Page:King Alfred's Version of the Consolations of Boethius.djvu/253

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Of plants of the wood. No wine they drank

Bright from the bowl; none could boast

Skill to mingle drink with his meat,

Water with honey, nor to fashion by sewing

Clothing of silk; nor had they cunning

In costly stuffs; nor stood there halls

Cleverly planned; but it was their custom

In every season to sleep in the open

In the deep tree-shade. They drank burn-water

Cool from the spring. Never did chapman

See over the sea-surge the shore of strange land;

Nor had men heard of the harrying ship-host

No, nor was fighting familiar to mortals.

Not as yet was the earth anywhere stained

With the blood of a man nor the dye of the blade,

Nor even one wounded had any man witnessed

Under the sun. So too none was worthy

Held in the world if his will seemed

Evil unto men; by all was he loathed.

Oh! were it true, or would God but grant

That here on earth in our days now,

Over the wide world, man's wont was such

Under the sun! But now 'tis more sinful,

For covetous greed so clogs the soul

Of every man that he heeds not other things.

And in the mind boiling it burns ever,

This curse of covetise, never contented,

Black and bottomless blazes smouldering,

Even as the mountain that mortals call

By name of Etna; this on an island,