group of my thanes, my warrior-friends, if War should seize me; and the

goodly gifts thou gavest me, Hrothgar beloved, to Hygelac
send! Geatland's king may ken by the gold, Hrethel's son see, when he stares at 
the treasure, that
I got me a friend for goodness famed, and joyed while I could in my 
jewel-bestower. And let Unferth wield this wondrous sword, earl far-honored, 
this
heirloom precious, hard of edge: with Hrunting I seek doom of glory, or Death 
shall take me." After these words the Weder-Geat lord boldly hastened, biding 
never answer at all: the ocean floods closed o'er the hero. Long
while of the day fled ere he felt the floor of the sea. Soon found the fiend
who the flood-domain sword-hungry held these

hundred winters, greedy and grim, that some guest from above, some man, was 
raiding her monster-realm. She grasped out for him with grisly claws, and the 
warrior seized; yet scathed she not his body hale; the breastplate hindered, as 
she strove to shatter the sark of war, the linked harness, with loathsome hand. 
Then bore this brine-wolf, when bottom she
touched, the lord of rings to the lair she haunted whiles vainly he strove, 
though his valor held, weapon to wield against wondrous monsters that sore 
beset him; sea-beasts
many tried with fierce tusks to tear his mail, and swarmed on the stranger. But 
soon
he marked he was now in some hall, he knew not which, where water
never could work him harm, nor through the roof could reach him ever fangs of 
the flood. Firelight he saw, beams of a blaze that brightly
shone. Then the warrior was ware of that wolf-of-the-deep, mere-wife monstrous. 
For mighty stroke he swung his blade, and the blow withheld

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