Nibelungenlied
ADVENTURE XXXVI:
How The Queen Gave Orders To Burn the Hall.
"Now unbind your helmets," spake the good Knight Hagen. "I and
my comrade will guard you well, and should Etzel's men be minded
to try again, I'll warn my lords as soon as I ever can."
Then many a good knight bared his head. They sate them down upon
the wounded, who had fallen in the blood, done to death at their
hands. Evil looks were cast upon the noble strangers. Before
the eventide the king and the queen brought it to pass that the
Hunnish champions tried again. Men saw full twenty thousand
warriors stand before them, who must perforce march to the fray.
Straightway there rose a mighty storming towards the strangers.
Dankwart, Hagen's brother, the doughty knight, sprang from his
lordings' side to meet the foes without the door. All weened
that he were dead, yet forth he stood again unscathed. The
furious strife did last till nightfall brought it to a close. As
befitted good knights, the strangers warded off King Etzel's
liegemen the livelong summer day. Ho, how many a bold knight
fell doomed before them! This great slaughter happed upon
midsummer's day, when Lady Kriemhild avenged her sorrow of heart
upon her nearest kin and upon many another man, so that King
Etzel never again gained joy.
The day had passed away, but still they had good cause for fear.
They thought, a short and speedy death were better for them, than
to be longer racked with monstrous pain. A truce these proud and
lusty knights now craved; they begged that men would bring the
king to see them. Forth from the hall stepped the heroes, bloody
of hue, and the three noble kings, stained from their armor.
They wist not to whom they should make plaint of their mighty
wounds. Thither both Etzel and Kriemhild went; the land was
theirs and so their band waxed large. He spake to the strangers:
"Pray tell me, what ye will of me? Ye ween to gain here peace,
but that may hardly be. For damage as great as ye have done me,
in my son and in my many kinsmen, whom ye have slain, peace and
pardon shall be denied you quite; it shall not boot you aught,
an' I remain alive."
To this King Gunther answered: "Dire need constrained us; all my
men-at-arms lay dead before thy heroes in the hostel. How did I
deserve such pay? I came to thee in trust, I weened thou wast my
friend."
Young Giselher of Burgundy likewise spake: "Ye men of Etzel, who
still do live, what do ye blame me with? What have I done to
you, for I rode in friendly wise into this land of yours."
Quoth they: "From thy friendliness this castle is filled with
grief and the land as well. We should not have taken it ill, in
sooth, if thou hadst never come from Worms beyond the Rhine.
Thou and thy brothers have filled this land with orphans."
Then spake Knight Giselher in angry mood: "And ye will lay aside
this bitter hate and make your peace with us stranger knights,
'twere best for either side. We have not merited at all what
Etzel here doth do us."
Then spake the host to his guests: "Unlike are my wrongs and
yours. The mickle grievance from the loss and then the shame,
which I have taken here, are such that none of you shall e'er go
hence alive."
At this mighty Gernot spake to the king: "May God then bid you
act in merciful wise. Slay, if ye will, us homeless knights, but
let us first descend to you into the open court. That will make
to you for honor. Let be done quickly whatever shall hap to us.
Ye have still many men unscathed, who dare well encounter us and
bereave us storm-weary men of life. How long must we warriors
undergo these toils?"
King Etzel's champions had nigh granted this boon and let them
leave the hall, but Kriemhild heard it and sorely it misliked
her. Therefore the wanderers were speedily denied the truce.
"Not so, ye Hunnish men. I counsel you in true fealty, that ye
do not what ye have in mind, and let these murderers leave the
hall, else must your kinsmen suffer a deadly fall. Did none of
them still live, save Uta's sons, my noble brothers, and they
came forth into the breeze and cooled their armor rings, ye would
all be lost. Bolder heroes were never born into the world."
Then spake young Giselher: "Fair sister mine, full evil was my
trust, when thou didst invite me from across the Rhine hither to
this land, to this dire need. How have I merited death here from
the Huns? I was aye true to thee; never did I do thee wrong, and
in the hope that thou wast still my friend, dear sister mine,
rode I hither to thy court. It cannot be but that thou grant us
mercy."
