| In Wizard's Isle still lay, forgot, | |
| enmeshed and tortured in that grot | |
| cold, evil, doorless, without light, | |
| and blank-eyed stared at endless night | |
| two comrades. Now alone they were. | (5) |
| The others lived no more, but bare | |
| their broken bones would lie and tell | |
| how ten had served their master well. | |
| To Felagund then Beren said: | |
| ''Twere little loss if I were dead, | (10) |
| and I am minded all to tell, | |
| and thus, perchance, from this dark hell | |
| thy life to loose. I set thee free | |
| from thine old oath, for more for me | |
| hast thou endured than e'er was earned.' | (15) |
| 'Ah, Beren, Beren hast not learned | |
| that promises of Morgoth's folk | |
| are frail breath. From this dark yoke | |
| of pain shall neither ever go, | |
| whether Sauron learn our names or no, | (20) |
| with his consent. Nay, more, I think, | |
| yet deeper of torment we should drink, | |
| knew he that son of Barahir | |
| and Felagund were captive here, | |
| and even worse if he should know | (25) |
| the dreadful errand we did go.' | |
| A devil's laugh they ringing heard | |
| within their pit. 'True, true the word | |
| I hear you speak,' a voice then said. | |
| ''Twere little loss if he were dead, | (30) |
| the outlaw mortal. But the king, | |
| the Elf undying, many a thing | |
| no man could suffer may endure. | |
| Perchance, when what these walls immure | |
| of dreadful anguish thy folk learn, | (35) |
| their king to ransom they will yearn | |
| with gold and gem and high hearts cowed; | |
| or maybe Celegorm the proud | |
| will deem a rival's prison cheap, | |
| and crown and gold himself will keep. | (40) |
| Perchance, the errand I shall know, | |
| ere all is done, that ye did go. | |
| The wolf is hungry, the hour is nigh; | |
| no more need Beren wait to die.' | |
| The slow time passed, then in the gloom | (45) |
| two eyes there glowed. He saw his doom, | |
| Beren, silent, as his bonds he strained | |
| beyond his mortal might enchained. | |
| But now the spells that Finrod spun | |
| once more were wakened and begun; | (50) |
| from chains and anguish release he sought: | |
| now his enchantments were come full wrought. | |
| Lo, sudden there was rending sound | |
| of chains that parted and unwound, | |
| of meshes broken. Forth there leapt, | (55) |
| upon the wolvish thing that crept | |
| in shadow, faithful Felagund, | |
| careless of fang or venomed wound. | |
| There in the dark they wrestled slow, | |
| remorseless, snarling, to and fro, | (60) |
| teeth in flesh, gripe on throat, | |
| fingers locked in shaggy coat, | |
| spurning Beren - who there lying | |
| heard the werewolf shuddering, dying, | |
| the struggle ceasing in the dark, | (65) |
| then gasping breath and silence stark. | |
| Then a voice he heard: 'Farewell! | |
| On earth I need no longer dwell, | |
| friend and comrade, Beren bold. | |
| My heart is burst, my limbs are cold. | (70) |
| Here all my power I have spent | |
| to break my bonds, and dreadful rent | |
| of poisoned teeth is in my breast. | |
| I now must go to my long rest | |
| in Aman, there beyond the shore | (75) |
| of Eldamar for ever more | |
| in memory to dwell.' Then silence fell, | |
| and shadows black in his dark cell | |
| surrounded him. So died the king, | |
| as still the elven harpers sing. | (80) |
| There Beren lies. His grief no tear, | |
| his despair no horror has, nor fear, | |
| waiting for footsteps, a voice, for doom. | |
| Silences, profounder than the tomb | |
| of long-forgotten kings neath years | (85) |
| and sands uncounted laid on biers | |
| and buried everlasting-deep, | |
| slow and unbroken round him creep. | |
| The silences were sudden shivered | |
| to silver fragments. Faint there quivered | (90) |
| a voice in song that walls of rock, | |
| enchanted hill, and bar and lock, | |
| and powers of darkness pierced with light. | |
| He felt about him the soft night | |
| of many stars, and in the air | (95) |
| were rustlings and a perfume rare. | |
| The nightingales were in the trees, | |
| slim fingers flute and viol seize | |
| beneath the moon, and one more fair | |
