When Morgoth in that day of doom | |
had slain the Trees and filled with gloom | |
the shining land of Valinor, | |
there Fëanor and his sons then swore | |
the mighty oath upon the hill | (5) |
of tower-crowned Túna, that still | |
wrought wars and sorrow in the world. | |
From darkling seas the fogs unfurled | |
their blinding shadows grey and cold | |
where Laurelin had bloomed with gold | (10) |
and Telperion spread its silver flowers. | |
The mists were mantled round the towers | |
of the Elves' white city by the sea. | |
There countless torches fitfully | |
did start and twinkle on the stair | (15) |
that led to the wide echoing square. | |
There Fëanor mourned his jewels divine, | |
the Silmarils he made. Like wine | |
his wild and potent words them fill; | |
a great host harkens deathly still. | (20) |
But all he said both wild and wise, | |
half truth and half the fruit of lies | |
that Morgoth sowed in Valinor, | |
in other songs and other lore | |
recorded is. He bade them flee | (25) |
from lands divine, to cross the sea, | |
the pathless plains, the perilous shores | |
where ice-infested water roars; | |
to follow Morgoth to the unlit earth | |
leaving their dwellings and olden mirth; | (30) |
to go back to the Outer Lands | |
to wars and weeping. There their hands | |
they joined in vows, those kinsmen seven, | |
swearing beneath the stars of Heaven | |
by Varda, the Holy, that them wrought | (35) |
and bore them each with radiance fraught | |
and set them in the deeps to flame. | |
Taniquetil's holy height they name, | |
whereon are built the timeless halls | |
of Manwë Súlimo. Who calls | (40) |
these names in witness may not break | |
his oath, though earth and heaven shake. | |
Curufin, Celegorm the fair, | |
both Amrod and Amras were there, | |
Caranthir dark and Maedhros tall | (45) |
(whom after torment should befall), | |
and Maglor the mighty, who like the sea | |
with deep voice sings yet mournfully. | |
'Be he friend or foe, or seed defiled | |
of Morgoth Bauglir, or mortal child | (50) |
that in after days on earth shall dwell, | |
no law, nor love, nor league of hell, | |
not might of Valar, not moveless fate | |
shall him defend from wrath and hate | |
of Fëanor's sons, who takes or steals | (55) |
or finding keeps the Silmarils, | |
the thrice-enchanted globes of light | |
that shine until the final night.' | |
The Noldor's wars and wandering | |
this tale tells not, though some still sing | (60) |
how they fought and laboured in the North. | |
Fingon daring alone went forth | |
and sought for Maedhros where he hung; | |
in torment terrible he swung, | |
his wrist in band of forgéd steel | (65) |
from a sheer precipice where reel | |
the dizzy senses staring down | |
from Thangorodrim's stony crown. | |
The song of Fingon Elves yet sing, | |
captain of armies, Noldorin king, | (70) |
who fell at last in flame of swords | |
with his white banners and his lords. | |
They sing how Maedhros free he set, | |
and stayed the feud that slumbered yet | |
with children proud of Fingolfin. | (75) |
Now joined once more they hemmed him in, | |
even great Morgoth, and their host | |
beleaguered Angband, 'till they boast | |
no Orc nor demon ever dare | |
their leaguer break or past them fare. | (80) |
Then days of solace woke on earth | |
beneath the new-lit Sun, and mirth | |
was heard in the Great Lands where Men, | |
a young race, spread and wandered then. | |
That was the time that songs do call | (85) |
the Siege of Angband, when like a wall | |
the Noldor's swords did fence the earth | |
from Morgoth's ruin, a time of birth, | |
of blossoming, of flowers, of growth; | |
but still there held the deathless oath, | (90) |
and still the Silmarils were deep | |
in Angband's darkly-dolven keep. | |
An end there came, when fortune turned | |
and flames of Morgoth's vengeance burned, | |
and all the might which he prepared | (95) |
in secret in his fastness flared | |
and poured across the Thirsty Plain; | |
and armies black were in its train. | |
The leaguer of Angband Morgoth broke; | |
his enemies in fire and smoke | (100) |
were scattered, and the Orcs there slew | |
and slew, until the blood like dew | |
dripped from each cruel and crooked blade. | |
Then Barahir the bold did aid | |
with mighty spear, with shield and men, | (105) |
Felagund wounded. To the fen | |
escaping, there they bound their troth, | |
and Felagund deeply swore an oath | |
of friendship to his kin and seed, | |
of love and succour in time of need. | (110) |
Of Finarfin's sons, those four, | |
were Angrod slain and proud Aegnor. | |
