| So days drew on from that mournful day; |
|
| the curse of silence no more lay |
|
| on Doriath, though Daeron's flute |
|
| and Lúthien's singing both were mute. |
|
| The murmurs soft awake once more | (5) |
| about the woods, the waters roar |
|
| past the great gates of Thingol's halls; |
|
| but no dancing step of Lúthien falls |
|
| on turf or leaf. For she forlorn, |
|
| where stumbled once, where bruised and torn | (10) |
| with longing on him like a dream, |
|
| had Beren sat by the shrouded stream, |
|
| Esgalduin the dark and strong, |
|
| she sat and mourned in a low song: |
|
| 'Endless roll the waters past; | (15) |
| to this my love hath come at last, |
|
| enchanted waters pitiless, |
|
| a heartache and a loneliness.' |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| The summer turns. In branches tall |
|
| she hears the pattering raindrops fall, | (20) |
| the windy tide in leafy seas, |
|
| the creaking of the countless trees; |
|
| and longs unceasing and in vain |
|
| to hear one calling once again |
|
| the tender name that nightingales | (25) |
| were called of old. Echo fails. |
|
| 'Tinúviel! Tinúviel!' |
|
| the memory is like a knell, |
|
| a faint and far-off tolling bell: |
|
| 'Tinúviel! Tinúviel!' | (30) |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| 'Oh mother Melian, tell to me |
|
| some part of what thy dark eyes see. |
|
| Tell of thy vision where his feet |
|
| are wandering, what foes him meet. |
|
| Oh mother, tell me, lives he still | (35) |
| treading the desert and the hill? |
|
| Do sun and moon above him shine, |
|
| do the rains fall on him, mother mine?' |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| 'Nay, Lúthien my child, I fear |
|
| he lives indeed in bondage drear. | (40) |
| The Lord of Wolves hath prisons dark, |
|
| chains and enchantments cruel and stark; |
|
| there trapped and bound and languishing |
|
| now Beren dreams that thou dost sing.' |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| 'Then I alone must go to him | (45) |
| and dare the dread in dungeons dim; |
|
| for none there be that will him aid |
|
| in all the world, save elven-maid |
|
| whose only skill were joy and song, |
|
| and both have failed and left her long.' | (50) |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| Then nought said Melian thereto, |
|
| though wild the words. She wept anew, |
|
| and ran through the woods like hunted deer |
|
| with her hair streaming and eyes of fear. |
|
| Daeron she found with ferny crown | (55) |
| silently sitting on beech-leaves brown. |
|
| On the earth she cast her at his side. |
|
| 'Oh, Daeron, Daeron, my tears,' she cried, |
|
| 'now pity for our old days' sake! |
|
| Make me a music for heart's ache, | (60) |
| for heart's despair, and for heart's dread, |
|
| for light gone dark and laughter dead!' |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| 'But for music dead there is no note,' |
|
| Daeron answered, and at his throat |
|
| his fingers clutched. Yet his pipe he took, | (65) |
| and sadly trembling the music shook; |
|
| and all things stayed while that piping went |
|
| wailing in the hollows, and there intent |
|
| they listened, their business and their mirth, |
|
| their hearts' gladness and the light of earth | (70) |
| forgotten; and bird-voices failed |
|
| while Daeron's flute in Doriath wailed. |
|
| Lúthien wept not for very pain, |
|
| and when he ceased she spoke again: |
|
| 'My friend, I have a need of friends, | (75) |
| as he who a long dark journey wends, |
|
| and fears the road, yet dares not turn |
|
| and look back where the candles burn |
|
| in windows he has left. The night |
|
| in front, he doubts to find the light | (80) |
| that far beyond the hills he seeks.' |
|
| And thus of Melian's words she speaks, |
|
| and of her doom and her desire |
|
| to climb the mountains, and the fire |
|
| and ruin of the Northern realm | (85) |
| to dare, a maiden without helm |
|
| or sword, or strength of hardy limb, |
|
| where enchantments founder and grow dim. |
|
| His aid she sought to guide her forth |
|
| and find the pathways to the North, | (90) |
| if he would not for love of her |
|
| go by her side, a wanderer. |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| 'Wherefore,' said he, 'should Daeron go |
