Hounds there were in Valinor | |
with silver collars. Hart and boar, | |
the fox and hare and nimble roe | |
there in the forests green did go. | |
Oromë was the lord divine | (5) |
of all those woods. The potent wine | |
went in his halls and hunting song. | |
The Elves anew have named him long | |
Tauron, the Vala whose horns did blow | |
over the mountains long ago; | (10) |
he who had hunted in the world | |
before the banners were unfurled | |
of Moon and Sun; and shod with gold | |
were his great horses. Hounds untold | |
baying in woods beyond the West | (15) |
of race immortal he possessed: | |
grey and limber, black and strong, | |
white with silken coats and long, | |
brown and brindled, swift and true | |
as arrow from a bow of yew; | (20) |
their voices like the deeptoned bells | |
that ring in Valmar's citadels, | |
their eyes like living jewels, their teeth | |
like ruel-bone. As sword from sheath | |
they flashed and fled from leash to scent | (25) |
for Tauron's joy and merriment. | |
In Tauron's friths and pastures green | |
had Huan once a young whelp been. | |
He grew the swiftest of the swift, | |
and Oromë gave him as a gift | (30) |
to Celegorm, who loved to follow | |
the Vala's horn o'er hill and hollow. | |
Alone of hounds of the Land of Light | |
when sons of Fëanor took flight | |
and came into the North, he stayed | (35) |
beside his master. Every raid | |
and every foray wild he shared, | |
and into mortal battle dared. | |
Often he saved his Elvish lord | |
from Orc and wolf and leaping sword. | (40) |
A wolf-hound, tireless, grey and fierce | |
he grew; his gleaming eyes would pierce | |
all shadows and all mist, the scent | |
moons old he found through fen and bent, | |
through rustling leaves and dusty sand; | (45) |
all paths of wide Beleriand | |
he knew. But wolves, he loved them best; | |
he loved to find their throats and wrest | |
their snarling lives and evil breath. | |
Sauron's packs him feared as Death. | (50) |
No wizardry, nor spell, nor dart, | |
no fang, nor venom devil's art | |
could brew had harmed him; for his weird | |
was woven. Yet he little feared | |
that fate decreed and known to all: | (55) |
before the mightiest he should fall, | |
before the mightiest wolf alone | |
that ever was whelped in cave of stone; | |
that thrice with words would he then speak | |
ere his doom and death in future seek. | (60) |
Hark! Afar in Nargothrond, | |
far over Sirion and beyond, | |
there are dim cries and horns blowing, | |
and barking hounds through the trees going. | |
The hunt is up, the woods are stirred. | (65) |
Who rides to-day? Ye have not heard | |
that Celegorm and Curufin | |
have loosed their dogs? With merry din | |
they mounted ere the sun arose, | |
and took their spears and took their bows. | (70) |
The wolves of Sauron late have dared | |
both far and wide. Their eyes have glared | |
by night across the roaring stream | |
of Narog. Doth their master dream, | |
perchance, of plots and counsels deep, | (75) |
of secrets that the Elf-lords keep, | |
of movements in the Elvish realm | |
and errands under beech and elm? | |
Curufin spake: 'Good brother mine, | |
I like it not. What dark design | (80) |
doth this portend? These evil things, | |
we swift must end their wanderings! | |
And more, 'twould please my heart full well | |
to hunt a while and wolves to fell.' | |
And then he leaned and whispered low | (85) |
that Orodreth was a dullard slow; | |
long time it was since the king had gone, | |
and rumour or tidings came there none. | |
'At least thy profit it would be | |
to know whether dead he is or free; | (90) |
to gather thy men and thy array. | |
"I go to hunt" then thou wilt say, | |
and men will think that Narog's good | |
ever thou heedest. But in the wood | |
things may be learned; and if by grace, | (95) |
by some blind fortune he retrace | |
his footsteps mad, and if he bear | |
a Silmaril - I need declare | |
no more in words; but one by right | |
is thine (and ours), the jewel of light; | (100) |
another may be won - a throne. | |
The eldest blood our house doth own.' | |
Celegorm listened. Nought he said, | |
but forth a mighty host he led; | |
and Huan leaped at the glad sounds, | (105) |
the chief and captain of his hounds. | |
Three days they ride by holt and hill | |
and wolves of Sauron hunt and kill, | |
and many a head and fell of grey | |
they take, and many drive away, | (110) |
