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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.

(Ingram, p.84-87)