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    Appendix 9

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    THE LAY OF HAMDIR
    Great deeds of bale
    In the garth began,
    At the sad dawning
    The tide of Elves' sorrow
    When day is a-waxing
    And man's grief awaketh,
    And the sorrow of each one
    The early day quickeneth.
    Not now, not now,
    Nor yesterday,
    But long ago
    Has that day worn by,
    That ancientest time,
    The first time to tell of,
    Then, whenas Gudrun,
    Born of Giuki,
    Whetter her sons
    To Swanhild's avenging.
    "Your sister's name
    Was naught but Swanhild,
    Whom Jormunrek
    With horses has trodden!--
    White horses and black
    On the war-beaten way,
    Grey horses that go
    On the roads of the Goths.
    "All alone am I now
    As in holt is the aspen;
    As the fir-tree of boughs,
    So of kin am I bare;
    As bare of things longed for
    As the willow of leaves
    When the bough-breaking wind
    The warm day endeth.
    "Few, sad, are ye left
    O kings of my folk!
    Yet alone living
    Last shreds of my kin!
    "Ah, naught are ye grown
    As that Gunnar of old days;
    Naught are your hearts
    As the heart of Hogni!
    Well would ye seek
    Vengeance to win
    If your hearts were in aught
    As the hearts of my brethren!"
    Then spake Hamdir The high-hearted:
    "Nought hadst thou to praise
    The doings of Hogni,
    When they woke up Sigurd
    From out of slumber,
    And in bed thou sat'st up
    'Mid the banes-men's laughter.
    "Then when thy bed-gear,
    Blue-white, well woven
    By art of craftsmen
    All swam with thy king's blood;
    The Sigurd died,
    O'er his dead corpse thou sattest,
    Not heeding aught gladsome,
    Since Gunnar so willed it.
    "Great grief for Atli
    Gatst thou by Erp's murder,
    And the end of thine Eitil,
    But worse grief for thyself.
    Good to use sword
    For the slaying of others
    In such wise that its edge
    Shall not turn on ourselves!"
    Then well spake Sorli
    From a heart full of wisdom:
    "No words will I
    Make with my mother,
    Though both ye twain
    Need words belike--
    What askest thou, Gudrun,
    To let thee go greeting?
    "Weep for thy brethren,
    Weep for thy sweet sons,
    And thy nighest kinsfolk
    Laid by the fight-side!

    Yea, and thou Gudrun,
    May'st greet for us twain
    Sitting fey on our steeds
    Doomed in far lands to die."
    From the garth forth they went
    With hearts full of fury,
    Sorli and Hamdir,
    The sons of Gudrun,
    And they met on the way
    The wise in all wiles:
    "And thou little Erp,
    What helping from thee?"
    He of alien womb
    Spake out in such wise:
    "Good help for my kin,
    Such as foot gives to foot,
    Or flesh-covered
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