Ismaer
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The Tale of Ísmær
Dróttkvætt by Petronilla de Chastelerault
- In the ancient skald-songs
- Stories of the north-land,
- Told by swift-tongued elders,
- Tell of mighty giants
- And of hero’s valor,
- Valhalla and Asgard.
- And the ice-born Ísmær,
- Snow-maid, clever, fairest.
- By the northern sea-gate,
- There dwelled lovely Ísmær.
- Daughter of no mortal,
- Time, not woman, birthed her.
- Lived she in the snow-lands,
- Lonely, on an island,
- Blissful, and not seeing
- Sorrows of the far-world.
- Ísmær sat on south-shore,
- Summer months beginning.
- Sky above did darken,
- Dragon dropped from earth-ends!
- Long as seven warships,
- Scales like hard-forged iron.
- Sent by death-bound Hela,
- Dark-world’s overseer.
- Hela, in her death-hall,
- Had four carven marble
- Seeing-stones of power.
- Saw eye-tale inside stone,
- Ísmær’s god-wrought beauty.
- Sent forth dragon northward,
- Want-rage creeping through her.
- Hers great beauty would be!
- Ísmær, fear-sense rising,
- Snatched by dragon’s talons,
- Thought of how to life-keep,
- To her island return.
- “How have I offended?
- Have I given insult?
- if I have, forgive me,”
- Forth spoke to her captor.
- Then did turn the dragon,
- to its heart her words went.
- Said it then unto her,
- “No insult have you given.
- Hela Death-Queen sent me,
- That she might have beauty.
- Now I regret greatly
- Going to her service.”
- Hela, in her death-hall,
- Heard the conversation.
- Anger rose within her,
- Raged she at her servant.
- Cried she of his falseness,
- Sent she forth a fell-storm,
- Sea to water-walls turned,
- Winds to icy hammers!
- Ísmær and the dragon,
- Rising on the soft-winds,
- From the north the storm came,
- Thor-force wind surrounded.
- Ísmær forth to Hela
- Told her this, “O Lady,
- You storm-toss the faultless.
- This, it makes you happy?”
- Hela, in her death-hall,
- Heard the words of Ísmær.
- Stopped she then the dark-storms,
- Thor-force winds no longer.
- Danger there deserted,
- Dragon flew on freely.
- Landed it on white-sand
- Down it laid fair Ísmær.
- In the ancient skald-songs
- Stories of the north-land
- Tell of maiden’s valor-
- Lucky man can best it.
- In the well-built mead-hall
- Toast they the Ice-Maiden.
- “Hail,” cry worthy warriors,
- “Won her life with words!”
You can find the rules for writing a Dróttkvætt here: Svensdrapa.