Njal's Saga
Page 11
30.
GUNNAR GOES A-SEA-ROVING
So Gunnar held on out of the river, and he and Kolskegg were both on board
one ship. But Hallvard was on board another. Now, they see the ships before
them, and then Gunnar spoke, and said, "Let us be ready for anything if
they turn towards us! but else let us have nothing to do with them."
So they did that, and made all ready on board their ships. The others
parted their ships asunder, and made a fareway between the ships. Gunnar
fared straight on between the ships, but Vandil caught up a grappling-iron,
and cast it between their ships and Gunnar's ship, and began at once to
drag it towards him.
Oliver had given Gunnar a good sword; Gunnar now drew it, and had not
yet put on his helm. He leapt at once on the forecastle of Vandil's ship,
and gave one man his death-blow. Karli ran his ship alongside the other
side of Gunnar's ship, and hurled a spear athwart the deck, and aimed
at him about the waist. Gunnar sees this, and turned him about so quickly
that no eye could follow him, and caught the spear with his left hand,
and hurled it back at Karli's ship, and that man got his death who stood
before it. Kolskegg snatched up a grapnel and cast it at Karli's ship,
and the fluke fell inside the hold, and went out through one of the planks
and in rushed the coal-blue sea, and all the men sprang on board other
ships.
Now Gunnar leapt back to his own ship, and then Hallvard came up, and
now a great battle arose. They saw now that their leader was unflinching,
and every man did as well as he could. Sometimes Gunnar smote with the
sword, and sometimes he hurled the spear, and many a man had his bane
at his hand. Kolskegg backed him well. As for Karli, he hastened in a
ship to his brother Vandil, and thence they fought that day. During the
day Kolskegg took a rest on Gunnar's ship, and Gunnar sees that. Then
he sung a song --
"For the eagle ravine-eager,
Raven of my race, to-day
Better surely hast thou
catered,
Lord of gold, than for
thyself;
Here the morn come greedy
ravens
Many any a rill of wolf
(1) to sup,
But thee burning thirst
down-beareth,
Prince of battle's Parliament!"
After that Kolskegg took a beaker full of mead, and drank it off, and
went on fighting afterwards; and so it came about that those brothers
sprang up on the ship of Vandil and his brother, and Kolskegg went on
one side, and Gunnar on the other. Against Gunnar came Vandil, and smote
at once at him with his sword, and the blow fell on his shield. Gunnar
gave the shield a twist as the sword pierced it, and broke it short off
at the hilt. Then Gunnar smote back at Vandil, and three swords seemed
to be aloft, and Vandil could not see how to shun the blow. Then Gunnar
cut both his legs from under him, and at the same time Kolskegg ran Karli
through with a spear. After that they took great war spoil.
Thence they held on south to Denmark, and thence east to Smoland, (2)
and had victory wherever they went. They did not come back in autumn.
The next summer they held on to Reval, and fell in there with sea-rovers,
and fought at once, and won the fight. After that they steered east to
Osel,(3) and lay there somewhile
under a ness. There they saw a man coming down from the ness above them;
Gunnar went on shore to meet the man, and they had a talk. Gunnar asked
him his name, and he said it was Tofi. Gunnar asked again what he wanted.
"Thee I want to see," says the man. " Two warships lie on the other side
under the ness, and I will tell thee who command them: two brothers are
the captains -- one's name is Hallgrim, and the other's Kolskegg. I know
them to be mighty men of war; and I know too that they have such good
weapons that the like are not to be had. Hallgrim has a bill which he
had made by seething- spells; and this is what the spells say, that no
weapon shall give him his death-blow save that bill. That thing follows
it too that it is known at once when a man is to be slain with that bill,
for something sings in it so loudly that it may be heard along way off
-- such a strong nature has that bill in it."
Then Gunnar sang a song --
"Soon shall I that spearhead
seize,
And the bold sea-rover
slay,
Him whose blows on headpiece
ring,
Heaper up of piles of
dead.
Then on Endil's courser
(4) bounding,
O'er the sea-depths I
will ride,
While the wretch who
spells abuseth,
Life shall lose in Sigar's
storm." (5)
"Kolskegg has a short sword; that is also the best of weapons. Force,
too, they have -- a third more than ye. They have also much goods, and
have stowed them away on land, and I know clearly where they are. But
they have sent a spy-ship off the ness, and they know all about you. Now
they are getting themselves ready as fast as they can; and as soon as
they are `boun,' they mean to run out against you. Now you have either
to row away at once, or to busk yourselves as quickly as ye can; but if
ye win the day then I will lead you to all their store of goods."
Gunnar gave him a golden finger-ring, and went afterwards to his men and
told them that war-ships lay on the other side of the ness, "and they
know all about us; so let us take to our arms and busk us well, for now
there is gain to be got."
