Njal's Saga
Page 15
39.
THE SLAYING OF BRYNJOLF THE UNRULY
There was a man named Thord, he was surnamed Freedmanson. Sigtrygg was
his father's name, and he had been the freedman of Asgerd, and he was
drowned in Markfleet. That was why Thord was with Njal afterwards. He
was a tall man and a strong, and he had fostered all Njal's sons. He had
set his heart on Gudfinna Thorolf's daughter, Njal's kinswoman; she was
housekeeper at home there, and was then with child.
Now Bergthora came to talk with Thord Freedmanson; she said, "Thou shalt
go to kill Brynjolf, Hallgerda's kinsman."
"I am no man-slayer," he says, "but still I will do whatever thou wilt."
"This is my will," she says.
After that he went up to Lithend, and made them call Hallgerda out, and
asked where Brynjolf might be.
"What's thy will with him," she says.
"I want him to tell me where he has hidden Atli's body; I have heard say
that he has buried it badly."
She pointed to him and said he was down yonder in Acretongue.
"Take heed," says Thord, "that the same thing does not befall him as befell
Atli."
"Thou art no man-slayer," she says, "and so naught will come of it even
if ye two do meet."
"Never have I seen man's blood, nor do I know how I should feel if I did,"
he says, and gallops out of the "town" and down to Acretongue.
Rannveig, Gunnar's mother, had heard their talk.
"Thou goadest his mind much, Hallgerda," she says, "but I think him a
dauntless man, and that thy kinsman will find."
They met on the beaten way, Thord and Brynjolf; and Thord said, "Guard
thee, Brynjolf, for I will do no dastard's deed by thee."
Brynjolf rode at Thord, and smote at him with his axe. He smote at him
at the same time with his axe, and hewed in sunder the haft just above
Brynjolf's hands, and then hewed at him at once a second time, and struck
him on the collar-bone, and the blow went straight into his trunk. Then
he fell from horseback, and was dead on the spot.
Thord met Hallgerda's herdsman, and gave out the slaying as done by his
hand, and said where he lay, and bade him tell Hallgerda of the slaying.
After that he rode home to Bergthorsknoll, and told Bergthora of the slaying,
and other people too.
"Good luck go with thy hands," she said.
The herdsman told Hallgerda of the slaying; she was snappish at it, and
said much ill would come of it, if she might have her way.
40. GUNNAR AND NJAL MAKE PEACE ABOUT BRYNJOLF'S SLAYING
Now these tidings come to the Thing, and Njal made them tell him the tale
thrice, and then he said, "More men now become man- slayers than I weened."
Skarphedinn spoke, "That man, though, must have been twice fey," he says,
"who lost his life by our foster-father's hand, who has never seen man's
blood. And many would think that we brothers would sooner have done this
deed with the turn of temper that we have."
"Scant space wilt thou have," says Njal, "ere the like befalls thee; but
need will drive thee to it."
Then they went to meet Gunnar, and told him of the slaying. Gunnar spoke
and said that was little man-scathe, "but yet he was a free man."
Njal offered to make peace at once, and Gunnar said yes, and he was to
settle the terms himself. He made his award there and then, and laid it
at one hundred in silver. Njal paid down the money on the spot, and they
were at peace after that.
41. SIGMUND COMES OUT TO ICELAND
There was a man whose name was Sigmund. He was the son of Lambi, the son
of Sighvat the Red. He was a great voyager, and a comely and a courteous
man; tall too, and strong. He was a man of proud spirit, and a good skald,
and well trained in most feats of strength. He was noisy and boisterous,
and given to jibes and mocking. He made the land east in Homfirth. Skiolld
was the name of his fellow-traveller; he was a Swedish man, and ill to
do with. They took horse and rode from the east out of Hornfirth, and
did not draw bridle before they came to Lithend, in the Fleetlithe. Gunnar
gave them a hearty welcome, for the bonds of kinship were close between
them. Gunnar begged Sigmund to stay there that winter, and Sigmund said
he would take the offer if Skiolld his fellow might be there too.
