondrous, wound with
bands;<br/> and in artful wise it all was wrought,<br/> by devilish craft,
of dragon-skins.<br/> Me therein, an innocent man,<br/> the fiendish foe
was fain to thrust<br/> with many another. He might not so,<br/> when I
all angrily upright stood.<br/> ’Twere long to relate how that
land-destroyer<br/> I paid in kind for his cruel deeds;<br/> yet there, my
prince, this people of thine<br/> got fame by my fighting. He fled away,<br/>
and a little space his life preserved;<br/> but there staid behind him his
stronger hand<br/> left in Heorot; heartsick thence<br/> on the floor of
the ocean that outcast fell.<br/> Me for this struggle the Scyldings’-friend<br/>
paid in plenty with plates of gold,<br/> with many a treasure, when morn
had come<br/> and we all at the banquet-board sat down.<br/> Then was song
and glee. The gray-haired Scylding,<br/> much tested, told of the times of
yore.<br/> Whiles the hero his harp bestirred,<br/> wood-of-delight; now
lays he chanted<br/> of sooth and sadness, or said aright<br/> legends of
wonder, the wide-hearted king;<br/> or for years of his youth he would
yearn at times,<br/> for strength of old struggles, now stricken with age,<br/>
hoary hero: his heart surged full<br/> when, wise with winters, he wailed
their flight.<br/> Thus in the hall the whole of that day<br/> at ease we
feasted, till fell o’er earth<br/> another night. Anon full ready<br/>
in greed of vengeance, Grendel’s mother<br/> set forth all doleful.
Dead was her son<br/> through war-hate of Weders; now, woman monstrous<br/>
with fury fell a foeman she slew,<br/> avenged her offspring. From
Aeschere old,<br/> loyal councillor, life was gone;<br/> nor might they e’en,
when morning broke,<br/> those Danish people, their death-done comrade<br/>
burn with brands, on balefire lay<br/> the man they mourned. Under
mountain stream<br/> she had carried the corpse with cruel hands.<br/> For
Hrothgar that was the heaviest sorrow<br/> of all that had laden the lord
of his folk.<br/> The leader then, by thy life, besought me<br/> (sad was
his soul) in the sea-waves’ coil<br/> to play the hero and hazard my
being<br/> for glory of prowess: my guerdon he pledged.<br/> I then in the
waters -- ’tis widely known --<br/> that sea-floor-guardian savage
found.<br/> Hand-to-hand there a while we struggled;<br/> billows welled
blood; in the briny hall<br/> her head I hewed with a hardy blade<br/>
from Grendel’s mother, -- and gained my life,<br/> though not
without danger. My doom was not yet.<br/> Then the haven-of-heroes,
Healfdene’s son,<br/> gave me in guerdon great gifts of price.</p>
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<p>XXIX</p>
<p>“So held this king to the customs old,<br/> that I wanted for nought
in the wage I gained,<br/> the meed of my might; he made me gifts,<br/>
Healfdene’s heir, for my own disposal.<br/> Now to thee, my prince,
I proffer them all,<br/> gladly give them. Thy grace alone<br/> can find
me favor. Few indeed<br/> have I of kinsmen, save, Hygelac, thee!”<br/>
Then he bade them bear him the boar-head standard,<br/> the battle-helm
high, and breastplate gray,<br/> the splendid sword; then spake in form:
--<br/> “Me this war-gear the wise old prince,<br/> Hrothgar, gave,
and his hest he added,<br/> that its story be straightway said to thee. --<br/>
A while it was held by Heorogar king,<br/> for long time lord of the land
of Scyldings;<br/> yet not to his son the sovran left it,<br/> to daring
Heoroweard, -- dear as he was to him,<br/> his harness of battle. -- Well
hold thou it all!”<br/> And I heard that soon passed o’er the
path of this treasure,<br/> all apple-fallow, four good steeds,<br/> each
like the others, arms and horses<br/> he gave to the king. So should
kinsmen be,<br/> not weave one another the net of wiles,<br/> or with
deep-hid treachery death contrive<br/> for neighbor and comrade. His
nephew was ever<br/> by hardy Hygelac held full dear,<br/> and each kept
watch o’er the other’s weal.<br/> I heard, too, the necklace
to Hygd he presented,<br/> wonder-wrought treasure, which Wealhtheow gave
him<br/> sovran’s daughter: three steeds he added,<br/> slender and
saddle-gay. Since such gift<br/> the gem gleamed bright on the breast of
the queen.<br/> Thus showed his strain the son of Ecgtheow<br/> as a man
remarked for mighty deeds<br/> and acts of honor. At ale he slew not<br/>
comrade or kin; nor cruel his mood,<br/> though of sons of earth his
strength was greatest,<br/> a glorious gift that God had sent<br/> the
splendid leader. Long was he spurned,<br/> and worthless by Geatish
warriors held;<br/> him at mead the master-of-clans<br/> failed full oft
to favor at all.<br/> Slack and shiftless the strong men deemed him,<br/>
profitless prince; but payment came,<br/> to the warrior honored, for all
his woes. --<br/> Then the bulwark-of-earls <SPAN name="linkcitation29a" id="linkcitation29a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote29a">{29a}</SPAN> bade bring
within,<br/> hardy chieftain, Hrethel’s heirloom<br/> garnished with
gold: no Geat e’er knew<br/> in shape of a sword a statelier prize.<br/>
The brand he laid in Beowulf’s lap;<br/> and of hides assigned him
seven thousand, <SPAN name="linkcitation29b" id="linkcitation29b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote29b">{29b}</SPAN><br/> with house and high-seat. They held
in common<br/> land alike by their line of birth,<br/> inheritance, home:
but higher the king<br/> because of his rule o’er the realm itself.</p>
<p>Now further it fell with the flight of years,<br/> with harryings horrid,
that Hygelac perished, <SPAN name="linkcitation29c" id="linkcitation29c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote29c">{29c}</SPAN><br/> and Heardred, too, by hewing of
swords<br/> under the shield-wall slaughtered lay,<br/> when him at the
van of his victor-folk<br/> sought hardy heroes, Heatho-Scilfings,<br/> in
arms o’erwhelming Hereric’s nephew.<br/> Then Beowulf came as
king this broad<br/> realm to wield; and he ruled it well<br/> fifty
winters, <SPAN name="linkcitation29d" id="linkcitation29d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote29d">{29d}</SPAN> a wise old prince,<br/> warding his
land, until One began<br/> in the dark of night, a Dragon, to rage.<br/>
In the grave on the hill a hoard it guarded,<br/> in the stone-barrow
steep. A strait path reached it,<br/> unknown to mortals. Some man,
however,<br/> came by chance that cave within<br/> to the heathen hoard.
<SPAN name="linkcitation29e" id="linkcitation29e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote29e">{29e}</SPAN> In hand he took<br/> a golden goblet,
nor gave he it back,<br/> stole with it away, while the watcher slept,<br/>
by thievish wiles: for the warden’s wrath<br/> prince and people
must pay betimes!</p>
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<p>XXX</p>
<p>THAT way he went with no will of his own,<br/> in danger of life, to the
dragon’s hoard,<br/> but for pressure of peril, some prince’s
thane.<br/> He fled in fear the fatal scourge,<br/> seeking shelter, a
sinful man,<br/> and entered in. At the awful sight<br/> tottered that
guest, and terror seized him;<br/> yet the wretched fugitive rallied anon<br/>
from fright and fear ere he fled away,<br/> and took the cup from that
treasure-hoard.<br/> Of such besides there was store enough,<br/>
heirlooms old, the earth below,<br/> which some earl forgotten, in ancient
years,<br/> left the last of his lofty race,<br/> heedfully there had
hidden away,<br/> dearest treasure. For death of yore<br/> had hurried all
hence; and he alone<br/> left to live, the last of the clan,<br/> weeping
his friends, yet wished to bide<br/> warding the treasure, his one
delight,<br/> though brief his respite. The barrow, new-ready,<br/> to
strand and sea-waves stood anear,<br/> hard by the headland, hidden and
closed;<br/> there laid within it his lordly heirlooms<br/> and heaped
hoard of heavy gold<br/> that warden of rings. Few words he spake:<br/>
“Now hold thou, earth, since heroes may not,<br/> what earls have
owned! Lo, erst from thee<br/> brave men brought it! But battle-death
seized<br/> and cruel killing my clansmen all,<br/> robbed them of life
and a liegeman’s joys.<br/> None have I left to lift the sword,<br/>
or to cleanse the carven cup of price,<br/> beaker bright. My brave are
gone.<br/> And the helmet hard, all haughty with gold,<br/> shall part
from its plating. Polishers sleep<br/> who could brighten and burnish the
battle-mask;<br/> and those weeds of war that were wont to brave<br/> over
bicker of shields the bite of steel<br/> rust with their bearer. The
ringed mail<br/> fares not far with famous chieftain,<br/> at side of
hero! No harp’s delight,<br/> no glee-wood’s gladness! No good
hawk now<br/> flies through the hall! Nor horses fleet<br/> stamp in the
burgstead! Battle and death<br/> the flower of my race have reft away.”<br/>
Mournful of mood, thus he moaned his woe,<br/> alone, for them all, and
unblithe wept<br/> by day and by night, till death’s fell wave<br/>
o’erwhelmed his heart. His hoard-of-bliss<br/> that old ill-doer
open found,<br/> who, blazing at twilight the barrows haunteth,<br/> naked
foe-dragon flying by night<br/> folded in fire: the folk of earth<br/>
dread him sore. ’Tis his doom to seek<br/> hoard in the graves, and
heathen gold<br/> to watch, many-wintered: nor wins he thereby!<br/>
Powerful this plague-of-the-people thus<br/> held the house of the hoard
in earth<br/> three hundred winters; till One aroused<br/> wrath in his
breast, to the ruler bearing<br/> that costly cup, and the king implored<br/>
for bond of peace. So the barrow was plundered,<br/> borne off was booty.