Felagund and Orodreth then | |
gathered the remnant of their men, | |
their maidens and their children fair; | (115) |
forsaking war they made their lair | |
and cavernous hold far in the south. | |
On Narog's towering bank its mouth | |
was opened, which they hid and veiled; | |
and mighty doors, that unassailed | (120) |
'till Túrin's day stood vast and grim, | |
they build, by trees o'ershadowed dim. | |
And with them dwelt a long time there | |
Curufin, and Celegorm the fair; | |
and a mighty folk lived neath their hands | (125) |
in Narog's secret halls and lands. | |
Thus Felagund in Nargothrond | |
still reigned, a hidden king whose bond | |
was sworn to Barahir the bold. | |
And now his son through forests cold | (130) |
wandered alone as in a dream. | |
Esgalduin's dark and shrouded stream | |
he followed, 'till its waters frore | |
were joined to Sirion, Sirion hoar, | |
pale silver water wide and free | (135) |
rolling in splendour to the sea. | |
Now Beren came unto the pools, | |
wide shallow meres where Sirion cools | |
his gathered tide beneath the stars, | |
ere chafed and sundered by the bars | (140) |
of reedy banks a mighty fen | |
he feeds and drenches, plunging then | |
into vast chasms underground, | |
where many miles his way is wound. | |
Aelin-uial, Twilight Meres, | (145) |
those great wide waters grey as tears | |
the Elves then named. Through driving rain, | |
from thence across the Guarded Plain, | |
the Hills of Hunters Beren saw | |
with bare tops bitten bleak and raw | (150) |
by western winds; but, in the mist | |
of streaming rains that flashed and hissed | |
into the meres, he knew there lay, | |
beneath those hills, the cloven way | |
of Narog, and the watchful halls | (155) |
of Felagund beside the falls | |
of Ringwil tumbling from the wold. | |
An everlasting watch they hold, | |
the Noldor of Nargothrond renowned, | |
and every hill is tower-crowned, | (160) |
where wardens sleepless peer and gaze | |
guarding the plain and all the ways | |
between Narog swift and Sirion pale; | |
and archers whose arrows never fail | |
there range the woods, and secret kill | (165) |
all who creep thither against their will. | |
Yet now he thrusts into that land | |
bearing the gleaming ring on hand | |
of Felagund, and oft doth cry: | |
'Here comes no wandering Orc or spy, | (170) |
but Beren son of Barahir | |
who once to Felagund was dear.' | |
He went with arm and hand held high; | |
the ring there gleamed beneath the sky. | |
So ere he reached the eastward shore | (175) |
of Narog, that doth foam and roar | |
o'er boulders black, those archers green | |
came round him. When the ring was seen | |
they bowed before him, though his plight | |
was poor and beggarly. Then by night | (180) |
they led him northward, for no ford | |
nor bridge was built where Narog poured | |
before the gates of Nargothrond, | |
and friend nor foe might pass beyond. | |
To northward, where that stream yet young | (185) |
more slender flowed, below the tongue | |
of foam-splashed land that Ginglith pens | |
when her brief golden torrent ends | |
and joins the Narog, there they wade. | |
Now swiftest journey thence they made | (190) |
to Nargothrond's sheer terraces | |
and dim gigantic palaces. | |
They came beneath a sickle moon | |
to doors there darkly hung and hewn | |
with posts and lintels of ponderous stone | (195) |
and timbers huge. Now open thrown | |
were gaping gates, and in they strode | |
where Felagund on throne abode. | |
Fair were the words of Narog's king | |
to Beren, and his wandering | (200) |
and all his feuds and bitter wars | |
recounted soon. Behind closed doors | |
they sat, while Beren told his tale | |
of Doriath; and words him fail | |
recalling Lúthien dancing fair | (205) |
with wild white roses in her hair, | |
remembering her elven voice that rung | |
while stars in twilight round her hung. | |
He spake of Thingol's marvellous halls | |
by enchantment lit, where fountain falls | (210) |
and ever the nightingale doth sing | |
to Melian and to her king. | |
The quest he told that Thingol laid | |
in scorn on him; how for love of maid | |
more fair than ever was born to Men, | (215) |
for Tinúviel, for Lúthien, | |
he must essay the burning waste, | |
and doubtless death and torment taste. | |
This Felagund in wonder heard, | |
and heavily spake at last this word: | (220) |
'It seems that Thingol doth desire | |
thy death. The everlasting fire | |
of those enchanted jewels all know | |
is cursed with an oath of endless woe, | |
and Fëanor's sons alone by right | (225) |
