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The Sea-King

A metrical romance, in six cantos. With notes, historical and illustrative. By J. Stanyan Bigg
  

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CANTO III. The Legend of Ragnar Lodbrog.
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61

CANTO III. The Legend of Ragnar Lodbrog.

“------ Wherefore not vain,
Nor yet without permitted power impressed,
I deem those legends terrible, with which
The Polar ancient thrilled his uncouth throng.”
Coleridge.

“------ By night from dreams
Of opening gulphs, black storms, and raging flames,
Starting amazed. ------”
Prior.


63

I.

'Tis strange how o'er the most obdurate breast
Fell Superstition holdeth magic sway,
Producing causeless care, and sad unrest,
Chasing the better feelings all away,
And bringing apprehension strong alway.—
And e'en to those who fear not danger near,
There is a horror in those things that lay
In doubt and mystery; superstition here
Raiseth his hoary head, and worketh woe and fear.

64

II.

And in that goodly company
Each thought his neighbour ill at rest,
While from the plague himself not free,—
He bore a burthen in his breast:
And aye for fear scarce drew his breath
Through lips as ashy-pale as death.
But he, the cause of these alarms,
Knew not fear, nor thought of harms,
But like a spectre from the tomb
He slowly glided down the room,
And gazing carefully around,
He sought for one he had not found.

III.

His gaze at last met the stranger's glance,
And then athwart his countenance
There came a ghastly smile,—
That passed away the while,
As swiftly as the meteors dance
Across heaven's darkened countenance,

64

Illuming yonder isle.
And his features wore their wonted gloom
As hopeless, as cheerless, as dark as the tomb.

IV.

O who can this aged wanderer be?
He seemeth a man of mysterye,
And his beard is as white as the foam of the sea.
His visage is wan, his vigour hath fled,
And he seemeth like one who hath once been dead!
Oh! his figure is gaunt, and his skin seemeth thrown
Like a mantle to cover the naked bone,
And his eyes are as lifeless as circles of stone;
And he who looks on them shivereth still,
And feeleth I ween his life blood chill;
And he is by a fearful sense oppressed,
For a slimy snake seemeth coiled in his breast.

V.

Otlauga,—what aileth her?—pale as death,
Without a motion, without a breath,
Resteth there silent and alone,

65

As cold and as chill as a marble-stone!
For when that old man passed the door,
She knew his figure I ween of yore:
She had seen that form by the pale moonlight,
Wrapped in the mists of the chilly night.

VI.

She had seen him stand on those rocks so bare,
Beside the silent sea of blood;
She had heard his voice on the nightly air
When he spake to the being who sailed on the flood.
And still when the night winds sighed and sung,
Those words in her ears forever rung,—
“I have found where she dwelleth, that child of the sea,
Thou shalt see her I ween right speedily.”
She had heard that voice when the night bird screams,
She had seen that form in her midnight dreams.

VII.

But still the guests in silent horror stood,
Till with a sudden start
They felt the kindly long congealed blood

66

Rush round their heart,
And in its proper channels flow,
With a pleasurable glow.
For that old man had spoken
In accents so kind,
That the ice was all broken,
As if with a token,
That thrilled through their body, and thrilled through their mind.
“'Tis strange how such a power should dwell
With any breathing mortal breath,”
“Hush! be silent! how canst thou tell
That he cometh not up from the palace of death.
But whether he be a man or no
Time will show,—time will show!”

VIII.

“Say why hath all this fear,
This horror thus come o'er ye?
My messenger was here,
I sent him on before me.

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He told you I ween with whoop and with cry”
That his aged master was drawing nigh.—”
The old man spake with a leer and a smile,
And the owlet with its eye of fire,
Sat perching all the while
Upon his master's golden lyre.
That was a wondrous harp I ween,
And aye men say that it had been
In many a strange and dreadful scene!

IX.

