[The Story of the Glittering Plain by William Morris]@TWC D-Link book
The Story of the Glittering Plain

CHAPTER IX: THEY COME TO THE LAND OF THE GLITTERING PLAIN
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He turned now to Hallblithe and said: "Thou art late awake: hadst thou been waking earlier, the sooner had thine heart been gladdened.

Go forward now, and gaze thy fill and come and tell me thereof." "Thou art happy, Grandfather," said Hallblithe, "what good tidings hath morn brought us ?" "The Land! the Land!" said the Long-hoary; "there are no longer tears in this old body, else should I be weeping for joy." Said Hallblithe: "Art thou going to meet some one who shall make thee glad before thou diest, old man ?" "Some one ?" said the elder; "what one?
Are they not all gone?
burned, and drowned, and slain and died abed?
Some one, young man?
Yea, forsooth some one indeed! Yea, the great warrior of the Wasters of the Shore; the Sea-eagle who bore the sword and the torch and the terror of the Ravagers over the coal-blue sea.

It is myself, MYSELF that I shall find on the Land of the Glittering Plain, O young lover!" Hallblithe looked on him wondering as he raised his wasted arms towards the bows of the ship pitching down the slope of the sunlit sea, or climbing up it.

Then again the old man fell back on his bed and muttered: "What fool's work is this! that thou wilt draw me on to talk loud, and waste my body with lack of patience.

I will talk with thee no more, lest my heart swell and break, and quench the little spark of life within me." Then Hallblithe arose to his feet, and stood looking at him, wondering so much at his words, that for a while he forgat the land which they were nearing, though he had caught glimpses of it, as the bows of the round- ship fell downward into the hollow of the sea.


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