"I will not grant you mercy, merciless is my mood. Hagen of
Troneg hath done me such great wrongs that it may never be
amended, the while I live. Ye must all suffer for this deed,"
so spake King Etzel's wife. "And ye will give me Hagen alone as
hostage, I will not deny that I will let you live, for ye be my
brothers and children of one mother, and will counsel peace with
these heroes that be here."
"Now God in heaven forbid," spake Gernot; "were there here a
thousand of us, the clansmen of thy kin, we'd rather all lie
dead, than give thee a single man as hostage. Never shall this
be done."
"We all must die," spake then Giselher, "but none shall hinder
that we guard us in knightly wise. We be still here, if any list
to fight us; for never have I failed a friend in fealty."
Then spake bold Dankwart (it had not beseemed him to have held
his peace): "Forsooth my brother Hagen standeth not alone. It
may yet rue those who here refuse the truce. I'll tell you of a
truth, we'll make you ware of this."
Then spake the queen: "Ye full lusty heroes, now go nigher to the
stairs and avenge my wrongs. For this I will ever serve you, as
I should by right. I'll pay Hagen well for his overweening
pride. Let none at all escape from the house, and I will bid the
hall be set on fire at all four ends. Thus all my wrongs shall
be well avenged."
Soon were King Etzel's champions ready still stood without into
the hall with blows and shots. Mickle waxed the din, yet the
lordings and their liegemen would not part. For very fealty they
could not leave each other. Etzel's queen then bade the hall be
set on fire, and thus they racked the bodies of the knights with
fire and flame. Fanned by the breeze, the whole house burst into
flames full soon. I ween, no folk did ever gain such great
distress. Enow within cried out: "Alack this plight! We would
much rather die in stress of battle. It might move God to pity,
how we all are lost! The queen now wreaketh monstrously on us
her wrath."
Quoth one of them within: "We must all lie dead. What avail us
now the greetings which the king did send us? Thirst from this
great heat giveth me such dole, that soon, I ween, my life must
ebb away in anguish."
Then spake Hagen of Troneg: "Ye noble knights and good, let him
whom pangs of thirst constrain, drink here this blood. In such
great heat, 'tis better still than wine. We can purvey us at
this time none better."
One of the warriors hied him then to where he found a corpse, and
knelt him down beside the wound; then he unbound his helmet and
began to drink the flowing blood. However little wont to such a
drink, him thought it passing good: "Sir Hagen, now God requite
you," spake the weary man, "that I have drunk so well at your
advice; seldom hath better wine been proffered me. And I live
yet a while, I shall ever be your friend."
When now the others heard this, it thought them good, and soon
there were many more that drank the blood. From this the body of
each gained much of strength; but many a stately dame paid dear
for this through the loss of loving kin. Into the hall the fire
fell thick and fast upon them, but with their shields they turned
it from them to the ground. Both the heat and the smoke did hurt
them sore; in sooth, I ween, that nevermore will such anguish hap
to heroes.
Again Hagen of Troneg spake: "Stand by the sides of the hall.
Let not the firebrands fall upon your helmet bands, but stamp
them with your feet down deeper in the blood. Forsooth it is an
evil feast which the queen doth give us here."
In such dire woes the night did wear away at last, and still the
brave minstrel and his comrade Hagen stood before the hall,
a-leaning on their shields. More scathe they awaited from those
of Etzel's band. Then spake the fiddler: "Now go we into the
hall. Then the Huns will ween, that we all be dead from the
torture that hath been done us here. They'll yet see us go to
meet them in the strife."
Now spake Giselher of Burgundy, the youth: "I trow the day
dawneth, a cooling wind doth blow. May God in heaven let us live
to see a liefer time, for my sister Kriemhild hath given us here
an evil feast."
Again one spake: "I see the day . Sith we cannot hope for better
things, so arm you, heroes, think on your life. Certes, King
Etzel's wife will come to meet us soon again."
