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Jan 4th, 2023
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  1. 744 - Venturing closer,
  2. his talon was raised to attack Beowulf
  3. where he lay on the bed; he was bearing in
  4. with open claw when the alert hero's
  5. comeback and armlock forestalled him utterly.
  6. The captain of evil discovered himself
  7. in a handgrip harder than anything
  8. he had ever encountered in any man
  9. on the face of the earth. Every bone in his body
  10. quailed and recoiled, but he could not escape.
  11. He was desperate to flee to his den and hide
  12. with the devil's litter, for in all his days
  13. he had never been clamped or cornered like this.
  14. Then Hygelac's trusty retainer recalled
  15. his bedtime speech, sprang to his feet
  16. and got a firm hold. Fingers were bursting,
  17. the monster back-tracking, the man overpowering.
  18. The dread of the land was desperate to escape,
  19. to take a roundabout road and flee
  20. to his lair in the fens. The latching power
  21. in his fingers weakened; it was the worst trip
  22. the terror-monger had taken to Heorot.
  23. And now the timbers trembled and sang,
  24. a hall-session that harrowed every Dane
  25. inside the stockade: stumbling in fury,
  26. the two contenders crashed through the building.
  27. The hall clattered and hammered, but somehow
  28. survived the onslaught and kept standing:
  29. it was handsomely structured, a sturdy frame
  30. braced with the best of blacksmith's work
  31. inside and out. The story goes
  32. that as the pair struggled, mead-benches were smashed
  33. and sprung off the floor, gold fittings and all.
  34. Before then, no Shielding elder would believe
  35. there was any power or person upon earth
  36. capable of wrecking their horn-rigged hall
  37. unless the burning embrace of a fire
  38. engulf it in flame. Then an extraordinary
  39. wail arose, and bewildering fear
  40. came over the Danes. Everyone felt it
  41. who heard that cry as it echoed off the wall,
  42. a God-cursed scream and strain of catastrophe,
  43. the howl of the loser, the lament of the hell-serf
  44. keening his wound. He was overwhelmed,
  45. manacled tight by the man who of all men
  46. was foremost and strongest in the days of this life
  47.  
  48. But the earl-troop's leader was not inclined
  49. to allow his caller to depart alive:
  50. he did not consider that life of much account
  51. to anyone anywhere. Time and again,
  52. Beowulf's warriors worked to defend
  53. their lord's life, laying about them
  54. as best they could with their ancestral blades.
  55. Stalwart in action, they kept striking out
  56. on every side, seeking to cut
  57. straight to the soul. When they joined the struggle
  58. there was something they could not have known at the
  59. time,
  60. that no blade on earth, no blacksmith's art
  61. could ever damage their demon opponent.
  62. He had conjured the harm from the cutting edge
  63. of every weapon. But his going away
  64. out of this world and the days of his life
  65. would be agony to him, and his alien spirit
  66. would travel far into fiends' keeping.
  67.  
  68. Then he who had harrowed the hearts of men
  69. with pain and affliction in former times
  70. and had given offence also to God
  71. found that his bodily powers failed him.
  72. Hygelac's kinsman kept him helplessly
  73. locked in a handgrip. As long as either lived,
  74. he was hateful to the other. The monster's whole
  75. body was in pain, a tremendous wound
  76. appeared on his shoulder. Sinews split
  77. and the bone-lappings burst. Beowulf was granted
  78. the glory of winning; Grendel was driven
  79. under the fen-banks, fatally hurt,
  80. to his desolate lair. His days were numbered,
  81. the end of his life was coming over him,
  82. he knew it for certain; and one bloody clash
  83. had fulfilled the dearest wishes of the Danes.
  84. The man who had lately landed among them,
  85. proud and sure, had purged the hall,
  86. kept it from harm; he was happy with his nightwork
  87. and the courage he had shown. The Geat captain
  88. had boldly fulfilled his boast to the Danes:
  89. he had healed and relieved a huge distress,
  90. unremitting humiliations,
  91. the hard fate they'd been forced to undergo,
  92. no small affliction. Clear proof of this
  93. could be seen in the hand the hero displayed
  94. high up near the roof: the whole of Grendel's
  95. shoulder and arm, his awesome grasp.
  96.  
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