Into the vast and echoing gloom | |
more dread than many-tunnelled tomb | |
in labyrinthine pyramid | |
where everlasting death is hid, | |
down awful corridors that wind | (5)
|
down to a menace dark enshrined; | |
down to the mountain's roots profound, | |
devoured, tormented, bored and ground | |
by seething vermin spawned of stone; | |
down to the depths they went alone. | (10)
|
| |
| |
The arch behind of twilit shade | |
they saw recede and dwindling fade; | |
the thunderous forges' rumour grew, | |
a burning wind there roaring blew | |
foul vapours up from gaping holes. | (15)
|
Huge shapes there stood like carven trolls, | |
enormous, hewn of blasted rock | |
to forms that mortal likeness mock; | |
monstrous and menacing, entombed, | |
at every turn they silent loomed | (20)
|
in fitful glares that leaped and died. | |
There hammers clanged, and tongues there cried | |
with sound like smitten stone; there wailed | |
faint from far under, called and failed | |
amid the iron clink of chain | (25)
|
voices of captives put to pain. | |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
Loud rose a din of laughter hoarse,
| |
self-loathing yet without remorse;
| |
loud came a singing harsh and fierce
| |
like swords of terror souls to pierce.
| (30)
|
Red was the glare through open doors
| |
of firelight mirrored on brazen floors,
| |
and up the arches towering clomb
| |
to glooms unguessed, to vaulted dome
| |
swathed in wavering smokes and steams
| (35)
|
stabbed with flickering lightning gleams.
| |
To Morgoth's hall, where dreadful feast
| |
he held and drank the blood of beast
| |
and lives of Men, they stumbling came:
| |
their eyes were dazed with smoke and flame.
| (40)
|
The pillars, reared like monstrous shores
| |
to bear earth's overwhelming floors,
| |
were devil-carven, shaped with skill
| |
such as unholy dreams doth fill:
| |
they towered like trees into the air,
| (45)
|
whose trunks are rooted in despair,
| |
whose shade is death, whose fruit is bane,
| |
whose boughs like serpents writhe in pain.
| |
| |
| |
Beneath them ranged with spear and sword
| |
stood Morgoth's sable-armoured horde:
| (50)
|
the fire on blade and boss of shield
| |
was red as blood on stricken field.
| |
Beneath a monstrous column loomed
| |
the throne of Morgoth, and the doomed
| |
and dying gasped upon the floor:
| (55)
|
his hideous footstool, rape of war.
| |
About him sat his awful thanes,
| |
the Balrog-lords with fiery manes,
| |
redhanded, mouthed with fangs of steel;
| |
devouring wolves were crouched at heel.
| (60)
|
And o'er the host of hell there shone
| |
with a cold radiance, clear and wan,
| |
the Silmarils, the gems of fate,
| |
emprisoned in the crown of hate.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
Lo, through the grinning portals dread
| (65)
|
sudden a shadow swooped and fled;
| |
and Beren gasped - he lay alone,
| |
with crawling belly on the stone:
| |
a form bat-wingéd, silent, flew
| |
where the huge pillared branches grew,
| (70)
|
amid the smokes and mounting steams.
| |
And as on the margin of dark dreams
| |
a dim-felt shadow unseen grows
| |
to cloud of vast unease, and woes
| |
foreboded, nameless, roll like doom
| (75)
|
upon the soul, so in that gloom
| |
the voices fell, and laughter died
| |
slow to silence many-eyed.
| |
A nameless doubt, a shapeless fear,
| |
had entered in their caverns drear,
| (80)
|
and grew, and towered above them cowed,
| |
hearing in heart the trumpets loud
| |
of gods forgotten. Morgoth spoke,
| |
and thunderous the silence broke:
| |
'Shadow, descend! And do not think
| (85)
|
to cheat mine eyes. In vain to shrink
| |
from thy Lord's gaze, or seek to hide.
| |
My will by none may be defied.
| |
Hope nor escape doth here await
| |
those that unbidden pass my gate.
| (90)
|
Descend! ere anger blast thy wing,
| |
thou foolish, frail, bat-shapen thing,
| |
and yet not bat within. Come down!'
