Cito de la traducción de Burton Raffel:
I heard
The oldest soldiers of all calling
For ale from Hrothgar's daughter's hands,
And Freaw was the way they greeted her when she gave them
The golden cups. And Hrothgar will give her
To Ingeld, gracious Froda's son;
She and that ripening soldier will be married,
The Danes' great lord and protector has declared,
Hoping that his quarrel with the Hathobards can be settled
By a woman. He's wrong: how many wars
Have been put to rest in a prince's bed?
Few. A bride can bring a little
Peace, make spears silent for a time,
But not long. Ingeld and all his men
Will be drinking in the hall, when the wedding is done
And Freaw is his wife; the Danes will be wearing
Gleaming armor and ring-marked old swords;
And the prince and his people will remember those treasures,
Will remember that their fathers once wore them, fell
With those helmets on their heads, those swords in their hands.
And seeing their ancestral armor and weapons
Ingeld and his followers will be angry. And one
Of his soldiers, sitting with ale in his cup
And bitterness heavy in his heart, will remember
War and death, and while he sits and drinks
His sharp old tongue will begin to tempt
Some younger warrior, pushing and probing
For a new war: "That sword, that precious old blade
Over there, I think you know it, friend.
Your father carried it, fought with it the last time
He could swing a sword; the Danes killed him
—And many more of our men—and stripped
The dead bodies: the brave, bold Danes!
One of the princess's people, here,
Now, might be the murderer's son,
Boasting about his treasures, his ancient
Armor—which ought to be yours, by right."
Bitter words will work in a hot-tempered brain,
Pushing up thoughts of the past,
And then, when he can, calling his father's
Name, the youngster will kill some innocent
Dane, a servant—and bloody sword
In hand will run from the hall, knowing
His way through the woods. But war eill begin
As he runs, to the sound of broken oaths,
And its heat will dry up Ingelds's heart,
Leave him indifferent to his Danish bride.
Hrothgar may think the Hathobards love him,
Loving Freaw, but the friendship can't last,
The vows are worthless.
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