Welcome
Valinor
A place to rant and rave about one of the most beloved English speaking writers since Shakespeare: J.R.R. Tolkien. A place to talk and discuss the bringing to life of this man's vision by Peter Jackson and his New Zealand myth generating crew.

Languages of lost realms (3 threads, 74 posts)
    Poems in Tolkiens works (8 posts)
    Social Thread

    Here is aplace to post and discuss the poetry by tolkien botrh in elvish and in english. ...
    4 Members have made 8 Posts here to date.
    Google
    AncientWorlds.net Web
    Next:
    Prev: Billy Boyd sings another of Bilbo's songs
    The Horns of Ylmir, from "The Fall of Gondolin"
    00017736_000.jpg
    Author: * Theodoric Ostrogoth - 1 Post on this thread out of 83 Posts sitewide.
    Date: Jan 31, 2004 - 15:31

    Nova página 2



    THE HORNS OF YLMIR


    from
    "THE FALL OF GONDOLIN"

    by J.R.R.Tolkien
     

     'Twas in the Land of Willows where the grass is long and green -
    I was fingering my harp-strings, for a wind had crept unseen
    And was speaking in tree-tops, while the voices of the reeds
    Were whispering reedy whispers as the sunset touched the meads,
    Inland musics subtly magic that those reeds alone could weave-
    'Twas in the Land of Willows that once Ylmir came at eve.

    In the twilight by the river on a hollow thing of shell
    He made immortal music, till my heart beneath his spell
    Was broken in the twilight, and the meadows faded dim
    To great grey waters heaving round the rocks where sea-birds swim.

    I heard them wailing round me where the black cliffs towered high
    And the old primeval starlight flickered palely in the sky.
    In that dim and perilous region in whose great tempestuous ways
    I heard no sound of men's voices, in those eldest of the days,
    I sat on the ruined margin of the deep-voiced echoing sea
    Whose roaring foaming music crashed in endless cadency
    On the land besieged for ever in an aeon of assaults
    And torn in towers and pinnacles and caverned in great vaults;
    And its arches shook with thunder and its feet were filled with shapes

    Riven in old sea-warfare from those crags and sable capes.

    Lo! I heard the embattled tempest roaring up behind the tide
    When the trumpet of the first winds sounded, and the grey sea sang and cried
    As a new white wrath woke in him, and his armies rose to war
    And swept in billowed cavalry toward the walled and moveless shore.
    There the windy-bannered fortress of those high and virgin coasts
    Flung back the first thin feelers of the elder tidal hosts;
    Flung back the restless streamers that like arms of a tentacled thing

    Coiling and creeping onward did rustle and suck and cling.
    Then a sign arose and a murmuring in that stealthy-whispering van,
    While, behind, the torrents gathered and the leaping billows ran,
    Till the foam-haired water-horses in green rolling volumes came --
    A mad tide trampling landward -- and their war-song burst to flame.

    Huge heads were tossed in anger and their crests were towers of froth
    And the song the great seas were singing was a song of unplumbed wrath,
    For through that giant welter Osse's trumpets fiercely blew,
    That the voices of the flood yet deeper and the High Wind louder grew;
    Deep hollows hummed and fluted as they sucked the sea-winds in;
    Spumes and great white spoutings yelled shrilly o'er the din;
    Gales blew the bitter tresses of the sea in the land's dark face
    And wild airs thick with spindrift fled on a whirling race
    From battle unto battle, till the power of all the seas
    Gathered like one mountain about Osse's awful knees,
    And a dome of shouting water smote those dripping black facades
    And its catastrophic fountains smashed in deafening cascades.

    Then the immeasurable hymn of Ocean Lord I heard as it rose and fell
    To its organ whose stops were the piping of gulls and the thunderous swell;
    Heard the burden of the waters and the singing of the waves
    Whose voices came on for ever and went rolling to the caves,
    Where an endless fugue of echoes splashed against wet stone
    And arose and mingled in unison into a murmuring drone --
    'Twas a music of uttermost deepness that stired in the profound,
    And all the voices of all oceans were gathered to that sound;
    'Twas Ylmir, Lord of Waters, with all-stilling hand that made
     

    Then the immeasurable hymn of Ocean Lord I heard as it rose and fell
    To its organ whose stops were the piping of gulls and the thunderous swell;
    Whose voices came on for ever and went rolling to the caves,
    Where an endless fugue of echoes splashed against wet stone
    And arose and mingled in unison into a murmuring drone --
    'Twas a music of uttermost deepness that stired in the profound,
    And all the voices of all oceans were gathered to that sound;
    'Twas Ylmir, Lord of Waters, with all-stilling hand that made
    Unconquerable harmonies, that the roaring sea obeyed,
    That its waters poured off and Earth heaved her glistening shoulders again
    Naked up into the airs and the cloudrifts and sea-going rain,
    Till the suck and suck of green eddies and the slap of ripples was all
    That reached to mine isled stone, save the old unearthly call
    Of sea-birds long-forgotten and the grating of ancient wings.
    Thus murmurous slumber took me mid those far-off eldest things

    ( In a lonely twilit region down whose old chaotic ways
    I heard no sound of men's voices, in those eldest of the days
    When the world reeled in the tumult as the Great Gods tore the Earth
    In the darkness, in the tempest of the cycles ere our birth),
    Till the tides went out, and the Wind died, and did all sea musics cease
    And I woke to silent caverns and empty sands and peace.

    Then the magic drifted from me and that music loosed its bands --
    Far, far-off, conches calling -- lo! I stood in the sweet lands,
     And the meadows were about me where the weeping willows grew,
    Where the long grass stirred beside me, and my feet were drenched with dew.
    Only the reeds were rustling, but a mist lay on the streams
    Like a sea-roke drawn far inland, like a shred of salt sea-dreams.
    'Twas in the Land of Willows that I heard th'unfathomed breath
    Of the Horns of Ylmir calling -- and shall hear them till my death.

     


    NEXT:
    PREV: Billy Boyd sings another of Bilbo's songs
Rome - Rome, Season 1 - The Stolen Eagle


Copyright 2002-2008 AncientWorlds LLC | Code of Conduct and Terms of Service | Contact Us! | The AncientWorlds Staff