Völsunga Saga
Page 10
Chapter 15
Of the Welding together
of the Shards of the Sward Gram
So Regin makes a sword, and
gives it into Sigurd's hands. He took the sword, and said --
"Behold thy smithying, Regin!"
and therewith smote it into the anvil, and the sword brake; so he cast
down the brand, and bade him forge a better.
Then Regin forged another
sword, and brought it to Sigurd, who looked thereon.
Then said Regin, "Belike
thou art well content therewith, hard master though thou be in smithying."
So Sigurd proved the sword,
and brake it even as the first; then he said to Regin --
"Ah, art thou, mayhappen,
a traitor and a liar like to those former kin of thine?"
Therewith he went to his
mother, and she welcomed him in seemly wise, and they talked and drank
together.
Then spake Sigurd, "Have
I heard aright, that King Sigmund gave thee the good sword Gram in two
pieces?"
"True enough," she said.
So Sigurd said, "Deliver
them into my hands, for I would have them."
She said he looked like
to win great fame, and gave him the sword. Therewith went Sigurd to Regin,
and bade him make a good sword thereof as he best might; Regin grew wroth
thereat, but went into the smithy with the pieces of the sword, thinking
well meanwhile that Sigurd pushed his head far enow into the matter of
smithying. So he made a sword, and as he bore it forth from the forge,
it seemed to the smiths as though fire burned along the edges thereof.
Now he bade Sigurd take the sword, and said he knew not how to make a
sword if this one failed. Then Sigurd smote it into the anvil, and cleft
it down to the stock thereof, and neither burst the sword nor brake it.
Then he praised the sword much, and thereafter went to the river with
a lock of wool, and threw it up against the stream, and it fell asunder
when it met the sword. Then was Sigurd glad, and went home.
But Regin said, "Now whereas
I have made the sword for thee, belike thou wilt hold to thy troth given,
and wilt go meet Fafnir?"
"Surely will I hold thereto,"
said Sigurd, "yet first must I avenge my father."
Now Sigurd the older he
grew, the more he grew in the love of all men, so that every child loved
him well.
Chapter 16
The prophecy of Grifir
There was
a man hight Grifir,(1) who was Sigurd's mother's
brother, and a little after the forging of the sword Sigurd went to Grifir,
because he was a man who knew things to come, and what was fated to men:
of him Sigurd asked diligently how his life should go; but Grifir was long
or he spake, yet at the last, by reason of Sigurd's exceeding great prayers,
he told him all his life and the fate thereof, even as afterwards came to
pass. So when Grifir had told him all even as he would, he went back home;
and a little after he and Regin met.
Then said Regin, "Go thou
and slay Fafnir, even as thou hast given thy word."
Sigurd said, "That work
shall be wrought; but another is first to be done, the avenging of Sigmund
the king and the other of my kinsmen who fell in that their last fight."
Chapter 17
Of Sigurd's Avenging of
Sigmund his Father
Now Sigurd went to the kings,
and spake thus --
"Here have I abode a space
with you, and I owe you thanks and reward, for great love and many gifts
and all due honour; but now will I away from the land and go meet the
sons of Hunding, and do them to wit that the Volsungs are not all dead;
and your might would I have to strengthen me therein."
So the kings said that they
would give him all things soever that he desired, and therewith was a
great army got ready, and all things wrought in the most heedful wise,
ships and all war-gear, so that his journey might be of the stateliest:
but Sigurd himself steered the dragon-keel which was the greatest and
noblest; richly wrought were their sails, and glorious to look on.
So they sail and have wind
at will; but when a few days were overpast, there arose a great storm
on the sea, and the waves were to behold even as the foam of men's blood;
but Sigurd bade take in no sail, howsoever they might be riven, but rather
to lay on higher than heretofore. But as they sailed past the rocks of
a ness, a certain man hailed the ships, and asked who was captain over
that navy; then was it told him that the chief and lord was Sigurd, the
son of Sigmund, the most famed of all the young men who now are.
Then said the man, "Naught
but one thing, certes do all say of him, that none among the sons of kings
may be likened unto him; now fain were I that ye would shorten sail on
some of the ships, and take me aboard."
