— EXULTATION OF GOLD —
He comes forth from the heart of the night as
the coming of morning, light as the tossing of wind-rippled grainfields
in the time of high mowing, bright as sun's rising, dancing — all
of him shining like the sun on the sea, flame amid flame, light leaping
through light like a sea-school at spring tide — His body is forged of
the living metal, his spirit sung before the first stars, and proud in
his might he has followed his liege lord to this Northern exile, to changing,
to
hard forging and testing, and now — in his full strength — to victory.
As a king on the day of his coronation so he returns,
to the lands that rejected him, to the people that mocked him, drove him
back to his exile — an army to back him and terror before him, behind him,
about him. Too young in his shaping when he dared his first venture, smitten
and mastered, sent hence in failure to face the scourge of his folly flung
back by his maker — this day he reigns, rules them, overrides them that
rode on his tail in tempest pursuing. Now he is the storm, the pursuer,
their scourge—
In the heart of the flames he is dancing, rejoicing
between two armies, clad in glory; none dare face him now, none dares defy
him; he is the gonfalon, the sign of his followers, himself his own banner
born in triumph before them. As a wind-whipped standard in the field
of blue heaven so he surges through the field of living gold, darting,
twisting, curvetting like a steed new brought from the stables. He laughs,
and armies bow at his laughter, as rough gray-gold of dead grasses transforms
into gold briefer but truer for his delighting — yet none so bright as
he
in his going, nothing shines forth as this lithe one, lightly leaping,
fretted with fire and adorned in reflections…
Satrap he might be, but his liege lord is greater
than all of these petty kings and greater in patience even than they, and
now they will fall prostrate before him, in death or in long, too-long
living, knowing his power and the strength of his servant. The glint of
their gold-work allures him, its shining and being a call to his own heart,
but far stronger the call of their fear and despair, he does not halt for
the spoils, he is drunk with his own exultation and the glitter of his
scales all the gold that he needs this day—
He whirls about, dashing headlong, the swiftest
of his attendants can scarcely keep pace with him, the courses of firewash
that heralded him hardly faster; lashing coils form sigils of destruction,
a deadly script in the darkness, his hastening self as he harries his prey
the rapid writing of an inescapable doom—
The blaze of his joy runs from mountain to mountain-root
ranging, filling the night to overflowing, a bowlful of wine, red-gold,
burning, a draught that none in this wide-open hall may refuse, the fumes
of it hiding the stars. —What fear has he, Glaurung the Golden, what heed
need he pay to the still stars? They are but the signs of a people now
defeated, and how shall they sign his destruction? Where shall any be found
that will face him? Not here — not here—!
(…But the star that shall slay him is far-fallen
in years as in leagues, deep-buried in thought as in stone, and the one
who will wield it unthought of in Arda—) |