He turned him to the company,—
That aged man of mystery,
There was something in his glance,
And something in his countenance
Of pity and of tenderness,
When his steady eye fell on the drooping form,
The form of the lovely shepherdess.
And as though the long, long gathering storm
That dwelt about his gloomy brow
Had quite evanished now,

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There came from his eye so cold and dead
A bright, but momentary gleam,—
Alas! alas! too soon it fled;
Why hath it gone, did it give him pain?
'Tis quenched, 'tis quenched, it vanished
Like the sun's departing beam,
And all too soon alas! is night again ysped.

X.

The old man sighed, and then he spake again,
“Thou aged son of song,
I heard thy plaintive strain
When it came floating the wild winds along;
Though between me and you there lay
Many a mile of weary way;
Though there were mountains, hills, and vales,
Flint-frozen streams, and ice and snow,
Above, about, below,—
Despite of these the swift wing'd gales.—
But it were vain to tell you what you cannot know,—
What if you hear you cannot understand,

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How the slight forms of air,
To me their message bring,
To me their wonders show
And own me as their king.
How through their watchful care
I know the secrets of each distant land,—
And have but to wave my wand
And am transported there.
To tell you this I say again,
Would be a waste of words in vain.

XI.

“'Twas not for this I left my sea-girt cave,
Where the winds and wild-waves sing,
And voices numberless,
On the rapt sense their music press
Till the crystal arches ring,
And dizzy, dance in wild excess
Of harmony, and happiness.
'Twas not for this I trod the cheerless shore,
And breathed the air of this unhappy earth;

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And not for this to those of mortal birth
My golden harp I bore.
Lovely maid I came for this,—
To cheer thy soul with harmony;
For this I left my bower of bliss,
For this I came to visit thee;
If thou wilt listen I will sing,
About a wondrous man, Ragnar the dread Sea-King.”

XII.

The maiden started at the name,
And the blood came rushing red like flame
From her heart to her features fair.
What causeth this? is it maidenly shame,
Or some deep feeling without a name?
It matters not,—the red blood came
To her cheek, and rested there.
Brightly her brow so bold and bare,
Beamed in the lamplight's lurid glare,
All red as the glowing evening air,
When the flaming sun descends in flare

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In the bright and glorious west:
Emotion thus painted her features fair,
And fluttered in her dove-like breast.
Until for shame or causeless care,
She hid her beaming face, behind her golden hair.

XIII.

And two alone in that large company
Marked the maiden's strange emotion.—
Have you ne'er seen upon the stormy sea,
How, when the waves and waters of the ocean
Are dancing and prancing in endless commotion,
A vessel answereth every changeful motion?
And when the waves each other crossing
Leap and fall in tumult tossing
Dancing to the dazzled view,
The bark,—whene'er the waters upward bending
Are flashing, splashing, and descending
Riseth still, and falleth too.—
As though it had no motion of its own,
But was ordained to undulation still,

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And bow obsequious to the tyrant will
Of the wild waves alone.

XIV.

Not less obsequious, did the stranger's view
Transfer from that fair maiden's countenance
Unto his own, each blush to that fair image true.
And aye it seemed as if he grew
Out of her image; and as if he drew
His sense of being from that fervent glance.
But the aged wanderer watched these two,
Until a feeling came again
That had too long been fled.
It came, it came, did it give him pain?
For he seemeth like one who hath once been dead.
Or was it the excess of joy
That gave his too full heart alloy?

XV.

It swiftly passed away,—and then he gave
The handsome stranger one much-meaning glance,

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Which like a chilling wave
Aroused him from his trance.
He knew that glance I ween of yore,
Shivering he gazed full wistfully about,
Till through the open door
He quickly issued out.
Fear urged him not, nor was it ought like flight,
But yea he knew that old man's meaning well,—
That wanderer of the night,
That man of the mystic spell.

XVI.

The night was fair, yet from the vault of heaven
The stars looked dimly on the world beneath,
The stranger gazed around—
It seemed as though the monster death
Had set his foot upon the frozen ground,
And with his noxious breath
Had blighted all beneath the deep blue sky.—
Around was one congealed expanse
Of dazzling snow, save where the waters dance,

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And fling their ever foamy crest on high;—
The stranger slowly took his way
Along the margin of a deep ravine,
Ice-rocks in wild confusion round him lay
Like monuments of things that once have been,
Around, above him, and below,
Was nought but ice and frozen snow.