|
| into direst peril earth doth know |
|
| for the sake of mortal who did steal | (95) |
| his laughter and joy? No love I feel |
|
| for Beren son of Barahir, |
|
| not weep for him in dungeons drear, |
|
| who in this wood have chains enow, |
|
| heavy and dark. But thee, I vow, | (100) |
| I will defend from perils fell |
|
| and deadly wandering into hell.' |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| No more they spake that day, and she |
|
| perceived not his meaning. Sorrowfully |
|
| she thanked him, and she left him there. | (105) |
| A tree she climbed, 'till the bright air |
|
| above the woods her dark hear blew, |
|
| and straining afar her eyes could view |
|
| the outline grey and faint and low |
|
| of dizzy towers where the clouds go, | (110) |
| the southern faces mounting sheer |
|
| in rocky pinnacle and pier |
|
| of stony mountains pale and cold; |
|
| and wide the lands before them rolled. |
|
| But straightway Daeron sought the king | (115) |
| and told him his daughter's pondering, |
|
| and how her madness might her lead |
|
| to ruin, unless the king gave heed. |
|
| Thingol was wroth, and yet amazed; |
|
| in wonder and half fear he gazed | (120) |
| on Daeron, and said: 'True hast thou been. |
|
| Now ever shall love be us between, |
|
| while Doriath lasts; within this realm |
|
| thou art a prince of beech and elm!' |
|
| He sent for Lúthien, and said: | (125) |
| 'Oh maiden fair, what hath thee led |
|
| to ponder madness and despair |
|
| to wander to ruin, and to fare |
|
| from Doriath against my will, |
|
| stealing like a wild thing men would kill | (130) |
| into the emptiness outside?' |
|
| 'The wisdom, father,' she replied; |
|
| nor would she promise to forget, |
|
| nor would she vow for love or threat |
|
| her folly to forsake and meek | (135) |
| in Doriath her father's will to seek. |
|
| This only vowed she, if go she must, |
|
| that none but herself would she now trust, |
|
| no folk of her father's would persuade |
|
| to break his will or lend her aid; | (140) |
| if go she must, she would go alone |
|
| and friendless dare the walls of stone. |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| In angry love and half in fear |
|
| Thingol took counsel his most dear |
|
| to guard and keep. He would not bind | (145) |
| in caverns deep and intertwined |
|
| sweet Lúthien, his lovely maid, |
|
| who robbed of air must wane and fade, |
|
| who ever must look upon the sky |
|
| and see the sun and moon go by. | (150) |
| But close unto his mounded seat |
|
| and grassy throne there ran the feet |
|
| of Hírilorn, the beechen queen. |
|
| Upon her triple boles were seen |
|
| no break or branch, until aloft | (155) |
| in a green glimmer, distant, soft, |
|
| the mightiest vault of leaf and bough |
|
| form world's beginning until now |
|
| was flung above Esgalduin's shores |
|
| and the long slopes to Thingol's doors. | (160) |
| |
|
| |
|
| Grey was the rind of pillars tall |
|
| and silken-smooth, and far and small |
|
| to squirrels' eyes were those who went |
|
| at her grey feet upon the bent. |
|
| Now Thingol made men in the beech, | (165) |
| in that great tree, as far as reach |
|
| their longest ladders, there to build |
|
| an airy house; and as he willed |
|
| a little dwelling of fair wood |
|
| was made, and veiled in leaves it stood | (170) |
| above the first branches. Corners three |
|
| it had and windows faint to see, |
|
| and by three shafts of Hírilorn |
|
| in the corners standing was upborne. |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| There Lúthien was bidden dwell, | (175) |
| until she was wiser and the spell |
|
| of madness left her. Up she clomb |
|
| the long ladders to her new home |
|
| among the leaves, among the birds; |
|
| she sang no song, she spoke no words. | (180) |
| Faint glimmering in the tree she rose, |
|
| and her little door they heard her close. |
|
| The ladders were taken and no more |
|
| her feet might tread Esgalduin's shore. |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| Thither at whiles they climbed and brought | (185) |
| all things she needed or besought; |
|
| but death was his, whoso should dare |
|
| a ladder leave, or creeping there |
|
| should set one by the tree at night; |
