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andal shoon. I will walk in the sun by day And sleep beneath the moon. I will set forth as the bells toll And travel to the East, Because of a sin upon my soul And the chiding of a priest. The Song of the Old Men. We are the old, old men, Once fierce and high-hearted in frolics, But now we are three score and ten Or upwards--mere relics Of the fine strong pageant of youth, Which time in his spite and unruth Has taken. We are dim and palsied and shaken, Ah! me--forsaken. Where are the fair white maids With flower faces and carriage Straight as new-smithied blades, Ripe, ready for marriage? Now all are withered and grey, Their beauty has passed away, Ah! madness-- They are bent like hoops with sadness And the world's badness. Our voices are hoarse and drear, As we sit and mumble together, We have no good tidings to hear We had sooner have never (So we grumble together) been born, That are so sick and forlorn; Just shadows-- But once bright fishers of shallows, Swift hunters of meadows. We are the old, old men, We have seen and endured much trouble; It has turned us children again, And bent us double. Now we sit like a circle of stones, And hear in each others' moans Ill token. For our sweetest thoughts were broken Or else unspoken. The Song of Snorro. "Oh! who can drink at the world's brink, Or reach the twilight star? It's a long sail where the winds wail, And the great waters are. "Or who can say at the parting day That he will see once more His children's faces in happy places, His true wife at the door?" Snorro the Viking, his thigh striking, Laughed in his big red beard. "Some are bound by sight and sound. While some have wished and feared. "Their days dream as a droning stream Or moonlight in a wood. Now who can sate his love or hate, And the tumult of his blood? "Then cast the die for the open sky When the great sun beats abroad, For the foam-fleck and the narrow deck, The life of oar and sword. "Life and limb for the wind's hymn, And all the fears that be, The ghost-races with ghastly faces, The phantoms of the sea. "Mine is the morrow," shouted Snorro, "I longed an
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