| than all there be or ever were | (100) |
| upon a lonely knoll of stone | |
| in shimmering raiment danced alone. | |
| Then in his dream it seemed he sang, | |
| and loud and fierce his chanting rang, | |
| old songs of battle in the North, | (105) |
| of breathless deeds, of marching forth | |
| to dare uncounted odds and break | |
| great powers, and towers and strong walls shake; | |
| and over all the silver fire | |
| that once Men named the Burning Briar, | (110) |
| the Seven Stars that Varda set | |
| about the North, were burning yet, | |
| a light in darkness, hope in woe, | |
| the emblem vast of Morgoth's foe. | |
| 'Huan, Huan! I hear a song | (115) |
| far under welling, far but strong; | |
| a song that Beren bore aloft. | |
| I hear his voice, I have heard it oft | |
| in dream and wandering.' Whispering low | |
| thus Lúthien spake. On the bridge of woe | (120) |
| in mantle wrapped at dead of night | |
| she sat and sang, and to its height | |
| and to its depth the Wizards's Isle, | |
| rock upon rock and pile on pile, | |
| trembling echoed. The werewolves howled, | (125) |
| and Huan, hidden, lay and growled, | |
| watchful, listening in the dark, | |
| waiting for battle cruel and stark. | |
| Sauron heard that voice, and stood | |
| wrapped in his cloak and sable hood | (130) |
| in his high tower. He listened long, | |
| and smiled, and knew that elvish song. | |
| 'Ah, little Lúthien! What brought | |
| the foolish fly to web unsought? | |
| Morgoth! A great and rich reward | (135) |
| to me thou wilt owe when to thy hoard | |
| the jewel is added.' Down he went, | |
| and forth his messengers he sent. | |
| Still Lúthien sang. A creeping shape | |
| with bloodred tongue and jaws agape | (140) |
| stole on the bridge; but she sang on | |
| with trembling limbs and wide eyes wan. | |
| The creeping shape leaped to her side, | |
| was grasped, and silent fell and died. | |
| And still they came, still one by one, | (145) |
| and each was seized, and there were none | |
| returned with padding feet to tell | |
| that a shadow lurketh fierce and fell | |
| at the bridge's end, and that below | |
| the shuddering waters loathing flow | (150) |
| o'er the grey corpses Huan killed. | |
| A mightier shadow slowly filled | |
| the narrow bridge, a slavering hate | |
| and awful werewolf fierce and great: | |
| pale Draugluin, the old grey lord | (155) |
| of wolves and beasts of blood abhorred, | |
| who fed on flesh of Man and Elf | |
| beneath chair of Sauron himself. | |
| No more in silence did they fight. | |
| Howling and baying smote the night, | (160) |
| 'till back by the chair where he had fed | |
| to die the werewolf yammering fled. | |
| 'Huan is there,' he gasped and died. | |
| Sauron was filled with wrath and pride. | |
| 'Before the mightiest he shall fall, | (165) |
| before the mightiest wolf of all,' | |
| so thought he now, and thought he knew | |
| how fate long spoken should come true. | |
| Now there came slowly forth and glared | |
| into the night a shape long-haired, | (170) |
| dank with poison, with awful eyes | |
| wolvish, ravenous; but there lies | |
| a light therein more cruel and dread | |
| than ever wolvish eyes had fed. | |
| More huge were its limbs, its jaws more wide, | (175) |
| its fangs more gleaming-sharp, and dyed | |
| with venom, torment, and with death. | |
| The deadly vapour of its breath | |
| swept on before it. Swooning dies | |
| the song of Lúthien, and her eyes | (180) |
| are dimmed and darkened with a fear, | |
| cold and poisonous and drear. | |
| Thus came Sauron, as wolf more great | |
| than e'er was seen from Angband's gate | |
| to the burning south, than ever lurked | (185) |
| in mortal lands or murder worked. | |
| Sudden he sprang, and Huan leapt | |
| aside in shadow. On he swept | |
| to Lúthien lying swooning faint. | |
| To her drowning senses came the taint | (190) |
| of his foul breathing, and she stirred; | |
| dizzily she spake a whispered word, | |
| her mantle brushed across his face. | |
| He stumbled, staggering in his pace. | |
| Out leaped Huan. Back he sprang. | (195) |
