The Saga of Grettir
the Strong
Grettis saga Ásmundarsonar
CHAPTER I
THE FAMILY AND
EARLY WARS OF ONUND THE SON OF OFEIG
There was a man
named Onund, the son of Ofeig Clumsyfoot, who was the son of
Ivar Horsetail. Onund was the brother of Gudbjorg, the
mother of Gudbrand Knob, the father of Asta, the mother of
King Olaf the Saint. His mother came from the
Upplands, while his father's relations were mostly in Rogaland
and Hordland. He was a great viking and used to harry away in
the West over the sea. He was accompanied on these expeditions
by one Balki, the son of Blaeing from Sotanes, and by Orm the
Wealthy. Another comrade of theirs was named Hallvard. They
had five ships, all well equipped. They plundered the
Hebrides, reaching the Barra Isles, where there ruled a king
named Kjarval, who also had five ships. These they attacked;
there was a fierce battle between them, in which Onund's men
fought with the utmost bravery. After many had fallen on both
sides, the battle ended with the king taking to flight with a
single ship; the rest were captured by Onund's force, along
with much booty. They stayed there for the winter, and spent
the succeeding three summers harrying the coasts of Ireland
and Scotland, after which they returned to Norway.
CHAPTER II
THE BATTLE OF HAFRSFJORD
At that time Norway was very disturbed. Harald
Shockhead, the son of Halfdan the Black, till then king of the
Upplands, was aiming at the supreme kingship. He went into the
North and fought many battles there, in which he was always
victorious. Then he marched harrying through the territories
to the South, bringing them into subjection wherever he came.
On reaching Hordland he was opposed by a motley multitude led
by Kjotvi the Wealthy, Thorir Long-chin, and Soti and King
Sulki from South Rogaland. Geirmund Swarthyskin was then away
in the West, beyond the sea, so he was not present at the
battle, although Hordland belonged to his dominion.
Onund and his party had arrived that autumn
from the western seas, and when Thorir and Kjotvi heard of
their landing they sent envoys to ask for their aid, promising
to treat them with honour. They were very anxious for an
opportunity of distinguishing themselves, so they joined
Thorir's forces, and declared that they would be in the
thickest part of the battle. They met King Harald in a fjord
in Rogaland called Hafrsfjord. The forces on each side were
very large, and the battle was one of the greatest ever fought
in Norway. There are many accounts of it, for one always hears
much about those people of whom the saga is told. Troops had
come in from all the country around and from other countries
as well, besides a multitude of vikings. Onund brought his
ship alongside of that of Thorir Long-chin in the very middle
of the battle. King Harald made for Thorir's ship, knowing him
to be a terrible berserk, and very brave. The fighting was
desperate on either side. Then the king ordered his berserks,
the men called Wolfskins, forward. No iron could hurt them,
and when they charged nothing could withstand them. Thorir
defended himself bravely and fell on his ship fighting
valiantly. The whole ship from stem to stern was cleared and
her fastenings were cut, so that she fell out of the line of
battle. Then they attacked Onund's ship, in the forepart of
which he was standing and fighting manfully. The king's men
said: "He bears himself well in the forecastle. Let us give
him something to remind him of having been in the battle."
Onund was stepping out with one foot on to the bulwark, and as
he was striking they made a thrust at him with a spear; in
parrying it he bent backwards, and at that moment a man on the
forecastle of the king's ship struck him and took off his leg
below the knee, disabling him at a blow. With him fell the
greater number of his men. They carried him to a ship
belonging to a man named Thrand, a son of Bjorn and brother of
Eyvind the Easterner. He was fighting against King Harald, and
his ship was lying on the other side of Onund's. Then there
was a general flight. Thrand and the rest of the vikings
escaped any way they could, and sailed away westwards. They
took with them Onund and Balki and Hallvard Sugandi. Onund
recovered and went about for the rest of his life with a
wooden leg, wherefore he was called Onund Treefoot as long as
he lived.
CHAPTER III
MEETING OF DEFEATED CHIEFS IN THE WEST AND
MARRIAGE OF ONUND
There were then in the western parts many
distinguished men who had fled from their homes in Norway
before King Harald, for he declared all who fought against him
outlaws, and seized their property. As soon as Onund had
recovered from his wound, Thrand went with his party to
Geirmund Swarthyskin, who was the most eminent of the vikings
in the West. They asked him whether he was not going to try
and regain his kingdom in Hordland, and offered to join him,
hoping by this means to do something for their own properties,
for Onund was very wealthy and his kindred very powerful.
Geirmund answered that Harald had such a force that there was
little hope of gaining any honour by fighting when the whole
country had joined against him and been beaten. He had no
mind, he said, to become the king's thrall, and to beg for
that which he had once possessed in his own right. Seeing that
he was no longer in the vigour of his youth he preferred to
find some other occupation. So Onund and his party returned to
the Southern Islands, where they met many of their friends.
There was a man named Ofeig, nicknamed Grettir.
He was the son of Einar, the son of Olvir the Babyman. He was
a brother of Oleif the Broad, the father of Thormod Shaft.
Another son of Olvir was named Steinolf, the father of Una,
whom Thorbjorn the Salmon-man married. A third son of Olvir
was Steinmod, who was the father of Konal, the father of
Alfdis of the Barra Isles. Konal's son was named Steimnod; he
was the father of Halldora, whom Eilif, the son of Ketil the
One-handed, married.
Ofeig Grettir married Asny, the daughter of
Vestar, the son of Haeing. His sons were Asmund the Beardless
and Asbjorn, and his daughters were named Aldis, Aesa, and
Asvor. Ofeig had fled from the wrath of King Harald into the
West over the sea, along with his kinsman Thormod Shaft and
all their families. They ravaged far and wide in the western
seas. Thrand and Onund Treefoot were going West to Ireland to
join Thrand's brother, Eyvind the Easterner, who had command
of the Irish defences. Eyvind's mother was named Hlif; she was
the daughter of Hrolf, the son of Ingjald, the son of King
Frodi, while Thrand's mother was Helga, the daughter of Ondott
Crow. The father of Eyvind and Thrand was Bjorn, the son of
Hrolf of Ar. He had had to leave Gautland because he had burnt
in his house Sigfast the father-in-law of King Solvi. Then he
went to Norway and spent the winter with Grim the Hersir, a
son of Kolbjorn the Sneak, who wanted to murder him for his
money. Thence Bjorn went to Ondott Crow, who lived in
Hvinisfjord in Agdir. There he was well received, stayed the
winter, and went campaigning with Ondott in the summer until
his wife Hlif died. Eventually Ondott gave Bjorn his daughter
Helga, and Bjorn then no longer went out to fight. Eyvind had
taken over his father's ships and become a great chief in the
western parts. He married Rafarta, the daughter of the Irish
king Kjarval. Their sons were Helgi the Lean and Snaebjorn.
When Thrand and Onund came to the Southern
Islands they found there Ofeig Grettir and Thormod Shaft, with
whom they became very friendly, for each thought the others
had risen from the dead, their last meeting having been in
Norway when the war was at its worst. Onund was very silent,
and Thrand, when he noticed it, asked what was on his mind.
Onund answered with a verse:
"No joy is mine since in battle I fought.
Many the sorrows that o'er me lower.
Men hold me for nought; this thought is the worst
of all that oppresses my sorrowing heart."
Thrand said: "Why, you still seem as full of
vigour as ever you were. You may yet settle down and marry.
You shall have my good word and my interest if you will only
tell me whom you fancy."
Onund said he behaved nobly; but said there had
once been a time when his chances of making a profitable
marriage had been better.
Thrand said: "Ofeig has a daughter named Aesa;
we might mention it if you like."
Onund said he would like it, and soon
afterwards Ofeig was approached on the subject. He received
the proposal favourably, saying he knew the man to be of good
lineage and to have some wealth in movable property, though
his lands were not worth much. "But," he said, "I do not think
he is very wise. Why, my daughter is quite a child."
Thrand said that Onund was more vigorous than
many a man whose legs were sounder.
So with the aid of Thrand the terms were
settled. Ofeig was to give his daughter a portion in cash, for
neither would reckon anything for his lands in Norway. Soon
afterwards Thrand was betrothed to the daughter of Thormod
Shaft. Both the maids were to remain plighted for three years.
Then they went on fighting expeditions in the
summer, remaining in the Barra Isles during the winter.
CHAPTER VI
FIGHT WITH VIKINGS VIGBJOD AND VESTMAR
There were two Vikings from the Southern Isles,
named Vigbjod and Vestmar; they were abroad both summer and
winter. They had eight ships, and harried mostly round the
coast of Ireland, where they did many an evil deed until
Eyvind undertook the defence of the coast, when they retired
to the Hebrides to harry there, and right in to the Scotch
firths. Thrand and Onund went out against them and learned
that they had sailed to an island called Bot. Onund and Thrand
followed them thither with five ships, and when the vikings
sighted them and saw how many there were, they thought their
own force was sufficient, so they took to their arms and
advanced to the attack. Onund ordered his ships to take up a
position between two rocks where there was a deep but narrow
channel, open to attack from one side only, and by not more
than five ships at once. Onund was a very wily man. He sent
his five ships forward into the channel so that, as there was
plenty of sea room behind them, they could easily retire by
merely backing their oars. One ship he brought under an island
lying on their beam, and carried a great stone to a place on
the front of the rock where it could not be seen from the
enemy's ships. The Vikings came boldly on, thinking they had
caught them in a trap. Vigbjod asked who they were that he had
hemmed in. Thrand answered that he was a brother of Eyvind the
Easterner, and the man with him was his comrade, Onund
Treefoot. The vikings laughed and said:
"Trolls take the rascal Treefoot
and lay him even with the ground.
Never yet did I see men go to battle who could
not carry themselves."
Onund said that could not be known until it was
tried. Then the ships came together. There was a great battle
in which both sides fought bravely. When the battle was thick
Onund ordered his ships to back their oars. The vikings seeing
it thought they were taking to flight, and pushed on with all
their might, coming under the rock just at the moment when the
party which had been dispatched for that purpose arrived. They
launched upon the vikings stones so huge that nothing could
hold against them. A number of the vikings were killed, and
others were so injured that they could fight no more. Then the
vikings tried to escape, but could not, as their ships were in
the narrowest part of the channel and were impeded both by the
current and by the enemy's ships. Onund's men vigorously
attacked the wing commanded by Vigbjod while Thrand engaged
Vestmar, but effected little. When the men on Vigbjod's ship
had been somewhat reduced, Onund's men, he himself with them,
prepared to board her. On seeing that, Vigbjod spurred on his
men resolutely. He turned against Onund, most of whose men
gave way. Onund was a man of immense strength and he bade his
followers observe how it fared with them. They shoved a log
under the stump of his leg, so that he stood pretty firm. The
viking dashed forward, reached Onund and hewed at him with his
sword, which cut right through his shield and into the log
beneath his leg, where it remained fixed. As Vigbjod bent down
to pull his sword clear again, Onund dealt him a blow on his
shoulder, severing his arm and disabling him. When Vestmar saw
his comrade fall, he sprang on to the outermost ship and
escaped along with all who could get on to her. Then they
examined the dead. Vigbjod had already expired. Onund went up
to him and said:
"Bloody thy wounds. Didst thou see me flee?
'One-leg' no hurt received from thee.
Braver are many in word than in deed.
Thou, slave, didst fail when it came to the trial."
They took a large quantity of booty and
returned to the Barra Isles in the autumn.
CHAPTER V
VISIT OF ONUND AND THRAND TO EYVIND IN IRELAND
The following summer they made ready for a
voyage to the West, to Ireland. At the same time Balki and
Hallvard sailed westwards, to Iceland, where they had heard
that good land was available for occupation. Balki took up
some land at Hrutafjord, and had his abode in two places
called Balkastad. Hallvard occupied Sugandafjord and Skalavik
as far as Stigi, where he lived.
Thrand and Onund went to visit Eyvind the
Easterner, who welcomed joyfully his brother Thrand; but when
he heard that Onund had also come, he became very angry and
wanted to fight him. Thrand asked him not to do so, and said
it would ill become him to quarrel with men from Norway,
especially with such as had given no offence. Eyvind said that
he had given offence before, when he made war on Kjarval the
king, and that he should now pay for it. The brothers had much
to say to each other about the matter, till at last Thrand
said that he and Onund should share their fortune together.
Then Eyvind allowed himself to be appeased. They stayed there
a long time in the summer and went with Eyvind on his
expeditions. Eyvind found Onund to be a man of the greatest
valour. In the autumn they went to the Hebrides, and Eyvind
made over to Thrand all his share in their father Bjorn's
patrimony in the event of Bjorn dying before Thrand. They
stayed in the Hebrides until they married and some years
after.
CHAPTER VI
DEATH OF BJORN; DISPUTES OVER HIS PROPERTY IN
NORWAY
The next thing that happened was the death of
Thrand's father Bjorn. When the news of it reached Grim the
Hersir he proceeded against Ondott Crow and claimed Bjorn's
estate. Ondott held Thrand to be the rightful heir of his
father, but Grim contended that Thrand was away in the West.
Bjorn, he said, came from Gautland, and the succession to the
estate of all foreigners passed to the king. Ondott said that
he would hold the property on behalf of Thrand, who was his
daughter's son. Grim then departed, having effected nothing by
his claim.
Thrand, when he heard of his father's death,
prepared to leave the Hebrides, and Onund Treefoot decided to
go with him. Ofeig Grettir and Thormod Shaft went to Iceland
with all their belongings, landing at Eyrar in the South. They
spent the first winter with Thorbjorn the Salmon-man, and then
occupied Gnupverjahrepp. Ofeig took the outer part lying
between the rivers Thvera and Kalfa, and lived at Ofeigsstad
near Steinsholt, while Thormod took the eastern part, living
at Skaptaholt. Thormod's daughters were named Thorvor and
Thorve; the former afterwards became the mother of Thorodd the
Godi at Hjalli, Thorve of Thorstein the Godi the father of
Bjarni the Wise.
We now return to Thrand and Onund, who sailed
back from the West to Norway. A strong wind blew in their
favour, so that they arrived at the house of Ondott Crow
before any one knew of their journey. He welcomed Thrand and
told him of the claim which Grim the Hersir had raised for
Bjorn's estate.
"To my thinking, kinsman," he said, "it is
better that the property should go to you than to the king's
thralls. It is a fortunate thing for you that no one knows of
your having come here, for I expect that Grim will make an
attack upon one or the other of us if he can. I should prefer
if you would take over your property and stay in other
countries."
Thrand said that he would do so. He took over
the property and prepared to leave Norway. Before leaving he
asked Onund Treefoot whether he would not come to Iceland.
Onund said he wanted first to visit some of his relations and
friends in the South.
"Then," said Thrand, "we must part. I should be
glad if you would give my kinsmen your support, for our
enemies will certainly try to take revenge upon them when I am
gone. I am going to Iceland, and I want you to come there
too."
Onund said he would come, and they parted with
great friendship. Thrand went to Iceland, where he met with a
welcome from Ofeig and Thormod Shaft. He took up his dwelling
at Thrandarholt to the west of Thjorsa.
CHAPTER VII
MURDER OF ONDOTT CROW, AND THE VENGEANCE
THEREFOR
Onund went to Rogaland in the South and visited
many of his relations and friends. He lived there in
concealment with a man named Kolbeinn. He there learned that
King Harald had taken all his property and given it into the
charge of a man named Harekr, one of his officials. Onund went
by night to Harekr's house and caught him at home; he was led
to execution. Then Onund took possession of all the loose
property which he found and burnt the building.
That autumn Grim the Hersir murdered Ondott
Crow because he had not succeeded in getting the property for
the king. Ondott's wife Signy carried off all their loose
property that same night to a ship and escaped with her sons
Asmund and Asgrim to her father Sighvat. A little later she
sent her sons to Hedin, her fosterfather in Soknadal, where
they remained for a time and then wanted to return to their
mother. They left at last, and at Yule-tide came to Ingjald
the Trusty at Hvin. His wife Gyda persuaded him to take them
in, and they spent the winter there. In the spring Onund came
to northern Agdir, having learned of the murder of Ondott. He
met Signy and asked her what assistance they would have of
him. She said they were most anxious to punish Grim for the
death of Ondott. So the sons were sent for, and when they met
Onund Treefoot they all joined together and had Grim's doings
closely watched.
In the summer there was a beer-brewing at
Grim's for a jarl named Audun, whom he had invited. When Onund
and the sons of Ondott heard of it, they appeared at his house
unexpectedly and set fire to it. Grim the Hersir and about
thirty men were burnt in the house. They captured a quantity
of valuables. Then Onund went into the forest, while the two
brothers took the boat of their fosterfather Ingjald, rowed
away and lay in hiding a little way off. Soon jarl Audun
appeared, on his way to the feast, as had been arranged, but
on arriving he missed his host. So he collected his men around
him and stayed there a few nights, quite unaware of Onund and
his companions. He slept in a loft with two other men. Onund
knew everything that was going on in the house and sent for
the two brothers to come to him. On their arrival he asked
them whether they preferred to keep watch on the house or to
attack the jarl. They chose to attack. They then battered the
entrance of the loft with beams until the door gave way.
Asmund seized the two men who were with the jarl and threw
them to the ground with such violence that they were wellnigh
killed. Asgrim rushed at the jarl and demanded of him weregild
for his father, for he had been in league with Grim and took
part in the attack when Ondott was murdered. The jarl said he
had no money about him and asked for time. Asgrim then placed
the point of his spear against his breast and ordered him to
pay up on the spot. Then the jarl took a necklace from his
neck and gave it to him with three gold rings and a velvet
mantle. Asgrim took the things and bestowed a name upon the
jarl. He called him Audun Nannygoat.
When the farmers and people about heard of the
disturbances they all came out to help the jar]. Onund had a
large force with him, and there was a great battle in which
many a good farmer and many a follower of the jarl were slain.
The brothers returned to Onund and reported what had occurred
with the jarl. Onund said it was a pity they had not killed
him. It would, he said, have been something to make up for the
losses which he had suffered from King Harald. They said the
disgrace was far worse for the jarl as it was, and they went
off to Surnadal to Eirik Beery, a Landman there, who took them
all in for the winter. At Yule-tide they had a great drinking
bout with a man named Hallsteinn, nicknamed Stallion. Eirik
opened the feast and entertained them generously. Then it was
Hallsteinn's turn, and they began to quarrel. Hallsteinn
struck Eirik with a deer's horn, for which Eirik got no
revenge, but had to go home with it, to the great annoyance of
Ondott's sons. A little later Asgrim went to Hallsteinn's
house and gave him a severe wound. All the people who were
present started up and attacked Asgrim. He defended himself
vigorously and escaped in the dark, leaving them under the
belief that they had killed him. Onund and Asmund, on hearing
that Asgrim had been killed, were at a loss what they could do
in the matter. Eirik's advice was that they should betake
themselves to Iceland, for it would never do for them to
remain in the land where the king could get at them. This they
determined to do. Each of them had his own ship and they made
ready for the voyage to Iceland. Hallsteinn was laid low with
his wound and died before Onund sailed with his party.
Kolbeinn, the man who was mentioned before, went in the ship
with Onund.
CHAPTER VIII
ONUND AND ASMUND SAIL TO ICELAND
Onund and Asmund set sail directly when they
were ready and their ships kept together. Onund said:
"Hallvard and I were aforetime deemed
worthy in storm of swords to bear us.
With one foot now I step on the ship
towards Iceland. The poet's day is o'er."
They had a rough passage with cross winds,
mostly from the south, so that they drifted away to the north.
They made Iceland right in the North, at Langanes, where they
regained their reckonings. The ships were near enough to each
other for them to speak together. Asmund said they had better
make for Eyjafjord, and this was agreed to. They kept under
the land and heavy weather set in from the south-east. Just as
Onund was tacking, the yard was carried away; they lowered the
sail and were driven out to sea. Asmund got under the lee of
Hrisey, where he waited until a fair wind set in which took
him up to Eyjafjord. Helgi the Lean gave him the whole of
Kraeklingahlid, and he lived at South- Glera. A few years
later his brother Asgrim came to Iceland and took up his
residence at North-Glera. His son was Ellidagrim the father of
Asgrim.
CHAPTER IX
ONUND SETTLES IN KALDBAK
Onund Treefoot was driven away from the shore
for several days, after which the wind shifted and blew
towards the land. Then they made land again, which those of
them who had been there before recognised as the western coast
of the Skagi peninsula. They sailed in to Strandafloi, almost
to Sudrstrandir. There came rowing towards them a ten-oared
boat with six men on board, who hailed the sea-going ship and
asked who was their captain. Onund told them his name and
asked whence they came. They said they were the men of
Thorvald from Drangar. Then Onund asked whether all the land
round that coast was occupied; they answered there was very
little left at Sudrstrandir and none at all in the North. So
Onund asked his men whether they would seek some land further
to the West or take that of which they had just been told.
They said they would first explore a little further. They
sailed in along the coast of the bay and anchored off a creek
near Arnes, where they put off in a boat to the shore.
Here dwelt a wealthy man named Eirik Snare, who
had taken the land between Ingolfsfjord and Ofaera in
Veidileysa. On hearing that Onund had arrived in those parts,
he offered to let him have such portion as he needed from his
own lands, adding that there was little land which had not
already been taken up. Onund said he would first like to see
what there was.
Then they went further into the bay past some
fjords and came to Ofaera, where Eirik said: "Here is what
there is to see. From here down to the lands of Bjorn is
unoccupied." A high range of mountains, on which snow had
fallen, rose from beside the river. Onund looked at the
mountains and spoke a verse:
"My lands and my might have drifted away
as drifts the ship on the ocean.
My friends and my home I have left behind me,
and bartered my acres for Kaldbak."
"Many a man," answered Eirik, "has lost so much
in Norway that it may not be mended. I expect too that nearly
all the lands in the main districts have been taken, so that I
will not urge you to leave these parts and seek elsewhere. I
will keep to my word and let you have whatever lands of my own
you may require."
Onund said he would take advantage of his
offer, and in the end he took some of the Ofaera land and the
three creeks Byrgisvik, Kolbeinsvik, and Kaldbaksvik as far as
Kaldbak's Cliff. Afterwards Eirik gave him Veidileysa with
Reykjarfjord and the outer part of Reykjanes on that side.
Nothing was settled about the drift which came to the coast,
because there was so much of it that every one could have what
he wanted. Onund made his home in Kaldbak and had a large
household. His property increased and he had another house in
Reykjarfjord. Kolbeinn lived in Kolbeinsvik and for some years
Onund lived quietly at home.
CHAPTER X
OFEIG GRETTIR IS KILLED. VISIT OF ONUND TO AUD
THE DEEP-MINDED
Onund was a man of such valour that few, even
of those whose limbs were sound, could measure themselves
against him. His name, too, was renowned throughout the whole
country on account of his ancestry. It happened that a dispute
arose between Ofeig Grettir and one Thorbjornm called
Jarlakappi, which ended in Ofeig being killed by Thorbjorn in
Grettisgeil near Haell. The feud was taken up by Ofeig's sons
who assembled a large force of men. Onund Treefoot was sent
for, and in the spring he rode South to Hvamm, where he stayed
with Aud the Deep-Minded. He had been with her over the sea in
the West, and she received him with welcome. Her grandson,
Olaf Feilan, was then grown up, and Aud was very infirm. She
consulted Onund concerning her kinsman Olaf, for whom she
wished to ask in marriage Alfdis of the Barra Isles, the
cousin of Onund's wife Aesa. Onund thought it a very suitable
match, and Olaf rode with him to the South. Then Onund met
friends and kinsmen, who made him their guest. The matter of
the dispute was talked over between them, and finally laid
before the Kjalarnes Thing, for the All-Thing had not yet been
established. Eventually it was settled by arbitration and
heavy weregilds were imposed for the murder. Thorbjorn
Jarlakappi was exiled. His son was Solmund, the father of
Svidukari. These kinsmen were long abroad after that. Thrand
invited Onund and Olaf with his party to stay with him, as did
Thormod Shaft. The matter of Olaf's marriage was then pressed,
and an agreement easily arrived at, for Aud's rank and
influence were well known to them. The settlement was arranged
and Onund's party rode home again. Aud thanked him for his aid
in behalf of Olaf, who married Alfdis of the Barra Isles that
autumn. Then Aud the Deep-Minded died, as is told in the
Laxdaela Saga.
CHAPTER XI
DEATH OF ONUND. DISPUTES BETWEEN THE SONS OF
ONUND AND OF EIRIK
Onund and Aesa had two sons; the elder was
named Thorgeir, the younger Ofeig Grettir. Soon afterwards
Aesa died and Onund married a second wife, Thordis Thorgrim's
daughter of Gnup in Midfjord, a kinsman of Skeggi of Midfjord.
By her Onund had a son named Thorgrim, who grew up quickly to
manhood, ta11 and strong, wise and a good manager. Onund
continued to live at Kaldbak until his old age. He died a
natural death and lies in Treefoot's howe. He was the boldest
and most active one-legged man that ever came to Iceland.
Among Onund's sons Thorgrim was the foremost,
although the others were older. When he was twenty-five years
old his hair was grey, whence they nick-named him Greyhead.
His mother Thordis married again, taking as her second husband
Audun Skokull. They had a son named Asgeir of Asgeirsa.
Thorgrim Greyhead and his brothers had a large property, which
they managed together without dividing it up.
Eirik lived, as was mentioned, at Arnes. He had
married Alof, the daughter of Ingolf of Ingolfsfjord, by whom
he had a son named Flosi, a very promising young man with many
friends.
There came to that part of Iceland three
brothers, named Ingolf, Ofeig, and Eyvind, and took the three
fjords which are called by their names, where they lived.
Eyvind had a son named Olaf. He at first lived at
Eyvindsfjord, but went later to Drangar. He was a most capable
man.
So long as their fathers were living no
disputes arose among these men; but when Eirik was dead it
occurred to Flosi that those of Kaldbak had no legal title to
the lands which Eirik had given to Onund. Out of this serious
dissensions arose between them. Thorgrim and his brothers
continued in possession of the lands as before, but they would
not join in games together. Thorgeir, the eldest brother, was
managing the farm at Reykjarfjord, and often rowed out
fishing, as the fjords were full of fish. The men of Vik now
laid their plans. Flosi had a man in Arnes named Thorfinn, and
sent him to fetch Thorgeir's head. This man hid himself in the
boatshed. One morning when Thorgeir was preparing to row out
with two other men, one of whom was named Brand, Thorgeir was
walking ahead with a leather skin on his back containing some
drink. It was very dark, and as he passed the boat-house
Thorfinn sprang out upon him and dealt him a blow with an axe
between his shoulders. The axe went into something and made a
squeaking noise. Thorfinn let go his axe, feeling quite sure
that no bandages would be needed, and being very anxious to
escape as fast as he could. He ran North, and reaching Arnes
before the day had quite broken, said that he had killed
Thorgeir and that Flosi must protect him. The only thing to be
done was to offer some compensation in money. "That," he said,
"will be the best thing for us after such a terrible piece of
work."
Flosi said he must first learn more about it,
and that he thought Thorfinn seemed very frightened after his
doughty deed.
We must now tell what had happened to Thorgeir.
He turned round when he was struck, but the blow had gone into
the leather bottle, and he was unhurt. They could make no
search for the man because it was dark, so they rowed on down
the fjord to Kaldbak, where they told what had happened.
People made great game of the affair and called him Thorgeir
Bottleback, a name which stuck to him ever after. A verse was
made:
"In days gone by men bathed their blades
in the streaming gore of a foeman's wound.
But now a wretch of all honour bereft
reddens his dastard axe in whey."
CHAPTER XII
BATTLE AT RIFSKER
At that time there came over Iceland a famine
the like of which had never been seen before. Nearly all the
fisheries failed, and also the drift wood. So it continued for
many years.
One autumn some traders in a sea-going ship,
who had been driven out of their course, were wrecked at Vik.
Flosi took in four or five of them with their captain, named
Steinn. They all found shelter in the neighbourhood of Vik and
tried to rig up a ship out of the wreckage, but were not very
successful. The ship was too narrow in the bow and stern and
too broad amidships. In the spring a northerly gale set in
which lasted nearly a week, after which men began to look for
drift.
There was a man living in Reykjanes named
Thorsteinn. He found a whale stranded on the south side of the
promontory at the place now called Rifsker. It was a large
rorqual, and he at once sent word by a messenger to Flosi in
Vik and to the nearest farms.
At Gjogr lived a man named Einar, a tenant of
the Kaldbak men whom they employed to look after the drift on
that side of the fjord. He got to know of the whale having
been stranded and at once rowed across the fjord in his boat
to Byrgisvik, whence he sent a messenger to Kaldbak. When
Thorgrim and his brother heard the news they got ready to go
with all speed to the spot. There were twelve of them in a
ten-oared boat, and six others, with Ivar and Leif, sons of
Kolbeinn. All the farmers who could get away went to the
whale.
In the meantime Flosi had sent word to his
kinsmen in the North at Ingolfsfjord and Ofeigsfjord and to
Olaf the son of Eyvind who lived at Drangar. The first to
arrive were Flosi and the men of Vik, who at once began to cut
up the whale, carrying on shore the flesh as it was cut. At
first there were about twenty men, but more came thronging in.
Then there came the men of Kaldbak with four ships. Thorgrim
laid claim to the whale and forbade the men of Vik to cut,
distribute, or carry away any portion of it. Flosi called upon
him to show proof that Eirik had in express words given over
the drift to Onund; if not, he said he would prevent them by
force. Thorgrim saw that he was outnumbered and would not
venture on fighting. Then there came a ship across the fjords,
the men rowing with all their might. They came up; it was Svan
of Hol from Bjarnarfjord with his men, and he at once told
Thorgrim not to let himself be robbed. The two men had been
great friends, and Svan offered Thorgrim his aid, which the
brothers accepted, and they attacked valiantly. Thorgeir
Bottleback was the first to get on to the whale where Flosi's
men were. Thorfinn, who was spoken of before, was cutting it
up, standing near the head on the place where he had been
carving. "Here I bring you your axe," said Thorgeir. Then he
struck at Thorfinn's neck and cut off his head. Flosi was up
on the beach and saw it. He urged on his men to give it them
back. They fought for a long time and the Kaldbak people were
getting the best of it. Most of them had no weapons but the
axes with which they were cutting up the whale and short
knives. The men of Vik were driven from the whale on to the
sandbanks. The men from the East, however, were armed and able
to deal wounds. Their captain Steinn cut off the leg of
Kolbeinn's son Ivar, and Ivar's brother Leif beat one of
Steinn's men to death with a rib of the whale. Then they
fought with anything they could get, and men were slain on
both sides. At last Olaf came up with a number of ships from
Drangar and joined Flosi; the men of Kaldbak were then
overpowered by numbers. They had already loaded their ships,
and Svan told them to get on board. They therefore retired
towards the ships, the men of Vik after them. Svan on reaching
the sea struck at Steinn their captain, wounding him badly,
and then sprang into his own ship. Thorgrim gave Flosi a
severe wound and escaped. Olaf wounded Ofeig Grettir fatally,
but Thorgeir carried him off and sprang on to his ship with
him. The Kaldbak men rowed into the fjord and the two parties
separated.
The following verse was composed on these
doings:
"Hard were the blows which were dealt at Rifsker;
no weapons they had but steaks of the whale.
They belaboured each other with rotten blubber.
Unseemly methinks is such warfare for men."
After this they made peace, and the dispute was
laid before the All-Thing. On the side of the Kaldbak men were
Thorodd the Godi, Skeggi of Midfjord, and many others from the
South. Flosi was exiled, along with several others who had
been with him. He was put to great expense, for he insisted
upon paying all the fines himself. Thorgrim and his brothers
were unable to show that they had paid any money either for
the land or for the drift which Flosi claimed. The Lawman was
Thorkell Mani, and the question was referred to him. He
declared that by law something must have been paid, though not
necessarily the full value.
"There was a case in point," he said, "between
my grandfather Ingolf and a woman named Steinvor the Old. He
gave her the whole of Rosmhvalanes and she gave him a dirty
cloak for it; the transfer was afterwards held to be valid.
That was a much more important affair than this. My advice is
that the land be divided in equal portions between the two;
and henceforward it shall be legally established that all
drift shall be the property of the owner of the land upon
which it has been stranded."
This was agreed to. Thorgrim and his brothers
were to give up Reykjarfjord with all on that side, and were
to keep Kamb. For Ofeig a large sum of money was paid, and
Thorfinn was assessed at nothing at all; Thorgeir received
compensation for the attack made upon his life, and all the
parties were reconciled. Flosi went to Norway with Steinn the
captain and sold his lands in Vik to Geirmund Hvikatimbr, who
lived there thenceforward.
The ship which Steinn's sailors had built was
rather a tub. She was called Trekyllir - Tree-sack. Flosi went
on his journey in her, but was driven back to Oxarfjord; out
of this arose the saga of Bodmod the Champion and Grimolf.
CHAPTER XIII
THORGRIM SETTLES AT BJARG AND MARRIES. HIS SON
ASMUND VISITS NORWAY AND MARRIES TWICE
After these events Thorgrim and his brothers
divided up the property between them. Thorgrim took the
movable property and Thorgeir the lands. Then Thorgrim went
inland to Midfjord and bought some land at Bjarg with the aid
of Skeggi. He married Thordis, the daughter of Asmund from
Asmund's peak who had land in Thingeyrasveit. They had a son
named Asmund, a great man and strong, also wise, and notable
for his abundance of hair, which turned grey very early. He
was called Longhair.
Thorgrim occupied himself with the management
of his estate and kept all the men of his household hard at
work. Asmund did not want to work, so that he and his father
got on rather badly together. This continued until Asmund was
grown up, when he asked his father to give him the means to go
abroad. Thorgrim said he should have little enough, but he
gave him some ready cash. So Asmund went away and soon
increased his capital. He sailed to divers lands, became a
great trader and very wealthy. He was popular and enjoyed good
credit, and had many friends among the leading men of Norway.
One autumn Asmund was in the East on a visit to
a certain magnate named Thorsteinn. His family came from the
Upplands, and he had a sister named Rannveig who had excellent
prospects. Asmund asked this girl in marriage and obtained her
through the interest of her brother Thorsteinn; he settled
there for a time and was highly thought of. He and Rannveig
had a son named Thorsteinn, who became a handsome man, strong,
and with a powerful voice. He was very tall and rather
sluggish in his movements, wherefore he was nicknamed Dromund.
When young Thorsteinn was half grown up his mother fell ill
and died, and Asmund cared no more for Norway. Thorsteinn was
taken over by his mother's relations along with his property,
while Asmund went on voyages and became famous.
Asmund came in his ship to Hunavain, where
Thorkell Krafla was chief of the Vatnsdalers. On hearing of
Asmund's arrival Thorkell went to the ship and invited him to
stay, and Asmund went to visit him in Marsstadir in Vatnsdal
where he lived. Thorkell was a son of Thorgrim, the Godi of
Karnsa, and a man of great experience. This was soon after the
arrival of Bishop Fridrek and Thorvald the son of Kodran, who
were living at Laekjamot when these events happened, preaching
Christianity for the first time in the North of the island.
Thorkell and many of his men received the prima signatio. Many
things might be told of the dealings between the bishop's men
and the Northerners, which, however, do not belong to this
saga.
There was a girl named Asdis who was being
brought up in Thorkell's house. She was a daughter of Bard the
son of Jokull, the son of Ingimund the Old, the son of
Thorsteinn, the son of Ketil Raum. Her mother's name was
Aldis, whom we have already heard of as the daughter of Ofeig
Grettir. Asdis was not betrothed as yet, and was a most
desirable match, both on account of her connections and her
wealth. Asmund now became sick of travelling about and wanted
to settle down in Iceland. So he spoke up and asked for Asdis
as his wife. Thorkell knew all about him and knew that he was
a man of wealth, able to manage his affairs, so the marriage
was arranged. Asmund married Asdis, and became a close friend
of Thorkell. He was a great man of affairs, learned in the law
and very strenuous. Soon afterwards Thorgrim Greyhead died at
Bjarg; Asmund succeeded to his property and took up his
residence at Bjarg.
CHAPTER XIV
ASMUND'S CHILDREN. GRETTIR'S CHILDH00D
Asmund Longhair now set up a large and
sumptuous household in Bjarg, where he maintained a numerous
retinue and became very popular. His children were as follows:
The eldest was Atli, an able and accomplished man, tactful and
easy to deal with; he was much liked by all. His second son
was called Grettir. He was very hard to manage in his bringing
up. He spoke little and was rough in his manners and
quarrelsome, both in words and deeds. He got little affection
from his father Asmund, but his mother loved him dearly.
Grettir was a handsome man in appearance, with a face rather
broad and short, redhaired and somewhat freckled; not very
precocious in his youth. There was a daughter named Thordis,
who afterwards married Glum the son of Ospak, Kjallak's son
from Skridinsenni. Another daughter was named Rannveig; she
married Gamli the son of Thorhall of Vineland, and they dwelt
at Melar in Hrutafjord and had a son named Grim. Glum and
Thordis had a son named Ospak who fell into a dispute with Odd
the son of Ofeig, which is told of in the "Saga of the Banded
Men."
Grettir grew up at Bjarg until he was ten years
old, when he began to develop a little. Asmund told him that
he must do some work. Grettir said that would not suit him
very well, but asked what he was to do.
"You must mind the geese," said Asmund.
"That is wretched work, only fit for an idiot,"
Grettir answered.
"You do that properly," his father said, "and
we shall get on better together."
So Grettir went to mind the geese. There were
fifty of them, and a number of goslings. Before long he began
to find them troublesome, and the goslings would not come on
quickly enough. This put him out, for he could never control
his temper. Soon afterwards some wanderers found the goslings
lying outside dead, and the geese with their wings broken.
This was in the autumn. Asmund was very much annoyed and asked
Grettir whether he had killed the birds. Grettir grinned and
answered:
"Always when winter is coming on
I like to wring the goslings' necks.
If among them there are geese
I treat the creatures all alike."
"You shan't twist any more of their necks,"
said Asmund.
"The friend aye warns his friend of ill,"
answered Grettir.
"I will give you other work to do."
"He knoweth most who most hath tried. But what
am I to do now?" Grettir asked.
"You shall rub my back when I am sitting by the
fire, as I am in the habit of having it done."
"Warm work for the hands." he answered. "It is
only fit for an idiot."
This for a time was Grettir's occupation. As
the autumn advanced Asmund wanted more warmth, and was
constantly telling Grettir to rub his back hard. It was the
custom in those days for people to have large rooms with long
fires in them in their houses, where men sat by the fire in
the evenings on benches, sleeping afterwards at the side away
from the fries. By day the women carded their wool there.
One evening when Grettir had to scratch
Asmund's back his father said to him: "Now you will have to
put aside your laziness, you good-for-nothing you."
Grettir answered: "`Tis ill to rouse a hasty
temper."
"You are fit for nothing at all," said Asmund.
Grettir saw some wood-combs lying on one of the
benches; he took up one of them and drew it along Asmund's
back. Asmund sprang up and was going to thrash him with his
stick, but he escaped. His mother came up and asked what they
were fighting about. Grettir answered in a verse:
"Oh lady, the giver of treasure, I see,
has dire intent to burn my hands.
With nails uncut I was stroking his back.
Clearly I see the bird of wounds."
His mother was much vexed with Grettir for what
he had done and said he would not grow up very prudent. The
affair did not improve the relations between Asmund and his
son.
Soon after this Asmund spoke to Grettir and
told him to look after his horses. Grettir said that would be
better than back-fire-warming.
"You are to do what I tell you," said Asmund.
