FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27  
28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   >>  
methought I was at home at Burg, standing outside the men's-door, and I looked up at the house-roof, and on the ridge I saw a swan, goodly and fair, and I thought it was mine own, and deemed it good beyond all things. Then I saw a great eagle sweep down from the mountains, and fly thitherward and alight beside the swan, and chuckle over her lovingly; and methouht the swan seemed well content thereat; but I noted that the eagle was black-eyed, and that on him were iron claws: valiant he seemed to me. "After this I thought I saw another fowl come flying from the south quarter, and he, too, came hither to Burg, and sat down on the house beside the swan, and would fain be fond with her. This also was a mighty eagle. "But soon I thought that the eagle first-come ruffled up at the coming of the other. Then they fought fiercely and long, and this I saw that both bled, and such was the end of their play, that each tumbled either way down from the house-roof, and there they lay both dead. "But the swan sat left alone, drooping much, and sad of semblance. "Then I saw a fowl fly from the west; that was a falcon, and he sat beside the swan and made fondly towards her, and they flew away both together into one and the same quarter, and therewith I awoke. "But a dream of no mark this is," he says, "and will in all likelihood betoken gales, that they shall meet in the air from those quarters whence I deemed the fowl flew." The Eastman spake: "I deem it nowise such," saith he. Thorstein said, "Make of the dream, then, what seemeth likest to thee, and let me hear." Then said the Eastman: "These birds are like to be fetches of men: but thy wife sickens now, and she will give birth to a woman-child fair and lovely; and dearly thou wilt love her; but high-born men shall woo thy daughter, coming from such quarters as the eagles seemed to fly from, and shall love her with overweening love, and shall fight about her, and both lose their lives thereby. And thereafter a third man, from the quarter whence came the falcon, shall woo her, and to that man shall she be wedded. Now, I have unravelled thy dream, and I think things will befall as I have said." Thorstein answered: "In evil and unfriendly wise is the dream interpreted, nor do I deem thee fit for the work of unriddling dreams." Then Eastman said, "Thou shalt find how it will come to pass." But Thorstein estranged himself from the Eastman thenceforward, and he left
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27  
28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   >>  



Top keywords:

Eastman

 

quarter

 

Thorstein

 

thought

 

quarters

 

falcon

 

coming

 

things

 

deemed

 
sickens

fetches
 
lovely
 

dearly

 
nowise
 

goodly

 
seemeth
 
likest
 

looked

 

daughter

 

unfriendly


interpreted

 

unriddling

 
dreams
 
estranged
 

thenceforward

 

eagles

 

overweening

 

befall

 

answered

 

unravelled


methought

 

wedded

 

standing

 

ruffled

 

lovingly

 

mighty

 

chuckle

 
mountains
 

thitherward

 

alight


fought

 

fiercely

 
methouht
 

flying

 

content

 

thereat

 
therewith
 
valiant
 

likelihood

 
betoken