The host weened well, that his guests were dead from their toil
and the pangs of fire; but yet within the hall six hundred brave
men, as good as any knight that king ever gained, were still
alive. Those set to guard the strangers had well seen that the
guests still lived, despite the damage and the dole that had been
done both to the lordings and their men. In the hall one saw
them stand full safe and sound. They then told Kriemhild that
many were still alive, but the queen replied: "It could never be,
that any should have lived through such stress of fire. Rather
will I believe that all lie dead."
The lordings and their men would still fain have lived, had any
listed to do them mercy, but they could find none among those of
the Hunnish land. So with full willing hand they avenged their
dying. On this same day, towards morning, men proffered them a
fierce attack as greeting, which brought the champions in stress
again. Many a stout spear was hurled upon them, but the bold and
lordly warriors warded them in knightly wise. High rose the mood
of Etzel's men at the thought that they should earn Queen
Kriemhild's gold. Thereto they were minded to perform whatso the
King did bid them. Many of them because of this must soon needs
gaze on death. Of pledges and of gifts one might tell wonders.
She bade the ruddy gold be carried forth on shields and gave it
to whomsoever craved it and would take it. Certes, greater wage
was nevermore given against foes. To the hall a mickle force of
well-armed warriors marched.
Then cried bold Folker: "We're here again, ye see. Never saw I
heroes more gladly come to fight than these that have taken the
king's gold to do us scathe."
Then enow did call: "Nearer, heroes, nearer, that we may do
betimes what we must bring to an end. Here dieth none that is
not doomed to die."
Soon their shields were seen sticking full of darts that had been
thrown. What more can I say? Full twelve hundred men tried hard
to match them, surging back and forth. The strangers cooled well
their mood with wounds. None might part the strife, and so blood
was seen to flow from mortal wounds, many of which were dealt.
Each one was heard to wail for friends. All the great king's
doughty warriors died, and loving kinsmen mourned them passing
sore.
ADVENTURE XXXVII:
How Margrave Rudeger Was Slain.
The strangers had done full well at dawn. Meanwhile Gotelind's
husband came to court. Bitterly faithful Rudeger wept when he
saw the grievous wounds on either side. "Woe is me," quoth the
champion, "that I was ever born, sith none may stay this mickle
grief! However fain I would make for peace, the king will not
consent, for he seeth ever more and more the sufferings of his
men."
Then the good Knight Rudeger sent to Dietrich, if perchance they
might turn the fate of the high-born kings. The king of Berne
sent answer: "Who might now forfend? King Etzel will let none
part the strife."
Then a Hunnish warrior, that saw Rudeger stand with weeping eyes,
and many tears had he shed, spake to the queen: "Now behold how
he doth stand, that hath the greatest power at Etzel's court and
whom both lands and people serve. Why have so many castles been
given to Rudeger, of which he doth hold such store from the king
in fief? Not one sturdy stroke hath he dealt in all this strife.
Methinks, he recketh not how it fare here at court, sith he hath
his will in full. Men say of him, he be bolder than any other
wight. Little hath that been seen in these parlous (1) days."
Sad in heart the faithful vassal gazed at him whom he heard thus
speak. Him-thought: "Thou shalt pay for this. Thou sayest, I be
a craven, and hast told thy tale too loud at court."
His fist he clenched, then ran he at him and smote the Hunnish
man so mightily that he lay dead at his feet full soon. Through
this King Etzel's woe grew greater.
"Away, thou arrant coward," cried Rudeger, "forsooth I have enow
of grief and pain, How dost thou taunt me, that I fight not here?
Certes, I have good cause to hate the strangers, and would have
done all in my power against them, had I not led the warriors
hither. Of a truth I was their safeguard to my master's land.
Therefore the hand of me, wretched man, may not strive against
them."
Then spake Etzel, the noble king, to the margrave: "How have ye
helped us, most noble Rudeger! We have so many fey (2) in the
land, that we have no need of more. Full evil have ye done."