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
Slow-wheeling o'er his iron crown,
| |
reluctantly, shivering and small,
| (95)
|
Beren there saw the shadow fall,
| |
and droop before the hideous throne,
| |
a weak and trembling thing, alone.
| |
And as thereon great Morgoth bent
| |
his darkling gaze, he shuddering went,
| (100)
|
belly to earth, the cold sweat dank
| |
upon his fell, and crawling shrank
| |
beneath the darkness of that seat,
| |
beneath the shadow of those feet.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
Tinúviel spake, a shrill, thin sound
| (105)
|
piercing those silences profound:
| |
'A lawful errand here me brought;
| |
from Sauron's mansions have I sought,
| |
from Taur-nu-Fuin's shade I fare
| |
to stand before thy mighty chair!'
| (110)
|
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
'Thy name, thou shrieking waif, thy name!
| |
Tidings enough from Sauron came
| |
but short while since. What would he now?
| |
Why send such messenger as thou?'
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
'Thuringwethil I am, who cast
| (115)
|
a shadow o'er the face aghast
| |
of the sallow moon in the doomed land
| |
of shivering Beleriand.'
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
'Liar art thou, who shalt not weave
| |
deceit before mine eyes. Now leave
| (120)
|
thy form and raiment false, and stand
| |
revealed, delivered unto my hand!'
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
There came a slow and shuddering change:
| |
the batlike raiment dark and strange
| |
was loosed, and slowly shrank and fell,
| (125)
|
quivering. She stood revealed in hell.
| |
About her slender shoulders hung
| |
her shadowy hair, and round her clung
| |
her garment dark, where glimmered pale
| |
the starlight caught in elvish veil.
| (130)
|
Dim dreams and faint oblivious sleep
| |
fell softly thence, in dungeons deep
| |
an odour stole of elven-flowers
| |
from elven-dells where silver showers
| |
drip softly through the evening air;
| (135)
|
and round there crawled with greedy stare
| |
dark shapes of snuffling hunger dread.
| |
| |
| |
With arms upraised and drooping head
| |
then softly she began to sing
| |
a theme of sleep and slumbering,
| (140)
|
wandering, woven with deeper spell
| |
than songs wherewith in ancient dell
| |
Melian did once the twilight fill,
| |
profound, and fathomless, and still.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
The fires of Angband flared and died,
| (145)
|
smouldered into darkness; through the wide
| |
and hollow halls there rolled unfurled
| |
the shadows of the underworld.
| |
All movement stayed, and all sound ceased,
| |
save vaporous breath of Orc and beast.
| (150)
|
One fire in darkness still abode:
| |
the lidless eyes of Morgoth glowed;
| |
one sound the breathing silence broke:
| |
the mirthless voice of Morgoth spoke.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
'So Lúthien, so Lúthien -
| (155)
|
a liar like all Elves and Men!
| |
Yet welcome, welcome to my hall!
| |
I have a use for every thrall.
| |
What news of Thingol in his hole
| |
shy lurking like a timid vole?
| (160)
|
What folly fresh is in his mind
| |
who cannot keep his offspring blind
| |
from straying thus - or can devise
| |
no better counsel for his spies?'
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
She wavered, and she stayed her song:
| (165)
|
'The road,' she said, 'was wild and long
| |
but Thingol sent me not nor knows
| |
what way his rebellious daughter goes.
| |
Yet every road and path will lead
| |
Northward at last, and here of need
| (170)
|
I trembling come with humble brow
| |
and here before thy throne I bow.
| |
For Lúthien hath many arts
| |
for solace sweet of kingly hearts.'
