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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, King Diderik, by George Borrow, Edited by
+Thomas J. Wise
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: King Diderik
+ and the fight between the Lion and Dragon and other ballads
+
+
+Translator: George Borrow
+
+Editor: Thomas J. Wise
+
+Release Date: October 7, 2008 [eBook #26802]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KING DIDERIK***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1913 Thomas J. Wise pamphlet, email ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ KING DIDERIK
+ AND THE FIGHT BETWEEN THE
+ LION AND DRAGON
+
+
+ AND OTHER BALLADS
+
+ BY
+ GEORGE BORROW
+
+ LONDON:
+ PRINTED FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION
+
+ 1913
+
+ _Copyright in the United States of America_
+ _by Houghton_, _Mifflin & Co. for Clement Shorter_.
+
+
+
+
+KING DIDERIK AND THE LION’S FIGHT WITH THE DRAGON
+
+
+From Bern rode forth King Diderik,
+ A stately warrior form;
+Engaged in fray he found in the way
+ A lion and laidly worm. {5}
+
+They fought for a day, they fought for two,
+ But ere the third was flown,
+The worm outfought the beast, and brought
+ To earth the lion down.
+
+Then cried the lion in his need
+ When he the warrior saw:
+“O aid me quick, King Diderik,
+ To ’scape the Dragon’s claw.
+
+“O aid me quick, King Diderik,
+ For the mighty God thou fearest;
+A lion save for the lion brave,
+ Which on thy shield thou bearest.
+
+“Come to my rescue, thou noble King,
+ Help, help me for thy name;
+Upon thy targe I stand at large,
+ Glittering like a flame.”
+
+Long, long stood he, King Diderik,
+ Deep musing thereupon;
+At length he cried: “Whate’er betide
+ I’ll help thee, noble one.”
+
+It was Sir King Diderik,
+ His good sword bare he made:
+With courage fraught, the worm he fought,
+ Till blood tinged all the blade.
+
+The gallant lord would not delay
+ So fast his blows he dealt;
+He hacked and gored until his sword
+ Was sundered at the hilt.
+
+The Lindworm took him upon her back,
+ The horse beneath her tongue;
+To her mountain den she hurried then
+ To her eleven young.
+
+The horse she cast before her young,
+ The man in a nook she throws:
+“Assuage your greed upon the steed,
+ But I will to repose.
+
+“I pray ye feed upon the steed,
+ At present no more I can;
+When I upleap, refreshed, from sleep,
+ We’ll feast upon the man.”
+
+It was Sir King Diderik,
+ In the hill he searched around;
+Then, helped by the Lord, the famous sword
+ Called Adelring he found.
+
+Aye there he found so sharp a sword,
+ And a knife with a golden heft:
+“King Sigfred be God’s grace with thee,
+ For here thy life was reft!
+
+“I’ve been with thee in many a fight,
+ In many an inroad too,
+But that thy doom had been in this tomb
+ I never, never knew.”
+
+It was Sir King Diderik,
+ Would prove the faulchion’s might;
+He hewed upon the flinty stone
+ ’Till all around was light.
+
+It was the youngest Lindworm saw
+ The sparks the hill illume:
+“Who dares awake the fiery snake
+ In her own sleeping room?”
+
+The Lindworm gnashed its teeth with rage,
+ Its grinning fangs it show’d:
+“Who dares awake the mother snake
+ Within her own abode?”
+
+Then spake the other little ones,
+ From the dark nooks of the hill:
+“If from her sleep the old one leap,
+ ’Twill fare with thee but ill.”
+
+Then answered Sir King Diderik,
+ His eyes with fury gleam:
+“I will awake your mother snake
+ With chilly, chilly dream.
+
+“Your mother she King Sigfred slew,
+ A man of noble line;
+I’ll on ye all avenge his fall
+ With this good hand of mine.”
+
+And then awaked the Lindworm old,
+ And on her fell such fear:
+“Who thus with riot disturbs my quiet?
+ What noise is this I hear?”
+
+Then said King Diderik: “’Tis I,
+ And this have I to say:
+O’er hill and dale, ’neath thy crooked tail,
+ Thou brought’st me yesterday.”