At this the noble knight made answer: "Forsooth he grieved my
mood and twitted me with the honors and the goods, such store of
which I have received from thy hand. This hath cost the liar
dear."
The queen, too, was come and had seen what fortuned to the Huns
through the hero's wrath. Passing sore she bewailed it; her eyes
grew moist as she spake to Rudeger: "How have we deserved that ye
should increase the sorrows of the king and me? Hitherto ye have
told us, that for our sake ye would risk both life and honor. I
heard full many warriors accord to you the palm. Let me mind you
of your fealty and that ye swore, when that ye counseled me to
Etzel, good knight and true, that ye would serve me till one of
us should die. Never have I, poor woman, had such great need of
this."
"There's no denying that I swore to you, my lady, for your sake
I'd risk both life and honor, but I did not swear that I would
lose my soul. 'Twas I that bade the high-born lordings to this
feast."
Quoth she: "Bethink thee, Rudeger, of thy great fealty, of thy
constancy, and of thine oaths, that thou wouldst ever avenge mine
injuries and all my woes."
Said the margrave: "Seldom have I denied you aught."
Mighty Etzel, too, began implore; upon their knees they sank
before the knight. Men saw the noble margrave stand full sad.
Pitifully the faithful warrior spake: "Woe is me, most wretched
man, that I have lived to see this day. I must give over all my
honors, my fealty, and my courtesie, that God did bid me use.
Alas, great God of heaven, that death will not turn this from me!
I shall act basely and full evil, whatever I do or leave undone.
But if I give over both, then will all people blame me. Now may
he advise me, who hath given me life."
Still the king and the queen, too, begged unceasingly. Through
this warriors must needs thereafter lose their lives at Rudeger's
hands, when the hero also died. Ye may well hear it now, that he
deported him full pitifully. He wist that it would bring him
scathe and monstrous woe. Gladly would he have refused the king
and queen. He feared full sore that if he slew but one of the
strangers, the world would bear him hate.
Then the brave man addressed him to the king: "Sir King, take
back again all that I have from you, my land with its castles,
let not a whit remain to me. On foot will I wander into other
lands."
At this King Etzel spake: "Who else should help me then? I'll
give thee the land and all its castles, as thine own, that thou
mayst avenge me on my foes. Thou shalt be a mighty king at
Etzel's side."
Then answered Rudeger: "How shall I do this deed? I bade them to
my house and home; in friendly wise I offered them both food and
drink and gave them gifts. How may I counsel their death?
People will lightly ween, that I be craven. No service of mine
have I refused these noble lordings and their men. Now I rue the
kinship I have gained with them. I gave my daughter to Giselher,
the knight; to none in all the world could she have been better
given, for courtesie and honor, for fealty and wealth. Never
have I seen so young a prince of such right courteous mind."
Then Kriemhild spake again: "Most noble Rudeger, take pity on our
griefs, on mine and on the king's. Bethink thee well, that king
did never gain such baneful guests."
To the noble dame the margrave spake: "Rudeger's life must pay
to-day for whatsoever favors ye and my lord have shown me.
Therefore must I die; no longer may it be deferred. I know full
well, that my castles and my lands will be voided for you to-day
through the hand of one of these men. To your mercy I commend my
wife and children and the strangers (3) who be at Bechelaren."
"Now God requite thee, Rudeger," spake the king, and both he and
the queen grew glad. "Thy people shall be well commended to our
care. For mine own weal I trust thou too shalt go unscathed."
Etzel's bride began to weep. Then body and soul he staked upon
the venture. He spake: "I must perform what I have vowed. Alas
for my friends, whom I am loth to fight."
Men saw him go sadly from the presence of the king. Close at
hand he found his warriors standing. He spake: "Ye must arm you
all, my men, for, alas, I must needs encounter the bold
Burgundians."
They bade the squires run nimbly to where lay their arms.
Whether it were helm or buckler, 'twas all brought forth to them
by their meiny. Later the proud strangers heard told baleful
tales. Rudeger was now armed, and with him five hundred men;
thereto he gained twelve champions, who would fain win renown in
the stress of battle. They wist not that death drew nigh them.
