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When every thing was in readiness for the contest, Amilias,
clad in his boasted war-coat, went up to the top of the
hill, and sat upon a great rock, and waited for Mimer's
coming. As he sat there, he looked, to the people below,
like some great castle-tower; for he was almost a giant in
size, and his coat of mail, so skilfully wrought, was so
huge that twenty men of common mould might have found
shelter, or hidden themselves, within it. As the smith
Mimer, so dwarfish in stature, toiled up the steep hillside,
Amilias smiled to see him; for he felt no fear of the
slender, gleaming blade that was to try the metal of his
war-coat. And already a shout of expectant triumph went up
from the throats of the Burgundian hosts, so sure were they
of their champion's success.
But Mimer's friends waited in breathless silence, hoping,
and yet fearing. Only King Siegmund whispered to his queen,
and said, "Knowledge is stronger than brute force. The
smallest dwarf who has drunk from the well of the Knowing
One may safely meet the stoutest giant in battle."
When Mimer reached the top of the hill, Amilias folded his
huge arms, and smiled again; for he felt that this contest
was mere play for him, and that Mimer was already as good as
beaten, and his thrall. The smith paused a moment to take
breath, and as he stood by the side of his foe he looked to
those below like a mere black speck close beside a
steel-gray castle-tower.
"Are you ready?" asked the smith.
"Ready," answered Amilias. "Strike!"
Mimer raised the beaming blade in the air, and for a moment
the lightning seemed to play around his head. The muscles on
his short, brawny arms, stood out like great ropes; and then
Balmung, descending, cleft the air from right to left. The
waiting lookers-on in the plain below thought to hear the
noise of clashing steel; but they listened in vain, for no
sound came to their ears, save a sharp hiss like that which
red-hot iron gives when plunged into a tank of cold water.
The huge Amilias sat unmoved, with his arms still folded
upon his breast; but the smile had faded from his face.
"How do you feel now?" asked Mimer in a half-mocking tone.
"Rather strangely, as if cold iron had touched me," faintly
answered the upstart.
"Shake thyself!" cried Mimer.
Amilias did so, and, lo! he fell in two halves; for the
sword had cut sheer through the vaunted war-coat, and cleft
in twain the great body incased within. Down tumbled the
giant head and the still folded arms, and they rolled with
thundering noise to the foot of the hill, and fell with a
fearful splash into the deep waters of the river; and there,
fathoms down, they may even now be seen, when the water is
clear, lying like great gray rocks among the sand and gravel
below. The rest of the body, with the armor which incased
it, still sat upright in its place; and to this day
travellers sailing down the river are shown on moonlit
evenings the luckless armor of Amilias on the high hill-top.
In the dim, uncertain light, one easily fancies it to be the
ivy covered ruins of some old castle of feudal times.
The master, Mimer, sheathed his sword, and walked slowly
down the hillside to the plain, where his friends welcomed
him with glad cheers and shouts of joy. But the Burgundians,
baffled, and feeling vexed, turned silently homeward, nor
cast a single look back to the scene of their disappointment
and their ill-fated champion's defeat.
And Siegfried went again with the master and his fellows to
the smoky smithy, to his roaring bellows and ringing anvil,
and to his coarse fare, and rude, hard bed, and to a life of
labor. And while all men praised Mimer and his knowing
skill, and the fiery edge of the sunbeam blade, no one knew
that it was the boy Siegfried who had wrought that piece of
workmanship.
But after a while it was whispered around that not Mimer,
but one of his pupils, had forged the sword. And, when the
master was asked what truth there was in this story, his
eyes twinkled, and the corners of his mouth twitched
strangely, and he made no answer. But Veliant, the foreman
of the smithy, and the greatest of boasters said, "It was I
who forged the fire-edge of the blade Balmung." And,
although none denied the truth of what he said, but few who
knew what sort of a man he was believed his story. And this
is the reason, my children, that, in the ancient songs and
stories which tell of this wondrous sword, it is said by
most that Mimer, and by a few that Veliant, forged its
blade. But I prefer to believe that it was made by
Siegfried, the hero who afterwards wielded it in so many
adventures. [EN#3] Be this as it may, however, blind hate
and jealousy were from this time uppermost in the coarse and
selfish mind of Veliant; and he sought how he might drive
the lad away from the smithy in disgrace. "This boy has done
what no one else could do," said he. "He may yet do greater
deeds, and set himself up as the master smith of the world,
and then we shall all have to humble ourselves before him as
his underlings and thralls."
And he nursed this thought, and brooded over the hatred
which he felt towards the blameless boy; but he did not dare
to harm him, for fear of their master, Mimer. And Siegfried
busied himself at his forge, where the sparks flew as
briskly and as merrily as ever before, and his bellows
roared from early morning till late at evening. Nor did the
foreman's unkindness trouble him for a moment, for he knew
that the master's heart was warm towards him.
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