登陆注册
34926300000046

第46章

This was the state of affairs in Norway when a king arose, Harold Fair-Hair, who tried to bring all these proud people under him, and to make them pay taxes and live more regularly and quietly. They revolted at this, and when they were too weak to defy the king they set sail and fled to Iceland. There in the lonely north, between the snow and fire, the hot-water springs, the volcano of Hecla, the great rivers full of salmon that rush down such falls as Golden Foot, there they lived their old-fashioned life, cruising as pirates and merchants, taking foreign service at Mickle Garth, or in England or Egypt, filling the world with the sound of their swords and the sky with the smoke of their burnings. For they feared neither God nor man nor ghost, and were no less cruel than brave; the best of soldiers, laughing at death and torture, like the Zulus, who are a kind of black Vikings of Africa. On some of them "Bersark's gang"would fall--that is, they would become in a way mad, slaying all and sundry, biting their shields, and possessed with a furious strength beyond that of men, which left them as weak as children when it passed away. These Bersarks were outlaws, all men's enemies, and to kill them was reckoned a great adventure, and a good deed. The women were worthy of the men--bold, quarrelsome, revengeful. Some were loyal, like Bergthora, who foresaw how all her sons and her husband were to be burned; but who would not leave them, and perished in the burning without a cry. Some were as brave as Howard's wife, who enabled her husband, old and childless, to overthrow the wealthy bully, the slayer of his only son. Some were treacherous, as Halgerda the Fair. Three husbands she had, and was the death of every man of them. Her last lord was Gunnar of Lithend, the bravest and most peaceful of men. Once she did a mean thing, and he slapped her face. She never forgave him. At last enemies besieged him in his house. The doors were locked--all was quiet within. One of the enemies climbed up to a window slit, and Gunnar thrust him through with his lance. "Is Gunnar at home?" said the besiegers. "I know not--but his lance is," said the wounded man, and died with that last jest on his lips. For long Gunnar kept them at bay with his arrows, but at last one of them cut the arrow string. "Twist me a string with thy hair," he said to his wife, Halgerda, whose yellow hair was very long and beautiful. "Is it a matter of thy life or death?" she asked. "Ay," he said. "Then Iremember that blow thou gavest me, and I will see thy death." So Gunnar died, overcome by numbers, and they killed Samr, his hound, but not before Samr had killed a man.

So they lived always with sword or axe in hand--so they lived, and fought, and died.

Then Christianity was brought to them from Norway by Thangbrand, and if any man said he did not believe a word of it, Thangbrand had the schoolboy argument, "Will you fight?" So they fought a duel on a holm or island, that nobody might interfere--holm-gang they called it--and Thangbrand usually killed his man. In Norway, Saint Olaf did the like, killing and torturing those who held by the old gods--Thor, Odin, and Freya, and the rest. So, partly by force and partly because they were somewhat tired of bloodshed, horsefights, and the rest, they received the word of the white Christ and were baptised, and lived by written law, and did not avenge themselves by their own hands.

They were Christians now, but they did not forget the old times, the old feuds and fightings and Bersarks, and dealings with ghosts, and with dead bodies that arose and wrought horrible things, haunting houses and strangling men. The Icelandic ghosts were able-bodied, well "materialised," and Grettir and Olaf Howard's son fought them with strength of arm and edge of steel. TRUE stories of the ancient days were told at the fireside in the endless winter nights by story tellers or Scalds. It was thought a sin for any one to alter these old stories, but as generations passed more and more wonderful matters came into the legend. It was believed that the dead Gunnar, the famed archer, sang within his cairn or "Howe," the mound wherein he was buried, and his famous bill or cutting spear was said to have been made by magic, and to sing in the night before the wounding of men and the waking of war. People were thought to be "second-sighted"--that is, to have prophetic vision. The night when Njal's house was burned his wife saw all the meat on the table "one gore of blood," just as in Homer the prophet Theoclymenus beheld blood falling in gouts from the walls, before the slaying of the Wooers.

The Valkyries, the Choosers of the slain, and the Norns who wove the fates of men at a ghastly loom were seen by living eyes. In the graves where treasures were hoarded the Barrowwights dwelt, ghosts that were sentinels over the gold: witchwives changed themselves into wolves and other monstrous animals, and for many weeks the heroes Signy and Sinfjotli ran wild in the guise of wolves.

These and many other marvels crept into the Sagas, and made the listeners feel a shudder of cold beside the great fire that burned in the centre of the skali or hall where the chief sat, giving meat and drink to all who came, where the women span and the Saga man told the tales of long ago. Finally, at the end of the middle ages, these Sagas were written down in Icelandic, and in Latin occasionally, and many of them have been translated into English.