|
| a guard was held from dusk to light | (190) |
| about the grey feet of Hírilorn |
|
| and Lúthien in prison and forlorn. |
|
| There Daeron grieving often stood |
|
| in sorrow for the captive of the wood, |
|
| and melodies made upon his flute | (195) |
| leaning against a grey tree-root. |
|
| Lúthien would from her windows stare |
|
| and see him far under piping there, |
|
| and she forgave his betraying word |
|
| for the music and the grief she heard, | (200) |
| and only Daeron would she let |
|
| across her threshold foot to set. |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| Yet long the hours when she must sit |
|
| and see the sunbeams dance and flit |
|
| in beechen leaves, or watch the stars | (205) |
| peep on clear nights between the bars |
|
| of beechen branches. And one night |
|
| just ere the changing of the light |
|
| a dream there came, from the Ainur, maybe, |
|
| or Melian's enchantments. She dreamed that she | (210) |
| heard Beren's voice o'er hill and fell |
|
| ''Tinúviel' call, ''Tinúviel.' |
|
| And her heart answered: 'Let me be gone |
|
| to seek him no others think upon!' |
|
| She woke and saw the moonlight pale | (215) |
| through the slim leaves. It trembled frail |
|
| upon her arms, as these she spread |
|
| and there in longing bowed her head, |
|
| and yearned for freedom and escape. |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| Now Lúthien doth her counsel shape; | (220) |
| and Melian's daughter of deep lore |
|
| knew many things, enchantments more |
|
| than then or now know elven-maids |
|
| that glint and shimmer in the glades. |
|
| She pondered long, while the moon sank | (225) |
| and faded, and the starlight shrank, |
|
| and the dawn opened. At last a smile |
|
| on her face flickered. She mused a while, |
|
| and watched the morning sunlight grow, |
|
| then called to those that walked below. | (230) |
| And when one climbed to her she prayed |
|
| that he would in the dark pools wade |
|
| of cold Esgalduin, water clear, |
|
| the clearest water cold and sheer |
|
| to draw for her. 'At middle night,' | (235) |
| she said, 'in bowl of silver white |
|
| it must be drawn and brought to me |
|
| with no word spoken, silently.' |
|
| Another she begged to bring her wine |
|
| in a jar of gold where flowers twine - | (240) |
| 'and singing let him come to me |
|
| at high noon, singing merrily.' |
|
| Again she spake: 'Now go, I pray, |
|
| to Melian the queen, and say: |
|
| "thy daughter many a weary hour | (245) |
| slow passing watches in her bower; |
|
| a spinning-wheel she begs thee send."' |
|
| Then Daeron she called: 'I prithee, friend, |
|
| climb up and talk to Lúthien!' |
|
| And sitting at her window then, | (250) |
| she said: 'My Daeron, thou hast craft, |
|
| beside thy music, many a shaft |
|
| and many a tool of carven wood |
|
| to fashion with cunning. It were good |
|
| if thou wouldst make a little loom | (255) |
| to stand in the corner of my room. |
|
| My idle fingers would spin and weave |
|
| a pattern of colours, of morn and eve, |
|
| of sun and moon and changing light |
|
| amid the beech-leaves waving bright.' | (260) |
| This Daeron did and asked her then: |
|
| 'Oh Lúthien, oh Lúthien, |
|
| what wilt thou weave? What wilt thou spin?' |
|
| 'A marvellous thread, and wind therein |
|
| a strong enchantment and a spell | (265) |
| I will weave within a web that hell |
|
| nor all the powers of Dread shall break.' |
|
| The Daeron wondered, but he spake |
|
| no word to Thingol, though his heart |
|
| feared the dark purpose of her art. | (270) |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| And Lúthien now was left alone. |
|
| A magic song to Men unknown |
|
| she sang, and singing then the wine |
|
| with water mingled three times nine; |
|
| and as in golden jar they lay | (275) |
| she sang a song of growth and day; |
|
| and as they lay in silver white |
|
| another song she sang, of night |
|
| and darkness without end, of height |
|
| uplifted to the stars, and flight | (280) |
| and freedom. And all names of things |
|
| tallest and longest on earth she sings: |
|
| the locks of the Longbeard dwarves; the tail |
|
| of Draugluin the werewolf pale; |
|
| the body of Glaurung the great snake; | (285) |