+
+“O hew me not, King Diderik,
+ I’ll give thee all my hoard;
+’Twere best that we good friends should be,
+ So cast away thy sword.”
+
+“I pay no trust to thy false device,
+ Befool me thou wouldst fain;
+Full many hast thou destroyed ere now,
+ Thou never shalt again.”
+
+“Hear me, Sir King Diderik,
+ Forbear to do me ill,
+And thee I’ll guide to thy plighted bride,
+ She’s hidden in the hill.
+
+“Above by my head, King Diderik,
+ Is hung the little key;
+Below by my feet to the maiden sweet
+ Descend thou fearlessly.”
+
+“Above by thy head, thou serpent curst,
+ To begin I now intend;
+Below by thy feet, as is full meet,
+ I soon shall make an end.”
+
+Then first the laidly worm he slew,
+ And then her young he smote;
+But in vain did he try from the mountain to fly,
+ For tongues of snakes thrust out.
+
+So then with toil in the rocky soil
+ He dug a trench profound,
+That in the flood of serpent blood
+ And bane he might not be drowned.
+
+Then bann’d the good King Diderik,
+ On the lion he wroth became:
+“Bann’d, bann’d,” said he, “may the lion be,
+ Confusion be his and shame.”
+
+“With subtle thought the brute has brought
+ On me this grievous risk;
+Which I ne’er had seen had he not been
+ Graved on my buckler’s disc.”
+
+And when the gallant lion heard
+ The King bewail his hap:
+“Stand fast, good lord,” the lion roared,
+ “While with my claws I scrap.”
+
+The lion scrapp’d, King Diderik hewed,
+ Bright sparks the gloom relieved;
+Unless the beast had the knight released
+ He’d soon to death have grieved.
+
+So when he had slain the laidly worm,
+ And her offspring all had kill’d;
+Escaped the knight to the morning light,
+ With heavy cuirass and shield.
+
+And when he had now come out of the hill
+ For his gallant courser he sighed;
+With reason good he trust him could,
+ For they had each other tried.
+
+“O there’s no need to bewail the steed,
+ Which thou, Sir King, hast miss’d;
+I am thy friend, my back ascend,
+ And ride where’er thou list.”
+
+So he rode o’er the deepest dales,
+ And o’er the verdant meads;
+The knight he rode, the lion strode,
+ Through the dim forest glades.
+
+The lion and King Diderik
+ Together thenceforth remain;
+Each death had braved, and the other saved
+ From peril sore and pain.
+
+Where’er King Diderik rode in the fields
+ The lion beside him sped;
+When on the ground the knight sat down
+ In his bosom he laid his head.
+
+Wherefore they call him the lion knight
+ With fame that name he bore;
+Their love so great did ne’er abate
+ Until their dying hour.
+
+
+
+
+DIDERIK AND OLGER THE DANE
+
+
+With his eighteen brothers Diderik stark
+ Dwells in the hills of Bern;
+And each I wot twelve sons has got,
+ For manly feats they yearn.
+
+He has twelve sisters, each of them
+ A dozen sons can show;
+Thirteen the youngest, gallant lads,
+ Of fear who nothing know.
+
+To stand before the King a crowd
+ Of giant bodies move;
+I say to ye forsooth their heads
+ O’ertopped the beechen grove.
+
+“With knights of pride we war have plied
+ For many, many a year;
+Of Olger, who in Denmark reigns,
+ Such mighty things we hear.
+
+“Men talk so fain of Olger Dane
+ Who dwells in Jutland’s fields;
+Crowned is his head with gold so red,
+ No tribute us he yields.”
+
+Then Swerting took a mace, and shook
+ That mace right furiously:
+“From ten times ten of Olger’s men
+ I would not look to flee!”
+
+“Hark, Swerting, hark, of visage dark,
+ Esteem them not so little;
+I’d have thee ken that Olger’s men
+ Are knights of gallant mettle.
+
+“They feel no fright for faulchions,
+ For arrows no dismay;
+The desperate fight is their delight,
+ They deem it children’s play.”
