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- Avt’handils
Letter to His Vassals
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- 166
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- HE wrote as follows: "My vassals, my
instructors and
- some my pupils, faithful, trusty and tried,
attentive to my
- behests like shadows, hearken to my letter
all assembled!
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- 167
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- "GIVE ear! I, Avt'handil, earth
beneath your feet, write
- this unto you; with mine own hand have I
written this
- epistle. For a little while I have
preferred roaming to
- drink and song; for bread and meat I shall
trust to my bow
- and thumb.
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- 168
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- "I HAVE in hand a certain matter which
makes me
- journey to a far country; I depart alone,
and this year
- shall I travel. I ask you only this: I
beseech you let me find
- the realm unshaken by the foe.
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- 169
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- "I HAVE in hand a certain matter which
makes me
- journey to a far country; I depart alone,
and this year
- shall I travel. I ask you only this: I
beseech you let me find
- the realm unshaken by the foe.
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- 170
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- "YOU know, too, how he has grown up
with me like a
- brother and like a son; you must obey him
as if he were
- Avt'handil; let him make to sound the
trumpet, do
- everything as I have hitherto done; if I
come not at the
- time appointed, mourning and not laughter
will be seemly
- to you."
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- 171
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- THE eloquent and nice-worded one ended this
letter, he
- tied gold round his waist, habited himself
to travel alone;
- he said: "I shall mount in the
plain." The soldiers formed
- in line, then they came forth; he tarried
no time indoors.
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- 172
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- HE said: "Let all go hence; herein I
need none as a
- partisan." He sent the slaves away
also, he remained by
- himself, alone he withdrew himself, he
hastened through
- the rushes. His slayer, T'hinat'hin, is
always in his thoughts.
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- 173
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- HE galloped over that plain; he was lost to
the soldiers'
- sight. What human being might have seen him
and pursued
- him, his sword could not harm him; his arm
was hampered.
- He was heavy laden with a burden of grief
for her sake.
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- 174
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- WHEN the soldiers hunted and sought their
lord, and
- could no longer find the sun-faced, their
countenances
- paled, their great joy turned into
heaviness, they ran
- everywhere to seek him, whoever had a swift
horse.
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- 175
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- "0 LION, whom can God put in thy
place!" They ran and
- brought out other messengers from
elsewhere; they could
- learn nothing of him; he passed from that
place. His
- disheartened hosts shed hot tears.
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- 176
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- SHERMADIN assembled together the courtiers
and nobles;
- he showed them the letter in which
Avt'handil had told
- them his tidings. When they heard it, all
remained
- heart-pierced, they beat themselves, there
was not
- a tearless heart, not an unbruised breast.
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- 177
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- ALL said: "Though our state without
him is irksome to us,
- to whom save thee could he give his seat
and throne ? Of
- a truth we shall obey thee, whatever thou
commandest
- any of us." They made that vassal
lord; all did him
- homage.
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