The Fall of the Niebelungs | Page 8

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courteous
welcome, and the valiant man bowed before them because they greeted him so fair.
"I would know," said the king, "whence noble Siegfried cometh, and what he seeketh at
Worms by the Rhine."
The guest answered him, "I will tell thee that readily. Word hath reached me in the land
of my father, that, hereby thee, dwell the prowest ever sworn to king. I have heard much
of these, and would know them; for this I am come hither. Thy knightliness also I hear
praised, and am told that nowhere is a better king. So say the folk throughout the land;
and, till I have proven it, I will not depart hence. I also am a king that shall wear a crown,

and I would have men say of me that the country and the people are rightly mine. Thereto
I pledge both honour and life. If thou art valiant, as they say, I care not whom it liketh or
irketh, I will take from thee all thou hast, land and castles, and they shall be mine."
The king and his men marvelled when they heard this strange saying, that he would take
their land; when the warriors understood it they were wroth.
"Wherein have I wronged thee," said Gunther the knight, "that I should yield to the might
of any man what my father ruled so long with honour? We will show thee to thy hurt that
we also are brave knights."
"I will abide by my purpose," said the doughty man. "If thou canst not hold they land in
peace, I will rule it. Also what I have in fee, if thou overcome, shall be thine. With thy
country be it even as with mine. To the one of us twain that overcometh shall the whole
belong, people and land."
But Hagen and Gernot answered him back straightway. "We desire not," said Gernot, "to
win new kingdoms at the cost of dead heroes. Our land is rich, and we are the rightful
lords. The folk desire none better."
Grim and angered stood Gunther's kinsmen. Amidst of them was Ortwin of Metz, who
said, "This bargain pleaseth me little. Bold Siegfried hath challenged thee wrongfully.
Were thou and thy brothers naked, and he with a whole king's army at his back, I would
undertake to show the overweening man he did well to abate his pride."
Whereat the knight of the Netherland was wroth and said, "Not such as thou art shall
raise a hand against me, for I am a great king; thou art but a king's man. Twelve of thy
sort could not withstand me."
Then Ortwin of Metz, the sister's son of Hagen of Trony, cried aloud for his sword. It
grieved the king that he had kept silence so long, but Gernot, a warrior bold and keen,
came betwixt them.
He said to Ortwin, "Calm thyself. Siegfried hath done naught to us, that we should not
end this matter peaceably. I counsel that we take him to friend. That were more to our
honour."
Then said Hagen the stark man, "It may well irk thy knights that he rideth hither as a
foeman. Better had he refrained. My masters had never done the like by him."
Brave Siegfried answered, "If thou like not my words, I will show thee here, in Burgundy,
the deeds of my hand."
"That I will hinder," said Gernot, and he forbade to his knights their overweening words,
for they irked him. Siegfried also thought on the noble maiden.
"Wherefore should we fight with thee?" said Gernot. "Though every knight lay dead
thereby, small were our glory and little thine adventure."

Whereto Siegfried, King Siegmund's son, answered, "Why do Hagen and Ortwin hang
back, and their friends, whereof they have enow in Burgundy?"
But these must needs hold their peace, as Gernot commanded them.
"Thou art welcome," said Uta's son; "thou and they comrades that are with thee. We will
serve thee gladly, I and my kinsmen."
They let pour for them Gunther's wine, and the host of that land, even Gunther the king,
said, "All that is ours, and whatsoever thou mayest with honour desire, is thine to share
with us, body and goods."
Then Siegfried was milder of his mood.
What he and his men had with them was seen to; they gave Siegfried's knights good
quarters and fair lodging; and they rejoiced to see the stranger in Burgundy.
They did him honour many days: more than I can tell. This he won, I trow, by his valour.
Few looked on him sourly.
The king and his men busied them with sports, and in each undertaking Siegfried still
approved him the best. Whether they threw the stone or shot with the shaft, none came
near him by reason of his
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