The Laxdaela Saga
Page 20
Chapter 48
The Men of Laugar and Gudrun
plan an Ambush for Kjartan, A.D. 1003.
Kjartan spent the fourth day
after Easter at Hol, and there was the greatest merriment and gaiety. The
night after An was very ill at ease in his sleep, so they waked him. They
asked him what he had dreamt.
He answered, "A woman came
to me most evil looking and pulled me forth unto the bedside. She had
in one hand a short sword, and in the other a trough; she drove the sword
into my breast and cut open all the belly, and took out all my inwards
and put brushwood in their place. After that she went outside."
Kjartan and the others laughed
very much at this dream, and said he should be called An "brushwood belly",
and they caught hold of him and said they wished to feel if he had the
brushwood in his stomach. Then Aud said, "There is no need to mock so
much at this; and my counsel is that Kjartan do one of two things: either
tarry here longer, or, if he will ride away, then let him ride with more
followers hence than hither he did."
Kjartan said, "You may hold
An 'brushwood belly' a man very sage as he sits and talks to you all day,
since you think that whatever he dreams must be a very vision, but go
I must, as I have already made up my mind to, in spite of this dream."
Kjartan got ready to go
on the fifth day in Easter week; and at the advice of Aud, so did Thorkell
Whelp and Knut his brother. They rode on the way with Kjartan a band of
twelve together. Kjartan came to Whitedale and fetched the homespun for
Thorhalla Chatterbox as he had said he would. After that he rode south
through Swinedale. It is told how at Laugar in Saelingsdale Gudrun was
early afoot directly after sunrise. She went to where her brothers were
sleeping. She roused Ospak and he woke up at once, and then too the other
brothers. And when Ospak saw that there was his sister, he asked her what
she wanted that she was up so early. Gudrun said she wanted to know what
they would be doing that day. Ospak said he would keep at rest, "for there
is little work to do."
Gudrun said, "You would
have the right sort of temper if you were the daughters of some peasant,
letting neither good nor bad be done by you. Why, after all the disgrace
and shame that Kjartan has done to you, you none the less lie quietly
sleeping, though he rides past this place with but one other man. Such
men indeed are richly endowed with the memory of swine. I think it is
past hoping that you will ever have courage enough to go and seek out
Kjartan in his home, if you dare not meet him now that he rides with but
one other man or two; but here you sit at home and bear yourselves as
if you were hopeful men; yea, in sooth there are too many of you."
Ospak said she did not mince
matters and it was hard to gainsay her, and he sprang up forthwith and
dressed, as did also each of the brothers one after the other. Then they
got ready to lay an ambush for Kjartan. Then Gudrun called on Bolli to
bestir him with them. Bolli said it behoved him not for the sake of his
kinship with Kjartan, set forth how lovingly Olaf had brought him up.
Gudrun answered, "Therein
you speak the truth, but you will not have the good luck always to do
what pleases all men, and if you cut yourself out of this journey, our
married life must be at an end."
And through Gudrun's harping
on the matter Bolli's mind swelled at all the enmity and guilts that lay
at the door of Kjartan, and speedily he donned his weapons, and they grew
a band of nine together. There were the five sons of Osvif -- Ospak, Helgi,
Vandrad, Torrad, and Thorolf. Bolli was the sixth and Gudlaug, the son
of Osvif's sister, the hopefullest of men, the seventh. There were also
Odd and Stein, sons of Thorhalla Chatterbox.. They rode to Swinedale and
took up their stand beside the gill which is called
Goat-gill. (1) They bound up their horses and sat
down. Bolli was silent all day, and lay up on the top of the gill bank.
Now when Kjartan and his followers were come south past Narrowsound, where
the dale begins to widen out, Kjartan said that Thorkell and the others
had better turn back. Thorkell said they would ride to the end of the
dale. Then when they came south past the out-dairies called Northdairies
Kjartan spake to the brothers and bade them not to ride any farther. "Thorolf
the thief," he said, "shall not have that matter to laugh at that I dare
not ride on my way with few men."
Thorkell Whelp said, "We
will yield to you in not following you any farther; but we should rue
it indeed not to be near if you should stand in need of men today."
