Brut eBook

Layamon
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 261 pages of information about Brut.

Brut eBook

Layamon
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 261 pages of information about Brut.

Arthur saw this, noblest of kings; he saw a heathen earl advance against him, with seven hundred knights, all ready to fight.  The earl himself approached before all his troop, and Arthur himself rode before all his host.  Arthur the bold took Ron in hand; he extended (couched) the stark shaft, the stiff-minded king; his horse he let run, so that all the earth dinned.  His shield he drew to his breast—­ the king was incensed—­he smote Borel the earl throughout the breast, so that the heart sundered.  And the king called anon, “The foremost is dead!  Now help us the Lord, and the heavenly queen, who the Lord bore!” Then called Arthur, noblest of kings:  “Now to them! now to them!  The commencement is well done!” The Britons laid on them, as men should do on the wicked; they gave bitter strokes with axes and with swords.  There fell of Childric’s men full two thousand, so that never Arthur lost ever one of his men; there were the Saxish men of all folk most wretched, and the Alemainish men most miserable of all people!  Arthur with his sword wrought destruction; all that he smote at, it was soon destroyed!  The king was all enraged as is the wild boar, when he in the beech-wood meeteth many swine.  Childric saw this, and gan him to turn, and bent him over the Avon, to save himself.  And Arthur approached to him, as if it were a lion, and drove them to the flood, there many were slain; they sunk to the bottom five-and-twenty hundred, so that all Avon’s stream was bridged with steel!  Childric over the water fled, with fifteen hundred knights; he thought forth to push, and sail over the sea.  Arthur saw Colgrim climb to the mount, retreat to the hill that standeth over Bath; and Baldulf went after him, with seven thousand knights; they thought on the hill to withstand nobly, defend them with weapons, and do injury to Arthur.

When Arthur saw, noblest of kings, where Colgrim withstood, and eke battle wrought, then called the king, keenly loud:  “My bold thanes, advance to the hills!  For yesterday was Colgrim of all men keenest, but now it is to him all as to the goat, where he guards the hill; high upon the hill he fighteth with horns, when the wild wolf approacheth toward him.  Though the wolf be alone, without each herd, and there were in a fold five hundred goats, the wolf to them goeth, and all them biteth.  So will I now to-day Colgrim all destroy; I am the wolf and he is the goat; the man shall die!” The yet called Arthur, noblest of kings:  “Yesterday was Baldulf of all knights boldest, but now he standeth on the hill, and beholdeth the Avon, how the steel fishes lie in the stream!  Armed with sword, their life is destroyed; their scales float like gold-dyed shields; there float their fins, as if it were spears.  These are marvellous things come to this land; such beasts on the hill, such fishes in the stream!  Yesterday was the kaiser keenest of all kings; now is he become a hunter, and horns him follow; he flieth over the broad weald;

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Project Gutenberg
Brut from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.