"I have a dun mare with a dark stripe down her back whom I
call Keingala. She is very knowing about the weather and about
rain coming. When she refuses to graze it never fails that a
storm will follow. You are then to keep the horses under
shelter in the stables, and when cold weather sets in keep
them to the north of the ridge. I hope you will perform this
duty better than the two which I gave you before."
Grettir said: "That is cold work, and fit for a
man to do; but it seems to me rash to trust to the mare, when
to my knowledge no one has done so before."
So Grettir took to minding the horses, and went
on until Yule- tide was past, when very cold weather set in,
with snow, so that grazing was difficult. He was very badly
provided with clothes and little hardened to the weather. He
began to feel it very cold, and Keingala always chose the
windiest places whatever the weather was. She never came to
the meadow early enough to get home before nightfall. Grettir
then thought he would play a trick upon Keingala to pay her
out for her wanderings. One morning early he came to the
stables, opened the door and found Keingala standing in front
of the manger. She had taken the whole of the fodder which had
been given to all the horses for herself. Grettir jumped upon
her back, with a sharp knife in his hand which he drew across
her shoulder and along her back on both sides. The horse was
fat and fresh; she shied back very frightened and kicked out
till her hoofs rattled against the walls. Grettir fell off,
but picked himself up and tried to mount her again. There was
a sharp struggle, which ended in his shaving all the skin on
her back down to her flank. Then he drove the horses out to
the meadow. Keingala would not take a bite except off her
back, and soon after noon she bolted off to the stables.
Grettir locked the door and went home. Asmund asked him where
the horses were; he said he had looked after them as usual.
Asmund said there must be a storm close at hand if the horses
would not stay out in such weather as there was then.
Grettir said: "Many seem wise who are lacking
in wit."
The night passed and there was no storm.
Grettir drove out the horses, but Keingala could not endure
the pasture. Asmund thought it very strange that no change
came in the weather. On the third morning he went himself to
the horses and on seeing Keingala he said: "III indeed have
the horses fared in this beautiful weather! Thy back will not
deceive me, my Bleikala."
"The likely may happen - also the unlikely,"
said Grettir.
Asmund stroked the back of the horse and all
her coat came off on his hand. He could not understand how she
had got into that state and thought Grettir must have done it.
Grettir grinned and said nothing. Asmund went home and became
very abusive. He heard his wife say: "My son's watching of the
horses must have prospered well."
Then he spoke a verse:
"He has cheated me sorely, and Keingala shorn.
'Tis the pride of a woman that urges her tongue.
Artful he holds my commands in derision.
Consider my verses, oh wife of my heart."
"I do not know," she said, "which seems to me
the more perverse, for you to make him work, or for him always
to get out of it in the same way."
"Now there shall be an end to it," said Asmund.
"He must have something worse than merely making good the
damage."
"Let neither speak of it to the other," said
Grettir, and so it remained.
Asmund had Keingala killed. Many more childish
pranks did Grettir play which are not told in the saga. He now
began to grow very big, but men did not clearly know what
strength he had because he had never been tried in wrestling.
He kept making verses and ditties which were always a little
ironical. He did not sleep in the common room and was
generally very silent.
CHAPTER XV
GAMES AT MIDFJORDVATN
There were then a good many youths growing up
in Midfjord. A certain Skaldtorfa, whose home was in
Torfustadir, had a son named Bersi, an accomplished young man
and a clever poet. Two brothers named Kormak and Thorgils
lived at Mel and had with them a youth named Odd, who was
dependent upon them, and was nicknamed Odd the Needy-Skald.
Another was named Audun; he grew up in Audunarstad in Vididal,
a pleasant good-natured youth and the strongest of his age in
the North. Kalf the son of Asgeir and his brother Thorvald
lived at Asgeirsa. Grettir's brother Atli was then growing to
a man; he was most gracious in manners and universally liked.
These youths used to play at ball together at
Midfjord Water. Those from Midfjord and from Vididal used to
meet there, and there came many from Vestrhop and Vatnsnes
with some from Hrutafjord. Those who came from afar used to
lodge there. Those who were about equal in the ballgame were
matched together, and generally they had much fun in the
autumn. Grettir went to the sports when he was fourteen years
old at the request of his brother Atli. The parties were made
up. Grettir was matched against Audun, the youth already
mentioned, who was a few years the elder. Audun struck the
ball over Grettir's head so that he could not reach it, and it
bounded far away over the ice. Grettir lost his temper,
thinking he had done it out of mischief, but he fetched the
ball, brought it back and going up to Audun drove it straight
into his forehead, so that the skin was broken. Audun then
struck at Grettir with the bat that he was holding, but
Grettir ducked and the blow missed him. Then they seized each
other with their arms and wrestled. It was evident to the
people around that Grettir was stronger than they had
supposed, for Audun was very strong indeed of body. They
struggled long together until at last Grettir was thrown.
Audun then set his knees on his stomach and dealt unmercifully
with him. Atli and Bersi and a number of the others ran up and
separated them. Gretti said they need not hold him like a mad
dog, and added: "The thrall alone takes instant vengeance, the
coward never."
The rest had no mind to let the affair create
discord among them, and the brothers Kalf and Thorvald tried
to reconcile them. Audun and Grettir were distantly related to
each other. The games went on and there was no further
disturbance.
CHAPTER XVI
GRETTIR KILLS SKEGGI AND IS OUTLAWED FOR THREE
YEARS
Thorkell Krafla now began to grow very old. He
was a great chieftain and held the Vatnsdal Godord. He was a
close friend of Asmund Longhair, as befitted the near
relations in which they stood to each other. He had,
therefore, been in the habit of riding every year in the
spring to Bjarg to visit his kinsmen there, and he did so in
the spring which followed the events just related. Asmund and
Asdis received him with both hands. He stayed there three
nights and many a matter did the kinsmen discuss together.
Thorkell asked Asmund what his heart told him about his sons,
and what professions they were likely to follow. Asmund said
that Atli would probably be a great landowner, very careful
and wealthy.
"A useful man, like yourself," said Thorkell.
"But what can you tell me of Grettir? "
"I can only say," he replied, "that he will be
a strong man; but headstrong and quarrelsome. A heavy trial
has he been to me."
"That does not look very promising, kinsman!"
said Thorkell. "But how are we to arrange our journey to the
Thing in the summer? "
"I am getting difficult to move," he said. "I
would rather stay at home."
"Would you like Atli to go for you?"
"I don't think I can spare him," Asmund said,
"because of the work and the provisioning. Grettir will not do
anything. But he has quite wit enough to carry out the duties
at the Thing on my behalf under your guidance."
"It shall be as you please," said Thorkell.
Then Thorkell made himself ready and rode home;
Asmund dismissed him with presents.
A little later Thorkell journeyed to the Thing
with sixty men. All the men of his godord went with him. They
passed through Bjarg, where Grettir joined them. They rode
South through the heath called Tvidaegra. There was very
little grazing to be had in the hills, so they rode quickly
past them into the cultivated land. When they reached
Fljotstunga they thought it was time to sleep, so they took
the bits from their horses and turned them loose with their
saddles. They lay there well on into the day, and when they
woke began to look for their horses. Every horse had gone off
in a different direction and some had been rolling. Grettir
could not find his horse at all. The custom was at that time
that men should find their own provisions at the Thing, and
most of them carried their sacks over their saddles. When
Grettir found his horse its saddle was under its belly, and
the sack of provisions gone. He searched about but could not
find it. Then he saw a man running very fast and asked him who
he was. He said his name was Skeggi and that he was a man from
Ass in Vatnsdal in the North.
"I am travelling with Thorkell," he said. "I
have been careless and lost my provisionbag."
"Alone in misfortune is worst. I also have lost
my stock of provisions; so we can look for them together. "
Skeggi was well pleased with this proposal, and
so they went about seeking for a time. Suddenly, when Grettir
least expected it, Skeggi started running with all his might
along the moor and picked up the sack. Grettir saw him bend
and asked what it was that he had picked up.
"My sack," he said.
"Who says so besides yourself?" Grettir asked.
"Let me see it! Many a thing is like another."
Skeggi said no one should take from him what
was his own. Grettir seized hold of the sack and they both
pulled at it for a time, each trying to get his own way.
"You Midfjord men have strange notions," said
Skeggi, "if you think that because a man is not so wealthy as
you are, he is not to dare to hold to his own before you."
Grettir said it had nothing to do with a man's
degree, and that each should have that which was his own.
Skeggi replied: "Audun is now too far away to
strangle you as he did at the ballplay."
"That is well," said Grettir; "but however that
may have been you shall not strangle me."
Skeggi then seized his axe and struck at
Grettir, who on seeing it seized the handle of the axe with
his left hand and pulled it forward with such force that
Skeggi at once let go. The next moment it stood in his brain
and he fell dead to the earth. Grettir took the sack, threw it
across his saddle and rode back to his companions.
Thorkell rode on, knowing nothing of what had
happened. Soon Skeggi was missed in the company, and when
Grettir came up they asked him what news he had of Skeggi. He
answered in a verse:
"Hammer-troll ogress has done him to death.
Thirsting for blood the war-fiend came.
With hard-edged blade she gaped, o'er his head,
nor spared she his teeth. I saw it myself."
Then Thorkell's men sprang up and said it was
impossible that a troll should have taken the man in full
daylight. Thorkell was silent for a moment. Then he said:
"There must be something more in it. Grettir must have killed
him. What was it that really happened, Grettir?"
Grettir then told him all about their fight.
Thorkell said: "It is a most unfortunate occurrence, because
Skeggi was entrusted to my service, and was a man of good
family. I will take the matter upon myself and pay whatever
compensation is adjudged. But a question of banishment does
not lie with me. Now, Grettir, there are two things for you to
choose between. Either you can go on to the Thing with us and
take the chance of what may happen there, or you can turn back
and go home."
Grettir decided to go on to the Thing, and to
the Thing he went. The matter was taken up by the heirs of the
man slain. Thorkell gave his hand to pay the compensation and
Grettir was to be banished for three years.
On their way back from the Thing all the chiefs
halted at Sledaass before they parted company. It was then
that Grettir lifted a stone lying in the grass, which is still
known as Grettishaf. Many went afterwards to see this stone
and were astounded that so young a man should have lifted such
a mountain.
Grettir rode home to Bjarg and told his father
about his adventures. Asmund was much put out and said he
would be a trouble to everybody.
CHAPTER XVII
GRETTIR SAILS FOR NORWAY AND IS WRECKED ON
HARAMARSEY
There dwelt at Reydarfell on the banks of the
Hvita a man named Haflidi, a mariner, owning a ship of his own
which was lying in dock in the Hvita river. He had as his mate
a man named Bard who had a young and pretty wife. Asmund sent
a man to Haflidi asking him to take Grettir and look after
him. Haflidi answered that he had heard that Grettir was very
difficult to get on with, but out of friendship for Asmund he
took him. Grettir, therefore, prepared to go to sea. His
father would not give him any outfit for his voyage beyond his
bare provisions and a little wadmal. Grettir asked him to give
him some sort of weapon. Asmund answered: "You have never been
obedient to me. Nor do I know what you would do with a weapon
that would be of any profit. I shall not give you any."
Grettir said: "Work not done needs no reward."
Father and son parted with little love between
them. Many wished him a good voyage, but few a safe return.
His mother went with him along the road. Before they parted
she said: "You have not been sent off in the way that I should
have wished, my son, or in a way befitting your birth. The
most cruel thing of all, I think, is that you have not a
weapon which you can use. My heart tells me that you will want
one."
Then she took from under her mantle a sword all
ready for use, a valuable possession. She said: "This was the
sword of jokull, my father's father and of the ancient
Vatnsdal men, in whose hands it was blessed with victory. I
give it to you; use it well."
Grettir thanked her warmly and said it would be
more precious to him than any other possession though of
greater value. Then he went on his way and Asdis wished him
all possible happiness. He rode South over the heath and did
not stop till he reached his ship. Haflidi received him well
and asked him about his outfit for the voyage. Grettir spoke a
verse:
"Oh trimmer of sails I my father is wealthy,
but poorly enough he sent me from home.
My mother it was who gave me this sword.
True is the saying: The mother is best."
Haflidi said it was evident that she had most
thought for him.
Directly they were ready and had a wind they
got under way. When they were out of shallow water they
hoisted their sail. Grettir made himself a corner under the
ship's boat, whence he refused to stir either to bale or to
trim the sails or to do any work in the ship, as it was his
duty to do equally with the other men; nor would he buy
himself off. They sailed to the South, rounded Reykjanes and
left the land behind them, when they met with stormy weather.
The ship was rather leaky and became very uneasy in the gale;
the crew were very much exhausted. Grettir only let fly
satirical verses at them, which angered them sorely. One day
when it was very stormy and very cold the men called out to
Grettir to get up and work; they said their claws were quite
frozen. He answered:
"Twere well if every finger were froze
on the hands of such a lubberly crew."
They got no work out of him and liked him even
worse than before, and said they would pay him out on his
person for his squibs and his mutinous behaviour.
"You like better," they said, "to pat the belly
of Bard the mate's wife than to bear a hand in the ship. But
we don't mean to stand it."
The weather grew steadily worse; they had to
bale night and day, and they threatened Grettir. Haflidi when
he heard them went up to Grettir and said: "I don't think your
relations with the crew are very good. You are mutinous and
make lampoons about them, and they threaten to pitch you
overboard. This is most improper."
"Why cannot they mind their own business?"
Grettir rejoined. "But I should like one or two to remain
behind with me before I go overboard."
"That is impossible," said Haflidi. "We shall
never get on upon those terms. But I will make you a proposal
about it."
"What is that?"
"The thing which annoys them is that you make
lampoons about them. Now I suggest that you make a lampoon
about me. Then, perhaps, they will become better disposed
towards you."
"About you I will never utter anything but
good," said he. "I am not going to compare you with the
sailors."
"But you might compose a verse which should at
first appear foul, but on closer view prove to be fair."
"That," he answered, "I am quite equal to."
Haflidi then went to the sailors and said: "You
have much toil; and it seems that you don't get on with
Grettir."
"His lampoons," they answered, "annoy us more
than anything else."
Then Haflidi, speaking loud, said: "It will be
the worse for him some day."
Grettir, when he heard himself being denounced,
spoke a verse:
"Other the words that Haflid spake
when he dined on curds at Reydarfell.
But now two meals a day he takes
in the steed of the bays mid foreland shores."
The sailors were very angry and said he should
not lampoon Haflidi for nothing. Haflidi said: "Grettir
certainly deserves that you should take him down a little, but
I am not going to risk my good name because of his ill-temper
and caprice. This is not the time to pay him out, when we are
all in such danger. When you get on shore you can remember it
if you like."
"Shall we not endure what you can endure?" they
said. "Why should a lampoon hurt us more than it does you? "
Haflidi said so it should be, and after that
they cared less about Grettir's lampoons.
The voyage was long and fatiguing. The ship
sprung a leak, and the men began to be worn out. The mate's
young wife was in the habit of stitching Grettir's sleeves for
him, and the men used to banter him about it. Haflidi went up
to Grettir where he was lying and said:
"Arise from thy den! deep furrows we plough!
Remember the word thou didst speak to the fair.
Thy garment she sewed; but now she commands
that thou join in the toil while the land is afar."
Grettir got up at once and said:
"I will rise, though the ship be heavily rolling.
The woman is vexed that I sleep in my den.
She will surely be wrath if here I abide
while others are toiling at work that is mine."
Then he hurried aft where they were baling and
asked what they wanted him to do. They said he would do little
good. He replied: "A man's help is something." Haflidi told
them not to refuse his help. "Maybe," he said, "he is thinking
of loosening his hands if he offers his services."
In those days in sea-going ships there were no
scuppers for baling; they only had what is called bucket or
pot-baling, a very troublesome and fatiguing process. There
were two buckets, one of which went down while the other came
up. The men told Grettir to take the buckets down, and said
they would try what he could do. He said the less tried the
better, and went below and filled his bucket. There were two
men above to empty the buckets as he handed them. Before long
they both gave in from fatigue. Then four others took their
places, but the same thing happened. Some say that before they
were done eight men were engaged in emptying the buckets for
him. At last the ship was baled dry. After this, the seamen
altered their behaviour towards Grettir, for they realised the
strength which was in him. From that time on he was ever the
forwardest to help wherever he was required.
They now held an easterly course out to sea. It
was very dark. One night when they least expected it, they
struck a rock and the lower part of the ship began to fill.
The boats were got out and the women put into them with all
the loose property. There was an island a little way off,
whither they carried as much of their property as they could
get off in the night. When the day broke, they began to ask
where they were. Some of them who had been about the country
before recognised the coast of Sunnmore in Norway. There was
an island lying a little off the mainland called Haramarsey,
with a large settlement and a farm belonging to the Landman on
it.
CHAPTER XVIII
ADVENTURE IN THE HOWE OF KAR THE OLD
The name of the Landman who lived in the island
was Thorfinn. He was a son of Kar the Old, who had lived there
for a long time. Thorfinn was a man of great influence.
When the day broke, the people on the island
saw that there were some sailors there in distress and
reported it to Thorfinn, who at once set about to launch his
large sixteen-oared boat. He put out as quickly as possible
with some thirty men to save the cargo of the trader, which
then sank and was lost, along with much property. Thorfinn
brought all the men off her to his house, where they stayed
for a week drying their goods. Then they went away to the
South, and are heard of no more in this story.
Grettir stayed behind with Thorfinn, keeping
very quiet and speaking little. Thorfinn gave him his board,
but took little notice of him. Grettir held rather aloof, and
did not accompany him when he went abroad every day. This
annoyed Thorfinn, but he did not like to refuse Grettir his
hospitality; he was a man who kept open house, enjoyed life
and liked to see other men happy. Grettir liked going about
and visiting the people in the other farms on the island.
There was a man named Audun, who dwelt at Vindheim. Grettir
went to see him daily and became very intimate with him,
sitting there all day long.
One evening very late when Grettir was
preparing to return home, he saw a great fire shoot up on the
headland below Audun's place, and asked what new thing that
might be. Audun said there was no pressing need for him to
know.
"If they saw such a thing in our country," said
Grettir, "they would say the fire came from some treasure."
"He who rules that fire," answered the man, "is
one whom it will be better not to inquire about."
"But I want to know," Grettir said.
"On that headland," said Audun, "there is a
howe, wherein lies Kar the Old, the father of Thorfinn. Once
upon a time father and son had a farm-property on the island;
but ever since Kar died his ghost has been walking and has
scared away all the other farmers, so that now the whole
island belongs to Thorfinn, and no man who is under Thorfinn's
protection suffers any injury."
"You have done right to tell me," said Grettir.
Expect me here tomorrow morning, and have tools ready for
digging."
"I won't allow you to have anything to do with
it," said Audun, "because I know that it will bring Thorfinn's
wrath down upon you."
Grettir said he would risk that.
The night passed; Grettir appeared early the
next morning, and the bondi, who had got all the tools for
digging ready, went with Grettir to the howe. Grettir broke
open the grave, and worked with all his might, never stopping
until he came to wood, by which time the day was already
spent. He tore away the woodwork; Audun implored him not to go
down, but Grettir bade him attend to the rope, saying that he
meant to find out what it was that dwelt there. Then he
descended into the howe. It was very dark and the odour was
not pleasant. He began to explore how it was arranged, and
found the bones of a horse. Then he knocked against a sort of
throne in which he was aware of a man seated. There was much
treasure of gold and silver collected together, and a casket
under his feet, full of silver. Grettir took all the treasure
and went back towards the rope, but on his way he felt himself
seized by a strong hand. He left the treasure to close with
his aggressor and the two engaged in a merciless struggle.
Everything about them was smashed. The howedweller made a
ferocious onslaught. Grettir for some time gave way, but found
that no holding back was possible. They did not spare each
other. Soon they came to the place where the horse's bones
were lying, and here they struggled for long, each in turn
being brought to his knees. At last it ended in the
howedweller falling backwards with a horrible crash, whereupon
Audun above bolted from the rope, thinking that Grettir was
killed. Grettir then drew his sword Jokulsnaut, cut off the
head of the howedweller and laid it between his thighs. Then
he went with the treasure to the rope, but finding Audun gone
he had to swarm up the rope with his hands. First he tied the
treasure to the lower end of the rope, so that he could haul
it up after him. He was very stiff from his struggle with Kar,
but he turned his steps towards Thorfinn's house, carrying the
treasure along with him. He found them all at supper. Thorfinn
cast a severe glance at him and asked what he had found so
pressing to do that he could not keep proper hours like other
men.
"Many a trifle happens at eve," he replied.
Then he brought out all the treasure which he
had taken from the howe and laid it on the table. One thing
there was upon which more than anything else Grettir cast his
eyes, a short sword, which he declared to be finer than any
weapon which he had ever seen. It was the last thing that he
showed. Thorfinn opened his eyes when he saw the sword, for it
was an heirloom of his family and had never been out of it.
"Whence came this treasure?" he asked.
Grettir then spake a verse:
"Scatterer of gold! 'twas the lust of wealth
that urged my hand to ravish the grave.
This know; but none hereafter, I ween,
will be fain to ransack Fafnir's lair."
Thorfinn said: "You don't seem to take it very
seriously; no one ever before had any wish to break open the
howe. But since I know that all treasure which is hidden in
the earth or buried in a howe is in a wrong place I hold you
guilty of no misdeed, especially since you have brought it to
me."
Grettir answered:
"The monster is slain! in the dismal tomb
I have captured a sword, dire wounder of men.
Would it were mine I a treasure so rare
I never would suffer my hand to resign."
"You have spoken well," Thorfinn answered. "But
before I can give you the sword you must display your prowess
in some way. I never got it from my father whilst he lived."
Grettir said: "No one knows to whom the
greatest profit will fall ere all is done."
Thorfinn took the treasure and kept the sword
in his own custody near his bed. The winter came on bringing
Yule-tide, and nothing more happened that need be told of.
CHAPTER XIX
BERSERKS AT HARAMARSEY
The following summer jarl Eirik the son of
Hakon was preparing to leave his country and sail to the West
to join his brother-in-law King Knut the Great in England,
leaving the government of Norway in the hands of Hakon his
son, who, being an infant, was placed under the government and
regency of Eirik's brother, jarl Sveinn. Before leaving Eirik
summoned all his Landmen and the larger bondis to meet him.
Eirik the jarl was an able ruler, and they had much discussion
regarding the laws and their administration. It was considered
a scandal in the land that pirates and berserks should be able
to come into the country and challenge respectable people to
the holmgang for their money or their women, no weregild being
paid whichever fell. Many had lost their money and been put to
shame in this way; some indeed had lost their lives. For this
reason jarl Eirik abolished all holmgang in Norway and
declared all robbers and berserks who disturbed the peace
outlaws. Thorfinn the son of Kar of Haramarsey, being a man of
wise counsel and a close friend of the jarl, was present at
the meeting.
The worst of these ruffians were two brothers
named Thorir Paunch and Ogmund the Bad. They came from
Halogaland and were bigger and stronger than other men. When
angry they used to fall into the berserk's fury, and nothing
escaped that was before them. They used to carry off men's
wives, keep them for a week or two and then send them back.
Wherever they came they committed robberies and other acts of
violence. Jarl Eirik had declared them outlaws throughout
Norway. The man who had been most active in getting them
outlawed was Thorfinn, and they were determined to pay him out
in full for his hostility.
The jarl's expedition is told of in his saga,
and the government of Norway was left in the hands of jarl
Sveinn, with the regency. Thorfinn returned home and remained
there until about Yule-tide, as has already been told. Towards
Yule-tide he made ready to go on a journey to his farm called
Slysfjord on the mainland, whither he had invited a number of
his friends. He could not take his wife with him, because
their grownup daughter was lying sick, so they both had to
stay at home. Grettir and eight of the serving men remained
with them. Thorfinn went with thirty freemen to the Yule
festival, at which there was much gladness and merriment.
Yule-eve set in with bright and clear weather.
Grettir, who was generally abroad in the daytime, was watching
the vessels which came along the coast, some from the North,
some from the South, meeting at the places agreed upon for
their drinkingbouts. The bondi's daughter was then better and
could go out with her mother. So the day passed. At last
Grettir noticed a ship rowing up to the island, not large,
covered with shields amidships and painted above the
water-line. They were rowing briskly and making for Thorfinn's
boathouses. They ran the boat on to the beach and all sprang
ashore. Grettir counted the men; there were twelve in all, and
their aspect did not look peaceful. After hauling up their
boat out of the water they all made for the boat-house where
Thorfinn's great boat, mentioned already, was stowed. She
always required thirty men to put her to sea, but the twelve
shoved her along the beach at once. Then they brought their
own boat into the boat-house. It was very evident to Grettir
that they did not mean to wait for an invitation, so he went
up to them, and greeting them in a friendly way asked who they
were and who was their captain. The man whom he addressed
answered him at once, saying his name was Thorir, called
Paunch; the others were his brother Ogmund with their
companions. "I think," he added, "that your master Thorfinn
has heard our names mentioned. But is he at home? "
"You must be men who have luck," said Grettir,
"you have come most opportunely, if you are the people I take
you for. The bondi has gone from home with all his freedmen
and will not be back until after Yule. The goodwife is at home
with her daughter, and if I had any grudge to repay, I would
come just as you do, for there is everything here which you
want, ale to drink and other delights."
Thorir was silent while Grettir went on
talking. Then he turned to Ogmund and said: "Has anything not
happened as I said it would? I should not be sorry to punish
Thorfinn for having got us outlawed. This man seems ready to
tell us everything; we don't have to drag the words out of his
mouth."
"Every one is master of his own words," said
Grettir. "If you will come home with me I will give you what
entertainment I can."
They thanked him and said they would accept his
invitation. When they reached the house Grettir took Thorir by
the hand and led him into the hall. He was very talkative. The
mistress was in the hall decorating it and putting all in
order. On hearing what Grettir said, she came to the door and
asked who it was that Grettir was welcoming so warmly.
Grettir answered: "It will be advisable,
mistress, to be civil to these men who have come. They are the
bondi Thorir Paunch and his followers, and have come, all
twelve of them, to spend Yule-tide here. It is fortunate for
us, for we have had little company till now."
She said: "I don't call them bondis, nor are
they decent men, but arrant robbers and malefactors. I would
gladly pay a large portion of my property for them not to have
come just at this time. It is an ill return that you make to
Thorfinn for having saved you from shipwreck and kept you this
winter like a free man, destitute as you were."
"You would do better," said Grettir, "if you
first took off the wet clothes from your guests instead of
casting reproaches upon me. You will have plenty of time for
that."
Then Thorir said: "Don't be angry, mistress!
You shall lose nothing by your husband being away, for you
shall have a man in his place and so shall your daughter and
all the other women."
"That is spoken like a man," said Grettir. "The
women shall be quite contented with what they get.
Then all the women fled and began to weep,
being overcome by terror. Grettir said to the berserks: "Give
me all the things which you want to lay aside, your weapons
and your wet clothes, for the men will not obey us while they
are frightened."
Thorir said he cared little for the women's
whining. "But," he said, "we mean to treat you in a different
way from the other men of the house. It seems to me that we
may make a comrade of you."
"See to that yourselves," said Grettir. "But I
do not look upon all men alike."
Then they laid aside most of their weapons.
Grettir said: "I think now you had better sit down at the
table and have some drink. You must be thirsty after your
rowing."
They said they were quite ready for a drink,
but did not know where the cellar was. Grettir asked whether
they would let him arrange for their entertainment, which they
willingly agreed to. So Grettir went and fetched some ale
which he gave them to drink. They were very tired and drank
enormously. He kept them well plied with the strongest ale
there was, and they sat there for a long time whilst he told
them funny stories. There was a tremendous din amongst them
all, and the servants had no wish to approach them.
Thorir said: "I never yet met with a stranger
who treated me like this man. What reward shall we give you
for all that you have done, Grettir?"
Grettir replied: "I don't expect any reward for
my services at present. But if when you depart we are still as
good friends as we seem to be now, I should very much like to
join your company, and though I may not be able to do as much
work as any of you, I will not be a hindrance in any doughty
undertaking."
They were delighted, and wanted to swear
fellowship with him at once. Grettir said that could not be,
"for," he added, "there is truth in the saying that Ale is
another man, and such a thing should not be done hastily, so
let it remain at what I said; we are both little in the habit
of restraining ourselves."
They declared that they did not mean to go
back. The night was now coming on and it was getting very
dark. Grettir noticed that they were rather fuddled, and asked
whether they did not think it was time to go to bed. Thorir
said: "So it is; but I have to fulfil my promise to the
mistress." Grettir then went out and called out loud: "Go to
bed, women! Such is the will of Thorir the bondi."
The women execrated him and could be heard
howling like wolves. The berserks then left the room. Grettir
said: "Let us go outside; I will show you the room in which
Thorfinn keeps his clothes."
They were agreeable and all went out to an
enormous outhouse, which was very strongly built, and had a
strong lock on the outer door. Adjoining it was a large and
well-built privy, with only a wooden partition between it and
the room of the outhouse, which was raised above the ground
and had to be reached by steps. The berserks then began
skylarking and pushing Grettir about. He fell down the in
steps, as if in sport, and in a moment was out of the house,
had pulled the bolt, slammed the door to, and locked it.
Thorir and his mates thought at first that the door had swung
to of itself, and paid little attention; they had a light with
them by which Grettir had been showing them all Thorfinn's
treasures, and they continued looking at them for some time.
Grettir went off to the homestead, and on
reaching the door cried out very loud, asking where the
mistress was. She was silent, being afraid to answer. He said:
"Here is rather good sport to be had. Are there any arms which
are good for anything?"
"There are arms," she said; "but I don't know
for what purpose you want them."
"We will talk about that afterwards; but now
let each do what he can; it is the last chance."
"Now indeed were God in the dwelling," she
said, "if anything should happen to save us. Over Thorfinn's
bed there hangs the great halberd which belonged to Kar the
Old; there, too, is a helmet and a corselet and a good short
sword. The weapons will not fail if your heart holds firm."
Grettir took the helmet and spear, girt the
sword about him and went quickly out. The mistress called to
her men and bade them follow their brave champion. Four of
them rushed to their arms, but the other four durst not go
near them.
Meantime the berserks thought that Grettir was
a long time away and began to suspect some treachery. They
rushed to the door and found it locked. They strained at the
woodwork till every timber groaned. At last they tore down the
wooden partition and so gained the passage where the privy
was, and thence the steps. Then the berserks' fury fell upon
them and they howled like dogs. At that moment Grettir
returned, and taking his halberd in both hands he thrust it
right through Thorir's body just as he was about to descend
the steps. The blade was very long and broad. Ogmund the Bad
was just behind pushing him on, so that the spear passed right
up to the hook, came out at his back between the
shoulderblades and entered the breast of Ogmund. They both
fell dead, pierced by the spear. Then all the others dashed
down as they reached the steps. Grettir tackled them each in
turn, now thrusting with the spear, now hewing with the sword,
while they defended themselves with logs lying on the ground
or with anything else which they could get. It was a terrible
trial of a man's prowess to deal with men of their strength,
even unarmed.
Grettir slew two of the Halogaland men there in
the enclosure. Four of the serving-men then came up. They had
not been able to agree upon which arms each should take, but
they came out to the attack directly the berserks were running
away; when these turned against them they fell back on the
house. Six of the ruffians fell, all slain by Grettir's own
hand; the other six then fled towards the landing place and
took refuge in the boat-house, where they defended themselves
with oars. Grettir received a severe blow from one of them and
narrowly escaped a serious hurt.
The serving-men all went home and told great
stories of their own exploits. The lady wanted to know what
had become of Grettir, but they could not tell her. Grettir
slew two men in the boat- house, but the other four got away,
two in one direction, two in another. He pursued those who
were nearest to him. The night was very dark. They ran to
Vindheim, the place spoken of before, and took refuge in a
barn, where they fought for a long time until at last Grettir
killed them. By this time he was terribly stiff and exhausted.
The night was far spent; it was very cold and there were
driving snow-storms. He felt little inclination to go after
the two who yet remained, so he went back home. The goodwife
kindled a light and put it in a window in the loft at the top
of the house, where it served him as a guide, and he was able
to find his way home by the light. When he came to the door
the mistress came to meet him and bade him welcome.
"You have earned great glory," she said, "and
have saved me and my household from a disgrace never to be
redeemed if you had not delivered us."
"I think I am much the same person as I was
last evening when you spoke so roughly to me," said Grettir.
"We knew not then the might that was in you,"
she said, "as we know it now. Everything in the house shall be
yours, so far as it is fitting for me to bestow and right for
you to receive. I doubt not that Thorfinn will reward you in a
better way when he comes home."
"There is little that I want as a reward at
present," said Grettir. "But I accept your offer until your
husband returns. I think now that you will be able to sleep in
peace undisturbed by the berserks."
Grettir drank little before he retired and lay
all night in his armour. In the morning, directly the day
broke, all the men of the island were called together to go
forth and search for the two berserks who had escaped. They
were found at the end of the day lying under a rock, both dead
from cold and from their wounds; they were carried away and
buried in a place on the shore beneath the tide, with some
loose stones over them, after which the islanders returned
home, feeling that they could live in peace. When Grettir came
back to the house and met the mistress he spoke a verse:
"Near the surging sea the twelve lie buried.
I stayed not my hand but slew them alone.
Great lady! what deed that is wrought by a man
shall be sung of as worthy if this be deemed small."
She answered: "Certainly you are very unlike
any other man now living." She set him in the high seat and
gave him the best of everything. So it remained until Thorfinn
returned.
CHAPTER XX
THORFINN'S RETURN. GRETTIR VISITS THE NORTH
When Yule-tide was past, Thorfinn made ready
for his homeward journey and dismissed his many guests with
gifts. He sailed with all his men and landed near the place
where the boat-houses were. They saw a ship lying on the sand
which they at once recognised as his great boat. Thorfinn had
heard nothing of the vikings and told his men to put him on
shore, "for I suspect," he said, "that they are not friends
who have been at work here."
Thorfinn was the first to land, and went
straight to the boat- house, where he saw a craft which he
knew at once to be that of the berserks. He said to his men:
"I suspect that things have taken place here such that I would
give the whole island and everything that is in it for them
not to have happened."
They asked how that was.
"Vikings have been here, men whom I know as the
worst in all Norway, namely Thorir Paunch and Ogmund the Bad.
They will not have dealt gently with us. I mistrust that
Icelander."
Then he spoke many things to his men. Grettir
was at home and detained the men from going down to the shore.
He said he did not care if the bondi got a little fright from
what he saw. The goodwife asked his leave to go down, and he
said she was mistress of her own ways, but that he was not
going. So she hurried away to greet Thorfinn and embraced him
joyfully. He was rejoiced to see her and said: "God be praised
that I see you well and my daughter too. But what has happened
to you since I left?"
"It has ended well," she said. "But we were
nigh to suffering a disgrace which could never have been wiped
out, had not your winter-guest aided us."
Thorfinn said: "Let us sit down and you shall
tell me everything."
Then she told him fully all that had happened,
praising highly Grettir's courage and resourcefulness.
Thorfinn was silent while she was speaking, and when she had
finished he said: "True indeed is the word, `Long shall a man
be tried'. But where is Grettir?"
"He is at home in the hall," she answered.
Then they went up to the house. Thorfinn went
to Grettir and turned towards him and thanked him with the
fairest words for his courageous conduct.
"I will say a word to you," he said, "which few
would say to their friend. I would it might happen that you
should need the help of a man, for you to know whether I count
for anything or not; I cannot repay what you have done for me
as long as you are not in straits. You shall have in my house
whatever you desire, and shall be in the highest honour in my
household."
Grettir thanked him and said he would have
accepted his offer even if he had made it earlier.
Grettir stayed there the rest of the winter in
high favour with Thorfinn. The fame of his deed spread through
all Norway, especially in those parts where the berserks had
ravaged most mercilessly. In the spring Thorfinn asked him
what he would like to do. He said he would go North to Vagar
while the fair was on there. Thorfinn said that any money
which he required should be at his service; Grettir said he
did not want more just then than enough to pay for his living.
Thorfinn said that was his due, and brought him to a ship,
where he gave him the excellent short sword. Grettir kept it
as long as he lived; it was a most precious possession.
Thorfinn bade him come to him if ever he wanted any help.
Grettir then travelled to Vagar, which was
crowded with people. Many whom he had never set eyes on before
greeted him warmly because of his exploit in killing the
vikings, and several of the leading men invited him to stay
with them, but he preferred to return to his friend Thorfinn.
So he took his passage in a trading ship belonging to one
Thorkell, a man of some consideration in Salfti in Halogaland.
Grettir went to visit Thorkell in his home, where he received
a hearty welcome and a very pressing invitation to stay there
for the winter. Grettir accepted the invitation and stayed the
winter with Thorkell, who treated him with great honour.
CHAPTER XXI
ADVENTURE WITH A BEAR
There was a man named Bjorn who was then on a
visit to Thorkell. He was of a somewhat violent character of
good family and related in some way to Thorkell. He was not
generally liked, because he was too much given to talking
against the men who were about Thorkell and drove many away
from him. He and Grettir did not get on at all. Bjorn thought
him of small account compared to himself; Grettir paid him
little deference, and it became an open feud. Bjorn was a
boisterous swaggering man, and many of the younger men
imitated him, loitering about outside in the evenings.
It happened at the beginning of the winter that
a savage brown bear broke out of its den and raged about
destroying men and cattle. Every one declared that it had been
provoked by the noise which Bjorn and his company made. The
beast became most mischievous, attacking the flocks in the
very face of the men themselves. Thorkell, being the
wealthiest man of that part, suffered most. One day he called
up his men to come with him and search out the bear's den.
They found it in a cliff by the sea where there was a cave
under an overhanging rock, with a narrow path leading to the
entrance. Below was a sheer precipice down to the beach,
threatening certain death to any one who stumbled. In this den
the bear lay in the daytime, going abroad at night. Fences
were of no avail against him, nor could the dogs do anything,
so that all were in the utmost distress. Thorkell's kinsman
Bjorn declared that the main thing was gained now that they
had found the den. "Now we shall see," he said, "how the game
will go with me and my namesake." Grettir pretended not to
hear what he said.
In the evenings when the others retired to bed,
Bjorn used generally to go out. One night he went to the
bear's den and found the creature inside, growling horribly.
He lay down in the path, placing his shield over him,
intending to wait until the beast came out as usual. Bruin,
however, got wind of him and was rather slow in coming out.
Bjorn got very sleepy where he was lying and could not keep
awake; in the meantime out came the bear from his den and saw
a man lying there. He clawed at him, dragged off his shield
and threw it down the cliff. Bjorn woke up, not a little
startled, took to his heels and ran off home, narrowly
escaping the bear's clutches. His friends knew all about it,
having watched his movements; on the next morning they found
the shield and made great game of his adventure.
At Yule-time Thorkell himself went out to the
den with Bjorn, Grettir and others of his men, a party of
eight in all. Grettir had on a fur cape which he put off when
they were attacking the bear. It was rather difficult to get
at him, since they could only reach him with spear-thrusts,
which he parried with his teeth. Bjorn kept urging them on to
tackle him, but himself did not go near enough to be in any
danger. At last, when no one was looking out, he took
Grettir's fur cloak and threw it in to the bear. They did not
succeed in getting the bear out, and when night came on turned
to go home. Grettir then missed his cloak and saw that the
bear had got it into his grip.
"Who has been playing tricks on me?" he cried.
"Who threw my cloak into the cave?"
Bjorn answered: "He who did it will not be
afraid to say so."
"Things of that sort do not trouble me much,"
said Grettir.
Then they started on their way home. After they
had gone a little way Grettir's garter broke. Thorkell told
them to wait for him, but Grettir said it was not necessary.
Then Bjorn said: "There is no need to suppose that Grettir
will run away from his cloak. He wants to have the honour of
killing the beast all alone, and he will say that we eight men
went away. Then he would appear to be what he is said to be.