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
'And here of need thou shalt remain
| (175)
|
now, Lúthien, in joy or pain -
| |
or pain, the fitting doom for all
| |
for rebel thief and upstart thrall.
| |
Why should ye not in our fate share
| |
of woe and travail? Or should I spare
| (180)
|
to slender limb and body frail
| |
breaking torment? Of what avail
| |
here dost thou deem thy babbling song
| |
and foolish laughter? Minstrels strong
| |
are at my call. Yet I will give
| (185)
|
a respite brief, a while to live,
| |
a little while, though purchased dear,
| |
to Lúthien the fair and clear.
| |
A pretty toy for idle hour.
| |
In slothful gardens many a flower
| (190)
|
like thee the amorous gods are used
| |
honey-sweet to kiss, and cast then bruised,
| |
their fragrance loosing, under feet.
| |
But here we seldom find such sweet
| |
amid our labours long and hard,
| (195)
|
from godlike idleness debarred.
| |
And who would not taste the honey-sweet
| |
lying to lips, or crush with feet
| |
the soft cool tissue of pale flowers,
| |
easing like gods the dragging hours?
| (200)
|
Ah! Curse the Gods! Oh hunger dire,
| |
oh blinding thirst's unending fire,
| |
one moment shall ye cease, and slake
| |
your sting with morsel I here take!'
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
In his eyes the fire to flame was fanned,
| (205)
|
and forth he stretched his brazen hand.
| |
Lúthien as shadow shrank aside.
| |
'Not thus, oh king! Not thus,' she cried,
| |
'do great lords hark to humble boon!
| |
For every minstrel hath his tune;
| (210)
|
and some are strong and some are soft,
| |
and each would bear his song aloft,
| |
and each a little while be heard,
| |
though rude the note, and light the word.
| |
But Lúthien hath cunning arts
| (215)
|
for solace sweet of kingly hearts.
| |
Now hearken.' And her song she brought
| |
then softly up, and swift as thought
| |
slipped from his grasp, and wheeling round,
| |
fluttering before his eyes, she wound
| (220)
|
a heart-enthralling dance. She sang,
| |
and ever clear the echoes rang;
| |
and beauty filled from wall to wall
| |
that great and vast and darkling hall.
| |
| |
| |
Enchanting was her song, and soft
| (225)
|
the melody she bore aloft,
| |
and Morgoth's thought dwelt on her rare
| |
enthralling beauty, frail and fair.
| |
| |
| |
She slipped from sight; in shadows long
| |
began anew a striking song
| (230)
|
profound, of such surpassing power
| |
he listened perforce, and in that hour
| |
that fairest maid of Elvenesse
| |
obscured his sight: its loveliness
| |
beguiled great Morgoth. Light she caught
| (235)
|
her wings then deftly up and sought
| |
the vaulted shadows. Veiled, she sped
| |
above his iron-crownéd head.
| |
And as her song was sung anew
| |
it soft came dropping like a dew
| (240)
|
down from on high in that domed hall
| |
her voice bewildering, magical,
| |
and grew to silver-murmuring streams
| |
pale falling in dark pools in dreams.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
She let her flying raiment sweep,
| (245)
|
enmeshed with woven spells of sleep,
| |
as round the dark void she ranged and reeled.
| |
From wall to wall she turned and wheeled
| |
in dance such as never Elf nor fay
| |
before devised, nor since that day;
| (250)
|
than swallow swifter, than flittermouse
| |
in dying light round darkened house
| |
more silken-soft, more strange and fair
| |
than sylphine maidens of the Air
| |
whose wings in Varda's heavenly hall
| (255)
|
in rhythmic movement beat and fall.
| |
| |
| |
Down crumpled Orc, and Balrog proud;
| |
all eyes were quenched, all heads were bowed;
| |
the fires of heart and maw were stilled,
| |
and ever like a bird she trilled
| (260)
|
above a lightless world forlorn
| |
in ecstasy enchanted borne.
| |
| |
| |
All eyes were quenched, save those that glared
| |
in Morgoth's lowering brows, and stared
| |
in slowly wandering wonder round,
| (265)
|
and slow were in enchantment bound.
| |
Their will wavered, and their fire failed,
| |
and as beneath his brows they paled,
| |
the Silmarils with living light
| |
were kindled clear, and waxing bright
| (270)
|
shone like the stars that in the North
| |
above the reek of earth leap forth.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
Then flaring suddenly they fell,
| |
down, down upon the floors of hell.
