Capitolo 37
glorious aurora.
Suddenly she felt the happy notes of the silver of Siegfried horn.
"Siegfried! Siegfried!" she cried in joy, and hasty down the mountain
to greet him/it.
All the earth seemed as happy as to that duration of gladiolus when Siegfried came
Rock of Walkuere to ask Brunhilde for his/her bride.
But Brunhilde was not happy together.
You could not forget the sorry news that you/he/she had brought his/her sister, of
the obscurity to Valhalla.
Then, after their first greeted gladiolus, they sat him on the stones, and
Brunhilde told Siegfried the sad history of the ring, from the duration when
Alberich grabbed him from his/her/their Rhine-daughters, up to the day Siegfried
picks him/it up from Hate Cavern.
Then, of equal footstep, they went, the brave Siegfried and the noble
Brunhilde, to the banks of the Rhine.
Them called to his/her Rhine-daughters and his/her Rhine-daughters it came out on
the stones.
With a gladiolus you shout, the flung of Brunhilde the ring in the water.
His/her Rhine-daughters cast later him.
In one moment of theirs they came again to the surface of the water.
They finally contained them jewel, shining
gold.
The happiest song that has ever echoed along the banks of the Rhine was sung
Rhine-daughters give in that morning of gladiolus.
* * * * *
Once more gold you/he/she was become harmless as a sunbeam.
Hurry, worry, the falsehood, the avarice, and the envy faded away from the earth.
Anxiety disappeared from the eyebrows of the tired fathers.
A new happiness entered the eyes of the loving mothers.
A greater power that gold or strength of giant had come to dominate the world,
and that to be able was Love.
MORE ON THE HISTORIES
The author is not able you you/he/she has he thinks that when you have read this small
you book you he/she knows that whole Richard Wagner it said on Siegfried.
When you are more old man, doesn't succeed in reading Rhine-gold of _The The Walkuere,,
Siegfried_ and _Goetterdaemmerung,_ as Richard Wagner told them.
You will enjoy them more because of having read these small histories.