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    Appendix 10 - Page 2

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    For any may
    Save for me alone."
    Mind had the damsel
    Of the weary day
    Whenas the high lords
    Dealt out the heritage,
    And she sat her down,
    The sorrowful woman,
    To tell of the bale,
    And the heavy trouble.
    "Nourished was I
    In the hall of kings--
    Most folk were glad--
    'Mid the council of great ones:
    In fair life lived I,
    And the wealth of my father
    For five winters only,
    While yet he had life.
    "Such were the last words
    That ever he spake,
    The king forewearied,
    Ere his ways he went;
    For be bade folk give me
    The gold red-gleaming,
    And give me in Southlands
    To the son of Grimhild.
    "But Brynhild he bade
    To the helm to betake her,
    And said that Death-chooser
    She should become;
    And that no better
    Might ever be born
    Into the world,
    If fate would not spoil it.
    "Brynhild in bower
    Sewed at her broidery,
    Folk she had
    And fair lands about her;
    Earth lay a-sleeping,
    Slept the heavens aloft
    When Fafnir's-bane
    The burg first saw.
    "Then was war waged
    With the Welsh-wrought sword
    And the burg all broken
    That Brynhild owned;
    Nor wore long space,
    E'en as well might be,
    Ere all those wiles
    Full well she knew.
    "Hard and dreadful
    Was the vengeance she drew down,
    So that all we
    Have woe enow.
    Through all lands of the world
    Shall that story fare forth
    How she did her to death
    For the death of Sigurd.
    "But therewithal Gunnar
    The gold-scatterer
    Did I fall to loving
    And should have loved him.
    Rings of red gold
    Would they give to Atli,
    Would give to my brother
    Things goodly and great.
    "Yea, fifteen steads
    Would they give for me,
    And the load of Grani
    To have as a gift;
    But then spake Atli,
    That such was his will,
    Never gift to take
    From the sons of Giuki.
    "But we in nowise
    Might love withstand,
    And mine head must I lay
    On my love, the ring-breaker;
    And many there were
    Among my kin,
    Who said that they
    Had seen us together.
    "Then Atli said
    That I surely never
    Would fall to crime
    Or shameful folly:
    But now let no one
    For any other,

    That shame deny
    Where love has dealing.
    "For Atli sent
    His serving-folk
    Wide through the murkwood
    Proof to win of me,
    And thither they came
    Where they ne'er should have come,
    Where one bed we twain
    Had dight betwixt us.
    "To those men had we given
    Rings of red gold,
    Naught to tell
    Thereof to Atli,
    But straight they hastened
    Home to the house,
    And all the tale
    To Atli told.
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