| the vast upsoaring peaks that quake |
|
| above the fires in Angband's gloom; |
|
| the chain Angainor, that ere Doom |
|
| of Bauglir had by Valar been wrought |
|
| of steel and torment. Names she sought, | (290) |
| and sang of Glend, the sword of Nan; |
|
| of Gilim, the giant of Eruman; |
|
| and last and longest named she then |
|
| the endless hair of Uinen, |
|
| the Lady of the Sea, that lies | (295) |
| through all the waters under skies. |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| Then did she lave her head and sing |
|
| a theme of sleep and slumbering, |
|
| profound and fathomless and stark |
|
| as Lúthien's shadowy hair was dark - | (300) |
| each thread was more slender and more fine |
|
| than threads of twilight that entwine |
|
| in filmy web the fading grass |
|
| and closing flowers as day doth pass. |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| Now long and longer grew her hair, | (305) |
| and fell to her feet, and wandered there |
|
| like pools of shadow on the ground. |
|
| Then Lúthien in a slumber drowned |
|
| was laid upon her bed and slept, |
|
| 'till morning through the windows crept | (310) |
| thinly and faint. And then she woke, |
|
| and the room was filled as with a smoke |
|
| and with an evening mist, and deep |
|
| she lay thereunder drowsed in sleep. |
|
| Behold, her hair from windows blew | (315) |
| in morning airs and darkly grew |
|
| waving about the pillars grey |
|
| of Hírilorn at break of day. |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| Then groping she found her little shears, |
|
| and cut the hair about her ears, | (320) |
| and close she cropped it to her head, |
|
| enchanted tresses, thread by thread. |
|
| Thereafter grew they slow once more, |
|
| yet darker than their wont before. |
|
| And now was her labour but begun: | (325) |
| long was she spinning, long she spun; |
|
| and though with elvish skill she wrought, |
|
| long was her weaving. If men sought |
|
| to call her, crying from below, |
|
| 'Nothing I need,' she answered, 'Go! | (330) |
| I would keep my bed, and only sleep |
|
| I now desire, who waking weep.' |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| Then Daeron feared, and in amaze |
|
| he called from under; but three days |
|
| she answered not. Of cloudy hair | (335) |
| she wove a web like misty air |
|
| of moonless night, and thereof made |
|
| a robe as fluttering-dark as shade |
|
| beneath great trees, an enchanted dress |
|
| that all was drenched with drowsiness. | (340) |
| Imbued it was with mightier spell |
|
| than Melian's raiment in that dell |
|
| wherein of yore did Thingol roam |
|
| beneath the dark and starry dome |
|
| that hung above the dawning world. | (345) |
| And now this robe she round her furled, |
|
| and veiled her garments shimmering white; |
|
| her mantle blue with jewels bright |
|
| like crystal stars, the lilies gold, |
|
| were wrapped and hid; and down there rolled | (350) |
| dim dreams and faint oblivious sleep |
|
| falling about her, to softly creep |
|
| through all the air. Then swift she takes |
|
| the threads unused; of these she makes |
|
| a slender rope of twisted strands | (355) |
| yet long and stout, and with her hands |
|
| she makes it fast unto the shaft |
|
| of Hírilorn. Now, all her craft |
|
| and labour ended, looks she forth |
|
| from her little window facing North. | (360) |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| Already the sunlight in the trees |
|
| is drooping red, and dusk she sees |
|
| come softly along the ground below, |
|
| and now she murmurs soft and slow. |
|
| Now chanting clearer down she cast | (365) |
| her long hair, 'till it reached at last |
|
| from her window to the darkling ground. |
|
| Men far beneath her heard the sound; |
|
| but the slumbrous strand now swung and swayed |
|
| above her guards. Their talking stayed, | (370) |
| they listened to her voice and fell |
|
| suddenly beneath a binding spell. |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| Now clad as in a cloud she hung; |
|
| now down her ropéd hair she swung |
|
| as light as squirrel, and away, | (375) |
| away she danced, and who could say |
|
| what paths she took, whose elvish feet |
|
| no impress made a-dancing fleet? |