The Nibelungen Lied
To-day we are deeply touched, as our forefathers
must
have been, at the recital of the boundless suffering and the
overwhelming
concatenation of sin and expiation in the lives of the Recken and
Frauen
of the Nibelungen Legend. That naive singer has remained nameless and
unknown,
who about the end of the 12th century wrote down this legend in poetic
form,
thus preserving forever our most precious relic of Germanic Folksepic.
A
powerful story it is of sin and suffering: corresponding to the world
itself
and just as the primitive mind of a people loves to represent it. The
story
begins as a lovely idyll but ends in gloomy tragedy.
The ancient Rhenish town of Worms was during the great
migrations
the seat of authority of the Burgundian invaders, an east Germanic
stock.
During the glorious reign of King Gunther there appears, attracted by
the
beauty of Chriemhild the king's sister, a young hero, Siegfried, by
name.
He is himself a king's son, his father Siegmund reigning in Xanten
"nieden
by dem Rine". King Gunther receives the fair Recken into his service as
a
vassal.
Siegfried, exhibiting the fairest loyalty to his
overlord,
and rendered invisible by magic, conquers for him the redoubtable
Brunhild,
the proud queen of the island kingdom of Isenland (Iceland)and compels
her
to wed King Gunther. As a reward Siegfried receives the hand of
Chriemhild.
In the fulness of his heart the hero presents to Chriemhild as a
marriage
gift, the Nibelungen Hoard, which he had gained in his early years from
the
sons of the king of the Nibelungen and from Dwarf Alberich the guardian
of
the treasure.
Joy reigns in the king's court at Worms, but it
was not
shared by all. Besides Chriemhild there was another secretly drawn
towards
the hero, and in Brunhild's heart the bridal happiness of Chriemhild
awakens
such envy that soon no friendly word passes between the women. They
become
estranged and one day her bad feeling leads Brunhild to harsh words.
Then
alas, Chriemhild gave unbridled licence to her tongue. In her rash
insolence
she represents to Brunhild that it was not Gunther but Siegfried who
formerly
overcame her. As proof of this she produces the ring and girdle which
Siegfried
had taken on that night from the powerful Brunhild, and which he had
presented
to Chriemhild. With fierce haughtiness Chriemhild taunts her opponent
with
a hateful name no woman could endure, and forbids her to enter the
cathedral.
Brunhild, weeping, informs King Gunther of the
contumely
heaped upon her. The king is filled with wrath, and his vassal, the
gloomy
Hagen considers how he may destroy Siegfried avowedly to avenge the
Queen,
but secretly for the possession of the Nibelungen Hoard. During a hunt
in
the Odenwald Siegfried was treacherously stabbed by Hagen whilst
stooping
to drink from a well. The intention was to spread the report that
Siegfried
had been slain by robbers whilst hunting alone. So, on the following
day
they crossed the Rhine back to Worms.
In the night Hagen caused the dead body of
Siegfried
to be laid in front of Chriemhild's chamber. In the early morning as
Chriemhild
accompanied by her attendants was preparing to go to mass in the
cathedral
she noticed the corpse of her hero. A wail of sorrow arose. Chriemhild
threw
herself weeping on the body of her murdered husband. "Alas!" she cried
"thy
shield is not hewn by swords: thou hast been foully murdered. Did I but
know
who has done this, I would avenge thy death". Chriemhild ordered a
magnificent
bier for her royal hero, and demanded that an ordeal should be held
over
the corpse. "For it is a marvellous thing, and to this day it happens,
that
when the bloodstained murderer approaches wounds bleed anew".
So all the princes and nobles of Burgundy walked
past
the dead body, above which was the figure of the crucified Redeemer of
the
world, and lo! when the grim Hagen came forward the wounds of the dead
man
began to flow. In the presence of the astounded men and horrified women
Chriemhild accused Hagen of the assassination of her husband.
Much treachery and woe accompanied the expiation of this
great crime. The Nibelungen Hoard, the cause of the shameful deed, was
sunk
in the middle of the Rhine in order to prevent future strife arising
from
human greed. But Chriemhild's undying sorrow was not mitigated, nor her
unconquerable thirst for revenge appeased.
After the burial of his son King Siegmund begged
in vain
that Chriemhild should come to the royal city of Xanten; she remained
at
Worms for thirteen years constantly near her beloved dead.
Then the sorrowing woman removed to the Abbey of
Lorch
which her mother, Frau Ute, had founded. Thither also, she transferred
Siegfried's body.
When Etzel (Attila) the ruler of the Huns wooed
her,
Chriemhild urged not by love but by very different feelings gave him
her
hand and accompanied her heathen lord to the Ungarnland. Then she
treacherously
invited Siegfried's murderers to visit her husband, and prepared for
them
a destruction which fills the mind with horror. The Burgundian king and
his
followers, who, since the Hoard had come into their possession, were
called
the Nibelungen, fell slaughtered in the Etzelburg under the swords of
the
Huns and their allies, thus atoning for their faithlessness to the hero
Siegfried. And with this awful holocaust ends the Lied of the
Nibelungen
Not, the most renowned heroic legend in the German tongue.
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