Then Rudeger was seen to march with helmet donned. The
margrave's men bare keen-edged swords, and their bright shields
and broad upon their arms. This the fiddler saw; greatly he rued
the sight. When young Giselher beheld his lady's father walk
with his helm upon his head, how might he know what he meant
thereby, save that it portended good? Therefore the noble prince
waxed passing merry of mood.
"Now well is me of such kinsmen," spake Knight Giselher, "whom we
have won upon this journey; from my wife we shall reap much
profit here. Lief it is to me, that this betrothal hath taken
place."
"I know not whence ye take your comfort," spake then the
minstrel; "when have ye seen so many heroes walk with helmets
donned and swords in hand, for the sake of peace? Rudeger doth
think to win his castles and his lands in fight with us."
Or ever the fiddler had ended his speech, men saw the noble
Rudeger before the house. At his feet he placed his trusty
shield, and now both service and greeting he must needs refuse
his friends. Into the hall the noble margrave called: "Ye
doughty Nibelungs, now guard you well on every side. Ye were to
profit by me, now I shall bring you scathe. Aforetime we were
friends, but of this troth I now would fain be rid."
The hard-pressed men were startled at this tale, for none gained
aught of joy, that he whom they did love would now fain fight
them. From their foes they had already suffered mickle stress of
war. "Now God of heaven forbid," spake Gunther, the knight,
"that ye should give over your love of us and your great fealty,
on which we counted of a truth. Better things I trow of you,
than that ye should ever do this deed."
"Alas, I cannot give it over, but must fight you, for I have
vowed it. Now ward you, brave heroes, and ye love your life.
King Etzel's wife would not release me from mine oath."
"Ye declare this feud too late," spake the highborn king. "Now
may God requite you, most noble Rudeger, for all the love and
fealty that ye have shown us, if ye would only act more kindly at
the end. I and my kinsmen, we ought ever to serve you for the
noble gifts ye gave us, when ye brought us hither faithfully to
Etzel's land. Now, noble Rudeger, think on this."
"How gladly would I grant you," spake Knight Rudeger, "that I
might weigh out my gifts for you with full measure, as willingly
as I had hoped, if I never should be blamed on that account."
"Turn back, noble Rudeger," spake then Gernot, "for host did
never give his guests such loving cheer as ye did us. This shall
profit you well, and we remain alive."
"Would to God," spake Rudeger, "most noble Gernot, that ye were
on the Rhine and I were dead with passing honor, sith I must now
encounter you! Never did friends act worse to heroes."
"Now God requite you, Sir Rudeger," answered Gernot, "for your
passing rich gifts. Your death doth rue me, if such knightly
virtues shall be lost with you. Here I bear your sword that ye
gave me, good knight and true. It hath never failed me in all
this need. Many a knight fell dead beneath its edges. It is
bright and steady, glorious and good; nevermore, I ween, will
warrior give so rich a gift. And will ye not turn back, but come
to meet us, and slay aught of the friends I still have here, with
your own sword will I take your life. Then will ye rue me,
Rudeger, ye and your high-born wife."
"Would to God, Sir Gernot, that this might come to pass, that all
your will might here be done, and that your kinsmen escaped
unscathed! Then both my daughter and my wife may trust you well,
forsooth."
Then of the Burgundians there spake fair Uta's son: "Why do ye
so, Sir Rudeger? Those that be come with us, do all like you
well. Ye encounter us in evil wise; ye wish to make your fair
daughter a widow far too soon. If ye and your warriors match me
now with strife, how right unkindly do ye let it appear, that I
trust you well above all other men and therefore won me your
daughter to wife."
"Think on your fealty, most noble and high-born king. And God
let you escape," so spake Rudeger, "let the maiden suffer not for
me. For your own virtue's sake, vouchsafe her mercy."
