Now tells the tale of King Volsung and his sons
that they go at the time appointed to Gothland at the bidding of King
Siggeir, and put off from the land in three ships, all well manned, and
have a fair voyage, and made Gothland late of an evening tide.
But that same night came Signy and called her father
and brothers to a privy talk, and told them what she deemed King Siggeir
was minded to do, and how that he had drawn together an army no man
may meet. "And," says she, "he is minded to do guilefully by you; wherefore
I bid you get ye gone back again to your own land, and gather together
the mightiest power ye may, and then come back hither and avenge you;
neither go ye now to your undoing, for ye shall surely fail not to fall
by his wiles if ye turn not on him even as I bid you."
Then spake Volsung the king, "All people and nations
shall tell of the word I spake, yet being unborn, wherein I vowed a
vow that I would flee in fear from neither fire nor the sword; even
so have I done hitherto, and shall I depart therefrom now I am old?
Yea withal never shall the maidens mock these my sons at the games,
and cry out at them that they fear death; once alone must all men need
die, and from that season shall none escape; so my rede is that we flee
nowhither, but do the work of our hands in as manly wise as we may;
a hundred fights have I fought and whiles I had more, and whiles I had
less, and yet even had I the victory, nor shall it ever be heard tell
of me that I fled away or prayed for peace."
Then Signy wept right sore, and prayed that she might
not go back to King Siggeir, but King Volsung answered --
"Thou shalt surely go back to thine husband, and abide
with him, howsoever it fares with us."
So Signy went home, and they abode there that night
but in the morning, as soon as it was day, Volsung bade his men arise
and go aland and make them ready for battle; so they went aland, all
of them all-armed, and had not long to wait before Siggeir fell on them
with all his army, and the fiercest fight there was betwixt them; and
Siggeir cried on his men to the onset all he might; and so the tale
tells that King Volsung and his sons went eight times right through
Siggeir's folk that day, smiting and hewing on either hand, but when
they would do so even once again, King Volsung fell amidst his folk
and all his men withal, saving his ten sons, for mightier was the power
against them than they might withstand.
But now are all his sons taken, and laid in bonds and
led away; and Signy was ware withal that her father was slain, and her
brothers taken and doomed to death, that she called King Siggeir apart
to talk with her, and said --
"This will I pray of thee, that thou let not slay my
brothers hastily, but let them be set awhile in the stocks, for home
to me comes the saw that says, "Sweet to eye while seen": but longer
life I pray not for them, because I wot well that my prayer will not
avail me."
Then answered Siggeir
"Surely thou art mad and witless, praying thus for more
bale for thy brothers than their present slaying; yet this will I grant
thee, for the better it likes me the more they must bear, and the longer
their pain is or ever death come to them."
Now he let it be done even as she prayed, and a mighty
beam was brought and set on the feet of those ten brethren in a certain
place of the wild-wood, and there they sit day-long until night; but
at midnight, as they sat in the stocks, there came on them a she-wolf
from out the wood; old she was, and both great and evil of aspect; and
the first thing she did was to bite one of those brethren till he died,
and then she ate him up withal, and went on her way.
But the next morning Signy sent a man to the brethren,
even one whom she most trusted, to wot of the tidings; and when he came
back he told her that one of them was dead, and great and grievous she
deemed it, if they should all fare in like wise, and yet naught might
she avail them.
Soon is the tale told thereof: nine nights together
came the she- wolf at midnight, and each night slew and ate up one of
the brethren, until all were dead, save Sigmund only; so now, before
the tenth night came, Signy sent that trusty man to Sigmund, her brother,
and gave honey into his hand, bidding him do it over Sigmund's face,
and set a little deal of it in his mouth; so he went to Sigmund and
did as he was bidden, and then came home again; and so the next night
came the she-wolf according to her wont, and would slay him and eat
him even as his brothers; but now she sniffs the breeze from him, whereas
he was anointed with the honey, and licks his face all over with her
tongue, and then thrusts her tongue into the mouth of him. No fear he
had thereof, but caught the she-wolf's tongue betwixt his teeth, and
so hard she started back thereat, and pulled herself away so mightily,
setting her feet against the stock that all was riven asunder; but he
ever held so fast that the tongue came away by the roots, and thereof
she had her bane.
But some men say that this same she-wolf was the mother
of King Siggeir, who had turned herself into this likeness by troll's
lore and witchcraft.