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J R R Tolkien - The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 3, 4. J R R Tolkien - The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 3, 4.
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III. There once, and long ang long ago, before the sun and moon we know were lit to sail above the world, when first the shaggy woods unfurled, and shadowy shapes did stare and roam beneath the dark and starry dome that hung above the dawn of Earth, the silences with silver mirth were shaken; the rocks were ringing, the birds of Melian were singing, the first to sing in mortal lands, the nightingales with her own hands she fed, that fay of garments grey; beneath her silver girdle`s seat and down unto her silver feet. She had wayward wandered on a time from gardens of the Gods, to climb the everlasting mountains free that look upon the outmost sea, and never wandered back, but stayed and softly sang from glade to glade. Her voice it was that Thingol heard, and sudden singing of a bird, in that old time when new-come Elves had all the wide world to themselves. Yet all his kin now marched away, as old tales tell, to seek the bay on the last shore of mortal lands, where mighty ships with magic hands they made, and sailed beyond the seas. The Gods them bade to lands of ease and gardens fair, where earth and sky together flow, and none shall die. But Thingol stayed, enchanted, still, one moment to hearken to the thrill of that sweet singing in the trees. Enchanted moments such as these from gardens of the Lord of Sleep, where fountains play and shadows creep, do come, and count as many years in mortal lands.  With many tears his people seek him ere they sail, while Thingol listens in the dale. There after but an hour, him sees, he finds her where she lies and dreams, pale Melian with her dark hair upon a bed of leaves. Beware! There slumber and a sleep is twined! He touched her tresses and his mind was drowned in the forgetful deep, and dark the years rolled o`er his sleep. Thus Thingol sailed not on the seas but dwelt amid the land of trees, and Melian he loved, divine, whose voice was potent as the wine the Valar drink in golden halls where flower blooms and fountain falls; but when she sang it was a spell, and no flower stirred nor fountain fell. A king and queen thus lived they long, and Doriath was filled with song, and all the Elves that missed their way and never found the western bay, the gleaming walls of their long home by the grey seas and the white foam, who never trod the golden land where the towers of the Valar stand, all these were gathered in their realm beneath the beech and oak and elm. In later days when Morgoth first, fleeing the Gods, their bondage burst, and on the mortal lands set feet, and in the North his mighty seat founded and fortified, and all the newborn race of Men were thrall unto his power, and Elf and Gnome his slaves, or wandered without home, or scattered fastnesses walled with fear upraised upon his borders drear, and each one fell, yet reigned there still in Doriath beyond his will Thingol and deathless Melian, whose magic yet no evil can that cometh from without surpass. Here still was laughter and green grass, and leaves were lit with the white sun, and many marvels were begun. In sunshine and in sheen of moon, with silken robe and silver shoon, the daughter of the deathless queen now danced on the undying green, half elven-fair and half divine; and when the stars began to shine unseen but near a piping woke, and in the branches of an oak, or seated on the beech-leaves brown, Dairon the dark with ferny crown played with bewildering wizard`s art music for breaking of the heart. Such players have there only been thrice in all Elfinesse, I ween: Tinfang Gelion who still the moon enchants on summer nights of June and kindles the pale firstling star; and he who harps upon the far forgotten beaches and dark shores where western foam for ever roars, Maglor whose voice is like the sea; and Dairon, mightiest of the three. Now it befell on summer night, upon a lawn where lingering light yet lay and faded faint and grey, that Lúthien danced while he did play. The chestnuts on the turf had shed their flowering candles, white and red; there darkling stood a silent elm and pale beneath its shadow-helm there glimmered faint the umbels thick of hemlocks like a mist, and quick the moths on pallid wings of white with tiny eyes of fiery light were fluttering softly, and the voles crept out to listen from their holes; the little owls were hushed and still; the moon was yet behind the hill. Her arms like ivory were gleaming, her long hair like a cloud was streaming, her feet atwinkle wandered roaming in misty mazes in the gloaming; and