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is arms and ran Fast from that house, the bane of man. * * * * * Yet therewithal he spake her soft And kissed her over oft and oft, Until from kissed and trembling mouth She cried: "The Dragon of the South!" He set her down and turned about, And drew the eager edges out. And therewith scaly coil on coil Reared 'gainst his face the mouth aboil: The gaping jaw and teeth of dread Was dark 'twixt heaven and his head. But with no fear, no thought, no word, He thrust the thin-edged ancient sword. And the hot blood ran from the hairy throat, And set the summer grass afloat. Then back he turned and caught her hand, And never a minute did they stand. But as they ran on toward the wood, He deemed her swift feet fair and good. * * * * * She looked back o'er her shoulder fair: "The whelming poison-pool is here; And now availeth nought the blade: O if my cherished trees might aid! But now my feet fail. Leave me then! And hold my memory dear of men." He caught her in his arms again; Of her dear side was he full fain. Her body in his arms was dear: "Sweet art thou, though we perish here!" Like quicksilver came on the flood: But lo, the borders of the wood! She slid from out his arms and stayed; Round a great oak her arms she laid. "If e'er I saved thee, lovely tree, From axe and saw, now, succour me: Look how the venom creeps anigh, Help! lest thou see me writhe and die." She crouched beside the upheaved root, The bubbling venom touched her foot; Then with a sucking gasping sound It ebbed back o'er the blighted ground. * * * * * Up then she rose and took his hand And never a moment did they stand. "Come, love," she cried, "the ways I know, How thick soe'er the thickets grow. O love, I love thee! O thine heart! How mighty and how kind thou art!" Therewith they saw the tree-dusk lit, Bright grey the great boles gleamed on it. "O flee," she said, "the sword is nought Against the flickering fire-flaught." "But this availeth yet," said he, "That Hallows All our love may see." He turned about and faced the glare: "O Mother, help us, kind and fair! Now help me, true St. Nicholas, If ever truly thine I was!" Therewith the wild-fire waned and paled And in the wood the light nigh failed; And all about 'twas as the night. He said: "Now won is all our fight, And now meseems all were but good If thou mightst bring us from the wood." She fawned upo
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