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This is followed by " I send you, I look at you, wolfish perversion, and unbearable desire, may distress descend on you and jöluns wrath.
Never shall you sit, never shall you sleep ... ( that you ) love me as yourself.
" According to Mindy MacLeod and Bernard Mees, the inscription " seems to begin as a benevolent formulation before abruptly switching to the infliction of distress and misery, presumably upon the recipient of the charm rather than the baleful valkyrie ", and they posit the final line appears " to constitute a rather spiteful kind of charm aimed at securing the love of a woman ".

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