Njal's Saga
Page 66
152.
FLOSI GOES ABROAD
Now Flosi rides east to Hornfirth, and most of the men in his Thing followed
him, and bore his wares east, as well as all his stores and baggage which
he had to take with him.
After that they busked them for their voyage, and fitted out their ship.
Now Flosi stayed by the ship until they were "boun." But as soon as ever
they got a fair wind they put out to sea. They had it long passage and
hard weather.
Then they quite lost their reckoning, and sailed on and on, and all at
once three great waves broke over their ship, one after the other. Then
Flosi said they must be near some land, and that this was a ground-swell.
A great mist was on them, but the wind rose so that a great gale overtook
them, and they scarce knew where they were before they were dashed on
shore at dead of night, and the men were saved, but the ship was dashed
all to pieces, and they could not save their goods.
Then they had to look for shelter and warmth for themselves, and the day
after they went up on a height. The weather was then good.
Flosi asked if any man knew this land, and there were two men of their
crew who had fared thither before, and said they were quite sure they
knew it, and, say they, "We are come to Hrossey in the Orkneys."
"Then we might have made a better landing," said Flosi, "for Grim and
Helgi, Njal's sons, whom I slew, were both of them of Earl Sigurd Hlodver's
son's bodyguard."
Then they sought for a hiding-place and spread moss over themselves, and
so lay for a while, but not for long, ere Flosi spoke and said, "We will
not lie here any longer until the landsmen are ware of us."
Then they arose, and took counsel, and then Flosi said to his men, "We
will go all of us and give ourselves up to the earl; for there is naught
else to do, and the earl has our lives at his pleasure if he chooses to
seek for them."
Then they all went away thence, and Flosi said that they must tell no
man any tidings of their voyage, or what manner of men they were, before
he told them to the earl.
Then they walked on until they met men who showed them to the town, and
then they went in before the earl, and Flosi and all the others hailed
him.
The earl asked what men they might be, and Flosi told his name, and said
out of what part of Iceland he was.
The earl had already heard of the burning, and so be knew the men at once,
and then the earl asked Flosi, "What hast thou to tell me about Helgi
Njal's son, my henchman."
"This," said Flosi, "that I hewed off his head."
"Take them all," said the earl.
Then that was done, and just then in came Thorstein, son of Hall of the
Side. Flosi had to wife Steinvora, Thorstein's sister. Thorstein was one
of Earl Sigurd's bodyguard, but when be saw Flosi seized and held, he
went in before the earl, and offered for Flosi all the goods he had.
The earl was very wroth a long time, but at last the end of it was, by
the prayer of good men and true, joined to those of Thorstein, for he
was well backed by friends, and many threw in their word with his, that
the earl took an atonement from them, and gave Flosi and all the rest
of them peace. The earl held to that custom of mighty men that Flosi took
that place in his service which Helgi Njal's son had filled.
So Flosi was made Earl Sigurd's henchman, and he soon won his way to great
love with the earl.
153. KARI GOES ABROAD
Those messmates Kari and Kolbein the Black put out to sea from Eyrar half
a month later than Flosi and his companions from Hornfirth.
They got a fine fair wind, and were but a short time out. The first land
they made was the Fair Isle, it lies between Shetland and the Orkneys.
There that man whose name was David the White took Kari into his house,
and he told him all that he had heard for certain about the doings of
the burners. He was one of Kari's greatest friends, and Kari stayed with
him for the winter.
There they heard tidings from the west out of the Orkneys of all that
was done there.
Earl Sigurd bade to his feast at Yule Earl Gilli, his brother- in-law,
out of the Southern isles; he had to wife Swanlauga, Earl Sigurd's sister;
and then, too, came to see Earl Sigurd that king from Ireland whose name
was Sigtrygg. He was a son of Olaf Rattle, but his mother's name was Kormlada;
she was the fairest of all women, and best gifted in everything that was
not in her own power, but it was the talk of men that she did all things
ill over which she had any power.
Brian was the name of the king who first had her to wife, but they were
then parted. He was the best-natured of all kings. He had his seat in
Connaught, in Ireland; his brother's name was Wolf the Quarrelsome, the
greatest champion and warrior; Brian's foster-child's name was Kerthialfad.
He was the son of King Kylfi, who had many wars with King Brian, and fled
away out of the land before him, and became a hermit; but when King Brian
went south on a pilgrimage, then he met King Kylfi, and then they were
atoned, and King Brian took his son Kerthialfad to him, and loved him
more than his own sons. He was then full grown when these things happened,
and was the boldest of all men.
Duncan was the name of the first of King Brian's sons; the second was
Margad; the third, Takt, whom we call Tann, he was the youngest of them;
but the elder sons of King Brian were full grown, and the briskest of
men.
Kormlada was not the mother of King Brian's children, and so grim was
she against King Brian after their parting, that she would gladly have
him dead.
King Brian thrice forgave all his outlaws the same fault, but if they
misbehaved themselves oftener, then he let them be judged by the law;
and from this one may mark what a king he must have been.
Kormlada egged on her son Sigtrygg very much to kill King Brian, and she
now sent him to Earl Sigurd to beg for help.
King Sigtrygg came before Yule to the Orkneys, and there, too, came Earl
Gilli, as was written before.