His boon was granted<br/> that wretched man; and his ruler saw<br/> first
time what was fashioned in far-off days.<br/> When the dragon awoke, new
woe was kindled.<br/> O’er the stone he snuffed. The stark-heart
found<br/> footprint of foe who so far had gone<br/> in his hidden craft
by the creature’s head. --<br/> So may the undoomed easily flee<br/>
evils and exile, if only he gain<br/> the grace of The Wielder! -- That
warden of gold<br/> o’er the ground went seeking, greedy to find<br/>
the man who wrought him such wrong in sleep.<br/> Savage and burning, the
barrow he circled<br/> all without; nor was any there,<br/> none in the
waste.... Yet war he desired,<br/> was eager for battle. The barrow he
entered,<br/> sought the cup, and discovered soon<br/> that some one of
mortals had searched his treasure,<br/> his lordly gold. The guardian
waited<br/> ill-enduring till evening came;<br/> boiling with wrath was
the barrow’s keeper,<br/> and fain with flame the foe to pay<br/>
for the dear cup’s loss. -- Now day was fled<br/> as the worm had
wished. By its wall no more<br/> was it glad to bide, but burning flew<br/>
folded in flame: a fearful beginning<br/> for sons of the soil; and soon
it came,<br/> in the doom of their lord, to a dreadful end.</p>
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<p>XXXI</p>
<p>THEN the baleful fiend its fire belched out,<br/> and bright homes burned.
The blaze stood high<br/> all landsfolk frighting. No living thing<br/>
would that loathly one leave as aloft it flew.<br/> Wide was the dragon’s
warring seen,<br/> its fiendish fury far and near,<br/> as the grim
destroyer those Geatish people<br/> hated and hounded. To hidden lair,<br/>
to its hoard it hastened at hint of dawn.<br/> Folk of the land it had
lapped in flame,<br/> with bale and brand. In its barrow it trusted,<br/>
its battling and bulwarks: that boast was vain!</p>
<p>To Beowulf then the bale was told<br/> quickly and truly: the king’s
own home,<br/> of buildings the best, in brand-waves melted,<br/> that
gift-throne of Geats. To the good old man<br/> sad in heart, ’twas
heaviest sorrow.<br/> The sage assumed that his sovran God<br/> he had
angered, breaking ancient law,<br/> and embittered the Lord. His breast
within<br/> with black thoughts welled, as his wont was never.<br/> The
folk’s own fastness that fiery dragon<br/> with flame had destroyed,
and the stronghold all<br/> washed by waves; but the warlike king,<br/>
prince of the Weders, plotted vengeance.<br/> Warriors’-bulwark, he
bade them work<br/> all of iron -- the earl’s commander --<br/> a
war-shield wondrous: well he knew<br/> that forest-wood against fire were
worthless,<br/> linden could aid not. -- Atheling brave,<br/> he was fated
to finish this fleeting life, <SPAN name="linkcitation31a" id="linkcitation31a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote31a">{31a}</SPAN><br/> his
days on earth, and the dragon with him,<br/> though long it had watched o’er
the wealth of the hoard! --<br/> Shame he reckoned it, sharer-of-rings,<br/>
to follow the flyer-afar with a host,<br/> a broad-flung band; nor the
battle feared he,<br/> nor deemed he dreadful the dragon’s warring,<br/>
its vigor and valor: ventures desperate<br/> he had passed a-plenty, and
perils of war,<br/> contest-crash, since, conqueror proud,<br/> Hrothgar’s
hall he had wholly purged,<br/> and in grapple had killed the kin of
Grendel,<br/> loathsome breed! Not least was that<br/> of hand-to-hand
fights where Hygelac fell,<br/> when the ruler of Geats in rush of battle,<br/>
lord of his folk, in the Frisian land,<br/> son of Hrethel, by
sword-draughts died,<br/> by brands down-beaten. Thence Beowulf fled<br/>
through strength of himself and his swimming power,<br/> though alone, and
his arms were laden with thirty<br/> coats of mail, when he came to the
sea!<br/> Nor yet might Hetwaras <SPAN name="linkcitation31b" id="linkcitation31b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote31b">{31b}</SPAN> haughtily
boast<br/> their craft of contest, who carried against him<br/> shields to
the fight: but few escaped<br/> from strife with the hero to seek their
homes!<br/> Then swam over ocean Ecgtheow’s son<br/> lonely and
sorrowful, seeking his land,<br/> where Hygd made him offer of hoard and
realm,<br/> rings and royal-seat, reckoning naught<br/> the strength of
her son to save their kingdom<br/> from hostile hordes, after Hygelac’s
death.<br/> No sooner for this could the stricken ones<br/> in any wise
move that atheling’s mind<br/> over young Heardred’s head as
lord<br/> and ruler of all the realm to be:<br/> yet the hero upheld him
with helpful words,<br/> aided in honor, till, older grown,<br/> he
wielded the Weder-Geats. -- Wandering exiles<br/> sought him o’er
seas, the sons of Ohtere,<br/> who had spurned the sway of the Scylfings’-helmet,<br/>
the bravest and best that broke the rings,<br/> in Swedish land, of the
sea-kings’ line,<br/> haughty hero. <SPAN name="linkcitation31c" id="linkcitation31c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote31c">{31c}</SPAN> Hence
Heardred’s end.<br/> For shelter he gave them, sword-death came,<br/>
the blade’s fell blow, to bairn of Hygelac;<br/> but the son of
Ongentheow sought again<br/> house and home when Heardred fell,<br/>
leaving Beowulf lord of Geats<br/> and gift-seat’s master. -- A good
king he!</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
<br/><br/></div>
<p>XXXII</p>
<p>THE fall of his lord he was fain to requite<br/> in after days; and to
Eadgils he proved<br/> friend to the friendless, and forces sent<br/> over
the sea to the son of Ohtere,<br/> weapons and warriors: well repaid he<br/>
those care-paths cold when the king he slew. <SPAN name="linkcitation32a" id="linkcitation32a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote32a">{32a}</SPAN><br/> Thus
safe through struggles the son of Ecgtheow<br/> had passed a plenty,
through perils dire,<br/> with daring deeds, till this day was come<br/>
that doomed him now with the dragon to strive.<br/> With comrades eleven
the lord of Geats<br/> swollen in rage went seeking the dragon.<br/> He
had heard whence all the harm arose<br/> and the killing of clansmen; that
cup of price<br/> on the lap of the lord had been laid by the finder.<br/>
In the throng was this one thirteenth man,<br/> starter of all the strife
and ill,<br/> care-laden captive; cringing thence<br/> forced and
reluctant, he led them on<br/> till he came in ken of that cavern-hall,<br/>
the barrow delved near billowy surges,<br/> flood of ocean. Within ’twas
full<br/> of wire-gold and jewels; a jealous warden,<br/> warrior trusty,
the treasures held,<br/> lurked in his lair. Not light the task<br/> of
entrance for any of earth-born men!<br/> Sat on the headland the hero
king,<br/> spake words of hail to his hearth-companions,<br/> gold-friend
of Geats. All gloomy his soul,<br/> wavering, death-bound. Wyrd full nigh<br/>
stood ready to greet the gray-haired man,<br/> to seize his soul-hoard,
sunder apart<br/> life and body. Not long would be<br/> the warrior’s
spirit enwound with flesh.<br/> Beowulf spake, the bairn of Ecgtheow: --<br/>
“Through store of struggles I strove in youth,<br/> mighty feuds; I
mind them all.<br/> I was seven years old when the sovran of rings,<br/>
friend-of-his-folk, from my father took me,<br/> had me, and held me,
Hrethel the king,<br/> with food and fee, faithful in kinship.<br/> Ne’er,
while I lived there, he loathlier found me,<br/> bairn in the burg, than
his birthright sons,<br/> Herebeald and Haethcyn and Hygelac mine.<br/>
For the eldest of these, by unmeet chance,<br/> by kinsman’s deed,
was the death-bed strewn,<br/> when Haethcyn killed him with horny bow,<br/>
his own dear liege laid low with an arrow,<br/> missed the mark and his
mate shot down,<br/> one brother the other, with bloody shaft.<br/> A
feeless fight, <SPAN name="linkcitation32b" id="linkcitation32b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote32b">{32b}</SPAN> and a fearful sin,<br/> horror to
Hrethel; yet, hard as it was,<br/> unavenged must the atheling die!<br/>
Too awful it is for an aged man<br/> to bide and bear, that his bairn so
young<br/> rides on the gallows. A rime he makes,<br/> sorrow-song for his
son there hanging<br/> as rapture of ravens; no rescue now<br/> can come
from the old, disabled man!<br/> Still is he minded, as morning breaks,<br/>
of the heir gone elsewhere; <SPAN name="linkcitation32c" id="linkcitation32c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote32c">{32c}</SPAN> another he hopes not<br/> he will bide
to see his burg within<br/> as ward for his wealth, now the one has found<br/>
doom of death that the deed incurred.<br/> Forlorn he looks on the lodge
of his son,<br/> wine-hall waste and wind-swept chambers<br/> reft of
revel. The rider sleepeth,<br/> the hero, far-hidden; <SPAN name="linkcitation32d" id="linkcitation32d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote32d">{32d}</SPAN>
no harp resounds,<br/> in the courts no wassail, as once was heard.</p>
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<p>XXXIII</p>
<p>“THEN he goes to his chamber, a grief-song chants<br/> alone for his
lost. Too large all seems,<br/> homestead and house. So the
helmet-of-Weders<br/> hid in his heart for Herebeald<br/> waves of woe. No
way could he take<br/> to avenge on the slayer slaughter so foul;<br/> nor
e’en could he harass that hero at all<br/> with loathing deed,
though he loved him not.<br/> And so for the sorrow his soul endured,<br/>
men’s gladness he gave up and God’s light chose.<br/> Lands
and cities he left his sons<br/> (as the wealthy do) when he went from
