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    Appendix 6

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    THE SECOND OR ANCIENT LAY OF GUDRUN.
    Thiodrek the King was in Atli's house, and had lost there the more part of his men: so there Thiodrek and Gudrun bewailed their troubles one to the other, and she spake and said:--

    A may of all mays
    My mother reared me
    Bright in bower;
    Well loved I my brethren,
    Until that Giuki
    With gold arrayed me,
    With gold arrayed me,
    And gave me to Sigurd.
    Such was my Sigurd,
    Among the sons of Giuki
    As is the green leek
    O'er the low grass waxen,
    Or a hart high-limbed
    Over hurrying deer,
    Or glede-red gold
    Over grey silver.
    Till me they begrudged,
    Those my brethren,
    The fate to have him,
    Who was first of all men;
    Nor might they sleep,
    Nor sit a-dooming,
    Ere they let slay
    My well-loved Sigurd.
    Grani ran to the Thing,
    There was clatter to hear,
    But never came Sigurd
    Himself thereunto;
    All the saddle-girt beasts
    With blood were besprinkled,
    As faint with the way
    Neath the slayers they went.
    Then greeting I went
    With Grani to talk,
    And with tear-furrowed cheeks
    I bade him tell all;
    But drooping laid Grani,
    His head in the grass,
    For the steed well wotted
    Of his master's slaying.
    A long while I wandered,
    Long my mind wavered,
    Ere the kings I might ask
    Concerning my king.
    Then Gunnar hung head,
    But Hogni told
    Of the cruel slaying
    Of my Sigurd:
    "On the water's far side
    Lies, smitten to death,
    The bane of Guttorm
    To the wolves given over.
    "Go, look on Sigurd,
    On the ways that go southward,
    There shalt thou hear
    The ernes high screaming,
    The ravens a-croaking
    As their meat they crave for;
    Thou shalt hear the wolves howling
    Over thine husband.
    "How hast thou, Hogni,
    The heart to tell me,
    Me of joy made empty,
    Of such misery?
    Thy wretched heart
    May the ravens tear
    Wide over the world,
    With no men mayst thou wend."
    One thing Hogni
    Had for answer,
    Fallen from his high heart,
    Full of all trouble:
    "More greeting yet,
    O Gudrun, for thee,
    If my heart the ravens
    Should rend asunder!"
    Thence I turned
    From the talk and the trouble
    To go a leasing [1]
    What the wolves had left me;

    No sigh I made
    No smote hands together,
    Nor did I wail
    As other women
    When I sat over
    My Sigurd slain.
    Night methought it,
    And the moonless dark,
    When I sat in sorrow
    Over Sigurd;
    Better than all things
    I deemed it would be
    If they would let me
    Cast my life by,
    Or burn me up
    As they burn the birch-wood.
    From the fell I wandered
    Five days together,
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