Then Kjartan said, "Never
will Bolli, my kinsman, join hands with plotters against my life. But
if the sons of Osvif lie in wait for me, there is no knowing which side
will live to tell the tale, even though I may have some odds to deal with."
Thereupon the brothers rode
back to the west.
Chapter 49
The Death of Kjartan.
Now Kjartan rode south through
the dale, he and they three together, himself, An the Black, and Thorarin.
Thorkell was the name of a man who lived at Goat-peaks in Swinedale, where
now there is waste land. He had been seeing after his horses that day, and
a shepherd of his with him. They saw the two parties, the men of Laugar
in ambush and Kjartan and his where they were riding down the dale three
together. Then the shepherd said they had better turn to meet Kjartan and
his; it would be, quoth he, a great good hap to them if they could stave
off so great a trouble as now both sides were steering into.
Thorkell said, "Hold your
tongue at once. Do you think, fool as you are, you will ever give life
to a man to whom fate has ordained death? And, truth to tell, I would
spare neither of them from having now as evil dealings together as they
like. It seems to me a better plan for us to get to a place where we stand
in danger of nothing, and from where we can have a good look at their
meeting, so as to have some fun over their play. For all men make a marvel
thereof, how Kjartan is of all men the best skilled at arms. I think he
will want it now, for we two know how overwhelming the odds are."
And so it had to be as Thorkell
wished. Kjartan and his followers now rode on to Goat-gill. On the other
hand the sons of Osvif misdoubt them why Bolli should have sought out
a place for himself from where he might well be seen by men riding from
the west. So they now put their heads together, and, being of one mind
that Bolli was playing them false, they go for him up unto the brink and
took to wrestling and horse-playing with him, and took him by the feet
and dragged him down over the brink. But Kjartan and his followers came
up apace as they were riding fast, and when they came to the south side
of the gill they saw the ambush and knew the men. Kjartan at once sprung
off his horse and turned upon the sons of Osvif. There stood near by a
great stone, against which Kjartan ordered they should wait the onset
(he and his). Before they met Kjartan flung his spear, and it struck through
Thorolf's shield above the handle, so that therewith the shield was pressed
against him, the spear piercing the shield and the arm above the elbow,
where it sundered the main muscle, Thorolf dropping the shield, and his
arm being of no avail to him through the day. Thereupon Kjartan drew his
sword, but he held not the "King's-gift". The sons of Thorhalla went at
Thorarin, for that was the task allotted to them. That outset was a hard
one, for Thorarin was mightily strong, and it was hard to tell which would
outlast the other. Osvif's sons and Gudlaug set on Kjartan, they being
five together, and Kjartan and An but two. An warded himself valiantly,
and would ever be going in front of Kjartan. Bolli stood aloof with Footbiter.
Kjartan smote hard, but his sword was of little avail (and bent so), he
often had to straighten it under his foot. In this attack both the sons
of Osvif and An were wounded, but Kjartan had no wound as yet. Kjartan
fought so swiftly and dauntlessly that Osvif's sons recoiled and turned
to where An was. At that moment An fell, having fought for some time,
with his inwards coming out. In this attack Kjartan cut off one leg of
Gudlaug above the knee, and that hurt was enough to cause death. Then
the four sons of Osvif made an onset on Kjartan, but he warded himself
so bravely that in no way did he give them the chance of any advantage.
Then spake Kjartan, "Kinsman Bolli, why did you leave home if you meant
quietly to stand by? Now the choice lies before you, to help one side
or the other, and try now how Footbiter will do."
Bolli made as if he did
not hear. And when Ospak saw that they would no how bear Kjartan over,
he egged on Bolli in every way, and said he surely would not wish that
shame to follow after him, to have promised them his aid in this fight
and not to grant it now. "Why, heavy enough in dealings with us was Kjartan
then, when by none so big a deed as this we had offended him; but if Kjartan
is now to get away from us, then for you, Bolli, as even for us, the way
to exceeding hardships will be equally short."
Then Bolli drew Footbiter,
and now turned upon Kjartan. Then Kjartan said to Bolli, "Surely thou
art minded now, my kinsman, to do a dastard's deed; but oh, my kinsman,
I am much more fain to take my death from you than to cause the same to
you myself."