"That I should do by right," spake the youthful Giselher, "but if
my noble kinsmen here within must die through you, then my
steadfast friendship for you and for your daughter must be
parted."
"Now may God have mercy on us," answered the valiant man. Then
they raised their shields, as though they would hence to fight
the guests in Kriemhild's hall, but Hagen cried full loud adown
the steps. "Pray tarry awhile, most noble Rudeger," so spake
Hagen; "I and my lords would fain have further parley, as doth
befit our need. What can the death of us wanderers avail King
Etzel? I stand here in a fearful plight; the shield that Lady
Gotelind gave me to bear hath been cut to pieces by the Huns. I
brought it with friendly purpose into Etzel's land. O that God
in heaven would grant, that I might bear so good a shield as that
thou hast in thy hand, most noble Rudeger! Then I should no
longer need a hauberk in the fray."
"Gladly would I serve thee with my shield, durst I offer it
before Kriemhild. Yet take it, Hagen, and bear it on thine arm.
Ho, if thou couldst only wield it in the Burgundian land!"
When he so willingly offered to give the shield, enow of eyes
grew red with scalding tears. 'T was the last gift that ever
Rudeger of Bechelaren gave to any knight. However fierce Hagen,
and however stern of mood, the gift did touch him, which the good
hero, so near to death, had given. Many a noble knight gan mourn
with him.
"Now God in heaven requite you, most noble Rudeger. Your like
will nevermore be found, who giveth homeless warriors such lordly
gifts. God grant that your courtesie may ever live." Again
Hagen spake: "Woe is me of these tales, we had so many other
griefs to bear. Let complaint be made to heaven, if we must
fight with friends."
Quoth the margrave: "Inly doth this grieve me."
"Now God requite you, for the gift, most noble Rudeger. Howso
these high-born warriors deport them toward you, my hand shall
never touch you in the fight, and ye slew them all from the
Burgundian land."
Courteously the good Sir Rudeger bowed him low. On every side
they wept, that none might soothe this pain of heart. That was a
mighty grief. In Rudeger would die the father of all knightly
virtues.
Then Folker, the minstrel, spake from out the hall: "Sith my
comrade Hagen hath made his peace with you, ye shall have it just
as steadfastly from my hand, for well ye earned it, when we came
into this land. Most noble margrave, ye shall be mine envoy,
too. The margravine gave me these ruddy arm rings, that I should
wear them here at the feasting. These ye may yourself behold,
that ye may later be my witness."
"Now God of heaven grant," spake Rudeger, "that the margravine
may give you more! I'll gladly tell these tales to my dear love,
if I see her in health again. Of this ye shall not doubt."
When he had vowed him this, Rudeger raised high his shield. No
longer he bided, but with raging mood, like a berserker, he
rushed upon the guests. Many a furious blow the noble margrave
struck. The twain, Folker and Hagen, stepped further back, as
they had vowed to him afore. Still he found standing by the
tower such valiant men, that Rudeger began the fight with anxious
doubts. With murderous intent Gunther and Gernot let him in,
good heroes they! Giselher stood further back, which irked him
sore, in truth. He voided Rudeger, for still he had hope of
life. Then the margrave's men rushed at their foes; in knightly
wise one saw them follow their lord. In their hands they bare
their keen-edged swords, the which cleft there many a helm and
lordly shield. The tired warriors dealt the men of Bechelaren
many a mighty blow, that cut smooth and deep through the shining
mail, down to the very quick.
Rudeger's noble fellowship was now come quite within. Into the
fight Folker and Hagen sprang anon. They gave no quarter, save
to one man alone. Through the hands of the twain the blood
streamed down from the helmets. How grimly rang the many swords
within! The shield plates sprang from their fastenings, and the
precious stones, cut from the shields, fell down into the gore.
So grimly they fought, that men will never do the like again.
The lord of Bechelaren raged to and fro, as one who wotteth how
to use great prowess in the fray. Passing like to a worshipful
champion and a bold did Rudeger bear him on that day. Here stood
the warriors, Gunther and Gernot, and smote many a hero dead in
the fray. Giselher and Dankwart, the twain, recked so little,
that they brought full many a knight to his last day of life.