earth.<br/> There was strife and struggle ’twixt Swede and Geat<br/>
o’er the width of waters; war arose,<br/> hard battle-horror, when
Hrethel died,<br/> and Ongentheow’s offspring grew<br/> strife-keen,
bold, nor brooked o’er the seas<br/> pact of peace, but pushed their
hosts<br/> to harass in hatred by Hreosnabeorh.<br/> Men of my folk for
that feud had vengeance,<br/> for woful war (‘tis widely known),<br/>
though one of them bought it with blood of his heart,<br/> a bargain hard:
for Haethcyn proved<br/> fatal that fray, for the first-of-Geats.<br/> At
morn, I heard, was the murderer killed<br/> by kinsman for kinsman, <SPAN name="linkcitation33a" id="linkcitation33a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote33a">{33a}</SPAN>
with clash of sword,<br/> when Ongentheow met Eofor there.<br/> Wide split
the war-helm: wan he fell,<br/> hoary Scylfing; the hand that smote him<br/>
of feud was mindful, nor flinched from the death-blow.<br/> -- “For
all that he <SPAN name="linkcitation33b" id="linkcitation33b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote33b">{33b}</SPAN> gave me, my gleaming sword<br/> repaid
him at war, -- such power I wielded, --<br/> for lordly treasure: with
land he entrusted me,<br/> homestead and house. He had no need<br/> from
Swedish realm, or from Spear-Dane folk,<br/> or from men of the Gifths, to
get him help, --<br/> some warrior worse for wage to buy!<br/> Ever I
fought in the front of all,<br/> sole to the fore; and so shall I fight<br/>
while I bide in life and this blade shall last<br/> that early and late
hath loyal proved<br/> since for my doughtiness Daeghrefn fell,<br/> slain
by my hand, the Hugas’ champion.<br/> Nor fared he thence to the
Frisian king<br/> with the booty back, and breast-adornments;<br/> but,
slain in struggle, that standard-bearer<br/> fell, atheling brave. Not
with blade was he slain,<br/> but his bones were broken by brawny gripe,<br/>
his heart-waves stilled. -- The sword-edge now,<br/> hard blade and my
hand, for the hoard shall strive.”<br/> Beowulf spake, and a
battle-vow made<br/> his last of all: “I have lived through many<br/>
wars in my youth; now once again,<br/> old folk-defender, feud will I
seek,<br/> do doughty deeds, if the dark destroyer<br/> forth from his
cavern come to fight me!”<br/> Then hailed he the helmeted heroes
all,<br/> for the last time greeting his liegemen dear,<br/> comrades of
war: “I should carry no weapon,<br/> no sword to the serpent, if
sure I knew<br/> how, with such enemy, else my vows<br/> I could gain as I
did in Grendel’s day.<br/> But fire in this fight I must fear me
now,<br/> and poisonous breath; so I bring with me<br/> breastplate and
board. <SPAN name="linkcitation33c" id="linkcitation33c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote33c">{33c}</SPAN> From the barrow’s keeper<br/> no
footbreadth flee I. One fight shall end<br/> our war by the wall, as Wyrd
allots,<br/> all mankind’s master. My mood is bold<br/> but forbears
to boast o’er this battling-flyer.<br/> -- Now abide by the barrow,
ye breastplate-mailed,<br/> ye heroes in harness, which of us twain<br/>
better from battle-rush bear his wounds.<br/> Wait ye the finish. The
fight is not yours,<br/> nor meet for any but me alone<br/> to measure
might with this monster here<br/> and play the hero. Hardily I<br/> shall
win that wealth, or war shall seize,<br/> cruel killing, your king and
lord!”<br/> Up stood then with shield the sturdy champion,<br/>
stayed by the strength of his single manhood,<br/> and hardy ’neath
helmet his harness bore<br/> under cleft of the cliffs: no coward’s
path!<br/> Soon spied by the wall that warrior chief,<br/> survivor of
many a victory-field<br/> where foemen fought with furious clashings,<br/>
an arch of stone; and within, a stream<br/> that broke from the barrow.
The brooklet’s wave<br/> was hot with fire. The hoard that way<br/>
he never could hope unharmed to near,<br/> or endure those deeps, <SPAN name="linkcitation33d" id="linkcitation33d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote33d">{33d}</SPAN>
for the dragon’s flame.<br/> Then let from his breast, for he burst
with rage,<br/> the Weder-Geat prince a word outgo;<br/> stormed the
stark-heart; stern went ringing<br/> and clear his cry ’neath the
cliff-rocks gray.<br/> The hoard-guard heard a human voice;<br/> his rage
was enkindled. No respite now<br/> for pact of peace! The poison-breath<br/>
of that foul worm first came forth from the cave,<br/> hot reek-of-fight:
the rocks resounded.<br/> Stout by the stone-way his shield he raised,<br/>
lord of the Geats, against the loathed-one;<br/> while with courage keen
that coiled foe<br/> came seeking strife. The sturdy king<br/> had drawn
his sword, not dull of edge,<br/> heirloom old; and each of the two<br/>
felt fear of his foe, though fierce their mood.<br/> Stoutly stood with
his shield high-raised<br/> the warrior king, as the worm now coiled<br/>
together amain: the mailed-one waited.<br/> Now, spire by spire, fast sped
and glided<br/> that blazing serpent. The shield protected,<br/> soul and
body a shorter while<br/> for the hero-king than his heart desired,<br/>
could his will have wielded the welcome respite<br/> but once in his life!
But Wyrd denied it,<br/> and victory’s honors. -- His arm he lifted<br/>
lord of the Geats, the grim foe smote<br/> with atheling’s heirloom.
Its edge was turned<br/> brown blade, on the bone, and bit more feebly<br/>
than its noble master had need of then<br/> in his baleful stress. -- Then
the barrow’s keeper<br/> waxed full wild for that weighty blow,<br/>
cast deadly flames; wide drove and far<br/> those vicious fires. No victor’s
glory<br/> the Geats’ lord boasted; his brand had failed,<br/> naked
in battle, as never it should,<br/> excellent iron! -- ’Twas no easy
path<br/> that Ecgtheow’s honored heir must tread<br/> over the
plain to the place of the foe;<br/> for against his will he must win a
home<br/> elsewhere far, as must all men, leaving<br/> this lapsing life!
-- Not long it was<br/> ere those champions grimly closed again.<br/> The
hoard-guard was heartened; high heaved his breast<br/> once more; and by
peril was pressed again,<br/> enfolded in flames, the folk-commander!<br/>
Nor yet about him his band of comrades,<br/> sons of athelings, armed
stood<br/> with warlike front: to the woods they bent them,<br/> their
lives to save. But the soul of one<br/> with care was cumbered. Kinship
true<br/> can never be marred in a noble mind!</p>
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<p>XXXIV</p>
<p>WIGLAF his name was, Weohstan’s son,<br/> linden-thane loved, the
lord of Scylfings,<br/> Aelfhere’s kinsman. His king he now saw<br/>
with heat under helmet hard oppressed.<br/> He minded the prizes his
prince had given him,<br/> wealthy seat of the Waegmunding line,<br/> and
folk-rights that his father owned<br/> Not long he lingered. The linden
yellow,<br/> his shield, he seized; the old sword he drew: --<br/> as
heirloom of Eanmund earth-dwellers knew it,<br/> who was slain by the
sword-edge, son of Ohtere,<br/> friendless exile, erst in fray<br/> killed
by Weohstan, who won for his kin<br/> brown-bright helmet, breastplate
ringed,<br/> old sword of Eotens, Onela’s gift,<br/> weeds of war of
the warrior-thane,<br/> battle-gear brave: though a brother’s child<br/>
had been felled, the feud was unfelt by Onela. <SPAN name="linkcitation34a" id="linkcitation34a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote34a">{34a}</SPAN><br/> For
winters this war-gear Weohstan kept,<br/> breastplate and board, till his
bairn had grown<br/> earlship to earn as the old sire did:<br/> then he
gave him, mid Geats, the gear of battle,<br/> portion huge, when he passed
from life,<br/> fared aged forth. For the first time now<br/> with his
leader-lord the liegeman young<br/> was bidden to share the shock of
battle.<br/> Neither softened his soul, nor the sire’s bequest<br/>
weakened in war. <SPAN name="linkcitation34b" id="linkcitation34b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote34b">{34b}</SPAN> So the worm found out<br/> when once in
fight the foes had met!<br/> Wiglaf spake, -- and his words were sage;<br/>
sad in spirit, he said to his comrades: --<br/> “I remember the
time, when mead we took,<br/> what promise we made to this prince of ours<br/>
in the banquet-hall, to our breaker-of-rings,<br/> for gear of combat to
give him requital,<br/> for hard-sword and helmet, if hap should bring<br/>
stress of this sort! Himself who chose us<br/> from all his army to aid
him now,<br/> urged us to glory, and gave these treasures,<br/> because he
counted us keen with the spear<br/> and hardy ’neath helm, though
this hero-work<br/> our leader hoped unhelped and alone<br/> to finish for
us, -- folk-defender<br/> who hath got him glory greater than all men<br/>
for daring deeds! Now the day is come<br/> that our noble master has need
of the might<br/> of warriors stout. Let us stride along<br/> the hero to
help while the heat is about him<br/> glowing and grim! For God is my
witness<br/> I am far more fain the fire should seize<br/> along with my
lord these limbs of mine! <SPAN name="linkcitation34c" id="linkcitation34c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote34c">{34c}</SPAN><br/> Unsuiting it seems our shields to
bear<br/> homeward hence, save here we essay<br/> to fell the foe and
defend the life<br/> of the Weders’ lord. I wot ’twere shame<br/>
on the law of our land if alone the king<br/> out of Geatish warriors woe
endured<br/> and sank in the struggle! My sword and helmet,<br/>
breastplate and board, for us both shall serve!”<br/> Through
