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"Who is this Fenris-wolf?" asked one of the Nibelungens as
they rode through the solemn shadows of the wood.
And Siegfried thereupon related how that fierce creature had
been brought up and cared for by the Asa-folk; and how, when
he grew large and strong, they sought to keep him from doing
harm by binding him with an iron chain called Leding. But
the strength of the monster was so great, that he burst the
chain asunder, and escaped. Then the Asas made another chain
twice as strong, which they called Drome. And they called to
the wolf, and besought him to allow them to bind him again,
so that, in bursting the second chain, he might clear up all
doubts in regard to his strength. Flattered by the words of
the Asas, the wolf complied; and they chained him with
Drome, and fastened him to a great rock. But Fenris
stretched his legs, and shook himself, and the great chain
was snapped in pieces. Then the Asas knew that there was no
safety for them so long as a monster so huge and terrible
was unbound; and they besought the swarthy elves to forge
them another and a stronger chain. This the elves did. They
made a most wondrous chain, smooth as silk, and soft as
down, yet firmer than granite, and stronger than steel. They
called it Gleipner; and it was made of the sinews of a bear,
the footsteps of a cat, the beard of a woman, the breath of
a fish, the sweat of a bird, and the roots of a mountain.
When the Asas had obtained this chain, they lured the
Fenris-wolf to the rocky Island of Lyngve, and by flattery
persuaded him to be bound again. But this he would not agree
to do until Tyr placed his hand in his mouth as a pledge of
good faith. Then they tied him as before, and laughingly
bade him break the silken cord. The huge creature stretched
himself as before, and tried with all his might to burst
away; but Gleipner held him fast, and the worst that he
could do was to bite off the hand of unlucky Tyr. And this
is why Tyr is called the one-armed god.
"But it is said," added Siegfried, "that in the last
twilight the Fenris-wolf will break his chain, and that he
will swallow the sun, and slay the great Odin himself, and
that none can subdue him save Vidar the Silent."
It was thus that the heroes conversed with each other as
they rode through the silent ways of the wood.
At length, one afternoon in early summer, the little company
reached the Rhine valley; and looking down from the sloping
hill-tops, green with growing corn, they saw the pleasant
town of the Burgundians and the high gray towers of
Gunther's dwelling. And not long afterwards they rode
through the streets of the old town, and, tired and
travel-stained, halted outside of the castle-gates. Very
soon it became noised about that Siegfried and a company of
strange knights, fair and tall, had come again to Burgundy
and to the home of the Burgundian kings. But when it was
certainly known that neither Gunther the king, nor Hagen of
the evil eye, nor Dankwart his brother, had returned, the
people felt many sad misgivings; for they greatly feared
that some hard mischance had befallen their loved king. Then
Gernot and the young Giselher, having heard of Siegfried's
arrival, came out with glad but anxious faces to greet him.
"Welcome, worthy chief!" they cried. "But why are you alone?
What are your tidings? Where is our brother? and where are
our brave uncles, Hagen and Dankwart? And who are those
strange, fair men who ride with you? And what about
Brunhild, the warrior-maiden? Alas! if our brother has
fallen by her cruel might, then woe to Burgundy! Tell us
quickly all about it!"
"Have patience, friends!" answered Siegfried. "Give me time
to speak, and I will gladden the hearts of all the folk of
Burgundy with my news. Your brother Gunther is alive and
well; and he is the happiest man in the whole mid-world,
because he has won the matchless Brunhild for his bride. And
he is ere now making his way up the river with a mighty
fleet of a hundred vessels and more than two thousand
warriors. Indeed, you may look for him any day. And he has
sent me, with these my Nibelungen earls, to bid you make
ready for his glad home-coming."
Then, even before he had alighted from Greyfell, he went on
to tell of the things that had happened at Isenstein; but he
said nothing of the part which he had taken in the strange
contest. And a crowd of eager listeners stood around, and
heard with unfeigned joy of the happy fortune of their king.
"And now," said Siegfried to Giselher, when he had finished
his story, "carry the glad news to your mother and your
sister; for they, too, must be anxious to learn what fate
has befallen King Gunther."
"Nay," answered the prince, "you yourself are the king's
herald, and you shall be the one to break the tidings to
them. Full glad they'll be to hear the story from your own
lips, for long have they feared that our brother would never
be seen by us again. I will tell them of your coming, but
you must be the first to tell them the news you bring."
"Very well," answered Siegfried. "It shall be as you say."
Then he dismounted from Greyfell, and, with his Nibelungen
earls, was shown into the grand hall, where they were
entertained in a right kingly manner.
When Kriemhild the peerless, and Ute her mother, heard that
Siegfried had come again to Burgundy, and that he brought
news from Gunther the king, they hastened to make ready to
see him. And, when he came before them, he seemed so noble,
so bright, and so glad, that they knew he bore no evil
tidings.
"Most noble prince," said Kriemhild, trembling in his
presence, "right welcome are you to our dwelling! But
wherefore are you come? How fares my brother Gunther? Why
came he not with you back to Burgundy-land? Oh! undone are
we, if, through the cruel might of the warrior-queen, he has
been lost to us."
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