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Three Northern Love Stories and Other Tales



Page 2

CHAPTER IV
Frithiof goes to Baldur's Meads

        Straightway whenas the kings were gone away Frithiof took his raiment of state and set the goodly gold ring on his arm; then went the foster-brother down to the sea and launched Ellidi. Then said Biorn: "Whither away, foster-brother?"
        "To Baldur's Meads," said Frithiof, "to be glad with Ingibiorg."
        Biorn said: "A thing unmeet to do, to make the gods wroth with us."
        "Well, it shall be risked this time," said Frithiof; "and withal, more to me is Ingibiorg's grace than Baldur's grame."
        Therewith they rowed over the firth, and went up to Baldur's Meads and to Ingibiorg's bower, and there she sat with eight maidens, and the newcomers were eight also.
        But when they came there, lo, all the place was hung with cloth of pall and precious webs.
        Then Ingibiorg arose and said:
        "Why art thou so overbold, Frithiof, that thou art come here without the leave of my brethren to make the gods angry with thee?"
        Frithiof says: "Howsoever that may be, I hold thy love of more account than the gods' hate."
        Ingibiorg answered: "Welcome art thou here, thou and thy men!"
        Then she made place for them to sit beside her, and drank to him in the best of wine; and thus they sat and were merry together.
        Then beheld Ingibiorg the goodly ring on his arm, and asked him if that precious thing were his own. Frithiof said Yea, and she praised the ring much. Then Frithiof said:
        "I will give thee the ring if thou wilt promise to give it to no one, but to send it to me when thou no longer shalt have will to keep it: and hereon shall we plight troth each to other."
        So with this troth-plighting they exchanged rings.
        Frithiof was oft at Baldur's Meads a-night time, and every day between whiles would he go thither to be glad with Ingibiorg.

CHAPTER V
Those brethren come home again

        Now tells the tale of those brothers, that they met King Ring, and he had more folk than they: then went men betwixt them, and sought to make peace, so that no battle should be: thereto King Ring assented on such terms that the brethren should submit them to him, and give him in marriage Ingibiorg their sister, with the third part of all their possessions.
        The kings said Yea thereto, for they saw that they had to do with overwhelming might: so the peace was fast bound by oaths, and the wedding was to be at Sogn whenas King Ring should go see his betrothed.
        So those brethren fare home with their folk, right ill content with things. But Frithiof, when he deemed that the brethren might be looked for home again, spake to the king's daughter----
        "Sweetly and well have ye done to us, neither has goodman Baldur been wroth with us; but now as soon as ye wot of the kings' coming home, spread the sheets of your beds abroad on the Hall of the Goddesses, for that is the highest of all the garth, and we may see it from our stead."
        The king's daughter said: "Thou dost not after the like of any other: but certes, we welcome dear friends whenas ye come to us."
        So Frithiof went home; and the next morning he went out early, and when he came in then he spake and sang:----
                "Now must I tell
                To our good men
                That over and done
                Are our fair journeys;
                No more a-shipboard
                Shall we be going,
                For there are the sheets
                Spread out a-bleaching."
        Then they went out, and saw that the Hall of the Goddesses was all thatched with white linen. Biorn spake and said: "Now are the kings come home, and but a little while have we to sit in peace, and good were it, meseems, to gather folk together."
        So did they, and men came flocking thither.
        Now the brethren soon heard of the ways of Frithiof and Ingibiorg, and of the gathering of men. So King Helgi spake----
        "A wondrous thing how Baldur will bear what shame soever Frithiof and she will lay on him! Now will I send men to him, and wot what atonement he will offer us, or else will I drive him from the land, for our strength seemeth to me not enough that we should fight with him as now."
        So Hilding, their fosterer, bare the king's errand to Frithiof and his friends, and spake in such wise: "This atonement the kings will have of thee, Frithiof, that thou go gather the tribute of the Orkneys, which has not been paid since Beli died, for they need money, whereas they are giving Ingibiorg their sister in marriage, and much of wealth with her."
        Frithiof said: "This thing only somewhat urges us to peace, the good will of our kin departed; but no trustiness will those brethren show herein. But this condition I make, that our lands be in good peace while we are away." So this was promised and all bound by oaths.
        Then Frithiof arrays him for departing, and is captian of men brave and of good help, eighteen in company.
        Now his men asked him if he would not go to King Helgi and make peace with him, and pray himself free from Baldur's wrath.
        But he answered: "Hereby I swear that I will never pray Helgi for peace."
        Then he went aboard Ellidi, and they sailed out along the Sognfirth.
        But when Frithiof was gone from home, King Halfdan spake to Helgi his brother: "Better lordship and more had we if Frithiof had payment for his masterful deed: now therefore let us burn his stead, and bring on him and his men such a storm on the sea as shall make an end of them."
        Helgi said it was a thing meet to be done.
        So then they burned up clean all the stead at Foreness and robbed it of all goods; and after that sent for two witch-wives, Heidi and Hamglom, and gave them money to raise against Frithiof and his men so mighty a storm that they should all be lost at sea. So they sped the witchsong, and went up on the witch mount with spells and sorcery.
        
