I. Frithiof's Homestead
BY ESAIAS TEGNER
I
FRITHIOF'S HOMESTEAD
Three miles extended around the fields of the homestead, on three
sides
Valleys and mountains and hills, but on the fourth side was the
ocean.
Birch woods crowned the summits, but down the slope of the
hillsides
Flourished the golden corn, and man-high was waving the
rye-field.
Lakes, full many in number, their mirror held up for the
mountains,
Held for the forests up, in whose depths the high-horned
reindeers
Had their kingly walk, and drank of a hundred brooklets.
But in the valleys widely around, there fed on the greensward
Herds with shining hides and udders that longed for the
milk-pail.
'Mid these scattered, now here and now there, were numberless
flocks of
Sheep with fleeces white, as thou seest the white-looking stray
clouds,
Flock-wise spread o'er the heavenly vault when it bloweth in
springtime.
Coursers two times twelve, all mettlesome, fast fettered storm-
winds,
Stamping stood in the line of stalls, and tugged at their fodder.
Knotted with red were their manes, and their hoofs all white with
steel shoes.
Th' banquet-hall, a house by itself, was timbered of hard fir.
Not five hundred men (at ten times twelve to the hundred)
Filled up the roomy hall, when assembled for drinking, at
Yule-tide.
Through the hall, as long as it was, went a table of holm-oak,
Polished and white, as of steel; the columns twain of the
High-seat
Stood at the end thereof, two gods carved out of an elm-tree:
Odin with lordly look, and Frey with the sun on his frontlet.
Lately between the two, on a bear-skin (the skin it was
coal-black,
Scarlet-red was the throat, but the paws were shodden with
silver),
Thorsten sat with his friends, Hospitality sitting with Gladness.
Oft, when the moon through the cloudrack flew, related the old
man
Wonders from distant lands he had seen, and cruises of Vikings
Far away on the Baltic, and Sea of the West and the White Sea.
Hushed sat the listening bench, and their glances hung on the
graybeard's
Lips, as a bee on the rose; but the Scald was thinking of Brage,
Where, with his silver beard, and runes on his tongue, he is
seated
Under the leafy beech, and tells a tradition by Mimer's
Ever-murmuring wave, himself a living tradition.
Midway the floor (with thatch was it strewn) burned ever the
fire-flame
Glad on its stone-built hearth; and thorough the wide-mouthed
smoke-flue
Looked the stars, those heavenly friends, down into the great
hall.
Round the walls, upon nails of steel, were hanging in order
Breastplate and helmet together, and here and there among them
Downward lightened a sword, as in winter evening a star shoots.
More than helmets and swords the shields in the hall were
resplendent,
White as the orb of the sun, or white as the moon's disk of
silver.
Ever and anon went a maid round the hoard, and filled up the
drink-horns,
Ever she cast down her eyes and blushed; in the shield her
reflection
Blushed, too, even as she; this gladdened the drinking champions.
Content: From the Swedish and Danish: Passages from Frithiof's Saga: I. Frithiof's Homestead [Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poems Translations]
Read next: From the Swedish and Danish#Passages from Frithiof's Saga#II. A Sledge-Ride on the Ice
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