Njal's Saga
Page 22
57.
OF STARKAD AND HIS SONS
There was a man named Starkad; he was a son of Bork the Waxy- toothed-blade,
the son of Thorkell Clubfoot, who took the land round about Threecorner
as the first settler. His wife's name was Hallbera (1).
The sons of Starkad and Hallbera were these: Thorgeir and Bork and Thorkell.
Hildigunna the Leech was their sister.
They were very proud men in temper, hard-hearted and unkind. They treated
men wrongfully.
There was a man named Egil; he was a son of Kol, who took land as a settler
between Storlek and Reydwater. The brother of Egil was Aunund of Witchwood,
father of Hall the Strong, who was at the slaying of Holt-Thorir with
the sons of Kettle the Smooth- tongued.
Egil kept house at Sandgil; his sons were these: Kol, and Ottar, and Hauk.
Their mother's name was Steinvor; she was Starkad's sister.
Egil's sons were tall and strifeful; they were most unfair men. They were
always on one side with Starkad's sons. Their sister was Gudruna Nightsun,
and she was the bestbred of women.
Egil had taken into his house two Easterlings; the one's name was Thorir
and the other's Thorgrim. They were not long come out hither for the first
time, and were wealthy and beloved by their friends; they were well skilled
in arms, too, and dauntless in everything.
Starkad had a good horse of chesnut hue, and it was thought that no horse
was his match in fight. Once it happened that these brothers from Sandgil
were away under the Threecorner. They had much gossip about all the householders
in the Fleetlithe, and they fell at last to asking whether there was any
one that would fight a horse against them.
But there were some men there who spoke so as to flatter and honour them,
that not only was there no one who would dare do that, but that there
was no one that had such a horse.
Then Hildigunna answered, "I know that man who will dare to fight horses
with you."
"Name him," they say.
"Gunnar has a brown horse," she says, "and he will dare to fight his horse
against you, and against any one else."
"As for you women," they say, "you think no one can be Gunnar's match;
but though Geir the Priest or Gizur the White have come off with shame
from before him, still it is not settled that we shall fare in the same
way."
"Ye will fare much worse," she says: and so there arose out of this the
greatest strife between them. Then Starkad said, "My will is that ye try
your hands on Gunnar last of all; for ye will find it hard work to go
against his good luck."
"Thou wilt give us leave, though, to offer him a horsefight?"
"I will give you leave, if ye play him no trick."
They said they would be sure to do what their father said.
Now they rode to Lithend; Gunnar was at home, and went out, and Kolskegg
and Hjort went with him, and they gave them a hearty welcome, and asked
whither they meant to go?
"No farther than hither," they say. "We are told that thou hast a good
horse, and we wish to challenge thee to a horse-fight."
"Small stories can go about my horse," says Gunnar; "he is young and untried
in every way."
"But still thou wilt be good enough to have the fight, for Hildigunna
guessed that thou wouldest be easy in matching thy horse."
"How came ye to talk about that?" says Gunnar.
"There were some men," say they, "who were sure that no one would dare
to fight his horse with ours."
"I would dare to fight him," says Gunnar; "but I think that was spitefully
said."
"Shall we look upon the match as made, then?" they asked.
"Well, your journey will seem to you better if ye have your way in this;
but still I will beg this of you, that we so fight our horses that we
make sport for each other, but that no quarrel may arise from it, and
that ye put no shame upon me; but if ye do to me as ye do to others, then
there will be no help for it but that I shall give you such a buffet as
it will seem hard to you to put up with. In a word, I shall do then just
as ye do first."
Then they ride home. Starkad asked how their journey had gone off; they
said that Gunnar had made their going good.
"He gave his word to fight his horse, and we settled when and where the
horse-fight should be; but it was plain in everything that he thought
he fell short of us, and he begged and prayed to get off."
"It will often be found," says Hildigunna, "that Gunnar is slow to be
drawn into quarrels, but a hard hitter if he cannot avoid them."
Gunnar rode to see Njal, and told him of the horse-fight, and what words
had passed between them, "But how dost thou think the horse-fight will
turn out?"
"Thou wilt be uppermost," says Njal, "but yet many a man's bane will arise
out of this fight."