XVII.

And still the traveller his way pursued,
Approaching nearer to the shore;
Which in a small cape bending
Revealed the waters nearer than before,—
And still he heard the ceaseless roar
Of the winds and waves, while from a cliff decending.
Nearer, and nearer still he drew,
Until the welcome spot
Burst full upon his view.
It was a lovely little grot,
A wild fantastick cave,
Round which the winds and waters rave.

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And from the sea there stole a little stream,
Which filled the basement of the cell,—
That might have answered well,
As a home or a shell
Where the sea nymphs might revel, and happily dwell.

XVIII.

Here, stooping down he entered, and unloosed
From all its fastenings a small fragile boat,
Which soon was set afloat.
A push from the oar, and a spring—
And he and the frail boat swing
Right out on the restless sea;
Merrily, merrily, merrily
They dance on the dancing wave,
They speed away together,
Despite of wind and weather
Far away from the stormy cave.
Round them still the wild waves sing,
Round them still the waters ring
And ever restless, roar;

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Till they two can scarce be seen,
Through the thin spray bright and sheen,—
Moving from the distant shore,
And sunk behind the waves, they can be seen no more.

XIX.

But in the hall the aged wanderer stood,
His harp already sounding,
And all in silence was that multitude
The aged man surrounding.
The sounds of his wild harp, too wild for earthly strain,
Made a soul-touching harmony;
Bold they were and full and free,
Not like mortal minstrelsy,
For they went further than the sense,
And thrilled the heart and soul, with a passion most intense:
Purging the very thoughts from base desire,
And wrapping feeling up in latent fire.
They were burning sounds I ween,—
Not a human being stirred,
Such a harp was never seen,

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Such like sounds were never heard.
And never will so wild a strain,
Break on mortal ear again.

XX.

Otlauga with a burning breast
Betrayed her strong emotion;
Her soul was by strange cares opprest,
Her eye beamed fire in sad unrest,
Yet past all sign of motion.
She felt those sounds but she heeded them not,
All sense, and feeling were forgot
In one o'erwhelming interest,
One strange involved commotion.
'Twas fixed, intense attention that thus made
The maiden hold her very vital breath,
'Twas fixed attention that thus made
Her hang her head, and droop and fade,
Like the bloodless form of death.—
And while the sounding harpstrings rung
He pitched his thrilling voice, and thus the wanderer sung.

78

I. PART I.—The Journey.

XXI.

What sight on earth so goodly
As a merry ship at sea,
When the winds and boisterous waters
Repose in harmony;
When from the heavenly regions
The moon and stars so bright,
Disperse the chilling terrors
And the darkness of the night;
When o'er the world of waters
The good ship makes her way,
And all around without a sound
The dancing meteors play?
There is no sight so welcome
In all the world to me,
As the mighty sleeping ocean
And a merry ship at sea.

XXII.

The breeze was blowing lightly,

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And the sea-steeds scarce were prancing,
But the merry ship, with Elfin skip
Went o'er the waters dancing.
Who would have thought that vessel
That harmless stems the flood,
Had wrought such dire destruction
That it might have sailed in blood?
That vessel hath a chieftain
Whose dreaded name will ring,
As long as men will listen,
And as long as scalds will sing.
'Tis the fierce and bloody Ragnar,
That mighty man who springs
From Norway's line of warriors,
And from Denmark's race of kings.

XXIII.

The dreadful son of Sigurd
Skims on before the wind,
The North-land is before him
But his fleet is far behind.

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Why is his speed so hasty,
What flies he on to meet,
Why seeketh he the North Countree,
Why lags behind his fleet?
His fleet lies off the Frankish coast,
To watch, but not invade,
For there hath treacherous Harald gone
For succour and for aid.
'Twixt him and mighty Ragnar
The feud is fierce and rise,
He strives to quell the feud in vain—
With the feud will end his life.

XXIV.