He has been backward enough all day."
"I don't know how you stand in that matter,"
said Thorkell. "You and he are not equal in valour; do not
make any to-do about him."
Bjorn said that neither he nor Grettir should
choose the words out of his mouth.
There was a hill between them and Grettir, who
had turned back along the footpath. Now he had no others to
reckon with in making the attack. He drew his sword Jokulsnaut
and tied a loop round the handle which he passed over his
wrist, because he thought that he could carry out his plans
better if his hand were free. He went along the path. When the
bear saw a man coming, he charged savagely, and struck at him
with the paw that was on the side away from the precipice.
Grettir aimed a blow at him with his sword and cut off his paw
just above the claws. Then the creature tried to strike him
with his sound paw, but to do so he had to drop on the stump,
which was shorter than he expected, and over he fell into
Grettir's embraces. Grettir seized the beast by the ears and
held him off so that he could not bite. He always said that he
considered this holding back the bear the greatest feat of
strength that he ever performed. The beast struggled
violently; the space was very narrow, and they both fell over
the precipice. The bear being the heavier came down first on
the beach; Grettir fell on the top of him, and the bear was
badly mauled on the side that was down. Grettir got his sword,
ran it into the heart of the bear and killed him. Then he went
home, after fetching his cloak which was torn to pieces. He
also took with him the bit of the paw which he had cut off.
Thorkell was sitting and drinking when Grettir
entered. They all laughed at the ragged cloak which he was
wearing. Then he laid the piece of the paw upon the table.
Thorkell said: "Where is my kinsman Bjorn? I never saw iron
bite like that in your hands. Now I would like you to show
Grettir some honour to make up for the shame which you cast
upon him."
Bjorn said that could wait, and that it
mattered little to him whether Grettir was pleased or not.
Grettir then spoke a verse:
"Oft returned the watcher at night
trembling home, but sound in limb.
None ever saw me sit in the dusk
at the cave; yet now I am home returned."
"It is true," said Bjorn, "that you have fought
well; and also true that our opinions differ. I suppose you
think that your taunts hurt me."
Thorkell said: "I should be glad, Grettir, if
you would not revenge yourself upon Bjorn. I will pay the full
weregild of a man for you to be reconciled."
Bjorn said he might invest his money better
than in paying for that; and that it would be better for him
and Grettir to go on bickering since "each oak has that which
it scrapes from the other." Thorkell said: "But I ask you,
Grettir, to do so much for my sake as not to attack Bjorn
while you are both with me."
"That I promise," said Grettir.
Bjorn said that he would walk without fear of
Grettir wherever they met. Grettir grinned, and would accept
no money on account of Bjorn. They stayed there the winter.
CHAPTER XXII
GRETTIR KILLS BJORN AND IS SUMMONED BEFORE JARL
SVEINN
In the spring Grettir went North to Vagar with
Thorkell's men. They parted with friendship. Bjorn went West
to England in Thorkell's ship, of which he was master, staying
there for the summer and transacting the business which
Thorkell had entrusted to him. In the end of the autumn he
returned from the western parts. Grettir stayed in Vagar till
the trading ships left, and then sailed South with some of the
traders, as far as the port of Gartar at the mouth of the
Thrandheim's Fjord, where he set up the awnings to make a
stay. When they were settled down a ship came up along the
coast from the South, which they at once recognised as one of
the ships from England. She made fast further out off the
coast and her crew landed. Grettir went out with his
companions to visit them. On their meeting Grettir found Bjorn
amongst the company and said: "It is well that we meet here,
for now we can continue our former quarrel. I should like to
try which of us is the better man."
Bjorn said that was all past now, as far as he
was concerned. "But," he said, "if there has been anything
between us I will pay you such compensation that you shall be
satisfied." Grettir spoke a verse:
"Time was when the bear was slain by my hand;
my cloak in tatters was torn.
A rascally knave was the cause of it all
but now he shall make me amends."
Bjorn said that weightier matters than this had
been settled by payment. Grettir said that few men had any
reason to act maliciously towards him; he had accepted no
money-atonement, nor would he do so now; that if he had his
way they should not both go away unhurt, and that if Bjorn
refused to fight he would brand him as a coward. Bjorn saw
that excuses would not avail him, so he took his arms and went
out. They rushed at each other and fought; soon Bjorn was
wounded and then he fell dead to the ground. On seeing that,
his men went on board their ship, sailed away to the North
along the coast to Thorkell's place and told him what had
happened. He said it had not come sooner than he expected.
Directly afterwards he sailed to the South to Thrandheim where
he found jarl Sveinn.
Grettir, after slaying Bjorn, went to More to
his friend Thorfinn and told him exactly what had happened.
Thorfinn received him in a most friendly way. "I am glad," he
said, "that you will now have need of a friend. You must stay
with me until this affair is finished."
Grettir thanked him for his invitation and said
be would accept it.
Jarl Sveinn was staying at Steinker in
Thrandheim when he heard of the Slaying of Bjorn. With him was
a brother of Bjorn named Hjarrandi, as one of his bodyguard.
On hearing of Bjorn's death he became very angry and begged
the jarl for his support in the matter, which the jarl
promised that he should have. He sent messengers to Thorfinn
to summon both him and Grettir to appear before him.
Immediately on receiving the jarl's commands they both made
ready and came to Thrandheim. The jarl held a council on the
matter and ordered Hjarrandi to be present. Hjarrandi said he
was not going to weigh his brother against his purse, and that
he must either follow him or avenge him.
When the case was looked into, it became
evident that Bjorn had given Grettir many provocations.
Thorfinn offered to pay a fine such as the jar] thought
suitable to the position of his kinsman, and dwelt at length
upon Grettir's achievement in killing the berserks, and how he
had delivered the men in the North from them.
The jarl answered: "Truth do you speak,
Thorfinn! that was indeed a cleansing! It would befit us well
to accept the compensation for your sake. Grettir, too, is a
fine fellow, and noted for his strength and valour."
Hjarrandi, however, would accept no
compensation, and the meeting came to an end. Thorfinn
appointed one of his kinsmen, Arnbjorn, to accompany Grettir
every day, for he knew that Hjarrandi was plotting against his
life.
CHAPTER XXIII
GRETTIR KILLS HJARRANDI
One day Grettir and Arnbjorn were walking along
the road for their diversion when they passed a gate, whence a
man rushed out holding an axe aloft with both hands and struck
at Grettir, who was not on his guard and was moving slowly.
Arnbjorn, however, saw the man coming, seized Grettir and
pushed him aside with such force that he fell on his knee. The
axe struck him in the shoulder-blade and cut down to below the
arm, inflicting a severe wound. Grettir turned quickly and
drew his sword; he saw that it was Hjarrandi who had attacked
him. The axe had stuck fast in the road, and Hjarrandi was
slow in recovering it. Grettir struck at him and cut off his
arm at the shoulder. Then there came running up five of
Hjarrandi's followers and a battle began with them. They were
soon routed; Grettir and Arnbjorn killed the five who were
with Hjarrandi; one man escaped and bore the tale to the jarl
forthwith. The jarl was very angry indeed, and summoned the
assembly for the next day. Thorfinn and his party appeared
thereat. The jarl brought a charge of manslaughter against
Grettir, who admitted it and said that he had been obliged to
defend himself. "I bear the marks of it," he said. "I should
have been killed if Arnbjorn had not defended me."
The jarl said it was a pity he had not been
killed, for this affair would lead to many a man being slain
if he lived.
There had come to the jarl's court Bersi the
son of Skaldtorfa, Grettir's comrade and friend. He and
Thorfinn stepped before the jarl and begged for pardon for
Grettir. They asked that the jarl should decide the matter
himself as he thought best, only that Grettir should have his
life and the freedom of the country. The jarl was averse to
any terms being granted to him, but gave way to their
entreaties. He granted immunity to Grettir until the spring,
but not absolutely until Gunnar the brother of Bjorn and
Hjarrandi should be present. Gunnar was a landed proprietor in
Tunsberg.
In the spring the jarl ordered Grettir and
Thorfinn to appear at Tunsberg, where he himself intended to
be while the shipping was assembled. So thither they went, and
found the jarl was already in the town. There Grettir met his
brother Thorsteinn Dromund, who greeted him joyfully and
invited him to be his guest. He was a landowner in the town.
Grettir told him all about his case, and Thorsteinn took his
view of it, but told him to beware of Gunnar. So the spring
passed.
CHAPTER XXIV
GRETTIR KILLS GUNNAR. HIS FRIENDS RALLY ROUND
HIM AND SAVE HIM FROM THE VENGEANCE OF THE JARL
Gunnar was in the town and was plotting against
Grettir's life. Wherever he went Gunnar dogged his steps
wherever he found a chance of getting near him. One day
Grettir was sitting in a booth and drinking, because he wanted
to keep out of Gunnar's way. Suddenly there was a bang at the
door, so hard that it broke in pieces, and in rushed four men
armed and attacked Grettir. They were Gunnar with his
followers. Grettir seized his arms which were hanging above
his head and ran into a corner, where he defended himself,
holding his shield before him, and hewing with his sword. They
made little way against him. One blow he succeeded in
delivering upon one of Gunnar's followers, who needed nothing
more. Then Grettir advanced, driving them before him out of
the booth, and killing another of them. Gunnar would fain have
got away with his men, but on reaching the door he caught his
foot on the doorstep, fell over and was not able to recover
himself at once. He held his shield before him and retreated
as Grettir pressed him hard. Then Grettir sprang on to the
crossbenches near the door. Gunnar's hands and the shield were
still inside the door, and Grettir struck down between him and
the shield, cutting off both his hands at the wrist. He fell
backwards out of the door, and Grettir gave him his
death-blow. Then the man who was behind him got on his feet
and ran off at once to tell the jarl what had happened. Sveinn
was furious, and called the assembly to meet there and then in
the town. When Thorfinn and Thorsteinn Dromund heard the news,
they called all their followers and friends together and went
to the meeting in force. The jarl was very wroth, and it was
no easy matter to get speech with him. Thorfinn was the first
to come before the jarl, and he said: "I have come to offer an
honourable atonement for the man who has been slain by
Grettir. The judgment shall remain with you alone if you but
spare his life."
The jarl replied in great wrath: "It is too
late to beg for Grettir's life, and you have no case that I
can see. He has killed three brothers, one at the feet of the
other; men of noble minds who would not weigh each other
against their purses. Now, Thorfinn, it will not avail you to
beg for Grettir; I will not do such a wrong in the land as to
accept atonement for such a crime as this."
Then Bersi the son of Skaldtorfa came up and
begged the jarl to accept blood-money. "Grettir," he said, "is
a man of high birth and is my good friend. I offer you what I
possess. May you see, my lord, that it is better by sparing
one man to earn the goodwill of many and to fix the penalty
yourself than to refuse honourable terms and risk whether you
can arrest the man or not."
The jarl replied: "You do right, Bersi; and
herein as ever you show your worth. But I do not mean to break
the laws of the land by granting life to a man who has
forfeited it."
Then Thorsteinn Dromund came forward, and he,
too, offered blood-money on behalf of Grettir, adding many
fair words thereto. The jarl asked what moved him to offer
blood-money for the man. Thorsteinn said Grettir was his
brother. The jarl said he had not known that.
"It shows a manly spirit in you," he said,
"that you want to help him. But as I am determined not to
accept blood-money in this case, I must treat the requests of
all of you alike. I must have Grettir's life whatever it cost,
directly I can get him."
Then the jarl rose quickly up and refused to
hear any more about atonement. They all went home with
Thorsteinn and made their preparations, whereupon the jarl
ordered all the men of his guard under arms and went forth
with a large force. Before they came up, Grettir's friends had
made ready to defend the house. Thorfinn, Thorsteinn, Grettir
himself, and Bersi were in the forefront, each with a large
force of followers behind him. The jarl summoned them to give
up Grettir, and not to bring trouble on themselves. They
repeated their former offers, but the jarl would not listen to
them. Thorfinn and Thorsteinn said that more was at stake for
the jarl than the taking of Grettir's life. "One fate shall
fall upon us all," they cried, "and men shall say that you
have given much for the life of one man when we are all laid
low with the ground."
The jarl said he would spare none of them, and
they were on the very verge of a battle when many of the
well-disposed men came up to him and begged him not to land
himself in such a difficulty. He should bear in mind that
these men would work great havoc among his own followers
before they fell. The jarl thought this counsel was wise and
let himself be somewhat appeased. Then the terms of atonement
were settled. Thorfinn and Thorsteinn were ready to pay so
long as Grettir's life was spared. The jarl said: "You must
know that although I agree to this compromise, I do not
consider it a full amnesty. Only I have no mind to fight
against my own men, although they appear to hold me of little
account in the matter."
Thorfinn said: "Yours is all the greater
honour, my lord, that you will have the fixing of the penalty
yourself."
The jarl said that Grettir should have leave
from him to depart from the country in peace for Iceland,
directly there was a ship leaving, if so it seemed good to
them. They agreed and paid the money to the jarl to his
satisfaction. They parted with little friendship. Grettir went
with Thorfinn after bidding an affectionate farewell to his
brother Thorsteinn.
Thorfinn earned great honour for the support
which he had given Grettir against such odds as he had to deal
with. Not one of the men who had helped Grettir was ever
received into favour again with the jarl, excepting Bersi.
Grettir then spoke:
"Comrade of Odin, Thorfinn was born
to rescue my life from the fangs of Hel.
No less was Thorsteinn Dromund's aid
when I was doomed to the realm of the dead."
And again:
"The prince's retainers withdrew in fear
when Bersi threatened their hearts to pierce."
Grettir returned with Thorfinn to the North and
stayed with him until he found a ship with some traders who
were bound for Iceland. Thorfinn gave him many valuable
garments and a coloured saddle with a bridle. They parted with
friendship, and Thorfinn invited him to come and see him if
ever he returned to Norway.
CHAPTER XXV
EVENTS IN ICELAND. THORGILS MAKSSON ATTACKED BY
THE FOSTER- BROTHERS AND SLAIN
Asmund Longhair was in Bjarg whilst Grettir was
away, and was much respected as a bondi in Midfjord. Thorkell
Krafla had died during Grettir's absence. Thorvald Asgeirsson
dwelt in Ass in Vatnsdal and was a great chief. He was the
father of Dalla who married Isleif, afterwards bishop in
Skalaholt. Asmund had great support from Thorvald in legal
suits and in other matters.
There grew up in Asmund's household a youth
named Thorgils Maksson, a near kinsman of his. Thorgils was a
strong man of his body and made much money under Asmund's
guidance; he dwelt at Laekjamot, on a property which Asmund
had bought for him. Thorgils was a good manager and went to
Strandir every year, where he obtained whales and other
things. He was a man of great courage, and went as far as the
eastern Almenningar. At that time the two foster-brothers
Thorgeir Havarsson and Thormod Coalbrow-Skald were very much
to the front; they kept a boat, gathering what they wanted
from the country around, and had not the reputation of dealing
fairly.
One summer Thorgils Maksson found a whale at
the Almenningar and went out at once with his men to cut it
up. When the two foster-brothers heard of it they went there
too, and at first it seemed as if matters would be settled
peaceably. Thorgils proposed that they should share equally
that part of the whale which was yet uncut, but they wanted to
have all the uncut part or else to share the entire whale.
Thorgils positively refused to give up any portion of what had
already been cut. They began to use threats and at last took
to their arms and fought. Thorgeir and Thorgils fought each of
them desperately together without either prevailing. After a
long and furious battle Thorgils fell slain by Thorgeir. In
another place Thormod was fighting with the followers of
Thorgils, and he overcame them, killing three. Those who
remained of Thorgils' party went off after he fell to
Midfjord, taking his body with them and feeling that they had
suffered a great loss. The foster-brothers took possession of
the whole whale. The affair is referred to in the memorial
poem which Thormod composed upon Thorgeir.
News of the death of his kinsman was brought to
Asmund Longhair, on whom as nearest of kin the blood-feud
devolved. He went to the spot, called witnesses to testify to
the wounds and brought the case before the All-Thing, which
appeared to be the proper course in this case where the act
had been committed in another quarter. Some time was passed
over this.
CHAPTER XXVI
THE FEUD WITH THE FOSTER-BROTHERS IS TAKEN UP
BY ASMUND AND THORSTEINN KUGGASON
There was a man named Thorsteinn; he was the
son of Thorkell Kuggi, the son of Thord Yeller, the son of
Olaf Feilan, the son of Thorsteinn the Red, the son of Aud the
Deep-Minded. Thorsteinn Kuggason's mother was Thurid, daughter
of Asgeir Hothead. Asgeir was the brother of Asmund Longhair's
father. Thorsteinn Kuggason was equally responsible in the
blood-feud over Thorgils' death with Asmund Longhair, who now
sent for him. Thorsteinn was a great warrior and very
masterful. He came at once to his kinsman Asmund and they had
a talk together about the suit. Thorsteinn was for extreme
measures. He said that no blood-money should be accepted; that
with their connections they were powerful enough to carry
through a sentence of either banishment or death on the
slayer. Asmund said he would support any measures whatever
that he chose to adopt. They rode then North to Thorvald their
kinsman and asked for his support, which he at once promised
them. So the suit was begun against Thorgeir and Thormod.
Thorsteinn then rode home to his dwelling at Ljarskogar in the
Hvamm district. Skeggi in Hvamm also joined Thorsteinn. He was
a son of Thorarin Fylsenni, a son of Thord the Yeller. His
mother was Fridgerd, a daughter of Thord from Hofdi. They had
a large following at the All-Thing and pressed their suit
valiantly. Asmund and Thorvald rode from the North with sixty
men, halting several days at Ljarskogar.
CHAPTER XXVII
SENTENCES ON THE FOSTER-BROTHERS
There dwelt at Reykjaholar a man named
Thorgils, the son of Ari, the son of Mar, the son of Atli the
Red, the son of Ulf Squint- Eye, the first settler at
Reykjanes. Thorgils' mother was Thorgerd the daughter of Alf
of Dalir. Alf had another daughter named Thorelf, who was the
mother of Thorgeir the son of Havar. Thorgeir, therefore, had
a very strong backing through his connections, for Thorgils
was the most powerful chief in the Vestfirding quarter. He was
very open-handed and gave hospitality to any free-man for as
long as he would. There was consequently always a crowd at
Reykjaholar, and he lived in great grandeur. He was both
kindly and wise. Thorgeir stayed with him in the winter and
went to Strandir in the summer.
After slaying Thorgils the son of Mak, Thorgeir
went to Reykjaholar and told Thorgils Arason what had
happened. Thorgils told him his house was open to him. "But,"
he said, "they will press the matter vigorously, and I am most
unwilling to involve myself in difficulties. I will send a man
now to Thorsteinn and offer him blood-money for the Thorgils
affair; if he will not accept it I will not adopt any violent
measures."
Thorgeir declared that he would submit to his
wisdom. In the autumn Thorgils sent a messenger to Thorsteinn
Kuggason to try and arrange a settlement. Thorsteinn was very
disinclined to accept any money in atonement for the slaying
of Thorgils, although for the others he was willing to follow
the advice of men of counsel. Thorgils on receiving the report
of his messenger called Thorgeir to a consultation with him
and asked him what support he thought was proper. Thorgeir
said that if a sentence of banishment were passed upon him he
would go. Thorgils said that his resolve would be put to the
trial.
There came a ship into the Nordra river in
Borgarfjord, and Thorgils secretly took a passage in her for
the two foster- brothers. The winter now passed, and Thorgils
heard that Thorsteinn and his party had assembled in great
force for the All-Thing and were then in Ljarskogar. So he put
off his departure, intending that they should arrive from the
North before he came up from the West. So it came to pass.
Thorgils and Thorgeir then rode towards the South, Thorgeir
killing one Boggul-Torfi on the way at Marskelda and two other
men named Skuf and Bjarni at Hundadal. Thormod sings about
this affair in his Thorgeir's drapa:
"The hem slew the son of Mak;
there was storm of swords and raven's food.
Skuf and Bjami he also felled;
gladly he bathed his hands in blood."
Thorgils settled for the slaying of Skuf and
Bjarni there and then in the dale, and was delayed by the
affair longer than he intended. Thorgeir embarked on the ship
and Thorgils went to the Thing, where he did not arrive before
they were proceeding to judgment in Thorgils Maksson's case.
Asmund Longhair then called for the defence. Thorgils appeared
before the court and offered blood-money in atonement on
condition of Thorgeir not being sentenced to banishment. He
endeavoured to meet the charge by pleading that finds in the
Almenningar were free to all. The question whether this was a
valid defence or not was referred to the Lawman, who at that
time was Skapti. He upheld Asmund's view on account of their
kinship together. He declared that this was indeed the law in
the case of men equal in position, but that a bondi had
precedence over a vagrant. Asmund further urged that Thorgils
had offered to share the uncut portion of the whale with the
foster-brothers when they arrived. The defendants were
non-suited on that point. Then Thorsteinn and his party
pressed their suit resolutely and said they would not be
satisfied with any sentence short of banishment upon Thorgeir.
Thorgils saw that no choice was left to him but either to call
up his men and try to carry his case with violence, the issue
of which would be uncertain, or else to submit to the sentence
demanded by the opposite party, and since Thorgeir was already
on board his ship Thorgils had no desire to press the case
further. Thorgeir was banished, but Thormod was discharged
upon payment of blood-money. Asmund and Thorsteinn gained
great glory by this case. The men rode home from the Thing.
There were some who said that Thorgils had not taken much
trouble in the case, but he paid little attention and let them
say what they pleased.
When Thorgeir heard that he was banished, he
said that if he had his way, those who had brought it about
should be repayed in full before it was over.
There was a man named Gaut, called the son of
Sleita, a kinsman of Thorgils Maksson. He was intending to
travel in the same ship with Thorgeir, with whom he was on
very bad terms, and frowned on him. The traders thought it
would never do to have them both together in the ship.
Thorgeir said he did not care what Gaut did with his eyebrows.
Nevertheless they decided that Gaut should leave the ship. He
went into the northern districts and for that time nothing
happened, but the affair brought about a feud between them
which broke out later.
CHAPTER XXVIII
GRETTIR'S VISIT TO AUDUN IN VIDIDAL; OFFERS HIS
SERVICES TO BARDI
In the course of that summer Grettir Asmundsson
returned to Skagafjord. He had such a reputation for strength
that none of the younger men was supposed to be his equal. He
soon came to his home in Bjarg, and Asmund gave him a fitting
welcome. Atli was then managing the property and the brothers
agreed well together, but Grettir became so over-weening that
he thought nothing was beyond his powers.
Many of the youths with whom Grettir had played
at Midfjordsvatn before he left were now grown up. Audun, the
son of Asgeir, the son of Audun, was now living at Audunarstad
in Vididal. He was a good bondi and a kindly man, and was the
strongest of all the men in the northern parts, as well as the
most modest.
Grettir had not forgotten how he had seemingly
been worsted by Audun at the ball-play, as related above, and
he was anxious to try which of them had gained most since.
With this object he went at the beginning of the hay-harvest
to Audunarstad. Grettir put on all his finery and rode with
the coloured and richly ornamented saddle which Thorfinn had
given him, on a splendid horse and in his best armour to
Audun's place, where he arrived early in the day and knocked
at the door. Few of the men were in the house, and to
Grettir's question whether Audun was at home, they replied
that he had gone to the hill-dairy to bring home some produce.
Grettir took the bridle off his horse. The hay had not been
mown in the meadow and the horse went for the part where the
grass was thickest. Grettir entered the room and sat down on
the bench, where he fell asleep. Soon Audun returned home and
saw a horse in the meadow with a coloured saddle on its back.
He was bringing two horses loaded with curds in skins tied at
the mouth -- so-called "curd-bags." Audun took the skins off
the horses and was carrying them in his arms so that he could
not see in front of him. Grettir's leg was stretched out
before him and Audun stumbled over it, falling on the
curd-bags which broke at the neck. Audun sprang up and asked
what rascal that was in his house. Grettir told him his name.
"That was very awkward of you," said Audun.
"But what do you want here?"
"I want to fight with you."
"First I must look after my dairy produce,"
Audun said.
"You can do that," answered Grettir, "if you
have no one else to do it for you."
Audun bent down, gathered up the skin and threw
it right into Grettir's breast, telling him to take what he
sent him. Grettir was all covered with curds, and felt more
disgusted than at any wound which Audun could have given him.
Then they went for each other and wrestled pretty smartly.
Grettir rushed at him, but Audun escaped his grasp. He saw,
however, that Grettir had gained upon him. They drove up and
down the room, overthrowing everything that was near them.
Neither of them spared himself, but Grettir had the advantage,
and at last Audun fell, after tearing off all Grettir's
weapons. They struggled hard and the din was terrific.
Then there was a loud noise below. Grettir
heard a man ride up to the house, get off his horse and come
quickly inside. He saw a handsome man in a red jacket wearing
a helmet. Hearing the commotion going on in the room where
they were wrestling, he came in and asked what was in the
room. Grettir told him his name; "but who is it that wants to
know?" he asked.
"My name is Bardi," answered the stranger.
"Are you Bardi the son of Gudmund from
Asbjarnarnes?"
"The same," he replied. "But what are you
after?"
Grettir said: "I and Audun are playing here."
"I don't know about your play," said Bardi.
"But you are not alike. You are overbearing and insolent,
while he is modest and good-natured. Let him get up at once."
Grettir said: "Many a man seizes the lock for
the door. You would do better to avenge your brother Hall than
to come between me and Audun when we are contending."
"I am always hearing that," said Bardi, "and I
don't know whether I shall ever obtain my vengeance. But I
want you to leave Audun in peace, for he is a quiet man."
Grettir said he was willing to do so because of
Bardi's intercession, though he did not like it much. Bardi
asked what they were contending about. Grettir replied in a
verse:
"I know not if for all your pride
he may not try your throat to squeeze.
Thus when within my home I dwelt
did he once belabour me."
Bardi said there was certainly some excuse if
he was taking revenge. "Let me now settle it between you," he
said. "Let matters remain as they are and cease your strife."
So they consented, for they were kinsmen. But
Grettir had little liking for Bardi or his brothers. They all
rode away together. On the way Grettir said: "I hear, Bardi,
that you intend to go South to Borgarfjord this summer; I
propose that I shall go with you, which I think is more than
you deserve."
Bardi was very pleased with this offer, and at
once accepted it most thankfully. Then they parted. Bardi then
turned back and said to Grettir: "I would like it to be
understood that you only come with me if it meets with
Thorarin's approval, since all the arrangements for the
expedition are with him."
"I thought," said Grettir, "you were competent
to make your arrangements for yourself. I do not leave my
affairs to other people to settle. I shall take it very ill if
you refuse me."
Then each went his own way. Bardi promised to
send Grettir word "if Thorarin wished him to go." Otherwise he
could remain quietly at home. Grettir then rode to Bjarg and
Bardi to his own home.
CHAPTER XXIX
HORSE-FIGHT AT LANGAFIT
That summer there was a great horse-fight at
Langafit below Reykir, whither a great many people came
together. Atli of Bjarg had a good stallion of Keingala's
race; grey with a dark stripe down his back. Both father and
son valued the horse highly. The two brothers Kormak and
Thorgils in Mel had a very mettlesome brown stallion, and they
arranged to match it against that of Atli from Bjarg. Many
other excellent stallions were brought. Odd the Needy-Skald,
Kormak's kinsman, had the charge of their horse on the day. He
had grown into a strong man and had a high opinion of himself;
he was surly and reckless. Grettir asked Atli who should have
charge of his stallion.
"That is not so clear to me," said Atli.
"Would you like me to back him?"
"Then you must keep very cool, kinsman," he
said. "We have men to deal with who are rather overbearing."
"Let them pay for their bluster," he said, "if
they cannot control it."
The stallions were led out and the mares
tethered together in the front on the bank of the river. There
was a large pool just beyond the bank. The horses fought
vigorously and there was excellent sport. Odd managed his
horse pluckily and Grettir gave way before him, holding the
tail of his horse with one hand and with the other the stick
with which he pricked it on. Odd stood in the front by his
horse, and one could not be sure that he was not pricking off
Atli's horse from his own. Grettir pretended not to notice it.
The horses then came near the river. Then Odd thrust with his
pointed stick at Grettir and caught him in the shoulder-blade
which Grettir was turning towards him. He struck pretty hard,
and the flesh swelled up, but Grettir was little hurt. At the
same moment the horses reared. Grettir ducked beneath the
flank of his horse and drove his stick into Odd's side with
such violence that three of his ribs were broken and Odd fell
into the pool with his horse and all the mares that were
tethered there by the bank. Some people swam out and rescued
them. There was great excitement about it. Kormak's men on one
side and those of Bjarg on the other seized their arms, but
the men of Hrutafjord and Vatnsnes came between them and
parted them. They all went home in great wrath, but kept quiet
for a time. Atli said very little, but Grettir rather
swaggered and said that they should meet again if he had his
way.
CHAPTER XXX
THORBJORN OXMAIN AND THE FRAY AT
HRUTAFJARDARHALS
There was living in Thoroddsstad in Hrutafjord
a man named Thorbjorn. He was the son of Arnor Downy-Nose, the
son of Thorodd who had settled in that side of Hrutafjord
which lies opposite to Bakki. Thorbjorn was of all men the
strongest, and was called Oxmain. He had a brother named
Thorodd, called Drapustuf. Their mother was Gerd, daughter of
Bodvar from Bodvarsholar. Thorbjorn was a great swashbuckler
and kept a large troop of followers. He was noted for being
worse at getting servants than other men, and scarcely paid
them any wages. He was not a man easy to deal with. There was
a kinsman of his, also named Thorbjorn, called Slowcoach. He
was a mariner, and the two namesakes were in partnership
together. He was always at Thoroddsstad and people did not
think he made Thorbjorn any better. He liked to talk scandal
and spoke offensively of several men.
There was a man named Thorir, a son of
Thorkell, at Bordeyr. He first lived at Melar in Hrutafjord,
and had a daughter named Helga who married Sleitu-Helgi. After
the Fagrabrekka affair Thorir went South to Haukadal and lived
in Skard, selling the property at Melar to Thorhall the
Winelander, the son of Gamli. Thorhall's son Gamli married
Rannveig, the daughter of Asmund Longhair, Grettir's sister.
They lived at that time in Melar and had a good establishment.
Thorir of Skard had two sons, Gunnar and Thorgeir, both
promising men, who took over the property from their father,
but were always with Thorbjorn Oxmain, and became very
overbearing.
In the summer of that year Kormak and Thorgils
rode with a kinsman of theirs named Narfi South to Nordrardal
on some business. Odd the Needy-Skald had recovered from the
hurts which he had received at the horse-fight and was of the
party. While they were south of the heath Grettir was
journeying from his home at Bjarg with two of Atli's men. They
rode to Burfell and then across the neck to Hrutafjord,
reaching Melar in the evening, where they spent three nights.
Rannveig and Gamli gave Grettir a friendly reception and
invited him to stay, but he wanted to return home. Then
Grettir learned of Kormak's company having come from the
South, and that they were staying at Tunga at night. He
prepared to leave Melar at once, and Gamli offered to send
some of his men with him. Gamli's brother Grim, who was very
smart and active, and another rode with Grettir. The party,
five in number, came to Hrutafjardarhals to the west of
Burfell, where the great stone called Grettishaf lies; he
struggled a long time with that stone, trying to lift it, and
delayed his journey thereby until Kormak's party came up.
Grettir went towards them and both alighted from their horses.
Grettir said it would be more seemly for free men to set to
work with all their might instead of fighting with sticks like
tramps. Kormak told them to take up the challenge like men and
to do their best. So they went for each other. Grettir was in
front of his men and told them to see that nobody got behind
him. They fought for a time and both were hurt.
On the same day Thorbjorn Oxmain had ridden
across the neck to Burfell, and as he returned with Thorbjorn
Slowcoach, Gunnar and Thorgeir, the sons of Thorir, and
Thorodd Drapustuf, he saw the fight going on. On coming up,
Thorbjorn called upon his men to go between them, but they
were struggling so furiously that nobody could get at them.
Grettir was making a clean sweep of everything round him.
Before him were the sons of Thorir. He pushed them back and
they both fell over. This made them furious, and the
consequence was that Gunnar gave a blow to one of Atli's men
which killed him. Thorbjorn on seeing that ordered them to
separate, saying that he would give his support to whichever
side obeyed him. By then two of Kormak's men had fallen.
Grettir saw that it would scarcely do if Thorbjorn joined the
opposite side, so he gave up the battle. All those who had
fought were wounded. Grettir was much disgusted at their being
separated, but both parties rode home and were not reconciled
on this occasion.
Thorbjorn Slowcoach made great game of all
this, and the relations between the men of Bjarg and Thorbjorn
Oxmain became strained in consequence, until at last there was
a regular feud, which however broke out later. No compensation
was offered to Atli for his man, and he went on as if he knew
nothing of it. Grettir stayed at Bjarg till the Tvi-month. It
is not known that he and Kormak ever met again; at least it is
not mentioned anywhere.
CHAPTER XXXI
GRETTIR'S VAIN ENDEAVOUR TO PROVOKE BARDI
Bardi the son of Gudmund and his brothers rode
home to Asbjarnarnes when they left Grettir. They were the
sons of Gudmund the son of Solmund. Solmund's mother was
Thorlaug, daughter of Saemund the Southerner, the
foster-brother of Ingimund the Old. Bardi was a man of great
distinction. Soon he went to see his foster-father Thorarin
the Wise, who welcomed him and asked what help he had been
able to obtain, for Bardi's journey had been arranged
beforehand by them both. Bardi answered that he had engaged a
man whose help he thought worth more than that of two others.
Thorarin was silent for a moment and then said: "That must be
Grettir the son of Asmund."
"The guess of the wise is truth," said Bardi.
"That is the very man, my foster-father."
Thorarin answered: "It is true that Grettir is
beyond all other men of whom there is now choice in the
country; nor will he be easily subdued by arms so long as he
is sound. But great arrogance is in him now, and I have
misgivings as to his luck. It is important for you that all
your men on your expedition are not men of an evil star. It is
enough if he does not fare with you. He shall not come if my
counsel is followed."
"I did not expect, my foster-father," said he,
"that you would deny me the man who is bravest in all that he
undertakes. A man in such straits as I seem to be in cannot
provide against everything."
"It will be better for you," he replied, "to
let me provide."
So it came about that as Thorarin desired, word
was not sent to Grettir. Bardi went to the South and the
battle of the Heath was fought.
Grettir was at Bjarg when he received the news
that Bardi had started on his expedition. He was very angry
that word had not been sent to him, and said it should not end
there. He found out when they were expected back from the
South, and rode off to Thoreyjargnup, where he meant to lie in
wait for Bardi and his men as they rode back. He left the
homestead behind and remained at the cliffs. On that day rode
Bardi back from the battle of the Heath from Tvidaegra; there
were six of them in his party, all sorely wounded. When they
came to the homestead Bardi said: "There is a man up there on
the cliff, very tall and armed. Whom do you take him for?"
They could not say who he was. Bardi said: "I
believe it is Grettir the son of Asmund. If it is, he will be
wanting to meet us, for I expect he is little pleased at not
having been with us. It seems to me that we are not in a very
fit condition if he wants to annoy us. I will send home to
Thoreyjargnup for some men and not allow myself to be put out
by his evil intentions."
They said that was the best thing he could do,
and it was done. Bardi's party rode on; Grettir watched where
they were going and went there too. They met and greeted each
other. Grettir asked what the news was, and Bardi told him
without hesitation. Grettir asked who had been with them.
Bardi answered that his brothers and Eyjvolf his brother-inlaw
had been with him.
"You have wiped out your disgrace," said
Grettir. "Now the next thing is for us two here to try which
is the stronger."
"I have more urgent business," said Bardi,
"than to fight with you about nothing. I think I may be
excused that now."
"It seems to me that you are afraid, Bardi;
that is the reason why you dare not fight me."
"Call it what you please. If you wish to bully,
find some one else; that seems to be what you want, for your
insolence passes all bounds."
Grettir thought luck was against him. He
hesitated now whether he should attack any of them; it seemed
rather rash as they were six and he was only one. Then the men
from Thoreyjargnup came up and joined Bardi's party, so he
left them and went back to his horse. Bardi and his men went
on, and there was no greeting between them when they parted.
We are not told that any strife arose between Bardi and
Grettir after this.
Grettir once said that he would trust himself
to fight with most men if there were not more than three
against him. Even with four he would not give way without
trying, but more he would not attempt, except in self-defence.
Thus he says in a verse:
"Oh skilled in war! When three are before me
I yet will endeavour to fight with them all.
But more than four I dare not encounter
in the clashing of arms, if the choice is with me."
On leaving Bardi, Grettir returned to Bjarg,
and was much aggrieved at finding nothing to try his strength
on. He sought everywhere for something to fight with.
CHAPTER XXII
THE SPOOK AT THORHALLSSTAD. GLAM THE SHEPHERD
KILLED BY A FIEND. HIS GHOST WALKS
There was a man named Thorhall living in
Thorhallsstad in Forsaeludal, up from Vatnsdal. He was the son
of Grim, the son of Thorhall, the son of Fridmund, who was the
first settler in Forsaeludal. Thorhall's wife was named
Gudrun; they had a son named Grim and a daughter named Thurid
who were just grown up. Thorhall was fairly wealthy,
especially in live-stock. His property in cattle exceeded that
of any other man. He was not a chief, but an honest bondi
nevertheless. He had great difficulty in getting a shepherd to
suit him because the place was haunted. He consulted many men
of experience as to what he should do, but nobody gave him any
advice which was of any use. Thorhall had good horses, and
went every summer to the Thing. On one occasion at the
All-Thing he went to the booth of the Lawman Skapti the son of
Thorodd, who was a man of great knowledge and gave good
counsel to those who consulted him. There was a great
difference between Thorodd the father and Skapti the son in
one respect. Thorodd possessed second sight, but was thought
by some not to be straight, whereas Skapti gave to every man
the advice which he thought would avail him, if he followed it
exactly, and so earned the name of Father-betterer.
So Thorhall went to Skapti's booth, where
Skapti, knowing that he was a man of wealth, received him
graciously, and asked what the news was.
"I want some good counsel from you," said
Thorhall.
"I am little fit to give you counsel," he
replied; "but what is it that you need?"
"It is this: I have great difficulty in keeping
my shepherds. Some get injured and others cannot finish their
work. No one will come to me if he knows what he has to
expect."
Skapti answered: "There must be some evil
spirit abroad if men are less willing to tend your flocks than
those of other men. Now since you have come to me for counsel,
I will get you a shepherd. His name is Glam, and he came from
Sylgsdale in Sweden last summer. He is a big strong man, but
not to everybody's mind."
Thorhall said that did not matter so long as he
looked after the sheep properly. Skapti said there was not
much chance of getting another if this man with all his
strength and boldness should fail. Then Thorhall departed.
This happened towards the end of the Thing.
Two of Thorhall's horses were missing, and he
went himself to look for them, which made people think he was
not much of a man. He went up under Sledaass and south along
the hill called Armannsfell. Then he saw a man coming down
from Godaskog bringing some brushwood with a horse. They met
and Thorhall asked him his name. He said it was Glam. He was a
big man with an extraordinary expression of countenance, large
grey eyes and wolfgrey hair. Thorhall was a little startled
when he saw him, but soon found out that this was the man who
had been sent to him.
"What work can you do best?" he asked.
Glam said it would suit him very well to mind
sheep in the winter.
"Will you mind my sheep?" Thorhall asked.
"Skapti has given you over to me."
"My service will only be of use to you if I am
free to do as I please," he said. "I am rather crossgrained
when I am not well pleased."