Then Kjartan flung away
his weapons and would defend himself no longer; yet he was but slightly
wounded, though very tired with fighting. Bolli gave no answer to Kjartan's
words, but all the same he dealt him his death-wound. And straightway
Bolli sat down under the shoulders of him, and Kjartan breathed his last
in the lap of Bolli. Bolli rued at once his deed, and declared the manslaughter
due to his hand. Bolli sent the sons of Osvif into the countryside, but
he stayed behind together with Thorarin by the dead bodies. And when the
sons of Osvif came to Laugar they told the tidings. Gudrun gave out her
pleasure thereat, and then the arm of Thorolf was bound up; it healed
slowly, and was never after any use to him. The body of Kjartan was brought
home to Tongue, but Bolli rode home to Laugar. Gudrun went to meet him,
and asked what time of day it was. Bolli said it was near noontide.
Then spake Gudrun, "Harm
spurs on to hard deeds (work); I have spun yarn for twelve ells of homespun,
and you have killed Kjartan."
Bolli replied, "That unhappy
deed might well go late from my mind even if you did not remind me of
it."
Gudrun said, "Such things
I do not count among mishaps. It seemed to me you stood in higher station
during the year Kjartan was in Norway than now, when he trod you under
foot when he came back to Iceland. But I count that last which to me is
dearest, that Hrefna will not go laughing to her bed tonight."
Then Bolli said, and right
wroth he was, "I think it is quite uncertain that she will turn paler
at these tidings than you do; and I have my doubts as to whether you would
not have been less startled if I had been lying behind on the field of
battle, and Kjartan had told the tidings."
Gudrun saw that Bolli was
wroth, and spake, "Do not upbraid me with such things, for I am very grateful
to you for your deed; for now I think I know that you will not do anything
against my mind."
After that Osvif's sons
went and hid in an underground chamber, which had been made for them in
secret, but Thorhalla's sons were sent west to Holy-Fell to tell Snorri
Godi the Priest these tidings, and therewith the message that they bade
him send them speedily all availing strength against Olaf and those men
to whom it came to follow up the blood-suit after Kjartan. At Saelingsdale
Tongue it happened, the night after the day on which the fight befell,
that An sat up, he who they had all thought was dead. Those who waked
the bodies were very much afraid, and thought this a wondrous marvel.
Then An spake to them, "I beg you, in God's name, not to be afraid of
me, for I have had both my life and my wits all unto the hour when on
me fell the heaviness of a swoon. Then I dreamed of the same woman as
before, and methought she now took the brushwood out of my belly and put
my own inwards in instead, and the change seemed good to me."
Then the wounds that An
had were bound up and he became a hale man, and was ever afterwards called
An Brushwood-belly. But now when Olaf Hoskuld's son heard these tidings
he took the slaying of Kjartan most sorely to heart, though he bore it
like a brave man. His sons wanted to set on Bolli forthwith and kill him.
Olaf said, "Far be it from
me, for my son is none the more atoned to me though Bolli be slain; moreover,
I loved Kjartan before all men, but as to Bolli, I could not bear any
harm befalling him. But I see a more befitting business for you to do.
Go ye and meet the sons of Thorhalla, who are now sent to Holy-Fell with
the errand of summoning up a band against us. I shall be well pleased
for you to put them to any penalty you like."
Then Olaf's sons swiftly
turn to journeying, and went on board a ferryboat that Olaf owned, being
seven of them together, and rowed out down Hvamm-firth, pushing on their
journey at their lustiest. They had but little wind, but fair what there
was, and they rowed with the sail until they came under Scoreisle, where
they tarried for some while and asked about the journeyings of men thereabouts.
A little while after they saw a ship coming from the west across the firth,
and soon they saw who the men were, for there were the sons of Thorhalla,
and Halldor and his followers boarded them straightway. They met with
no resistance, for the sons of Olaf leapt forthwith on board their ships
and set upon them. Stein and his brother were laid hands on and beheaded
overboard. The sons of Olaf now turn back, and their journey was deemed
to have sped most briskly.
ENDNOTES:
(1) Gill=gorge, deep watercourse. Back
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