slaughter-reek strode he to succor his chieftain,<br/> his battle-helm
bore, and brief words spake: --<br/> “Beowulf dearest, do all
bravely,<br/> as in youthful days of yore thou vowedst<br/> that while
life should last thou wouldst let no wise<br/> thy glory droop! Now, great
in deeds,<br/> atheling steadfast, with all thy strength<br/> shield thy
life! I will stand to help thee.”<br/> At the words the worm came
once again,<br/> murderous monster mad with rage,<br/> with fire-billows
flaming, its foes to seek,<br/> the hated men. In heat-waves burned<br/>
that board <SPAN name="linkcitation34d" id="linkcitation34d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote34d">{34d}</SPAN> to the boss, and the breastplate failed<br/>
to shelter at all the spear-thane young.<br/> Yet quickly under his
kinsman’s shield<br/> went eager the earl, since his own was now<br/>
all burned by the blaze. The bold king again<br/> had mind of his glory:
with might his glaive<br/> was driven into the dragon’s head, --<br/>
blow nerved by hate. But Naegling <SPAN name="linkcitation34e" id="linkcitation34e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote34e">{34e}</SPAN> was
shivered,<br/> broken in battle was Beowulf’s sword,<br/> old and
gray. ’Twas granted him not<br/> that ever the edge of iron at all<br/>
could help him at strife: too strong was his hand,<br/> so the tale is
told, and he tried too far<br/> with strength of stroke all swords he
wielded,<br/> though sturdy their steel: they steaded him nought.<br/>
Then for the third time thought on its feud<br/> that folk-destroyer,
fire-dread dragon,<br/> and rushed on the hero, where room allowed,<br/>
battle-grim, burning; its bitter teeth<br/> closed on his neck, and
covered him<br/> with waves of blood from his breast that welled.</p>
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<br/><br/></div>
<p>XXXV</p>
<p>’TWAS now, men say, in his sovran’s need<br/> that the earl
made known his noble strain,<br/> craft and keenness and courage enduring.<br/>
Heedless of harm, though his hand was burned,<br/> hardy-hearted, he
helped his kinsman.<br/> A little lower the loathsome beast<br/> he smote
with sword; his steel drove in<br/> bright and burnished; that blaze began<br/>
to lose and lessen. At last the king<br/> wielded his wits again,
war-knife drew,<br/> a biting blade by his breastplate hanging,<br/> and
the Weders’-helm smote that worm asunder,<br/> felled the foe, flung
forth its life.<br/> So had they killed it, kinsmen both,<br/> athelings
twain: thus an earl should be<br/> in danger’s day! -- Of deeds of
valor<br/> this conqueror’s-hour of the king was last,<br/> of his
work in the world. The wound began,<br/> which that dragon-of-earth had
erst inflicted,<br/> to swell and smart; and soon he found<br/> in his
breast was boiling, baleful and deep,<br/> pain of poison. The prince
walked on,<br/> wise in his thought, to the wall of rock;<br/> then sat,
and stared at the structure of giants,<br/> where arch of stone and
steadfast column<br/> upheld forever that hall in earth.<br/> Yet here
must the hand of the henchman peerless<br/> lave with water his winsome
lord,<br/> the king and conqueror covered with blood,<br/> with struggle
spent, and unspan his helmet.<br/> Beowulf spake in spite of his hurt,<br/>
his mortal wound; full well he knew<br/> his portion now was past and gone<br/>
of earthly bliss, and all had fled<br/> of his file of days, and death was
near:<br/> “I would fain bestow on son of mine<br/> this gear of
war, were given me now<br/> that any heir should after me come<br/> of my
proper blood. This people I ruled<br/> fifty winters. No folk-king was
there,<br/> none at all, of the neighboring clans<br/> who war would wage
me with ’warriors’-friends’ <SPAN name="linkcitation35a" id="linkcitation35a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote35a">{35a}</SPAN><br/> and
threat me with horrors. At home I bided<br/> what fate might come, and I
cared for mine own;<br/> feuds I sought not, nor falsely swore<br/> ever
on oath. For all these things,<br/> though fatally wounded, fain am I!<br/>
From the Ruler-of-Man no wrath shall seize me,<br/> when life from my
frame must flee away,<br/> for killing of kinsmen! Now quickly go<br/> and
gaze on that hoard ’neath the hoary rock,<br/> Wiglaf loved, now the
worm lies low,<br/> sleeps, heart-sore, of his spoil bereaved.<br/> And
fare in haste. I would fain behold<br/> the gorgeous heirlooms, golden
store,<br/> have joy in the jewels and gems, lay down<br/> softlier for
sight of this splendid hoard<br/> my life and the lordship I long have
held.”</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
<br/><br/></div>
<p>XXXVI</p>
<p>I HAVE heard that swiftly the son of Weohstan<br/> at wish and word of his
wounded king, --<br/> war-sick warrior, -- woven mail-coat,<br/>
battle-sark, bore ’neath the barrow’s roof.<br/> Then the
clansman keen, of conquest proud,<br/> passing the seat, <SPAN name="linkcitation36a" id="linkcitation36a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote36a">{36a}</SPAN>
saw store of jewels<br/> and glistening gold the ground along;<br/> by the
wall were marvels, and many a vessel<br/> in the den of the dragon, the
dawn-flier old:<br/> unburnished bowls of bygone men<br/> reft of
richness; rusty helms<br/> of the olden age; and arm-rings many<br/>
wondrously woven. -- Such wealth of gold,<br/> booty from barrow, can
burden with pride<br/> each human wight: let him hide it who will! --<br/>
His glance too fell on a gold-wove banner<br/> high o’er the hoard,
of handiwork noblest,<br/> brilliantly broidered; so bright its gleam,<br/>
all the earth-floor he easily saw<br/> and viewed all these vessels. No
vestige now<br/> was seen of the serpent: the sword had ta’en him.<br/>
Then, I heard, the hill of its hoard was reft,<br/> old work of giants, by
one alone;<br/> he burdened his bosom with beakers and plate<br/> at his
own good will, and the ensign took,<br/> brightest of beacons. -- The
blade of his lord<br/> -- its edge was iron -- had injured deep<br/> one
that guarded the golden hoard<br/> many a year and its murder-fire<br/>
spread hot round the barrow in horror-billows<br/> at midnight hour, till
it met its doom.<br/> Hasted the herald, the hoard so spurred him<br/> his
track to retrace; he was troubled by doubt,<br/> high-souled hero, if
haply he’d find<br/> alive, where he left him, the lord of Weders,<br/>
weakening fast by the wall of the cave.<br/> So he carried the load. His
lord and king<br/> he found all bleeding, famous chief<br/> at the lapse
of life. The liegeman again<br/> plashed him with water, till point of
word<br/> broke through the breast-hoard. Beowulf spake,<br/> sage and
sad, as he stared at the gold. --<br/> “For the gold and treasure,
to God my thanks,<br/> to the Wielder-of-Wonders, with words I say,<br/>
for what I behold, to Heaven’s Lord,<br/> for the grace that I give
such gifts to my folk<br/> or ever the day of my death be run!<br/> Now I’ve
bartered here for booty of treasure<br/> the last of my life, so look ye
well<br/> to the needs of my land! No longer I tarry.<br/> A barrow bid ye
the battle-fanned raise<br/> for my ashes. ’Twill shine by the shore
of the flood,<br/> to folk of mine memorial fair<br/> on Hrones Headland
high uplifted,<br/> that ocean-wanderers oft may hail<br/> Beowulf’s
Barrow, as back from far<br/> they drive their keels o’er the
darkling wave.”<br/> From his neck he unclasped the collar of gold,<br/>
valorous king, to his vassal gave it<br/> with bright-gold helmet,
breastplate, and ring,<br/> to the youthful thane: bade him use them in
joy.<br/> “Thou art end and remnant of all our race<br/> the
Waegmunding name. For Wyrd hath swept them,<br/> all my line, to the land
of doom,<br/> earls in their glory: I after them go.”<br/> This word
was the last which the wise old man<br/> harbored in heart ere hot
death-waves<br/> of balefire he chose. From his bosom fled<br/> his soul
to seek the saints’ reward.</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
<br/><br/></div>
<p>XXXVII</p>
<p>IT was heavy hap for that hero young<br/> on his lord beloved to look and
find him<br/> lying on earth with life at end,<br/> sorrowful sight. But
the slayer too,<br/> awful earth-dragon, empty of breath,<br/> lay felled
in fight, nor, fain of its treasure,<br/> could the writhing monster rule
it more.<br/> For edges of iron had ended its days,<br/> hard and
battle-sharp, hammers’ leaving; <SPAN name="linkcitation37a" id="linkcitation37a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote37a">{37a}</SPAN><br/> and
that flier-afar had fallen to ground<br/> hushed by its hurt, its hoard
all near,<br/> no longer lusty aloft to whirl<br/> at midnight, making its
merriment seen,<br/> proud of its prizes: prone it sank<br/> by the
handiwork of the hero-king.<br/> Forsooth among folk but few achieve,<br/>
-- though sturdy and strong, as stories tell me,<br/> and never so daring
in deed of valor, --<br/> the perilous breath of a poison-foe<br/> to
brave, and to rush on the ring-board hall,<br/> whenever his watch the
warden keeps<br/> bold in the barrow. Beowulf paid<br/> the price of death
for that precious hoard;<br/> and each of the foes had found the end<br/>
of this fleeting life.<br/> Befell erelong<br/> that the laggards in war
the wood had left,<br/> trothbreakers, cowards, ten together,<br/> fearing
before to flourish a spear<br/> in the sore distress of their sovran lord.<br/>
Now in their shame their shields they carried,<br/> armor of fight, where
the old man lay;<br/> and they gazed on Wiglaf. Wearied he sat<br/> at his
sovran’s shoulder, shieldsman good,<br/> to wake him with water.