CHAPTER VI
Frithiof sails for the Orkneys

        So when Frithiof and his men were come out of the Sognfirth there fell on them great wind and storm, and an exceeding heavy sea; but the ship drave on swiftly, for sharp built she was, and the best to breast the sea.
        So now Frithiof sang:----
                "Oft let I swim from Sogn
                My tarred ship sooty-sided,
                When maids sat o'er the mead-horn
                Amidst of Baldur's Meadows;
                Now while the storm is wailing
                Fairwell I bid you maidens,
                Still shall ye love us, sweet ones,
                Though Ellidi the sea fill."
        Said Biorn: "Thou mightest find other work to do than singing songs over the maids of Baldur's Meadows."
        "Of such work shall I not speedily run dry, though," said Frithiof. Then they bore up north to the sounds nigh those isles that are called Solundir, and therewith was the gale at its hardest.
        Then sang Frithiof:---
                "Now is the sea a-swelling,
                And sweepeth the rack onward;
                Spells of old days cast o'er us
                Make ocean all unquiet;
                No more shall we be striving
                Mid storm with wash of billows,
                But Solundir shall shelter
                Our ship with ice-beat rock-walls."
        So they lay to under the lee of the isles hight Solundir, and were minded to abide there; but straightway thereon the wind fell: then they turned away from under the lee of the islands, and now their voyage seemed hopeful to them because the wind was fair awhile: but soon it began to freshen again.
        Then sang Frithiof:---
                "In days foredone
                From Foreness strand
                I rowed to meet
                Maid Ingibiorg;
                But now I sail
                Through chilly storm
                And wide away
                My long-worm driveth."
        And now when they were come far out into the main, once more the sea waxed wondrous troubled, and a storm arose with so great drift of snow, that none might see the stem from the stern: and they shipped seas, so that they must be ever a-baling. So Frithiof sang:----
                "The salt waves see we nought
                As seaward drive we ever
                Before the witch-wrought weather,
                We well-famed king's-defenders:
                Here are we all a-standing,
                With all Solundir hull-down,
                Eighteen brave lads a-baling
                Black Ellidi to bring home."
        Said Biorn: "Needs must he who fareth far fall in with diverse hap." "Yea, certes, foster-brother," said Frithiof. And he sang withal:----
                "Helgi it is that helpeth
                The white-head billows' waxing;
                Cold time unlike the kissing
                In the close of Baldur's Meadow!
                So is the hate of Helgi
                To that heart's love she giveth.
                O would that there I held her,
                Gift high above all giving!"
        "Maybe," said Biorn, "she is looking higher than thou now art: what matter when all is said?"
        "Well," says Frithiof, "now is the time to show ourselves to be men of avail, though blither tide it was at Baldur's Meadows."
        So they turned to in manly wise, for there were the bravest of men come together in the best ship of the Northlands. But Frithiof sang a stave:-----
                "So come in the West-sea,
                Nought see I the billows,
                The sea-water seemeth
                As sweeping of wild-fire.
                Topple the rollers,
                Toss the hills swan-white,
                Ellidi wallows
                O'er the steep of the wave-hills."



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