Chapter_33

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Asleep still left he lying

all his faithful men.

He and his father Ludwig,

the twain, to go were seen,

And, gazing from the window,

they saw the throngs below them.

Quickly then said Hartmut:

“Too near our castle-walls methinks they show them.

“I ween they are not pilgrims,

in truth, my father dear;

More like it is that Wâ-te

and all his men draw near.

He from Sturmland cometh,

the lord of Ortland bringing;

The men I see are like them,

as I know from the flag that they to the breeze are flinging.

“I see a brown silk pennon,

that comes from Karadé;

Before that flag is lowered,

many will rue the day.

On it a head is blazoned⁠—

as red as gold it glitters:

Guests so bold and warlike

we well can spare; their sight the day embitters.

“The Moorland king is bringing

full twenty thousand men,

Knights as strong and daring

as any I have seen;

To win from us great honor

methinks they now are craving.

There comes another banner,

that o’er yet other knights its folds is waving.

“It is the flag of Horant,

the knight from the Danish land;

I see with him Lord Fru-te,

I know both him and his band.

And hither, too, from Waleis,

many foemen leading,

Morunc now comes riding;

he, for the morning’s fight, o’er the sands is speeding.

“I see another banner,

on it a chevron red,

With sharpened spears within it;

for this shall many bleed.

Ortwin it is who bears it,

from Ortland hither faring:

Erewhile we slew his father;

no kindly thought to us he now is bearing.

“There floats another banner,

whiter than any swan;

Blazons bright and golden

you well may see thereon.

It is our mother Hilda

who sends it o’er the water;

The hatred of the Hegelings

will soon be known by me who stole her daughter.

“There I see uplifted

a flag outspreading wide;

Of sky-blue silk ’tis woven.

The truth I will not hide;

Herwic bears this banner,

he in the Sealands dwelling.

Sea-leaves are shown upon it;

he soon on us his wrath will here be telling.

“There Irold, too, is coming⁠—

this that I say is true⁠—

From Friesland leading many,

as well indeed I know,

With fighting men from Holstein,

warriors brave and daring.

A stormy fight is nearing;

now in our castle all must arms be wearing.”

Then cried Hartmut loudly:

“Up, my faithful men!

If to these guests so warlike,

who ’neath our walls are seen,

It may not now be granted

to ride so boldly near us,

Then, before the gateway,

with sword-blows we must greet them, and bravely bear us.”

Then from their beds upsprang they

all who yet did lie;

At once, to bring their war-gear,

loudly did they cry.

The call to guard their master

gladly they were hearing;

Forty hundred warriors

showed themselves, their shining armor wearing.

Ludwig and Hartmut with him

armed themselves for fight:

To the sad and homeless maidens

this was a sorry sight;

These within the castle

uneasy hearts were keeping;

They said to one another:

“Let him who smiled before this day be weeping!”

Quickly came Queen Gerlind,

old King Ludwig’s wife;

She said: “What will you, Hartmut?

Would you lose your life,

With that of all your kinsmen

who here our lot are sharing?

The foe will surely slay you,

if to leave the castle-walls you now be daring.”

The well-born knight then answered:

“Mother, stay within;

You may not give your teaching

to me or to my men.

Spare your words for women;

they mayhap will listen,

While they sit at sewing,

making their silks with gold and gems to glisten.

“Now, mother, let us see you

send Gudrun to wash,

As you did before, with her maidens,

where the billows dash.

You weened they all were friendless,

and had no kindred living;

You yet may see, ere nightfall,

what thanks to us our guests will yet be giving.”

Then spake his devilish mother:

“I did it for your sake,

Thinking her will to bridle.

My bidding kindly take;

Strongly built is the castle,

let now the gates be fastened;

They then will gain but little

who on their toilsome way have hither hastened.

“Full well you know it, Hartmut,

you bear the maiden’s hate,

For you have slain her kinsmen:

your watch you must not bate.

It is not friends or kinsfolk

who at our gates are knocking;

The proud and warlike Hegelings,

twenty to one of us, come hither flocking.

“Of this bethink you further,

my well-belovèd son:

Bread we have in the castle

and wine for every one;

Food will not be lacking

if here for a year we are staying;

But if on the field you are taken,

our foes will you from bondage ne’er be freeing.”

Then to him spake further

old King Ludwig’s wife:

“Ever guard your honor,

but do not lose your life.

Bid men to shoot with longbows

at the loop-holes standing;

So shall wounds be given,

for which their friends at home will tears be spending.