<SPAN name="linkcitation37b" id="linkcitation37b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote37b">{37b}</SPAN> Nowise it availed.<br/> Though well he
wished it, in world no more<br/> could he barrier life for that
leader-of-battles<br/> nor baffle the will of all-wielding God.<br/> Doom
of the Lord was law o’er the deeds<br/> of every man, as it is
to-day.<br/> Grim was the answer, easy to get,<br/> from the youth for
those that had yielded to fear!<br/> Wiglaf spake, the son of Weohstan, --<br/>
mournful he looked on those men unloved: --<br/> “Who sooth will
speak, can say indeed<br/> that the ruler who gave you golden rings<br/>
and the harness of war in which ye stand<br/> -- for he at ale-bench
often-times<br/> bestowed on hall-folk helm and breastplate,<br/> lord to
liegemen, the likeliest gear<br/> which near of far he could find to give,
--<br/> threw away and wasted these weeds of battle,<br/> on men who
failed when the foemen came!<br/> Not at all could the king of his
comrades-in-arms<br/> venture to vaunt, though the Victory-Wielder,<br/>
God, gave him grace that he got revenge<br/> sole with his sword in stress
and need.<br/> To rescue his life, ’twas little that I<br/> could
serve him in struggle; yet shift I made<br/> (hopeless it seemed) to help
my kinsman.<br/> Its strength ever waned, when with weapon I struck<br/>
that fatal foe, and the fire less strongly<br/> flowed from its head. --
Too few the heroes<br/> in throe of contest that thronged to our king!<br/>
Now gift of treasure and girding of sword,<br/> joy of the house and
home-delight<br/> shall fail your folk; his freehold-land<br/> every
clansman within your kin<br/> shall lose and leave, when lords high-born<br/>
hear afar of that flight of yours,<br/> a fameless deed. Yea, death is
better<br/> for liegemen all than a life of shame!”</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
<br/><br/></div>
<p>XXXVIII</p>
<p>THAT battle-toil bade he at burg to announce,<br/> at the fort on the
cliff, where, full of sorrow,<br/> all the morning earls had sat,<br/>
daring shieldsmen, in doubt of twain:<br/> would they wail as dead, or
welcome home,<br/> their lord beloved? Little <SPAN name="linkcitation38a" id="linkcitation38a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote38a">{38a}</SPAN> kept back<br/>
of the tidings new, but told them all,<br/> the herald that up the
headland rode. --<br/> “Now the willing-giver to Weder folk<br/> in
death-bed lies; the Lord of Geats<br/> on the slaughter-bed sleeps by the
serpent’s deed!<br/> And beside him is stretched that slayer-of-men<br/>
with knife-wounds sick: <SPAN name="linkcitation38b" id="linkcitation38b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote38b">{38b}</SPAN> no sword availed<br/> on the awesome
thing in any wise<br/> to work a wound. There Wiglaf sitteth,<br/>
Weohstan’s bairn, by Beowulf’s side,<br/> the living earl by
the other dead,<br/> and heavy of heart a head-watch <SPAN name="linkcitation38c" id="linkcitation38c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote38c">{38c}</SPAN>
keeps<br/> o’er friend and foe. -- Now our folk may look<br/> for
waging of war when once unhidden<br/> to Frisian and Frank the fall of the
king<br/> is spread afar. -- The strife began<br/> when hot on the Hugas
<SPAN name="linkcitation38d" id="linkcitation38d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote38d">{38d}</SPAN> Hygelac fell<br/> and fared with his
fleet to the Frisian land.<br/> Him there the Hetwaras humbled in war,<br/>
plied with such prowess their power o’erwhelming<br/> that the
bold-in-battle bowed beneath it<br/> and fell in fight. To his friends no
wise<br/> could that earl give treasure! And ever since<br/> the Merowings’
favor has failed us wholly.<br/> Nor aught expect I of peace and faith<br/>
from Swedish folk. ’Twas spread afar<br/> how Ongentheow reft at
Ravenswood<br/> Haethcyn Hrethling of hope and life,<br/> when the folk of
Geats for the first time sought<br/> in wanton pride the
Warlike-Scylfings.<br/> Soon the sage old sire <SPAN name="linkcitation38e" id="linkcitation38e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote38e">{38e}</SPAN> of Ohtere,<br/>
ancient and awful, gave answering blow;<br/> the sea-king <SPAN name="linkcitation38f" id="linkcitation38f"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote38f">{38f}</SPAN>
he slew, and his spouse redeemed,<br/> his good wife rescued, though
robbed of her gold,<br/> mother of Ohtere and Onela.<br/> Then he followed
his foes, who fled before him<br/> sore beset and stole their way,<br/>
bereft of a ruler, to Ravenswood.</p>
<p>With his host he besieged there what swords had left,<br/> the weary and
wounded; woes he threatened<br/> the whole night through to that
hard-pressed throng:<br/> some with the morrow his sword should kill,<br/>
some should go to the gallows-tree<br/> for rapture of ravens. But rescue
came<br/> with dawn of day for those desperate men<br/> when they heard
the horn of Hygelac sound,<br/> tones of his trumpet; the trusty king<br/>
had followed their trail with faithful band.</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
<br/><br/></div>
<p>XXXIX</p>
<p>“THE bloody swath of Swedes and Geats<br/> and the storm of their
strife, were seen afar,<br/> how folk against folk the fight had wakened.<br/>
The ancient king with his atheling band<br/> sought his citadel, sorrowing
much:<br/> Ongentheow earl went up to his burg.<br/> He had tested Hygelac’s
hardihood,<br/> the proud one’s prowess, would prove it no longer,<br/>
defied no more those fighting-wanderers<br/> nor hoped from the seamen to
save his hoard,<br/> his bairn and his bride: so he bent him again,<br/>
old, to his earth-walls. Yet after him came<br/> with slaughter for Swedes
the standards of Hygelac<br/> o’er peaceful plains in pride
advancing,<br/> till Hrethelings fought in the fenced town. <SPAN name="linkcitation39a" id="linkcitation39a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote39a">{39a}</SPAN><br/>
Then Ongentheow with edge of sword,<br/> the hoary-bearded, was held at
bay,<br/> and the folk-king there was forced to suffer<br/> Eofor’s
anger. In ire, at the king<br/> Wulf Wonreding with weapon struck;<br/>
and the chieftain’s blood, for that blow, in streams<br/> flowed
’neath his hair. No fear felt he,<br/> stout old Scylfing, but
straightway repaid<br/> in better bargain that bitter stroke<br/> and
faced his foe with fell intent.<br/> Nor swift enough was the son of
Wonred<br/> answer to render the aged chief;<br/> too soon on his head the
helm was cloven;<br/> blood-bedecked he bowed to earth,<br/> and fell
adown; not doomed was he yet,<br/> and well he waxed, though the wound was
sore.<br/> Then the hardy Hygelac-thane, <SPAN name="linkcitation39b" id="linkcitation39b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote39b">{39b}</SPAN><br/> when
his brother fell, with broad brand smote,<br/> giants’ sword
crashing through giants’-helm<br/> across the shield-wall: sank the
king,<br/> his folk’s old herdsman, fatally hurt.<br/> There were
many to bind the brother’s wounds<br/> and lift him, fast as fate
allowed<br/> his people to wield the place-of-war.<br/> But Eofor took
from Ongentheow,<br/> earl from other, the iron-breastplate,<br/> hard
sword hilted, and helmet too,<br/> and the hoar-chief’s harness to
Hygelac carried,<br/> who took the trappings, and truly promised<br/> rich
fee ’mid folk, -- and fulfilled it so.<br/> For that grim strife
gave the Geatish lord,<br/> Hrethel’s offspring, when home he came,<br/>
to Eofor and Wulf a wealth of treasure,<br/> Each of them had a hundred
thousand <SPAN name="linkcitation39c" id="linkcitation39c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote39c">{39c}</SPAN><br/> in land and linked rings; nor at
less price reckoned<br/> mid-earth men such mighty deeds!<br/> And to
Eofor he gave his only daughter<br/> in pledge of grace, the pride of his
home.</p>
<p>“Such is the feud, the foeman’s rage,<br/> death-hate of men:
so I deem it sure<br/> that the Swedish folk will seek us home<br/> for
this fall of their friends, the fighting-Scylfings,<br/> when once they
learn that our warrior leader<br/> lifeless lies, who land and hoard<br/>
ever defended from all his foes,<br/> furthered his folk’s weal,
finished his course<br/> a hardy hero. -- Now haste is best,<br/> that we
go to gaze on our Geatish lord,<br/> and bear the bountiful
breaker-of-rings<br/> to the funeral pyre. No fragments merely<br/> shall
burn with the warrior. Wealth of jewels,<br/> gold untold and gained in
terror,<br/> treasure at last with his life obtained,<br/> all of that
booty the brands shall take,<br/> fire shall eat it. No earl must carry<br/>
memorial jewel. No maiden fair<br/> shall wreathe her neck with noble
ring:<br/> nay, sad in spirit and shorn of her gold,<br/> oft shall she
pass o’er paths of exile<br/> now our lord all laughter has laid
aside,<br/> all mirth and revel. Many a spear<br/> morning-cold shall be
clasped amain,<br/> lifted aloft; nor shall lilt of harp<br/> those
warriors wake; but the wan-hued raven,<br/> fain o’er the fallen,
his feast shall praise<br/> and boast to the eagle how bravely he ate<br/>
when he and the wolf were wasting the slain.”</p>
<p>So he told his sorrowful tidings,<br/> and little <SPAN name="linkcitation39d" id="linkcitation39d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote39d">{39d}</SPAN> he lied, the
loyal man<br/> of word or of work. The warriors rose;<br/> sad, they
climbed to the Cliff-of-Eagles,<br/> went, welling with tears, the wonder
to view.<br/> Found on the sand there, stretched at rest,<br/> their
lifeless lord, who had lavished rings<br/> of old upon them. Ending-day<br/>
had dawned on the doughty-one; death had seized<br/> in woful slaughter
the Weders’ king.<br/> There saw they, besides, the strangest being,<br/>
loathsome, lying their leader near,<br/> prone on the field. The fiery
dragon,<br/> fearful fiend, with flame was scorched.<br/> Reckoned by
feet, it was fifty measures<br/> in length as it lay. Aloft erewhile<br/>
it had revelled by night, and anon come back,<br/> seeking its den; now in
death’s sure clutch<br/> it had come to the end of its earth-hall
joys.<br/> By it there stood the stoups and jars;<br/> dishes lay there,
and dear-decked swords<br/> eaten with rust, as, on earth’s lap
resting,<br/> a thousand winters they waited there.<br/> For all that
heritage huge, that gold<br/> of bygone men, was bound by a spell, <SPAN name="linkcitation39e" id="linkcitation39e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote39e">{39e}</SPAN><br/>
so the treasure-hall could be touched by none<br/> of human kind, -- save
that Heaven’s King,<br/> God himself, might give whom he would,<br/>
Helper of Heroes, the hoard to open, --<br/> even such a man as seemed to
him meet.</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
<br/><br/></div>
<p>XL</p>
<p>A PERILOUS path, it proved, he <SPAN name="linkcitation40a" id="linkcitation40a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote40a">{40a}</SPAN> trod<br/>
who heinously hid, that hall within,<br/> wealth under wall! Its watcher
had killed<br/> one of a few, <SPAN name="linkcitation40b" id="linkcitation40b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote40b">{40b}</SPAN> and the feud
was avenged<br/> in woful fashion. Wondrous seems it,<br/> what manner a
man of might and valor<br/> oft ends his life, when the earl no longer<br/>
in mead-hall may live with loving friends.<br/> So Beowulf, when that