| Beneath the stars there shuddering rang | |
| the cry of hunting wolves at bay, | |
| the tongue of hounds that fearless slay. | |
| Backward and forth they leaped and ran | |
| feinting to flee, and round they span, | (200) |
| and bit and grappled, and fell and rose. | |
| Then suddenly Huan holds and throws | |
| his ghastly foe; his throat he rends, | |
| choking his life. Not so it ends. | |
| From shape to shape, from wolf to worm, | (205) |
| from monster to his own demon form, | |
| Sauron changes, but that hard grip | |
| he cannot shake, nor from it slip. | |
| No wizardry, nor spell, nor dart, | |
| no fang, nor venom, nor devil's art | (210) |
| could harm that hound that hart and boar | |
| had hunted once in Valinor. | |
| Nigh the foul spirit, ancient made | |
| and bent to evil shuddering strayed | |
| from its dark house, Lúthien arose | (215) |
| and shivering looked upon his throes. | |
| 'Oh demon dark, Oh phantom vile | |
| to foulness brought, to lies and guile, | |
| here shalt thou die, thy spirit roam | |
| quaking back to thy master's home | (220) |
| his scorn and fury to endure; | |
| thee he will in the bowels immure | |
| of groaning earth, and in a hole | |
| everlastingly thy naked soul | |
| shall wail and gibber - this shall be, | (225) |
| unless the keys thou render me | |
| of thy black fortress, and the spell | |
| that bindeth stone to stone thou tell, | |
| and speak the words of opening.' | |
| With gasping breath and shuddering | (230) |
| he spake, and yielded as he must, | |
| and vanquished betrayed his master's trust. | |
| Lo, by the bridge a gleam of light, | |
| like stars descended from the night | |
| to burn and tremble here below. | (235) |
| There wide her arms did Lúthien throw, | |
| and called aloud with voice as clear | |
| as still at while may mortal hear | |
| long elvish trumpets o'er the hill | |
| echo when all the worlds is still. | (240) |
| The dawn peered over mountains wan, | |
| their grey heads silent looked thereon. | |
| The hill trembled; the citadel | |
| crumbled, and all its towers fell; | |
| the rocks yawned and the bridge broke, | (245) |
| and Sirion spumed in sudden smoke. | |
| Like ghosts the owls were flying seen | |
| hooting in the dawn, and bats unclean | |
| went skimming dark through the cold airs | |
| shrieking thinly to find new lairs | (250) |
| in Deadly Nightshade's branches dread. | |
| The wolves whimpering and yammering fled | |
| like dusky shadows. | |
Out there creep
| |
| pale forms and ragged as from sleep, | |
| crawling, and shielding blinded eyes: | (255) |
| the captives in fear and in surprise | |
| from dolour long in clinging night | |
| beyond all hope set free to light. | |
| A vampire shape with pinions vast | |
| screeching leaped from the ground, and passed, | (260) |
| its dark blood dripping on the trees; | |
| and Huan neath him lifeless sees | |
| a wolvish corpse - Sauron had flown | |
| to Taur-nu-Fuin, a new throne | |
| and darker stronghold there to build. | (265) |
| The captives came and wept and shrilled | |
| their piteous cries of thanks and praise. | |
| But Lúthien anxious-gazing stays. | |
| Beren comes not. At length she said: | |
| 'Huan, Huan, among the dead | (270) |
| must we then find him whom we sought, | |
| for love of whom we toiled and fought?' | |
| Then side by side, from stone to stone | |
| o'er Sirion they climbed alone. | |
| Unmoving they him found who mourned | (275) |
| by Felagund, and never turned | |
| to see what feet drew halting nigh. | |
| Without a sound, without a sigh, | |
| her arms about him then she cast, | |
| and fell down into darkness fast. | (280) |
| Her touch such love and longing filled | |
| he raised his eyes, his mourning stilled, | |
| and felt his heart new-turned to flame | |
| for her that through peril to him came. | |
| 'Oh Lúthien! Oh Lúthien, | (285) |
| more fair than any child of Men! | |
| Oh, loveliest maid of Elvenesse, | |
| what might of love did thee posses | |
| to bring thee here to terror's lair? | |
| Oh, flower of Elfland ever fair!' | (290) |
| She had found his arms, and swooned away | |
| just at the rising of the day. |