| |
The dark and mighty head was bowed;
| (275)
|
like mountain-top beneath a cloud
| |
the shoulders foundered, the vast form
| |
crashed, as in overwhelming storm
| |
huge cliffs in ruin slide and fall;
| |
and prone lay Morgoth in his hall.
| (280)
|
His crown there rolled upon the ground,
| |
a wheel of thunder; then all sound
| |
died, and a silence grew as deep
| |
as were the heart of Earth asleep.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
Beneath the vast and empty throne
| (285)
|
the adders lay like twisted stone,
| |
the wolves like corpses foul were strewn;
| |
and there lay Beren deep in swoon:
| |
no thought, no dream nor shadow blind
| |
moved in the darkness of his mind.
| (290)
|
| |
| |
'Come forth, come forth! The hour hath knelled,
| |
and Angband's mighty lord is felled!
| |
Awake, awake! For we two meet
| |
alone before the awful seat.'
| |
This voice came down into the deep
| (295)
|
where he lay drowned in wells of sleep;
| |
a hand flower-soft and flower-cool
| |
passed o'er his face, and the still pool
| |
of slumber quivered. Up then leapt
| |
his mind to waking; forth he crept.
| (300)
|
The wolvish fell he flung aside
| |
and sprang unto his feet, and wide
| |
staring amid the soundless gloom
| |
he gasped as one living shut in tomb.
| |
There to his side he felt her shrink,
| (305)
|
felt Lúthien now shivering sink,
| |
her strength and power dimmed and spent,
| |
and swift his arms about her went.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
Before his feet he saw amazed
| |
the gems of Fëanor, that blazed
| (310)
|
with white fire glistening in the crown
| |
of Morgoth's might now fallen down.
| |
To move that helm of iron vast
| |
no strength he found, and thence aghast
| |
he strove with fingers mad to wrest
| (315)
|
the guerdon of their hopeless quest,
| |
'till in his heart there fell the thought
| |
of that cold morn whereon he fought
| |
with Curufin; then from his belt
| |
the sheathless knife he drew, and knelt,
| (320)
|
and tried its hard edge, bitter-cold,
| |
o'er which in Nogrod songs had rolled
| |
of dwarvish armourers singing slow
| |
to hammer-music long ago.
| |
Iron as tender wood it clove
| (325)
|
and mail as woof of loom it rove.
| |
In claws of iron the gem was caught;
| |
the knife them rent, as they were naught
| |
but brittle nails on a dead hand.
| |
Behold, the hope of Elvenland!
| (330)
|
The fire of Fëanor, Light of Morn
| |
before the sun and moon were born,
| |
thus out of bondage came at last,
| |
from iron to mortal hand it passed.
| |
There Beren stood. The jewel he held,
| (335)
|
and its pure radiance slowly welled
| |
through flesh and bone, and turned to fire
| |
with hue of living blood. Desire
| |
then smote his heart their doom to dare,
| |
and from the deeps of Hell to bear
| (340)
|
all three immortal gems, and save
| |
the elven-light from Morgoth's grave.
| |
Again he stooped; with knife he strove;
| |
through band and claw of iron it clove.
| |
But round the Silmarils dark Fate
| (345)
|
was woven: they were meshed in hate,
| |
and not yet come was their doomed hour
| |
when wrested from the fallen power
| |
of Morgoth in a ruined world,
| |
regained and lost, they should be hurled
| (350)
|
in fiery gulf and groundless sea,
| |
beyond recall while Time shall be.
| |
The dwarvish steel of cunning blade
| |
by treacherous smiths of Norgrod made
| |
snapped; then ringing sharp and clear
| (355)
|
in twain it sprang, and like a spear
| |
or errant shaft the cheek it grazed
| |
of Morgoth's sleeping head, and dazed
| |
their hearts with fear. For Morgoth groaned
| |
with voice entombed, like wind that moaned
| (360)
|
in hollow caverns penned and bound.
| |
There came a breath; a gasping sound
| |
moved through the halls, as Orc and beast
| |
turned in their dreams of hideous feast;
| |
in sleep uneasy Balrogs stirred,
| (365)
|
and far above was faintly heard
| |
an echo that in tunnels rolled,
| |
a wolvish howling long and cold.
|