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    Appendix 2

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    PART OF THE LAY OF SIGRDRIFA [1]
    Now this is my first counsel,
    That thou with thy kin
    Be guiltless, guileless ever,
    Nor hasty of wrath,
    Despite of wrong done--
    Unto the dead good that doeth.
    Lo the second counsel,
    That oath thou swearest never,
    But trusty oath and true:
    Grim tormenting
    Gripes troth-breakers;
    Cursed wretch is the wolf of vows.
    This is my third rede,
    That thou at the Thing
    Deal not with the fools of folk;
    For unwise man
    From mouth lets fall
    Worser word than well he wotteth.
    Yet hard it is
    That holding of peace
    When men shall deem thee dastard,
    Or deem the lie said soothly;
    But woeful is home-witness,
    Unless right good thou gettest it.
    Ah, on another day
    Drive the life from out him,
    And pay the liar back for his lying.
    Now behold the fourth rede:
    If ill witch thee bideth,
    Woe-begatting by the way,
    Good going further
    Rather than guesting,
    Though thick night be on thee.
    Far-seeing eyes
    Need all sons of men
    Who wend in wrath to war;
    For baleful women
    Bide oft by the highway,
    Swords and hearts to soften.
    And now the fifth rede:
    As fair as thou seest
    Brides on the bench abiding,
    Let not love's silver
    Rule over thy sleeping;
    Draw no woman to kind kissing!
    For the sixth thing, I rede
    When men sit a-drinking
    Amid ale-words and ill-words,
    Dead thou naught
    With the drunken fight-staves
    For wine stealeth wit from many.
    Brawling and drink
    Have brought unto men
    Sorrow sore oft enow;
    Yea, bane unto some,
    And to some weary bale;
    Many are the griefs of mankind.
    For the seventh, I rede thee,
    If strife thou raisest
    With a man right high of heart,
    Better fight a-field
    Than burn in the fire
    Within thine hall fair to behold.
    The eighth rede that I give thee:
    Unto all ill look thou,
    And hold thine heart from all beguiling;
    Draw to thee no maiden,
    No man's wife bewray thou,
    Urge them not unto unmeet pleasure.
    This is the ninth counsel:
    That thou have heed of dead folk Whereso thou findest them a-field;
    Be they sick-dead,
    Be they sea-dead,
    Or come to ending by war-weapons.
    Let bath be made

    For such men fordone,
    Wash thou hands and feet thereof,
    Comb their hair and dry them
    Ere the coffin has them;
    Then bid them sleep full sweetly.
    This for the tenth counsel:
    That thou give trust never
    Unto oaths of foeman's kin,
    Be'st thou bane of his brother,
    Or hast thou felled his father;
    Wolf in young son waxes,
    Though he with gold be gladdened.
    For wrong and hatred
    Shall rest them never,
    Nay, nor sore sorrow.
    Both wit and weapons
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