ose among the guests. Then, tired and
thirsty, he sat down, calling for a drink.
Not a bit of wine was at hand; it had all been carried to another part
of the forest. Hagen pointed out a spring near by and Siegfried proposed
a race, offering to run in full armor while the others ran without armor
or weapons. In spite of the handicap, Siegfried reached the spring
first.
Always polite, Siegfried bade his host, Gunther, drink first, while he
himself disarmed. Siegfried then stooped over the spring to drink, and
as he stooped, Hagen, gliding behind him, drove his spear into his body
at the exact spot where Kriemhild had embroidered the fatal mark.
Siegfried struggled to avenge himself, but found nothing but his shield
within reach. This he flung with such force at his murderer that it
knocked him down. Exhausted by the effort, the hero fell back upon the
grass, cursing the treachery of Gunther and Hagen.
Curses soon gave way to thoughts of Kriemhild, however, and overcoming
his anger he recommended her to the care of her brother Gunther. Then
the great hero died.
The hunting party agreed to carry the body back to Worms and say that
they had found it in the forest. But Hagen, bolder than the rest,
ordered the bearers to deposit the corpse at Kriemhild's door, where she
would see it when she went out for early mass the next morning. As he
expected, Kriemhild discovered her dead lord and fell senseless upon
him. Recovering, she cried out that he had been murdered: no foeman in a
fair fight could have killed the glorious knight.
A great funeral took place and Siegfried's body was laid in state in the
cathedral at Worms. Thither many came to view it and to express their
sympathy for the widow Kriemhild. The latter, suspecting treachery,
refused to listen to Gunther until he promised that all of those present
at the hunt should touch the body.
"Blood will flow afresh at the murderer's touch," he said.
One by one the hunters advanced, and when Hagen touched the great
warrior's form, lo, the blood flowed again from his wounds. At this the
Nibelung warriors wanted to avenge the dead, but Kriemhild would not
permit them to interrupt the funeral. So the ceremonies were concluded
and Siegfried's body was laid to rest.
LOHENGRIN AND ELSA THE BEAUTIFUL
The young Duchess of Brabant, Elsa the Beautiful, had gone into the
woods hunting, and becoming separated from her attendants, sat down to
rest under a wide-b
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