“Let slings with ropes be fitted;

we then will meet the foe

By hurling rocks upon them:

knights we have enow.

Before with these new-comers

you your swords are crossing,

Stones will I and my maidens

bring in aprons white, on them to be tossing.”

Angrily spake Hartmut:

“Lady, get you gone!

Why do you seek to lead me?

Is not my mind my own?

Before my foes shall find me

within my castle hiding,

Outside I would die far sooner,

in fight with Hilda’s men, against me riding.”

Then to him said, weeping,

old King Ludwig’s wife:

“I gave to you this warning

that you might spare your life,

And guard yourself the better.

Whoe’er is seen this morning

Beneath your banner fighting,

rich gifts from us shall he be fairly earning.

“Now arm ourselves,” cried Gerlind,

“stand by my son in fight;

Strike from your foemen’s helmets

a glowing, fiery light.

Be always near your master,

to help him ever striving;

Fitly these guests to welcome,

deep be the wounds that you to them are giving.”

Then to his men said Hartmut:

“My mother’s words are true;

If you to me are faithful,

and strive your best to do,

And this day, in the struggle,

to give your help are ready,

When fathers shall have fallen,

a friend I’ll be to sons bereft and needy.”

A thousand and a hundred

within King Ludwig’s halls

Now were all well-weaponed.

Before from out the walls

Went any thro’ the gateways,

they left the stronghold guarded;

Still within it posted,

five hundred warriors brave the castle warded.

On four gates of the castle

the bolts were backward thrown:

Ne’er had they been opened

to a single spur alone.

Then with the youthful Hartmut,

outgoing at his bidding,

All with helmets fastened,

went thirty hundred followers boldly riding.

The hour of strife drew nearer.

He of the Sturmisch land,

Wâ-te, his horn was blowing;

and loud across the sand,

For thirty miles or over,

men the blast were hearing;

The fighters of the Hegelings,

to flock to Hilda’s flag, their arms were wearing.

Once again he blew it:

at this should all take heed,

That every knight among them

then should mount his steed,

And each his men should gather

to ride as they were bidden.

A knight so old as Wâ-te,

and yet so brave, to the fight had never ridden.

The third time that he blew it,

he such a blast did make

That all the land was shaken,

and the sea a sound gave back;

Almost from Ludwig’s castle

the corner-stones were falling:

To raise Queen Hilda’s banner

Wâ-te to Horant then was loudly calling.

They feared old Wâ-te sorely,

none dared to speak aloud;

A horse was e’en heard neighing.

Upon the roof now stood

Herwic’s well-belovèd,

and saw the warriors daring,

Onward proudly riding,

to wage the fight with Hartmut, nothing fearing.

Hartmut rode to meet them;

he and all his men,

Bearing well their weapons,

to leave the gates were seen.

Those from the windows gazing

saw the helmets glisten

Of friends as well as foemen.

Hartmut not alone to the fight did hasten.

To all four sides of the castle

the foes their banners bore;

Bright in hue like silver

was the armor that they wore;

The bosses of their bucklers

were seen to glitter brightly.

Much was Wâ-te dreaded;

no lion grim and wild were feared more rightly.

The fighters from the Moorland

were seen apart to ride,

And heavy shafts were hurling;

splinters were scattered wide.

When with the Norman foemen

soon the fight did thicken,

Sharply from their weapons

and from their breastplates fiery sparks were stricken.

The warriors from Denmark

near to the castle rode.

There the mighty Irold

six thousand fighters good

Up to the walls was leading,

an onslaught to be making:

Brave and daring were they;

sore ill from them erelong was Ludwig taking.

Elsewhere, riding boldly,

Ortwin his followers led,

No less than eighty hundred;

sorrow and woe they made

For many of the Normans,

and all the land they harried.

Gerlind and Ortrun weeping,

watching the fight from the roof, together tarried.

Then came Herwic also,

betrothed to fair Gudrun;

Through him full many a woman

must come to sorrow soon,

When, for his heart’s belovèd,

he to the fight was springing.

Beneath the heavy weapons

were heard the clattering helmets loudly ringing.

Now came the aged Wâ-te,

with warriors not a few;

Grim was he and fearless,

as soon they all well knew.

His spear not yet he lowered

as he to the walls came riding:

Sad was the sight to Gerlind,

but other were the thoughts Gudrun was hiding.

Then came the Norman Hartmut,

riding before his men.

