Looking great, what is the story your design is telling ?
Looking forward to the finished work.
Dave.
There isn't a complete English text that survives but this comes from the Poetic Edda which survived in Iceland.
This translation is from Bellows in 1923
I've
highlighted the bits relevant to the carving.
Volundarkvitha
There was a king in Sweden named Nithuth. He had two sons and one daughter; her name was Bothvild. There were three brothers, sons of a king of the Finns; one was called Slagfith, another Egil, the third Volund. They went on snowshoes and hunted wild beasts. They came into Ulfdalir and there they built themselves a house; there was a lake there which is called Ulfsjar. Early one morning they found the shore of the lake three women, who were spinning flax.
Near them were their swan-garments, for they were Valkyries. Two of them were daughters of King Hlothver, Hlathguth the Swan-White and Hervor the All-Wise, and the third was Olrun, daughter of Kjar from Valland. There did they bring home to their hall with them. Egil took Olrun, and Slagfith Swan-White, and Volund All-Wise.
There they dwelt seven winters; but then they flew away to find battles, and came back no more. Then Egil set forth on his snowshoes to follow Olrun, and Slagfith followed Swan-White, but Volund stayed in Ulfdalir. He was a most skillful man, as men know from old tales. King Nithuth had him taken by force, as the poem tells here.
1. Maids from the south through Myrkwood flew,
Fair and young, their fate to follow;
On the shore of the sea to rest them they sat,
The maids of the south, and flax they spun.
2. -lacuna-
Hlathguth and Hervor, Hlothver's chidren,
And Olrun the Wise Kjar's daughter was.
3. -lacuna-
One in her arms took Egil then
To her white bosom, the woman fair.
4. Swan-White the second,- swan-feathers she wore,
-lacuna- ed em /then to her breast Slagfith embraced/
And her arms the third of the sisters threw
Next round Volund's neck so white.
5. There did they sit for seven winters,
In the eighth at last came their longing again,
(And in the ninth did need divide them)
The maidens yearned for the murky wood,
The fair young maids, their fate to follow.
6. Volund home from his hunting came,
From a weary way, the weather-wise bowman,
Slagfith and Egil the hall found empty,
Out and in went they, everywhere seeking.
7. East fared Egil after Olrun,
And Slagfith south to seek for Swan-White;
Volund alone in Ulfdalir lay
-lacuna- ed em /Till back the maiden bright should come/
8. Red gold he fashioned with fairest gems,
And rings he strung on ropes of bast;
So for his wife he waited long,
If the fair one home might come to him.
9. This Nithuth learned, the lord of Njars,
That Volund alone in Ulfdalir lay;
By night went his men, their mail-coats were studded,
Their shields in the waning moonlight shone.
10. From their saddles the gable wall they sought;
And in they went at the end of the hall;
Rings they saw there on ropes of bast,
Seven hundred the hero had.
11. Off they took them, but all they left
Save one alone which they bore away.
-lacuna-
-lacuna-
12. Volund home from his hunting came,
From a weary way, the weather-wise bowman;
A brown bear's flesh would he roast with fire;
Soon the wood so dry was burning well,
(The wind-dried wood that Volund's was).
13. On the bearskin he rested, and counted the rings,
The master of elves, but one he missed;
That Hlothver's daughter had it he thought,
And the all-wise maid had come one more.
14.
So long he sat that he fell asleep,
His waking empty of gladness was;
Heavy chains he saw on his hands,
And fetters bound his feet together.
Volund spake:
14. "What men are they who thus have laid
Ropes of bast to bind me now?"
15. The Nithuth called, the lord of Njars;
"How gottest thou, Volund, greatest of elves,
These treasures of ours in Ulfdalir?"
Volund spake:
16. "The gold was not on Grani's way,
Far methinks, is our realm from the hills of the Rhine;
I mind me that treasures more we had
When happy together at home we were."
17. Without stood the wife of Nithuth wise,
And in she came from the end of the hall;
On the floor she stood, and softly spoke:
"Not kind does he look who comes from the wood."
King Nithuth gave to his daughter Bothvild the gold ring that he had taken from the bast rope in Volund's house, and he himself wore the sword that Volund had had. The queen spake:
18. "The glow of his eyes is like gleaming snakes,
His teeth he gnashes if now is shown
The sword, or Bothvild's ring he sees;
Let them straightway cut his sinews of strength,
And set him then in Saevarstath."
