Early History of the Danes
Listen:
You have heard of the Danish Kings
in the old days and
how
they were great warriors.
Shield, the son of Sheaf,
took
many an enemy's chair,
terrified many a warrior,
after he was found
an orphan.
He prospered under the sky
until people
everywhere
listened when he spoke.
He was a good king!
Shield had a son,
child for his yard,
sent by God
to comfort
the people,
to keep them from fear--
Grain was his name;
he was
famous
throughout the North.
Young princes should do as he
did--
give out treasures
while they're still young
so that when
they're old
people will support them
in time of war.
A man
prospers
by good deeds
in any nation.
Shield died at his fated hour,
went to God still strong.
His
people carried him to the sea,
which was his last request.
In the
harbor stood
a well-built ship,
icy but ready for the sea.
They
laid Shield there,
propped him against the mast
surrounded by
gold
and treasure from distant lands.
I've never heard
of a more
beautiful ship,
filled with shields, swords,
and coats of mail,
gifts
to him for his long trip.
No doubt he had a little
more
than he did as a child
when he was sent out,
a naked orphan
in an empty boat.
Now he had a golden banner
high over his head,
was,
sadly by a rich people,
given to the sea.
The wisest alive
can't tell
where a death ship goes.
Grain ruled the Danes
a long time after his father's death,
and
to him was born
the great Healfdene, fierce in battle,
who ruled
until he was old.
Healfdene had four children--
Heorogar, Hrothgar,
Halga the Good,
and a daughter who married
Onela, King of the
Swedes.
Hrothgar Becomes King of the Danes
After Hrothgar became king
he won many battles:
his friends and
family
willingly obeyed him;
his childhood friends
became famous
soldiers.
So Hrothgar decided
he would build a mead-hall,
the greatest the
world had
ever seen, or even imagined.
There he would share
out
to young and old alike
all that God gave him
(except for
public lands and men's lives).
I have heard that orders
went out far and wide;
tribes
throughout the world
set to work on that building.
And it was built,
the world's
greatest mead-hall.
And that great man
called the
building
"Herot," the hart.
After it was built,
Hrothgar did what he said
he would: handed
out gold
and treasure at huge feasts.
That hall was
high-towered,
tall and wide-gabled
(though destruction
awaited,
fire and swords of family trouble;
and outside in the night
waited
a tortured spirit of hell).
The words of the poet,
the sounds of the harp,
the joy of people
echoed.
The poet told how the world
came to be, how God made the
earth
and the water surrounding,
how He set the sun and the
moon
as lights for people
and adorned the earth
with limbs and
leaves for everyone.
Hrothgar's people lived in joy,
happy until
that wanderer of the wasteland,
Grendel the demon, possessor of the
moors,
began his crimes.
He was of a race of monsters
exiled from mankind by God--
He was
of the race of Cain,
that man punished for
murdering his
brother.
From that family comes
all evil beings--
monsters,
elves, zombies.
Also the giants who
fought with God and got
repaid with the flood.
end of episode one