XXXIX

IT was heavy hap for that hero young

on his lord beloved to look and find him lying on earth with life at end,

sorrowful sight. But the slayer too,

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awful earth-dragon, empty of breath,

lay felled in fight, nor, fain of its treasure, could the writhing monster rule it more.

For edges of iron had ended its days,

hard and battle-sharp, hammers’ leaving;1

and that flier-afar had fallen to ground hushed by its hurt, its hoard all near,

no longer lusty aloft to whirl

at midnight, making its merriment seen,

proud of its prizes: prone it sank

by the handiwork of the hero-king.

Forsooth among folk but few achieve,

— though sturdy and strong, as stories tell me, and never so daring in deed of valor, -the perilous breath of a poison-foe

to brave, and to rush on the ring-board hall, whenever his watch the warden keeps

bold in the barrow. Beowulf paid

the price of death for that precious hoard; and each of the foes had found the end

of this fleeting life.

Befell erelong

that the laggards in war the wood had left, trothbreakers, cowards, ten together,

fearing before to flourish a spear

in the sore distress of their sovran lord.

Now in their shame their shields they carried, armor of fight, where the old man lay;

and they gazed on Wiglaf. Wearied he sat at his sovran’s shoulder, shieldsman good, to wake him with water.2 Nowise it availed.

Though well he wished it, in world no more could he barrier life for that leader-of-battles nor baffle the will of all-wielding God.

Doom of the Lord was law o’er the deeds

of every man, as it is to-day.

Grim was the answer, easy to get,

from the youth for those that had yielded to fear!

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Wiglaf spake, the son of Weohstan, -mournful he looked on those men unloved: -“Who sooth will speak, can say indeed

that the ruler who gave you golden rings and the harness of war in which ye stand — for he at ale-bench often-times

bestowed on hall-folk helm and breastplate, lord to liegemen, the likeliest gear

which near of far he could find to give, -threw away and wasted these weeds of battle, on men who failed when the foemen came!

Not at all could the king of his comrades-in-arms venture to vaunt, though the Victory-Wielder, God, gave him grace that he got revenge

sole with his sword in stress and need.

To rescue his life, ‘twas little that I

could serve him in struggle; yet shift I made (hopeless it seemed) to help my kinsman.

Its strength ever waned, when with weapon I struck that fatal foe, and the fire less strongly flowed from its head. — Too few the heroes in throe of contest that thronged to our king!

Now gift of treasure and girding of sword, joy of the house and home-delight

shall fail your folk; his freehold-land

every clansman within your kin

shall lose and leave, when lords highborn hear afar of that flight of yours,

a fameless deed. Yea, death is better

for liegemen all than a life of shame!”

[1] What had been left or made by the hammer; well-forged.

[2] Trying to revive him.