'till nigh to the borders in the West | |
of Doriath a while they rest. | |
There were dim cries and horns blowing, | |
and barking dogs through the woods going. | |
The hunt was up. The woods were stirred, | (115) |
and one there fled like startled bird, | |
and fear was in her dancing feet. | |
She knew not who the woods did beat. | |
Far from her home, forwandered, pale, | |
she flitted ghostlike through the vale; | (120) |
ever her heart bade her up and on, | |
but her limbs were worn, her eyes were wan. | |
The eyes of Huan saw a shade | |
wavering, darting down a glade | |
like a mist of evening snared by day | (125) |
and hasting fearfully away. | |
He bayed, and sprang with sinewy limb | |
to chase the shy thing strange and dim. | |
On terror's wings, like a butterfly | |
pursued by a sweeping bird on high, | (130) |
she fluttered hither, darted there, | |
now poised, now flying through the air - | |
in vain. At last against a tree | |
she leaned and panted. Up leaped he. | |
No word enchanted gasped with woe, | (135) |
no elvish charm that she did know | |
or had entwined in raiment dark | |
availed against that hunter stark, | |
whose old immortal race and kind | |
no spells could ever turn or bind. | (140) |
Huan alone that she ever met | |
she never in enchantment set | |
nor bound with spells. But loveliness | |
and gentle speech and pale distress | |
and eyes like starlight dimmed with tears | (145) |
tamed him that death nor monster fears. | |
Lightly he lifted her, light he bore | |
his trembling burden. Never before | |
had Celegorm beheld such prey: | |
'What hast thou brought, good Huan, say! | (150) |
Dark-elvish maid, or wraith, or fay? | |
Not such to hunt we came today.' | |
''Tis Lúthien of Doriath,' | |
the maiden spake. 'A wandering path | |
far from the Wood-Elves' sunny glades | (155) |
she sadly winds, where courage fades | |
and hope grows faint.' And as she spoke | |
cast she aside her shadowy cloak, | |
and there she stood in silver and white. | |
Her starry jewels twinkled bright | (160) |
in the risen sun like morning dew; | |
the lilies gold on mantle blue | |
gleamed and glistened. Who could gaze | |
on that fair face without amaze? | |
Long did Celegorm look and stare. | (165) |
The perfume of her flower-twined hair, | |
her lissom limbs, her elvish face, | |
smote to his heart, and in that place | |
enchained he stood. 'Oh maiden royal, | |
Oh lady fair, wherefore in toil | (170) |
and lonely journey dost thou go? | |
What tidings dread of war and woe | |
in Doriath have betid? Come, tell, | |
for fortune thee hath guided well; | |
friends thou hast found,' said Celegorm, | (175) |
and gazed upon her elvish form. | |
In his heart him thought her tale unsaid | |
he knew in part, but nought she read | |
of guile upon his smiling face. | |
'Who are ye then, the lordly chase | (180) |
that follow in this perilous wood?' | |
she asked; and answer seeming-good | |
they gave. 'Thy servants, lady sweet, | |
lords of Nargothrond thee greet, | |
and beg that thou wouldst with them go | (185) |
back to their hills, forgetting woe | |
a season, seeking hope and rest. | |
And now to hear thy tale were best.' | |
So Lúthien tells of Beren's deeds | |
in northern lands, how fate him leads | (190) |
to Doriath, of Thingol's ire, | |
the dreadful errand that her sire | |
decreed for Beren. Sign nor word | |
the brothers gave that aught they heard | |
that touched them near. Of her escape | (195) |
and the marvellous mantle she did shape | |
she lightly tells, but words her fail | |
recalling sunlight in the vale, | |
moonlight, starlight in Doriath, | |
ere Beren took the perilous path. | (200) |
'Need, too, my lords, there is of haste! | |
No time in ease and rest to waste. | |
For days are gone now since the queen, | |
Melian, whose heart hath vision keen, | |
looking afar me said in fear | (205) |
that Beren lived in bondage drear. | |
The Lord of Wolves hath prisons dark, | |
chains and enchantments cruel and stark, | |
and there entrapped and languishing | |
doth Beren lie - if direr thing | (210) |
hath not brought death or wish for death': | |
than gasping woe bereft her breath. | |
To Celegorm said Curufin | |
apart and low: 'Now news we win | |
of Felagund, and now we know | (215) |
why Sauron's creatures prowling go,' | |
and other whispered counsels spake, | |
and showed him what answer he should make. | |
'Lady,' said Celegorm, 'thou seest | |