The men were so placed that King Sigtrygg sat in a high seat in the middle,
but on either side of the king sat one of the earls. The men of King Sigtrygg
and Earl Gilli sate on the inner side away from him, but on the outer
side away from Earl Sigurd, sate Flosi and Thorstein, son of Hall of the
Side, and the whole hall was full.
Now King Sigtrygg and Earl Gilli wished to hear of these tidings which
had happened at the burning, and so, also, what had befallen since.
Then Gunnar Lambi's son was got to tell the tale, and a stool was set
for him to sit upon.
154. GUNNAR LAMBI'S SON'S SLAYING
Just at that very time Kari and Kolbein and David the White came to Hrossey
unawares to all men. They went straightway up on land, but a few men watched
their ship.
Kari and his fellows went straight to the earl's homestead, and came to
the hall about drinking time.
It so happened that just then Gunnar was telling the story of the burning,
but they were listening to him meanwhile outside. This was on Yule-day
itself.
Now King Sigtrygg asked, "How did Skarphedinn bear the burning?"
"Well at first for a long time," said Gunnar, "but still the end of it
was that he wept." And so he went on giving an unfair leaning in his story,
but every now and then he laughed out loud.
Kari could not stand this, and then he ran in with his sword drawn, and
sang this song:
"Men of might,
in battle eager,
Boast of burning
Njal's abode,
Have the Princes
heard how sturdy
Seahorse racers
sought revenge?
Hath not since,
on foemen holding
High the shield's
broad orb aloft,
All that wrong been
fully wroken?
Raw flesh ravens
got to tear."
So he ran in up the hall, and smote Gunnar Lambi's son on the neck with
such a sharp blow, that his head spun off on to the board before the king
and the earls, and the board was all one gore of blood, and the earl's
clothing too.
Earl Sigurd knew the man that had done the deed, and called out, "Seize
Kari and kill him."
Kari had been one of Earl Sigurd's bodyguard, and he was of all men most
beloved by his friends; and no man stood up a whit more for the earl's
speech.
"Many would say, Lord," said Kari, "that I have done this deed on your
behalf, to avenge your henchman."
Then Flosi said, "Kari hath not done this without a cause; he is in no
atonement with us, and he only did what he had a right to do."
So Kari walked away, and there was no hue and cry after him. Kari fared
to his ship, and his fellows with him. The weather was then good, and
they sailed off at once south to Caithness, and went on shore at Thraswick
to the house of a worthy man whose name was Skeggi, and with him they
stayed a very long while.
Those behind in the Orkneys cleansed the board, and bore out the dead
man.
The earl was told that they had set sail south for Scotland, and King
Sigtrygg said, "This was a mighty bold fellow, who dealt his stroke so
stoutly, and never thought twice about it!"
Then Earl Sigurd answered, "There is no man like Kari for dash and daring."
Now Flosi undertook to tell the story of the burning, and he was fair
to all; and therefore what he said was believed.
Then King Sigtrygg stirred in his business with Earl Sigurd, and bade
him go to the war with him against King Brian.
The earl was long steadfast, but the end of it was that he let the king
have his way, but said he must have his mother's hand for his help, and
be king in Ireland, if they slew Brian. But all his men besought Earl
Sigurd not to go into the war, but it was all no good.
So they parted on the understanding that Earl Sigurd gave his word to
go; but King Sigtrygg promised him his mother and the kingdom.
It was so settled that Earl Sigurd was to come with all his host to Dublin
by Palm Sunday.
Then King Sigtrygg fared south to Ireland, and told his mother Kormlada
that the earl had undertaken to come, and also what he had pledged himself
to grant him.
She showed herself well pleased at that, but said they must gather greater
force still.
Sigtrygg asked whence this was to be looked for?
She said there were two vikings lying off the west of Man; and that they
had thirty ships, and, she went on, "They are men of such hardihood that
nothing can withstand them. The one's name is Ospak, and the other's Brodir.
Thou shalt fare to find them, and spare nothing to get them into thy quarrel,
whatever price they ask."
Now King Sigtrygg fares and seeks the vikings, and found them lying outside
off Man; King Sigtrygg brings forward his errand at once, but Brodir shrank
from helping him until he, King Sigtrygg, promised him the kingdom and
his mother, and they were to keep this such a secret that Earl Sigurd
should know nothing about it; Brodir too was to come to Dublin on Palm
Sunday.
So King Sigtrygg fared home to his mother, and told her how things stood.
After that those brothers, Ospak and Brodir, talked together, and then
Brodir told Ospak all that he and Sigtrygg had spoken of, and bade him
fare to battle with him against King Brian, and said he set much store
on his going.
But Ospak said he would not fight against so good a king.
Then they were both wroth, and sundered their band at once. Ospak had
ten ships and Brodir twenty.
Ospak was a heathen, and the wisest of all men. He laid his ships inside
in a sound, but Brodir lay outside him.
Brodir had been a Christian man and a mass-deacon by consecration, but
he had thrown off his faith and become God's dastard, and now worshipped
heathen fiends, and he was of all men most skilled in sorcery. He had
that coat of mail on which no steel would bite. He was both tall and strong,
and had such long locks that he tucked them under his belt. His hair was
black.
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