"That will not hurt me," said Thorhall. "I
shall be glad if you will come to me."
"I can do so," he said. "Are there any special
difficulties?"
"The place seems to be haunted."
"I am not afraid of ghosts. It will be the less
dull."
"You will have to risk it," said Thorhall. "It
will be best to meet it with a bold face."
Terms were arranged and Glam was to come in the
autumn. Then they parted. Thorhall found his horses in the
very place where he had just been looking for them. He rode
home and thanked Skapti for his service.
The summer passed. Thorhall heard nothing of
his shepherd and no one knew anything about him, but at the
appointed time he appeared at Thorhallsstad. Thorhall treated
him kindly, but all the rest of the household disliked him,
especially the mistress. He commenced his work as shepherd,
which gave him little trouble. He had a loud hoarse voice. The
beasts all flocked together whenever he shouted at them. There
was a church in the place, but Glam never went to it. He
abstained from mass, had no religion, and was stubborn and
surly. Every one hated him.
So the time passed till the eve of Yule-tide.
Glam rose early and called for his meal. The mistress said:
"It is not proper for Christian men to eat on this day,
because to-morrow is the first day of Yule and it is our duty
to fast to-day."
"You have many superstitions," he said; "but I
do not see that much comes of them. I do not know that men are
any better off than when there was nothing of that kind. The
ways of men seemed to me better when they were called heathen.
I want my food and no foolery."
"I am certain," she said, "that it will fare
ill with you to-day if you commit this sin."
Glam told her that she should bring his food,
or that it would be the worse for her. She did not dare to do
otherwise than as he bade her. When he had eaten he went out,
his breath smelling abominably. It was very dark; there was
driving snow, the wind was howling and it became worse as the
day advanced. The shepherd's voice was heard in the early part
of the day, but less later on. Blizzards set in and a terrific
storm in the evening. People went to mass and so the time
passed. In the evening Glam did not return. They talked about
going out to look for him, but the storm was so violent and
the night so dark that no one went. The night passed and still
he had not returned; they waited till the time for mass came.
When it was full day some of the men set forth to search. They
found the animals scattered everywhere in the snow and injured
by the weather; some had strayed into the mountains. Then they
came upon some well-marked tracks up above in the valley. The
stones and earth were torn up all about as if there had been a
violent tussle. On searching further they came upon Glam lying
on the ground a short distance off. He was dead; his body was
as black as Hel and swollen to the size of an ox. They were
overcome with horror and their hearts shuddered within them.
Nevertheless they tried to carry him to the church, but could
not get him any further than the edge of a gully a short way
off. So they left him there and went home to report to the
bondi what had happened. He asked what could have caused
Glam's death. They said they had tracked him to a big place
like a hole made by the bottom of a cask thrown down and
dragged along up below the mountains which were at the top of
the valley, and all along the track were great drops of blood.
They concluded that the evil spirit which had been about
before must have killed Glam, but that he had inflicted wounds
upon it which were enough, for that spook was never heard of
again. On the second day of the festival they went out again
to bring in Glam's body to the church. They yoked oxen to him,
but directly the downward incline ceased and they came to
level ground, they could not move him; so they went home again
and left him. On the third day they took a priest with them,
but after searching the whole day they failed to find him. The
priest refused to go again, and when he was not with them they
found Glam. So they gave up the attempt to bring him to the
church and buried him where he was under a cairn of stones.
It was not long before men became aware that
Glam was not easy in his grave. Many men suffered severe
injuries; some who saw him were struck senseless and some lost
their wits. Soon after the festival was over, men began to
think they saw him about their houses. The panic was great and
many left the neighbourhood. Next he began to ride on the
house-tops by night, and nearly broke them to pieces. Almost
night and day he walked, and people would scarcely venture up
the valley, however pressing their business. The district was
in a grievous condition.
CHAPTER XXXIII
DOINGS OF GLAM'S GHOST. AWFUL CONDITION OF
VATNSDAL
In the spring Thorhall procured servants and
built a house on his lands. As the days lengthened out the
apparitions became less, until at midsummer a ship sailed up
the Hunavatn in which was a man named Thorgaut. He was a
foreigner, very tall and powerful; he had the strength of two
men. He was travelling on his own account, unattached, and
being without money was looking out for employment. Thorhall
rode to the ship, saw him and asked if he would take service
with him. Thorgaut said he would indeed, and that there would
be no difficulties.
"You must be prepared," said Thorhall, "for
work which would not be fitting for a weak-minded person,
because of the apparitions which have been there lately. I
will not deceive you about it."
"I shall not give myself up as lost for the
ghostlings," he said. "Before I am scared some others will not
be easy. I shall not change my quarters on that account."
The terms were easily arranged and Thorgaut was
engaged for the sheep during the winter. When the summer had
passed away he took over charge of them, and was on good terms
with everybody. Glam continued his rides on the roofs.
Thorgaut thought it very amusing and said the thrall must come
nearer if he wished to frighten him. Thorhall advised him not
to say too much, and said it would be better if they did not
come into conflict.
Thorgaut said: "Surely all the spirit has gone
out of you. I shall not fall dead in the twilight for stories
of that sort."
Yule was approaching. On the eve the shepherd
went out with his sheep. The mistress said: "Now I hope that
our former experiences will not be repeated."
"Have no fear for that, mistress," he said.
"There will be something worth telling of if I come not back."
Then he went out to his sheep. The weather was
rather cold and there was a heavy snowstorm. Thorgaut usually
returned when it was getting dark, but this time he did not
come. The people went to church as usual, but they thought
matters looked very much as they did on the last occasion. The
bondi wanted them to go out and search for the shepherd, but
the churchgoers cried off, and said they were not going to
trust themselves into the power of trolls in the night; the
bondi would not venture out and there was no search. On Yule
day after their meal they went out to look for the shepherd,
and first went to Glam's cairn, feeling sure that the
shepherd's disappearance must be due to him. On approaching
the cairn they saw an awful sight; there was the shepherd, his
neck broken, and every bone in his body torn from its place.
They carried him to the church and no one was molested by
Thorgaut.
Glam became more rampageous than ever. He was
so riotous that at last everybody fled from Thorhallsstad,
excepting the bondi and his wife.
Thorhall's cowherd had been a long time in his
service and he had become attached to him; for this reason and
because he was a careful herdsman he did not want to part with
him. The man was very old and thought it would be very
troublesome to have to leave; he saw, too, that everything the
bondi possessed would be ruined if he did not stay to
look-after them. One morning after midwinter the mistress went
to the cow-house to milk the cows as usual. It was then full
day, for no one would venture out of doors till then, except
the cowherd, who went directly it was light. She heard a great
crash in the cowhouse and tremendous bellowing. She rushed in,
shouting that something awful, she knew not what, was going on
in the cowhouse. The bondi went out and found the cattle all
goring each other. It seemed not canny there, so he went into
the shed and there saw the cowherd lying on his back with his
head in one stall and his feet in the other. He went up and
felt him, but saw at once that he was dead with his back
broken. It had been broken over the flat stone which separated
the two stalls. Evidently it was not safe to remain any longer
on his estate, so he fled with everything that he could carry
away. All the live-stock which he left behind was killed by
Glam. After that Glam went right up the valley and raided
every farm as far as Tunga, while Thorhall stayed with his
friends during the rest of the winter. No one could venture up
the valley with a horse or a dog, for it was killed at once.
As the spring went on and the sun rose higher in the sky the
spook diminished somewhat, and Thorhall wanted to return to
his land, but found it not easy to get servants. Nevertheless,
he went and took up his abode at Thorhallsstad. Directly the
autumn set in, everything began again, and the disturbances
increased. The person most attacked was the bondi's daughter,
who at last died of it. Many things were tried but without
success. It seemed likely that the whole of Vatnsdal would be
devastated unless help could be found.
CHAPTER XXXIV
GRETTIR VISITS HIS UNCLE JOKULL
We have now to return to Grettir, who was at
home in Bjarg during the autumn which followed his meeting
with Warrior-Bardi at Thoreyjargnup. When the winter was
approaching, he rode North across the neck to Vididal and
stayed at Audunarstad. He and Audun made friends again;
Grettir gave him a valuable battle-axe and they agreed to hold
together in friendship. Audun had long lived there, and had
many connections. He had a son named Egill, who married
Ulfheid the daughter of Eyjolf, the son of Gudmund; their son
Eyjolf, who was killed at the All-Thing, was the father of
Orin the chaplain of Bishop Thorlak.
Grettir rode to the North to Vatnsdal and went
on a visit to Tunga, where dwelt his mother's brother, Jokull
the son of Bard, a big strong man and exceedingly haughty. He
was a mariner, very cantankerous, but a person of much
consideration. He welcomed Grettir, who stayed three nights
with him. Nothing was talked about but Glam's walking, and
Grettir inquired minutely about all the particulars. Jokull
told him that no more was said than had really happened.
"Why, do you want to go there?" he asked.
Grettir said that it was so. Jokull told him
not to do it.
"It would be a most hazardous undertaking," he
said. "Your kinsmen incur a great risk with you as you are.
There does not seem to be one of the younger men who is your
equal. It is ill dealing with such a one as Glam. Much better
fight with human men than with goblins of that sort."
Grettir said he had a mind to go to
Thorhallsstad and see how things were. Jokull said: "I see
there is no use in dissuading you. The saying is true that
Luck is one thing, brave deeds another."
"Woe stands before the door of one but enters
that of another," answered Grettir. "I am thinking how it may
fare with you yourself before all is done."
"It may be," said Jokull, "that we both see
what is before us, and yet we may not alter it."
Then they parted, neither of them well pleased
with the other's prophetic saying.
CHAPTER XXXV
THE FIGHT WITH GLAM'S GHOST
Grettir rode to Thorhallsstad where he was
welcomed by the bondi. He asked Grettir whither he was bound,
and Grettir said he wished to spend the night there if the
bondi permitted. Thorhall said he would indeed be thankful to
him for staying there.
"Few," he said, "think it a gain to stay here
for any time. You must have heard tell of the trouble that is
here, and I do not want you to be inconvenienced on my
account. Even if you escape unhurt yourself, I know for
certain that you will lose your horse, for no one can keep his
beast in safety who comes here."
Grettir said there were plenty more horses to
be had if anything happened to this one.
Thorhall was delighted at Grettir's wishing to
remain, and received him with both hands. Grettir's horse was
placed securely under lock and key and they both went to bed.
The night passed without Glam showing himself.
"Your being here has already done some good,"
said Thorhall. "Glam has always been in the habit of riding on
the roof or breaking open the doors every night, as you can
see from the marks."
"Then," Grettir said, "either he will not keep
quiet much longer, or he will remain so more than one night. I
will stay another night and see what happens."
Then they went to Grettir's horse and found it
had not been touched. The bondi thought that all pointed to
the same thing. Grettir stayed a second night and again the
thrall did not appear. The bondi became hopeful and went to
see the horse. There he found the stable broken open, the
horse dragged outside and every bone in his body broken.
Thorhall told Grettir what had occurred and advised him to
look to himself, for he was a dead man if he waited for Glam.
Grettir answered: "I must not have less for my
horse than a sight of the thrall."
The bondi said there was no pleasure to be had
from seeing him: "He is not like any man. I count every hour a
gain that you are here."
The day passed, and when the hour came for
going to bed Grettir said he would not take off his clothes,
and lay down on a seat opposite to Thorkell's sleeping
apartment. He had a shaggy cloak covering him with one end of
it fastened under his feet and the other drawn over his head
so that he could see through the neck-hole. He set his feet
against a strong bench which was in front of him. The
frame-work of the outer door had been all broken away and some
bits of wood had been rigged up roughly in its place. The
partition which had once divided the hall from the entrance
passage was all broken, both above the cross-beam and below,
and all the bedding had been upset. The place looked rather
desolate. There was a light burning in the hall by night.
When about a third part of the night had passed
Grettir heard a loud noise. Something was going up on to the
building, riding above the hall and kicking with its heels
until the timbers cracked again. This went on for some time,
and then it came down towards the door. The door opened and
Grettir saw the thrall stretching in an enormously big and
ugly head. Glam moved slowly in, and on passing the door stood
upright, reaching to the roof. He turned to the hall, resting
his arms on the cross-beam and peering along the hall. The
bondi uttered no sound, having heard quite enough of what had
gone on outside. Grettir lay quite still and did not move.
Glam saw a heap of something in the seat, came farther into
the hall and seized the cloak tightly with his hand. Grettir
pressed his foot against the plank and the cloak held firm.
Glam tugged at it again still more violently, but it did not
give way. A third time be pulled, this time with both hands
and with such force that he pulled Grettir up out of the seat,
and between them the cloak was torn in two. Glam looked at the
bit which he held in his hand and wondered much who could pull
like that against him. Suddenly Grettir sprang under his arms,
seized him round the waist and squeezed his back with all his
might, intending in that way to bring him down, but the thrall
wrenched his arms till he staggered from the violence. Then
Grettir fell back to another bench. The benches flew about and
everything was shattered around them. Glam wanted to get out,
but Grettir tried to prevent him by stemming his foot against
anything he could find. Nevertheless Glam succeeded in getting
him outside the hall. Then a terrific struggle began, the
thrall trying to drag him out of the house, and Grettir saw
that however hard he was to deal with in the house, he would
be worse outside, so he strove with all his might to keep him
from getting out. Then Glam made a desperate effort and
gripped Grettir tightly towards him, forcing him to the porch.
Grettir saw that he could not put up any resistance, and with
a sudden movement he dashed into the thrall's arms and set
both his feet against a stone which was fastened in the ground
at the door. For that Glam was not prepared, since he had been
tugging to drag Grettir towards him; he reeled backwards and
tumbled bind- foremost out of the door, tearing away the
lintel with his shoulder and shattering the roof, the rafters
and the frozen thatch. Head over heels he fell out of the
house and Grettir fell on top of him. The moon was shining
very brightly outside, with light clouds passing over it and
hiding it now and again. At the moment when Glam fell the moon
shone forth, and Glam turned his eyes up towards it. Grettir
himself has related that that sight was the only one which
ever made him tremble. What with fatigue and all else that he
had endured, when he saw the horrible rolling of Glam's eyes
his heart sank so utterly that he had not strength to draw his
sword, but lay there wellnigh betwixt life and death. Glam
possessed more malignant power than most fiends, for he now
spoke in this wise:
"You have expended much energy, Grettir, in
your search for me. Nor is that to be wondered at, if you
should have little joy thereof. And now I tell you that you
shall possess only half the strength and firmness of heart
that were decreed to you if you had not striven with me. The
might which was yours till now I am not able to take away, but
it is in my power to ordain that never shall you grow stronger
than you are now. Nevertheless your might is sufficient, as
many shall find to their cost. Hitherto you have earned fame
through your deeds, but henceforward there shall fall upon you
exile and battle; your deeds shall turn to evil and your
guardian-spirit shall forsake you. You will be outlawed and
your lot shall be to dwell ever alone. And this I lay upon
you, that these eyes of mine shall be ever before your vision.
You will find it hard to live alone, and at last it shall drag
you to death."
When the thrall had spoken the faintness which
had come over Grettir left him. He drew his short sword, cut
off Glam's head and laid it between his thighs. Then the bondi
came out, having put on his clothes while Glam was speaking,
but he did not venture to come near until he was dead.
Thorhall praised God and thanked Grettir warmly for having
laid this unclean spirit. Then they set to work and burned
Glam to cold cinders, bound the ashes in a skin and buried
them in a place far away from the haunts of man or beast. Then
they went home, the day having nearly broken. Grettir was very
stiff and lay down to rest. Thorhall sent for some men from
the next farms and let them know how things had fared. They
all realised the importance of Grettir's deed when they heard
of it; all agreed that in the whole country side for strength
and courage and enterprise there was not the equal of Grettir
the son of Asmund.
Thorhall bade a kindly farewell to Grettir and
dismissed him with a present of a fine horse and proper
clothes, for all that he had been wearing were torn to pieces.
They parted in friendship. Grettir rode to Ass in Vatnsdal and
was welcomed by Thorvald, who asked him all about his
encounter with Glam. Grettir told him everything and said that
never had his strength been put to trial as it had been in
their long struggle. Thorvald told him to conduct himself
discreetly; if he did so he might prosper, but otherwise he
would surely come to disaster. Grettir said that his temper
had not improved, that he had even less discretion than
before, and was more impatient of being crossed. In one thing
a great change had come over him; he had become so frightened
of the dark that he dared not go anywhere alone at night.
Apparitions of every kind came before him. It has since passed
into an expression, and men speak of "Glam's eyes" or "Glam
visions" when things appear otherwise than as they are.
Having accomplished his undertaking Grettir
rode back to Bjarg and spent the winter at home.
CHAPTER XXXVI
THORBJORN SLOWCOACH AT HOME
Thorbjorn Oxmain gave a great feast in the
autumn at which many were assembled, whilst Grettir was in the
North in Vatnsdal. Thorbjorn Slowcoach was there and many
things were talked about. The Hrutafjord people inquired about
Grettir's adventure on the ridge in the summer. Thorbjorn
Oxmain praised Grettir's conduct, and said that Kormak would
have had the worst of it if no one had come to part them. Then
Thorbjorn Slowcoach said: "What I saw of Grettir's fighting
was not famous; and he seemed inclined to shirk when we came
up. He was very ready to leave off, nor did I see him make any
attempt to avenge the death of Atli's man. I do not believe
there is much heart in him, except when he has a sufficient
force behind him."
Thorbjorn went on jeering at him in this way.
Many of the others had something to say about it, and they
thought that Grettir would not leave it to rest if he heard
what Thorbjorn was saying. Nothing more happened at the
festivities; they all went home, and there was a good deal of
ill-will between them all that winter, though no one took any
action. Nothing more happened that winter.
CHAPTER XXXVI
GRETTIR SAILS FOR NORWAY AND KILLS THORBJORN
SLOWCOACH
Early in the spring, before the meeting of the
Thing, there arrived a ship from Norway. There was much news
to tell, above all of the change of government. Olaf the son
of Harald was now king, having driven away jarl Sveinn from
the country in the spring which followed the battle of Nesjar.
Many noteworthy things were told of King Olaf. Men said that
he took into favour all men who were skilled in any way and
made them his followers. This pleased many of the younger men
in Iceland and made them all want to leave home. When Grettir
heard of it he longed to go too, deeming that he merited the
king's favour quite as much as any of the others. A ship came
up to Gasar in Eyjafjord; Grettir engaged a passage in her and
prepared to go abroad. He had not much outfit as yet.
Asmund was now becoming very infirm and
scarcely left his bed. He and Asdis had a young son named
Illugi, a youth of much promise. Atli had taken over all the
management of the farm and the goods, and things went much
better, for he was both obliging and provident.
Grettir embarked on his ship. Thorbjorn
Slowcoach had arranged to travel in the same vessel without
knowing that Grettir would be in her. Some of his friends
tried to dissuade him from travelling in Grettir's company,
but he insisted upon going. He was rather a long time over his
preparations and did not get to Gasar before the ship was
ready to sail. Before he left home Asmund Longhair was taken
ill and was quite confined to his bed. Thorbjorn Slowcoach
arrived on the beach late in the day, when the men were going
on board and were washing their hands outside near their
booths. When he rode up to the rows of booths they greeted him
and asked what news there was.
"I have nothing to tell," he said, "except that
the valorous Asmund at Bjarg is now dead."
Some of them said that a worthy bondi had left
the world and asked how it happened.
"A poor lot befell his Valour," he replied. "He
was suffocated by the smoke from the hearth, like a dog. There
is no great loss in him, for he was in his dotage."
"You talk strangely about such a man as he
was," they said. "Grettir would not be much pleased if he
heard you."
"I can endure Grettir's wrath," he said. "He
must bear his axe higher than he did at Hrutafjardarhals if he
wishes to frighten me."
Grettir heard every word that Thorbjorn said,
but took no notice as long as he was speaking. When he had
finished Grettir said:
"I prophesy, Slowcoach, that you will not die
of the smoke from the hearth, and yet perhaps you will not die
of old age either. It is strange conduct to say shameful
things of innocent men."
Thorbjorn said: "I have nothing to unsay. I
never thought you would fire up like this on the day when we
got you out of the hands of the men of Mel who were
belabouring you like an ox's head."
Then Grettir spoke a verse:
"Too long is the tongue of the spanner of bows.
Full often he suffers the vengeance due.
Slowcoach! I tell thee that many a man
has paid for less shameful speech with his life."
Thorbjorn said his life was neither more nor
less in danger than it was before.
"My prophecies are not generally long-lived,"
said Grettir, "nor shall this one be. Defend yourself if you
will; you never will have better occasion for it than now."
Grettir then struck at him. He tried to parry
the blow with his arm, but it struck him above the wrist and
glanced off on to his neck so that his head flew off. The
sailors declared it was a splendid stroke, and that such were
the men for the king. No one would grieve, they said, because
a man so quarrelsome and scurrilous as Thorbjorn had been
killed.
Soon after this they got under way and towards
the end of the summer reached the south coast of Norway, about
Hordland, where they learned that King Olaf was in the North
at Thrandheim. Grettir took a passage thither with some
traders intending to seek audience of the king.
CHAPTER XXXVIII
GRETTIR FETCHES FIRE -- THE SONS OF THORIR ARE
BURNT
There was a man named Thorir dwelling in Gard
in Adaldal. He was a son of Skeggi Bodolfsson, who had settled
in Kelduhverfi, on lands extending right up to Keldunes, and
had married Helga the daughter of Thorgeir at Fiskilaek.
Thorir was a great chief, and a mariner. He had two sons whose
names were Thorgeir and Skeggi, both men of promise, and
pretty well grown up at that time. Thorir had been in Norway
in the summer in which Olaf came East from England, and had
won great favour with the king as well as with Bishop Sigurd.
In token of this it is related that Thorir asked the bishop to
consecrate a large sea-going ship he had built in the forest,
and the bishop did so. Later he came out to Iceland and had
his ship broken up because he was tired of seafaring. He set
up the figures from her head and stem over his doors, where
they long remained foretelling the weather, one howling for a
south, the other for a north wind.
When Thorir heard that Olaf had become sole
ruler of Norway he thought he might expect favour from him, so
he dispatched his sons to Norway to wait upon the king, hoping
that they would be received into his service. They reached the
south coast late in the autumn and engaged a rowing vessel to
take them up the coast to the North, intending to go to the
king. They reached a port to the south of Stad, where they put
in for a few days. They were well provided with food and
drink, and did not go out much because of the bad weather.
Grettir also sailed to the North along the
coast, and as the winter was just beginning he often fell in
with dirty weather. When they reached the neighbourhood of
Stad the weather became worse, and at last one evening they
were so exhausted with the snow and frost that they were
compelled to put in and lie under a bank where they found
shelter for their goods and belongings. The men were very much
distressed at not being able to procure any fire; their safety
and their lives seemed almost to depend upon their getting
some. They lay there in a pitiful condition all the evening,
and as night came on they saw a large fire on the other side
of the channel which they were in. When Grettir's companions
saw the fire they began talking and saying that he who could
get some of it would be a happy man. They hesitated for some
time whether they should put out, but all agreed that it would
be too dangerous. Then they had a good deal of talk about
whether there was any man living doughty enough to get the
fire. Grettir kept very quiet, but said that there probably
had been men who would not have let themselves be baulked. The
men said that they were none the better for what had been if
there were none now.
"But won't you venture, Grettir? The people of
Iceland all talk so much about your prowess, and you know very
well what we want."
Grettir said: "It does not seem to me such a
great thing to get the fire, but I do not know whether you
will reward it any better than he requires who does it."
"Why," they said, "should you take us to be men
of so little honour that we shall not reward you well?"
"Well," said Grettir, "if you really think it
so necessary I will try it; but my heart tells me that no good
will come to me therefrom."
They said it would not be so, and told him that
he should have their thanks.
Then Grettir threw off his clothes and got
ready to go into the water. He went in a cloak and breeches of
coarse stuff. He tucked up the cloak, tied a cord of bast
round his waist, and took a barrel with him. Then he jumped
overboard, swam across the channel and reached the land on the
other side. There he saw a house standing and heard sounds of
talking and merriment issuing from it. So he went towards the
house.
We have now to tell of the people who were in
the house. They were the sons of Thorir who have been
mentioned. They had been there some days waiting for a change
of weather and for a wind to carry them to the North. There
were twelve of them and they were all sitting and drinking.
They had made fast in the inner harbour where there was a
place of shelter set up for men who were travelling about the
country, and they had carried in a quantity of straw. There
was a huge fire on the ground. Grettir rushed into the house,
not knowing who was there. His cloak had all frozen directly
he landed, and he was a portentous sight to behold; he looked
like a troll. The people inside were much startled, thinking
it was a fiend. They struck at him with anything they could
get, and a tremendous uproar there was. Grettir pushed them
back with his arms. Some of them struck at him with
firebrands, and the fire spread all through the house. He got
away with his fire and returned to his companions, who were
loud in praise of his skill and daring, and said there was no
one like him. The night passed and they were happy now that
they had fire.
On the next morning the weather was fine. They
all woke early and made ready to continue their journey. It
was proposed that they should go and find out who the people
were who had had the fire, so they cast off and sailed across
the channel. They found no house there, nothing but a heap of
ashes and a good many bones of men amongst them. Evidently the
house with all who were in it had been burned. They asked
whether Grettir had done it, and declared it was an abominable
deed. Grettir said that what he expected had come to pass, and
that he was ill rewarded for getting the fire for them. He
said it was thankless work to help such miserable beings as
they were. He suffered much annoyance in consequence, for
wherever the traders went they told that Grettir had burned
the men in the house. Soon it became known that it was the
sons of Thorir of Gard and their followers who had been
burned. The traders refused to have Grettir on board their
ship any longer and drove him away. He was so abhorred that
scarcely any one would do him a service. His case seemed
hopeless, and his only desire was at any cost to appear before
the king. So he went North to Thrandheim where the king was,
and had heard the whole story before Grettir came, for many
had been busy in slandering him. Grettir waited several days
in the town before he was able to appear before the king.
CHAPTER XXXIX
GRETTIR APPEARS BEFORE THE KING AND FAILS TO
UNDERGO THE ORDEAL
One day when the king was sitting in judgment
Grettir came before him and saluted him respectfully. The king
looked at him and said:
"Are you Grettir the Strong?"
"So I have been called," he replied, "and I
have some here in the hope of obtaining deliverance from the
slanders which are being spread about me, and to say that I
did not do this deed."
The king said: "You are worthy enough; but I
know not what fortune you will have in defending yourself. It
is quite possible that you did not intend to burn the men in
the house."
Grettir said that he was most anxious to prove
his innocence if the king would permit him. Then the king bade
him relate faithfully all that had happened. Grettir told him
everything exactly as it was, and declared that they were all
alive when he escaped with his fire; he was ready to undergo
any ordeal which the king considered that the law required.
King Olaf said: "I decree that you shall bear
iron, if your fate so wills it."
Grettir was quite content with that, and began
his fast for the ordeal. When the day for the ceremony arrived
the king and the bishop went to the church together with a
multitude of people who came out of curiosity to see a man so
much talked about as Grettir. At last Grettir himself was led
to the church. When he entered many looked at him and remarked
that he excelled most men in strength and stature. As he
passed down the aisle there started up a very ill-favoured,
overgrown boy and cried to him:
"Wondrous are now the ways in a land where men
should call themselves Christians, when evildoers and robbers
and thieves walk in peace to purge themselves. What should a
wicked man find better to do than to preserve his life so long
as he may? Here is now a malefactor convicted of guilt, one
who has burnt innocent men in their houses, and yet is allowed
to undergo purgation. Such a thing is most unrighteous."
Then he went at Grettir, pointing at him with
his finger, making grimaces and calling him son of a
sea-ogress, with many other bad names. Then Grettir lost his
temper and his self-control. He raised his hand and gave him a
box on the ear so that he fell senseless, and some thought he
was dead. No one seemed to know whence the boy had come nor
what became of him afterwards, but it was generally believed
that he was some unclean spirit sent forth for the destruction
of Grettir.
There arose an uproar in the church; people
told the king that the man who had come to purge himself was
fighting with those around him. King Olaf came forward into
the church to see what was going on, and said:
"You are a man of ill luck, Grettir. All was
prepared for the ordeal, but it cannot take place now. It is
not possible to contend against your ill-fortune."
Grettir said: "I expected, oh king, more honour
from you for the sake of my family than I now seem likely to
obtain."
Then he told again the story as he had done
before of what had taken place with the men. "Gladly," he
said, "would I enter your service; there is many a man with
you who is not my better as a warrior."
"I know," said the king, "that few are your
equals in strength and courage, but your luck is too bad for
you to remain with me. You have my leave to depart in peace
whithersoever you will for the winter, and then in the summer
you may return to Iceland, where you are destined to lay your
bones."
"First I should like to clear myself of the
charge of burning, if I may," said Grettir; "for I did not do
it intentionally."
"Very likely it is so," said the king; "but
since the purgation has come to naught through your impatience
you cannot clear yourself further than you have done.
Impetuosity always leads to evil. If ever a man was doomed to
misfortune you are."
After that Grettir remained for a time in the
town, but he got nothing more out of Olaf. Then he went to the
South, intending after that to go East to Tunsberg to find his
brother Thorsteinn Dromund. Nothing is told of his journey
till he came to Jadar.
CHAPTER XL
ADVENTURE WITH THE BERSERK SNAEKOLL
At Yule Grettir came to a bondi named Einar, a
man of wealth who had a wife and a marriageable daughter named
Gyrid. She was a beautiful maiden and was considered an
excellent match. Einar invited Grettir to stay over Yule, and
he accepted.
It was no uncommon thing throughout Norway that
robbers and other ruffians came down from the forest and
challenged men to fight for their women, or carried off their
property with violence if there was not sufficient force in
the house to protect them. One day at Yule-tide there came a
whole party of these miscreants to Einar's house. Their leader
was a great berserk named Snaekoll. He challenged Einar to
hand over his daughter to him or else to defend her, if he
felt himself man enough to do so. Now the bondi was no longer
young, and no fighter. He felt that he was in a great
difficulty, and asked Grettir privately what help he would
give him, seeing that he was held to be so famous a man.
Grettir advised him to consent only to what was not
dishonourable. The berserk was sitting on his horse wearing
his helmet, the chin-piece of which was not fastened. He held
before him a shield bound with iron and looked terribly
threatening. He said to the bondi:
"You had better choose quickly: either one
thing or the other. What does that big fellow standing beside
you say? Would he not like to play with me himself?"
"One of us is as good as the other," said
Grettir, "neither of us is very active."
"All the more afraid will you be to fight with
me if I get angry."
"That will be seen when it is tried," said
Grettir.
The berserk thought they were trying to get off
by talking. He began to howl and to bite the rim of his
shield. He held the shield up to his mouth and scowled over
its upper edge like a madman. Grettir stepped quickly across
the ground, and when he got even with the berserk's horse he
kicked the shield with his foot from below with such force
that it struck his mouth, breaking the upper jaw, and the
lower jaw fell down on to his chest. With the same movement he
seized the viking's helmet with his left hand and dragged him
from his horse, while with his right hand he raised his axe
and cut off the berserk's head. Snaekoll's followers when they
saw what had happened fled, every man of them. Grettir did not
care to pursue them for he saw that there was no heart in
them. The bondi thanked him for what he had done, as did many
other men, for the quickness and boldness of his deed had
impressed them much. Grettir stayed there for Yule and was
well taken care of till he left, when the bondi dismissed him
handsomely. Then Grettir went East to Tunsberg to visit his
brother Thorsteinn, who received him joyfully and asked him
about his adventures. Grettir told him how he had killed the
berserk, and composed a verse :
"The warrior's shield by my foot propelled
in conflict came with Snaekoll's mouth.
His nether jaw hung down on his chest,
wide gaped his mouth from the iron ring."
"You would be very handy at many things," said
Thorsteinn, "if misfortune did not follow you."
"Men will tell of deeds that are done," said
Grettir.
CHAPTER XLI
THORSTEINN DROMUND'S ARMS
Grettir stayed with Thorsteinn for the rest of
the winter and on into the spring. One morning when Thorsteinn
and Grettir were above in their sleepingroom Grettir put out
his arm from the bed-clothes and Thorsteinn noticed it when he
awoke. Soon after Grettir woke too, and Thorsteinn said: "I
have been looking at your arms, kinsman, and think it is not
wonderful that your blows fall heavily upon some. Never have I
seen any man's arms that were like yours."
"You may know," said Grettir, "that I should
not have done the deeds I have if I had not been very mighty."
"Yet methinks it would be of advantage," said
Thorsteinn, "if your arm were more slender and your fortune
better."
"True," said Grettir, "is the saying that no
man shapes his own fortune. Let me see your arm."
Thorsteinn showed it to him. He was a tall
lanky man. Grettir smiled and said:
"There is no need to look long at that; all
your ribs are run together. I never saw such a pair of tongs
as you carry about! Why, you are scarcely as strong as a
woman!"
"It may be so," said Thorsteinn, "and yet you
may know that these thin arms of mine and no others will
avenge you some day; -- if you are avenged."
"Who shall know how it will be when the end
comes?" said Grettir; "but that seems unlikely."
No more is related of their conversation. The
spring came and Grettir took a ship for Iceland in the summer.
The brothers parted with friendship and never saw one another
again.
CHAPTER XLII
DEATH OF ASMUND LONGHAIR
We have now to return to where we broke off
before. Thorbjorn Oxmain when he heard of the death of
Thorbjorn Slowcoach flew into a violent passion and said he
wished that more men might deal blows in other people's
houses. Asmund Longhair lay sick for some time in the summer.
When he thought his end was nigh he called his kinsmen round
him and said his will was that Atli should take over all the
property after his day. "I fear," he said, "that the wicked
will scarce leave you in peace. And I wish all my kinsmen to
support him to the best of their power. Of Grettir I can say
nothing, for his condition seems to me like a rolling wheel.
Strong though he is, I fear he will have more dealing with
trouble than with kinsmen's support. And Illugi, though young
now, shall become a man of valiant deeds if he remain
unscathed."
When Asmund had settled everything with his
sons according to his wish his sickness grew upon him. He died
soon after and was buried at Bjarg, where he had had a church
built. All felt his loss deeply.
Atli became a great bondi and kept a large
establishment. He was a great dealer in household provisions.
Towards the end of the summer he went to Snaefellsnes to get
dried fish. He drove several horses with him and rode from
home to Melar in Hrutafjord to his brother-in-law, Gamli. Then
Grim, the son of Thorhall, Gamli's brother, made ready to
accompany him along with another man. They rode West by way of
Haukadalsskard and the road which leads out to the Ness, where
they bought much fish and carried it away-on seven horses;
when all was ready they turned homewards.
CHAPTER XLIII
THE SONS OF THORIR OF SKARD ARE SLAIN BY ATLI
AND GRIM
Thorbjorn Oxmain heard of Atli and Grim having
left home just when Gunnar and Thorgeir, the sons of Thorir of
Skard, were with him. Thorbjorn was jealous of Atli's
popularity and egged on the two brothers, the sons of Thorir,
to lie in wait for him as he returned from Snaefellsnes. They
rode home to Skard and waited there for Atli returning with
his loads. They could see the party from their house as they
passed Skard, and made ready quickly to pursue them with their
servants. Atli on seeing them ordered his horses to be
unloaded.
"Perhaps," he said, "they want to offer me
compensation for my man whom Gunnar slew last summer. We will
not be the first to attack, but if they begin fighting us we
will defend ourselves."
Then they came up and at once sprang off their
horses. Atli greeted them and asked what news there was, and
whether Gunnar desired to offer him some compensation for his
servant. Gunnar answered:
"You men of Bjarg, you deserve something else
than that I should pay compensation for him with my goods.
Thorbjorn whom Grettir slew is worth a higher atonement than
he."
"I have not to answer for that," said Atli,
"nor are you the representative of Thorbjorn."
Gunnar said it would have to be so
nevertheless. "And now," he cried, "let us go for them and
profit by Grettir being away."
There were eight of them, and they set upon
Atli's six. Atli led on his men and drew the sword Jokulsnaut
which Grettir had given him. Thorgeir cried: "Good men are
alike in many things. High did Grettir bear his sword last
summer on Hrutafjardarhals."
Atli answered: "He is more accustomed to deeds
of strength than I am."
Then they fought. Gunnar made a resolute attack
on Atli, and fought fiercely. After they had battled for a
time Atli said:
"There is nothing to be gained by each of us
killing the other's followers. The simplest course would be
for us to play together, for I have never fought with weapons
before."
Gunnar, however, would not have it. Atli bade
his servants look to the packs, and he would see what the
others would do. He made such a vigorous onslaught that
Gunnar's men fell back, and he killed two of them. Then he
turned upon Gunnar himself and struck a blow that severed his
shield right across below the handle, and the sword struck his
leg below the knee. Then with another rapid blow he killed
him.
In the meantime Grim, the son of Thorhall, was
engaging Thorgeir, and a long tussle there was, both of them
being men of great valour. When Thorgeir saw his brother
Gunnar fall he wanted to get away, but Grim pressed upon him
and pursued him until at last his foot tripped and he fell
forward. Then Grim struck him with an axe between the
shoulders, inflicting a deep wound. To the three followers who
were left they gave quarter. Then they bound up their wounds,
reloaded the packs on to the horses and went home, giving
information of the battle. Atli stayed at home with a strong
guard of men that autumn. Thorbjorn Oxmain was not at all
pleased, but could do nothing, because Atli was very wary.
Grim was with him for the winter, and his brother-in-law
Gamli. Another brother-in-law, Glum the son of Ospak from Eyr
in Bitra, was with them too. They had a goodly array of men
settled at Bjarg, and there was much merriment there during
the winter.
CHAPTER XLIV
SETTLEMENT OF THE FEUD AT THE HUNAVATN THING
Thorbfron Oxmain took up the suit arising from
the death of Thorir's sons. He prepared his case against Grim
and Atli, and they prepared their defence on the grounds that
the brothers had attacked them wrongfully and were, therefore,
"ohelgir." The case was brought before the Hunavatn Thing and
both sides appeared in force. Atli had many connections , and
was, therefore, strongly supported. Then those who were
friends of both came forward and tried to effect a
reconciliation; they urged that Atli was a man of good
position and peacefully disposed, though fearless enough when
driven into a strait. Thorbjorn felt that no other honourable
course was open to him but to agree to a reconciliation. Atli
made it a condition that there should be no sentence of
banishment either from the district or the country. Then men
were appointed to arbitrate: Thorvald Asgeirsson on behalf of
Atli, and Solvi the Proud on behalf of Tborbjorn. This Solvi
was a son of Asbrand, the son of Thorbrand, the son of Harald
Ring who had settled in Vatnsnes, taking land as far as
Ambattara to the West, and to the East up to the Thvera and
across to Bjargaoss and the whole side of Bjorg as far as the
sea. Solvi was a person of much display, but a man of sense,
and therefore Thorbjorn chose him as his arbitrator.
The decree of the arbitrators was that half
penalties should be paid for Thorir's sons and half should be
remitted on account of the wrongful attack which they made and
their designs on Atli's life. The slaying of Atli's man at
Hrutafjardarhals should be set off against the two of theirs
who had been killed. Grim the son of Thorhall was banished
from his district and the penalties were to be paid by Atli.
Atli was satisfied with this award, but Thorbjorn was not;
they parted nominally reconciled, but Thorbjorn let drop some
words to the effect that it was not over yet if all happened
as he desired.
Atli rode home from the Thing after thanking
Thorvald for his assistance. Grim the son of Thorhall betook
himself to the South to Borgarfjord and dwelt at Gilsbakki,
where he was known as a worthy bondi.
