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J R R Tolkien - The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 1, 2. J R R Tolkien - The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 1, 2.
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A King there was in days of old: ere men yet walked upon the mould his power was reared in cavern`s shade, his hand was over glen and glade. His shields were shining as the moon, his lances keen of steel were hewn, of silver grey his crown was wrought, the starlight in his banners caught ; and silver thrilled his trumpets long beneath the star in challenge strong; enchantment did his realm enfold, where might and glory, wealth untold, he wielded from his ivory throne in many pillared halls of stone. There beryl, pearl and opal pale, and metal wrought like fishes` mail, buckler and corslet, axe and sword, and gleaming spears were laid in hoard-- all these he had and loved them less than a maiden once in Elfinesse; for fairer than are born to Men a daughter had he, Lúthien. Such lissom limbs no more shall run on the green earth beneath the sun; so fair a maid no more shall be from down to dusk, from sun to sea. Her robe was blue as summer skies, but grey as evening were her eyes; `twas sewn with golden lilies fair, but dark as shadows was her hair. Her feet were light as bird on wing, her laughter lighter than the spring; the slender willow, the bowing reed, the fragance of a flowering mead, the light upon the leaves of trees, the voice of water more than these her beauty was and blissfulness, her glory and her loveliness; and her the king more dear did prize than hand or heart or light of eyes. They dwelt amid Beleriand, while Elfin power yet held the land, in the woven woods of Doriath: few ever thither found the path; few ever dared the forest-eaves to pass, or stir the listening leaves with tongue of hounds a-hunting fleet, with horse, or horn, or mortal feet. To North there lay the Land of Dread, whence only evil pathways led o`er hills of shadow bleak and cold or Taur-na-Fuin`s haunted hold, where Deadly Nightshade lurked and lay and never came or moon or day; to South the wide earth unexplored; to West the ancient Ocean roared, unsailed and shoreless, wide and wild; to East in peaks of blue were piled in silence folded, mist-enfurled, the mountains of the Outer World, beyond the tangled woodland shade, thorn and thicket, grove and glade, whose brooding boughs with magic hung were ancient when the world was young. There Thingol in the Thousand Caves, whose portals pale that river laves Esgalduin that fairies call, in many a tall and torchlit hall a dark and hidden king did dwell, lord of the forest and the fell; and sharp his sword and high his helm, the king of beech and oak and elm. There Lúthien the lissom maid would dance in dell and grassy glade, and music merrily, thin and clear, went down the ways, more fair than ear of mortal Men at feast hath heard, and fairer than the song of bird. When leaves were long and grass was green then Dairon with his fingers lean, as daylight melted into shade, a wandering music sweetly made, enchanted fluting, warbling wild, for love of Thingol`s elfin child. There bow was bent and shaft was sped, the fallow deer as phantoms fled, and horses proud with braided mane, with shining bit and silver rein, went fleeting by on moonlit night, as swallows arrow-swift in flight; a blowing and a sound of bells, a hidden hunt in hollow dells. There songs were made and things of gold, and silver cups and jewels untold, and the endless years of Faëry land rolled over far Beleriand, until a day beneath the sun, when many marvels were begun. Canto II. Far in the North neath hills of stone in caverns black there was a throne by fires illumined underground, that winds of ice with moaning sound made flare and flicker in dark smoke; the wavering bitter coils did choke the sunless airs of dungeons deep where evil things did crouch and creep. There sat a king: no Elfin race nor mortal blood, nor kindly grce of earth or heaven might he own, far older, stronger than the stone the world is built of, than the fire that burns within more fierce and dire; and thoughts profound were in his heart: a gloomy power that dwelt apart. Unconquerable spears of steel were at his nod.  No ruth did feel the legions of his marshalled hate, on whom did wolf and raven wait; and black the ravens sat and cried upon their banners black, and wide was heard their hideous chanting dread above the reek and trampled dead. With fire and sword his ruin red on all that would not bow the head like lightning fell.  