Lay of Leithian ch.3

 Canto III

Dark from the North now blew the cloud;   
the winds of autumn cold and loud   
hissed in the heather; sad and grey   
Aeluin's mournful water lay.   
'Son Beren,' then said Barahir,  
'Thou knowest the rumour that we hear   
of strength from the Gaurhoth that is sent   
against us; and our food nigh spent.   
On thee the lot falls by our law   
to go forth now alone to draw   
what help thou canst from the hidden few   
that feed us still, and what is new   
to learn. Good fortune go with thee!   
In speed return, for grudgingly   
we spare thee from our brotherhood,  
so small: and Gorlim in the wood    
is long astray or dead. Farewell!'   
As Beren went, still like a knell   
resounded in his heart that word,    
the last of his father that he heard.  
   
   
Through moor and fen, by tree and briar   
he wandered far: he saw the fire   
of Sauron's camp, he heard the howl   
of hunting Orc and wolf a-prowl,   
and turning back, for long the way,  
benighted in the forest lay.   
In weariness he then must sleep,    
fain in a badger-hole to creep,   
and yet he heard (or dreamed it so)   
nearby a marching legion go  
with clink of mail and clash of shields   
up towards the stony mountain-fields.   
He slipped then into darkness down,   
until, as man that waters drown   
strives upwards gasping, it seemed to him   
he rose through slime beside the brim   
of sullen pool beneath dead trees.   
Their livid boughs in a cold breeze   
trembled, and all their black leaves stirred:   
each leaf a black and croaking bird  
whose neb a gout of blood let fall.   
He shuddered, struggling thence to crawl   
through winding weeds, when far away   
he saw a shadow faint and grey   
gliding across the dreary lake.   
Slowly it came, and softly spake:   
"Gorlim I was, but now a wraith   
of will defeated, broken faith,   
traitor betrayed. Go! Stay not here!   
Awaken, son of Barahir,  
and haste! For Morgoth's fingers close   
upon thy father's throat; he knows    
your trysts, your paths, your secret lair.'   
   
   
Then he revealed the devil's snare   
in which he fell, and failed; and last  
begging forgiveness, wept, and passed   
out into darkness. Beren woke,   
leapt up as one by sudden stroke   
with fire of anger filled. His bow   
and sword he seized, and like the roe  
hotfoot o'er rock and heath he sped   
before the dawn. Ere the next night fled   
to Aeluin at last he came,   
as the red sun eastward rose in flame;   
but Aeluin was red with blood,   
red were the stones and trampled mud.   
Black in the birches sat a-row   
the raven and the carrion crow;   
wet were their nebs, and dark the meat    
that dripped beneath their griping feet.  
   
   
There Beren laid his father's bones    
in haste beneath a cairn of stones;   
no graven rune nor word he wrote    
o'er Barahir, but thrice he smote   
the topmost stone, and thrice aloud  
he cried his name. 'Thy death,' he vowed,   
'I will avenge. Yea, though my fate   
should lead at last to Angband's gate.'   
And then he turned, and did not weep:   
too dark his heart, the wound too deep.  
Out into night, as cold as stone,   
loveless, friendless, he strode alone.   
   
   
Of hunter's lore he had no need   
the trail to find. With little heed   
his ruthless foe, secure and proud,  
marched north away with blowing loud   
of brazen horns their lord to greet,   
trampling the earth with grinding feet.   
Behind them bold but wary went   
now Beren, swift as hound on scent,  
until, beside a darkling well   
where Rivil rises from the fell   
down into Serech's reeds to flow,   
he found the slayers, found his foe.   
From hiding on the hillside near   
he marked them all: though less than fear,   
too many for his sword and bow   
to slay alone. Then, crawling low   
as snake in heath, he nearer crept.   
There many weary with marching slept,  
but captains, sprawling on the grass,   
drank and from hand to hand let pass   
their booty, begrudging each small thing   
raped from dead bodies. One a ring   
held up, and laughed: 'Now, mates,' he cried  
'here's mine! And I'll not be denied,   
though few be like it in the land.   
It came from this now severed hand    
of that same Barahir I slew,   
the robber-knave. If tales be true,  
he had it of some elvish lord   
for the rogue-service of his sword.   
No help it gave to him - he's dead!   
They're parlous, elvish rings, 'tis said;   
still for the gold I'll keep it, yea,  
and so eke out my worthless pay.   
Old Sauron bade me bring it back,   
and yet, methinks, he has no lack   
of weightier treasures in his hoard:   
the greater the greedier the lord!   
So mark ye, mates, ye all shall swear   
the hand of Barahir was bare!'   
And as he spoke an arrow sped   
from tree behind, and forward dead   
choking he fell with barb in throat;  
with leering face the earth he smote.   
   