we go a-hunting roaming beast, | (220) |
and though our host is great and bold, | |
'tis ill prepared the wizard's hold | |
and island fortress to assault. | |
Deem not our hearts or wills at fault. | |
Lo, here our chase we now forsake | (225) |
and home our swiftest road we take, | |
counsel and aid there to devise | |
for Bern that in anguish lies.' | |
To Nargothrond they with them bore | |
Lúthien, whose heart misgave her sore. | (230) |
Delay she feared; each moment pressed | |
upon her spirit, yet she guessed | |
they rode not as swiftly as they might. | |
Ahead leaped Huan day and night, | |
and ever looking back his thought | (235) |
was troubled. What his master sought, | |
and why he rode not like the fire, | |
why he looked with hot desire | |
on Lúthien, he pondered deep, | |
and felt some evil shadow creep | (240) |
of ancient curse o'er Elvenesse. | |
His heart was torn for the distress | |
of Beren bold, and Lúthien dear, | |
and Felagund who knew no fear. | |
In Nargothrond the torches flared | (245) |
and feast and music were prepared. | |
Lúthien feasted not, but wept. | |
Her ways were trammelled; closely kept | |
she might not fly. Her enchanted cloak | |
was hidden, and no prayer she spoke | (250) |
was heeded, nor did answer find | |
her eager questions. Out of mind, | |
it seemed, were those afar that pined | |
in anguish and in dungeons blind | |
in prison and in misery. | (255) |
Too late she knew their treachery. | |
It was not hid in Nargothrond | |
that Fëanor's sons her held in bond; | |
they did not Beren think upon | |
nor had cause to wrest from Sauron | (260) |
the king they loved not and whose quest | |
old vows of hatred in their breast | |
had roused from sleep. Orodreth knew | |
ther purpose dark they would pursue: | |
King Felagund to leave to die, | (265) |
and with King Thingol's blood ally | |
the house of Fëanor by force | |
of treaty. But to stay their course | |
he had no power, for all his folk | |
the brothers had yet beneath their yoke, | (270) |
and all yet listened to their word. | |
Orodreth's counsel no man heard; | |
their shame they crushed, and would not heed | |
the tale of Felagund's dire need. | |
At Lúthien's feet there day by day | (275) |
and at night beside her couch would stay | |
Huan the hound of Nargothrond; | |
and words she spoke to him soft and fond: | |
'Oh, Huan, Huan, swiftest hound | |
that ever ran on mortal ground, | (280) |
what evil doth thy lords possess | |
to heed no tears nor my distress? | |
Once Barahir all men above | |
good hounds did cherish and did love; | |
once Beren in the friendless North | (285) |
when outlaw wild he wandered forth, | |
had friends unfailing among things | |
with fur and fell and feathered wings, | |
and among the spirits that in stone | |
in mountains old and wastes alone | (290) |
still dwell. But now not Elf nor Man, | |
none save the child of Melian, | |
remembers him who Morgoth fought | |
and never to thraldom base was brought.' | |
Nought said Huan; but Celegorm and kin | (295) |
thereafter never near could win | |
to Lúthien, nor touch that maid, | |
but shrank from Huan's fangs afraid. | |
Then on a night when autumn damp | |
was swathed about the glimmering lamp | (300) |
of the wan moon, and fitful stars | |
were flying seen between the bars | |
of racing cloud, when winter's horn | |
already wound in trees forlorn, | |
lo, Huan was gone. Then Lúthien lay | (305) |
fearing new wrong, 'till, just ere day | |
when all is dead and breathless still | |
and shapeless fears the sleepless fill, | |
a shadow came along the wall. | |
Then something let there softly fall | (310) |
her enchanted cloak beside her couch. | |
Trembling she saw the great hound crouch | |
beside her, heard a deep voice swell | |
as from a tower a far slow bell. | |
Thus Huan spake, who never before | (315) |
had uttered words, and but twice more | |
did speak in elven tongue again: | |
'Lady beloved, whom all Men, | |
whom Elvenesse, and whom all things | |
with fur and fell and feathered wings | (320) |
should serve and love - arise! Away! | |
Put on thy cloak! Before the day | |
comes over Nargothrond we fly | |
to Northern perils, thou and I.' | |
And ere he ceased he counsel wrought | (325) |
for achievement of the thing they sought. | |
There Lúthien listened in amaze, | |
and softly on Huan did she gaze. | |
Her arms about his neck she cast - | |
in friendship that to dath should last. | (330) |