Authors: Frederick Rebsamen
 | Have now and hold these havoc-stained walls |
 | remember your strength stand against darkness |
  660 | with luck and courage. You will lack for nothing |
 | if you risk this nightfall and rise with the sun.” |
 | He left the hall then Healfdene's son |
 | lord of the Shield-Danes beloved treasure-king |
 | went to his bedrest Wealhtheow beside him |
 | to comfort his sleep. The King of glory |
 | granted for that night a guard against helldeath |
 | a strong hall-warden holding in darkness |
 | a keen house-watch for the king of Heorot. |
 | The Geats' champion gathered his men |
  670 | matched against evil the Measurer's strength. |
 | He stripped off his armor steel-meshed mailcoat |
 | gilded mask-helmet gold-handled sword |
 | set them aside to serve him elsewhere |
 | rich war-weapons wonder-smiths' handwork. |
 | He kindled their courage with keen boastwords |
 | as they bent to bedrest in that best of halls: |
 | “No meaner am I in mortal combat |
 | grim hand-wrestling than Grendel himself. |
 | I will not send him to sleep with my blade |
  680 | carve out his life though I could easily. |
 | He has learned nothing of linden-shield play |
 | fighting with armor fearless though he be |
 | in dark thane-murderâon this dangerous night |
 | we'll have no swordplay if he seeks me here |
 | no clear weapon-fightâthen the wise Deemer |
 | will show his mercy the Shaper of all |
 | will measure us both, bring judgment here.” |
 | He bent to his bolster Beowulf the Geat |
 | put his head to restâaround him his warriors |
  690 | steelhearted sailors settled down to sleep. |
 | Not one believed they would leave Heorot |
 | sail once again seek out their homeland |
 | the known meadows of their native country. |
 | Too many stories of that tall wine-hall |
 | emptied of Danes by dark night-slaughter |
 | had found their ears. But the Father of men |
 | wove them battle-speedâWeather-Geats prevailed |
 | reprieved from hate-death haled to victory |
 | by the strength of one saved from farewell |
  700 | by a tight handgrip. It truly is known |
 | that God manages men of this earth. |
 | He slipped through the darkness under deep nightpall |
 | sliding through shadows. Shield-warriors rested |
 | slumbering guardians of that gabled hallâ |
 | all except one. That wandering spirit |
 | could never drag them to cold death-shadow |
 | if the world's Measurer wished to stop him. |
 | (A waking warrior watched among them |
 | anger mounting aching for revenge.) |
  710 | He moved through the mist past moors and ice-streams |
 | Grendel gliding God's wrath on him |
 | simmering to snare some sleeping hall-thanes |
 | trap some visitors in that tall gift-house. |
 | He moved under cloudbanks crossed the meadowlands |
 | till the wine-hall towered tall gold-gables |
 | rising in night-sky. Not for the first time |
 | he came to Heorot Hrothgar's gift-hallâ |
 | never had he come craving a blood-feast |
 | with worse slaughter-luck waiting there inside. |
  720 | He came to the hall hungry for man-flesh |
 | exiled from joy. The ironbound door |
 | smith-hammered hinges sprang at his touchâ |
 | raging then for gore he gripped in his hand-vise |
 | the ruined bolt-work wrenched it away |
 | leapt into the hall loomed with blood-rage |
 | aching with life-lustâfrom his eyes shone forth |
 | a fearful glowering fire-coals smoldering. |
 | Near him he spied sleeping together |
 | close war-brothers waiting peacefully |
  730 | prime for plucking. He exploded with fury |
 | growled with greed-hunger glared all around him |
 | burning to separate bodies from life-breath |
 | drain blood-vessels before breaking of day. |
 | His luck left him on that last slaughter-nightâ |
 | no more after sunrise would he murder and run. |
 | Wakeful and watching wonder in his mind |
 | Hygelac's nephew held to his bedrest |
 | anxious to measure that monster's strength. |
 | Nor did that thief think about waiting |
  740 | but searched with fire-eyes snared a doomed one |
 | in terminal rest tore frantically |
 | crunched bonelockings crammed blood-morsels |
 | gulped him with glee. Gloating with his luck |
 | he finished the first one his feet and his hands |
 | swallowed all of him. He stepped closer |
 | groped with claw-hands grabbed the next oneâ |
 | the watchful Geat grabbed back at him |
 | gripped with his fingers that great demon-hand |
 | tightened his grasp tugged steadily. |
  750 | Soon that fen-stalker found himself caught |
 | grasped and twisted by a greater handgrip |
 | than any he had known in the earth's regions |
 | iron finger-clampsâinto his mind |
 | fear came nudgingânowhere could he move. |
 | His thoughts yearned away he wished for his mere-den |
 | devil's companyâdoubt pulled at him |
 | a new sensation slid into his mind. |
 | Then Hygelac's thane held to his boasting |
 | mindful of his speech stood quickly then |
  760 | tightened his fistâfingers crackled |
 | Grendel pulled back Beowulf followed. |
 | That dark wanderer wished for more room |
 | to be on his way back to the moor-hills |
 | flee to the fens. He felt his knuckles |
 | crushed in that grip. A grim visitor |
 | that fate-marked fiend found in Heorot. |
 | The hall thunderedâto hovering Danes |
 | safe hut-dwellers sounds of that battle |
 | clattered and roared. They raged together |
  770 | warrior and guestâthe walls rumbled. |
 | With great wonder the wine-hall survived |
 | twin horn-gables trembling with combat |
 | towering high aboveâit held steadily |
 | inside and out with iron log-bonds |
 | forged by smith-hammers. The floor shuddered |
 | strong mead-benches sailed to the walls |
 | burnished banquet-seats bounced and clattered. |
 | Hrothgar's wisemen hallowed counselors |
 | had never believed that a living creature |
  780 | might break Heorot bring down the wallsâ |
 | only fire's embrace flames' greediness |
 | could swallow that hall. Storm-sounds of death |
 | rocked the horn-gables hammered the roofâ |
 | shivering Danefolk shook with hell-fear |
 | heard through the walls a wailing sorrow. |
 | God's demon-foe ground his blood-teeth |
 | howled to be gone home to the ice-streams |
 | far from that hall. Hygelac's thane |
 | strongest mortal mightiest of hand |
  790 | locked that hell-fiend hard within his grasp. |
 | He found no reason to free that monster |
 | spare him to flee far across the moors |
 | nor did he consider that sinful life |
 | useful to anyone. Anxious for their leader |
 | men of the Geats grabbed treasure-swords |
 | lifted them high to help their champion |
 | fight for his life with file-hardened edges. |
 | They were not prepared for this new hand-battling |
 | those hard-swinging swordmen hewing with steel-bites |
  800 | slashing about them with shield-breaking cuts |
 | seeking that fiend-soulâthey fought without knowing |
 | that the choicest of blades champions' war-weapons |
 | were helpless to harm that hell's messenger. |
 | He had cast his spell on keenest thane-weapons |
 | finest treasure-swords though his time was shortâ |
 | that final night-visit finished his hall-raids |
 | destiny struck his damned hell-soul |
 | banished it forever past boundaries of grace. |
 | Then that giant ravager rejected by God |
  810 | marked with murder measured by his sins |
 | finally conceived in his fiend's mindthoughts |
 | that his loathsome body would bear no more. |
 | Hygelac's thane held fast to him |
 | tightened his gripâGrendel yearned away |
 | his arm stretched thin thronging with painâ |