Elegy for Gruffudd ab Adda | |
It is a great splendour by a whitewashed wall, | |
where there is the orchard grove of a splendid company, | |
that a nightingale sings under apple trees | |
4 | by day and by night, |
fine clear–voiced bird with flowing tune, | |
cosy his nest, song of a chick from heaven; | |
golden his beak [and] woven songs at the high table, | |
8 | fine sounding clock on fresh green branch. |
When a wild bowman comes | |
trampling through the wood, praise of a tree edifice, | |
on a grim mission of treachery | |
12 | to destroy the species of the birch trees with four–sided bolt, |
although the trees with their lovely load | |
are full of sweet fruit, gift of gladness, | |
versecraft will be deeply mournful | |
16 | without the bright jewel of the flowering trees. |
Powys, loveliest fruitful land, | |
sweet drinking–horns in fine luxurious taverns, | |
was an inhabited orchard | |
20 | before the killing of the learned lad with grey sword. |
Now — woeful bereavement — | |
its hawks are bereft of the nightingale of praise. | |
This is a land of churls, bardic poets without dignity, | |
24 | with cruel enemies. |
If grief has been heavy for three months, | |
— alas! — no alas was ever louder, | |
cry of grievous distress, | |
28 | before blade's edge struck where none would wish it. |
Gruffudd with his sweet song, my bird, | |
son of Adda, most perfect man, | |
every noble man called for him, | |
32 | aristocrat of May's lovely branches, |
and organ whose piercing [sound] is most entertaining | |
and dear golden nightingale; | |
bee of the land of Gwenwynwyn | |
36 | with true abundant praise, poison came. |
Gruffudd son of Addaf ap Dafydd, | |
he is buried in the choir of Dolgellau, | |
it was awful that his kinsman struck him | |
40 | with steel in hand, brave in his ferocity. |
He laid a weapon on my brother, | |
deep sword–thrust, horrific nature; | |
he turned the sword's edge — was it not pitiful? — | |
44 | through the yellow hair of a pure brave man, |
a blow like the stroke of a saw, | |
a horrible cut through a lovely skull, | |
through the fine hair of a hawk of proud lineage. | |
48 | Alas that his blade was so keen! |
I am angry and shattered, | |
a blow like the slaughter of a goose, excessive churlishness. | |
Bright cheeks, yellow angel, | |
52 | golden turret, the man is dead. |