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    XXI

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    BEOWULF spake, bairn of Ecgtheow:
    "Sorrow not, sage! It beseems us better
    friends to avenge than fruitlessly mourn them.
    Each of us all must his end abide
    in the ways of the world; so win who may
    glory ere death! When his days are told,
    that is the warrior's worthiest doom.
    Rise, O realm-warder! Ride we anon,
    and mark the trail of the mother of Grendel.
    No harbor shall hide her -- heed my promise! --
    enfolding of field or forested mountain
    or floor of the flood, let her flee where she will!
    But thou this day endure in patience,
    as I ween thou wilt, thy woes each one."
    Leaped up the graybeard: God he thanked,
    mighty Lord, for the man's brave words.
    For Hrothgar soon a horse was saddled
    wave-maned steed. The sovran wise
    stately rode on; his shield-armed men
    followed in force. The footprints led
    along the woodland, widely seen,
    a path o'er the plain, where she passed, and trod
    the murky moor; of men-at-arms
    she bore the bravest and best one, dead,
    him who with Hrothgar the homestead ruled.
    On then went the atheling-born
    o'er stone-cliffs steep and strait defiles,
    narrow passes and unknown ways,
    headlands sheer, and the haunts of the Nicors.
    Foremost he[1] fared, a few at his side
    of the wiser men, the ways to scan,
    till he found in a flash the forested hill
    hanging over the hoary rock,
    a woful wood: the waves below
    were dyed in blood. The Danish men
    had sorrow of soul, and for Scyldings all,
    for many a hero, 'twas hard to bear,
    ill for earls, when Aeschere's head
    they found by the flood on the foreland there.
    Waves were welling, the warriors saw,
    hot with blood; but the horn sang oft
    battle-song bold. The band sat down,
    and watched on the water worm-like things,
    sea-dragons strange that sounded the deep,
    and nicors that lay on the ledge of the ness --
    such as oft essay at hour of morn
    on the road-of-sails their ruthless quest, --
    and sea-snakes and monsters. These started away,
    swollen and savage that song to hear,
    that war-horn's blast. The warden of Geats,
    with bolt from bow, then balked of life,
    of wave-work, one monster, amid its heart
    went the keen war-shaft; in water it seemed
    less doughty in swimming whom death had seized.

    Swift on the billows, with boar-spears well
    hooked and barbed, it was hard beset,
    done to death and dragged on the headland,
    wave-roamer wondrous. Warriors viewed
    the grisly guest.
    Then girt him Beowulf
    in martial mail, nor mourned for his life.
    His breastplate broad and bright of hues,
    woven by hand, should the waters try;
    well could it ward the warrior's body
    that battle should break on his breast in vain
    nor harm his heart by
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