Lay of Leithian Canto II
From Tolkien Gateway
This Cantos of the Lay of Leithian|Canto]] of the Lay of Leithian tells how Barahir lived as an outlaw. It tells of the snaring of Gorlim the unhappy by a phantom of his lost wife, and how he revealed the secret hiding of Barahir. Then how Thû slew him, and his ghost appeared to Beren, Barahir's son, who happened to be away, and told him of his treachery. Beren upon returning found his father and all his outlaw companions dead. He recaptured the Ring of Barahir from an orc who ironically was speaking of lying to Thû and keeping the ring. There the Canto ends. This Canto includes one of the most praised paragraphs of the Lay, describing Morgoth, recounted below.
- Far in teh North neath hills of stone
- in caverns black there was a throne
- by fires illuminated underground,
- that winds of ice with moaning sound
- made flare and flicker in dark smoke;
- the wavering bitter coils did choke
- the sunless airs of dungeons deep
- where evil things did crouch and creep.
- There sat a king: no Elfin race
- nor mortal blood, nor kindly grace
- of earth or heaven might he own,
- far older, stronger than the stone
- the world is built of, than the fire
- that burns within more fierce and dire;
- and thoughts profound were in his heart:
- a gloomy power that dwelt apart
-
- Unconquerable spears of steel
- were at his nod. No ruth did feel
- the legions of his marshalled hate,
- on whom did wolf and raven wait;
- and black the ravens sat and cried
- upon their banners black, and wide
- was heard their hideous chanting dread
- above the reek and trampled dead.
- With fire and sword his ruin red
- on all that would not bow the head
- like lightning fell. The northern land
- lay groaning neath his ghastly hand.
- Lines 99-126