are lords and masters of their light. | |
He cannot hope within his hoard | |
to keep this gem, nor is he lord | |
of all the flok of Elvenesse. | |
And yet thou saist for nothing less | (230) |
can thy return to Doriath | |
be purchased? Many a dreadful path | |
in sooth there lies before thy feet - | |
and after Morgoth, still a fleet | |
untiring hate, as I know well, | (235) |
would hunt thee from heaven unto hell. | |
Fëanor's sons would, if they could, | |
slay thee ever thou reached his wood | |
or laid in Thingol's lap that fire, | |
or gained at least thy sweet desire. | (240) |
Lo, Celegorm and Curufin | |
here dwell this very realm within, | |
and e'en though I, Finarfin's son, | |
am king, a mighty power have won | |
and many of their own folk lead. | (245) |
Friendship to me in every need | |
they yet have shown, but much I fear | |
that to Beren son of Barahir | |
mercy or love they will not show | |
if once thy dreadful quest they know.' | (250) |
True words he spake. For when the king | |
to all his people told this thing, | |
and spake of the oath to Barahir, | |
and how that mortal shield and spar | |
had saved them from Morgoth and from woe | (255) |
on Northern battlefields long ago, | |
then many were kindled in their hearts | |
once more to battle. But up there starts | |
amid the throng, and loudly cries | |
for hearing, one with flaming eyes, | (260) |
proud Celegorm with gleaming hair | |
and shining sword. Then all men stare | |
upon his stern unyielding face, | |
and a great hush falls upon that place. | |
'Be he friend or foe, or demon wild | (265) |
of Morgoth, Elf, or mortal child, | |
or any that here on earth may dwell, | |
no law, nor love, nor league of hell, | |
no might of Valar, no binding spell, | |
shall him defend from hatred fell | (270) |
of Fëanor's sons, whoso take or steal | |
or finding keep a Silmaril. | |
These we alone do claim by right, | |
our thrice enchanted jewels bright.' | |
Many wild and potent words he spoke, | (275) |
and as in Tirion awoke | |
his father's voice their hearts to fire, | |
so now dark fear and brooding ire | |
he cast on them, foreboding war | |
of friend with friend; and pools of gore | (280) |
their minds imagined lying red | |
in Nargothrond about the dead, | |
did Narog's host with Beren go; | |
or haply battle, ruin, and woe | |
in Doriath, where great Thingol reigned, | (285) |
if Fëanor's fatal jewel he gained. | |
And even such as were most true | |
to Felagund his oath did rue, | |
and thought with terror and despair | |
of seeking Morgoth in his lair | (290) |
with force or guile. This Curufin | |
when his brother ceased did then begin | |
more to impress upon their minds; | |
and such a spell he on them binds | |
that never again till Túrin's day | (295) |
would Noldor of Narog in array | |
of open battle go to war. | |
With secrecy, ambush, spies and lore | |
of wizardry; with silent leaguer | |
of wild things wary, watchful, eager, | (300) |
of phantom hunters, venomed darts, | |
and unseen stealthy creeping arts; | |
with padding hatred that their prey | |
with feet of velvet all the day | |
followed remorseless out of sight | (305) |
and slew then unawares at night - | |
thus they defended Nargothrond, | |
and forgot their kin and solemn bond | |
for dread of Morgoth that the art | |
of Curufin set within their heart. | (310) |
So would they not that angry day | |
King Felagund their lord obey, | |
but sullen murmured that Finrod | |
nor yet his kin were like a god. | |
Then Felagund took off his crown | (315) |
and at his feet he cast it down, | |
the silver helm of Nargothrond: | |
'Yours ye may break, but I my bond | |
must keep, and kingdom here forsake. | |
If hearts here were that did not quake, | (320) |
or that to Finrod's word were true, | |
then I at least should find a few | |
to go with me, not like a poor | |
rejected beggar scorn endure, | |
turned from my gates to leave my town, | (325) |
my people, and my realm and crown.' | |
Hearing these words there swiftly stood | |
beside him ten tried warriors good, | |
men of his house who had ever fought | |
wherever his banners had been brought. | (330) |
One stooped and lifted up his crown, | |
and said: 'Oh king, to leave this town | |
is now our fate, but not to lose | |
thy rightful lordship. Thou shalt choose | |
one to be steward in thy stead.' | (335) |
Then Felagund upon the head | |
of Orodreth set it: 'Brother mine, | |
'till I return this crown is thine.' | |
Then Celegorm no more would stay, | |
and Curufin smiled and turned away. | (340) |