+
+Then cried the mighty man of Bern,
+ When pondered long had he:
+“To Denmark we will wend, and learn
+ At home if Olger be.”
+
+They took their route from Berner land,
+ They eighteen thousand were;
+King Olger good they visit would,
+ And to Denmark all repair.
+
+A messenger by Diderik sent
+ To Danish Olger goes:
+“Say, will ye tribute pay to us,
+ Or with us bandy blows?”
+
+Then full of wrath King Olger grew,
+ Such speech he could not bear:
+“Let Diderik meet us on the wold,
+ We’ll battle with him there.
+
+“Tribute to pay each Dane would scorn,
+ He’s wont himself to take it;
+Our tribute ye will like but ill,
+ If ye come here to seek it.”
+
+His kemps then gathering in a ring
+ The news to them he told:
+“Bern’s haughty lord has sent us word
+ That he’ll have tribute-gold.
+
+“He’ll either tribute have, or hold
+ With us a bloody feud;
+But the first King he will not be
+ We have this year subdued.”
+
+Then cried in scorn a kempion good,
+ King Diderik’s envoy to:
+“To waste our home if Berners come
+ They all hence out won’t go.”
+
+Soon as the news he heard, full glad
+ Was Ulf Van Yern, and gay;
+Then laughed outright bold Hogen knight:
+ “Too long do they delay.”
+
+It was Vidrik Verlandson,
+ High beat with joy his heart;
+Then said amain Orm Ungerswayne:
+ “To meet them let us start.”
+
+“The first man I’ll be in the van,”
+ Sir Ivor Blue he cried:
+“Nor shall ye say that I was last,”
+ Sir Kulden Gray replied.
+
+King Olger on the verdant wold
+ With Diderik battle join’d;
+To fight they went, no jest they meant,
+ So wroth were they in mind.
+
+Endured for three long days the fray,
+ And flinch would neither side;
+To help his lord each Dane his sword
+ In desperation plied.
+
+Down ran the blood, like raging flood
+ Which ’neath steep hills doth pour;
+Then tribute they were forced to pay
+ Who tribute asked before.
+
+Rose in the sky the blood-reek high,
+ And dimmed the lustrous sun;
+’Twas sad to spy the brave men lie
+ So thick the earth upon.
+
+In gore lay thick both men and steeds,
+ Dear friends were parted there;
+All did not laugh the feast who sought,
+ Too hot they found the fare.
+
+Now tamer grown, the Berner Jutt
+ Thought thus himself within:
+“Of us a hundred scarce remain,
+ We cannot hope to win.”
+
+Then took he to his heels and ran,
+ Not often back looked he;
+To say good night forgot Swerting quite,
+ For Bern, for Bern they flee.
+
+Then Diderik turned him with a shout
+ That shook the vaulted skies:
+“Bern, Bern’s the place for us, I guess,
+ For here no refuge lies!”
+
+Then answered ’neath the green hill’s side
+ The son of Verland keen:
+“Ye and your host will little boast
+ Ye have in Denmark been.”
+
+Full eighteen thousand knights were they
+ When out they marched from Bern;
+Wounded and worn but seventy-five
+ With drooping crests, return.
+
+
+
+
+OLGER THE DANE AND BURMAN
+
+
+Burman in the mountain holds,
+ Makes his shield shine brightly there;
+A message he sends to Iceland’s King,
+ For he has a daughter fair.
+
+“Hear, good King of Iceland, hear,
+ Hear what now I say to thee:
+Give to me thy daughter fair,
+ And divide thy land with me.
+
+“Either yield thy daughter fair,
+ And divide with me thy land,
+Or the warrior good prepare
+ Who in fight can me withstand.”
+
+“I have daughter none but one,
+ Damsel Gloriant her they call;
+To King Carvel she’s betrothed,
+ And in him my trust is all.
+
+“I have given her to a King
+ And King Carvel hight is he;
+If he fail to defend the maid,
+ Then thy booty she shall be.”
+
+’Twas the King of Iceland good,
+ To his daughter’s bower he goes;
+And the Damsel Gloriant
+ To receive him gently rose.