The Northern land lay groaning neath his ghastly hand. But still there lived in hiding cold undaunted, Barahir the bold, of land bereaved, of lordship shorn, who once a prince of Men was born and now an outlaw lurked and lay in the hard heath and woodland grey, and with him clung of faithful men but Beren his son and other ten. Yet small as was their hunted band still fell and fearless was each hand, and strong deeds they wrought yet oft, and loved the woods, whose ways more soft them seemed than thralls of that black throne to live and languish in halls of stone. King Morgoth still pursued them sore with men and dogs, and wolf and boar with spells of madness filled he sent to slay them as in the woods they went; yet nought hurt them for many years, until, in brief to tell what tears have oft bewailed in ages gone, a deed unhappy; unaware their feet were caught in Morgoth`s snare. Gorlim it was, who wearying of toil and flight and harrying, one night by chance did turn his feet o`er the dark fields by stealth to meet with hidden friend within a dale, and found a homestead looming pale against the misty stars, all dark save one small window, whence a spark of fitful candle strayed without. Therein he peeped, and filled with dount he saw, as in a dreaming deep when longing cheats the heart in sleep, his wife beside a dying fire lament him lost; her thin attire and greying hair and paling cheek of tears and loneliness did speak. `A! fair and gentle Eilinel, whom I had thought in darkling hell long since emprisoned! Ere I fled I deemed I saw thee slain and dead upon that night of sudden fear when all I lost that I held dear`: thus thought his heavy heart amazed outside in darkness as he gazed. But ere he dared to call her name, or ask how she escaped and came to this far cale beneath the hills, he heard a cry beneath the hills! There hooted near a hunting owl with boding voice. He heard the howl of the wild wolves that followed him and dogged his feet through shadows dim. Him unrelenting, well he knew, the hunt of Morgoth did pursue. Lest Eilinel with him they slay without a word he turned away, and like a wild thing winding led his devious ways o`er stony bed of stream, and over quaking fen, until far from the homes of men he lay beside his fellows few in a secret place; and darkness grew, and waned, and still he watched unsleeping, and saw the dismal dawn come creeping in dank heavens above gloomy trees. A sickness held his soul for ease, and hope, and even thraldom`s chain if he might find his wife again. But all he thought twixt love of lord and hatred of the king abhorred and anguish for fair Eilinel who drooped alone, what tale shall tell? Yet at the last, when many days of brooding did his mind amaze, he found the servants of the king, and bade them to their master bring a rebel who forgiveness sought, if haply forgiveness might be bought with tidings of Barahir the bold, and where his hidings and his hold might best be found by night or day. And thus sad Gorlim, led away unto those dark deep-dolven halls, before the knees of Morgoth falls, and puts his trust in that cruel heart wherein no truth had ever part. Quoth Morgoth: `Eilinel the fair thou shalt most surely find, and there where she doth dwell and wait for thee together shall ye ever be, and sundered shall ye sigh no more. This guerdon shall he have that bore these tidings sweet, O traitor dear! For Eilinel she dwells not here, but in the shades of death doth roam widowed of husband and of home -- a wraith of that which might have been, methinks, it is that thou hast seen! Now shalt thou through the gates of pain the land thou askest grimly gain; thou shalt to the moonless mists of hell descend and seek thy Eilinel.` Thus Gorlim died a bitter death and cursed himself with dying breath, and Barahir was caught and slain, and all good deeds were made in vain. But Morgoth`s guile for ever failed, nor wholly o`er his foes prevailed, and some were ever that still fought unmaking that which malice wrought. Thus men believed that Morgoth made the fiendish phantom that betrayed the soul of Gorlim, and so brought the lingering hope forlorn to nought that lived amid the lonely wood; yet Beren had by fortune good long hunted far afield that day, and benighted in strange places lay far from his fellows. In his sleep he felt a dreadful darkness creep upon his heart, and thought the trees were bare and bent in mournful breeze; no leaves they had, but ravens dark sat thick as leaves on bough and bark, and croaked, and as they croaked each neb let fall a gout of blood; a web unseen entwined him hand and limb, until worn out, upon the rim of stagnant pool he lay and shivered. There saw he that a shadow quivered far out upon the water wan, and grew to a faint form thereon that glided o`er the silent lake, and coming slowly, softly spake and sadly said: `Lo! Gorlim here, traitor betrayed, now stands! Nor fear, but haste! For Morgoth`s fingers close upon thy father`s throat.  