E’en had he been Kaiser,

never would he be seen

To bear himself more proudly.

In the sun was seen to glisten

All his shining armor.

His boldness on the field not yet did lessen.

When he was seen by Ortwin,

the lord of Ortland’s throne,

He said: “Will any tell us,

to whom this knight is known,

Who is the daring fighter

now against us turning?

He shows as bold a bearing

as if to win a kingdom he were yearning.”

Then said one among them:

“ ’Tis Hartmut whom you see;

There indeed is a warrior!

a daring knight is he.

The selfsame foeman is he

who erstwhile slew your father.

Where’er the strife is raging,

a bolder man than he there’s not another.”

Angrily spake Ortwin:

“Me for his wrongs he owes,

And must atone full dearly

before from here he goes.

The ills that he has done us

must he be soon undoing;

Gerlind cannot help him

that he from hence may e’er alive be going.”

Down upon young Ortwin

Hartmut riding bore.

Altho’ he did not know him,

deep he plunged his spur;

His horse sprang forward widely,

against brave Ortwin driven.

Both their spears were lowered;

fire on their armor flashed from spear-strokes given.

No thrust against the other

did either leave undone:

The war-horse then of Ortwin

was on his haunches thrown;

Soon, too, the steed did stagger

whereon was Hartmut seated;

They could not bear the onset

of kings who rushed together, to madness heated.

High upreared the horses;

a mighty clang arose

From clash of kingly sword-blades.

Thanks were due to those

Who the fight thus opened,

as knights beseemeth ever.

Brave were both and fearless;

to shrink from one another thought they never.

On both sides came their followers,

lowering their spears,

And bringing death to many;

each his foeman nears,

And in the shock of the onset

heavy wounds was giving.

All of them were faithful,

and well for a worthy name they now were striving.

A thousand ’gainst a thousand,

now the strife began

Of Hartmut’s men with Wâ-te’s,

each man against his man.

Soon by the lord of Sturmland

were they so badly treated

That whoso now came near him

never a second time with him was mated.

Now were thickly mingled

of foes ten thousand men,

Among King Herwic’s warriors;

they came in anger keen.

Their mood it was so stubborn

that rather than be flying

Far from the field of fighting,

they on the ground would first in death be lying.

A knight indeed was Herwic;

what daring deeds he did!

Earnest was he in fighting,

that so the lovely maid

Might be to him the kinder.

But how could he be dreaming

The boon could e’er befall him,

that the eyes of fair Gudrun on him were beaming?

Ludwig, king of the Normans,

and they of the Danish land,

Now had met together.

Ludwig bore in hand

His strong and heavy weapon;

lordly was his bearing,

Yet he with all his followers

to come too far without the walls was daring.

There, with his men from Holstein,

Fru-te, brave and bold,

Slew full many a foeman;

of this could much be told.

Now, too, from the land of Waleis,

Morunc, many slaying,

Before King Ludwig’s castle

made rich the earth with the dead he low was laying.

Irold, the youthful champion,

a knight both true and good,

Slashed thro’ foemen’s armor,

shedding their hot life-blood.

Under Hilda’s banner

was Wâ-te’s kinsman fighting;

Many in death grew paler

as Horant thinned the crowd he fast was smiting.

Now the young King Hartmut

and Ortwin met again.

Thicker then than snowflakes

blown by the wind are seen,

The sword-strokes of the warriors

upon each other lighted:

Thus it was that Hartmut

once more by Ortwin on the field was greeted.

Gudrun’s young brother, Ortwin,

was bold and brave enow,

But Hartmut through his helmet

smote him a heavy blow;

Over his shining breastplate

soon the blood was streaming:

The followers of Ortwin

sadly saw the flow, its brightness dimming.

Great was the crush and uproar;

hand to hand they fought;

Many wounds were gaping

thro’ rings of steel well-wrought;

Many a head had fallen

beneath the sword-strokes given:

Death was like a robber,

that from their kin the dearest friends had riven.

Now saw the Danish Horant

that Ortwin from his foe

A bloody wound had taken;

then Horant bade them show

Who ’twas that thus had wounded

his master loved so dearly.

Hartmut at this was laughing,

for both upon the field had met too nearly.

Ortwin himself then answered:

“ ’Tis Hartmut this has done.”

Then Hilda’s banner was given

by Horant to one of his own;

Thinking thus the foeman

he could harm the better,

And gain himself much honor:

now he sought his foe with boldness greater.