barrow’s warden<br/> he sought, and the struggle; himself knew not<br/>
in what wise he should wend from the world at last.<br/> For <SPAN name="linkcitation40c" id="linkcitation40c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote40c">{40c}</SPAN>
princes potent, who placed the gold,<br/> with a curse to doomsday covered
it deep,<br/> so that marked with sin the man should be,<br/> hedged with
horrors, in hell-bonds fast,<br/> racked with plagues, who should rob
their hoard.<br/> Yet no greed for gold, but the grace of heaven,<br/>
ever the king had kept in view. <SPAN name="linkcitation40d" id="linkcitation40d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote40d">{40d}</SPAN><br/> Wiglaf
spake, the son of Weohstan: --<br/> “At the mandate of one, oft
warriors many<br/> sorrow must suffer; and so must we.<br/> The people’s-shepherd
showed not aught<br/> of care for our counsel, king beloved!<br/> That
guardian of gold he should grapple not, urged we,<br/> but let him lie
where he long had been<br/> in his earth-hall waiting the end of the
world,<br/> the hest of heaven. -- This hoard is ours<br/> but grievously
gotten; too grim the fate<br/> which thither carried our king and lord.<br/>
I was within there, and all I viewed,<br/> the chambered treasure, when
chance allowed me<br/> (and my path was made in no pleasant wise)<br/>
under the earth-wall. Eager, I seized<br/> such heap from the hoard as
hands could bear<br/> and hurriedly carried it hither back<br/> to my
liege and lord. Alive was he still,<br/> still wielding his wits. The wise
old man<br/> spake much in his sorrow, and sent you greetings<br/> and
bade that ye build, when he breathed no more,<br/> on the place of his
balefire a barrow high,<br/> memorial mighty. Of men was he<br/> worthiest
warrior wide earth o’er<br/> the while he had joy of his jewels and
burg.<br/> Let us set out in haste now, the second time<br/> to see and
search this store of treasure,<br/> these wall-hid wonders, -- the way I
show you, --<br/> where, gathered near, ye may gaze your fill<br/> at
broad-gold and rings. Let the bier, soon made,<br/> be all in order when
out we come,<br/> our king and captain to carry thither<br/> -- man
beloved -- where long he shall bide<br/> safe in the shelter of sovran
God.”<br/> Then the bairn of Weohstan bade command,<br/> hardy
chief, to heroes many<br/> that owned their homesteads, hither to bring<br/>
firewood from far -- o’er the folk they ruled --<br/> for the
famed-one’s funeral. “ Fire shall devour<br/> and wan flames
feed on the fearless warrior<br/> who oft stood stout in the iron-shower,<br/>
when, sped from the string, a storm of arrows<br/> shot o’er the
shield-wall: the shaft held firm,<br/> featly feathered, followed the
barb.”<br/> And now the sage young son of Weohstan<br/> seven chose
of the chieftain’s thanes,<br/> the best he found that band within,<br/>
and went with these warriors, one of eight,<br/> under hostile roof. In
hand one bore<br/> a lighted torch and led the way.<br/> No lots they cast
for keeping the hoard<br/> when once the warriors saw it in hall,<br/>
altogether without a guardian,<br/> lying there lost. And little they
mourned<br/> when they had hastily haled it out,<br/> dear-bought
treasure! The dragon they cast,<br/> the worm, o’er the wall for the
wave to take,<br/> and surges swallowed that shepherd of gems.<br/> Then
the woven gold on a wain was laden --<br/> countless quite! -- and the
king was borne,<br/> hoary hero, to Hrones-Ness.</p>
<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2">
<br/><br/></div>
<p>XLI</p>
<p>THEN fashioned for him the folk of Geats<br/> firm on the earth a
funeral-pile,<br/> and hung it with helmets and harness of war<br/> and
breastplates bright, as the boon he asked;<br/> and they laid amid it the
mighty chieftain,<br/> heroes mourning their master dear.<br/> Then on the
hill that hugest of balefires<br/> the warriors wakened. Wood-smoke rose<br/>
black over blaze, and blent was the roar<br/> of flame with weeping (the
wind was still),<br/> till the fire had broken the frame of bones,<br/>
hot at the heart. In heavy mood<br/> their misery moaned they, their
master’s death.<br/> Wailing her woe, the widow <SPAN name="linkcitation41a" id="linkcitation41a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkfootnote41a">{41a}</SPAN>
old,<br/> her hair upbound, for Beowulf’s death<br/> sung in her
sorrow, and said full oft<br/> she dreaded the doleful days to come,<br/>
deaths enow, and doom of battle,<br/> and shame. -- The smoke by the sky
was devoured.<br/> The folk of the Weders fashioned there<br/> on the
headland a barrow broad and high,<br/> by ocean-farers far descried:<br/>
in ten days’ time their toil had raised it,<br/> the battle-brave’s
beacon. Round brands of the pyre<br/> a wall they built, the worthiest
ever<br/> that wit could prompt in their wisest men.<br/> They placed in
the barrow that precious booty,<br/> the rounds and the rings they had
reft erewhile,<br/> hardy heroes, from hoard in cave, --<br/> trusting the
ground with treasure of earls,<br/> gold in the earth, where ever it lies<br/>
useless to men as of yore it was.<br/> Then about that barrow the
battle-keen rode,<br/> atheling-born, a band of twelve,<br/> lament to
make, to mourn their king,<br/> chant their dirge, and their chieftain
honor.<br/> They praised his earlship, his acts of prowess<br/> worthily
witnessed: and well it is<br/> that men their master-friend mightily laud,<br/>
heartily love, when hence he goes<br/> from life in the body forlorn away.</p>
<p>Thus made their mourning the men of Geatland,<br/> for their hero’s
passing his hearth-companions:<br/> quoth that of all the kings of earth,<br/>
of men he was mildest and most beloved,<br/> to his kin the kindest,
keenest for praise.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<h3> Footnotes: </h3>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote0a" id="linkfootnote0a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation0a">{0a}</SPAN>
Not, of course, Beowulf the Great, hero of the epic.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote0b" id="linkfootnote0b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation0b">{0b}</SPAN>
Kenning for king or chieftain of a comitatus: he breaks off gold from the
spiral rings -- often worn on the arm -- and so rewards his followers.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote1a" id="linkfootnote1a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation1a">{1a}</SPAN>
That is, “The Hart,” or “Stag,” so called from
decorations in the gables that resembled the antlers of a deer. This hall
has been carefully described in a pamphlet by Heyne. The building was
rectangular, with opposite doors -- mainly west and east -- and a hearth
in the middle of th single room. A row of pillars down each side, at some
distance from the walls, made a space which was raised a little above the
main floor, and was furnished with two rows of seats. On one side, usually
south, was the high-seat midway between the doors. Opposite this, on the
other raised space, was another seat of honor. At the banquet soon to be
described, Hrothgar sat in the south or chief high-seat, and Beowulf
opposite to him. The scene for a flying (see below, v.499) was thus very
effectively set. Planks on trestles -- the “board” of later
English literature -- formed the tables just in front of the long rows of
seats, and were taken away after banquets, when the retainers were ready
to stretch themselves out for sleep on the benches.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote1b" id="linkfootnote1b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation1b">{1b}</SPAN>
Fire was the usual end of these halls. See v. 781 below. One thinks of the
splendid scene at the end of the Nibelungen, of the Nialssaga, of Saxo’s
story of Amlethus, and many a less famous instance.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote1c" id="linkfootnote1c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation1c">{1c}</SPAN>
It is to be supposed that all hearers of this poem knew how Hrothgar’s
hall was burnt, -- perhaps in the unsuccessful attack made on him by his
son-in-law Ingeld.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote1d" id="linkfootnote1d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation1d">{1d}</SPAN>
A skilled minstrel. The Danes are heathens, as one is told presently; but
this lay of beginnings is taken from Genesis.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote1e" id="linkfootnote1e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation1e">{1e}</SPAN>
A disturber of the border, one who sallies from his haunt in the fen and
roams over the country near by. This probably pagan nuisance is now
furnished with biblical credentials as a fiend or devil in good standing,
so that all Christian Englishmen might read about him. “Grendel”
may mean one who grinds and crushes.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote1f" id="linkfootnote1f"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation1f">{1f}</SPAN>
Cain’s.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote1g" id="linkfootnote1g"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation1g">{1g}</SPAN>
Giants.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote2a" id="linkfootnote2a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation2a">{2a}</SPAN>
The smaller buildings within the main enclosure but separate from the
hall.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote2b" id="linkfootnote2b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation2b">{2b}</SPAN>
Grendel.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote2c" id="linkfootnote2c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation2c">{2c}</SPAN>
“Sorcerers-of-hell.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote2d" id="linkfootnote2d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation2d">{2d}</SPAN>
Hrothgar, who is the “Scyldings’-friend” of 170.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote2e" id="linkfootnote2e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation2e">{2e}</SPAN>
That is, in formal or prescribed phrase.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote3a" id="linkfootnote3a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation3a">{3a}</SPAN>
Ship.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote3b" id="linkfootnote3b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation3b">{3b}</SPAN>
That is, since Beowulf selected his ship and led his men to the harbor.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote3c" id="linkfootnote3c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation3c">{3c}</SPAN>
One of the auxiliary names of the Geats.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote3d" id="linkfootnote3d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation3d">{3d}</SPAN>
Or: Not thus openly ever came warriors hither; yet...</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote4a" id="linkfootnote4a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation4a">{4a}</SPAN>
Hrothgar.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote4b" id="linkfootnote4b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation4b">{4b}</SPAN>
Beowulf’s helmet has several boar-images on it; he is the “man
of war”; and the boar-helmet guards him as typical representative of
the marching party as a whole. The boar was sacred to Freyr, who was the
favorite god of the Germanic tribes about the North Sea and the Baltic.