Then they busked them; and just when they were `boun' they see ships coming
up to them. And now a fight sprung up between them, and they fought long,
and many men fell. Gunnar slew many a man.
Hallgrim and his men leapt on board Gunnar's ship. Gunnar turns to meet
him, and Hallgrim thrust at him with his bill. There was a boom athwart
the ship, and Gunnar leapt nimbly back over it. Gunnar's shield was just
before the boom, and Hallgrim thrust his bill into it, and through it,
and so on into the boom. Gunnar cut at Hallgrim's arm hard, and lamed
the forearm, but the sword would not bite. Then down fell the bill, and
Gunnar seized the bill, and thrust Hallgrim through, and then sang a song
--
"Slain is he who spoiled
the people,
Lashing them with flashing
steel;
Heard have I how Hallgrim's
magic
Helm-rod forged in foreign
land;
All men know, of heart-strings
doughty,
How this bill hath come
to me,
Deft in fight, the wolf's
dear feeder,
Death alone us two shall
part."
And that vow Gunnar kept, in that he bore the bill while he lived. Those
namesakes the two Kolskeggs fought together, and it was a near thing which
would get the better of it. Then Gunnar came up, and gave the other Kolskegg
his death-blow. After that the sea-rovers begged for mercy. Gunnar let
them have that choice, and he let them also count the slain, and take
the goods which the dead men owned, but he gave the others whom he spared
their arms and their clothing, and bade them be off to the lands that
fostered them. So they went off, and Gunnar took all the goods that were
left behind.
Tofi came to Gunner after the battle, and offered to lead him to that
store of goods which the sea-rovers had stowed away, and said that it
was both better and larger than that which they had already got.
Gunnar said he was willing to go, and so he went ashore, and Tofi before
him, to a wood, and Gunnar behind him. They came to a place where a great
heap of wood was piled together. Tofi says the goods were under there,
then they tossed off the wood, and found under it both gold and silver,
clothes, and good weapons. They bore those goods to the ships, and Gunnar
asks Tofi in what way he wished him to repay him.
Tofi answered, "I am a Dansk man by race, and I wish thou wouldst bring
me to my kinsfolk."
Gunnar asks why he was there away east?
"I was taken by sea-rovers," says Tofi, "and they put me on land here
in Osel, and here I have been ever since."
31. GUNNAR GOES TO KING HAROLD GORM'SSON AND EARL HACON
Gunnar took Tofi on board, and said to Kolskegg and Hallvard, "Now we
will hold our course for the north lands."
They were well pleased at that, and bade him have his way. So Gunnar sailed
from the east with much goods. He had ten ships, and ran in with them
to Heidarby in Denmark. King Harold Gorm's son was there up the country,
and he was told about Gunnar, and how too that there was no man his match
in all Iceland. He sent men to him to ask him to come to him, and Gunnar
went at once to see the king, and the king made him a hearty welcome,
and sat him down next to himself. Gunnar was there half a month. The king
made himself sport by letting Gunnar prove himself in divers feats of
strength against his men, and there were none that were his match even
in one feat.
Then the king said to Gunnar, "It seems to me as though thy peer is not
to be found far or near," and the king offered to get Gunnar a wife, and
to raise him to great power if he would settle down there.
Gunnar thanked the king for his offer and said, "I will first of all sail
back to Iceland to see my friends and kinsfolk."
"Then thou wilt never come back to us," says the king.
"Fate will settle that, lord," says Gunnar.
Gunnar gave the king a good long-ship, and much goods besides, and the
king gave him a robe of honour, and golden-seamed gloves, and a fillet
with a knot of gold on it, and a Russian hat.
Then Gunnar fared north to Hisingen. Oliver welcomed him with both hands,
and he gave back to Oliver his ships, with their lading, and said that
was his share of the spoil. Oliver took the goods, and said Gunnar was
a good man and true, and bade him stay with him some while. Hallvard asked
Gunnar if he had a mind to go to see Earl Hacon. Gunnar said that was
near his heart, "for now I am somewhat proved, but then I was not tried
at all when thou badest me do this before."
After that they fared north to Drontheim to see Earl Hacon, and he gave
Gunnar a hearty welcome, and bade him stay with him that winter, and Gunnar
took that offer, and every man thought him a man of great worth. At Yule
the Earl gave him a gold ring.
Gunnar set his heart on Bergliota, the Earl's kinswoman, and it was often
to be seen from the Earl's way, that he would have given her to him to
wife if Gunnar had said anything about that.
ENDNOTES:
(1)
Rill of wolf -- stream of blood. Back
(2) A province of Sweden. Back
(3) An island in the Baltic, off the coast of Esthonia. Back
(4) "Endil's courser" -- periphrasis for a ship. Back
(5) "Sigar's storm" -- periphrasis for a sea-fight. Back
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