"Will my bane perhaps come out of it?" asks Gunnar.
"Not out of this," says Njal; "but still they will bear in mind both the
old and the new feud who fare against thee, and thou wilt have naught
left for it but to yield."
Then Gunnar rode home.
ENDNOTES:
(1) She was daughter of Hroald the Red and Hildigunna
Thorstein Titling's daughter. The mother of Hildigunna was Aud Eyvind
Karf's daughter, the sister of Modolf the Wise of Mosfell, from whom the
Modylfings are sprung. Back
58. HOW GUNNAR'S HORSE FOUGHT
Just then Gunnar heard of the death of his father-in-law Hauskuld; a few
nights after, Thorgerda, Thrain's wife, was delivered at Gritwater, and
gave birth to a boy child. Then she sent a man to her mother, and bade
her choose whether it should be called Glum or Hauskuld. She bade call
it Hauskuld. So that name was given to the boy.
Gunnar and Hallgerda had two sons, the one's name was Hogni and the other's
Grani. Hogni was a brave man of few words, distrustful and slow to believe,
but truthful.
Now men ride to the horse-fight, and a very great crowd is gathered together
there. Gunnar was there and his brothers, and the sons of Sigfus. Njal
and all his sons. There too was come Starkad and his sons, and Egil and
his sons, and they said to Gunnar that now they would lead the horses
together.
Gunnar said, "That was well."
Skarphedinn said, "Wilt thou that I drive thy horse, kinsman Gunnar?"
"I will not have that," says Gunnar.
"It wouldn't be amiss though," says Skarphedinn; "we are hot- headed on
both sides."
"Ye would say or do little," says Gunnar, "before a quarrel would spring
up; but with me it will take longer, though it will be all the same in
the end."
After that the horses were led together; Gunnar busked him to drive his
horse, but Skarphedinn led him out. Gunnar was in a red kirtle, and had
about his loins a broad belt, and a great riding-rod in his hand.
Then the horses ran at one another, and bit each other long, so that there
was no need for any one to touch them, and that was the greatest sport.
Then Thorgeir and Kol made up their minds that they would push their horse
forward just as the horses rushed together, and see if Gunnar would fall
before him.
Now the horses ran at one another again, and both Thorgeir and Kol ran
alongside their horses' flank.
Gunnar pushes his horse against them, and what happened in a trice was
this, that Thorgeir and his brother fall down flat on their backs, and
their horse a-top of them.
Then they spring up and rush at Gunnar. Gunnar swings himself free and
seizes Kol, casts him down on the field, so that he lies senseless. Thorgeir
Starkad's son smote Gunnar's horse such a blow that one of his eyes started
out. Gunnar smote Thorgeir with his riding-rod, and down falls Thorgeir
senseless; but Gunnar goes to his horse, and said to Kolskegg, "Cut off
the horse's head; he shall not live a maimed and blemished beast."
So Kolskegg cut the head off the horse.
Then Thorgeir got on his feet and took his weapons, and wanted to fly
at Gunnar, but that was stopped, and there was a great throng and crush.
Skarphedinn said, "This crowd wearies me, and it is far more manly that
men should fight it out with weapons; and so he sang a song:
"At the Thing there
is a throng;
Past all bounds
the crowding comes;
Hard 'twill be
to patch up peace
'Twixt the men.
This wearies me;
Worthier is it
far for men
Weapons red with
gore to stain;
I for one would
sooner tame
Hunger huge of
cub of wolf."
Gunnar was still, so that one man held him, and spoke no ill words.
Njal tried to bring about a settlement, or to get pledges of peace; but
Thorgeir said he would neither give nor take peace; far rather, he said,
would he see Gunnar dead for the blow.
Kolskegg said, "Gunnar has before now stood too fast, than that he should
have fallen for words alone, and so it will be again."
Now men ride away from the horse-field, every one to his home. They make
no attack on Gunnar, and so that halfyear passed away. At the Thing, the
summer after, Gunnar met Olaf the peacock, his cousin, and he asked him
to come and see him, but yet bade him be ware of himself; "For," says
he, "they will do us all the harm they can, and mind and fare always with
many men at thy back."
He gave him much good counsel beside, and they agreed that there should
be the greatest friendship between them.
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