glowworms shimmered round her feet, and moths in moving garland fleet above her head went wavering wan -- and this the moon now looked upon, uprisen slow, and round, and white above the branches of the night. Then clearly thrilled her voice and rang; with sudden ecstasy she sang a song of nightingales she learned and with her elvish magic turned to such bewildering delight the moon hung moveless in the night. And this it was that Beren heard, and this he saw, without a word, enchanted dumb, yet filled fire of such a wonder and desire that all his mortal mind was dim; her magic bound and fettered him, and faint he leaned against a tree. Forwandered, wayworn, gaunt was he, his body sick and heart gone cold, grey in his hair, his youth turned old; for those that tread that lonely way a price of woe and anguish pay. And now his heart was healed and slain with a new life and with new pain. He gazed, and as he gazed her hair within its cloudy web did snare the silver moonbeams sifting white between the leaves, and glinting bright teh tremulous starlight of the skies was caught and mirrored in her eyes. Then all his journey`s lonely fare, the hunger and the haggard care, the awful mountains` stones he stained with blood of weary feet, and gained only a land of ghosts, and fear in dark ravines imprisoned sheer -- there mighty spiders wove their webs, old creatures foul with birdlike nebs that span their traps in dizzy air, and filled it with clinging black despair, and there they lived, and the sucked bones lay white beneath on the dank stones -- now all these horrors like a cloud faded from mind.  The waters loud falling from pineclad heights no more he heard, those waters grey and frore that bittersweet he drank and filled his mind with madness -- all was stilled. He recked not now the burning road, the paths demented where he strode endlessly...and ever new horizons stretched before his view, as each blue ridge with bleeding feet battle with creatures old and strong and monsters in the dark, and long, long watches in the haunted night while evil shapes with baleful light in clustered eyes did crawl and snuff beneath his tree -- not half enough the price he deemed to come at last to that pale moon when day had passed, to those clear stars of Elfinesse, the hearts-ease and the loveliness. Lo! all forgetting he was drawn unheeding toward the glimmering lawn by love and wonder that compelled his feet from hiding; music welled within his heart, and songs unmade on themes unthought-of moved and swayed his soul with sweetness; out he came, a shadow in the moon`s pale flame -- and Dairon`s flute as sudden stops as lark before it steeply drops, as grasshopper within the grass listening for heavy feet to pass. `Flee, Lúthien!`, and `Lúthien!` from hiding Dairon called again; `A stranger walks the woods! Away!` But Lúthien would wondering stay; fear had she never felt or known, till fear then seized her, all alone, seeing that shape with shagged hair and shadow long that halted there. Then sudden she vanished like a dream in dark oblivion, a gleam in hurrying clouds, for she had leapt among the hemlocks tall, and crept under a mighty plant with leaves all along and dark, whose stem in sheaves upheld an hundred umbels fair; and her white arms and shoulders bare her raiment pale, and in her hair the wild white roses glimmering there, all lay like spattered moonlight hoar in gleaming pools upon the floor. Then stared he wild in dumbness bound at silent trees, deserted ground; he blindly groped across the glade to the dark trees` encircling shade, and, while she watched with veiléd eyes, touched her soft arm in sweet surprise. Like startled moth from deathlike sleep in sunless nook or bushes deep she darted swift, and to and fro with cunning that elvish dancers know about the trunks of trees she twined a path fantastic.  Far behind enchanted, wildered and forlorn Beren came blundering, bruised and torn: Esgalduin the elven-stream, in which amid tree-shadows gleam the stars, flowed strong before his feet. Some secret way she found, and fleet passed over and was seen no more, and left him forsaken on the shore. `Darkly the sundering flood rolls past! To this my long way comes at last -- a hunger and a loneliness, enchanted waters pitiless.