Then they asked him of his
name, and he sang --
"Hnikar I hight,
When I gladdened Huginn,
And went to battle,
Bright son of Volsung;
Now may ye call
The carl on the cliff top,
Feng or Fjolnir:
Fain would I with you."
They made for land therewith,
and took that man aboard.
Then
quoth Sigurd,(2) as the song says --
"Tell me this, O Hnikar,
Since full well thou knowest
Fate of Gods, good and ill of mankind,
What best our hap foresheweth,
When amid the battle
About us sweeps the sword edge."
Quoth Hnikar --
"Good are many tokens
If thereof men wotted
When the swords are sweeping:
Fair fellow deem I
The dark-winged raven,
In war, to weapon-wielder.
"The second good thing:
When abroad thou goest
For the long road well arrayed,
Good if thou seest
Two men standing,
Fain of fame within the forecourt.
"A third thing:
Good hearing,
The wolf a howling
Abroad under ash boughs;
Good hap shalt thou have
Dealing with helm-staves,
If thou seest these fare before thee.
"No man in fight
His face shall turn
Against the moon's sister
Low, late-shining,
For he winneth battle
Who best beholdeth
Through the midmost sword-play,
And the sloping ranks best shapeth.
"Great is the trouble
Of foot ill-tripping,
When arrayed for fight thou farest,
For on both sides about
Are the Disir (3) by thee,
Guileful, wishful of thy wounding.
"Fair-combed, well washen
Let each warrior be,
Nor lack meat in the morning,
For who can rule
The eve's returning,
And base to fall before fate grovelling."
Then the storm abated, and
on they fared till they came aland in the realm of Hunding's sons, and then
Fjolnir vanished away.
Then they let loose fire
and sword, and slew men and burnt their abodes, and did waste all before
them: a great company of folk fled before the face of them to Lyngi the
King, and tell him that men of war are in the land, and are faring with
such rage and fury that the like has never been heard of; and that the
sons of King Hunding had no great forecast in that they said they would
never fear the Volsungs more, for here was come Sigurd, the son of Sigmund,
as captain over this army.
So King Lyngi let send the
war-message all throughout his realm, and has no will to flee, but summons
to him all such as would give him aid. So he came against Sigurd with
a great army, he and his brothers with him, and an exceeding fierce fight
befell; many a spear and many an arrow might men see there raised aloft,
axes hard driven, shields cleft and byrnies torn, helmets were shivered,
skulls split atwain, and many a man felled to the cold earth.
And now when the fight has
long dured in such wise, Sigurd goes forth before the banners, and has
the good sword Gram in his hand, and smites down both men and horses,
and goes through the thickest of the throng with both arms red with blood
to the shoulder; and folk shrank aback before him wheresoever he went,
nor would either helm or byrny hold before him, and no man deemed he had
ever seen his like. So a long while the battle lasted, and many a man
was slain, and furious was the onset; till at last it befell, even as
seldom comes to hand, when a land army falls on, that, do whatso they
might, naught was brought about; but so many men fell of the sons of Hunding
that the tale of them may not be told; and now whenas Sigurd was among
the foremost, came the sons of Hunding against him, and Sigurd smote therewith
at Lyngi the king, and clave him down, both helm and head, and mail- clad
body, and thereafter he smote Hjorward his brother atwain, and then slew
all the other sons of Hunding who were yet alive, and the more part of
their folk withal.
Now home goes Sigurd with
fair victory won, and plenteous wealth and great honour, which he had
gotten to him in this journey, and feasts were made for him against he
came back to the realm.
But when Sigurd had been
at home but a little, came Regin to talk with him, and said --
"Belike thou wilt now have
good will to bow down Fafnir's crest according to thy word plighted, since
thou hast thus revenged thy father and the others of thy kin."
Sigurd answered, "That will
we hold to, even as we have promised, nor did it ever fall from our memory."
ENDNOTES:
(1) Called "Gripir" in the Edda. Back
(2) This and verses following were inserted from the "Reginsmal" by the
translators. Back
(3) "Disir", sing. "Dis". These are the guardian beings who follow a man
from his birth to his death. The word originally means sister, and is used
throughout the Eddaic poems as a dignified synonym for woman, lady. Back
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