938
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<poem>
- Here Athelstan king,
- of earls the lord,
- rewarder of heroes,
- and his brother eke,
- Edmund atheling,
- elder of ancient race,
- slew in the fight,
- with the edge of their swords,
- the foe at Brumby!
- The sons of Edward
- their board-walls clove,
- and hewed their banners,
- with the wrecks of their hammers.
- So were they taught
- by kindred zeal,
- that they at camp oft
- 'gainst any robber
- their land should defend,
- their hoards and homes.
- Pursuing fell
- the Scottish clans;
- the men of the fleet
- in numbers fell;
- 'midst the din of the field
- the warrior swate.
- Since the sun was up
- in morning-tide,
- gigantic light!
- glad over grounds,
- God's candle bright,
- eternal Lord!
- 'till the noble creature
- sat in the western main:
- there lay many
- of the Northern heroes
- under a shower of arrows,
- shot over shields;
- and Scotland's boast,
- a Scythian race,
- the mighty seed of Mars!
- With chosen troops,
- throughout the day,
- the West-Saxons fierce
- press'd on the loathed bands;
- hew'd down the fugitives,
- and scatter'd the rear,
- with strong mill-sharpen'd blades,
- The Mercians too
- the hard hand-play
- spared not to any
- of those that with Anlaf
- over the briny deep
- in the ship's bosom
- sought this land
- for the hardy fight.
- Five kings lay
- on the field of battle,
- in bloom of youth,
- pierced with swords.
- So seven eke
- of the earls of Anlaf;
- and of the ship's-crew
- unnumber'd crowds.
- There was dispersed
- the little band
- of hardy Scots,
- the dread of northern hordes;
- urged to the noisy deep
- by unrelenting fate!
- The king of the fleet
- with his slender craft
- escaped with his life
- on the felon flood;
- and so too Constantine,
- the valiant chief,
- returned to the north
- in hasty flight.
- The hoary Hildrinc
- cared not to boast
- among his kindred.
- Here was his remnant
- of relations and friends
- slain with the sword
- in the crowded fight.
- His son too he left
- on the field of battle,
- mangled with wounds,
- young at the fight.
- The fair-hair'd youth
- had no reason to boast
- of the slaughtering strife.
- Nor old Inwood
- and Anlaf the more
- with the wrecks of their army
- could laugh and say,
- that they on the field
- of stern command
- better workmen were,
- in the conflict of banners,
- the clash of spears,
- the meeting of heroes,
- and the rustling of weapons,
- which they on the field
- of slaughter played
- with the sons of Edward.
- The northmen sail'd
- in their nailed ships,
- a dreary remnant,
- on the roaring sea;
- over deep water
- Dublin they sought,
- and Ireland's shores,
- in great disgrace.
- Such then the brothers
- both together
- king and atheling,
- sought their country,
- West-Saxon land,
- in right triumphant.
- They left behind them
- raw to devour,
- the sallow kite,
- the swarthy raven
- with horny nib,
- and the hoarse vultur,
- with the eagle swift
- to consume his prey;
- the greedy gos-hawk,
- and that grey beast
- the wolf of the weald.
- No slaughter yet
- was greater made
- e'er in this island,
- of people slain,
- before this same,
- with the edge of the sword;
- as the books inform us
- of the old historians;
- since hither came
- from the eastern shores
- the Angles and Saxons,
- over the broad sea,
- and Britain sought,
- fierce battle-smiths,
- o'ercame the Welsh,
- most valiant earls,
- and gained the land.</poem>
(Ingram, p.84-87)