` A summer waned, an autumn glowed, and Beren in the woods abode, as wild and wary as a faun that sudden wakes at rustling dawn, and flits from shade to shade, and flees the brightness of the sun, yet sees all stealthy movements in the wood. The murmurous warmth in weathers good, the hum of many wings, the call of many a bird, the pattering fall of sudden rain upon the trees, the windy tide in leafy seas, the creaking of the boughs, he heard; but not the song of sweetest bird brought joy or comfort to his heart, a wanderer dumb who dwelt apart; who sought unceasing and in vain to hear and see those things again: a song more fair than nightingale, a wonder in the moonlight pale. An autumn waned, a winter laid the withered leaves in grove and glade; the beeches bare were gaunt and grey, and red their leaves beneath them lay. From cavern pale the moist moon eyes the white mists that from earth arise to hide the morrow`s sun and drip all the grey day from each twig`s tip. By dawn and dusk he seeks her still; by noon and night in valleys chill, nor hears a sound but the slow beat on sodden leaves of his own feet. The wind of winter winds his horn; the misty veil is rent and torn. The wind dies; the starry choirs leap in the silent sky to fires, whose light comes bitter-cold and sheer through domes of frozen crystal clear. A sparkle through the darkling trees, a piercing glint of light he sees, and there she dances all alone upon a treeless knoll of stone! Her mantle blue with jewels white caught all the rays of frosted light. She shone with cold and wintry flame, as dancing down the hill she came, and passed his watchful silent gaze, a glimmer as of stars ablaze. And snowdrops sprang beneath her feet, and one bird, sudden, late and sweet, shrilled as she wayward passed along. A frozen brook to bubbling song awoke and laughed; but Beren stood still bound enchanted in the wood. Her starlight faded and the night closed o`er the snowdrops glimmering white. Thereafter on a hillock green he saw far off the elven-sheen of shining limb and jewel bright often and oft on moonlit night; and Dairon`s pipe woke once more, and soft she sang as once before. Then nigh he stole beneath the trees, and heartache mingled with hearts-ease. A night there was when winter died; then all alone she sang and cried and danced until the dawn of spring, and chanted some wild magic thing that stirred him, till it sudden broke the bonds that held him, and he woke to madness sweet and brave despair. He flung his arms to the night air, and out he danced unheeding, fleet, enchanted, with enchanted feet. He sped towards the hillock green, the lissom limbs, the dancing sheen; he leapt upon the grassy hill his arms with loveliness to fill: his arms were empty, and she fled; away, away her white feet sped. But as she went he swiftly came and called her with the tender name of nightingales in elvish tongue, that all the woods now sudden rung: `Tinúviel! Tinúviel!` And clear his voice was as a bell; its echoes wove a binding spell: `Tinúviel! Tinúviel!` His voice such love and longing filled one moment stood she, fear was stilled; one moment only; like a flame he leaped towards her as she stayed and caught and kissed that elfin maid. As love there woke in sweet surprise the starlight trembled in her eyes. A! Lúthien! A! Lúthien! more fair than any child of Men; O! loveliest maid of Elfinesse, what madness does thee now possess! A! lissom limbs and shadowy hair and chaplet of white snowdrops there; O! starry diadem and white pale hands beneath the pale moonlight! She left his arms and slipped away just at the breaking of the day. IV. He lay upon the leafy mould, his face upon earth`s bosom cold, aswoon in overwhelming bliss, enchanted of an elvish kiss, seeing within his darkened eyes the light that for no darkness dies, the loveliness that doth not fade, though all in ashes cold be laid. Then folded in the mists of sleep he sank into abysses deep, drowned in an overwhelming grief for parting after meeting brief; a shadow and a fragrance fair lingered, and waned, and was not there. Forsaken, barren, bare as stone, the daylight found him cold, alone. `Where art thou gone? The day is bare, the sunlight dark, and cold the air! Tinúviel, where went thy feet? O wayward star! O maiden sweet! O flower of Elfland all too fair for mortal heart! The woods are bare! The woods are bare!` he rose and cried. `Ere spring was born, the spring hath died!` And wandering in path and mind he groped as one gone sudden blind, who seeks to grasp the hidden light with faltering hands in more than night. And thus in anguish Beren paid for that great doom upon him laid, the deathless love of Lúthien, too fair for love of mortal Men; and in his doom was Lúthien snared, the deathless in his dying shared; and Fate them forged a binding chain of living love and mortal pain. Beyond all hope her feet returned at eve, when in the sky there burned the flame of stars; and in her eyes there trembled the starlight of the skies, and from her hair the fragrance fell of elvenflowers in elven-dell. Thus Lúthien, whom no pursuit, no snare, no dart that hunters shoot, might hope to win or hold, she came at the sweet calling of her name; and thus in his her slender hand was linked in far Beleriand; in hour enchanted long ago her arms about his neck did go, and gently down she drew to rest his weary head upon her breast.     