Hartmut heard around him

a loud and stormy din.

On many of his warriors

streams of blood were seen

Fast from wounds out-welling;

down to their feet ’twas flowing.

Then cried Hartmut boldly:

“For this shall you atone, and this be ruing.”

Now he turned him quickly

where Horant met his sight;

Then might one be seeing,

so brave were both in fight,

How from their ringed armor

sparks of fire were flying;

Blunted were the sword-blades

which they on each other’s helmets fast were plying.

Hartmut wounded Horant,

even as he had done

Not long before to Ortwin;

a ruddy stream full soon

Ran from out his armor,

at Hartmut’s hand forth welling.

Strong indeed was his foeman;

who now to win his lands could hope be feeling?

Then in bitter struggle

many, on either side,

Saw their bucklers shattered,

though strong and often tried;

Beaten were they and broken

by sword-strokes quickly given

By each upon the other.

Well to guard himself had Hartmut striven.

Now the friends of Ortwin,

and those of Horant, too,

Away from the field did lead them;

and care did they bestow

To bind their wounds wide-gaping;

no time for this they wasted.

Then again to the war-field

the knights both rode; once more to the strife they hasted.

We now must leave them fighting

as bravely as they will.

Who the day was winning,

or whom his foe did kill,

Before King Ludwig’s castle,

none could yet be saying.

Grimly strove the Normans;

their foes, not less, for fame were strength outlaying.

Of all that there befell them

none may ever tell;

But ’tis not yet forgotten

that many a knight there fell.

On every side were sword-blades

heard together ringing;

Foemen all were mingled,

the slow with those who quick in fight were springing.

Wâ-te stood not idle,

that can I well believe.

He bade farewell to many,

nor longer let them live;

Cut down by him in the struggle,

were they before him lying.

Fain were Hartmut’s kinsmen

to wreak their wrath for friends who there were dying.

Now came Herwic nearer,

so the tale is told,

And led against King Ludwig

many a champion bold.

He saw that aged warrior

his weapons bravely bearing,

Where he with all his liegemen,

a wondrous host of foes beat down, unsparing.

Herwic called out loudly:

“Can any one now tell

Who is that fighting graybeard,

who all his foes doth fell?

Deepest wounds for many

there his hand is hewing,

With bravery so fearless:

women in tears will this erelong be ruing.”

When this was heard by Ludwig,

outspoke that Norman foe:

“Who in the midst of battle

seeks my name to know?

I bear the name of Ludwig:

for Normandy I’m fighting;

Could I but meet my foemen,

them indeed would I be sorely smiting.”

Then spake to him King Herwic:

“This thou well dost earn:

Seeing thou art Ludwig,

with hate for thee I burn.

For us, upon the sand-drifts,

many knights thou wast slaying:

Thou slewest Hettel also;

a warrior brave was he, beyond all saying.

“Still further thou hast wronged us,

before thy day was done:

For this we still are mourning.

I for my loss have known

Heart-heaviness and sorrow:

thou hast my lady stolen

From me upon the Wulpensand;

and many knights for her in death have fallen.

“I bear the name of Herwic:

thou hast taken my hoped-for wife,

And again to me must give her;

else to give his life,

With that of many a liegeman,

must one of us be willing.”

Then King Ludwig answered:

“Too boldly thou in my land in threats art dealing.

“Thy name, and this thy warning,

thou hast no need to tell;

There yet are many others

from whom I took, as well,

Their goods and eke their kinsmen.

To trust my word be ready,

In this I will not falter;

thou nevermore may’st hope to kiss thy lady.”

When they thus had spoken,

the kings no more did rest,

But sprang upon each other.

If either got the best,

To hold it was not easy;

youths were forward pushing

Under both the standards,

and daring knights to help their lords were rushing.

A fearless king was Herwic,

and long and bravely fought;

But quickly Hartmut’s father

the youthful Herwic smote,

Till he began to stagger

’neath blows by Ludwig given,

Who gladly would have slain him,

or would from out his lands his foe have driven.

If Herwic’s faithful followers

so near him had not been,

And given help so quickly,

never could he, I ween,

Have freed himself from Ludwig,

or left the field yet living;

So well that aged warrior

to make young Herwic dread him now was striving.

But help to him was granted,

his life he did not lose;

And, neither stunned nor wounded,

he from his fall arose.

Then to the roof quick turning,

his eyes he now was raising,

To see if, ’mongst the ladies,

his heart’s beloved had on his fall been gazing.