He knows your secret tryst, your hidden lair`, and all the evil he laid bare that he had done and Morgoth wrought. Then Beren waking swiftly sought his sword and bow, and sped like wind that cuts with knives the branches thinned of autumn trees.  At last he came, his heart afire with burning flame, where Barahir his father lay; he came too late.  At dawn of day he found the homes of hunted men, a wooded island in the fen, and birds rose up in sudden cloud -- no fen-fowl were they crying loud. The raven and the carrion-crow sat in the alders all a-row; one croaked: `Ha! Beren comes too late`, and answered all: `Too late! Too late!` There Beren buried his father`s bones, and piled a heap of boulder-stones, and cursed the name of Morgoth thrice, but wept not, for his heart was ice. Then over fen and field and mountain he followed, till beside a fountain upgushing hot from fires below he found the slayers and his foe, the murderous soldiers of the king. And one there laughed, and showed a ring he took from Barahir`s dead hand. `This ring in far Beleriand, now mark ye, mates,` he said, `was wrought. Its like with gold could not be bought, for this same Berahir I slew, this robber fool, they say, did do a deed of service long ago for Felagund.  It may be so; for Morgoth bade me bring it back, and yet, methinks, he has no lack of weightier treasure in his hoard. Such green befits not such a lord, and I am minded to declare the hand of Barahir was bare!` Yet as he spake an arrow sped; with riven heart he crumpled dead. Thus Morgoth loved that his own foe should in his service deal the blow that punished the breaking of his word. But Morgoth laughed not when he heard that Beren like a wolf alone sprang madly from behind a stone amid that camp beside the well, and seized the ring, and ere the yell of wrath and rage had left their throat had fled his foes.  His gleaming coat was made of rings of steel no shaft could pierce, a web of dwarvish craft; and he was lost in rock and thorn, for in charméd hour was Beren born; their hungry hunting never learned the way his fearless feet had turned. As fearless Beren was renowned, as man most hardy upon ground, while Barahir yet lived and fought; but sorrow now his soul had wrought to dark despair, and robbed his life of sweetness, that he longed for knife, of shaft, or sword, to end his pain, and dreaded only thraldom`s chain. Danger he sought and death pursued, and thus escaped the fate he wooed, and deeds of breathless wonder dared whose whispered glory widely fared, and softly songs were sung at eve of marvels he did once achieve alone, beleaguered, lost at night by mist or moon, or neath the light of the broad eye of day.  The woods that northward looked with bitter feuds he filled and death for Morgoth`s folk; his comrades were the beech and oak, who failed him not, and many things with fur and fell and feathered wings; and many spirits, that in stone in mountains old and wastes alone, do dwell and wander, were his friends. Yet seldom well an outlaw ends, and Morgoth was a king more strong than all the world has since in song recorded, and his wisdom wide slow and surely who him defied did hem and hedge. Thus at the last must Beren flee the forest fast and lands he loved where lay his sire by reeds bewailed beneath the mire. Beneath a heap of mossy stones now crumble those once mighty bones, but Beren flees the friendless North one autumn night, and creeps him forth; the leaguer of his watchful foes he passed -- silently he goes. No more his hidden bowstring sings, no more his shaven arrow wings, no more his hunted head doth lie upon the heath beneath the sky. The moon that looked amid the mist upon the pines, the wind that hissed among the heather and the fern found him no more.  The stars that burn about the North with silver fire in frosty airs, the Burning Briar that Men did name in days long gone, were set behind his back, and shone o`er land and lake and darkened hill, forsaken fen and mountain rill. His face was South from the Land of Dread, whence only evil pathways led, and only feet of men most bold might cross the Shadowy Mountains cold. Their northern slopes were filled with woe, with evil and with mortal foe; their southern faces mounted sheer in rocky pinnacle and pier, whose roots were woven with deceit and washed with waters bitter-sweet. There magic lurked in gulf and glen, for far away beyond the ken of searching eyes, unless it were from dizzy tower that pricked the air where only eagles lived and cried, might grey and gleaming be descried Beleriand, Beleriand, the borders of the faëry land.
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