A! Lúthien, Tinúviel, why wentest thou to darkling dell with shining eyes and dancing pace, the twilight glimmering in thy face? Each day before the end of eve she sought her love, nor would him leave, until the stars were dimmed, and day came glimmering eastward silver-grey. Then trembling-veiled she would appear and dance before him, half in fear; there flitting just before his feet she gently chid with laughter sweet: `Come! dance now, Beren, dance with me! For fain thy dancing I would see. Come! thou must woo with nimbler feet, than those who walk where mountains meet the bitter skies beyond this realm of marvellous moonlit beech and elm.` In Doriath Beren long ago new art and lore he learned to know; his limbs were freed; his eyes alight, kindled with a new enchanted sight; and to her dancing feet his feet attuned went dancing free and fleet; his laughter welled as from a spring of music, and his voice would sing as voices of those in Doriath where paved with flowers are floor and path. The year thus on to summer rolled, from spring to a summertime of gold. Thus fleeting fast their short hour flies, while Dairon watches with fiery eyes, haunting the gloom of tangled trees all day, until at night he sees in the fickle moon their moving feet, two lovers linked in dancing sweet, two shadows shimmering on the green where lonely-dancing maid had been.     `Hateful art thou, O Land of Trees! May fear and silence on thee seize! My flute shall fall from idle hand and mirth shall leave Beleriand; music shall perish and voices fail and trees stand dumb in dell and dale!` It seemed a hush had fallen there upon the waiting woodland air; and often murmured Thingol`s folk in wonder, and to their king they spoke: `This spell of silence who hath wrought? What web hath Dairon`s music caught? It seems the very birds sing low; murmurless Esgalduin doth flow; the leaves scarce whisper on the trees, and soundless beat the wings of bees!` This Lúthien heard, and there the queen her sudden glances saw unseen. But Thingol marvelled, and he sent for Dairon the piper, ere he went and sat upon his mounded seat -- his grassy throne by the grey feet of the Queen of Beeches, Hirilorn, upon whose triple piers were borne, the mightiest vault of leaf and bough from world`s beginning until now. She stood above Esgalduin`s shore, where long slopes fell beside the door, the guarded gates, the portals stark of the Thousand echoing Caverns dark.     There Thingol sat and heard no sound save far off footsteps on the ground; no flute, no voice, no song of bird, no choirs of windy leaves there stirred; and Dairon coming no word spoke, silent amid the woodland folk. Then Thingol said: `O Dairon fair, thou master of all musics rare, O magic heart and wisdom wild, whose ear nor eye may be beguiled, what omen doth this silence bear? What horn afar upon the air, what summons do the woods await? Mayhap the Lord Tavros from his gate and tree-propped halls, the forest-god, rides his wild stallion golden-shod amid the trumpets` tempest loud, amid his green-clad hunters proud, leaving his deer and friths divine and emerald forests? Some faint sign of his great onset may have come upon the Western winds, and dumb the woods now listen for a chase that here once more shall thundering race beneath the shade of mortal trees. Would it were so! The Lands of Ease hath Tavros left not many an age, since Morgoth evil wars did wage, since ruin fell upon the North and the Gnomes unhappy wandered forth. But if not he, who comes or what?` And Dairon answered: `He cometh not! No feet divine shall leave that shore, where the Shadowy Seas` last surges roar, till many things be come to pass, and many evils wrought. Alas! the guest is here.  The woods are still, but wait not; for a marvel chill them holds at the strange deeds they see, but kings see not -- though queens, maybe, may guess, and maidens, maybe, know. Where one went lonely two now go!` `Whither thy riddle points is plain` the king in anger said, `but deign to make it plainer! Who is he that earns my wrath? How walks he free within my woods amid my folk, a stranger to both beech and oak?` But Dairon looked on Lúthien and would he had not spoken then, and no more would he speak that day, though Thingol`s face with wrath was grey. Then Lúthien stepped lightly forth: `Far in the mountain-leaguered North, my father,` said she, `lies the land that groans beneath King Morgoth`s hand. Thence came on hither, bent and worn in wars and travail, who had sworn undying hatred of that king; the last of Bëor`s sons, they sing, and even hither far and deep within thy woods the echoes creep through the wild mountain-passes cold, the last of Bëor`s house to hold a sword unconquered, neck unbowed, a heart by evil power uncowed. No evil needst thou think or fear of Beren son of Barahir! If aught thou hast to say to him, then swear to hurt not flesh nor limb, and I will lead him to thy hall, a son of kings, no mortal thrall.