Sorrow and sadness, and say eternal thanks
210 To the mighty Son of the Maker, that his mother I have become,
Though a maid I remain, and in men’s opinion
Thou art famed as his father, if fulfillment should come
Of the truth that the Prophets foretold of his coming.”
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
[164.] This passage is especially interesting in being one of the first appearances of the dialogue form in old English. Some scholars have gone so far as to think that we have here the germ from which English drama comes, but there does not seem reason to believe that the scene ever received any kind of dramatic representation.
4. Rune Passage
[Not] ever on earth need any man
780 Have dread of the darts of the devil’s race,