In the deadly strife with Harald's sire
Brave Sigurd smote the plain,
And by the sire of Ragnar
Was Harald's father slain.
And since hath wily Harald
By guile and treacherye,
Seized Ragnar's rightful kingdom

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And forced him to the sea.
How then can Harald hope to live
Disturbed by no annoy?
How can he strive for wealth and peace,
How can he think of joy?
In vain are all his efforts
For the fierce and deadly strife,
Will be renewed by Ragnar
Till the latest day of life.

XXV.

'Tis hoped the Frankish monarch
Will not the plunder share,
Nor listen unto treachery,
Nor heed a traitor's prayer.
The brave and trusty Soemund
Hath orders there to lay,—
And if the Franks should send their aid,
To stop it on the way.
And there rests trusty Soemund,

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The Sea-King's captain he,
While the brave and haughty Raguar
Hath sought the North Countree.
And far across the ocean,—
The mighty surging main,
The Sea-King with his single ship
Will soon return again.

XXVI.

But why thus with one vessel
Does he dance upon the wave,
While the stormy north winds whistle,
While the roaring waters rave?
What takes him from his faithful fleet
Across the faithless sea?
And why before all other lands
Does he seek the North Countree?
Oh! he hath had strange dreams of late,
He sees a maiden fair;
Than Nossa's self more beautiful,

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And lighter than the air.
Now Ragnar is a wondrous man,
And brave,—as brave men say,
But this fair maid hath vanquished him,
And ta'en his heart away.

XXVII.

And he with busy efforts
Hath sought, and sought again,
If he might haply find that maid,—
The cause of all his pain.
O'er many a land he's wandered,
And when his toils are o'er,
He finds his last as bootless
As that which went before.
Till from the stormy North-Land
There came a maiden's fame,
And Ragnar's wise seer Arngrim
Hath said she is the same
Who breaks on Ragnar's visions,

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So lovely and so fair,
Than Nossa's self more beautiful,
And lighter than the air.

XXVIII.

Now Arngrim is a trusty man,
A wondrous seer they say;
He would not for a world of wealth
Lead the wild Sea-King astray.
So Ragnar takes him at his word,
And now unfurls the sail,
He floats upon the surging flood,
He skips before the gale.
And now his fleet is far behind,
And he is out at sea;
He seeks a stormy distant land,
The North-Land seeketh he.
The Sea-King now hath travelled
Full many a night and day,
Still the broad sea is before him
And the blue sky still is o'er him;
Thor speed him on his way!

85

II. PART II.—The Shipwreck.

XXIX.

There is no sight in heaven, or earth, or hell,
More terrible
Than the fierce stormy ocean,—
Go view it in that hour
When tossed in wild commotion
It puts forth all its power.—
How the fierce waters leap, and rush, and drive,
As though in their wild fury they would strive
To ascend high heaven, and rive
From their primeval seat, the heavenly host!

XXX.

When like the frenzy of a dream,
The shocked ear on the whirling blast
May catch, as it flies past,
The Demon's wild discordant scream,
Or laugh of dissonance.
It seems as though the furies of deep hell,
Were all let loose to work their purpose fell,
Their purpose of malignity,

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On man and all mortality;
And that they love to dwell
For-ever, in the turbulential motion
Of the mad and foaming sea, the frenzy of the ocean.

XXXI.

Three nights, three days, the tempest fierce has lasted;
And now the evening of the fourth arrives,
Yet still upon the wave,
That yawns before it like a greedy grave,
The lost ship madly drives.
Its helm, and masts were long since torn away,
By the strong incessant blast,
That ever whirleth past
On wings of rapid fury through the air;—
The seamen in despair
Have long since yielded up the guidance of their ship
To those fell sprites who sweep the troubled air,
And dance and skip
In the dread lightning's lurid glare.
Now the mad ship would seem to rise,
And pierce the misty texture of the skies:

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Then with a mighty crash
It would descend,
As though the bosom of the sea to tear,—
Then with a start and splash
It darted here, it darted there,
To left, to right, above, below,
Around, and everywhere.

XXXII.