`     Then long King Thingol looked on her while hand nor foot nor tongue did stir, and Melian, silent, unamazed, on Lúthien and Thingol gazed. `No blad nor chain his limbs shall mar` the king then swore. `He wanders far, and news, mayhap, he hath for me, and words I have for him, maybe!` Now Thingol bade them all depart save Dairon, whom he called: `What art, what wizardry of Northern mist hath this illcomer brought us? List! Tonight go thou by secret path, who knowest all wide Doriath, and watch that Lúthien -- daughter mine, what madness doth thy heart entwine, what web from Morgoth`s dreadfull halls hath caught thy feet and thee enthralls! -- that she bid not this Beren flee back whence he came.  I would him see! Take with thee woodland archers wise. Let naught beguile your hearts or eyes!` Thus Dairon heavyhearted did, and the woods were filled with watchers hid; yet needless, for Lúthien that night led Beren by the golden light of mounting moon unto the shore and bridge before her father`s door; and the white light silent looked within the waiting portals yawning dim. Downward with gentle hand she led through corridors of carven dread whose turns were lit by lanters hung or flames from torches that were flung on dragons hewn in the cold stone with jewelled eyes and teeth of bone. Then sudden, deep beneath the earth the silences with silver mirth were shaken and the rocks were ringing, the birds of Melian were singing; and wide the ways of shadow spread as into archéd halls she led Beren in wonder.  There a light like day immortal and like night of stars unclouded, shone and gleamed. A vault of topless trees it seemed, whose trunks of carven stone there stood like towers of an enchanted wood in magic fast for ever bound, bearing a roof whose branches wound in endless tracery of green lit by some leaf-emprisoned sheen of moon and sun, and wrought of gems, and each leaf hung on golden stems.     Lo! there amid immortal flowers the nightingales in shining bowers sang o`er the head of Melian, while water for ever dripped and ran from fountains in the rocky floor. There Thingol sat.  His crown he wore of green and silver, and round his chair a host of gleaming armour fair. Then Beren looked upon the king and stood amazed; and swift a ring of elvish weapons hemmed him round. Then Beren looked upon the ground, for Melian`s gaze had sought his face, and dazed there drooped he in that place, and when the king spake deep and slow: `Who art thou stumblest hither? Know that none unbidden seek this throne and ever leave these halls of stone!` But Lúthien answered in his stead: `Behold, my father, one who came pursued by hatred like a flame! Lo! Beren son of Barahir! What need hath he thy wrath to fear, foe of our foes, without a friend, whose knees to Morgoth do not bend?` `Let Beren answer!` Thingol said. `What wouldst thou here? What hither led thy wandering feet, O mortal wild? How hast thou Lúthien beguiled or darest thus to walk this wood unasked, in secret? Reason good `twere best declare now if thou may, or never again see light of day!`     Then Beren looked in Lúthien`s eyes and saw a light of starry skies, and thence was slowly drawn his gaze to Melian`s face.  As from a maze of wonder dumb he woke; his heart the bonds of awe there burst apart and filled with the fearless pride of old; in his glance now gleamed an anger cold. `My feet hath fate, O king,` he said, `here over the mountains bleeding led, and what I sought not I have found, and love it is hath here me bound. Thy dearest treasure I desire; nor rocks nor steel nor Morgoth`s fire nor all the power of Elfinesse shall keep that gem I would possess. For fairer than are born to Men A daughter hast thou, Lúthien.` Silence then fell upon the hall; like graven stone there stood they all, save one who cast her eyes aground, and one who laughed with bitter sound. Dairon the piper leant there pale against a pillar.  His fingers frail there touched a flute that whispered not; his eyes were dark; his heart was hot. `Death is the guerdon thou hast earned, O baseborn mortal, who hast learned in Morgoth`s realm to spy and lurk like Orcs that do his evil work!` `Death!` echoed Dairon fierce and low, but Lúthien trembling gasped in woe. `And death,` said Thingol, `thou shouldst taste, had I not sworn an oath in haste that blade nor chain thy flesh should mar. Yet captive bound by never a bar, unchained, unfettered, shalt thou be in lightless labyrinth endlessly that coils about my halls profound by magic bewildered and enwound; there wandering in hopelessness thou shalt learn the power of Elfinesse!