CHAPTER XLV
ATLI MURDERED BY THORBJORN OXMAIN
There was dwelling with Thorbjorn Oxmain a man
whose name was Ali, a servant, rather stubborn and lazy.
Thorbjorn told him he must work better or he would be beaten.
Ali said he had no mind for work and became abusive. Thorbjorn
was not going to endure that, and got him down and handled him
roughly. After that Ali ran away and went to the North across
the neck to Midfjord; he did not stop till he reached Bjarg.
Atli was at home and asked whither he was going. He said he
was seeking an engagement.
"Are you not a servant of Thorbjorn?" Atli
asked.
"We did not get on with our bargain. I was not
there long, but it seemed to me a bad place while I was there.
Our parting was in such a way that his song on my throat did
not please me. I will never go back there, whatever becomes of
me. And it is true that there is a great difference between
you two in the way you treat your servants. I would be glad to
take service with you if there is a place, for me."
Atli said: "I have servants enough without
stretching forth my hands for those whom Thorbjorn has hired.
You seem an impatient man and had better go back to him."
"I am not going there of my own free will,"
said Ali.
He stayed there for the night, and in the
morning went out to work with Atli's men, and toiled as if he
had hands everywhere. So he continued all the summer; Atli
took no notice of him, but allowed him his food, for he was
pleased with the man's work. Soon Thorbjorn learned that Ali
was at Bjarg. He rode thither with two others and called to
Atli to come out and speak with him. Atli went out and greeted
him.
"You want to begin again provoking me to attack
you, Atli," he said. "Why have you taken away my workman? It
is a most improper thing to do."
Atli replied: "It is not very clear to me that
he is your workman. I do not want to keep him if you can prove
that he belongs to your household; but I cannot drive him out
of my house."
"You must have your way now," said Thorbjorn;
"but I claim the man and protest against his working for you.
I shall come again, and it is not certain that we shall then
part any better friends than we are now."
Atli rejoined: "I shall stay at home and abide
whatever comes to hand."
Thorbjorn then went off home. When the workmen
came back in the evening Atli told them of his conversation
with Thorbjorn and said to Ali that he must go his own ways,
for he was not going to be drawn into a quarrel for employing
him.
Ali said: "True is the ancient saying: The
over-praised are the worst deceivers. I did not think that you
would have turned me off now after I had worked here till I
broke in the summer. I thought that you would have given me
protection. Such is your way, however you play the beneficent.
Now I shall be beaten before your very eyes if you refuse to
stand by me."
Atli's mind was changed after the man had
spoken; he no longer wanted to drive him away.
So the time passed until the hay-harvest began.
One day a little before midsummer Thorbjorn Oxmain rode to
Bjarg. He wore a helmet on his head, a sword was girt at his
side, and in his hand was a spear which had a very broad
blade. The weather was rainy; Atli had sent his men to mow the
hay, and some were in the North at Horn on some work. Atli was
at home with a few men only. Thorbjorn arrived alone towards
midday and rode up to the door. The door was shut and no one
outside. Thorbjorn knocked at the door and then went to the
back of the house so that he could not be seen from the door.
The people in the house heard some one knocking and one of the
women went out. Thorbjorn got a glimpse of the woman, but did
not let himself be seen, for he was seeking another person.
She went back into the room and Atli asked her who had come.
She said she could see nobody outside. As they were speaking
Thorbjorn struck a violent blow on the door. Atli said:
"He wants to see me; perhaps he has some
business with me, for he seems very pressing."
Then he went to the outer door and saw nobody
there. It was raining hard, so he did not go outside, but
stood holding both the door-posts with his hands and peering
round. At that moment Thorbjorn sidled round to the front of
the door and thrust his spear with both hands into Atli's
middle, so that it pierced him through. Atli said when he
received the thrust: "They use broad spear-blades nowadays."
Then he fell forward on the threshold. The
women who were inside came out and saw that he was dead.
Thorbjorn had then mounted his horse; he proclaimed the
slaying and rode home. Asdis, the mistress of the house, sent
for men; Atli's body was laid out and he was buried beside his
father. There was much lamentation over his death, for he was
both wise and beloved. No blood-money was paid for his death,
nor was any demanded, for his representative was Grettir, if
he should ever return to Iceland. The matter rested there
during the summer. Thorbjorn gained little credit by this
deed, but remained quietly at home.
CHAPTER XKVI
SENTENCE OF OUTLAWRY PASSED UPON GRETTIR AT THE
ALL-THING
In that same summer before the assembly of the
Thing there came a ship out to Gasar bringing news of Grettir
and of his house- burning adventure. Thorir of Gard was very
angry when he heard of it and bethought himself of vengeance
for his sons upon Grettir. Thorir rode with a large retinue to
the Thing and laid a complaint in respect of the burning, but
men thought nothing could be done as long as there was no one
to answer the charge. Thorir insisted that he would be content
with nothing short of banishment for Grettir from the whole
country after such a crime. Then Skapti the Lawman said: "It
certainly was an evil deed if all really happened as has been
told. But One man's tale is but half a tale. Most people try
and manage not to improve a story if there is more than one
version of it. I hold that no judgment should be passed for
Grettir's banishment without further proceedings."
Thorir was a notable person and possessed great
influence in the district; many powerful men were his friends.
He pressed his suit so strongly that nothing could be done to
save Grettir. Thorir had him proclaimed an outlaw throughout
the country, and was ever afterwards the most bitter of his
opponents, as he often found. Having put a price upon his
head, as it was usual to do with other outlaws, he rode home.
Many said that the decree was carried more by violence than by
law, but it remained in force. Nothing more happened until
after midsummer.
CHAPTER XLVII
GRETTIR RETURNS TO BJARG -- SVEINN AND HIS
HORSE SADDLE-HEAD
Later in the summer Grettir the son of Asmund
came back to Iceland, landing in the Hvita in Borgarfjord.
People about the district went down to the ship and all the
news came at once upon Grettir, first that his father was
dead, then that his brother was slain, and third that he was
declared outlaw throughout the land. Then he spoke this verse:
"All fell at once upon the bard,
exile, father dead and brother.
Oh man of battle! Many an one
who breaks the swords shall smart for this."
It is told that Grettir changed his manner no
whit for these tidings, but was just as merry as before. He
remained on board his ship for a time because he could not get
a horse to suit him.
There was a man named Sveinn who dwelt at Bakki
up from Thingnes. He was a good bondi and a merry companion;
he often composed verses which it was a delight to listen to.
He had a brown mare, the swiftest of horses, which he called
Saddle-head. Once Grettir left Vellir in the night because he
did not wish the traders to know of it. He got a black cape
and put it over his clothes to conceal himself. He went up
past Thingnes to Bakki, by which time it was light. Seeing a
brown horse in the meadow he went up and put a bridle on it,
mounted on its back and rode up along the Hvita river below
Baer on to the river Flokadalsa and up to the road above
Kalfanes. The men working at Bakki were up by then, and told
the bondi that a man was riding his horse. He got up and
laughed and spoke a verse:
"There rode a man upon Saddle-head's back;
close to the garth the thief has come.
Frey of the Odin's cloud, dreadful of aspect,
appears from his strength to be busy with mischief."
Then he took a horse and rode after him.
Grettir rode on till he came to the settlement at Kropp, where
he met a man named Halli who said he was going down to the
ship at Vellir. Grettir then spoke a verse:
"Tell, oh tell in the dwellings abroad
tell thou hast met with Saddle-head.
The handler of dice in sable cowl
sat on his back; hasten, oh Halli!"
Then they parted. Halli went along the road as
far as Kalfanes before he met Sveinn. They greeted each other
hurriedly and Sveinn said:
"Saw you that loafer ride from the dwellings?
Sorely he means my patience to try.
The people about shall deal with him roughly;
blue shall his body be if I meet him."
"You can know from what I tell you," said
Halli, "that I met the man who said he was riding Saddle-head,
and he told me to spread it abroad in the dwellings and the
district. He was a huge man in a black cloak."
"Well, he seems to think something of himself,"
said the bondi. "I mean to know who he is."
Then he went on after him. Grettir came to
Deildartunga and found a woman outside. He began to talk to
her and spoke a verse:
"Mistress august! Go tell of the jest
that the serpent of earth has past on his way.
The garrulous brewer of Odin's mead
will come to Gilsbakki before he will rest."
The woman learned the verse and Grettir rode
on. Soon after Sveinn rode up; she was still outside, and when
he came he spoke the verse:
"Who was the man who a moment ago
rode past on a dusky horse in the storm?
The hound-eyed rascal, practised in mischief.
This day I will follow his steps to the end."
She told him as she had been taught. He
considered the lines and said: "It is not unlikely that this
man is no play-fellow for me. But I mean to catch him."
He then rode along the cultivated country. Each
could see the other's path. The weather was stormy and wet.
Grettir reached Gilsbakki that day, where Grim the son of
Thorhall welcomed him warmly and begged him to stay, which he
did. He let Saddle-head run loose and told Grim how he had
come by her. Then Sveinn came up, dismounted and saw his
horse. Then he said:
"Who has ridden on my mare?
Who will pay me for her hire?
Who ever saw such an arrant thief?
What next will be the cowl-man's game?"
Grettir had then put off his wet clothes, and
heard the ditty. He said:
"Home I rode the mare to Grim's,
a better man than the hovel-dweller!
Nothing will I pay for hire!
Now we may be friends again."
"Just so shall it be," said the bondi. "Your
ride on the horse is fully paid for."
Then they each began repeating verses, and
Grettir said he could not blame him for looking after his
property. The bondi stayed there the night and they had great
jokes about the matter. The verses they made were called
"Saddle-head verses." In the morning the bondi rode home,
parting good friends with Grettir. Grim told Grettir of many
things that had been done in Midfjord in the North during his
absence, and that no blood-money had been paid for Atli.
Thorbjorn Oxmain's interest, he said, was so great that there
was no certainty of Grettir's mother, Asdis, being allowed to
remain at Bjarg if the feud continued.
Grettir stayed but a few nights with Grim, for
he did not want it to become known that he was about to travel
North across the Heath. Grim told him to come back to visit
him if he needed protection. "Yet," he said, "I would gladly
avoid the penalty of being outlawed for harbouring you."
Grettir bade him farewell and said: "It is more
likely that I shall need your good services still more later
on."
Then Grettir rode North over the Tvidaegra
Heath to Bjarg, where he arrived at midnight. All were asleep
except his mother. He went to the back of the house and
entered by a door which was there, for he knew all the ways
about. He entered the hall and went to his mother's bed,
groping his way. She asked who was there. Grettir told her.
She sat up and turned to him, heaving a weary sigh as she
spoke:
"Welcome, my kinsman! My hoard of sons has
quickly passed away. He is killed who was most needful to me;
you have been declared an outlaw and a criminal; my third is
so young that he can do nothing."
"It is an ancient saying," said Grettir, "that
one evil is mended by a worse one. There is more in the heart
of man than money can buy; Atli may yet be avenged. As for me,
there will be some who think they have had enough in their
dealings with me."
She said that was not unlikely. Grettir stayed
there for a time, but few knew of it, and he obtained news of
the movements of the men of the district. It was not known
then that he had come to Midfjord. He learned that Thorbjorn
Oxmain was at home with few men. This was after the
hay-harvest.
CHAPTER XLVIII
DEATH OF THORBJORN OXMAIN
One fine day Grettir rode to the West across
the ridge to Thoroddsstad, where he arrived about noon and
knocked at the door. Some women came out and greeted him, not
knowing who he was. He asked for Thorbjorn, and they told him
that he was gone out into the fields to bind hay with his
sixteen-year-old son Arnor. Thorbjorn was a hard worker and
was scarcely ever idle. Grettir on hearing that bade them
farewell and rode off North on the road to Reykir. There is
some marsh-land stretching away from the ridge with much
grass-land, where Thorbjorn had made a quantity of hay which
was just dry. He was just about to bind it up for bringing in
with the help of his son, while a woman gathered up what was
left. Grettir rode to the field from below, Thorbjorn and his
son being above him; they had finished one load and were
beginning a second. Thorbjorn had laid down his shield and
sword against the load, and his son had his hand-axe near him.
Thorbjorn saw a man coming and said to his son:
"There is a man riding towards us; we had better stop binding
the hay and see what he wants."
They did so; Grettir got off his horse. He had
a helmet on his head, a short sword by his side, and a great
spear in his hand without barbs and inlaid with silver at the
socket. He sat down and knocked out the rivet which fastened
the head in order to prevent Thorbjorn from returning the
spear upon him.
Thorbjorn said: "This is a big man. I am no
good at judging men if that is not Grettir the son of Asmund.
No doubt be thinks that he has sufficient business with us. We
will meet him boldly and show him no signs of fear. We must
act with a plan. I will go on ahead towards him and see how we
get on together, for I will trust myself against any man if I
can meet him alone. Do you go round and get behind him; take
your axe with both hands and strike him between the shoulders.
You need not fear that he will hurt you, for his back will be
turned towards you."
Neither of them had a helmet. Grettir went
along the marsh and when he was within range launched his
spear at Thorbjorn. The head was not so firm as he had
intended it to be, so it got loose in its flight and fell off
on to the ground. Thorbjorn took his shield, held it before
him, drew his sword and turned against Grettir directly he
recognised him. Grettir drew his sword, and, turning round a
little, saw the boy behind him; so he kept continually on the
move. When he saw that the boy was within reach he raised his
sword aloft and struck Arnor's head with the back of it such a
blow that the skull broke and he died. Then Thorbjorn rushed
upon Grettir and struck at him, but he parried it with the
buckler in his left hand and struck with his sword a blow
which severed Thorbjorn's shield in two and went into his
head, reaching the brain. Thorbjorn fell dead. Grettir gave
him no more wounds; he searched for the spear-head but could
not find it. He got on to his horse, rode to Reykir and
proclaimed the slaying.
The woman who was out in the field with them
witnessed the battle. She ran home terrified and told the news
that Thorbjorn and his son were killed. The people at home
were much taken aback, for no one was aware of Grettir's
arrival. They sent to the next homestead for men, who came in
plenty and carried the body to the church. The bloodfeud then
fell to Thorodd Drapustuf, who at once called out his men.
Grettir rode home to Bjarg and told his mother
what had happened. She was very glad and said he had now shown
his kinship to the Vatnsdal race. "And yet," she said, "this
is the root and the beginning of your outlawry; for certain I
know that your dwelling here will not be for long by reason of
Thorbjorn's kinsmen, and now they may know that they have the
means of annoying you."
Grettir then spoke a verse:
"Atli's death was unatoned;
fully now the debt is paid."
Asdis said it was true: "but I know not what
counsel you now mean to take."
Grettir said he meant now to visit his friends
and kinsmen in the western regions, and that she should have
no unpleasantness on his account. Then he made ready to go,
and parted with much affection from his mother. First he went
to Melar in Hrutafjord and recounted to his brother-in-law
Gamli all his adventure with Thorbjorn. Gamli begged him to
betake himself away from Hrutafjord while the kinsmen of
Thorbjorn were abroad with their men, and said they would
support him in the suit about Atli's slaying to the best of
their power. Then Grettir rode to the West across the Laxardal
Heath and did not stop before he reached Ljarskogar, where he
stayed some time in the autumn with Thorsteinn Kuggason.
CHAPTER XLIX
GRETTIR VISITS THORSTEINN KUGGASON AND SNORRI
GODI
Thorodd Drapustuf now made inquiries who it was
who had killed Thorbjorn and his son. They went to Reykir,
where they were told that Grettir had proclaimed the slaying.
Thorodd then saw how matters stood and went to Bjarg, where he
found many people and asked whether Grettir was there. Asdis
said that he was gone, and that he would not hide if he were
at home.
"You can be well content to leave things as
they are. The vengeance for Atli was not excessive, if it be
reckoned up. No one asked what I had to suffer then, and now
it were well for it to rest."
Then they rode home, and it seemed as if there
were nothing to be done. The spear which Grettir had lost was
never found until within the memory of men now living. It was
found in the later days of Sturla the Lawman, the son of
Thord, in the very marsh where Thorbjorn fell, now called
Spearmarsh. This is the proof that he was killed there and not
in Midfitjar, as has been elsewhere asserted.
Thorbjorn's kinsmen learned of Grettir's being
in Ljarskogar and called together their men with the purpose
of going there. Gamli heard of this at Melar and sent word to
Thorsteinn and Grettir of their approach. Thorsteinn sent
Grettir on to Tunga to Snorri the Godi, with whom he was then
at peace, and advised Grettir to ask for his protection, and
if it were refused to go West to Thorgils the son of Ari in
Reykjaholar, "who will surely take you in for the winter. Stay
there in the Western fjords until the affair is settled."
Grettir said he would follow his counsel. He
rode to Tunga where he found Snorri and asked to be taken in.
Snorri answered: "I am now an old man, and have no mind to
harbour outlaws, unless in a case of necessity. But what has
happened that the old man should have turned you out?"
Grettir said that Thorsteinn had often shown
him kindness; "but we shall need more than him alone to do any
good."
Snorri said: "I will put in my word on your
behalf, if it will be of any use to you. But you must seek
your quarters elsewhere than with me."
So they parted. Grettir then went West to
Reykjanes. The men of Hrutafjord came with their followers to
Samsstad, where they heard that Grettir had left Ljarskogar,
and went back home.
CHAPTER L
GRETTIR WINTERS WITH THORGILS AT REYKJAHOLAR IN
COMPANY WITH THE FOSTER-BROTHERS
Grettir came to Reykjaholar towards the
beginning of the winter and asked Thorgils to let him stay the
winter with him. Thorgils said he was welcome to his
entertainment, like other free men; "but," he said, "we do not
pay much attention to the preparation of the food."
Grettir said that would not trouble him.
"There is another little difficulty," Thorgils
continued. "Some men are expected here who are a little
hot-headed, namely, the foster-brothers Thorgeir and Thormod.
I do not know how it will suit you to be together with them.
They shall always have entertainment here whenever they wish
for it. You may stay here if you will, but I will not have any
of you behaving ill to the others."
Grettir said that he would not be the first to
raise a quarrel with any man, more especially since the bondi
had expressed his wish to him.
Soon after the foster-brothers came up.
Thorgeir and Grettir did not take very kindly to one another,
but Thormod behaved with propriety. Thorgils said to them what
he had said to Grettir, and so great was the deference paid to
him that none of them spoke an improper word to the other,
although they did not always think alike. In this way the
first part of the winter was passed.
Men say that the islands called Olafseyjar,
lying in the fjord about a mile and a half from Reykjanes,
belonged to Thorgils. He had there a valuable ox, which he had
not brought away in the autumn. He was always saying that he
wanted him to be brought in before Yule. One day the
foster-brothers prepared to go and fetch the ox, but wanted a
third man to help them. Grettir offered to go with them and
they were very glad to have him. So the three set out in a
ten-oared boat. The weather was cold and the wind from the
North; the boat was lying at Hvalshausholm. When they left the
wind had freshened a little; they reached the island and
caught the ox. Grettir asked whether they preferred to ship
the ox or to hold the boat, for there was a high surf running
on the shore. They told him to hold the boat. He stood by her
middle on the side away from the land, the sea reaching right
up to beneath his shoulders, but he held the boat firmly so
that she could not drift. Thorgeir took the ox by the stern
and Thormod by the head, and so they hove him into the boat.
Then they started heading for the bay, Thormod taking the
bow-oars with Thorgeir amidships and Grettir in the stern. By
the time they reached Hafraklett the wind was very high.
Thorgeir said: "The stern is slackening."
Grettir said: "The stem will not be left behind
if the rowing amidships is all right."
Thorgeir then bent his back to the oars and
pulled so violently that both the rowlocks carried away. He
said:
"Pull on, Grettir, whilst I mend the rowlocks."
Grettir pulled vigorously whilst Thorgeir
mended the rowlocks. But when Thorgeir was about to take over
the oars again they were so damaged that on Grettir giving
them a shake on the gunwale they broke. Thormod said it would
be better to row less and not to break the ship. Then Grettir
took two spars which were on board, bored two holes in the
gunwale, and rowed so energetically that every timber creaked.
As the boat was well found and the men in good condition they
reached Hvalshausholm. Grettir asked whether they would go on
home with the ox or whether they would beach the boat. They
preferred to beach the boat, and they did so with all the
water that was in her all frozen. Grettir got off the ox,
which was very stiff in its limbs and very fat and tired; when
they got to Titlingsstad it could go no more. The
foster-brothers went home, for none of them would help the
other at his job. Thorgils asked after Grettir; they told him
how they had parted, and he sent men out to him. When they
came below Hellisholar they saw a man coming towards them with
an ox on his back; it was Grettir carrying the ox. They all
admired his great feat, but Thorgeir became rather jealous of
Grettir's strength.
One day soon after Yule Grettir went out alone
to bathe. Thorgeir knew of it and said to Thormod: "Let us go
out now and see what Grettir does if I attack him as he comes
out of the water"
"I don't care to do that," Thormod said; "and I
do not think you will get any good from him."
"I mean to go," Thorgeir said.
He went down to the bank, carrying his axe
aloft. Grettir was just coming out of the water, and when they
met Thorgeir said: "Is it true, Grettir, that you once said
you would not run away from any single person."
"I don't know whether I did," Grettir said;
"but I have scarcely run away from you."
Thorgeir raised his axe. In a moment Grettir
ran at him and brought him over with a heavy fall. Thorgeir
said to Thormod: "Are you going to stand there while this
devil knocks me down?"
Thormod then got Grettir by the leg and tried
to drag him off Thorgeir but could not. He was wearing a short
sword, and was just about to draw it when Thorgils came up and
told them to behave themselves and not to fight with Grettir.
They did as he bade and made out that it was all play. They
had no more strife, so far as has been told, and men thought
Thorgils blessed by fortune in having been able to pacify men
of such violent tempers.
When the spring set in they all departed.
Grettir went on to Thorskafjord. When some one asked him how
he liked his entertainment at Reykjaholar he answered: "Our
fare was such that I enjoyed my food very much -- when I could
get it." Then he went West over the heath.
CHAPTER LI
GRETTIR'S CASE OVERBORNE AT THE ALL-THING
Thorgils, the son of Ari, rode to the Thing
with a large following. All the magnates were there from all
parts of the country, and he soon met with Skapti the Lawman
and had some talk with him. Skapti said:
"Is it true, Thorgils, that you have been
giving winter entertainment to three of the most unruly men in
the country, all three of them outlaws, and that you kept
order so well that none of them did any harm to the other?"
Thorgils said it was true.
Skapti said: "Well, I think it shows what
authority you possess. But how did their characters appear to
you? Who is the most valorous among them?"
"They are all entirely valiant," he answered,
"but of two of them I will not say that they never fear; only
there is a difference. Thormod fears God, and is a man of
great piety; and Grettir fears the dark. He will not, if he
may follow his own inclination, venture anywhere after
nightfall. But Thorgeir, my kinsman, he I think cannot fear."
"They must be each of them as you say," said
Skapti, and there their conversation ended.
At the Thing Thorodd Drapustuf laid his
complaint in the matter of the slaying of Thorbjorn Oxmain,
for he had failed in the Hunavatn Thing through the influence
of Atli's kinsmen. Here he thought that there was less
likelihood of his case being overborne. Atli's party sought
counsel of Skapti the Lawman; he said that their defence
appeared to him a good one, and that full blood-money would
have to be paid for Atli. Then the case was brought before the
judges, and the opinion of the majority was that the slaying
of Atli was set off by that of Thorbjorn. Skapti when he heard
of it went to the judges and asked them on what grounds their
decision rested; they said that the two slain bondis were of
equal rank.
Skapti asked: "Which happened first, the
outlawing of Grettir or the death of Atli?"
"They reckoned up and found that a week had
elapsed between the two events. Grettir was outlawed at the
All-Tliing and Atli was killed just after it.
"That was what I expected," Skapti said. "You
have overlooked the facts; you have treated as a party to the
suit a man who was an outlaw, a man who was stopped from
appearing either as plaintiff or defendant. I maintain that
Grettir has no standing in the case, and that it must be
brought by the kinsmen of the deceased who are nearest at
law."
Thorodd Drapustuf said: "Who then is to answer
for the slaying of my brother Thorbjorn?"
"See to that yourself," said Skapti. "Grettir's
kinsmen are not liable to pay for his deeds unless his
sentence be removed."
When Thorvald the son of Asgeir learned of
Grettir's status in court having been disallowed, inquiry was
made for Atli's nearest of kin, and these were found to be
Skeggi the son of Gamli at Melar and Ospak the son of Glum of
Eyr in Bitra. Both were valiant and strenuous men. Thorodd was
then mulcted in blood- money for the slaying of Atli and had
to pay two hundreds of silver.
Then Snorri the Godi spoke:
"Men of Hrutafjord! Are you willing now to
agree to the remission of the fine in consideration of
Grettir's sentence being commuted? I expect that as an outlaw
he will bite you sorely."
Grettir's kinsmen welcomed this proposal, and
said they did not care about the money if Grettir could have
peace and freedom. Thorodd said he saw that his case was beset
with difficulties, and that for his part he was willing to
accept the proposal. Snorri said that inquiry must first be
made whether Thorir of Gard would agree to Grettir being
freed. When Thorir heard of it he was furious, and said that
never should Grettir either go or come out of his outlawry. So
far from consenting to his being amnestied, he would put a
higher price upon his head than was put upon any other outlaw.
When they knew that he would take it so ill,
nothing more was said about the amnesty. Ospak and Skeggi took
the money that was paid and kept it, while Thorodd Drapustuf
got no compensation for his brother Thorbjorn. He and Thorir
each offered a reward of three marks of silver for Grettir's
head; this seemed to men to be an innovation, for never before
had more than three marks in all been offered. Snorri said it
was very unwise to make such efforts to keep a man outlawed
who could do so much mischief, and that many would suffer for
it. Then they parted and men rode home from the Thing.
CHAPTER LII
GRETTIR IS CAPTURED BY FARMERS AND RELEASED BY
THORBJORG
Grettir went over the Thorskafjord Heath to
Langadal, where he let his hands sweep over the property of
the smaller cultivators, taking what he wanted from every one.
From some he got weapons, from others clothes. They gave up
their property very variously, but when he was gone all said
that they had been compelled to do it.
There dwelt on the Vatnsfjord one Vermund the
Slender, a brother of Viga-Styr, who had married Thorbjorg the
daughter of Olaf Peacock, the son of Hoskuld, called Thorbjorg
the Fat. At the time when Grettir was in Langadal Vermund was
away at the Thing. He went across the ridge to Laugabol where
a man named Helgi was living, one of the principal bondis.
Thence Grettir took a good horse belonging to the bondi and
rode on to Gervidal, where dwelt a man named Thorkell. He was
well provided but in a small way of business. Grettir took
from him what he wanted, Thorkell daring neither to withhold
anything nor to protest. Thence Grettir went to Eyr and on to
the coast of the fjord, obtaining food and clothes from every
homestead and making himself generally disagreeable, so that
men found it hard to live while he was about.
Grettir went boldly on, taking little care of
himself. He went on until he came to Vatnsfjardardal and
entered a dairy shelter, where he stayed several nights. There
he lay sleeping in the forest, fearing for nothing. When the
shepherds learned of it they reported in the homesteads that a
fiend had come into the place who they thought would be hard
to deal with. All the farmers came together and a band of
thirty of them concealed themselves in the forest where
Grettir could not know of them. They set one of the shepherds
to watch for an opportunity of seizing him, without however
knowing very clearly who the man was.
One day when Grettir was lying asleep the
farmers came up to him. They considered how they should take
him with least danger to themselves, and arranged that ten
should fall upon him while others laid bonds round his feet.
They threw themselves on to him, but Grettir struggled so
violently that he threw them all off and came down on his
hands and knees. Then they threw ropes round his feet. Grettir
kicked two of them in the ears and they fell senseless. One
came on after the other; long and hard he struggled, but at
last they succeeded in getting him down and binding him. Then
they began to ask themselves what they were going to do with
him. They asked Helgi of Laugabol to take him over and look
after him until Vermund returned from the Thing.
He said: "I have something better to do than to
keep my men guarding him. I have labour enough with my lands,
and he shall not come in my way."
Then they asked Thorkell of Gervidal to take
him and said he had sufficient means. He objected strongly and
said he had no accommodation for him, "I lie at home with my
wife, far from other men. You shall not bring your basket to
me."
"Then you, Thoralf of Eyr," they said; "you
take Grettir and look after him well while the Thing lasts, or
else hand him on to the next farm; only be answerable for his
not escaping. Give him over bound, just as you receive him."
He said: "I am not going to take Grettir. I
have neither means nor money to keep him, nor was he captured
on my property. So far as I can see much more trouble than
credit is to be got by taking him or having anything to do
with him. He shall not enter my house."
Each of the bondis was asked, but all refused.
Some witty person wrote a poem about these confabulations and
called it "Grettir's Faring," adding many jests of his own for
the dilectification of men. After parleying for a long time
they all came to an agreement that they would not throw away
their luck, and set to work to raise a gallows there and then
in the forest upon which Grettir should hang. Their delight
over this proposal was uproarious.
Then they saw three people riding along the
valley from below, one of them in a dyed dress. They guessed
that it must be Thorbjorg the mistress of Vatnsfjord on her
way to the dairy, and so it was. Thorbjorg was a person of
great magnificence, and tremendously wise. She was the leading
personage of the district and managed everything when Vermund
was away. She came up to where the crowd was gathered and was
lifted from her horse; the bondis saluted her respectfully.
She said:
"What is your meeting about? Who is this
thick-necked man sitting there in bonds?"
Grettir told his name and saluted her.
"What has moved you, Grettir," she said, "to
commit violence upon my Thing-men?"
"I cannot overlook everything," he said. "I
must be somewhere."
"You are indeed unfortunate," she said, "that a
pack of churls like these should have captured you and that
none of them should have paid for it. What are you men going
to do with him?"
The bondis said that they were going to hoist
him on to a gallows for his misdeeds.
She said: "It may be that Grettir has deserved
it, but it will bring trouble upon you men of Isafjord if you
take the life of a man so renowned and so highly connected as
Grettir, ill-starred though he be. Now what will you do for
your life, Grettir, if I give it to you?"
"What do you wish me to do?"
"You shall swear never to commit any violence
here in Isafjord; nor shall you take revenge upon those who
have had a hand in capturing you."
Grettir said it should be as she desired, and
he was released. He said it was the greatest effort of
self-restraint that he ever made that he did not thrash the
men who were there triumphing over him. Thorbjorg told him to
come home with her and gave him a horse to ride on. So he went
to Vatnsfjord and stayed there well cared for by the mistress
until Vermund returned. She gained great renown from this deed
through the district. Vermund was very much put out when he
got home and asked why Grettir was there. Thorbjorg told him
everything which had happened with the Isafjord men.
"To what does he owe it that you gave him his
life?" he asked.
"Many reasons there were," she said. "The first
is that you might be the more respected as a chief for having
a wife who would dare to do such a thing. Next, his kinswoman
Hrefna will surely say that I could not let him be slain; and
thirdly, because he is in many respects a man of the highest
worth."
"You are a wise woman," he said, "in most
things. I thank you for what you have done."
Then he said to Grettir: "You have sold
yourself very cheap, such a man of prowess as you are, to let
yourself be taken by churls. This is what always happens to
those who cannot control themselves."
Grettir then spoke a verse:
"Full was my cup in Isafjord
when the old swine held me at ransom."
"What were they going to do with you when they
took you?" Vermund asked.
"To Sigar's lot my neck was destined
when noble Thorbjorg came upon them."
"Would they have hanged you then if they had
been left to themselves?"
"My neck would soon have been in the noose,
had she not wisely saved the bard."
"Did she invite you to her home?"
"She bade me home with her to fare.
A steed she gave me, life and peace."
"Great will your life be and troublous," said
Vermund; "but now you have learnt to beware of your foes. I
cannot keep you here, for it would rouse the enmity of many
powerful men against me. Your best way is to seek your
kinsmen; there are not many who will be willing to take you in
if they can do anything else; nor are you one who will easily
follow the will of another man."
Grettir remained for a time in Vatnsfjord and
went thence to the Western fjords and tried several of the
leading men there, but something always happened to prevent
their taking him in.
CHAPTER LIII
GRETTIR WINTERS IN LJARSKOGAR WITH THORSTEINN
KUGGASON
During the autumn Grettir returned to the South
and did not stop till he came to his kinsman Thorsteinn
Kuggason in Ljarskogar, who welcomed him. He accepted
Thorsteinn's invitation to stay the winter with him.
Thorsteinn was a man who worked very hard; he was a smith, and
kept a number of men working for him. Grettir was not one for
hard work, so that their dispositions did not agree very well.
Thorsteinn had had a church built on his lands, with a bridge
from his house, made with much ingenuity. Outside the bridge,
on the beam which supported it, rings were fastened and bells,
which could be heard from Skarfsstadir half a sea-mile distant
when any one walked over the bridge. The building of the
bridge had cost Thorsteinn, who was a great worker in iron,
much labour. Grettir was a first-rate hand at forging the
iron, but was not often inclined to work at it. He was very
quiet during the winter so that there is not much to relate.
The men of Hrutafjord heard that Grettir was
with Thorsteinn, and gathered their forces in the spring.
Thorsteinn then told Grettir that he must find some other
hiding-place for himself, since he would not work. Men who did
nothing did not suit him.
"Where do you mean me to go to? "asked Grettir.
Thorsteinn told him to go South to his kinsmen,
but to return to him if he found them of no use.
Grettir did so. He went to Borgarfjord in the
South to visit Grim the son of Thorhall, and stayed with him
till the Thing was over. Grim sent him on to Skapti the Lawman
at Hjalli. He went South over the lower heaths and did not
stop before he reached Tunga, where he went to Thorhall, the
son of Asgrim the son of Ellidagrim, and paid few visits to
the farms around. Thorhall knew of Grettir through the
relations which had been between their ancestors; indeed
Grettir's name was well known throughout the country because
of his exploits. Thorhall was a wise man and treated Grettir
well, but did not want to keep him there for very long.
CHAPTER LIV
ADVENTURE WITH LOPT
Grettir went from Tunga up the Haukadal valley
northwards to Kjol and was there for some time in the summer.
For men travelling either to the North or to the South there
was no certainty of their not being stripped of what they had
on them, for he was hard pressed for the means of living.
One day when Grettir was keeping to the North
near Dufunesskeid he saw a man riding South along the Kjol
valley. He was a tall man on horseback, riding a good horse
with a studded bridle, and was leading another horse loaded
with sacks. He had a slouched hat on his head, so that his
face was not clearly seen. Grettir was very pleased to see his
horse and his property, and went to meet him and asked him his
name. He said it was Lopt, and added: "I know what your name
is; you are Grettir the Strong, son of Asmund. Whither are you
going?"
"I have not made up my mind yet about that,"
said Grettir. "My present business is to know whether you will
lay off some of the property which you are travelling with."
"Why should I give you what belongs to me? What
will you give me for the things?"
"Have you not heard that I never pay anything?
And yet it seems to most people that I get what I want."
Lopt said: "Make this offer to those who seem
good to you; I am not going to give my property away for
nothing. Let us each go our own way." Then he whipped on his
horse and was about to ride away from Grettir.
"We shall not part so quickly as that," said
Grettir, and seized the bridle of Lopt's horse in front of his
hands, pulled it from him and held it with both hands.
"Go your own way," said Lopt; "you will get
nothing from me as long as I am able to hold it."
"That shall now be tried," said Grettir.
Lopt reached down along the cheek-strap and got
hold of the reins between the end ring and Grettir's hands,
pulling with such force that Grettir let go, and at last Lopt
wrenched the whole bridle away from him. Grettir looked at his
palms and thought that this man must have strength in his
claws rather than not. Then he looked at him and said: "Where
are you going to now?
He answered:
"To the storm-driven den, over ice-clad heights,
I ride to the rock and the rest of the hand."
Grettir said: "There is no certainty to be had
from asking where your dwelling is if you do not speak more
clearly." Then Lopt spake and said:
"I seek not to hide thy ways from thy ken.
'Tis the place which the Borgfirdings Balljokull call."
Then they parted. Grettir saw that he had no
strength against this man. Then he spoke a verse:
"Illugi brave and Atli were far.
Never again may such hap be mine!
The bridle was torn away from my hand.
Her tears will flow when I am afeared."
After this Grettir left Kjol and went South to
Hjalli where he asked Skapti for shelter. Skapti said: "I am
told that you are acting with violence and are robbing men of
their property; that ill becomes a man so highly connected as
you are. It would be easier to negotiate if you gave up
robbing. Now as I am called Lawman of this country, it would
not be seemly for me to break the law by harbouring outlaws. I
would like you to betake yourself somewhere where you do not
need to commit robbery."
Grettir said he would be very glad to, but that
he could scarcely live alone owing to his fear of the dark.
Skapti said he would have to content himself with something
short of the best: "And trust no one so fully that what
happened to you in the Western fjords may be repeated. Many
have been brought to death by over-confidence."
Grettir thanked him for his good advice and
turned back to Borgarfjord in the autumn, when he went to his
friend Grim, the son of Thorhall, and told him what Skapti had
said. Grim advised him to go to the North to Fiskivotn in the
Arnarvatn Heath, and he did so.
CHAPTER LV
GRETTIR IN THE ARNARVATN HEATH. DEATH OF GRIM
THE FOREST-MAN
Grettir went up to the Arnarvatn Heath and
built himself a hut there of which the remains are still to be
seen. He went there because he wanted to do anything rather
than rob, so he got himself a net and a boat and went out
fishing to support himself. It was a weary time for him in the
mountains because of his fear of the dark. Other outlaws heard
of his having come there and wanted to go and see him,
thinking that he would be a great protection to them.
There was an outlaw from the North named Grim.
This man was bribed by those of Hrutafjord to kill Grettir.
They promised him pardon and money if he succeeded. He went to
visit Grettir and asked for his hospitality.
Grettir said: "I do not see how you will be
holpen by coming to me, and you men of the forest are
untrustworthy. But it is ill to live alone; I have no choice.
Only he shall be with me who is willing to work at whatever
comes to hand."
Grim said that was just what he wished and
pressed Grettir much, until Grettir let himself be persuaded
and took him in. He stayed there right into the winter, and
watched Grettir closely, but it seemed no easy matter to
attack him, for Grettir was suspicious and kept his weapons at
hand night and day; when he was awake the man would not
venture to approach him.
One morning Grim came home from fishing and
went into the hut stamping with his feet and wanting to know
whether Grettir was asleep. Grettir lay still and did not
move. There was a short sword hanging above his head. Grim
thought he would never have a better opportunity. He made a
loud noise to see whether Grettir took any notice, but he did
not, so Grim felt sure that he was asleep. He crept stealthily
to the bed, reached up to the sword, took it down and raised
it to strike. just at the moment when he raised it Grettir
sprang up on to the floor, and, seizing the sword with one
hand, Grim with the other, hurled him over so that he fell
nearly senseless. "This is how you have proved yourself with
all your friendly seeming," he said. Then he got the whole
truth out of him and killed him. He learned from this what it
was to take in a forest-man. So the winter passed. The hardest
thing of all to bear was his fear of the dark.
CHAPTER LVI
TREACHERY AND DEATH OF THORIR REDBEARD
Thorir of Gard now heard where Grettir had
taken up his abode and meant to leave no stone unturned to get
him slain. There was a man named Thorir Redbeard, a stout man
and a great fighter, on which account he had been declared
outlaw throughout the country. Thorir of Gard sent word to
him, and when they met asked Redbeard to undertake the
business of slaying Grettir. Redbeard said that was no easy
task, as Grettir was very wide awake and very cautious. Thorir
told him to try it, saying: "It would be a splendid deed for a
valiant man like you; I will get your outlawing removed and
give you sufficient money as well."
