This is Modern English. The word order and the diction are different from normal prose because Poetry differs from Prose in just such devices.
'Shall Not' and 'Will Not' have two wholly different meaning. Won't and Shan't are the constricted abbreviations of the words. Shalln't is bad english and simply wrong. As to Won't, that's not the same meaning.
The contraction "he'll" (followed by a primary verb in the future or future perfect) means "he will" or "he shall" (the two having zero distinction in modern English). e.g. He'll probably see the difference. He'll be embarrassed when he realizes his mistake. He'll have reached town by noon.
He shall repress violence with laws.
Unless you are already familiar with shall, you'll save yourself a lot of bother by not even trying to learn to use it in the precise English way. You're welcome to my rules of thumb: shall is a future form that expresses a certain destiny to the act; if you can't decide between will and shall, go with will.
This translates directly to the English idiom "Seek and you shall find".
"Thou" is an archaic, informal way of saying "you" in the English language. It was commonly used in early modern English but has largely fallen out of use in contemporary language.
Shall speak English: "Ska prata engelska"
the modern version for shalt is shall
'Shall Not' and 'Will Not' have two wholly different meaning. Won't and Shan't are the constricted abbreviations of the words. Shalln't is bad english and simply wrong. As to Won't, that's not the same meaning.
I shall be the greatest game
The verb 'shall' is most often an auxiliary verb.Example: I shall plant the rose bushes tomorrow.
Ik zal handhaven, which is the motto of the Netherlands, is a Dutch equivalent of 'I shall endure'.
The contraction "he'll" (followed by a primary verb in the future or future perfect) means "he will" or "he shall" (the two having zero distinction in modern English). e.g. He'll probably see the difference. He'll be embarrassed when he realizes his mistake. He'll have reached town by noon.
If it's para que de digo, then it's: what shall I tell you for; or why shall I tell you
That means "we sleep". Or, as a question: "Shall we sleep?"
wird gerettet werden
Pssh. Harry Potter all the way!!