` `That may not be!` Lo! Beren spake, and through the king`s words coldly brake. `What are thy mazes but a chain wherein the captive blind is slain? Twist not thy oaths, O elvish king, like faithless Morgoth! By this ring -- the token of a lasting bond that Felagund of Nargothrond once swore in love to Barahir, who sheltered him with shield and spear and saved him from pursuing foe on Northern battlefields long ago -- death thou canst give unearned to me, but names I will not take from thee of baseborn, spy, or Morgoth`s thrall! Are these the ways of Thingol`s hall?` Proud are the words, and all there turned to see the jewels green that burned in Beren`s ring. These Gnomes had set as eyes of serpents twined that met beneath a golden crown of flowers, that one upholds and one devours: the badge that Finrod made of yore and Felagund his son now bore.     His anger was chilled, but little less, and dark thoughts Thingol did possess, though Melian the pale leant to his side and whispered: `O king, forgo thy pride! Such is my counsel. Not by thee shall Beren be slain, for far and free from these deep halls his fate doth lead, yet wound with thine.  O king, take heed!` But Thingol looked on Lúthien. `Fairest of Elves! Unhappy Men, children of little lords and kings mortal and frail, these fadings things, shall they then look with love on thee?` his heart within him thought.  `I see thy ring,` he said, `O mighty man! But to win the child of Melian a father`s deeds shall not avail, nor thy proud words at which I quail. A treasure dear I too desire, but rocks and steel and Morgoth`s fire from all the powers of Elfinesse do keep the jewel I would possess. Yet bonds like these I hear thee say affright thee not.  Now go thy way! Bring me one shining Silmaril from Morgoth`s crown, then if she will, may Lúthien set her hand in thine; then shalt thou have this jewel of mine.` Then Thingol`s warriors loud and long they laughed; for wide renown in song had Fëanor`s gems o`er land and sea, the peerless Silmarils; and three alone he made and kindled slow in the land of the Valar long ago, and there in Tûn of their own light they shone like marvellous stars at night, in the great Gnomish hoards of Tûn, while Glingal flowered and Belthil`s bloom yet lit the land beyond the shore where the Shadowy Seas` last surges roar, ere Morgoth stole them and the Gnomes seeking their glory left their homes, ere sorrows fell on Elves and Men, ere Beren was or Lúthien, ere Fëanor`s sons in madness swore their dreadful oath. But now no more their beauty was seen, save shining clear in Morgoth`s dungeons vast and drear. His iron crown they must adorn, and gleam above Orcs and slaves forlorn, treasured in Hell above all wealth, more than his eyes; and might nor stealth could touch them, or even gaze too long upon their magic. Throng on throng of Orcs with reddened scimitars encircled him, and mighty bars and everlasting gates and walls, who wore them now amidst his thralls.     Then Beren laughed more loud than they in bitterness, and thus did say: `For little price do elven-kings their daughters sell -- for gems and rings and things of gold! If such thy will, thy bidding I will now fulfill. On Beren son of Barahir thou hast not looked the last, I fear. Farewell, Tinúviel, starlit maiden! Ere the pale winter pass snowladen, I will return, not thee to buy with any jewel in Elfinesse, but to find my love in loveliness, a flower that grows beneath the sky.` Bowing before Melian and the king he turned, and thrust aside the ring of guards about him, and was gone, and his footsteps faded one by one in the dark corridors. `A guileful oath thou sworest, father! Thou hast both to blade and chain his flesh now doomed in Morgoth`s dungeons deep entombed,` said Lúthien, and welling tears sprang in her eyes, and hideous fears clutched at her heart.  All looked away, and later remembered the sad day whereafter Lúthien no more sang. Then clear in the silence the cold words rang of Melian: `Counsel cunning-wise, O king!` she said. `Yet if mine eyes lose not their power, `twere well for thee that Beren failed his errantry. Well for thee, but for thy child a dark doom and a wandering wild.` `I sell not to Men those whom I love` said Thingol, `whom all things above I cherish; and if hope there were that Beren should ever living fare to the Thousand Caves once more, I swear he should not ever have seen the air or light of heaven`s stars again.` But Melian smiled, and there was pain as of far knowledge in her eyes; for such is the sorrow of the wise.
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