The night draws on apace,
And still the whirling ship—
With crash and splash, with leap and skip,
Maintains its dreadful race:
Now on the mighty ocean upward bending,
Now like the bolt of heaven descending.
The seamen of that vessel once were proud,
And aye they one and all were brave;
But now,—a timid band
They pale and shivering stand,—
And shrink with horror from the cloud
That rises from the boiling wave,

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This doomed to be their misty shroud,
And that their fated grave.

XXXIII.

The current drove the ship one way,
And the roaring winds another;
Yet on it went, without intent
Upon its path of woe,
As swift as is an arrow sent
From a sturdy twanging bow.
Just then one pale and ghastly beam of light
Came through the veil of the incumbent night.
Whence came that transitory beam?
It matters not;—it came, it came
And rested like a bloody flame
Above that fated ship,
That onward sped more fleet than air,
Upon its path of woe, its path of dark despair.

XXXIV.

And aye that light revealed

89

A sight, that made the curdled blood
As chill as is the stagnant flood,
When by stern winter's frost congealed.
As swift as passes through the air
The flash from the impending thunder-cloud,
Came thundering on its darkened way
(Reflecting the red glare
That ever lay
Athwart the bleaching heavens,)
Riding upon its chariot proud
A mass of ice; a wondrous isle,
Stretching from east to west full many a mile.

XXXV.

Towards its own destruction swiftly sped
The fated vessel; while the crew
Frozen with horror, silent as the dead
Too swiftly grew
To their own hearts, and courage tried, untrue.
Wildly they gazed about for help,—
No help was near.

90

Nearer and nearer still, the island drew,
And yea with fearful speed the vessel went,
As though impatient, and in haste
To be by that strange mass embraced,—
Upon its own destruction bent.
Between them and their fate still lay
The dark and dread abyss,—
The path o'er which they took their way
Towards the land of woe, or bliss.
Darkly the red light on the waters beamed,
Darkly the waters to the red light gleamed.

XXXVI.

But he, the chieftain of that fated ship
Gazed with an aspect stern upon the seas,
As if in fierce defiance of the breeze,
And of the dreadful waves that play, and skip
In cruel mock'ry of man's woe:
With folded arms he stood,
And gazed upon the dark and foaming flood
That boiled below.

91

And with a firm unflinching eye,
By the red light that blazed
Far overhead, the Sea-King gazed
Upon his own approaching destiny;
Betraying no emotion, not a sigh
Escaped him, but unmoved still
He viewed the threatening sky;
Nor winds, nor waves, nor powers of good or ill
Could bend his stubborn will:
He proudly gazed upon his restless tomb,
Nor with averted eye surveyed his doom.

XXXVII.

With fearful speed towards the frozen mass,
See the mad vessel o'er the waters pass,
It comes,—it comes,—and loud the waters roar,
Sea-monsters on their way
Gambol and lash that sea without a shore,
And gather round their prey.
The wild winds whistle, and the lightnings flash,
The heavens thunder, and the waters crash.—

92

The seamen stood in dread, and speechless wonder,
And aye they seemed to gaze with dizzy eye
Spectators of a fearful destiny
Awaiting others than themselves;—but nigh
And with a noise like thunder
The dreadful island drew; and then on high
The shivered fragments of the lost ship flew;
And one destruction whelmed, the vessel and its crew.

XXXVIII.

The tempest paused,—the mighty waves
Seemed filled with horror at their tragic deed:
But soon again, across the main
Like the fierce champing warlike steed
Upon the battle plain,
(When its dilated nostrils scent afar
The direful carnage of the sanguine war)
They in their fury came again:—
And leaping up to heaven, and thundering down to hell,
They rose and fell,
Darkling in ire, and rushing downward crashing

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The ocean's level under:
Turbid and fierce, they onward darted, splashing,
And with a noise like thunder:
And still the tempest with incessant roar,
Rushed o'er that furious sea, without a shore.

XXXIX.