Full well did Rudeger make appear that he was strong enow, brave
and well-armed. Ho, what knights he slew! This a Burgundian
espied; perforce it angered him, and thus Sir Rudeger's death
drew near.
The stalwart Gernot accosted the hero; to the margrave he spake:
"It appeareth, ye will not leave my men alive, most noble
Rudeger. That irketh me beyond all measure, no longer can I bear
the sight. So may your present work you harm, sith ye have taken
from me such store of friends. Pray address you unto me, most
noble man and brave, your gift shall be paid for as best I can."
Or ever the margrave could reach his foe, bright armor rings must
needs grow dull with blood. Then at each other sprang these
honor-seeking men. Either gan guard him against mighty wounds.
So sharp were their swords, that naught might avail against them.
Then Rudeger, the knight, smote Gernot a buffet through his
helmet, the which was as hard as flint, so that the blood gushed
forth. But this the bold knight and good repaid eftsoon. High
in his hand he now poised Rudeger's gift, and though wounded unto
death, he smote him a stroke through his good and trusty shield
down to his helmet band. And so fair Gotelind's husband was done
to death. Certes, so rich a gift was never worse repaid. So
fell alike both Gernot and Rudeger, slain in the fray, through
each other's hand.
Then first waxed Hagen wroth, when he saw the monstrous scathe.
Quoth the hero of Troneg: "Evil hath it fared with us. In these
two men we have taken a loss so great that neither their land nor
people will e'er recover from the blow. Rudeger's champions must
answer to us homeless men."
"Alas for my brother, who hath here been done to death. What
evil tales I hear all time! Noble Rudeger, too, must ever rue
me. The loss and the grievous wounds are felt on either side."
When Lord Giselher saw his betrothed's father dead, those within
the hall were forced to suffer need. Fiercely death sought his
fellowship; not one of those of Bechelaren escaped with life.
Gunther and Giselher and Hagen, too, Dankwart and Folker, the
right good knights, went to where they found the two men lying.
Then by these heroes tears of grief were shed.
"Death doth sorely rob us," spake Giselher, the youth. "Now give
over your weeping and go we bite the breeze, that the mailed
armor of us storm-weary men may cool. Certes, I ween, that God
in heaven vouchsafeth us no more to live."
This champion was seen to sit and that to lean against the wall,
but all again were idle. Rudeger's heroes lay still in death.
The din had died away; the hush endured so long, it vexed King
Etzel.
"Alack for such services," spake the queen. "They be not so
true, that our foes must pay with their life at Rudeger's hands.
I trow, he doth wish to lead them back to the Burgundian land.
What booteth it, King Etzel, that we have given him whatso he
would? The knight hath done amiss, he who should avenge us, doth
make his peace."
To this Folker, the full dapper knight, made answer: "This is not
true, alas, most noble queen. Durst I give the lie to such a
high-born dame, then had ye most foully lied against Rudeger. He
and his champions be cozened in this peace. So eagerly he did
what the king commanded, that he and all his fellowship lie here
in death. Now look around you, Kriemhild, to see whom ye may now
command. The good Knight Rudeger hath served you to his end.
And ye will not believe the tale, we'll let you see."
To their great grief 'twas done; they bare the slain hero to
where the king might see him. Never had there happed to Etzel's
men a grief so great. When they saw the margrave borne forth
dead, no scribe might write or tell the frantic grief of men and
women, which there gan show itself from dole of heart. King
Etzel's sorrow waxed so great that the mighty king did voice his
woe of heart, as with a lion's roar. Likewise did his queen.
Beyond all measure they bewailed the good Knight Rudeger's death.
ENDNOTES:
(1) "Parlous", older English for 'perilous'.
[Back]
(2) "Fey", 'doomed to death', here in the sense of 'already
slain'. See Adventure V, note 2.
[Back]
(3) "Strangers", i.e., those who are sojourning there far from
home. [Back]
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