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V.

Before the king at early morn again the young man stood,
Who at that sight rose up at once in dazed and wondering mood;
Astonished, too, were all the men gathered in presence there,
And eyed the youth all o'er and o'er, with amazed and anxious stare.
“Behold his bride he's won,” they cry, “his bride he's nobly won;
And she shall be his lawful wife in the sight of yonder sun.”

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The king now and his son withdrew, and the old man he retires,
But soon returning with them both, the king spake his desires:
“'Tis true, my son, as thou hast heard, this day thou'st won thy wife;
There's only one thing more I ask, I swear it by my life.
It is the last,—in doing this, thou shalt be my true son,
My daughter then shall be thy bride, and all Leon is thine own.
By my forefathers' bones, bring here great Merlin to our sight,
And when he comes, I swear that he shall bless the marriage rite.”