   
Forth, then, as wolfhound grim there leapt   
Beren among them. Two he swept    
aside with sword; caught up the ring;   
slew one who grasped him; with a spring   
back into shadow passed, and fled   
before their yells of wrath and dread   
of ambush in the valley rang.   
Then after him like wolves they sprang,   
howling and cursing, gnashing teeth,   
hewing and bursting through the heath,   
shooting wild arrows, sheaf on sheaf,   
at trembling shade or shaken leaf.   
   
   
In fateful hour was Beren born:   
he laughed at dart and wailing horn;  
fleetest of foot of living men   
tireless on fell and light on fen,   
elf-wise in wood, he passed away,   
defended by his hauberk grey   
of dwarvish craft in Nogrod made,   
where hammers rang in cavern's shade.   
     
   
As fearless Beren was renowned:   
when men most hardy upon ground    
were reckoned folk would speak his name,   
foretelling that his after-fame   
would even golden Hador pass   
or Barahir and Bregolas;   
but sorrow now his heart had wrought   
to fierce despair, no more he fought   
in hope of life or joy or praise,  
but seeking so to use his days   
only that Morgoth deep should feel   
the sting of his avenging steel,   
ere death he found and end of pain:   
his only fear was thraldom's chain.  
Danger he sought and death pursued,   
and thus escaped the doom he wooed,   
and deeds of breathless daring wrought   
alone, of which the rumour brought   
new hope to many a broken man.  
They whispered 'Beren,' and began   
in secret swords to whet, and soft   
by shrouded hearths at evening oft   
songs they would sing of Beren's bow,   
of Dagmor his sword: how he would go  
silent to camps and slay the chief,   
or, trapped in his hiding, past belief   
would slip away, and under night   
by mist or moon or by the light   
of open day would come again.  
Of hunters hunted, slayers slain   
they sang, of Gorgol the Butcher hewn,   
of ambush in Ladros, fire in Drûn,   
of thirty in one battle dead,   
of wolves that yelped like curs and fled,   
yea, Sauron himself with wound in hand.   
Thus one alone filled all that land   
with fear and death for Morgoth's folk;   
his comrades were the beech and oak   
who failed him not, and wary things  
with fur and fell and feathered wings   
that silent wander, or dwell alone    
in hill and wild and waste of stone   
watched o'er his ways, his faithful friends.   
         
   
Yet seldom well and outlaw ends;  
and Morgoth was a king more strong   
than all the world has since in song   
recorded: dark athwart the land   
reached out the shadow of his hand,   
at each recoil returned again;  
two more were sent for one foe slain.   
New hope was cowed, all rebels killed;   
quenched were the fires, the songs were stilled,   
tree felled, heath burned, and through the waste   
marched the black host of Orcs in haste.  
   
   
Almost they closed their ring of steel   
round Beren; hard upon his heel   
now trod their spies; within their hedge   
of all aid shorn, upon the edge   
of death at bay he stood aghast   
and knew that he must die at last,   
or flee the land of Barahir,   
his land beloved. Beside the mere   
beneath a heap of nameless stones   
must crumble those once mighty bones,  
forsaken by both son and kin,   
bewailed by reeds of Aeluin.   
     
   
In winter's night the houseless North   
he left behind, and stealing forth   
the leaguer of his watchful foe   
he passed - a shadow on the snow,   
a swirl of wind, and he was gone,   
the ruin of Dorthonion,   
Tarn Aeluin and its water wan,   
never again to look upon.   
No more shall hidden bowstring sing,   
no more his shaven arrows wing,   
no more his hunted head shall lie   
upon the heath beneath the sky.   
The Northern stars, whose silver fire   
of old Men named the Burning Briar,   
were set behind his back, and shone    
o'er land forsaken: he was gone.   
       
   
Southward he turned, and south away    
his long and lonely journey lay,   
while ever loomed before his path   
the dreadful peaks of Gorgorath.   
Never had foot of man most bold   
yet trod those mountains steep and cold,   
nor climbed upon their sudden brink,   
whence, sickened, eyes must turn and shrink   
to see their southward cliffs fall sheer   
in rocky pinnacle and pier   
down into shadows that were laid   
before the sun and moon were made.   
In valleys woven with deceit   
and washed with waters bitter-sweet   
dark magic lurked in gulf and glen;   
but out away beyond the ken   
of mortal sight the eagle's eye   
from dizzy towers that pierced the sky   
might grey and gleaming see afar,   
as sheen on water under star,   
Beleriand, Beleriand,   
the borders of the Elven-land.   


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