A moment since,—two hundred beings stood
Above that dark enfuriated flood;
And now,—alas! for their ill-fated destiny
They sink, to prove the dread profundity
Of that inhospitable sea,
And all, alas! are gone:—
But what is that dark object? See
How the black waters with fell swoop and swing
Break o'er it;—'tis a human being; one
Who struggles hard for life; 'tis he, 'tis he
The terrible Sea-King!
Fainting he clings to one detached mass
Of ice, that down the current strives to pass:
His chin already rests upon its brink,

94

But how can he ascend it? See they go
Riding to heaven upon the wave:—they sink
With one tremendous crash, into the gulph below!

XL.

The mass broke from him, and away it sped;
And now all helpless on the troubled sea
Ragnar looked round him; hope, alas! seemed fled,
And he prepared to meet his destiny.
It comes, it comes! for, towering to the sky,
And like a rolling mountain, proud and high,
The huge wave rushes o'er his head.
Oh! how shall he escape the waters? How
Shall his existence be continued now?
Far over him the swelling mountains rise,
And threat to deluge the impending skies;
Yet still determined not to yield his breath,
Nor unsubdued, resign himself to death;
Ragnar like one exhausted by his foes,
Struggling, and buoyant, to the surface rose.

95

XLI.

Now for a moment on the liquid plain,
The Sea-King wearied lay;
When near him in its rough uneven way,
A thundering mass of ice came on amain.
He darted at it;—and with eager speed
Seized it with hands whose frozen fingers bleed.
Now summoning every energy, he tries
To mount the slippery surface. The emprize
Is one of life or death;—he mounts it or he dies.
The strife was fearful, but the man was brave,
And unsubdued in soul by wind or wave.
He gains the surface with his vent'rous knee
And baffles for a time, the raging sea.

XLII.

Proudly the Sea-King gazed around.—
Oh! thus to be alone on such a night;
No land, no country near,
No friend the troubled soul to cheer,
No feeling, sight, or sound

96

Save what was mingled with the dread profound,
No comfort but a tear!
A tear,—a tear?—but no!
A tear was never shed
By that dread man, he may not show
His weakness thus; nor weep for woe,
Or aught beside, save for the dead!
The dead may justly claim the tear,
From those who never knew a fear.

XLIII.

It is a saddening thought
That now his bosom rends.—
Those faithful men whom he had brought
Far from their country and their friends,
Had fallen and perished, one and all,
And not as warriors love to fall!
'Midst scenes of terror and of strife,
'Tis bliss to yield up breath and life.
Thus had they fall'n their streaming blood
Had proved their courage tried;

97

But, swallowed by th' insatiate flood
Like children they had died;
And oh! he felt their shame to rest
Like a dead weight, within his breast.

XLIV.

Just then behind a cloud,
Like a pale spectre in its shroud,
The trembling moonbeams fell upon the raging sea.
It was a dreadful sight
That burst upon the Sea-King's view;
The pale and glimmering light
Just served to show the horrors of the night.
Above him hung a threatening canopy,
But down below,
More dark, more fearful, than the sky,
And full of woe,
Roared the terrific sea.
He gazed around,—and on his sight
Broke a chaotic world of leaping mountains,
That, liquid, sparkled in the light

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Like sunnier fountains.
See how he starts;—oh! sight of bliss,
Another being dwells on the abyss!

XLV.

But he who broke upon the Sea-King's view,
Alas! was not of his ill-fated crew.
See through the air how gloriously he rides,
And in his pride the tossing sea derides.
Now up to heaven upon the waves he flies,
And hides his person in the veiling skies.
Then downward glides
And in the ocean's bosom hides,—
That seems to shroud him in his grave;
Thus now above, and now below,
He ever tosses to and fro,
And dances on the wave:
Approaching nearer, and more near;—
It was a wondrous sight
To see him thus ascend the air;
His silvery hair

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Wandering upon the winds of night.
More wondrous still, a sight of fear,
That old man held a lamp, whose lurid glare
Was that ill-omened light
That hung above the ship in its despair!

XLVI.

That red light glared upon the flood
That boiled below,
With a lurid glow
Like a convulsing sea of blood.
And then a muttering sound
Burst o'er the dread profound,
Deep as a voice sent from an ancient sepulchre.
“Frail man what dost thou here?”
Broke on the Sea-King's ear.
And over head he saw the lambent flame
Dart here and there
Its lurid glare;—
And in a tone of mockery,
A voice that issued from the sea

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Three times pronounced his name:
And something whispered in his ear
These words again “frail man what dost thou here?”

