FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   >>  
ewards, above, Courage and love: Hallelujah, peace be with you all! THE HAIL-STORM. FROM THE NORSE. Sigvald Jarl was a famous Sea Rover, who, when unengaged in his predatory expeditions, resided at Jomsborg, in Denmark. He was the terror of the Norwegian coasts, which he ravaged and pillaged almost at his pleasure. Hacon Jarl, who at that time sat on the Norwegian throne, being informed that Sigvald meditated a grand descent, and knowing that he himself was unable to oppose him, had recourse to his God, Thorgerd, to whom he sacrificed his son Erling. In what manner Thorgerd assisted him and his forces, when the Danes landed, will best be learned from the bold song which the circumstance gave rise to, and which the following is a feeble attempt to translate. When from our ships we bounded, I heard, with fear astounded, The storm of Thorgerd's waking, From Northern vapours breaking; With flinty masses blended, Gigantic hail descended, And thick and fiercely rattled Against us there embattled. To aid the hostile maces, It drifted in our faces; It drifted, dealing slaughter, And blood ran out like water-- Ran reeking, red, and horrid, From batter'd cheek and forehead; We plied our swords, but no men Can stand 'gainst hail and foemen. And demon Thorgerd raging To see us still engaging, Shot, downward from the heaven, His shafts of flaming levin; Then sank our brave in numbers, To cold eternal slumbers; There lay the good and gallant, Renown'd for warlike talent. Our captain, this perceiving, The signal made for leaving, And with his ship departed, Downcast and broken-hearted; War, death, and consternation, Pursu'd our embarkation; We did our best, but no men Can stand 'gainst hail and foemen. THE ELDER-WITCH. According to the Danish tradition, there is a female Elf in the elder tree, which she leaves every midnight; and, having strolled among the fields, returns to it before morning. Though tall the oak, and firm its stem, Though far abroad its boughs are spread, Though high the poplar lifts its head, I have no song for them. A theme more bright, more bright would be The winsome, winsome elder tree, Beneath whose shade I sit reclin'd;-- It holds a witch within its bark, A lovely witch who haunts the dark, And fills with love my mind. When ghosts, at midnight, leave their graves, And rous'd is every phantom thing; When mermaids rise and sweetl
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   >>  



Top keywords:
Thorgerd
 

Though

 

drifted

 

midnight

 

gainst

 

Sigvald

 
foemen
 

Norwegian

 

winsome

 

bright


leaving

 

Downcast

 

hearted

 

signal

 
consternation
 

broken

 

departed

 

numbers

 

flaming

 

shafts


engaging
 

downward

 

heaven

 
eternal
 
talent
 

warlike

 

captain

 

Renown

 

gallant

 

slumbers


embarkation

 

perceiving

 

reclin

 

Beneath

 

lovely

 

haunts

 

graves

 
phantom
 

sweetl

 

mermaids


ghosts

 

poplar

 
leaves
 
strolled
 

fields

 

female

 
According
 

Danish

 
tradition
 

returns