So it was done: the sinews in his knee-joints were cut, and he was set in an island which was near the mainland, and was called Saevarstath. There he smithied for the king all kinds of precious things. No man dared to go to him, save only the king himself. Volund spake:
19. "At Nithuth's girdle gleams the sword
That I sharpened keen with cunningest craft,
(And hardened the steel with highest skill
The bright blade far forever is borne,
(Nor back shall I see it borne to my smithy
Now Bothvild gets the golden ring
(That was once my bride's,- ne'er well shall it be.")
20.
He sat, nor slept, and smote with his hammer,
Fast for Nithuth wonders he fashioned;
Two boys did go in his door to gaze,
Nithuth's sons, into Saevarstath.
21. They came to the chest, and they craved the keys,
The evil was open when in they looked;
To the boys it seemed that gems they saw,
Gold in plenty and precious stones.
Volund spake:
22. "Come ye alone, the next day come,
Gold to you both shall then be given;
Tell not the maids or the men of the hall,
To no one say that me you have sought."
23. -lacuna- questionable gap
Early did brother to brother call:
"Swift let us go the rings to see."
24. They came to the chest, and they craved the keys,
The evil was open when in they looked;
He smote off their heads, and their feet he hid
Under the sooty straps of the bellows.
25.
Their skulls, once hid by their hair, he took,
Set them in silver and sent them to Nithuth;
Gems full fair from their eyes he fashioned,
To Nithuth's wife so wise he gave them.
26.
And from the teeth of the twain he wrought
A brooch for the breast, to Bothvild he sent it;
-lacuna-
27.
Bothvild then of her ring did boast,
-lacuna- ed em (But soon it broke, and swiftly to Volund,/
She bore it and said - ") "The ring I have broken,
I dare not say it save to thee."
Volund spake:
28. "I shall weld the break in the gold so well
That fairer than ever thy father shall find it,
And better much thy mother shall think it,
And thou no worse than ever it was."
29. Beer he brought, he was better in cunning,
Until in her seat full soon she slept.
Volund spake:
30. "Now vengence I have for all my hurts,
Save one alone, on the evil woman."
31. -lacuna-
-lacuna-
Quoth Volund: "Would that well were the sinews
Maimed in my feet by Nithuth's men."
32.
Laughing Volund rose aloft,
Weeping Bothvild went from the isle,
For her lover's flight and her father's wrath.
33. Without stood the wife of Nithuth wise,
And in she came from the end of the hall;
But he by the wall in weariness sat:
"Wakest thou, Nithuth, lord of the Njars?"
Nithuth spake:
34. "Always I wake, and ever joyless,
Little I sleep since my sons were slain;
Cold is my head, cold was thy counsel,
One thing, with Volund to speak, I wish.
35. -lacuna- questionable
"Answer me, Volund, greatest of elves,
What happed with my boys that hale once were?"
Volund spake:
36. "First shalt thou all the oaths now swear,
By the rail of the ship, and the rim of the shield,
By the shoulder of the steed, and the edge of the sword,
That to Volund's wife thou wilt work no ill,
Nor yet my bride to her death wilt bring,
Though a wife I should have that well thou knowest,
And a child I should have within thy hall.
37.
"Seek the smithy that thou didst set,
Thou shalt find the bellows sprinkled with blood;
I smote off the heads of both thy sons,
And their feet 'neath the sooty straps I hid.
38. "Their skulls, once hid by their hair, I took,
Set them in silver and sent them to Nithuth;
Gems full fair from their eyes I fashioned,
To Nithuth's wife so wise I gave them.
39. "And from the teeth of the twain I wrought
A brooch for the breast, to Bothvild I gave it;
Now big with child does Bothvild go,
The only daughter ye two had ever."
Nithuth spake:
40. "Never spakest thou word that worse could hurt me,
Nor that me, Volund, more bitter for vengence;
There is no man so high from thy horse to take thee,
Or so doughty an archer as down to shoot thee,
While high in the clouds thy course thou takest."
41. Laughing Volund rose aloft,
But left in sadness Nithuth sat.
-lacuna-
42. The spake Nithuth, lord of Njars:
"Rise up, Thakkrath, best of my thralls,
Bid Bothvild come, the bright-bowed maid,
Bedecked so fair, with her father to speak."
43. -lacuna-
-lacuna-
"Is it true, Bothvild, that which was told me;
Once in the isle with Volund wert thou?"
Bothvild spake:
44. "True is it, Nithuth, that which was told thee,
Once in the isle with Volund was I,
An hour of lust, alas it should be!
Nought was my might with such a man,
Nor from his strength could I save myself."
(According to Thithrekssaga, son of Volund and Bothvild was Vithga /alt. Spelling Witege.)