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"What shall I do with this ring?" asked Siegfried.
"Give it to me!" cried Niblung.
"Give it to me!" cried Schilbung.
And both tried to snatch it from Siegfried's hand.
But the effort was too great for them. Their arms fell
helpless at their sides, their feet slipped beneath them,
their limbs failed: they sank fainting, each upon his pile
of treasures.
"O my dear, dear gold!" murmured Niblung, trying to clasp it
all in his arms,--"my dear, dear gold! Thou art mine, mine
only. No one shall take thee from me. Here thou art, here
thou shalt rest. O my dear, dear gold!" And then, calling up
the last spark of life left in his famished body, he cried
out to Siegfried, "Give me the ring!--the ring, I say!"
He hugged his cherished gold nearer to his bosom; he ran his
thin fingers deep down into the shining yellow heap; he
pressed his pale lips to the cold and senseless metal; he
whispered faintly, "My dear, dear gold!" and then he died.
"O precious, precious gem-stones," faltered Schilbung, "how
beautiful you are! And you are mine, all mine. I will keep
you safe. Come, come, my bright-eyed beauties! No one but me
shall touch you. You are mine, mine, mine!" And he chattered
and laughed as only madmen laugh. And he kissed the hard
stones, and sought to hide them in his bosom. But his hands
trembled and failed, dark mists swam before his eyes; he
fancied that he heard the black dwarfs clamoring for his
treasure; he sprang up quickly, he shrieked--and then fell
lifeless upon his hoard of sparkling gems.
A strange, sad sight it was,--boundless wealth, and
miserable death; two piles of yellow gold and sun-bright
diamonds, and two thin, starved corpses stretched upon them.
Some stories relate that the brothers were slain by
Siegfried, because their foolish strife and greediness had
angered him.[EN#19] But I like not to think so. It was the
gold, and not Siegfried, that slew them.
"O gold, gold!" cried the hero sorrowfully, "truly thou art
the mid-world's curse; thou art man's bane. But when the
bright spring-time of the new world shall come, and Balder
shall reign in his glory, then will the curse be taken from
thee, and thy yellow brightness will be the sign of purity
and enduring worth; and then thou wilt be a blessing to
mankind, and the precious plaything of the gods."
But Siegfried had little time for thought and speech. A
strange sound was heard upon the mountain-side. The twelve
great giants who had stood as watchmen upon the peaks above
were rushing down to avenge their masters, and to drive the
intruder out of Nibelungen Land. Siegfried waited not for
their onset; but he mounted the noble horse Greyfell, and,
with the sword Balmung in his hand, he rode forth to meet
his foes, who, with fearful threats and hideous roars, came
striding toward him. The sunbeams flashed from Greyfell's
mane, and dazzled the dull eyes of the giants, unused as
they were to the full light of day. Doubtful, they paused,
and then again came forward. But they mistook every tree in
their way for an enemy, and every rock they thought a foe;
and in their fear they fancied a great host to be before
them. Did you ever see the dark and threatening storm-clouds
on a summer's day scattered and put to flight by the bright
beams of the sun? It was thus that Siegfried's giant foes
were routed. One and all, they dropped their heavy clubs,
and stood ashamed and trembling, not knowing what to do. And
Siegfried made each one swear to serve him faithfully; and
then he sent them back to the snow-covered mountain-peaks to
stand again as watchmen at their posts.
And now another danger appeared. Alberich the dwarf, the
master of the swarthy elves who guarded the Nibelungen
Hoard, had come out from his cavern, and seen the two
princes lying dead beside their treasures, and he thought
that they had been murdered by Siegfried; and, when he
beheld the giants driven back to the mountain-tops, he
lifted a little silver horn to his lips, and blew a shrill
bugle-call. And the little brown elves came trooping forth
by thousands: from under every rock, from the nooks and
crannies and crevices in the mountain-side, from the deep
cavern and the narrow gorge, they came at the call of their
chief. Then, at Alberich's word, they formed in line of
battle, and stood in order around the hoard and the bodies
of their late masters. Their little golden shields and their
sharp-pointed spears were thick as the blades of grass in a
Rhine meadow. And Siegfried, when he saw them, was pleased
and surprised; for never before had such a host of pygmy
warriors stood before him.
While he paused and looked, the elves became suddenly
silent, and Siegfried noticed that Alberich stood no longer
at their head, but had strangely vanished from sight.
"Ah, Alberich!" cried the hero. "Thou art indeed cunning. I
have heard of thy tricks. Thou hast donned the Tarnkappe,
the cloak of darkness, which hides thee from sight, and
makes thee as strong as twelve common men. But come on, thou
brave dwarf!"
Scarcely had he spoken, when he felt a shock which almost
sent him reeling from his saddle, and made Greyfell plunge
about with fright. Quickly, then, did Siegfried dismount,
and, with every sense alert, he waited for the second onset
of the unseen dwarf. It was plain that Alberich wished to
strike him unawares, for many minutes passed in utter
silence. Then a brisk breath of wind passed by Siegfried's
face, and he felt another blow; but, by a quick downward
movement of his hand, he caught the plucky elf-king, and
tore off the magic Tarnkappe, and then, with firm grasp, he
held him, struggling in vain to get free.
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