XLVII.

The Sea-King feared not death;
And he was bold and brave;
And yet he held his very breath
To gaze at him who wandered on the wave.
And in a tone far more imperious than before,
A tone of dread and fear,
That voice demanded “man what dost thou here?
“What brought me here shall ever rest
A secret locked within my breast,”
The brave Sea-King replied:
“But if my melancholy tale
May, man of wonder, aught avail,—
I will relate to thee my woe,
Provided thou wilt show
On what dread sea I sail.”
“Granted!” a thrilling voice replied,

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That seemed to thunder at his side.

XLVIII.

“Short is my tale, not so my list of woes”
Ragnar began;
“I who ne'er shrank before my foes
Or mortal man,
Have had a feeling in my bosom here,
Too much like that which men call fear.
Tis hard to war against the skies,
And have the waves for enemies,
Yet such has been my lot;—
My business led to the Norwegian coast,
Think not that I forgot
(I say it not in boast,)
To move the Gods who govern sea and air,
By gifts and sacrifice and prayer:
That they propitious, would my voyage bless
And grant me what I sought,—success.

XLIX.

“I thought the Gods had surely heard my prayer,

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For aye the treacherous winds blew fair,
Until the long desired land
Burst full upon our view;—
Its frozen hills of snowy hue,
Its dark forbidding strand.
Just then there rose from out the seas,
Dark curling mists; that on the breeze
Surrounded us full fast;
Yet still we wandered o'er the sea,
And hoped to reach our destiny
Borne onward by the blast.—
Vain hope! for through the mists, the light
Like some half-spent, and flickering flame,
So faint, so dim, and glimmering came
We knew not day from night!
Yet on,—and on,—as if by some mysterious helmsman guided
Our vessel swiftly glided;—
And nights and days and weeks have past
Since we surveyed the North-Land last!

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L.

“So long had we been on the seas,
So long had bent beneath the breeze,
We might have travelled where the Gods had birth,
And spanned the seas that gird the solid earth.
When on a fatal day
The vapours cleared away,—
Once more we hailed the cheering light,
(Better have been involved in night!)
For to our half-extinguished sight
The black heavens told us of the tomb,
The raging waters spake our doom!

LI.

“We saw we were alone,
The habitable earth, far, far behind;—
The seamen with a sigh and groan
Themselves to fate resigned.
Soon rose the fierce expected blast,
And then the waves on high,
Bore us into the blackening sky;

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And swiftly whirling past
We saw huge icebergs on the waters cast
And heard them crashing nigh:
But dark as are the shadows of the tomb
The mists came on again, and wrapped us in their gloom.

LII.

“Three nights, three days we wandered on our way,
Still by the tempest tost;
Our helm and masts were rent away
We were already lost!
And now the evening of a fourth arrives,
And still our helpless vessel madly drives
Towards the bleaching North:—
The night set in with a roaring din
As though hell's fiends had issued forth;
A mass of ice came in the vessel's way,
And she at once a wreck, all shivered lay!
It was this thrice-accursed night,
My own brave followers sank below;
This night they bade farewell to light,

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To tread tonight, the path of woe!
Of friends, of hope, of every good bereft
I,—I alone, of all the crew am left.—
My tale is ended, and I wait to know
What, man of wonder, thou hast yet to show.”

LIII.

“Ragnar! and dost thou think” he said,
With a stern voice and full of dread;
“To hide aught from that searching eye
That reads thy future destiny?
And thinkest thou that aught can rest,
A secret locked within thy breast
That is not known to me?
Go where thou wilt, let any sky be o'er thee,
I tell thee King I have been there before thee.
Thy tongue needs not thy purpose tell,
For aye long since I knew full well
Why thus thou sought'st the sea!
And who I am thou soon shalt know,
And where thou art,—short time will show,

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For a brief space farewell!”
He said,—the leaping waves anon,
Lift high their foamy crests,—and he is gone.