"Well, I have been so told about him," said Gunnar, "that he is no betterer
of thy temper; but as it is, thou rather needest to have it bettered.
This, too, is a bad house to stay at, and I would just give both of you
a bit of advice, my kinsman, not to fire up at the egging on of my wife
Hallgerda; for she takes much in hand that is far from my will."
"His hands are clean who warns another," says Sigmund.
"Then mind the advice given thee," says Gunnar, "for thou art sure to
be sore tried; and go along always with me, and lean upon my counsel."
After that they were in Gunnar's company. Hallgerda was good to Sigmund;
and it soon came about that things grew so warm that she loaded him with
money, and tended him no worse than her own husband; and many talked about
that, and did not know what lay under it.
One day Hallgerda said to Gunnar, "It is not good to be content with that
hundred in silver which thou tookest for my kinsman Brynjolf. I shall
avenge him if I may," she says.
Gunnar said he had no mind to bandy words with her, and went away. He
met Kolskegg, and said to him, "Go and see Njal; and tell him that Thord
must be ware of himself though peace has been made for, methinks, there
is faithlessness somewhere."
He rode off and told Njal, but Njal told Thord, and Kolskegg rode home,
and Njal thanked them for their faithfulness.
Once on a time they two were out in the "town," Njal and Thord; a he-goat
was wont to go up and down in the "town," and no one was allowed to drive
him away. Then Thord spoke and said, "Well, this is a wondrous thing!"
"What is it that thou see'st that seems after a wondrous fashion?" says
Njal.
"Methinks the goat lies here in the hollow, and he is all one gore of
blood."
Njal said that there was no goat there, nor anything else.
"What is it then?" says Thord.
"Thou must be a `fey' man," says Njal, "and thou must have seen the fetch
that follows thee, and now be ware of thyself."
"That will stand me in no stead," says Thord, "if death is doomed for
me."
Then Hallgerda came to talk with Thrain Sigfus' son, and said, "I would
think thee my son-in-law indeed," she says, "if thou slayest Thord Freedmanson."
"I will not do that," he says, "for then I shall have the wrath of my
kinsman Gunnar; and besides, great things hang on this deed, for this
slaying would soon be avenged."
"Who will avenge it?" she asks; "is it the beardless carle?"
"Not so," says he, "his sons will avenge it."
After that they talked long and low, and no man knew what counsel they
took together.
Once it happened that Gunnar was not at home, but those companions were.
Thrain had come in from Gritwater, and then he and they and Hallgerda
sat out of doors and talked. Then Hallgerda said, "This have ye two brothers
in arms, Sigmund and Skiolld, promised to slay Thord Freedmanson; but
Thrain thou hast promised me that thou wouldst stand by them when they
did the deed."
They all acknowledged that they had given her this promise.
"Now I will counsel you how to do it," she says: "Ye shall ride east into
Homfirth after your goods, and come home about the beginning of the Thing,
but if ye are at home before it begins, Gunnar will wish that ye should
ride to the Thing with him. Njal will be at the Thing and his sons and
Gunnar, but then ye two shall slay Thord."
They all agreed that this plan should be carried out. After that they
busked them east to the Firth, and Gunnar was not aware of what they were
about, and Gunnar rode to the Thing. Njal sent Thord Freedmanson away
east under Eyjafell, and bade him be away there one night. So he went
east, but he could not get back from the east, for the Fleet had risen
so high that it could not be crossed on horseback ever so far up. Njal
waited for him one night, for he had meant him to have ridden with him;
and Njal said to Bergthora that she must send Thord to the Thing as soon
as ever he came home. Two nights after, Thord came from the east, and
Bergthora told him that he must ride to the Thing, "But first thou shalt
ride up into Thorolfsfell and see about the farm there, and do not be
there longer than one or two nights."
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