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s steered on the vessel, To the shore the boat he guided, And he turned and looked about him, And the pike's great head examined, And he spoke the words which follow: 180 "Let the eldest of the yeomen, Come and cleave the pike to pieces, Let him carve it into slices, Let him hew the head to pieces." From the boat the men made answer, From the boat replied the women, "But the captor's hands are finer, And the speaker's fingers better." Vaeinaemoeinen, old and steadfast, Drew from out the sheath his knife-blade, 190 From his side the cold sharp iron, That the pike might be divided, And he cut the fish to pieces, And he spoke the words which follow: "Let the youngest of the maidens, Cook the pike that we have captured, Let her mince it for our breakfast, That on fish we make our dinner." Then the maidens set to cooking, Ten there were who made the effort, 200 And they cooked the pike for eating, And they minced it for their breakfast; On the reefs the bones they scattered, On the rocks they left the fishbones. Vaeinaemoeinen, old and steadfast, Saw the bones where they were lying, And he turned to look upon them, And he spoke the words which follow: "What might perhaps be fashioned from them, From the pike's teeth be constructed, 210 From the fragments of the jawbones, Were they to the smithy taken, To the skilful smith entrusted, To the hands of one most skilful?" Said the smith, said Ilmarinen, "Nothing comes from what is useless, Nothing can be made of fishbones, By a smith in smithy working, Though to skilful smith entrusted, To the hands of one most skilful." 220 Vaeinaemoeinen, old and steadfast, Answered in the words which follow: "Yet a harp might be constructed Even of the bones of fishes, If there were a skilful workman, Who could from the bones construct it." As no craftsman there was present, And there was no skilful workman Who could make a harp of fishbones, Vaeinaemoeinen, old and steadfast, 230 Then began the harp to fashion, And himself the work accomplished, And he made a harp of pikebones, Fit to give unending pleasure. Out of what did he construct it? Chiefly from the gr
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