So Redbeard agreed and Thorir told him how he
should go to work to deal with Grettir. Redbeard then went
away into the East in order that Grettir might not suspect
where he came from. Thence he came to the Arnarvatn Heath,
where Grettir had then been for one winter, found Grettir and
asked him for entertainment. He said: "I cannot allow people
to play with me again as the man did who came here last
autumn, pretending to be very friendly; before he had been
here very long be began plotting against my life. I cannot
risk taking in anymore forest-men."
"I think you have reason," Thorir said, "to
mistrust forest-men. It may be you have heard tell of me as a
man of blood and a disturber of peace, but never did you hear
of such a monstrous deed of me as that I betrayed my host. Ill
is the lot of him who has an ill name; for men think of him
but as such; nor would I have come here if I had had any
better choice. All is not lost for us if we stand together.
You might venture so much to begin with as to try how you like
me, and then if you find any unfitness in me turn me away."
"Well," said Grettir, "I will risk it with you;
but know of a surety that if I suspect you of any treachery it
will be your death."
Thorir agreed. Grettir took him in and found
that in whatever he did he had the strength of two men. He was
ready for anything that Grettir gave him to do. Nothing did
Grettir need to do for himself, and he had never lived so
comfortably since he had become an outlaw. Nevertheless he was
so wary that Thorir got no chance. Two years was Thorir
Redbeard with Grettir on the Heath, and at last he began to
weary of it. He thought over what he could do to take Grettir
off his guard.
One night in the spring a heavy gale sprang up
while they were asleep. Grettir awoke and asked where their
boat was. Thorir sprang up, ran to the boat, broke her all in
pieces, and threw the fragments about so that it looked as if
the storm had wrecked her. Then he returned to the hut and
said aloud: "You have had bad luck, my friend. Our boat is all
broken in pieces and the nets are lying far out in the lake."
"Get them back then," said Grettir. "It seems
to me to be your doing that the boat is smashed."
"Of all things which I can do," said Thorir,
"swimming is that which suits me least. In almost anything
else I think I can hold my own with any ordinary man. You know
very well that I have been no burden to you since I came here;
nor would I ask you to do this if I were able to do it
myself."
Grettir then arose, took his arms and went to
the lake. There was a point of land running out into the lake
with a large bay on the further side of it. The water was deep
up to the shore. Grettir said: "Swim out to the nets and let
me see what you are able to do."
"I told you before," Thorir said, "that I
cannot swim. I do not know now where all your boldness and
daring are gone to."
"I could get the nets," he said; "but betray me
not if I trust you."
"Do not think such shameful and monstrous
things of me," said Thorir.
"You will prove yourself what you are," Grettir
said.
Then he threw off his clothes and his weapons
and swain out to the nets. He gathered them together, returned
to the shore and cast them up on to the bank. just as he was
about to land Thorir quickly seized his short sword and drew
it. He ran towards Grettir as he stepped on to the bank and
aimed a blow at him. Grettir threw himself down backwards into
the water and sank like a stone. Thorir stood by the shore
intending to guard it until he came up. Grettir swam beneath
the water, keeping close to the bank so that Thorir could not
see him, and so reached the bay behind him, where he landed
without letting himself be seen. The first Thorir knew of it
was when Grettir lifted him up over his head and dashed him
down with such violence that the sword fell out of his hand.
Grettir got possession of it and without speaking a word cut
off his head. So his life ended. After that Grettir refused to
take in any forest-men, and yet he could not live alone.
CHAPTER LVII
ATTACK ON GRETTIR BY THORIR OF GARD WITH EIGHTY
MEN REPULSED WITH THE AID OF HALLMUND
At the All-Thing Thorir of Gard learned of
Thorir Redbeard having been killed. It was evident that the
matter was not so easy to deal with. He now determined to ride
from the Thing in a westerly direction through the lower
heath, and with the aid of about eighty men whom he had with
him to take Grettir's life. Grim the son of Thorhall heard of
his plans and sent word to Grettir, bidding him beware of
himself. Grettir therefore continued closely to watch the
movements of men who came and went.
One day he saw a number of men coming in the
direction of his place of dwelling. He went into a gorge
between two rocks, but did not go right away because he did
not see the whole of the troop. Thorir then came up with his
whole party and bade them go between his head and his body,
saying that the scoundrel had but a poor chance now.
"A filled cup is not yet drunk," answered
Grettir. "You have come far to seek me, and some of you shall
bear the marks of our game before we part."
Thorir urged his men on to attack him. The
gorge was very narrow so that he could easily defend it from
one end, and he wondered much that they did not get round to
his rear to hurt him. Some of Thorir's men fell and some were
wounded, but they effected nothing. Then Thorir said: "I
always heard that Grettir was distinguished for his courage
and daring, but I never knew that he was so skilled in magic
as I now see he is; for there fall half as many again behind
his back as before his face, and I see that we have to do with
a troll instead of a man."
So he bade his men retire, and they did so.
Grettir wondered what the explanation could be, but was
terribly exhausted. Thorir and his men withdrew and rode into
the northern parts. Their expedition was considered very
disgraceful. Thorir had left eighteen men on the ground and
had many wounded.
Grettir then went up the gorge and found there
a man of huge stature sitting up against the rock and sorely
wounded. Grettir asked his name, and he said it was Hallmund,
adding: "That you may recognise me I may remind you that you
thought I gripped the reins rather tightly when I met you in
Kjol last summer. I think I have now made that good."
"Indeed," said Grettir, "I think you have done
me a manly service; whenever I can I will repay it."
"Now I wish," said Hallmund, "that you may come
to my home, for it must seem wearisome to you here on the
Heath."
Grettir said he would come willingly, and they
both went together to the foot of the Balljokull, where
Hallmund had a large cave. There they found his daughter, a
fine and well-grown maiden. They treated Grettir well, and the
daughter nursed both the wounded men to health again. Grettir
stayed there some time that summer. He composed an ode on
Hallmund in which the line occurs:
"Hallmund steps from his mountain hall";
further:
"The war-fain sword in Arnarvatn
went forth to hew its bloody path.
Heroes inherit Kelduhverfi.
Hallmund the brave came forth from his den."
It is said that at that encounter Grettir slew
six men and Hallmund twelve.
As the summer passed Grettir began to long for
the habitations of men, and to see his friends and kinsmen.
Hallmund told him to visit him when he returned to the South
and Grettir promised to do so. He went westwards to
Borgarfjord and thence to Breidafjardardalir and sought
counsel of Thorsteinn Kuggason as to where he should go next.
Thorsteinn said that his enemies were now becoming so numerous
that few would care to take him in; but told him to_go to
Myrar and see what he found there. So in the autumn he went to
Myrar.
CHAPTER LVIII
GRETTIR VISITS BJORN THE HITDALE WARRIOR AND
TAKES REFUGE IN THE FAGRASKOGAFJALL
There lived in Holm Bjorn the Hitdale Warrior,
who was the son of Arngeir, the son of Bersi the Godless, the
son of Balki, who was the first settler in Hrutafjord, as has
already been told. Bjorn was a great chief and a valiant man,
always ready to take in outlaws. He received Grettir well when
he came to Holm on account of the friendship which had existed
between their former kinsmen. Grettir asked if he would give
him shelter, and Bjorn said that he had so many quarrels
throughout the land that men would be reluctant to take him in
for fear of being outlawed themselves. "But," he said, "I will
give you some help if you will leave the men who are under my
protection in peace, whatever you do to others in this part."
Grettir promised that he would, and Bjorn
continued: "I have thought of something. In the mountain which
stretches away from the Hitara river there is a good position
for defence, and likewise a good hiding-place if it is
skilfully managed. There is a hole through the mountain from
which you can see down upon the high road that lies
immediately beneath it, and a sandy slope down to the road so
steep that few could get up it if it were defended above by
one doughty man up in the hollow. It may, I think, be worth
your while to consider whether you can stay there; it is easy
to go down from there to the Myrar to get your supplies, and
to reach the sea."
Grettir said he would trust to his foresight if
he would help him a little. Then he went to Fagraskogafjall
and made himself a home there. He hung some grey wadmal in
front of the hole, and it looked from the road below as if one
could see through. Then he began to get in his supplies, but
the Myramen thought they had an unhappy visitor in Grettir.
Thord the son of Kolbeinn was an excellent poet
who dwelt in Hitarnes. There was a great feud between him and
Bjorn at that time, and Bjorn thought it would be more than
half useful to him if Grettir were to busy himself with
Thord's men or his cattle. Grettir was a great deal with Bjorn
and they had many games of strength. It is related in Bjorn's
saga that they were considered equal in strength, but the
opinion of most people is that Grettir was the strongest man
that had been in the land since the days when Orin Storolfsson
and Thoralf Skolmsson ceased their trials of strength. Grettir
and Bjorn swam in one course the whole length of the Hitara
from the lake at its head down to the sea. They brought the
stepping-stones into the river which neither floods nor
freezing nor icedrifts have since moved from their places.
Grettir stayed a year in Fagraskogafjall without any attack
being made upon him, and yet many lost their property through
his means and got nothing for it, because his position was
strong for defence and he was always in good friendship with
those who were nearest to him.
CHAPTER LIX
THE CHASTISEMENT OF GISLI
There was a man named Gisli; he was the son of
that Thorsteinn whom Snorri the Godi had caused to be slain.
He was a big strong man, very ostentatious in his dress and in
his armour, a man with a high opinion of himself and very
boastful. He was a mariner, and landed at the Hvita river in
the summer after Grettir had spent a winter in the mountains.
Thord the son of Kolbeinn rode to his ship and was welcomed by
Gisli, who offered him of his wares whatever he cared to have.
Thord accepted his offer and they began to have some talk
together. Gisli asked: "Is it true what I hear that you are in
difficulty how to rid yourself of a forest-man who is doing
you much hurt?" "We have made no attempt yet," said Thord,
"because a great many think he is difficult to reach, and have
found it so."
"It seems likely that you will have trouble
with Bjorn, unless you drive him away. All the worse it is
that I must be too far away next winter to give you any help."
"It is better for you to know of him only by
hearsay."
"Don't talk to me about Grettir," said Gisli.
"I have been in much greater straits in my campaigns with King
Knut the Mighty and in the western seas, where I was always
considered to have held my own. Only let me come within reach
of him and I will trust myself and my armour."
Thord answered that he should not do it for
nothing if he killed Grettir: "There is more money on his head
than on that of any other outlaw. First there were six marks
of silver, this summer Thorir of Gard added three more, and
men think that he who wins it will have had enough trouble."
"Everything will be attempted for money," said
Gisli: "especially with us traders. But we must keep quiet
about what we have been saying, for Grettir will be more on
his guard if he hears that you have taken me into your
counsels. I intend next winter to be at Olduhrygg; is there
any hiding-place of his on my way there? He will not be
prepared for this, and I shall not take many men with me to
attack him."
Thord approved of his proposal. He rode home
soon after and kept very quiet about it. And now was proved
what has often been said, that: Off in the woods is a listener
nigh. Men who were friends of Bjorn in Hitardal overheard
their conversation and reported it accurately to him. Bjorn
told Grettir of it when they met, and said now he should see
how to encounter him. "It would be no bad joke," he said, "if
you were to injure him in some way without killing him if you
can."
Grettir grinned but said little. Towards the
time of gathering in the cattle Grettir went down to
Flysjuhverfi to get some sheep and got four wethers. The
bondis heard of his having come and went after him. They came
up just at about the moment when he reached the foot of his
mountain and wanted to drive the sheep away from him. But they
would not attack him with weapons. There were six of them and
they stood across his path to bar his way. He was concerned
about his sheep, got angry, seized three of them and threw
them down the hill so that they lay senseless. The others when
they saw it went at him, but rather halfheartedly. Grettir
took the sheep, fastened them together by the horns, threw two
over each shoulder and carried them off. Then he went up into
his den. The bondis turned back feeling they had had the worst
of it, and were more discontented with their lot than ever.
Gisli stayed with his ship that autumn until
she was ready to be hauled up. Several things happened to
delay him, so that he was late in getting away and rode off
very little before the winter nights. Then he rode North and
stayed at Hraun on the south bank of the Hitara. Next morning
before he rode out he said to his servants: "Now we will ride
in red clothes and let the forest-man see that we are not like
the other travellers who beat about here every day."
There were three of them and they did as he
bade. When they had crossed the river he said: "Here I am told
dwells the forest-man, up in that peak; but the way is not an
easy one. Would it not please him to come to us and see our
array?" They said this was always his habit.
That morning Grettir had got up early. The
weather was cold, it was freezing and some snow had fallen,
but very little. He saw three men riding from the South across
the Hitara, and the light shone from their apparel and from
their enamelled shields. It occurred to Grettir who it might
be, and he thought he would relieve them of some of their
accoutrements. He was very curious to meet a man who went
about so ostentatiously. So he took his weapons and hurried
down the hillside. Gisli when he heard the clattering of the
stones said: "A man, rather tall, is coming down the hill and
wants to meet us. Let us act boldly and we shall have good
sport." His men said that this fellow had great confidence in
himself to run into their hands; but that he who asked should
have. Then they got off their horses. Grettir came up to them
and laid hold of a bag of clothes which Gisli had behind him
on his saddle, saying:
"I must have this; I often stoop to little
things."
Gisli said: "You shall not; do not you know
with whom you have to do?"
Grettir said: "No; that is not so clear to me.
Nor do I make much difference between one man and another
since I claim so little."
"May be it seems little to you," said Gisli;
"but I would sooner part with thirty hundred ells of wadmal.
It seems that extortion is your way. Go for him, boys! Let us
see what he can do."
They obeyed. Grettir fell back a little and
reached a stone which is still standing by the side of the way
and is called Grettishaf, where he stood at bay. Gisli urged
on his men, and Grettir saw that he was not quite so valiant
as he pretended to be, for he kept well behind them. Grettir
got tired of being hemmed in, so he made a lunge with his
sword and killed one of Gisli's men, sprang from his stone and
assailed them so vigorously that Gisli fell back all along the
foot of the hill. Then his other man was killed.
Grettir said: "One would scarcely see that you
have achieved much in the world abroad, and you have
shamefully forsaken your comrades."
Gisli answered: "The fire is hottest to him who
is in it; it is ill dealing with men from Hel."
They had exchanged few more blows when Gisli
threw away his arms and bolted right away along the foot of
the mountain. Grettir gave him time to throw away whatever he
liked, and at every opportunity he threw off something more of
his clothes. Grettir never followed him so closely that there
was not some distance between them. He ran right away from the
mountains, across Kaldardal, round Aslaug's Cliff, above
Kolbeinsstad and out to Borgarhraun.
By that time he had nothing left on him but his
shirt, and was terribly exhausted. Grettir still followed,
keeping now within reach of him. He pulled off a great branch.
Gisli did not stop till he reached Haffjardara river, which
was all swollen and difficult to ford. Gisli was going right
out into the river when Grettir pressed forward and seized him
and showed him the difference in their strength.
Grettir got him down, sat on the top of him and
asked: "Are you the Gisli who wanted to meet Grettir?"
"I have found him now," he answered; "but I
know not how I shall part with him. Keep what you have taken
and let me go free."
Grettir said: "You will not understand what I
am going to tell you, so I must give you something to remember
it by." Then he pulled up Gisli's shirt over his head and let
the rod play on both sides of his back. Gisli struggled to get
away, but Grettir gave him a sound whipping and then let him
go. Gisli thought that he would sooner not learn anything from
Grettir than have another such flogging, nor did he do
anything more to earn it. Directly he got his feet under him
again he ran off to a large pool and swam across the river. In
the evening he reached the settlement called Hrossholt, very
exhausted. There he lay for a week, his body covered with
blisters, and afterwards went on to his own place.
Grettir turned back, gathered up all the things
which Gisli had thrown away and took them home. Gisli never
got them back again; many thought be had only got what he
deserved for his noisy boasting. Grettir made a verse about
their encounter:
"The horse whose fighting teeth are blunted
runs from the field before his foe.
With many an afterthought ran Gisli.
Gone is his fame, his glory lost!"
In the spring after this Gisli prepared to go
on board his ship and forbade in the strongest terms anything
which belonged to him being carried South by the way of the
mountains; for he said that the Fiend himself was there. Gisli
when he went South to join his ship kept all the way along the
coast and he never met Grettir again. Nobody considered him
worth thinking about, nor do we hear any more of him in this
saga. Grettir's relations with Thord the son of Kolbeinn
became worse than ever, and Thord tried every means to get
Grettir driven away or killed.
CHAPTER LX
THE BATTLE WITH THE MYRAMEN
When Grettir had been two winters in
Fagraskogafjall and the third winter had set in, he went South
into Myrar to the farm called Laekjarbug, where he took six
wethers without their owner's permission. Then he went down to
Akrar and drove off two oxen for slaughter with several sheep,
and went up South to the Hitara. When the bondis heard of his
exploits they sent word to Thord at Hitarnes and asked him to
take the lead in the slaying of Grettir. He was rather
reluctant, but as they had asked him he sent his son Arnor,
afterwards called Jarlsbard, to go with them, and told them
not to let Grettir escape. Messengers were then sent round to
all the farms.
There was a man named Bjarni who dwelt in Jorvi
in Flysjuhverfi. He collected men on the other side of the
Hitara; the intention was that each band should keep on its
own side. Grettir had two men with him, one named Eyjolf, a
stout man, the son of a bondi in Fagraskogar, and another. The
party came on, about twenty in number, under Thorarin from
Akrar and Thorfinn of Laekjarbug. Grettir tried to get out
across the river, but was met by Arnor and Bjarni coming from
the coast. There was a narrow point jutting out into the river
on Grettir's side, and when he saw the men approaching he
drove his animals on to it, for he never would let go anything
of which he had once got possession. The Myramen prepared to
attack in good order and Grettir told his companions to guard
his rear. They could not all come on at once. There was a hard
struggle between them; Grettir used his short sword with both
hands and they found it not easy to get at him. Some of the
Myramen fell and some were wounded. The men on the other side
of the river were rather slow in coming up because there was
no ford near. Before they had been fighting very long they
fell back. Thorarin of Akrar was a very old man and not able
to join in the fighting. When the battle was over there came
up his son Thrand, his brother Ingjald's son Thorgils,
Finnbogi the son of Thorgeir, the son of Thorhadd of Hitardal,
and Steinolf the son of Thorleif of Hraundal. They set on
their men and there was a hard struggle.
Grettir saw that there was no choice left but
either to flee or else to do his utmost and not spare himself.
He pressed on hard and nothing could hold against him, for his
foes were so numerous that there was no chance of escaping
except by fighting to the last before he fell. He tried always
to engage those who seemed most courageous; first he went for
Steinolf of Hraundal and cleft his skull down to his
shoulders; then he struck at Thorgils the son of Ingjald and
almost cut him in two. Then Thrand tried to spring forward and
avenge his kinsmen, and Grettir hewed at his right thigh,
cutting out all the muscles so that he could fight no more.
Next he gave Finnbogi a severe wound. Then Thorarin ordered
them off. "The longer you fight," he said, "the worse you will
get from him and the more will he choose out the men from your
company."
They obeyed and fell back. Ten had fallen; five
were wounded to death or crippled, and nearly all who had been
in the battle were hurt. Grettir was terribly fatigued but
little wounded. The Myramen drew off, having suffered heavy
losses, for many a good man had fallen. Those who were beyond
the river came over slowly and did not arrive till the fight
was over, and when they saw the plight of their men Arnor
would not risk himself any further, for which he was much
blamed by his father and by others. Men thought he was not
much of a warrior. The place where they fought is now called
Grettisoddi.
Grettir and his companions were all wounded;
they took their horses and rode back along the foot of the
mountain. When they reached Fagraskogar Eyjolf was behind.
There was a bondi's daughter there and she asked for their
tidings, which Grettir told her fully and spoke a verse:
"Goddess of horn-floods! Steinolf's wounds
are such that scarcely may be healed.
Of Thorgils' life is little hope;
his bones are smashed; eight more are dead."
Then Grettir went to his retreat and spent the
winter there.
CHAPTER LXI
GRETTIR WINTERS UNDER THE GEITLAND GLACIER
The next time that Bjorn met Grettir he told
him that this was a very serious affair, and that he would not
be able to stay there in peace much longer. "You have killed
kinsmen and friends of mine, but I will not depart from my
promise to you so long as you are here."
Grettir said he was sorry to have given him
offence, but that he had to defend his hands and his life.
Bjorn said it would have to remain so. Soon there came to him
some of the men who had lost their kinsmen through Grettir and
petitioned him not to allow such a ruffian as he was to stay
there any longer and molest them. Bjorn said he would do as
they desired directly the winter was over.
Thrand the son of Thorarin of Akrar had now
recovered from his wound. He was a man of much worth, and had
married Steinunn the daughter of Hrut of Kambsnes. Steinolf's
father Thorleif of Hraundal was a great man; from him are
sprung the Hraundal men.
No more meetings are told of between Grettir
and the Myramen while he was in the mountains. Bjorn continued
in friendship with him, but some of Bjorn's other friends fell
away from him because of his allowing Grettir to remain there,
for they were annoyed at getting no compensation for the
slaying of their kinsmen. When the Thing assembled Grettir
left the Myrar district and went to Borgarfjord, where he
visited Grim the son of Thorhall and sought counsel of him
where he should move to next. Grim said he was not powerful
enough to keep him there, so Grettir went off to his friend
Hallmund and stayed there till the end of the summer.
In the autumn Grettir went to Geitland, where
he stayed till bright weather set in. Then he ascended the
Geitlandsjokull and turned his steps South-east along the
glacier, taking with him a kettle and fuel. It is supposed
that he went there by the counsel of Hallmund, who knew the
country far and wide. He went on till he came to a long and
rather narrow valley in the glacier, shut in on every side by
the ice which overhung the valley. He went about everywhere,
and found fair grass-grown banks and brushwood. There were hot
springs, and it seemed as if volcanic fires had kept the ice
from closing in above the valley. A little stream flowed down
the dale with smooth banks on either side. Little did the
light of the sun enter there, and the number of sheep in the
valley seemed to him countless. They were much better and
fatter than any which he had ever seen.
Grettir stayed there and built himself a hut
out of logs which he found about. He caught a sheep to eat,
and it was better for slaughter than two in other places.
There was a ewe there with her lamb; she had a brown head and
excelled all the others in size. He was anxious to have the
lamb, so he caught it and slaughtered it and got half a
measure of suet out of it, and it was better in every way.
When Brownhead missed her lamb she came up every night to
Grettir's hut and bleated so that he never could get any
sleep. He regretted much having killed the lamb on account of
the disturbance which she caused him. Every evening when the
twilight set in he heard a voice calling in the valley, and
then the sheep used to run together into a place of shelter.
Grettir has told us that a blending ruled over the valley, a
giant named Thorir, under whose protection he remained.
Grettir called the valley after him Thorisdal. He said that
Thorir had daughters with whom he had some play, and that they
were very pleased, because not many people came there. And
when the days of fasting came Grettir remembered to tell them
that fat and liver should be eaten in Lent. Nothing particular
occurred that winter, and Grettir found it so dull that he
could not stay there any longer. He left the valley and went
to the South through the glacier, reaching the middle of
Skjaldbreid from the North. There he took up a stone, cut a
hole in it and said that if a man put his eye to the hole he
could see into the gully which flows out of Thorisdal. Then he
went across the country South and reached the eastern fjords.
He spent the summer and the winter on this journey and visited
all the great men, but found them all against him so that
nowhere could he get lodging or shelter. So he returned to the
North and stayed in various places.
CHAPTER LXII
HALLMUND IS KILLED BY A FOREST-MAN NAMED GRIM
Soon after Grettir had left the Arnarvatn Heath
there came a man there named Grim, the son of a widow at
Kropp. He had killed the son of Eid of Ass, the son of Skeggi,
and been outlawed for it. So there he stayed where Grettir had
been before him and got plenty of fish out of the lake.
Hallmund was not at all pleased at Grim being there instead of
Grettir, and said that he should have little advantage from
his great catches of fish. One morning Grim had caught a
hundred fish, which he brought to the hut and arranged
outside. The next morning when he went there every fish was
gone. He thought it very strange, but returned to the lake and
caught this time two hundred. He carried them home and
arranged them; again everything happened as before; in the
morning all were gone, evidently through the same agency as
before. The third day he caught three hundred, carried them
home and kept a watch on his hut. He looked out through a hole
in the door to see if any one came, and so he remained for a
time. When about one third of the night had passed he heard
some one walking near and stepping rather heavily; so he
immediately took his axe, which was very sharp, and wanted to
know what was the matter. There came a man with a big basket
on his back; he put it down and looked round, but saw no one
outside. He rummaged about among the fish and seemed to think
that they would do for him to lay hands upon. He threw them
all into his basket and they quite filled it. The fishes were
so large that Grim thought no horse would be able to carry
more. This man then took the load and got beneath it. Just as
he was about to rise Grim rushed out and taking his axe in
both hands struck a blow at his neck which went through the
skin. He started in surprise and then ran off towards the
south of the hill with his basket. Grim went after him to see
whether he had got him. They went south along the foot of the
Balljokull where the man entered a cave. There was a bright
fire in the cave and a woman standing in it, very tall but
shapely. Grim heard her greet her father, calling him
Hallmund. He flung down his load and heaved a great sigh. She
asked why he was covered with blood. He answered in a verse:
"No man, I see, may trust his might.
His luck and heart will fail at death."
Then she pressed him to say what had happened,
and he told her everything.
"Hear now," he said, "what I tell you of my
adventure. I will tell it to you in verse, and you shall cut
it in runes on a staff."
She did so, and he spoke the Hallmundarkvida,
in which the following occurs:
"I was strong when Grettir's bridle I seized
I saw him gazing long at his palms.
Then Thorir came on the Heath with his men.
'Gainst eighty we two had play with our spears.
Grettir's hands knew how to strike;
much deeper the marks that were left by mine.
Arms and heads then flew as they tried
to gain my rear; eighteen of them fell.
The giant-kind and the grim rock-dwellers,
demons and blendings fell before me,
elves and devils have felt my hand."
Many exploits of his did Hallmund recount in
the lay, for he had been in every land.
The daughter said: "That man was not going to
let his catch slip away from him. It was only to be expected,
for you treated him very badly. But who is going to avenge
you?"
"It is not certain that anybody will, but I
think that Grettir would avenge me if he were able. It will
not be easy to go against this man's luck; he is destined to
great things." Then as the lay continued his strength began to
fail. Hallmund died almost at the moment when he finished the
song. She grieved much for him and wept sorely. Then Grim came
forward and bade her be comforted. "All," he said, "must
depart when their fate calls. It was partly his own fault, for
I could not look on and see myself robbed."
She said he might speak much about that: "The
unjust man prospers ill."
She was somewhat cheered by the talk with him.
Grim stayed several nights in the cave and learned the lay;
all went well with them. Grim was in the Arnarvatn Heath all
the winter after Hallmund's death. Afterwards Thorkell the son
of Eyjolf came to the heath and fought with him. The meeting
ended by Grim having Thorkell's life in his power, but he
would not kill him. Thorkell then took him in, sent him abroad
and supplied him with means; each was considered to have acted
generously towards the other. Grim became a great traveller
and there is a long saga about him.
CHAPTER LXIII
GRETTIR'S MEETING WITH THORIR ON THE REYKJA
HEATH
We now return to Grettir, who came from the
eastern fjords, travelling in disguise and hiding his head
because he did not wish to meet Thorir. That summer he spent
in Modrudal Heath and other places. For a time too he was on
Reykja Heath. Thorir heard of his being on Reykja Heath,
gathered his men and rode thither, determined not to let him
escape. Grettir scarcely knew of their plans before they came
upon him. He was in a hill-dairy a little off the road with
another man, and when they saw the troop they had to lay their
plans quickly. Grettir said they should make their horses lie
down inside the house, and they did so. Thorir rode forward
across the heath in a northerly direction, missed the place,
did not find Grettir and turned back home. When the troop had
ridden round to the West, Grettir said: "They will not be
pleased with their expedition if they do not meet me. You stay
and mind the horses while I go after them. It would be a good
jest if they did not recognise me."
His companion tried to dissuade him, but he
would go. He changed his dress, put on a wide hat which came
down over his face and took a stick in his hand. Then he went
along the road towards them. They addressed him and asked
whether he had seen any men riding over the heath.
"I have seen the men whom you are seeking," he
said, "you very nearly came upon them; they were on your left
hand just south of the marshes."
On hearing this they galloped off towards the
marshes, which were so swampy that they could not get through
and had to spend a great part of the day dragging their horses
out. They swore much at the supposed traveller for playing a
practical joke upon them. Grettir returned speedily home to
his companion, and when they met spoke a verse:
"I will not ride to the warriors' arms;
too great the danger is.
I dare not meet the storm of Vidri;
but homeward turn my steps."
They rode off as fast as they could westwards
towards the homestead in Gard before Thorir could come there
with his company. When they were near the place they met a man
on the road who did not know them. There was a young woman
standing outside, very much dressed up, and Grettir asked who
she was. The man who had come up said she was Thorir's
daughter. Then Grettir spoke a verse:
"Maiden, when thy father comes
tell him, little though it please him,
how I rode his dwelling past;
only two who with me rode."
From this the man learnt who it was, and rode
to the house to tell them that Grettir had come round. When
Thorir returned many men thought that he had been bamboozled
by Grettir. He then set spies to watch Grettir's movements.
Grettir took the precaution of sending his companion to the
western districts with his horse, while he himself went North
into the mountains at the beginning of the winter, muffling up
his face so that no one should recognise him. Every one
thought that Thorir had fared no better but even worse than at
their former encounter.
CHAPTER LXIV
GHOSTS IN BARDARDAL
There was dwelling at Eyjardalsa in Bardardal a
priest named Steinn, a good farmer and wealthy. His son
Kjartan was grown up and was now a fine young man. Thorsteinn
the White was a man who dwelt at Sandhaugar to the south of
Eyjardalsa; his wife Steinvor was young and of a merry
disposition. They had children who at this time were yet
young. Their place was generally thought to be much haunted by
trolls. Two winters before Grettir came North into those
parts, Steinvor the mistress of Sandhaugar went as usual to
spend Yule at Eyjardalsa, while her husband stayed at home.
Men lay down to sleep in the evening, and in the night they
heard a great noise in the room near the bondi's bed. No one
dared to get up to see what was the matter because there were
so few of them. The mistress of the house returned home the
next morning, but her husband had disappeared and no one knew
what had become of him. So the next season passed. The
following winter the mistress wanted to go to mass, and told
her servant to stay at home; he was very unwilling but said
she should be obeyed. It happened just as before; this time
the servant disappeared. People thought it very strange and
found some drops of blood upon the outer door, so they
supposed that some evil spirit must have carried off both the
men. The story spread all through the district and came to the
ears of Grettir, who being well accustomed to deal with ghosts
and spectres turned his steps to Bardardal and arrived at
Yule-eve at Sandhaugar. He retained his disguise and called
himself Gest. The lady of the house saw that he was enormously
tall, and the servants were terribly afraid of him. He asked
for hospitality; the mistress told him that food was ready for
him but that he must see after himself. He said he would, and
added: "I will stay in the house while you go to mass if you
would like it."
She said: "You must be a brave man to venture
to stay in the house."
"I do not care for a monotonous life," he said.
Then she said: "I do not want to remain at
home, but I cannot get across the river."
"I will come with you," said Gest. Then she
made ready to go to mass with her little daughter. It was
thawing outside; the river was flooded and was covered with
ice. She said: "It is impossible for either man or horse to
cross the river."
"There must be fords," said Gest; "do not be
afraid."
"First carry the maiden over," she said; "she
is lighter."
"I don't want to make two journeys of it," said
he; "I will carry you in my arms."
She crossed herself and said: "That is
impossible; what will you do with the girl?"
"I will find a way," he said, taking them both
up and setting the girl on her mother's knee as he bore them
both on his left arm, keeping his right arm free. So he
carried them across. They were too frightened to cry out. The
river came up to his breast, and a great piece of ice drove
against him, which he pushed off with the hand that was free.
Then the stream became so deep that it broke over his
shoulder, but he waded on vigorously till he reached the other
bank and put them on shore. It was nearly dark by the time he
got home to Sandhaugar and called for some food. When he had
eaten something he told the servants to go to the other end of
the hall. Then he got some boards and loose logs and laid them
across the hall to make a great barricade so that none of the
servants could get across. No one dared to oppose him or to
object to anything. The entrance was in the side wall of the
hall under the back gable, and near it was a cross bench upon
which Grettir laid himself, keeping on his clothes, with a
light burning in the room. So he lay till into the night.
The mistress reached Eyjardalsa for mass and
every one wondered how she had crossed the river. She said she
did not know whether it was a man or a troll who had carried
her over. The priest said it was certainly a man though unlike
other men. "Let us keep silence over it; may be that he means
to help you in your difficulties."
She stayed there the night.
CHAPTER LXV
ADVENTURE WITH A TROLL-WOMAN
We return now to tell of Gest. Towards midnight
he heard a loud noise outside, and very soon there walked a
huge troll-wife into the room. She carried a trough in one
hand and a rather large cutlass in the other. She looked round
the room as she entered, and on seeing Gest lying there she
rushed at him; he started up and attacked her furiously. They
fought long together; she was the stronger but he evaded her
skilfully. Everything near them and the panelling of the back
wall were broken to pieces. She dragged him through the hall
door out to the porch, where he resisted vigorously. She
wanted to drag him out of the house, but before that was done
they had broken up all the fittings of the outer door and
borne them away on their shoulders. Then she strove to get to
the river and among the rocks. Gest was terribly fatigued, but
there was no choice but either to brace himself or be dragged
down to the rocks. All night long they struggled together, and
he thought he had never met with such a monster for strength.
She gripped him so tightly to herself that he could do nothing
with either hand but cling to her waist. When at last they
reached a rock by the river he swung the monster round and got
his right hand loose. Then he quickly seized the short sword
which he was wearing, drew it and struck at the troll's right
shoulder, cutting off her right arm and releasing himself. She
sprang among the rocks and disappeared in the waterfall. Gest,
very stiff and tired, lay long by the rock. At daylight he
went home and lay down on his bed, blue and swollen all over.
When the lady of the house came home she found
the place rather in disorder. She went to Gest and asked him
what had happened, and why everything was broken to pieces. He
told her everything just as it had happened. She thought it a
matter of great moment and asked him who he was. He told her
the truth, said that he wished to see a priest and asked her
to send for one. She did so; Steinn came to Sandhaugar and
soon learnt that it was Grettir the son of Asmund who had come
there under the name of Gest. The priest asked him what he
thought had become of the men who had disappeared; Grettir
said he thought that they must have gone among the rocks. The
priest said he could not believe his word unless he gave some
evidence of it. Grettir said that later it would be known, and
the priest went home. Grettir lay many days in his bed and the
lady did all she could for him; thus Yule-tide passed. Grettir
himself declared that the trollwoman sprang among the rocks
when she was wounded, but the men of Bardardal say that the
day dawned upon her while they were wrestling; that when he
cut off her arm she broke, and that she is still standing
there on the mountain in the likeness of a woman. The dwellers
in the valley kept Grettir there in hiding.
One day that winter after Yule Grettir went to
Eyjardalsa and met the priest, to whom he said: "I see,
priest, that you have little belief in what I say. Now I wish
you to come with me to the river and to see what probability
there is in it."
The priest did so. When they reached the falls
they saw a cave up under the rock. The cliff was there so
abrupt that no one could climb it, and nearly ten fathoms down
to the water. They had a rope with them. The priest said: "It
is quite impossible for any one to get down to that."
Grettir answered: "It is certainly possible;
and men of high mettle are those who would feel themselves
happiest there. I want to see what there is in the fall. Do
you mind the rope."
The priest said he could do so if he chose. He
drove a stake into the ground and laid stones against it.
CHAPTER LXVI
GRETTIR SLAYS A GIANT
Grettir now fastened a stone in a loop at the
end of the rope, and lowered it from above into the water.
"Which way do you mean to go?" asked the
priest.
"I don't mean to be bound when I come into the
fall," Grettir said. "So my mind tells me."
Then he prepared to go; he had few clothes on
and only a short sword; no other arms. He jumped from a rock
and got down to the fall. The priest saw the soles of his feet
but after that did not know what had become of him. Grettir
dived beneath the fall. It was very difficult swimming because
of the currents, and he had to dive to the bottom to get
behind the fall. There was a rock where he came up, and a
great cave under the fall in front of which the water poured.
He went into the cave, where there was a large fire burning
and a horrible great giant most fearful to behold sitting
before it. On Grettir entering the giant sprang up, seized a
pike and struck at him, for he could both strike and thrust
with it. It had a wooden shaft and was of the kind called
"heptisax." Grettir struck back with his sword and cut through
the shaft. Then the giant tried to reach up backwards to a
sword which was hanging in the cave, and at that moment
Grettir struck at him and cut open his lower breast and
stomach so that all his entrails fell out into the river and
floated down the stream. The priest who was sitting by the
rope saw some debris being carried down all covered with blood
and lost his head, making sure that Grettir was killed. He
left the rope and ran off home, where he arrived in the
evening and told them for certain that Grettir was dead, and
said it was a great misfortune to them to have lost such a
man.
Grettir struck few more blows at the giant
before he was dead. He then entered the cave, kindled a light
and explored. It is not told how much treasure he found there,
but there is supposed to have been some. He stayed there till
late into the night and found the bones of two men, which he
carried away in a skin. Then he came out of the cave, swam to
the rope and shook it, thinking the priest was there; finding
him gone he had to swarm up the rope and so reached the top.
He went home to Eyjardalsa and carried the skin with the bones
in it into the vestibule of the church together with a
rune-staff, upon which were most beautifully carved the
following lines:
"Into the fall of the torrent I went;
dank its maw towards me gaped.
The floods before the ogress' den
Mighty against my shoulder played";
and then:
"Hideous the friend of troll-wife came.
Hard were the blows I dealt upon him.
The shaft of Heptisax was severed.
My sword has pierced the monster's breast."
There too it was told how Grettir had brought
the bones from the cave. The priest when he came to the church
on the next morning found the staff and all that was with it
and read the runes. Grettir had then returned home to
Sandhaugar.
CHAPTER LXVII
VISIT TO GUDMUND THE MIGHTY
When the priest met Grettir again he asked him
to say exactly what bad happened, and Grettir told him all
about where he had been. He said that the priest had held the
rope very faithlessly, and the priest admitted that it was
true. Men felt no doubt that these monsters were responsible
for the disappearance of the men in the valley, nor was there
any haunting or ghost-walking there afterwards; Grettir had
evidently cleared the land of them. The bones were buried by
the priest in the churchyard. Grettir stayed the winter in
Bardardal, but unknown to the general public.
Thorir of Gard heard rumours of Grettir being
in Bardardal and set some men on to take his life. Men
thereupon advised him to depart, and he went into the West to
Modruvellir, where he met Gudmund the Mighty and asked him for
protection. Gudmund said it would not be convenient for him to
take him in.
"You must," he said, "find a place to settle in
where you need be in no fear for your life."
Grettir said he did not know where such a place
was.
"There is an island," Gudmund said, "in
Skagafjord, called Drangey. It is excellent for defence; no
one can get up to it without a ladder. If once you can reach
it there is no chance of any one attacking you there with arms
or with craft, so long as you guard the ladder well."
"That shall be tried," said Grettir. "But I am
in such dread of the dark that even for the sake of my life I
cannot live alone."
"It may be that it is so," said Gudmund; "but
trust no man so well that you trust not yourself better. Many
are unfit to be trusted."
