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Hildebrand And Hellelil. Translated From The Danish.

By William Morris

Topics: classic

Hellelil sitteth in bower there,     None knows my grief but God alone,     And seweth at the seam so fair,     I never wail my sorrow to any other one.     But there whereas the gold should be     With silk upon the cloth sewed she.     Where she should sew with silken thread     The gold upon the cloth she laid.     So to the Queen the word came in     That Hellelil wild work doth win.     Then did the Queen do furs on her     And went to Hellelil the fair.     "O swiftly sewest thou, Hellelil,     Yet nought but mad is thy sewing still!"     "Well may my sewing be but mad     Such evil hap as I have had.     My father was good king and lord,     Knights fifteen served before his board.     He taught me sewing royally,     Twelve knights had watch and ward of me.     Well served eleven day by day,     To folly the twelfth did me bewray.     And this same was hight Hildebrand,     The King's son of the English Land.     But in bower were we no sooner laid     Than the truth thereof to my father was said.     Then loud he cried o'er garth and hall:     'Stand up, my men, and arm ye all!     'Yea draw on mail and dally not,     Hard neck lord Hildebrand hath got!'     They stood by the door with glaive and spear;     'Hildebrand rise and hasten here!'     Lord Hildebrand stroked my white white cheek:     'O love, forbear my name to speak.     'Yea even if my blood thou see,     Name me not, lest my death thou be.'     Out from the door lord Hildebrand leapt,     And round about his good sword swept.     The first of all that he slew there     Were my seven brethren with golden hair.     Then before him stood the youngest one,     And dear he was in the days agone.     Then I cried out: 'O Hildebrand,     In the name of God now stay thine hand.     'O let my youngest brother live     Tidings hereof to my mother to give!'     No sooner was the word gone forth     Than with eight wounds fell my love to earth.     My brother took me by the golden hair,     And bound me to the saddle there.     There met me then no littlest root,     But it tore off somewhat of my foot.     No littlest brake the wild-wood bore,     But somewhat from my legs it tore.     No deepest dam we came unto     But my brother's horse he swam it through.     But when to the castle gate we came,     There stood my mother in sorrow and shame.     My brother let raise a tower high,     Bestrewn with sharp thorns inwardly.     He took me in my silk shirt bare     And cast me into that tower there.     And wheresoe'er my legs I laid     Torment of the thorns I had.     Wheresoe'er on feet I stood     The prickles sharp drew forth my blood.     My youngest brother me would slay     But my mother would have me sold away.     A great new bell my price did buy     In Mary's Church to hang on high.     But the first stroke that ever it strake     My mother's heart asunder brake."     So soon as her sorrow and woe was said,     None knows my grief but God alone,     In the arm of the Queen she sat there dead,     I never tell my sorrow to any other one.

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"Hellelil sitteth in bower there,..."

This evocative piece by William Morris, titled "Hildebrand And Hellelil. Translated From The Danish.", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Author:William Morris

"Hellelil sitteth in bower there,..." by William Morris

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William Morris

About William Morris

William Morris (1834–1896) was an English poet, artist, and socialist reformer associated with the Pre-Raphaelites and the Arts and Crafts movement. His epic poems "The Earthly Paradise" and "Sigurd the Volsung" draw on medieval legend and Norse mythology.

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