LIV.

Just then the heavens seemed rent in twain,
And the moon shone clearly on the troubled main.
Ragnar had felt a strange unwonted motion,
No waves he had encountered, but seemed sliding
Upon the surface of a tranquil ocean,
And swiftly gliding.
But when the moonbeams issued forth,
To set himself at rest,
He gazed to the south and north,
He gazed to east and west.
A strange sight burst upon his view;—
“Is this a dream or is it true?”
The wondering Sea-King said;
The sky still held its threatening hue,
The unabated tempest blew,
And whistled overhead:

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Yet, swifter than the bolt of death,
So swift he scarce could draw his breath,—
Against the wind he seemed to pass
Upon a lake of liquid glass.

LV.

At distance still, like a vast watery wall,
The undulating waves still rise and fall:
Far as his eye can reach, the waters rise,
And leap into the lowering skies.
But when he looks around,
He views a black revolving lake,
On which no waters ever break
With their crashing, dinning sound.
Close to the waves (had they been land,
He might have leaped upon the strand,)
He flew, and flew full fast;
And when he stretched out his hand
It cut the whistling blast.
What was it that thus urged him on?
He knew not;—but all hope was gone!

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LVI.

Ragnar now saw that he was moving round,
For his back was towards the moon;
Then on his ear there broke full soon
A distant, rumbling sound.
Thrice round that lake as fleet as air he sped,
While the wild winds whistled past,
And the pale moon beamed far overhead,—
Upon the scene he cast
His firm unflinching eye;
But his great soul shrank in his haughty breast,
When he gazed on that unwonted scene,
And strange, and unknown fears opprest
His stubborn heart I ween.
He saw that he was whirling round and round
With dread rapidity;
Approaching fast the centre of that pitchy lake:—
And now a dire tremendous sound
Broke on his ear, and wholly drowned
The tempest of the distant sea.

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LVII.

That was a night of contrasts; in the sky
The moon hung out her lamp so fair;
But down below, the storm raged high,
And still the leaping waters fly
Far up into the air.
All round, the wild waves surge and swing,
And threaten from afar;
And wage a vain impotent war
Against the fierce Sea-King,
Encircled as he seems, within a charmed ring.
But round and round incessant still he flies,
And nearer to the dreadful centre hies.
Just then a fearful thought shot through his brain,
And in a tone of agony,
He said “it cannot,—cannot be,—
Yet to conceal the truth is vain;
I am not now impelled by wave or breeze,
Yet on I move with ease
Around this watery plain.
Alas! this is that place of dread,

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And I am doomed to freeze
Beneath the chambers of the seas,
And moulder with the dead.
So let it be;—I am prepared to die,
My friends have gone before, now follow I.”

LVIII.

So spake the dread Sea-King;—and now the sound
That long at distance seemed, broke on the sense
With such tremendous violence
That the swol'n nerves, with throb, and bound,
Proclaimed the power immense.
On,—on,—and ever on he flies,
And now he hangs right o'er the dread abyss,
Now dances on the verge
Of the dire precipice:
Still he preserves a stern unruffled brow,
Although in him hope has no being now.
Hope is a thing to laugh at there,
The Maël-Strom will admit, no feeling but despair.

LIX.

The Maël-Strom? aye the Maël-Strom,—'tis a name

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At which the stoutest heart, may shudder without shame.
Down the deep vortex now the Sea-King whirls
Beyond the reach of sight:
He looks into the yawning gulph below;—
And in that dread abyss of night
He spies the red and glaring light,
The harbinger of woe!
Guiding him onward in his dreadful flight.
But far above, those wheeling walls of water,
Down which he hurries to the hidden deep,
(Where haply his bare bones must sleep)
Like a small speck of sickly blue,
The overhanging sky
Breaks on his dizzy eye,—
Then vanishes from view.
And now enshrouded in the deepest night
Senseless he wheels his deadly flight,
His pulse beats not, nor gasps he now for breath,
As though already in the jaws of death,
Entranced he closes now his eyes,
Yet pauses not, but ever hies
A thousand fathoms down;—into the gulph he flies.