Unluckily, these translations have hitherto been expensive to buy, and were not always to be had easily. For the wise world, which reads newspapers all day and half the night, does not care much for books, still less for good books, least of all for old books. You can make no money out of reading Sagas: they have nothing to say about stocks and shares, nor about Prime Ministers and politics.

Nor will they amuse a man, if nothing amuses him but accounts of races and murders, or gossip about Mrs. Nokes's new novel, Mrs.

同类推荐
  • What Diantha Did

    What Diantha Did

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太清修丹秘诀

    太清修丹秘诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Ramsey Milholland

    Ramsey Milholland

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 華夷譯語

    華夷譯語

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • LORD JIM

    LORD JIM

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 25岁的清晨

    25岁的清晨

    秦晨第一次见到叶清时,便觉得她的笑容像阳光,温暖,和煦;后来她准备向他告白时,他却无形的拒绝并消失不见;七年后,他和她重逢时,“海蓝之谜”的酒吧里,仅隔三步的距离,“好久不见啊,秦晨。”“七年没见了,叶清。”“我,秦晨,25岁,会叠被子会做饭,无不良嗜好,工作稳定,你觉得怎么样?”“还行吧……”他和她,爱着,思念着,鼻酸中带着怨,却从未停过喜欢着对方。
  • 我在万界穿越之废物系统

    我在万界穿越之废物系统

    第一次写,可能会不好,先是火影然后超神学院,斗罗,崩坏,等等。群号1075465350,建议各位从九尾之乱下开始看。
  • 东吴西风起

    东吴西风起

    大顺小吴王顾也蒙难流落江湖,在皇权的围追堵截下结交天下英豪。不断历练,从单纯善良的一张白纸到杀伐果断的一方剑圣。内乱、外犯、庙堂之高、江湖之远,凭借过人天赋成长起来的小吴王究竟会在大顺江湖写下怎样的故事?
  • 未敢言相思

    未敢言相思

    稚子之龄与顾见初相识八岁与其分别还以为此生不复相见却在十二岁时只剩下他一个依靠那个时候她还称他十一叔那么这么多年的十一叔又是怎么爱上的呢无从得知也无需惊讶毕竟在她的心里故事的开始顾十一就只是顾十一而已
  • 凤骨箫

    凤骨箫

    三千世界,只现一隅。有神魔,有仙侠,有宫廷相争,也有沙场铁血,有完全脑洞,也有历史真事。?你要相信,在这世间有一个人,无论你在哪儿,无论你成了谁,他都会跨越一切找到你。?你所念念不忘的,在时间的洪流中已悄然改变。包括你自己,也早已改变。?你以为你一生所求是他,其实所求的不过是那份美丽的念想罢了。几番轮回,眼前的这个人还是曾经的那个他吗?你也知道,不是。即便有记忆又如何?不过是一个个支离破碎的且与他本体无关的故事罢了。而本体的他,才真正只是那段最原始的记忆,而已。?(▁▂▃▄佛系写手,随心更文▄▃▂▁)
  • 因为不能飞,所以要奔跑

    因为不能飞,所以要奔跑

    因为痛,所以叫青春;因为迷茫,所以叫人生。如果你不能飞,就奔跑;如果你不能奔跑,就走;如果你不能走,就爬。但无论你做什么,你都得一直前行。《因为不能飞,所以要奔跑》用4大要点5种方法8个问题12种诀窍,全面强大你的内心和硬实力,它有系统有步骤地教你如何与“苦逼”的人生死磕到底,直到这个世界为你让步。
  • 竹林空月圆

    竹林空月圆

    7年了,你回来了。7年了,你还好吗?熟悉的……陌生人?
  • 一次意外的邂逅

    一次意外的邂逅

    沈峰作为沈氏集团的二公子,在生活的逼迫之下,不得不放弃了相恋四年的恋人。而后沈峰却意外邂逅了温柔善良的萧寒珊,这次沈峰还会放弃这次邂逅吗?他们最后的结局会如何呢?
  • 彼岸秋叶

    彼岸秋叶

    李晓诚一名热血青春少年,一名高中生成长经历!在此期间勇敢追求,敢想敢做!
  • 璇夜

    璇夜

    他!前世名叫至尊宝,一个多情,滑头的土匪头子!他!今世叫做林傲,一个被寡妇扶养长大的孤儿!一次偶然的机会,沉睡在他心中的灵旋壁和另一个声音被悄然唤醒,从此后也开启了他颠覆宿命的修行!——————————————————————————苦渡轮回十里边,恍若惊鸿五百年夜雨芭蕉雨打枝,三世三生尽浮华犹记傲来国许愿池旁许愿石碑下的再世约定!!!犹记驻立轮回司饮下孟婆汤时的一曲绝唱!!!犹记那些年我们一起追的大话西游!!!