Page:The Sundering Flood - Morris - 1898.djvu/220

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206
THE SUNDERING FLOOD

us amidst all this talk. So now do ye women dight the board and light the candles within the hall, that we may eat and drink together this last time for a long while.

Even so it was done, and all folk sat to meat, and thereafter was the drink brought in, and they drank all a cup to Osberne, and he to them; and then was the cup filled for Wethermel, and then again for the Dale; and the last cup was for Osberne's luck. Then came a word into his mouth, and he stood up and sang:

From the Wethermel reek
I set me to seek
The world-ways unkenned
And the first of the end,
For when out there I be
Each way unto me
Shall seem nought save it lead
Back to Wethermel's need,
And many a twilight twixt dawning and day
Shall the feet of the waker dream wending the way.

When the war-gale speeds
Point-bitter reeds,
And the edges flash
O'er the war-board's clash,
Through the battle's rent
Shall I see the bent,
And the gables' peace
Midst the Dale's increase,
And the victory-whooping shall seem to me oft
As the Dale-shepherd's cry where the reek wends aloft.

When to right and left
The ranks are cleft,