Page:Gummere (1909) The Oldest English Epic.djvu/102

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86
THE OLDEST ENGLISH EPIC

of the wiser men, the ways to scan,
till he found in a flash the forested hill
1415hanging 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,
1420ill for earls, when Æschere’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,
1425and 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[1]
on the road-of-sails their ruthless quest,—
1430and 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
1435went 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,
1440wave-roamer wondrous. Warriors viewed
the grisly guest.
Then girt him Beowulf

in martial mail, nor mourned for his life.
  1. Noon? “Mittagsstunde, Geisterstunde.”