+
+“Hear, all dearest daughter mine,
+ For I bring thee tidings new;
+Burman in the mountain holds,
+ He would win thee and doth woo.
+
+“Burman is a kempion dour,
+ And of jesting nought he knows;
+He will surely have thee soon,
+ If no warrior him oppose.”
+
+It was Damsel Gloriant,
+ Silent would no longer stand:
+“In our tower a prisoner is
+ Who will Burman take in hand.”
+
+It was Damsel Gloriant,
+ Her blue mantle o’er her threw;
+Swiftly to the prison tower,
+ Where the prisoners lay she flew.
+
+It was Damsel Gloriant,
+ ’Bove the prisoners all she cried:
+“Hear thou, Olger good, the Dane,
+ Have thy legs yet power to stride?
+
+“Art thou living, Olger Dane?
+ I have something to impart;
+There is a trold for me that lusts,
+ And that trold is Burman swart.
+
+“I’ll not wed the filthy guest,
+ I’m betrothed to Christian knight;
+I to thee will subject be
+ If thou conquer him in fight.”
+
+“Here I’ve lain for fifteen years,
+ All in chains and bondage hard;
+Blessings on thee, Gloriant,
+ That to me thou hast repaired.
+
+“Here for fifteen years I’ve lain,
+ Borne fierce hunger-pangs, and thirst;
+I’m not able now to wage
+ Fight as I was able erst.”
+
+“Hear thou me, good Olger Dane,
+ Save me from my peril, save;
+Ere I take the ugly trold
+ I would fling me in my grave.
+
+“Burman is fierce, his horse is wild
+ I to thee will tell forsooth,
+I have heard and been assured
+ That he bites with wolfish tooth.
+
+“Nothing, nothing will he eat
+ But the flesh of Christian men;
+And nothing, nothing, will he drink
+ But human blood mixt up with bane.”
+
+“Thy father means a gallant man,
+ King Carvel to share thy bed;
+Can he not hold thee from the trold,
+ That thou unto me hast sped?
+
+“Blessings on thee, Gloriant,
+ That thou didst upon me think,
+With Burman I will break a lance
+ If thou give me good meat and drink.
+
+“Canst thou procure my horse again,
+ My good sword and hauberk tried?
+Then for thy sake it will be,
+ I a course with him will ride.
+
+“Carvel is my stall-brother true,
+ To his ears ’twill doubtless come;
+Rather would I lose my life
+ Than the fiend should bear thee home.”
+
+“The best food which thou shalt choose
+ I for thee will straight provide;
+And I will give thee thy steed again,
+ Which thou lovest best to ride.
+
+“I will give thee the strongest sword
+ E’er that armed a warrior’s side;
+Give thee too a faulchion hard,
+ Well thereon thou may’st confide.”
+
+Olger from the tower they took,
+ Garments for him have they wrought;
+They sat him highest at the board,
+ And rich meats for him they brought.
+
+Burman riding came to court,
+ Thought to bear the maid away;
+Olger the Dane against him rode,
+ And soon found him rougher play.
+
+For two days they stoutly fought,
+ As the third towards evening drew
+Down upon a stone they sat,
+ They their strength would there renew.
+
+Then the valiant Burman kemp,
+ To the Danish Olger said:
+“Quarter I will grant, if thou
+ Wilt believe in Mahommed.”
+
+Little could brook that, Olger the Dane,
+ On his foe fierce looks he bent:
+“When thou dwell in blackest hell
+ Say by Olger thou wast sent.”
+
+Up then leapt the kempions twain,
+ ’Gainst each other rode anew;
+Then asunder went their helms,
+ And afar their faulchions flew.
+
+They fought so long, they fought so hard,
+ That their strength was well-nigh flown;
+Slain at length was Burman Kemp,
+ Dead to earth fell Burman down.
+
+Olger to the Damsel rode:
+ “Thou mayst take thy plighted knight,
+For I have with my good sword
+ Slain the foul and poisonous sprite.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON:
+ Printed for THOMAS J. WISE, Hampstead, N.W.
+
+ _Edition limited to Thirty Copies_
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+
+{5} Dragon.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KING DIDERIK***
+
+
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