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Poetic Edda
64.[1] "Yet one boon I beg of thee,
The last of boons in my life it is:
Let the pyre be built so broad in the field
That room for us all will ample be,
(For us who slain with Sigurth are.)
The last of boons in my life it is:
Let the pyre be built so broad in the field
That room for us all will ample be,
(For us who slain with Sigurth are.)
65.[2] "With shields and carpets cover the pyre,
..............
Shrouds full fair, and fallen slaves,
And besides the Hunnish hero burn me.
..............
Shrouds full fair, and fallen slaves,
And besides the Hunnish hero burn me.
66.[3] "Besides the Hunnish hero there
Slaves shall burn, full bravely decked,
Two at his head and two at his feet,
A brace of hounds and a pair of hawks,
For so shall all be seemly done.
Slaves shall burn, full bravely decked,
Two at his head and two at his feet,
A brace of hounds and a pair of hawks,
For so shall all be seemly done.
- ↑ Line 5 is very probably spurious.
- ↑ The manuscript indicates no gap; a suggested addition runs "Gold let there be, and jewels bright." Fallen slaves: cf. stanza 66 and 69. Hunnish hero: cf. stanza 4 and note.
- ↑ In place of lines 3-4 the manuscript has one line "Two at his head, and a pair of hawks"; the addition is made from the Volsungasaga paraphrase. The burning or burying of slaves or beasts to accompany their masters in death was a general custom in the North. The number of slaves indicated in this stanza does not tally with the one given in stanza 69, wherefore Vigfusson rejects most of this stanza.
- ↑
came in any way connected with the Sigurth cycle (cf. introductory note to Gripisspo).
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