Grettir thanked him for his excellent advice
and departed from Modruvellir. He went on straight to Bjarg,
where his mother and Illugi greeted him joyfully. He stayed
there several days and heard of Thorsteinn Kuggason having
been slain in the autumn before he went to Bardardal. Fate, he
thought, was striking hard against him. Then he rode South to
Holtavarda Heath, intending to revenge the death of Hallmund
if he could meet with Grim. On reaching Nordrardal he learnt
that Grim had left two or three years before, as has already
been related. Grettir had not received news of it because he
had been in hiding there for two years and a third in
Thorisdal and had met no one to tell him of what had happened.
Then he turned his steps towards the Breidafjord valleys and
waylaid those who passed over Brattabrekka. He continued to
let his hands sweep over the property of the small farmers
during the height of the summer season.
When the summer was passing away, Steinvor at
Sandhaugar gave birth to a son who was named Skeggi. He was at
first fathered on Kjartan, the son of Steinn the priest at
Eyjardalsa. Skeggi was unlike all his family in his strength
and stature. When he was fifteen years old he was the
strongest man in the North, and then they put him down to
Grettir. There seemed a prospect of his growing into something
quite extraordinary, but he died when he was seventeen and
there is no saga about him.
CHAPTER LXVIII
FIGHT WITH THORODD THE SON OF SNORRI
After the death of Thorsteinn Kuggason, Snorri
the Godi was on bad terms with his son Thorodd and with Sam
the son of Bork the Fat. It is not clearly stated what they
had done to displease him except that they had refused to
undertake some important work which he had given them to do;
what is known is that Snorri turned off his son Thorodd and
told him not to come back until he had slain some forest-man,
and so it remained. Thorodd then went to Dalir. There dwelt at
Breidabolstad in Sokkolfsdal a certain widow named Geirlaug;
she kept as her shepherd a grown-up youth who had been
outlawed for wounding some one. Thorodd Snorrason heard of
this, rode to Breidabolstad and asked where the shepherd was.
The woman said he was with the sheep and asked what Thorodd
wanted with him.
"I want to take his life," he said; "he is an
outlaw and a forest-man."
She said: "Such a warrior as you has nothing to
gain by killing a miserable creature like him. I will show you
a much doughtier deed, should you have a mind to try it."
"What is that?" he asked.
"Up there in the mountains," she said, "is
Grettir the son of Asmund; deal with him; that will be more
fitting for you."
Thorodd liked the proposal and said he would do
it. Then he put spurs to his horse and rode up along the
valleys. On reaching the hills below the Austra river he saw a
light-coloured horse saddled, with a big man in armour, and at
once directed his steps towards them. Grettir hailed him and
asked who he was. Thorodd told his name and asked: "Why do you
not rather ask my business than my name?"
"Because," he said, "it is not likely to be
very weighty. Are you a son of Snorri the Godi?"
"So it is indeed; we shall now try which of us
is the stronger."
"That is easily done," said Grettir, "but have
you not heard that I have not proved a mound of wealth to most
of those who have had to do with me?"
"I know that; but I mean to risk something on
it now."
Then he drew his sword and went valiantly for
Grettir, who defended himself with his shield but would not
use his weapons against Thorodd. They fought for a time
without his being wounded. Grettir then said:
"Let us stop this play; you will not gain the
victory in a battle with me."
Thorodd struck at him most furiously. Grettir
was tired of it, so he took hold of him and set him down next
to himself, saying: "I could do what I liked with you; but I
have no fear of your killing me. I am much more afraid of your
grey-headed father, Snorri the Godi, and of his counsels,
which have brought many a man to his knees. You should take up
tasks which you are able to accomplish; it is no child's play
to fight with me."
When Thorodd saw that there was nothing to be
done he quieted down, and then they parted. He rode home to
Tunga and told his father of his encounter witb Grettir.
Snorri smiled and said: "Many a man has a high opinion of
himself; but the odds against you were too great. While you
were aiming blows at him he was doing what he pleased with
you. But he was wise not to kill you, for it would not have
been my purpose to leave you unavenged. I will now rather use
my influence on his side if I ever have to do with his
affairs."
Snorri showed his approval of Grettir's action
towards Thorodd, for his counsels were always friendly to
Grettir.
CHAPTER LXIX
GRETTIR'S LAST VISIT TO BJARG AND JOURNEY WITH
ILLUGI TO DRANGEY
Soon after Thorodd left him Grettir rode North
to Bjarg and remained there in hiding for a time. His fear of
the dark grew so upon him that he dared go nowhere after dusk.
His mother offered to keep him there, but said she saw that it
would not do for him because of the feuds which he had
throughout the land. Grettir said she should not fall into
trouble through him, "but," he said, "I can no longer live
alone even to save my life."
Illugi his brother was then fifteen years old
and was a most goodly young man. He heard what they were
saying. Grettir told his mother what Gudmund the Mighty had
advised him to do, and declared he would try to get to Drangey
if he could. Yet, he said, he could not go there unless he
could find some faithful man to stay with him. Then Illugi
said: "I will go with you, brother. I know not whether I shall
be a support to you, but I will be faithful to you and will
not run from you so long as you stand upright. And I shall
know the better how it fares with you if I am with you."
Grettir answered: "You are such an one amongst
men as I most rejoice in. And if my mother be not against it I
would indeed that you should go with me."
Asdis then said: "It has now come to this, that
I see two difficulties meeting each other. It is hard for me
to lose Illugi, but I know that so much may be said for
Grettir's condition that he will find some way out. And though
it is much for one to bid farewell to both of you, yet I will
consent to it if Grettir's lot is bettered thereby."
Illugi was pleased at her words, for his heart
was set upon going with Grettir. She gave them plenty of money
to take with them and they made ready for their journey. Asdis
took them along the road, and before they parted she said: "Go
forth now, my sons twain. Sad will be your death together, nor
may any man escape that which is destined for him. I shall see
neither of you again; let one fate befall you both. I know not
what safety you seek in Drangey, but there shall your bones be
laid, and many will begrudge you your living there. Beware of
treachery; yet shall you be smitten with weapons, for strange
are the dreams which I have had. Guard yourselves against
witchcraft, for few things are stronger than the ancient
spells."
Thus she spoke and wept much. Grettir said:
"Weep not, my mother. It shall be said that you had sons and
not daughters if we are attacked with arms. Live well, and
farewell."
Then they parted. The two travelled North
through the districts and visited their kinsmen while the
autumn passed into winter. Then they turned their steps to
Skagafjord, then North to Vatnsskard on to Reykjaskard below
Saemundarhlid to Langholt, reaching Glaumbaer as the day was
waning. Grettir had slung his hat over his shoulder; so he
always went when out of doors whether the weather was good or
bad. Thence they continued their journey, and when they had
gone a short way they met a man with a big head, tall and thin
and ill clad. He greeted them and each asked the other's name.
They told theirs and he said his name was Thorbjorn. He was a
vagrant, had no mind to work and swaggered much. It was the
habit of some to make game of him or fool him. He became very
familiar and told them much gossip about the district and the
people therein. Grettir was much amused. He asked whether they
did not want a man to work for them and said he would much
like to go with them. So much he got from his talk that they
let him join them. It was very cold and there was a driving
snow-storm. As the man was so fussy and talkative they gave
him a nickname and called him Glaum.
"The people in Glaumbaer," he said, "were much
exercised about your going without a hat in this weather, and
wanted to know whether you were any the braver for being proof
against the cold. There were two sons of bondis there, men of
great distinction; the shepherd told them to come out and mind
the sheep with him, but they could scarcely get their clothes
on for the cold."
Grettir said: "I saw a young man inside the
door putting on his mittens, and another going between the
cow-house and the dung- heap. Neither of them will frighten
me."
Then they went on to Reynines and stayed the
night there; then to the sea-shore to a farm called Reykir
where a man, a good farmer, named Thorvald, lived. Grettir
asked him for shelter and told him of his intention of going
to Drangey. The bondi said that men of Skagafjord would not
think his a very friendly visit and drew back. Then Grettir
took the purse of money which his mother had given him and
gave it to the bondi. The man's brows unbent when he saw the
money and he told three of his servants to take them out in
the night by the moonlight. From Reykir is the shortest
distance to the island, about one sea-mile.
When they reached the island Grettir thought it
looked quite pleasant; it was all overgrown with grass and had
steep cliffs down to the sea so that no one could get on to it
except where the ladders were. If the upper ladder was pulled
up it was impossible for any one to get on to the island.
There was also a large crag full of sea birds in the summer,
and there were eighty sheep in the island belonging to the
bondis, mostly rams and ewes, which were meant for slaughter.
There Grettir quietly settled down. He had been
fifteen or sixteen years an outlaw, so Sturla the son of Thord
has recorded.
CHAPTER LXX
THE PEOPLE OF SKAGAFJORD
When Grettir came to Drangey the following
chiefs were in Skagafjord:
Hjalti lived at Hof in Hjaltadal, the son of
Thord, the son of Hjalti, the son of Thord Skalp. He was a
great chief, very distinguished and very popular. His brother
was named Thorbjorn Angle, a big man, strong and hardy and
rather quarrelsome. Thord their father had married in his old
age, and his then wife was not the mother of these two. She
was very much against her stepsons, especially Thorbjorn,
because he was intractable and headstrong. One day when he was
playing at "tables", his stepmother came up and saw that he
was playing at "hnettafl"; they played with big peg pieces.
She considered that very lazy of him and spoke some words to
which he answered hastily. She took up the piece and struck
him on the cheek bone with the peg, and it glanced into his
eye which hung down on his cheek. He started up and handled
her mercilessly so that she was confined to her bed and soon
afterwards died; they say that she was pregnant at the time.
After that he became a regular ruffian. He took over his
property and went first to live in Vidvik.
Halldor the son of Thorgeir, the son of Thord
of Hofdi, lived at Hof in Hofdastrand. He married Thordis the
daughter of Thord, the sister of Hjalti and Thorbjorn Angle.
Halldor was a worthy bondi and wealthy.
Bjorn was the name of a man who lived at
Haganes in Fljot, a friend of Halldor of Hof, and the two held
together in every dispute.
Tungu-Steinn dwelt at Steinsstadir. He was the
son of Bjorn, the son of Ofeig Thinbeard, the son of
Crow-Hreidar, to whom Eirik of Guddal gave Tunga below
Skalamyr. He was a man of renown.
Eirik was the son of Holmgang-Starri, the son
of Eirik of Guddal, the son of Hroald, the son of Geirmund
Straightbeard. He lived at Hof in Guddal.
All these were men of high rank. Two brothers
dwelt at a place called Breida in Slettahlid, both named
Thord. They were very strong men, but peaceable.
All the men now named had a share in Drangey.
It is said that the island was owned by no fewer than twenty
men, and none of them would part with his share to the others.
The largest share belonged to the sons of Thord since they
were the richest.
CHAPTER LXXI
THE BONDIS CLAIM THEIR PROPERTY IN DRANGEY
Midwinter was passed, and the bondis prepared
to bring in their animals from the island for slaughter. They
manned a boat and each had a man of his own on board, some
two.
When they reached the island they saw men on it
moving about. They thought it very strange, but supposed that
some one had been wrecked and had gone on shore there. So they
rowed to where the ladders were. The people on the shore
pulled the ladders up. This seemed very strange behaviour and
they hailed the men and asked who they were. Grettir told his
name and those of his companions. The bondis asked who had
taken them out to the island.
Grettir answered: "He brought me out who took
me here, and had hands, and was more my friend than yours."
The bondis said: "Let us take our animals and
come to the land with us. You shall have freely whatever you
have taken of our property."
Grettir said: "That is a good offer; but each
of us shall have that which he has got. I may tell you at once
that hence I go not, unless I am dead or dragged away; nor
will I let go that which my hands have taken."
The bondis said no more, but thought that most
unhappy visitors had come to Drangey. They offered money and
made many fair promises, but Grettir refused them all, and so
they had to return home much disgusted, having accomplished
nothing. They told all the people of the district of the
wolves who had come into the island. This had come upon them
unawares and nothing could be done. They talked it over that
winter but could think of no way of getting Grettir out of the
island.
CHAPTER LXXII
GRETTIR VISITS THE THING AT HEGRANES
The time passed on until the spring, when men
assembled at the Hegranes Thing. They came in great numbers
from all the districts under its jurisdiction, and stayed
there a long time, both palavering and merry-making, for there
were many who loved merriment in the country round.
When Grettir heard that everybody had gone to
the Thing he laid a plan with his friends, for he was always
on good terms with those who were nearest to him, and for them
he spared nothing which he was able to get. He said he would
go to the land to get supplies and that Illugi and Glaum
should remain behind. Illugi thought it very imprudent but he
let Grettir have his way. He told them to guard the ladder
well since everything depended upon that. Then he went to the
land and obtained what he wanted. He kept his disguise
wherever he went and no one knew that he had come. He heard of
the festivities that were going on at the Thing and was
curious to see them, so he put on some old clothes that were
rather shabby and arrived just as they were going from the
Logretta home to their booths. Some of the young men were
talking about the weather, said it was good and fair, and that
it would be a good thing to have some games and wrestling;
they thought it a good proposal. So they sat down in front of
their booths. The foremost men in the games were the sons of
Thord. Thorbjorn Angle was very uppish and was arranging
everything himself for the sports. Every one had to do as he
bade, and he took them each by the shoulders and pushed them
into the field. The wrestling was begun by the less strong
ones in pairs, and there was great sport. When most of them
had wrestled except the strongest, there was much talk as to
who should tackle the two Thords mentioned above, and there
was no one who would do it. They went round inviting men to
wrestle, but the more they asked the more their invitation was
declined. Thorbjorn Angle looked round and saw a big man
sitting there, but could not clearly see his face. He seized
hold of him and gave a violent tug, but the man sat still and
did not move.
Thorbjorn said: "Nobody has held so firm
against me to-day as you. But who is this fellow?"
"My name is Gest."
Thorbjorn said: "You will be wanting to play
with us. You are a welcome Guest."
"Things may change quickly," he said. "I cannot
join in your games for I have no knowledge of them."
Many of them said that they would take it
kindly of him if he, a stranger, would play a little with the
men. He asked what they wanted him to do, and they asked him
to wrestle with some one. He said he had given up wrestling,
though he once used to take pleasure in it. As he did not
directly refuse they pressed him all the more.
"Well," he said, "if you want to drag me in you
must do one thing for me and grant me peace here at the Thing
until I reach my home."
They all shouted and said they would gladly do
that. The man who was foremost in urging that peace should be
given was one Haf the son of Thorarin, the son of Haf, the son
of Thord Knapp, who had settled in the land between Stifla in
Fljot and Tungua. He lived at Knappsstad and was a man of many
words. He spoke in favour of the peace with great authority
and said:
"Hereby do I declare PEACE between all men, in
particular between this man here seated who is named Gest and
all Godord's men, full bondis, all men of war and bearers of
arms, all other men of this district of the Hegranes Thing
whencesoever they have come, both named and unnamed. I declare
PEACE and full Immunity in behoof of this newcomer to us
unknown, Gest yclept, for the practice of games, wrestling and
all kinds of sport, while abiding here, and during his journey
home, whether he sail or whether he travel, whether by land or
whether by sea. He shall have PEACE in all places, named and
unnamed, for such time as he needeth to reach his home in
safety, by our faith confirmed. And I establish this PEACE on
the part of ourselves and of our kinsmen, our friends and
belongings, alike of women and of men, bondsmen and thralls,
youths and adults. Be there any truce-breaker who shall
violate this PEACE and defile this faith, so be he rejected of
God and expelled from the community of righteous men; be he
cast out from Heaven and from the fellowship of the holy; let
him have no part amongst mankind and become an outcast from
society. A vagabond he shall be and a wolf in places where
Christians pray and where heathen worship, where fire burneth,
where the earth bringeth forth, where the child lispeth the
name of mother, where the mother beareth a son, where men
kindle fire, where the ship saileth, where shields blink, sun
shineth, snow lieth, Finn glideth, fir-tree groweth, falcon
flieth the live-long day and the fair wind bloweth straight
under both her wings, where Heaven rolleth and earth is
tilled, where the breezes waft mists to the sea, where corn is
sown. Far shall he dwell from church and Christian men, from
the sons of the heathen, from house and cave and from every
home, in the torments of Hel. At PEACE we shall be, in concord
together, each with other in friendly mind, wherever we meet,
on mountain or strand, on ship or on snow- shoes, on plains or
on glaciers, at sea or on horseback, as friends meet in the
water, or brothers by the way, each at PEACE with other, as
son with father, or father with son, in all our dealings.
"Our hands we lay together, all and every to
hold well the PEACE and the words we have spoken in this our
faith, in the presence of God and of holy men, of all who hear
my words and here are present."
Many said that a great word had been spoken.
Gest said: "You have declared and spoken well; if you go not
back upon it, I will not delay to show that of which I am
capable."
Then he cast off his hood and after that all
his upper garments. Each looked at the other and woe spread
over their lips; for they knew that it was Grettir who had
come to them, by his excelling all other men in stature and
vigour. All were silent and Haf looked foolish. The men of the
district went two and two together, each blaming the other,
and most of all blaming him who had declared the peace. Then
Grettir said: "Speak plainly to me and declare what is in your
minds, for I will not sit here long without my clothes. You
have more at stake than I have, whether you hold the peace or
not."
They answered little and sat themselves down.
The sons of Thord and their brother-in-law Halldor then talked
together. Some wished to uphold the peace and some not. Each
nodded to the other. Then Grettir spoke a verse:
"Many a man is filled with doubt.
A twofold mask has the prover of shields.
The skilful tongue is put to shame.
They doubt if they shall hold the troth."
Then said Tungu-Steinn: "Think you so, Grettir?
Which then will the chieftains do? But true it is that you
excel all men in courage. See you not how they are putting
their noses together?"
Grettir then said:
"Together they all their noses laid;
they wagged their beards in close converse.
They talked with each other by two and two,
regretting the peace they afore declared."
Then said Hjalti the son of Thord: "It shall
not be so; we will hold the peace with you although our minds
have altered. I would not that men should have the example of
our having broken the peace which we ourselves gave and
declared. Grettir shall depart unhindered whithersoever he
will, and shall have peace till such time as he reach his home
from this journey. And then this truce shall have expired
whatever happen with us." They all thanked him for his speech,
and thought he had acted as a chieftain should under such
circumstances. Thorbjorn Angle was silent. Then it was
proposed that one or the other of the Thords should close with
Grettir, and he said that they might do as they chose. One of
the two brothers Thord then came forward. Grettir stood
upright before him and Thord went for him with all his might,
but Grettir never moved from his place. Then Grettir stretched
over across his back and seizing his breeches tripped up his
foot and cast him backwards over his head so that he fell
heavily upon his shoulders. Then the people said that both the
brothers should tackle him together, and they did so. There
arose a mighty tussle, each in turn having the advantage,
although Grettir always had one of them down. Now one, now the
other was brought to his knees or met with a reverse. So
fiercely they gripped that all of them were bruised and
bloody. Everybody thought it splendid sport, and when they
ceased thanked them for their wrestling. Those that were
sitting near judged that the two together were no stronger
than Grettir alone, although each had the strength of two
strong men. They were so equal that when they strove together
neither gained the advantage. Grettir did not stay long at the
Thing. The bondis asked him to give up the island, but this he
refused to do, and they accomplished nothing.
Grettir returned to Drangey where Illugi
rejoiced much at seeing him again. They stayed there in peace
and Grettir told them of his journeys; so the summer passed.
All thought the men of Skagafjord had acted most honourably in
upholding their peace, and from this may be seen what trusty
men lived in those days, after all that Grettir had done
against them. The less wealthy ones among the bondis began to
talk amongst themselves and say that there was little profit
in keeping a small share of the island, and now offered to
sell their holdings to the sons of Thord, but Hjalti said he
did not want to buy them. The bondis stipulated that any one
who wanted to buy a share should either kill Grettir or get
him away. Thorbjorn Angle said that he was ready to take the
lead, and would spare no pains to attack Grettir if they would
pay him for it. Hjalti his brother resigned to him his share
of the island because Thorbjorn was the more violent and was
unpopular. Several other bondis did the same, so that
Thorbjorn Angle got a large part of the island at a small
price, but he bound himself to get Grettir away.
CHAPTER LXXIII
VISIT OF THORBJORN ANGLE TO DRANGEY
At the end of the summer Thorbjorn Angle went
with a boat fully manned to Drangey. Grettir and his party
came forward on the cliff and they talked together. Thorbjorn
begged Grettir to do so much for his asking as to quit the
island. Grettir said there was not much hope of that.
Thorbjorn said: "It may be that I can give you some assistance
which will make it worth your while to do this. Many of the
bondis have now given up the shares which they had in the
island to me."
Grettir said: "Now for the very reason that you
have just told me, because you own the greater part of the
island, I am determined never to go hence. We may now divide
the cabbage. It is true that I thought it irksome to have the
whole of Skagafjord against me, but now neither need spare the
other, since neither is suffocated with the love of his
fellows. You may as well put off your journeys hither, for the
matter is settled so far as I am concerned."
"All abide their time," he said, "and you abide
evil."
"I must risk that," he said. And so they
parted. Thorbjorn returned home again.
CHAPTER LXXIV
THE FIRE GOES OUT IN DRANGEY
Grettir had, it is said, been two years in
Drangey, and they had slaughtered nearly all the sheep. One
ram, it is told, they allowed to live; it was grey below and
had large horns. They had much sport with it, for it was very
tame and would stand outside and follow them wherever they
went. It came to the hut in the evening and rubbed its horns
against the door. They lived very comfortably, having plenty
to eat from the birds on the island and their eggs, nor had
they much trouble in gathering wood for fire. Grettir always
employed the man to collect the drift, and there were often
logs cast ashore there which he brought home for fuel. The
brothers had no need to work beyond going to the cliffs, which
they did whenever they chose. The thrall began to get very
slack at his work; he grumbled much and was less careful than
before. It was his duty to mind the fire every night, and
Grettir bade him be very careful of it as they had no boat
with them. One night it came to pass that the fire went out.
Grettir was very angry and said it would only be right that
Glaum should have a hiding. The thrall said he had a very poor
life of it to have to lie there in exile and be ill-treated
and beaten if anything went wrong. Grettir asked Illugi what
was to be done, and he said he could think of nothing else but
to wait until a ship brought them some fire.
Grettir said that would be a very doubtful
chance to wait for. "I will venture it," he said, "and see
whether I can reach the land."
"That is a desperate measure," said Illugi. "We
shall be done for if you miscarry."
"I shall not drown in the channel," he said. "I
shall trust the thrall less in future since he has failed in a
matter of such moment to us."
The shortest passage from the island to the
mainland is one sea-mile.
CHAPTER LXXV
GRETTIR SWIMS TO THE MAINLAND FOR FIRE
Grettir then prepared for his swim. He wore a
cloak of coarse material with breeches and had his fingers
webbed. The weather was fine; he left the island towards the
evening. Illugi thought his journey was hopeless. Grettir had
the current with him and it was calm as he swam towards the
fjord. He smote the water bravely and reached Reykjanes after
sunset. He went into the settlement at Reykir, bathed in the
night in a warm spring, and then entered the hall, where it
was very hot and a little smoky from the fire which had been
burning there all day. He was very tired and slept soundly,
lying on right into the day. When it was a little way on in
the morning the servants rose, and the first to enter the room
were two women, the maid with the bondi's daughter. Grettir
was asleep, and his clothes had all fallen off on to the
floor. They saw a man lying there and recognised him. The maid
said:
"As I wish for salvation, sister, here is
Grettir the son of Asmund come. He really is large about the
upper part of his body, and is lying bare. But he seems to me
unusually small below. It is not at all in keeping with the
rest of him."
The bondi's daughter said: "How can you let
your tongue run on so? You are more than half a fool! Hold
your tongue!"
"I really cannot be silent, my dear sister,"
said the maid; "I would not have believed it if any one had
told me."
Then she went up to him to look more closely,
and kept running back to the bondi's daughter and laughing.
Grettir heard what she said, sprang up and chased her down the
room. When he had caught her he spoke a verse:
(VERSE MISSING IN MANUSCRIPT)
Soon afterwards Grettir went to the bondi
Thorvald, told him his difficulty and asked him to take him
out to the island again, which he did, lending him a ship and
taking him over. Grettir thanked him for his courtesy. When it
became known that Grettir had swum a sea-mile, every one
thought his courage extraordinary both on sea and on land. The
men of Skagafjord blamed Thorbjorn Angle much for not having
ridded Drangey of Grettir, and all wanted their shares back
again. That did not suit him and he asked them to have
patience.
CHAPTER LXXVI
ADVENTURE OF HAERING IN DRANGEY
That summer a ship came to Gonguskardsos, on
board of which was a man named Haering. He was a young man and
very active; he could climb any cliff. He went to visit
Thorbjorn Angle and stayed there into the autumn. He pressed
Thorbjorn much to take him to Drangey, that he might see
whether the cliff was so high that he could not get up there.
Thorbjorn said it should not be for nothing if he succeeded in
getting up on to the island and either killing or wounding
Grettir; he made it appear attractive as a task for Haering to
undertake.
One day they went to Drangey and he put the
Easterner ashore in a certain place, telling him not to let
himself be seen if he got to the top. Then they set up the
ladder and began a conversation with Grettir's people.
Thorbjorn asked him whether he would not leave the island. He
said there was nothing on which he was so determined.
"You have played much with us," said Thorbjorn,
"and we do not seem likely to have our revenge, but you have
not much fear for yourself."
Thus they disputed for long, but came to no
agreement.
We have now to tell of Haering. He climbed all
about on the cliffs and got to the top in a place which no
other man ever reached before or since. On reaching the top he
saw the two brothers standing with their backs turned to him.
He hoped in a short time to win money and glory from both.
They had no inkling of his being there, and thought that
nobody could get up except where the ladders were. Grettir was
occupied with Thorbjorn's men, and there was no lack of
derisive words on both sides. Then Illugi looked round and saw
a man coming towards them, already quite close. He said: "Here
is a man coming towards us with his axe in the air; he has a
rather hostile appearance." "You deal with him," said Grettir,
"while I look after the ladder." Illugi then advanced against
the Easterner, who on seeing him turned and ran about all over
the island. Illugi chased him to the furthest end of the
island; on reaching the edge he leaped down and broke every
bone in his body; thus his life ended. The place where he
perished was afterwards called Haering's leap. Illugi returned
and Grettir asked him how he had parted with his man.
"He would not trust me to manage for him," he
said. "He broke his neck over the cliff. The bondis may pray
for him as for a dead man."
When Angle heard that he told his men to shove
off. "I have now been twice to meet Grettir," he said. "I may
come a third time, and if then I return no wiser than I am
now, it is likely that they may stay in Drangey, so far as I
am concerned. But methinks Grettir will not be there so long
in the future as he has been in the past."
They then returned home and this journey seemed
even worse than the one before. Grettir stayed in Drangey and
saw no more of Thorbjorn that winter. Skapti the Lawman died
during the winter, whereby Grettir suffered a great loss, for
he had promised to press for a removal of his sentence when he
had been twenty years an outlaw, and the events just related
were in the nineteenth year. In the spring died Snorri the
Godi, and much more happened during this winter season which
does not belong to our saga.
CHAPTER LXXVII
GRETTIR'S CASE BEFORE THE ALL-THING
That summer at the All-Thing Grettir's friends
spoke much about his outlawry, and some held that his term was
fulfilled when he had completed any portion of the twentieth
year. This was disputed by the opposite party, who declared
that he had committed many acts deserving of outlawry since,
and that, therefore, his sentence ought to be all the longer.
A new Lawman had been appointed, Steinn the son of Thorgest,
the son of Steinn the Far-traveller, the son of Thorir
Autumn-mist. The mother of Steinn the Lawman was Arnora, the
daughter of Thord the Yeller. He was a wise man, and was asked
for his opinion. He told them to make a search to find out
whether this was the twentieth year of his outlawry, and they
did so. Then Thorir of Gard went to work to put every possible
difficulty in the way, and found out that Grettir had spent
one year of the time in Iceland, during which he must be held
to have been free of his outlawry. Consequently it had only
lasted nineteen years.
The Lawman declared that no man could be
outlawed for longer than twenty years in all, even though he
committed an outlaw's acts during that time. But before that
he would allow no man to be freed.
Thus the endeavour to remove his sentence broke
down for the moment, but there seemed a certainty of his being
freed in the following summer. The men of Skagafjord were
little pleased at the prospect of Grettir being freed, and
they told Thorbjorn Angle that he must do one of the two,
resign his holding in the island or kill Grettir. He was in
great straits, for he saw no way of killing Grettir, and yet
he wanted to keep the island. He tried everything he could
think of to get the better of Grettir by force or by fraud or
in any other way that he could.
CHAPTER LXXVIII
THORBJORN'S FOSTER-MOTHER
Thorbjorn Angle had a foster-mother named
Thurid. She was very old and of little use to mankind, but she
had been very skilled in witchcraft and magic when she was
young and the people were heathen. Now she seemed to have lost
it all. Still, although the land was Christian, many sparks of
heathendom remained. It was not forbidden by the law of the
land to sacrifice or perform other heathen rites in private;
only the one who performed them openly was sentenced to the
minor exile. Now it happened to many as it is said: The hand
turns to its wonted skill, and that which we have learned in
youth is always most familiar to us. So Thorbjorn Angle,
baffled in all his plans, turned for help to the quarter where
it would have been least looked for most people, namely, to
his foster-mother, and asked her what she could do for him.
She replied, "Now it seems to me to have come
to this, as the saying is: Many go to the goat-house to get
wool. What would I less than to think myself above the other
men of the country, and then to be as nothing when it comes to
the trial? I see not that it fares worse with me than with
you, even though I scarce rise from my bed. If you will have
my counsel then I must have my way in all that is done."
He consented, and said that she had long given
him counsel for his good. The "double month" of the summer was
now approaching. One fine day the old woman said to Angle:
"The weather is now calm and bright; I will that you go to
Drangey and pick a quarrel with Grettir. I will go with you
and learn what caution is in his words. I shall have some
surety when I see how far they are prospering, and then I will
speak over them such words as I please."
Angle said: "Let us not go to Drangey. It is
always worse in my mind when I leave that place than when I
arrive."
The woman said: "I will not help you if you
will not let me do as I like."
"Far be that from me, my foster-mother. I have
said that I will go there a third time, that something may
come of it for us."
"You may venture it," she said, "much labour
will you have before Grettir is laid in the earth; often your
lot will be doubtful and hard will it go with you before it is
finished. And yet you are so bound that somehow you must get
yourself out of it."
Then Thorbjorn Angle had a ten-oared boat
manned and went on board with eleven men. The woman was with
them and they rowed out to Drangey. When the brothers saw them
coming they came forward to the ladder and began once more to
talk about their case. Thorbjorn said he had come once more to
hear their answer whether Grettir would leave the place. He
said he would treat the destruction of his property and
Grettir's stay there as a light thing, provided they parted in
peace. Grettir said he had no intention of coming to any terms
about his going away. "I have often told you," he said, "that
there is no use in talking to me about it. You may do whatever
you please; I mean to stay here and abide what happens."
Thorbjorn saw that his end would not be gained
this time, and said: "I knew very well with what men of Hel I
had to do. It is most likely that some days will pass before I
come here again."
"It would not hurt me if you never came at
all," said Grettir.
The woman was lying in the stern sheets covered
up with clothes. Then she began to stir and said:
"These men are brave and unfortunate; there is
much difference between you; you offer them good and they
refuse everything. There are few more certain tokens of evil
than not to know how to accept the good. Now I say this of
you, Grettir, that you be deprived of health, of all good luck
and fortune, of all protection and counsel, ever the more the
longer you live. I wish that your days may be less happy in
the future than they have been in the past."
When Grettir heard that he started violently
and said: "What fiend is that in the ship with them?"
Illugi said: "I think that must be the old
woman, Thorbjorn's foster-mother."
"Curse the hag!" he said. "I could have thought
of nothing worse! Nothing that was ever said startled me more
than her words, and I know that some evil will befall me from
her and her spells. She shall have something to remind her of
her visit here."
Then he took up an enormous stone and threw it
down into the boat. It fell into the heap of clothes.
Thorbjorn had not thought that any man could throw so far. A
loud scream was heard, for the stone had struck her thigh and
broken it.
Illugi said: "I wish you had not done that."
"Do not blame me for it," said Grettir. "I fear
it has been just too little. One old woman would not have been
too great a price for us two."
"How will she pay for us? That will be a small
sum for the pair of us."
Thorbjorn then returned home; no greeting
passed between them when he left. He spoke to the old woman
and said: "It has happened as I expected. Little credit has
the journey to the island brought you. You have been injured
for the rest of your life, and we have no more honour than we
had before; we have to endure unatoned one insult after
another."
She answered: "This is the beginning of their
destruction; I say that from this time onwards they will go
downwards. I care not whether I live or not, if I do not have
vengeance for the injury they have done me."
"You seem to be in high spirits,
foster-mother," he said. Then they arrived home. The woman lay
in bed for nearly a month before her leg was set and she was
able to walk again. Men laughed much over the journey of
Thorbjorn and the old woman. Little luck had come from the
meetings with Grettir, first at the peace declaration at the
Thing, next when Haering was killed, and now the third time
when the woman's thigh was broken, while nothing had been done
on their side. Thorbjorn Angle suffered much from their talk.
CHAPTER LXXIX
THE SPELL TAKES EFFECT
The autumn passed and but three weeks remained
till the winter. The old woman asked to be driven to the
sea-shore. Thorbjorn asked what she was going to do.
"A small thing only," she said, "yet maybe the
signal of greater things to come."
They did as she asked them. When they reached
the shore she hobbled on by the sea as if directed to a spot
where lay a great stump of a tree as large as a man could bear
on his shoulder. She looked at it and bade them turn it over
before her; the other side looked as if it had been burned and
smoothed. She had a small flat surface cut on its smooth side;
then she took a knife, cut runes upon it, reddened them with
her blood and muttered some spells over it. After that she
walked backwards against the sun round it, and spoke many
potent words. Then she made them push the tree into the sea,
and said it should go to Drangey and that Grettir should
suffer hurt from it. Then she went back to Vidvik. Thorbjorn
said he did not know what would come of it. The woman said he
would know more clearly some day. The wind was towards the
land up the fjord, but the woman's stump drifted against the
wind, and not more slowly than would have been expected.
Grettir was sitting in Drangey with his
companions very comfortably, as has been told. On the day
following that on which the old woman had cast her spells upon
the tree they went down from the hill to look for firewood.
When they got to the western side of the island they found a
great stump stranded there.
"Here is a fine log for fuel," cried Illugi,
"let us carry it home." Grettir gave it a kick with his foot
and said: "An ill tree and ill sent. We must find other wood
for the fire."
He pushed it out into the sea and told Illugi
to beware of carrying it home, for it was sent for their
destruction. Then they returned to their hut and said nothing
about the tree to the thrall. The next day they found the tree
again, nearer to the ladder than on the day before. Grettir
put it back into the sea and said he would never carry it
home. That night passed and dirty weather set in with rain, so
that they did not care to go out and told Glaum to fetch fuel.
He grumbled very much and declared it was cruel to make him
plague himself to death in every kind of weather. He descended
the ladder and found there the woman's log. He thought himself
lucky, laboured home with it to the hut and threw it down with
a great noise which Grettir heard.
"Glaum has got something; I must go out and see
what it is," he said, and went out, taking his wood-cutting
axe with him.
"Let your cutting up of it be no worse than my
carrying of it home!" said Glaum.
Grettir was irritated with the thrall; he used
his axe with both hands and did not notice what tree it was.
Directly the axe touched the tree it turned flat and glanced
off into Grettir's right leg. It entered above his right knee
and pierced to the bone, making a severe wound. Grettir turned
to the tree and said: "He who meant me evil has prevailed; it
will not end with this. This is the very log which I twice
rejected. Two disasters have you now brought about, Glaum;
first you let our fire go out, and now you have brought in
this tree of ill-fortune. A third mistake will be the death of
you and of us all."
Illugi then bound the wound. It bled little;
Grettir slept well that night and three days passed without
its paining him. When they opened the bandages the flesh had
grown together and the wound was almost healed. Illugi said:
"I do not think that you will suffer very long with this
wound."
"That would be well," said Grettir; "it has
happened strangely however it ends; but my mind tells me
otherwise."
CHAPTER LXXX
THE SPELL CONTINUES TO WORK
One evening they all went to bed, and about
midnight Grettir began to toss about. Illugi asked him why he
was so restless. Grettir said his leg was hurting him and he
thought there must be some change in its appearance. They
fetched a light, unbound the wound and found it swollen and
blue as coal. It had opened again and was much worse than at
first. He had much pain after that and could not keep quiet,
nor would any sleep come to his eyes.
Grettir said: "We must be prepared for it. This
illness of mine is not for nothing; there is witchcraft in it.
The old woman has meant to punish me for the stone which I
threw at her." Illugi said: "I told you that no good would
come of that old woman."
"It will be all the same in the end," said
Grettir, and spoke a verse:
"Often when men have threatened my life
I have known to defend it against the foe:
but now 'tis a woman has done me to death.
Truly the spells of the wicked are mighty."
"Now we must be on the watch; Thorbjorn Angle
will not leave it to end here. You, Glaum, must in future
guard the ladder every day and pull it up in the evening. Do
this trustily, for much depends thereon. If you betray us your
end will be a short one."
Glaum promised most faithfully. The weather now
became severe. A north-easterly wind set in and it was very
cold. Every evening Grettir asked if the ladder was drawn in.
"Are we now to look for men?" said Glaum. "Is
any man so anxious to take your life that he will lose his own
for it? This weather is much worse than impossible. Your
warlike mood seems to have left you utterly if you think that
everything is coming to kill you."
"You will always bear yourself worse than
either of us," said Grettir, "whatever happens. But now you
must mind the ladder however unwilling you may be."
They drove him out every morning, much to his
disgust. The pain of the wound increased, and the whole leg
was swollen; the thigh began to fester both above and below
the wound, which spread all round, and Grettir thought he was
likely to die. Illugi sat with him night and day, paying no
heed to anything else. They were now in the second week of his
illness.
CHAPTER LXXXI
THORBJORN AGAIN VISITS DRANGEY
Thorbjorn Angle was now at home in Vidvik, much
put out at not having been able to overcome Grettir. When
about a week had passed from the day when the old woman had
bewitched the log, she came to speak with Thorbjorn and asked
whether he did not mean to visit Grettir. He said there was
nothing about which he was more determined.
"But do you wish to meet him, foster-mother?"
he asked.
"I have no intention of meeting him," she said;
"I have sent him my greeting, which I expect he has received.
But I advise you to set off at once and go quickly to see him,
otherwise it will not be your fate to overcome him."
He replied: "I have made so many inglorious
journeys there that I am not going again. This weather is
reason enough; it would not be possible, however pressing it
were."
"You are indeed without counsel if you see not
through these wiles. Now, I will advise you. First go and
collect men; ride to your brother-in-law Halldor in Hof and
get help from him. Is it too wild a thing to suppose that I
may have to do with this breeze that is now playing?"
Thorbjorn thought it might be that the woman
saw further than he supposed, so he sent through the country
for men. Answer came very quickly that none of those who had
given up their shares would do anything to help him. They said
that both the island and the Grettir affair were Thorbjorn's.
Tungu-Steinn gave him two men, Hjalti his brother three, Eirik
in Guddal sent him one. Of his own he had six. These twelve
rode out from Vidvik to Hof, where Halldor invited them to
stay and asked their news. Thorbjorn told him everything
fully. Halldor asked who had done it all; he said his
foster-mother had urged him much.
"That will lead to no good. She is a sorceress,
and sorcery is now forbidden."
"I cannot overlook everything," said Thorbjorn;
"I am determined that it shall now be brought to an end
somehow. But how shall I go to work to get on to the island?"
