William Morris

The House of the Wolfings


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damsel, long would I hearken to thy voice this summer day.

      But how didst thou leave the wild-wood, what people brought thee away?”

      Then said the Hall-Sun:

      “I awoke on a time in the even, and voices I heard as I woke;

      And there was I in the wild-wood by the bole of the ancient oak,

      And a ring of men was around me, and glad was I indeed

      As I looked upon their faces and the fashion of their weed.

      For I gazed on the red and the scarlet and the beaten silver and gold,

      And blithe were their noble faces and kindly to behold,

      And nought had I seen of such-like since that hour of the other day

      When that warrior came to the oak glade with the little child to play.

      And forth now he came, with the face that my hands had fondled before,

      And a battle shield wrought fairly upon his arm he bore,

      And thereon the wood-wolf’s image in ruddy gold was done.

      Then I stretched out my little arms towards the glorious shining one

      And he took me up and set me on his shoulder for a while

      And turned about to his fellows with a blithe and joyous smile;

      And they shouted aloud about me and drew forth gleaming swords

      And clashed them on their bucklers; but nought I knew of the words

      Of their shouting and rejoicing. So thereafter was I laid

      And borne forth on the warrior’s warshield, and our way through the wood we made

      ’Midst the mirth and great contentment of those fair-clad shielded men.

      “But no tale of the wolf and the wild-wood abides with me since then,

      And the next thing I remember is a huge and dusky hall,

      A world for my little body from ancient wall to wall;

      A world of many doings, and nought for me to do,

      A world of many noises, and known to me were few.

      “Time wore, and I spoke with the Wolfings and knew the speech of the kin,

      And was strange ’neath the roof no longer, as a lonely waif therein;

      And I wrought as a child with my playmates and every hour looked on

      Unto the next hour’s joyance till the happy day was done.

      And going and coming amidst us was a woman tall and thin

      With hair like the hoary barley and silver streaks therein.

      And kind and sad of visage, as now I remember me,

      And she sat and told us stories when we were aweary with glee,

      And many of us she fondled, but me the most of all.

      And once from my sleep she waked me and bore me down the hall,

      In the hush of the very midnight, and I was feared thereat.

      But she brought me unto the dais, and there the warrior sat,

      Who took me up and kissed me, as erst within the wood;

      And meseems in his arms I slumbered: but I wakened again and stood

      Alone with the kindly woman, and gone was the goodly man,

      And athwart the hush of the Folk-hall the moon shone bright and wan,

      And the woman dealt with a lamp hung up by a chain aloft,

      And she trimmed it and fed it with oil, while she chanted sweet and soft

      A song whose words I knew not: then she ran it up again,

      And up in the darkness above us died the length of its wavering chain.”

      “Yea,” said the carline, “this woman will have been the Hall-Sun that came before thee. What next dost thou remember?”

      Said the maiden:

      “Next I mind me of the hazels behind the People’s Roof,

      And the children running thither and the magpie flitting aloof,

      And my hand in the hand of the Hall-Sun, as after the others we went,

      And she soberly hearkening my prattle and the words of my intent.

      And now would I call her ‘Mother,’ and indeed I loved her well.

      “So I waxed; and now of my memories the tale were long to tell;

      But as the days passed over, and I fared to field and wood,

      Alone or with my playmates, still the days were fair and good.

      But the sad and kindly Hall-Sun for my fosterer now I knew,

      And the great and glorious warrior that my heart clung sorely to

      Was but my foster-father; and I knew that I had no kin

      In the ancient House of the Wolfings, though love was warm therein.”

      Then smiled the carline and said: “Yea, he is thy foster-father, and yet a fond one.”

      “Sooth is that,” said the Hall-Sun. “But wise art thou by seeming. Hast thou come to tell me of what kindred I am, and who is my father and who is my mother?”

      Said the carline: “Art thou not also wise? Is it not so that the Hall-Sun of the Wolfings seeth things that are to come?”

      “Yea,” she said, “yet have I seen waking or sleeping no other father save my foster-father; yet my very mother I have seen, as one who should meet her in the flesh one day.”

      “And good is that,” said the carline; and as she spoke her face waxed kinder, and she said:

      “Tell us more of thy days in the House of the Wolfings and how thou faredst there.”

      Said the Hall-Sun:

      “I waxed ’neath the Roof of the Wolfings, till now to look upon

      I was of sixteen winters, and the love of the Folk I won,

      And in lovely weed they clad me like the image of a God:

      And lonely now full often the wild-wood ways I trod,

      And I feared no wild-wood creature, and my presence scared them nought;

      And I fell to know of wisdom, and within me stirred my thought,

      So that oft anights would I wander through the mead and far away,

      And swim the Mirkwood-water, and amidst his eddies play

      When earth was dark in the dawn-tide; and over all the folk

      I knew of the beasts’ desires, as though in words they spoke.

      “So I saw of things that should be, were they mighty things or small,

      And upon a day as it happened came the war-word to the hall,

      And the House must wend to the warfield, and as they sang, and played

      With the strings of the harp that even, and the mirth of the war-eve made,

      Came the sight of the field to my eyes, and the words waxed hot in me,

      And I needs must show the picture of the end of the fight to be.

      Then I showed them the Red Wolf bristling o’er the broken fleeing foe;

      And the war-gear of the fleers, and their banner did I show,

      To wit the Ling-worm’s image with the maiden in his mouth;

      There I saw my foster-father ’mid the pale blades of the South,

      Till aloof swept all the handplay and the hurry of the chase,

      And he lay along by an ash-tree, no helm about