Rude representations of warriors show the boar on the helmet quite as
large as the helmet itself.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote5a" id="linkfootnote5a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation5a">{5a}</SPAN>
Either merely paved, the strata via of the Romans, or else thought of as a
sort of mosaic, an extravagant touch like the reckless waste of gold on
the walls and roofs of a hall.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote6a" id="linkfootnote6a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation6a">{6a}</SPAN>
The nicor, says Bugge, is a hippopotamus; a walrus, says Ten Brink. But
that water-goblin who covers the space from Old Nick of jest to the Neckan
and Nix of poetry and tale, is all one needs, and Nicor is a good name for
him.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote6b" id="linkfootnote6b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation6b">{6b}</SPAN>
His own people, the Geats.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote6c" id="linkfootnote6c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation6c">{6c}</SPAN>
That is, cover it as with a face-cloth. “There will be no need of
funeral rites.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote6d" id="linkfootnote6d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation6d">{6d}</SPAN>
Personification of Battle.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote6e" id="linkfootnote6e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation6e">{6e}</SPAN>
The Germanic Vulcan.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote6f" id="linkfootnote6f"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation6f">{6f}</SPAN>
This mighty power, whom the Christian poet can still revere, has here the
general force of “Destiny.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote7a" id="linkfootnote7a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation7a">{7a}</SPAN>
There is no irrelevance here. Hrothgar sees in Beowulf’s mission a
heritage of duty, a return of the good offices which the Danish king
rendered to Beowulf’s father in time of dire need.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote7b" id="linkfootnote7b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation7b">{7b}</SPAN>
Money, for wergild, or man-price.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote7c" id="linkfootnote7c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation7c">{7c}</SPAN>
Ecgtheow, Beowulf’s sire.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote8a" id="linkfootnote8a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation8a">{8a}</SPAN>
“Began the fight.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote8b" id="linkfootnote8b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation8b">{8b}</SPAN>
Breca.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote9a" id="linkfootnote9a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation9a">{9a}</SPAN>
Murder.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote10a" id="linkfootnote10a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation10a">{10a}</SPAN> Beowulf, -- the “one.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote11a" id="linkfootnote11a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation11a">{11a}</SPAN> That is, he was a “lost soul,”
doomed to hell.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote12a" id="linkfootnote12a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation12a">{12a}</SPAN> Kenning for Beowulf.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote13a" id="linkfootnote13a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation13a">{13a}</SPAN> “Guarded the treasure.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote13b" id="linkfootnote13b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation13b">{13b}</SPAN> Sc. Heremod.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote13c" id="linkfootnote13c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation13c">{13c}</SPAN> The singer has sung his lays, and the
epic resumes its story. The time-relations are not altogether good in this
long passage which describes the rejoicings of “the day after”;
but the present shift from the riders on the road to the folk at the hall
is not very violent, and is of a piece with the general style.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote14a" id="linkfootnote14a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation14a">{14a}</SPAN> Unferth, Beowulf’s sometime
opponent in the flyting.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote15a" id="linkfootnote15a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation15a">{15a}</SPAN> There is no horrible inconsistency here
such as the critics strive and cry about. In spite of the ruin that
Grendel and Beowulf had made within the hall, the framework and roof held
firm, and swift repairs made the interior habitable. Tapestries were hung
on the walls, and willing hands prepared the banquet.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote15b" id="linkfootnote15b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation15b">{15b}</SPAN> From its formal use in other places,
this phrase, to take cup in hall, or “on the floor,” would
seem to mean that Beowulf stood up to receive his gifts, drink to the
donor, and say thanks.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote15c" id="linkfootnote15c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation15c">{15c}</SPAN> Kenning for sword.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote15d" id="linkfootnote15d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation15d">{15d}</SPAN> Hrothgar. He is also the “refuge
of the friends of Ing,” below. Ing belongs to myth.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote15e" id="linkfootnote15e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation15e">{15e}</SPAN> Horses are frequently led or ridden into
the hall where folk sit at banquet: so in Chaucer’s Squire’s
tale, in the ballad of King Estmere, and in the romances.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16a" id="linkfootnote16a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16a">{16a}</SPAN> Man-price, wergild.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16b" id="linkfootnote16b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16b">{16b}</SPAN> Beowulf’s.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16c" id="linkfootnote16c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16c">{16c}</SPAN> Hrothgar.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16d" id="linkfootnote16d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16d">{16d}</SPAN> There is no need to assume a gap in the
Ms. As before about Sigemund and Heremod, so now, though at greater
length, about Finn and his feud, a lay is chanted or recited; and the epic
poet, counting on his readers’ familiarity with the story, -- a
fragment of it still exists, -- simply gives the headings.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16e" id="linkfootnote16e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16e">{16e}</SPAN> The exact story to which this episode
refers in summary is not to be determined, but the following account of it
is reasonable and has good support among scholars. Finn, a Frisian
chieftain, who nevertheless has a “castle” outside the Frisian
border, marries Hildeburh, a Danish princess; and her brother, Hnaef, with
many other Danes, pays Finn a visit. Relations between the two peoples
have been strained before. Something starts the old feud anew; and the
visitors are attacked in their quarters. Hnaef is killed; so is a son of
Hildeburh. Many fall on both sides. Peace is patched up; a stately funeral
is held; and the surviving visitors become in a way vassals or liegemen of
Finn, going back with him to Frisia. So matters rest a while. Hengest is
now leader of the Danes; but he is set upon revenge for his former lord,
Hnaef. Probably he is killed in feud; but his clansmen, Guthlaf and Oslaf,
gather at their home a force of sturdy Danes, come back to Frisia, storm
Finn’s stronghold, kill him, and carry back their kinswoman
Hildeburh.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16f" id="linkfootnote16f"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16f">{16f}</SPAN> The “enemies” must be the
Frisians.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16g" id="linkfootnote16g"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16g">{16g}</SPAN> Battlefield. -- Hengest is the “prince’s
thane,” companion of Hnaef. “Folcwald’s son” is
Finn.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16h" id="linkfootnote16h"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16h">{16h}</SPAN> That is, Finn would govern in all honor
the few Danish warriors who were left, provided, of course, that none of
them tried to renew the quarrel or avenge Hnaef their fallen lord. If,
again, one of Finn’s Frisians began a quarrel, he should die by the
sword.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16i" id="linkfootnote16i"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16i">{16i}</SPAN> Hnaef.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16j" id="linkfootnote16j"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16j">{16j}</SPAN> The high place chosen for the funeral:
see description of Beowulf’s funeral-pile at the end of the poem.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote16k" id="linkfootnote16k"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation16k">{16k}</SPAN> Wounds.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote17a" id="linkfootnote17a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation17a">{17a}</SPAN> That is, these two Danes, escaping home,
had told the story of the attack on Hnaef, the slaying of Hengest, and all
the Danish woes. Collecting a force, they return to Frisia and kill Finn
in his home.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote17b" id="linkfootnote17b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation17b">{17b}</SPAN> Nephew to Hrothgar, with whom he
subsequently quarrels, and elder cousin to the two young sons of Hrothgar
and Wealhtheow, -- their natural guardian in the event of the king’s
death. There is something finely feminine in this speech of Wealhtheow’s,
apart from its somewhat irregular and irrelevant sequence of topics. Both
she and her lord probably distrust Hrothulf; but she bids the king to be
of good cheer, and, turning to the suspect, heaps affectionate assurances
on his probity. “My own Hrothulf” will surely not forget these
favors and benefits of the past, but will repay them to the orphaned boy.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote19a" id="linkfootnote19a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation19a">{19a}</SPAN> They had laid their arms on the benches
near where they slept.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote20a" id="linkfootnote20a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation20a">{20a}</SPAN> He surmises presently where she is.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote20b" id="linkfootnote20b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation20b">{20b}</SPAN> The connection is not difficult. The
words of mourning, of acute grief, are said; and according to Germanic
sequence of thought, inexorable here, the next and only topic is revenge.
But is it possible? Hrothgar leads up to his appeal and promise with a
skillful and often effective description of the horrors which surround the
monster’s home and await the attempt of an avenging foe.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote21a" id="linkfootnote21a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation21a">{21a}</SPAN> Hrothgar is probably meant.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote21b" id="linkfootnote21b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation21b">{21b}</SPAN> Meeting place.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote22a" id="linkfootnote22a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation22a">{22a}</SPAN> Kenning for “sword.”