"It seems to me," said Halldor, "that you are
relying upon something, but I know not whether it is anything
good. If you want to accomplish anything go out to my friend
Bjorn in Haganes in Fljot. He has a good boat; ask him from me
to lend it to you, and then you will be able to sail on to
Drangey. It seems to me that if you find Grettir well and
hearty your journey will have been in vain. One thing know for
certain: do not slay him in open fight, for there are enough
men to avenge him. Do not slay Illugi if you can help it. I
fear that my counsel may not appear altogether Christian."
Halldor then gave him six men; one was named
Kar, another Thorleif, the third Brand. The names of the
others are not mentioned.
These eighteen men then went to Fljot, reached
Haganes, and gave Halldor's message to Bjorn. He said it was
his duty to do it for Halldor's sake, but that he was under no
obligation to Thorbjorn. He said it was an insane journey to
make, and tried hard to dissuade them. They answered that they
could not turn back, so they went down to the sea and launched
the boat, which was ready with all her gear in the boat-house.
Then they made ready to sail. All those who were standing on
the shore thought it impossible to cross. They hoisted the
sail and the boat was soon under way, far out in the fjord.
When they got right out to sea the weather quieted and was no
longer too heavy. In the evening as it was getting dark they
reached Drangey.
CHAPTER LXXXII
THE LAST BATTLE -- DEATH OF GRETTIR AND ILLUGI
It has now to be told how Grettir became so ill
that he could not stand on his feet. Illugi sat with him and
Glaum had to hold watch. He still continued to object, and
said they might think their lives were going to fall out of
them, but there was no reason for it. He went out, but most
unwillingly. When he came to the ladder he said to himself
that there was no need to draw it up. He felt very sleepy, lay
down and slept all day, and did not wake until Thorbjorn
reached the island. They saw then that the ladder was not
drawn up. Thorbjorn said: "The situation has changed from what
it used to be; there are no men moving about, and the ladder
is in its place. It may be that more will come of our journey
than we expected at first. Now let us go to the hut and not
let our courage slacken. If they are well we may know for
certain that there will be need for each to do his very best."
They went up the ladder, looked round and saw
close to the ascent a man lying and snoring aloud. Thorbjorn
recognised Glaum, went up to the rascal and told him to wake
up, striking his ear with the hilt of his sword and saying:
"Truly he is in a bad case whose life is entrusted to your
keeping."
Glaum looked up and said: "They are going on as
usual. Do you think my freedom such a great thing while I am
lying here in the cold?"
Angle said: "Have you lost your wits? Don't you
see that your enemies are upon you and about to kill you all?"
Glaum said nothing, but on recognising the men
cried out as loud as he could.
"Do one thing or the other," said Angle;
"either be silent this moment and tell me all about your
household, or be killed."
Glaum was as silent as if he had been dipped in
water. Thorbjorn said: "Are the brothers in the hut? Why are
they not about?"
"That would not be so easy," said Glaum, "for
Grettir is sick and nigh to death and Illugi is sitting with
him."
Thorbjorn asked about his condition, and what
had happened. Then Glaum told him all about Grettir's wound.
Angle laughed and said: "True is the ancient
saying that Old friends are the last to break away, and also
this, that It is ill to have a thrall for your friend -- such
a one as you, Glaum! You have shamefully betrayed your liege
lord, though there was little good in him."
Then the others cast reproaches at him for his
villainy; they beat him almost helpless and left him lying
there. Then they went on to the hut and knocked violently at
the door.
Illugi said: "Greybelly (1) is knocking at the
door, brother."
"He is knocking rather loud," said Grettir;
"most unmercifully." Then the door broke in pieces. Illugi
rushed to his arms and defended the door so that they could
not get in. They assailed it long, but could get nothing in
but the points of their spears, all of which Illugi severed
from their shafts. Seeing that they could do nothing, they
sprang on to the roof and began to break it in. Then Grettir
got on to his feet, seized a spear and thrust it between the
rafters. It struck Kar, Halldor's man from Hof, and went right
through him. Angle told them to go to work warily and be
careful of themselves. "We shall only overcome them," he said,
"if we act with caution."
Then they laid open the end of one of the
timbers and bore upon it until it broke. Grettir was unable to
rise from his knees, but he seized the sword Karsnaut at the
moment when they all sprang in from the roof, and a mighty
fray began. Grettir struck with his sword at Vikar, a man of
Hjalti the son of Thord, reaching his left shoulder as he
sprang from the roof. It passed across his shoulder, out under
his right arm, and cut him right in two. His body fell in two
parts on the top of Grettir and prevented him from recovering
his sword as quickly as he wished, so that Thorbjorn Angle was
able to wound him severely between the shoulders. Grettir
said: "Bare is his back who has no brother!"
Illugi threw his shield before Grettir and
defended him so valiantly that all men praised his prowess.
Grettir said to Angle: "Who showed you the way
to the island?"
"Christ showed us the way," he said.
"I guess," said Grettir, "that it was the
wicked old woman, your foster-mother, who showed you; hers
were the counsels that you relied upon."
"It shall now be all the same to you," said
Angle, "upon whom I relied."
They returned to the attack; Illugi defended
himself and Grettir courageously, but Grettir was unfit for
fighting, partly from his wounds, partly from his illness.
Angle then ordered them to bear Illugi down with their
shields, saying he had never met with his like amongst older
men than he. They did so, and pressed upon him with a wall of
armour against which resistance was impossible. They took him
prisoner and kept him. He had wounded most of those who were
attacking him and killed three. Then they went for Grettir,
who had fallen forward on his face. There was no resistance in
him for he was already dead from his wounded leg; his thigh
was all mortified up to the rectum. Many more wounds they gave
him, but little or no blood flowed.
When they thought he was quite dead Angle took
hold of his sword, saying he had borne it long enough, but
Grettir's fingers were so tightly locked around the hilt that
he could not loosen them. Many tried before they gave it up,
eight of them in turn, but all failed. Angle then said: "Why
should we spare a forest-man? Lay his hand upon the log."
They did so, and he hewed off the hand at the
wrist. Then the fingers straightened and were loosed from the
hilt. Angle took his sword in both hands and hewed at
Grettir's head. So mighty was the blow that the sword could
not hold against it, and a piece was broken out of the edge.
When asked why he spoilt a good weapon, he replied: "It will
be more easily known if there be any question."
They said this was unnecessary, as the man was
dead before. "I will do more," he said, and struck two or
three blows at Grettir's neck before he took off his head.
Then he said:
"Now I know for certain that Grettir is dead; a
great man of war have we laid even with the earth. We will
take his head with us, for I have no wish to lose the money
which was put upon it. There shall not be any doubt that it
was I who slew Grettir."
They said he might do as he pleased, but they
felt much disgusted, and thought his conduct contemptible.
Then Angle said to Illugi: "It is a great pity
that a man so valiant as you should have committed such a
folly as to cast in your lot with this outlaw and follow his
evil ways, at last to die unatoned."
Illugi answered: "When the All-Thing is over
next summer you shall know who are outlawed. Neither you nor
the woman, your foster-mother, shall judge this case, for it
is your spells and sorcery that have killed Grettir, though
you bore your iron weapons against him when he was at the door
of death. Many a base deed did you do over and above your
witchcraft."
Angle said: "You speak bravely, but it shall
not be so. I will show how I value you by sparing your life if
you will swear by your honour to take no vengeance upon any
person who has been with us on this occasion."
"I might have thought of it," he said, "if
Grettir had been able to defend himself or if you had killed
him in honourable battle. But now you need not hope that I
will try to save my life by becoming a poltroon like you. I
tell you at once that if I live no man shall be more
burdensome to you than I. Long will it be before I forget how
you have dealt with Grettir; far sooner will I choose to die."
Then Thorbjorn consulted with his companions
whether they should allow Illugi to live. They said he should
decide their doings himself, as he was the leader of the
expedition. Angle said he was not going to have a man
threatening his head who would not promise to hold faith. When
Illugi knew that they intended to slay him he laughed and
said: "Now you have resolved upon that which was nearest to my
heart."
When the day broke they led him to the eastern
side of the island and there slew him. All praised his
courage, and said there was no man of his years who was like
him. They buried both the brothers in the island, but took
Grettir's head with all weapons and clothes which had any
value away with them. His good sword Angle would not allow to
come amongst the spoils for division, but bore it long
himself. They took Glaum with them, still complaining and
resisting. The weather had calmed down in the night, and in
the morning they rowed to the mainland. Angle sailed for the
most convenient place, and sent the ship on to Bjorn. When
they came near to Osland, Glaum became so obstreperous that
they refused to carry him any further and slew him there where
he was, crying as loud as he could until he was killed. Angle
went home to Vidvik and considered that on this journey he had
been successful. They laid Grettir's head in salt and put it
for the winter in the out-house called Grettisbur in Vidvik.
Angle was much blamed for this affair when men came to know
that Grettir had been overcome by sorcery. He remained quietly
at home till after Yule. Then he went to seek Thorir in Gard
and told him of the slayings, adding that he considered that
he had a right to the money which had been put on Grettir's
head.
Thorir said that he would not deny that he had
brought about Grettir's sentence. "I have often suffered wrong
from him; but I would not to take his life have become an
evil-doer as you have done. I will not pay the money to you,
for you seem to me as one who will be doomed to death for
magic and witchcraft."
Angle said: "I think it is much more avarice
and meanness on your part than any scruples about the way in
which Grettir was killed."
Thorir said there was an easy way of settling
it between them; they need only wait for the All-Thing and
accept what seemed right to the Lawman. They then parted with
nothing but illfeeling between Thorir and Thorbjorn Angle.
ENDNOTES:
(1) The tame ram, see ch. lxxiv.
CHAPTER LXXXIII
THORBJORN VISITS GRETTIR'S MOTHER AT BJARG
The kinsmen of Grettir and Illugi were deeply
grieved when they heard of their death. They held that Angle
had done a dastardly deed in slaying a man at the point of
death, and they also accused him of practising sorcery. They
applied to the most learned men, and Angle's case was
ill-spoken of.
Four weeks after the beginning of summer he
rode Westwards to Midfjord. When Asdis heard of his being in
the neighbourhood she gathered her men around her. She had
many friends, Gamli and Glum, Skeggi, called Short-hand, and
Ospak, who was mentioned before. So much beloved was she that
the whole of Midfjord rose to help her, even those who had
once been Grettir's enemies. Chief among these was Thorodd
Drapustuf, who was joined by most of the Hrutafjord men.
Angle reached Bjarg with a following of twenty
men, bringing Grettir's head with him. All those who had
promised their support had not yet come in. Angle's party
entered the room with the head and set it on the floor. The
mistress of the house was there and several others; no
greeting passed between them. Angle spoke a verse:
"Grettir's head I bring thee here.
Weep for the red-haired hero, lady.
On the floor it lies; 'twere rotten by this,
but I laid it in salt. Great glory is mine."
She sat silent while he spoke his verse; then
she said:
"The swine would have fled like sheep from the fox
if Grettir had stood there hearty and strong.
Shame on the deeds that were done in the North!
Little the glory you gain from my lay."
Many said it was small wonder that she had
brave sons, so brave was she herself before the insults which
she had received. Ospak was outside and was talking with those
of Angle's men who had not gone in. He asked about the fray,
and they all praised Illugi for the defence that he had made.
They also told of Grettir's firm grip on his sword after he
was dead, and the men thought it marvellous. Then a number of
men were seen riding from the West; they were the friends of
Asdis with Gamli and Skeggi, who had come from Melar.
Angle had intended to have an execution against
Illugi and to claim all his property, but when all these men
came up he saw that it would not do. Ospak and Gamli were very
forward in wanting to fight with Angle, but the wiser heads
told them to get the advice of their kinsmen Thorvald and
other chiefs, and said that the more men of knowledge occupied
themselves with the affair the worse it would be for Angle.
Through their intervention Angle got away and took with him
Grettir's head, which he intended to produce at the All-Thing.
He rode home thinking that matters were going badly for him,
for nearly all the chiefs in the land were either relations or
connections of Grettir and Illugi.
That summer Skeggi Short-hand married the
daughter of Thorodd Drapustuf, who then took part in the case
on the side of Grettir's kinsmen.
CHAPTER LXXXIV
THORBJORN IS EXILED AT THE THING
Men now rode to the Thing. Angle's party was
smaller than he had expected, because the matter had come to
be badly spoken of. Halldor asked whether they were to take
Grettir's head with them to the All-Thing. Angle said he meant
to take it.
"That is an ill-advised thing to do," said
Halldor; "there are quite enough men against you as it is,
without your doing such a thing as that to re-awaken their
grief."
They were then on the road, and meant to ride
South by Sand, so Angle let him take the head and bury it in a
sand-hill, which is now called Grettisthuf.
The Thing was very full. Angle brought forward
his case, making the most of his own deeds. He told them how
he had killed the forest-man on whose head the highest price
had been laid, and he claimed the money. Thorir replied as
before. Then the Lawman was asked for his opinion. He said
that he wished to hear whether any counter-charge was made, by
which Angle should forfeit the outlaw money; if not, the money
offered for Grettir's head must be paid. Then Thorvald the son
of Asgeir asked Short- hand to bring the case before the
court, and he declared a first summons against Thorbjorn Angle
for witchcraft and sorcery through which Grettir had met with
his death, and a second for having killed a man who was half
dead, crimes which he said were punishable with outlawry.
There was a great division of parties, but
those who supported Thorbjorn were few. It went very
unexpectedly for him, for Thorvald and his son-in-law Isleif
held that to do a man to death by sorcery was a crime worthy
of death. Finally, by the counsel of wise men sentence was
passed that Thorbjorn was to leave Iceland that summer and not
to return during the lifetime of any of the men concerned in
the case on the side of Illugi and Grettir. It was enacted as
a law that all sorcerers should be outlawed.
When Thorbjorn saw what his fate was going to
be he got away from the Thing, for Grettir's friends were
making preparations to attack him. None of the money that was
set upon Grettir's head did he get; Steinn the Lawman would
not allow it because of his dishonourable conduct; nor was any
bloodmoney paid for the men who had fallen on his side in
Drangey; they were set off against Illugi, an arrangement,
however, with which Illugi's kinsmen were not at all pleased.
Men rode home from the Thing, and all the feuds
which had arisen on Grettir's account were now at an end.
Skeggi the son of Gamli, son-in-law of Thorodd Drapustuf and
sister's son of Grettir, went North to Skagafjord with the
assistance of Thorvald Asgeirsson and of his son-in-law
Isleif, who afterwards became bishop of Skalaholt. After
obtaining the consent of the whole community he took ship and
went to Drangey, where he found the bodies of Grettir and
Illugi and brought them to Reykir in Reykjastrand and buried
them in the church. Testimony of Grettir lying there is in the
fact that in the days of the Sturlungs, when the church at
Reykir was moved to another place, Grettir's bones were dug
up, and were found to be enormously big and strong. Illugi was
buried later on the north side of the church, and Grettir's
head was buried in the church at his home in Bjarg.
Asdis remained in Bjarg and was so beloved that
no one molested her any more than they did while Grettir was
an outlaw. The property at Bjarg passed after her death to
Skeggi Short-hand, who became a great man. His son was Gamli,
the father of Skeggi of Skarfsstad and of Alfdis the mother of
Odd the Monk, from whom many are descended.
CHAPTER LXXXV
THORBJORN GOES TO NORWAY AND CONSTANTINOPLE
Thorbjorn Angle embarked at Gasar with as much
of his own property as he was able to get. His lands went to
his brother Hjalti, including Drangey, which Angle gave him.
Hjalti became a great chief later on, but is not mentioned
again in our story.
Angle went to Norway and still made himself
very important. He was supposed to have done a great deed of
valour in slaying Grettir, and many who did not know how it
really happened honoured him accordingly; but there were some
to whom Grettir's fame was known. He only told so much of the
story as tended to his own glory, but whatever was less
creditable to him he omitted. In the autumn his account
reached Tunsberg and came to the ears of Thorsteinn Dromund,
who kept very quiet, for he had been told that Angle was a
very doughty man and valiant. He remembered the talk which he
had had with Grettir in days long past about his arms, and
obtained news of Angle's movements. They were both in Norway
that winter, but Thorbjorn was in the North and Thorsteinn in
Tunsberg, so that they did not see each other. Angle knew,
however, that Grettir had a brother in Norway, and did not
feel very secure in a strange country; so he asked advice as
to what he had better do. In those days many of the Norsemen
used to go to Mikligard (1) to take service. Thorbjorn thought
it would suit him very well to go there and earn wealth and
glory instead of staying in the northern parts where there
were relations of Grettir. So he made ready to leave Norway,
embarked, and did not stop until he reached Constantinople,
and obtained service there.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Constantinople.
CHAPTER LXXXVI
GRETTIR'S DEATH AVENGED BY HIS BROTHER
THORSTEINN DROMUND
Thorsteinn Dromund was a wealthy man and highly
thought of. On hearing of Angle's departure to Constantinople
he handed over his property to his kinsmen and followed him,
dogging his movements as he went, without Angle knowing. He
reached Constantinople very soon after Angle, intending at all
costs to kill him. Neither knew of the other.
Both wanted to be received into the Varangian
Guards, and their offer was well received directly it was
known that they were Norsemen. At that time Michael Catalactus
was king over Constantinople. Thorsteinn Dromund watched for
an opportunity of meeting Angle where he might recognise him,
but failed amidst the crowd, so he kept on the watch, caring
little for his own well- being and ever thinking how much he
had lost.
The next thing that happened was that the
Varangians were ordered on field service for the defence of
the country. The custom and the law were that before they
marched a review was held for the inspection of their weapons;
this was done on the present occasion. On the day appointed
for the review all the Varangians and all who were marching
with them had to appear and show their arms. Thorsteinn and
Angle both presented themselves. Thorbjorn was the first to
show his weapons and he presented the sword Grettisnaut. As he
showed it all marvelled and declared that it was indeed a
noble weapon, but said it was a bad fault that a piece was out
of the middle of the edge, and they asked how that had come
about. Angle said that was a tale worth telling.
"The first thing I must tell you," he said, "is
that out in Iceland I slew a hero named Grettir the Strong. He
was a tremendous warrior and so valorous that no one could
succeed in killing him until I came. But as I was destined to
be his slayer, I overcame him, although he was many times
stronger than I am. I cut off his head with this sword and
broke a piece out of the edge."
Those who stood by said he must have had a hard
skull, and they showed the sword round. From this Thorsteinn
came to know which was Angle, and asked to be shown the sword
with the others. Angle willingly showed it to him, for they
were all praising his strength and courage, and he, having no
notion of its being Thorsteinn or any relation of Grettir,
thought he would do likewise. Dromund took the sword, at once
raised it aloft and struck a blow at Angle. It came into his
head with such force that it penetrated to his jaw and
Thorbjorn fell dead to the ground. Thereupon all the men
became silent. The officer of the place put Thorsteinn under
arrest and asked him why he had committed such a breach of
discipline in the sanctity of the Assembly. Thorsteinn said he
was a brother of Grettir the Strong and that he had never been
able to obtain his vengeance till that moment. Then many of
them stood up for him and said there was much excuse for a man
who had come such a long way to avenge his brother. The elders
of the town thought that this might be true, but as there was
no one present to bear out his word they fell back upon their
own law, which declared that any man who slew another should
lose nothing else than his life.
Judgment was quickly passed upon Thorsteinn,
and it was rather hard. He was to sit in a dark chamber in a
dungeon and there await his death unless some one came to pay
a ransom for him. When he reached the dungeon he found a man
who had been there a long time and was all but dead from
misery. It was both foul and cold. Thorsteinn asked him: "How
do you find your life?"
"Most evil," he replied; "no one will help me,
for I have no kinsmen to pay a ransom."
"There are many ways out of a difficulty," said
Thorsteinn, "let us be happy and do something to cheer
ourselves."
The man said he had no joy in anything.
"We will try it," said Thorsteinn.
Then he began to sing songs. He was such a
singer that it would be hard to find his like, and he spared
nothing. The dungeon was close to the public road and
Thorsteinn sang so loud that it resounded from the walls; the
man who before was half dead had much joy therefrom. In this
way he sang every evening.
CHAPTER LXXXVII
THE LADY SPES
There was a very distinguished lady in that
town, the owner of a large establishment, very rich and highly
born. Her name was Spes. Her husband's name was Sigurd; he too
was wealthy, but of lower birth than she was. She had been
married to him for his money. There was not much love between
them, and the marriage was thought an unhappy one. She was
very proud, and had much dignity.
One evening when Thorsteinn was diverting
himself she happened to pass along the street near the dungeon
and heard singing so sweet that she declared she had never
heard the like. She was walking with several retainers, and
told them to go in and find out who it was that had such a
magnificent voice. They called out and asked who was there in
such close confinement. Thorsteinn told his name. Spes said:
"Are you as good at other things as you are at
singing?"
He said there was not much in that.
"What have you done," she asked, "that they
should torture you here to death?"
He said he had killed a man and avenged his
brother; "but I have no witness to prove it," he said; "so I
have been put here unless some one comes to release me, of
which there seems little hope, since I have no relations
here."
"A great loss would it be if you were killed,"
she said. "Was your brother then a man of such renown, he whom
you avenged?"
Thorsteinn said he was half as good a man again
as himself.
She asked what token there was of that. Then
Thorsteinn spoke this verse:
"Goddess of rings! No eight could meet him,
or gain the sword from his vanquished hand.
Brave was Grettir; his foemen doughty
severed the hand of the ruler of ships."
Those who understood the song declared that it
told of great nobility. When she heard that she asked:
"Will you receive your life at my hands if the
choice is offered you?"
"Indeed I will," he said, "if this companion of
mine sitting here is released along with me. If not, we must
both remain sitting here together."
She answered: "I think you are more worth
paying for than he is."
"However that may be," he said, "either we both
of us come out from here together or neither of us comes out."
So she went to the Varangians' quarters and
asked for the release of Thorsteinn, offering money. They
agreed. With her interest and her wealth she brought it about
that both of them were released. Directly Thorsteinn came out
of the dungeon he went to pay his respects to the lady Spes.
She welcomed him and kept him there secretly. From time to
time he went campaigning with the Varangians, and was
distinguished for his courage in all their engagements.
CHAPTER LXXXVIII
ADVENTURES OF THORSTEINN AND SPES
At that time Harald the son of Sigurd (1) was
in Constantinople, and Thorsteinn became friendly with him.
Thorsteinn was now a very great personage, for Spes kept him
well supplied with money, and they became very much attached
to one another. She was a great admirer of his skill. Her
expenses were very great because she tried to keep up many
friends. Her husband noticed a great change in her character
and her behaviour, and especially that she had become very
extravagant. Treasures of gold and other property which were
in her keeping disappeared. One day her husband Sigurd spoke
with her and said that he was much surprised at her conduct.
"You pay no attention to our affairs," he said, "and squander
money in many ways. You seem as if you were in a dream, and
never wish to be where I am. I am certain that something is
going on."
She replied: "I told you as I told my kinsmen
when we married that I meant to be my own mistress in all
matters which concern myself; that is why I do not spare your
money. Or is there anything more than this that you wish to
speak about with me? Do you accuse me of anything shameful?"
He said : "I am not without my suspicions that
you are keeping some man whom you prefer to me."
"I do not know," she said, "that there would be
very much in that; and yet of a surety there is no truth in
what you say. I will not speak with you alone if you bring
such improper accusations against me."
He dropped the subject for the time. She and
Thorsteinn continued to carry on as before, and were not very
heedful of the talk of evil-minded people; they relied upon
her wits and her popularity. They were often sitting together
and diverting themselves.
One evening when they were sitting in an upper
room in which her treasures were kept she asked Thorsteinn to
sing something, and thinking that her husband was as usual
sitting at drink she fastened the door. When he had sung for a
time there was a banging at the door, and some one called to
them to open it. It was her husband with a number of his
followers. The lady had opened a large chest to show
Thorsteinn the treasures. When she knew who was outside she
refused to open the door, and said to Thorsteinn: "Quickly!
Jump into the chest and keep very quiet."
He did so. She locked the chest and sat upon
it. Her husband then entered, having forced his way in. She
said:
"What are you coming here for with all this
uproar? Are there robbers after you?"
He said: "Now it is well that you yourself give
proof of what you are. Where is the man who was letting his
voice run on so grandly? No doubt you think his voice is
better than mine."
"No man is a fool if he keeps silence," she
said; "that applies to you. You think yourself very cunning,
and would like to fasten your lies on to me, as in this case.
Well, if you have spoken the truth, find the man. He will not
escape through the walls or the roof."
He searched all through the room and found
nothing.
"Why don't you take him," she said, "if you are
so certain?"
He was silent and knew not how he could have
been deceived. He asked his men whether they had not heard
what he heard, but when they saw that the lady was displeased
there was nothing to be got out of them; they said that one
was often mistaken about sounds. He then went away, not
doubting that he knew the truth, though he could not find the
man. After that he ceased for some time to pry into his wife's
concerns.
On another occasion, much later, Thorsteinn and
Spes were sitting in a tiring-room where dresses were kept
which belonged to them, both made up and in the piece. She
showed many of the cloths to Thorsteinn and spread them out.
When they were least expecting it her husband came up with a
troop of men and broke into the room. While they were forcing
their way in she covered Thorsteinn up with a bundle of
clothes and leaned against the heap when they entered.
"Do you again deny," he said, "that there was a
man here with you? There are those present here now who saw
you both."
She told him not to be so violent. "You will
not fail to catch him now," she said. "Only leave me in peace
and do not push me about."
They searched the room, but finding nothing had
to give it up.
"It is always good to have better proofs than
people suppose. It was only to be expected that you would not
find what was not there. Now, my husband, will you admit your
folly and free me from this slanderous accusation?"
"By no means will I free you," he said, "for I
know that what I have accused you of is true, and it will cost
you an effort to free yourself of the charge."
She said she was quite ready to do that, and
there. with they parted.
After this Thorsteinn remained entirely with
the Varangians. Men say that he acted by the advice of Harald
the son of Sigurd, and it is thought that they would not have
got out of it as they did if they had not made use of him and
his wits.
After a time Sigurd gave out that he was about
to go abroad on some business. His wife did not try to
dissuade him. When he was gone Thorsteinn came to Spes and
they were always together. Her house was built on the very
edge of the sea and there were some of the rooms under which
the sea flowed.
Here it was that Spes and Thorsteinn always
sat. There was a small trap-door in the floor, known to no one
but these two, and it was kept open in case of its being
wanted in a hurry.
Sigurd, it must be told, did not go away, but
concealed himself so as to be able to watch his wife's doings.
One evening when they were sitting unconcernedly in the room
over the sea and enjoying themselves, in came her husband with
a party of men, taking them by surprise. He had taken some of
the men to the window of the room that they might see whether
it was not as he had said. They all said that he had spoken
truly, and that it must have been so too on the former
occasions. Then they rushed into the room.
On hearing the noise Spes said to Thorsteinn:
"You must go down here whatever it costs. Give me some sign
that you have got away from the house."
He promised that he would, and descended
through the floor. The lady closed the trap-door with her
foot, and it fell back into its place so that no one could see
any mark of the floor having been touched. Sigurd entered the
room with his men, searched, and of course found nothing. The
room was uninhabited and there was no furniture in it, but
only the bare floor and a bed, on which the lady was sitting
and twirling her fingers. She paid little attention to them
and seemed as if their business did not concern her. Sigurd
thought it altogether ridiculous and asked his followers if
they had not seen the man. They declared that they had seen
him most assuredly.
The lady said: "Now we may say as the proverb
has it: A11 good things are in threes. This is your case,
Sigurd. Three times you have disturbed me, if I remember
rightly; and now are you any the wiser than you were in the
beginning?"
"This time I am not alone to tell the story,"
he said. "For all that you will have to clear yourself, for on
no terms will I allow your shameful deeds to go unpunished."
"It seems," she said, "that you require the
very thing which I would myself propose. It will please me
well to show the falsehood of this accusation, which has been
so thoroughly aired that I shall be disgraced if I cannot
refute it."
"At the same time," he said, "you will have to
deny that you have expended my money and my property."
She replied: "At the time when I clear myself I
will refute all the matters which you brought against me, and
you may consider how it will all end. I mean to go at once,
to-morrow morning, before the bishop that he may grant me full
compurgation from this charge."
Her husband was satisfied with this and went
away with his men.
In the meantime Thorsteinn had swum away from
the house and landed at a convenient place, where he got a
firebrand and held it aloft so that it could be seen from the
lady's house. She stayed long outside in the evening and the
night, for she was anxious to know whether Thorsteinn had
reached the land. When she saw the light she knew that he had
landed, for that was the signal which they had agreed upon.
The next morning Spes proposed to her husband
that they should speak with the bishop on their matter. This
he was quite ready to do, so they went before the bishop and
Sigurd repeated his accusation. The bishop asked whether she
had ever been accused of misbehaviour before, but nobody had
heard of such a thing. Then he asked upon what evidence this
charge was brought against her, and Sigurd produced the men
who had seen her sitting in a room with the door locked and a
man with her. Her husband said that this was ground enough for
supposing that the man meant to seduce her.
The bishop said that she might very well purge
herself from this accusation if she so desired. She replied
that she desired it very much. "I hope," she said, "that I
shall have many women to swear for me on this charge."
The form of the oath which she was to swear was
then communicated to her and the day for the compurgation
fixed. She returned home and was quite happy. She and
Thorsteinn met and laid their plans.
ENDNOTES:
(1) The same Harald who, as King of Norway, would later
challenge King Harald I for the throne of England. He lost at
the Battle of Stamford Bridge -- three weeks before Hastings
(A.D. 1066).
CHAPTER LXXXIX
THE ORDEAL
The day now arrived when Spes was to make oath.
She invited all her friends and relations, and appeared in the
finest clothes that she possessed, with many a fine lady in
her train. It was raining heavily and the roads were flooded;
on the way to the church there was a swamp to be passed. When
Spes came with her company to the swamp there was a great
crowd on the high road, and a multitude of poor people asking
for alms, for all who knew her thought it a duty to give her a
greeting and wish her well because of the kindnesses which
they had often received from her. Amongst these poor people
there was a beggar very large of stature and with a long
beard. The women halted at the swamp; being people of high
rank they did not like to cross the dirty slough. The big
beggar, seeing that Spes was better dressed than the other
ladies, said to her: "Good lady, have the condescension to
allow me to carry you over the swamp. It is the duty of us
gaberlunzies to serve you in whatever way we can."
"How can you carry me," she said, "when you can
scarcely carry yourself?"
"Nevertheless, it would be a great
condescension. I cannot offer you more than I have, and you
will prosper the better in other things for having had no
pride with a poor man."
"Know then for a surety," she said, "that if
you carry me not properly the skin shall be flayed from your
back."
"Gladly will I venture upon that," he said, and
waded out into the stream. She pretended to dislike very much
being carried by him; nevertheless, she got upon his back. He
staggered along very slowly, using two crutches, and when they
reached the middle he was reeling in every direction. She told
him to pull himself together. "If you drop me here," she said,
"it shall be the worst journey that you ever made."
The poor wretch gathered up all his strength
and still went on. By dint of a valiant effort he had all but
reached the shore when he struck his foot against something
and fell forwards, projecting her on to the bank while he
himself fell into the mire up to his armpits. There as he lay
he put out his hands, not on her clothes, but on her legs. She
sprang up cursing and said she always suffered ill from low
vagabonds. "It would only be right that you should have a good
beating," she said, "were I not ashamed to beat such a
miserable creature as you are."
He said: "Unequal is the lot of man. I thought
to earn some benefit and to receive alms from you, and you
only give me abuse and insult without any reward." And he
pretended to be very much disgusted. Many felt pity for him,
but she said he was a very cunning rascal. When they all began
to beg for him she took out her purse, wherein was many a
golden penny. She shook out the money, saying: "Take that,
fellow! It would not be right that you should go unpaid for
all my scoldings. You are now paid for what you have done."
He gathered up the money and thanked her for
her liberality. Spes then went to the church, which was full
of people. Sigurd proceeded with energy and told her to clear
herself of the charge which he had brought against her.
"I pay no heed to your accusation," she said;
"but I want to know what man it was whom you pretend to have
seen in the room with me, because there is always some proper
man near me; there is nothing to be ashamed of in that. But
this I will swear, that to no man have I given money and that
by no man has my body been defiled excepting by my husband and
by that beggar, who put his muddy hands upon my leg to-day
when I was carried over the ditch."
Many then were satisfied and declared that her
oath was perfectly good and that she was in no way disgraced
by a man having touched her unwittingly. She said she had to
tell the story just as it happened, and then she swore the
oath in the words appointed for her. Many said that she would
be observing the saying that: Nothing should be omitted from
an oath. But she replied that wise men would hold that there
was no cause for suspicion. Then her relations began to talk
with her and said that it was a great insult to a woman of
high birth that such lies should be told about her and go
unpunished, for they said it was an offence punishable with
death if a woman were proved to have been unfaithful to her
husband. So Spes asked the bishop to divorce her from Sigurd,
saying that she would not endure the lies which he had told.
Her kinsmen supported her, and with their help her request was
granted. Sigurd got little of the property and had to leave
the country. So it happened as usual that the weaker had to
bow, nor could he accomplish anything although the right was
on his side. Spes took all the money and was held in high
esteem, but when men came to consider her oath they thought it
was not altogether above suspicion, and they concluded that
very skilful men had composed the Latin formula for her. They
ferreted out that the beggar who carried her was Thorsteinn
Dromund. But Sigurd got no redress.
CHAPTER XC
THORSTEINN AND SPES RETURN TO NORWAY
While the affair was being talked about
Thorsteinn Dromund remained with the Varangians, where he was
held in such high estimation that his prowess was considered
to be beyond that of nearly every man who had come to them.
Especially Harald the son of Sigurd did him honour, and
claimed kinship with him; it was supposed to have been by his
advice that Thorsteinn had acted.
Soon after Sigurd was driven from the country
Thorsteinn proposed marriage to Spes; she was quite agreeable,
but referred it to her kinsmen. There were family meetings and
all agreed that she herself ought to decide. Matters were
settled between them; their union was most prosperous and they
had plenty of money. Thorsteinn was considered lucky to have
got out of his difficulties in such a way. After they had
lived together for two years in Constantinople, Thorsteinn
told her that he would like to visit his property once more in
Norway. She said he should do as he pleased, and he then sold
his property so as to have some ready money. They left the
country with a good company of followers and sailed all the
way to Norway. Thorsteinn's kinsmen welcomed them both, and
soon saw that Spes was both generous and noble; accordingly
she quickly became very popular. They had three children, and
remained on their property very well contented with their
condition.
The king of Norway was at that time Magnus the
Good. Thorsteinn soon went to meet him, and was well received
because of the fame which he had earned through having avenged
Grettir the Strong. Scarcely an example was known of a man
from Iceland having been avenged in Constantinople, excepting
Grettir the son of Asmund. It is said that Thorsteinn entered
his bodyguard. Thorsteinn remained nine years in Norway, both
he and his wife being in high honour. After that King Harald
the son of Sigurd returned from Constantinople, and King
Magnus gave him the half of Norway. Both kings were together
in Norway for a time. After Magnus's death some who had been
his friends were less contented, for he was beloved of all,
but Harald was not easy to get on with, since he was hard and
severe. Thorsteinn Dromund then began to grow old, but was
still very vigorous. Sixteen winters had now passed since the
death of Grettir.
CHAPTER XCI
ABSOLUTION IN ROME
There were many who urged Thorsteinn to visit
King Harald and become his man, but he would not. Spes said to
him: "I would not, Thorsteinn, that you go to Harald, for a
larger debt remains unpaid to another King, whereto we must
now turn our thoughts. Our youth is now passed; we are both
becoming old, and we have lived more after our desires than
after Christian doctrine or regard for righteousness. Now I
know that neither kinsmen nor wealth may pay this debt if we
pay it not ourselves. I would therefore that we now change our
way of life and leave the country to betake ourselves to
Pafagard.(1) I have hope that so I shall be absolved from my
sin."
Thorsteinn answered: "The matter of which you
speak is as well known to me as it is to you. It is right that
you should rule now, and most seemly, since you allowed me to
rule when our matter was much less hopeful. And so shall it be
now in all that you say."
This resolve of theirs took men by surprise.
Thorsteinn was then two years past of sixty-five, but still
vigorous in all that he undertook. He summoned all his kinsmen
and connections to him and told them his plans. The wiser men
approved of his resolve, while holding his departure a great
misfortune for themselves. Thorsteinn said there was no
certainty of his return. He said:
"I wish now to thank you all for the care of my
goods which you took while I was absent. Now I ask you to take
over my children along with my property, and to bring them up
in your own ways; for I am now come to such an age that even
if I live there is much doubt about whether I shall return.
Manage all that I leave behind as if I should never return to
Norway."
The men answered that matters would be more
easily managed if his wife remained to look after them.
She answered: "I left my own country and came
from Mikligard with Thorsteinn, I bade farewell to my kinsmen
and my possessions, because I wished that one fate should
befall us both. And now it has seemed pleasant to me here, but
no desire have I to remain in Norway or in these Northern
lands after he has departed. There has always been goodwill
between us and no dissension. Now we must both depart
together; for we ourselves know best about many things which
have happened since we first met."
When they had thus dealt with their own
condition, Tborsteinn appointed certain impartial men to
divide his property in two parts. Tborsteinn's kinsmen took
over the half which was to go to the children, and brought
them up with their father's relations. They became in time men
of the utmost valour, and a large posterity in the Vik is
sprung from them. Thorsteinn and Spes divided their share,
giving some to the church for the good of their souls and
keeping some for themselves. So they set off for Rome, bearing
the good wishes of many with them.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Rome.
CHAPTER XCII
THE END OF THORSTEINN AND SPES
They travelled then the whole way to Rome, and
appeared before him who was appointed to hear confessions.
They related truly all that had happened, all the cunning
tricks wherewith they had achieved their union. They submitted
with humility to the penances laid upon them, and by reason of
their having voluntarily turned their hearts to desire
absolution from their sins, without any pressure from the
elders of the church, their penance was lightened so far as it
was possible, and they were gently admonished to arrange their
lives with wisdom for the well-being of their souls, and,
after receiving absolution in full, to live henceforward in
purity. They were declared to have acted wisely and well.
Then the lady Spes said: "Now, I think it has
gone well; and now we have not suffered only misfortune
together. It may be that foolish men will follow the example
of our former lives. Let us now end in such way that we may be
an example to the good. We will come to an agreement with some
men skilled in building to erect for each of us a stone
retreat, thus may we atone for all the offences which we have
committed against God."
So Thorsteinn advanced money to stone-masons
and such other persons as might be needed, that they might not
be without the means of subsistence. When these works were
completed and all matters were settled, a fitting time was
chosen for them to part company with each other, each to live
alone, in order more surely to partake of the eternal life in
another world. They remained each in their own retreat, living
as long as it pleased God to spare them, and thus ending their
lives.
Most men consider Thorsteinn Dromund and Spes
to have been most fortunate in escaping from the difficulties
which they had fallen into. None of their children or
posterity are mentioned as having come to Iceland.
CHAPTER XCIII
THE TESTIMONY OF STURLA THE LAWMAN
Sturla the Lawman has declared that no outlaw
was ever so distinguished as Grettir the Strong. For this he
assigns three reasons. First, that he was the cleverest,
inasmuch as he was the longest time an outlaw of any man
without ever being captured, so long as he was sound in
health. Secondly, that he was the strongest man in the land of
his age, and better able than any other to deal with spectres
and goblins. Thirdly, that his death was avenged in
Constantinople, a thing which had never happened to any other
Icelander.
Further, he says that Thorsteinn Dromund was a
man who had great luck in the latter part of his life.
Here endeth the story of Grettir the son of
Asmund.