Anglo-Saxon Riddles of the Exeter Book/Annotated/69
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69 (k-d 42)
I saw there two beautiful creatures openly playing the game of love. If the affair prospered, the fair-haired one proudly arrayed, received her due fulness. Now I can tell the assembled bookmen the names of both in runic letters. There shall be NEED, two of these, and the bright ASH tree, one on the line, and then two OAKS and two HAILS likewise. Whoever has unlocked with the power of the key the clasps of the chest which held the riddle cunningly hidden from the learned in runes— now is revealed to them here as they drink how those two of low minds are called by name. |
N N Æ A A H H 10 |
Ic seah wyhte wrætlice twa undearnunga ute plegan hæmedlaces hwitloc anfeng wlanc under wædum gif þæs weorces speop fæmne fyllo Ic on flette mæg þurh runstafas rincum secgan þā þe bec witan bega ætsomne naman þara wihta þær sceal nyd wesan twega oþer ⁊ se torhta æsc an an linan acas twegen hægelas swa some hwylc wæs hordgates cægan cræfte þa clamme onleac þe þa rædellan wið rȳne menn hygefæste heold heortan bewrigene orþoncbendum nu is undyrne werum æt wine hu þa wihte mid us heanmode twa hatne sindon · |
This is, as the author says, self-explanatory, if you recognize the runes: HANA (cock) and HÆN (hen).