Hrunting is bewitched, laid under a spell of uselessness, along with all
other swords.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote22b" id="linkfootnote22b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation22b">{22b}</SPAN> This brown of swords, evidently meaning
burnished, bright, continues to be a favorite adjective in the popular
ballads.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote23a" id="linkfootnote23a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation23a">{23a}</SPAN> After the killing of the monster and
Grendel’s decapitation.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote23b" id="linkfootnote23b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation23b">{23b}</SPAN> Hrothgar.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote23c" id="linkfootnote23c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation23c">{23c}</SPAN> The blade slowly dissolves in
blood-stained drops like icicles.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote23d" id="linkfootnote23d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation23d">{23d}</SPAN> Spear.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote24a" id="linkfootnote24a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation24a">{24a}</SPAN> That is, “whoever has as wide
authority as I have and can remember so far back so many instances of
heroism, may well say, as I say, that no better hero ever lived than
Beowulf.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote25a" id="linkfootnote25a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation25a">{25a}</SPAN> That is, he is now undefended by
conscience from the temptations (shafts) of the devil.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote25b" id="linkfootnote25b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation25b">{25b}</SPAN> Kenning for the sun. -- This is a
strange role for the raven. He is the warrior’s bird of battle,
exults in slaughter and carnage; his joy here is a compliment to the
sunrise.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote26a" id="linkfootnote26a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation26a">{26a}</SPAN> That is, he might or might not see
Beowulf again. Old as he was, the latter chance was likely; but he clung
to the former, hoping to see his young friend again “and exchange
brave words in the hall.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote27a" id="linkfootnote27a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation27a">{27a}</SPAN> With the speed of the boat.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote27b" id="linkfootnote27b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation27b">{27b}</SPAN> Queen to Hygelac. She is praised by
contrast with the antitype, Thryth, just as Beowulf was praised by
contrast with Heremod.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote27c" id="linkfootnote27c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation27c">{27c}</SPAN> Kenning for “wife.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote28a" id="linkfootnote28a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation28a">{28a}</SPAN> Beowulf gives his uncle the king not
mere gossip of his journey, but a statesmanlike forecast of the outcome of
certain policies at the Danish court. Talk of interpolation here is
absurd. As both Beowulf and Hygelac know, -- and the folk for whom the
Beowulf was put together also knew, -- Froda was king of the Heathobards
(probably the Langobards, once near neighbors of Angle and Saxon tribes on
the continent), and had fallen in fight with the Danes. Hrothgar will set
aside this feud by giving his daughter as “peace-weaver” and
wife to the young king Ingeld, son of the slain Froda. But Beowulf, on
general principles and from his observation of the particular case,
foretells trouble. Note:</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote28b" id="linkfootnote28b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation28b">{28b}</SPAN> Play of shields, battle. A Danish
warrior cuts down Froda in the fight, and takes his sword and armor,
leaving them to a son. This son is selected to accompany his mistress, the
young princess Freawaru, to her new home when she is Ingeld’s queen.
Heedlessly he wears the sword of Froda in hall. An old warrior points it
out to Ingeld, and eggs him on to vengeance. At his instigation the Dane
is killed; but the murderer, afraid of results, and knowing the land,
escapes. So the old feud must break out again.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote28c" id="linkfootnote28c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation28c">{28c}</SPAN> That is, their disastrous battle and the
slaying of their king.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote28d" id="linkfootnote28d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation28d">{28d}</SPAN> The sword.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote28e" id="linkfootnote28e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation28e">{28e}</SPAN> Beowulf returns to his forecast. Things
might well go somewhat as follows, he says; sketches a little tragic
story; and with this prophecy by illustration returns to the tale of his
adventure.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote28f" id="linkfootnote28f"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation28f">{28f}</SPAN> Not an actual glove, but a sort of bag.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote29a" id="linkfootnote29a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation29a">{29a}</SPAN> Hygelac.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote29b" id="linkfootnote29b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation29b">{29b}</SPAN> This is generally assumed to mean hides,
though the text simply says “seven thousand.” A hide in
England meant about 120 acres, though “the size of the acre varied.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote29c" id="linkfootnote29c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation29c">{29c}</SPAN> On the historical raid into Frankish
territory between 512 and 520 A.D. The subsequent course of events, as
gathered from hints of this epic, is partly told in Scandinavian legend.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote29d" id="linkfootnote29d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation29d">{29d}</SPAN> The chronology of this epic, as scholars
have worked it out, would make Beowulf well over ninety years of age when
he fights the dragon. But the fifty years of his reign need not be taken
as historical fact.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote29e" id="linkfootnote29e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation29e">{29e}</SPAN> The text is here hopelessly illegible,
and only the general drift of the meaning can be rescued. For one thing,
we have the old myth of a dragon who guards hidden treasure. But with this
runs the story of some noble, last of his race, who hides all his wealth
within this barrow and there chants his farewell to life’s glories.
After his death the dragon takes possession of the hoard and watches over
it. A condemned or banished man, desperate, hides in the barrow, discovers
the treasure, and while the dragon sleeps, makes off with a golden beaker
or the like, and carries it for propitiation to his master. The dragon
discovers the loss and exacts fearful penalty from the people round about.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote31a" id="linkfootnote31a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation31a">{31a}</SPAN> Literally “loan-days,” days
loaned to man.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote31b" id="linkfootnote31b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation31b">{31b}</SPAN> Chattuarii, a tribe that dwelt along the
Rhine, and took part in repelling the raid of (Hygelac) Chocilaicus.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote31c" id="linkfootnote31c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation31c">{31c}</SPAN> Onla, son of Ongentheow, who pursues his
two nephews Eanmund and Eadgils to Heardred’s court, where they have
taken refuge after their unsuccessful rebellion. In the fighting Heardred
is killed.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote32a" id="linkfootnote32a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation32a">{32a}</SPAN> That is, Beowulf supports Eadgils
against Onela, who is slain by Eadgils in revenge for the “care-paths”
of exile into which Onela forced him.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote32b" id="linkfootnote32b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation32b">{32b}</SPAN> That is, the king could claim no
wergild, or man-price, from one son for the killing of the other.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote32c" id="linkfootnote32c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation32c">{32c}</SPAN> Usual euphemism for death.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote32d" id="linkfootnote32d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation32d">{32d}</SPAN> Sc. in the grave.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote33a" id="linkfootnote33a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation33a">{33a}</SPAN> Eofor for Wulf. -- The immediate
provocation for Eofor in killing “the hoary Scylfing,”
Ongentheow, is that the latter has just struck Wulf down; but the king,
Haethcyn, is also avenged by the blow. See the detailed description below.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote33b" id="linkfootnote33b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation33b">{33b}</SPAN> Hygelac.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote33c" id="linkfootnote33c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation33c">{33c}</SPAN> Shield.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote33d" id="linkfootnote33d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation33d">{33d}</SPAN> The hollow passage.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote34a" id="linkfootnote34a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation34a">{34a}</SPAN> That is, although Eanmund was brother’s
son to Onela, the slaying of the former by Weohstan is not felt as cause
of feud, and is rewarded by gift of the slain man’s weapons.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote34b" id="linkfootnote34b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation34b">{34b}</SPAN> Both Wiglaf and the sword did their
duty. -- The following is one of the classic passages for illustrating the
comitatus as the most conspicuous Germanic institution, and its underlying
sense of duty, based partly on the idea of loyalty and partly on the
practical basis of benefits received and repaid.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote34c" id="linkfootnote34c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation34c">{34c}</SPAN> Sc. “than to bide safely here,”
-- a common figure of incomplete comparison.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote34d" id="linkfootnote34d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation34d">{34d}</SPAN> Wiglaf’s wooden shield.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote34e" id="linkfootnote34e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation34e">{34e}</SPAN> Gering would translate “kinsman of
the nail,” as both are made of iron.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote35a" id="linkfootnote35a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation35a">{35a}</SPAN> That is, swords.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote36a" id="linkfootnote36a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation36a">{36a}</SPAN> Where Beowulf lay.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote37a" id="linkfootnote37a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation37a">{37a}</SPAN> What had been left or made by the
hammer; well-forged.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote37b" id="linkfootnote37b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation37b">{37b}</SPAN> Trying to revive him.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote38a" id="linkfootnote38a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation38a">{38a}</SPAN> Nothing.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote38b" id="linkfootnote38b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation38b">{38b}</SPAN> Dead.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote38c" id="linkfootnote38c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation38c">{38c}</SPAN> Death-watch, guard of honor, “lyke-wake.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote38d" id="linkfootnote38d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation38d">{38d}</SPAN> A name for the Franks.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote38e" id="linkfootnote38e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation38e">{38e}</SPAN> Ongentheow.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote38f" id="linkfootnote38f"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation38f">{38f}</SPAN> Haethcyn.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote39a" id="linkfootnote39a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation39a">{39a}</SPAN> The line may mean: till Hrethelings
stormed on the hedged shields, -- i.e. the shield-wall or hedge of
defensive war -- Hrethelings, of course, are Geats.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote39b" id="linkfootnote39b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation39b">{39b}</SPAN> Eofor, brother to Wulf Wonreding.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote39c" id="linkfootnote39c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation39c">{39c}</SPAN> Sc. “value in” hides and the
weight of the gold.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote39d" id="linkfootnote39d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation39d">{39d}</SPAN> Not at all.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote39e" id="linkfootnote39e"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation39e">{39e}</SPAN> Laid on it when it was put in the
barrow. This spell, or in our days the “curse,” either
prevented discovery or brought dire ills on the finder and taker.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote40a" id="linkfootnote40a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation40a">{40a}</SPAN> Probably the fugitive is meant who
discovered the hoard. Ten Brink and Gering assume that the dragon is
meant. “Hid” may well mean here “took while in hiding.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote40b" id="linkfootnote40b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation40b">{40b}</SPAN> That is “one and a few others.”
But Beowulf seems to be indicated.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote40c" id="linkfootnote40c"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation40c">{40c}</SPAN> Ten Brink points out the strongly
heathen character of this part of the epic. Beowulf’s end came, so
the old tradition ran, from his unwitting interference with spell-bound
treasure.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote40d" id="linkfootnote40d"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation40d">{40d}</SPAN> A hard saying, variously interpreted. In
any case, it is the somewhat clumsy effort of the Christian poet to tone
down the heathenism of his material by an edifying observation.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linkfootnote41a" id="linkfootnote41a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#linkcitation41a">{41a}</SPAN> Nothing is said of Beowulf’s wife
in the poem, but Bugge surmises that Beowulf finally accepted Hygd’s
offer of kingdom and hoard, and, as was usual, took her into the bargain.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />