The Danish History (Book III) by Saxo Grammaticus
After Hiartuar, HOTHER, whom I mentioned above, the brother of
Athisl, and also the fosterling of King Gewar, became sovereign
of both realms. It will be easier to relate his times if I begin
with the beginning of his life. For if the earlier years of his
career are not doomed to silence, the latter ones can be more
fully and fairly narrated.
When Helgi had slain Hodbrodd, his son Hother passed the length
of his boyhood under the tutelage of King Gewar. While a
stripling, he excelled in strength of body all his foster-brethren and compeers. Moreover, he was gifted with many
accomplishments of mind. He was very skilled in swimming and
archery, and also with the gloves; and further was as nimble as
such a youth could be, his training being equal to his strength.
Though his years were unripe, his richly-dowered spirit surpassed
them. None was more skilful on lyre or harp; and he was cunning
on the timbrel, on the lute, and in every modulation of string
instruments. With his changing measures he could sway the
feelings of men to what passions he would; he knew how to fill
human hearts with joy or sadness, with pity or with hatred, and
used to enwrap the soul with the delight or terror of the ear.
All these accomplishments of the youth pleased Nanna, the
daughter of Gewar, mightily, and she began to seek his embraces.
For the valour of a youth will often kindle a maid, and the
courage of those whose looks are not so winning is often
acceptable. For love hath many avenues; the path of pleasure is
opened to some by grace, to others by bravery of soul, and to
some by skill in accomplishments. Courtesy brings to some stores
of Love, while most are commended by brightness of beauty. Nor
do the brave inflict a shallower wound on maidens than the
comely.
Now it befell that Balder the son of Odin was troubled at the
sight of Nanna bathing, and was seized with boundless love. He
was kindled by her fair and lustrous body, and his heart was set
on fire by her manifest beauty; for nothing exciteth passion like
comeliness. Therefore he resolved to slay with the sword Hother,
who, he feared, was likeliest to baulk his wishes; so that his
love, which brooked no postponement, might not be delayed in the
enjoyment of its desire by any obstacle.
About this time Hother chanced, while hunting, to be led astray
by a mist, and he came on a certain lodge in which were wood-
maidens; and when they greeted him by his own name, he asked who
they were. They declared that it was their guidance and
government that mainly determined the fortunes of war. For they
often invisibly took part in battles, and by their secret
assistance won for their friends the coveted victories. They
averted, indeed, that they could win triumphs and inflict defeats
as they would; and further told him how Balder had seen his
foster-sister Nanna while she bathed, and been kindled with
passion for her; but counselled Hother not to attack him in war,
worthy as he was of his deadliest hate, for they declared that
Balder was a demigod, sprung secretly from celestial seed. When
Hother had heard this, the place melted away and left him
shelterless, and he found himself standing in the open and out in
the midst of the fields, without a vestige of shade. Most of all
he marvelled at the swift flight of the maidens, the shifting of
the place, and the delusive semblance of the building. For he
knew not that all that had passed around him had been a mere
mockery and an unreal trick of the arts of magic.
Returning thence, he related to Gewar the mystification that had
followed on his straying, and straightway asked him for his
daughter. Gewar answered that he would most gladly favour him,
but that he feared if he rejected Balder he would incur his
wrath; for Balder, he said, had proffered him a like request.
For he said that the sacred strength of Balder's body was proof
even against steel; adding, however, that he knew of a sword
which could deal him his death, which was fastened up in the
closest bonds; this was in the keeping of Miming, the Satyr of
the woods, who also had a bracelet of a secret and marvellous
virtue, that used to increase the wealth of the owner. Moreover,
the way to these regions was impassable and filled with
obstacles, and therefore hard for mortal men to travel. For the
greater part of the road was perpetually beset with extraordinary
cold. So he advised him to harness a car with reindeer, by means
of whose great speed he could cross the hard-frozen ridges. And
when he had got to the place, he should set up his tent away from
the sun in such wise that it should catch the shadow of the cave
where Miming was wont to be; while he should not in return cast a
shade upon Miming, so that no unaccustomed darkness might be
thrown and prevent the Satyr from going out. Thus both the
bracelet and the sword would be ready to his hand, one being
attended by fortune in wealth and the other by fortune in war,
and each of them thus bringing a great prize to the owner. Thus
much said Gewar; and Hother was not slow to carry out his
instructions. Planting his tent in the manner aforesaid, he
passed the nights in anxieties and the days in hunting. But
through either season he remained very wakeful and sleepless,
allotting the divisions of night and day so as to devote the one
to reflection on events, and to spend the other in providing food
for his body. Once as he watched all night, his spirit was
drooping and dazed with anxiety, when the Satyr cast a shadow on
his tent. Aiming a spear at him, he brought him down with the
blow, stopped him, and bound him, while he could not make his
escape. Then in the most dreadful words he threatened him with
the worst, and demanded the sword and bracelets. The Satyr was
not slow to tender him the ransom of his life for which he was
asked. So surely do all prize life beyond wealth; for nothing is
ever cherished more among mortals than the breath of their own
life. Hother, exulting in the treasure he had gained, went home
enriched with trophies which, though few, were noble.
When Gelder, the King of Saxony, heard that Hother had gained
these things, he kept constantly urging his soldiers to go and
carry off such glorious booty; and the warriors speedily equipped
a fleet in obedience to their king. Gewar, being very learned in
divining and an expert in the knowledge of omens, foresaw this;
and summoning Hother, told him, when Gelder should join battle
with him, to receive his spears with patience, and not let his
own fly until he saw the enemy's missiles exhausted; and further,
to bring up the curved scythes wherewith the vessels could be
rent and the helmets and shields plucked from the soldiers.
Hother followed his advice and found its result fortunate. For
he bade his men, when Gelder began to charge, to stand their
ground and defend their bodies with their shields, affirming that
the victory in that battle must be won by patience. But the
enemy nowhere kept back their missiles, spending them all in
their extreme eagerness to fight; and the more patiently they
found Hother bear himself in his reception of their spears and
lances, the more furiously they began to hurl them. Some of
these stuck in the shields and some in the ships, and few were
the wounds they inflicted; many of them were seen to be shaken
off idly and to do no hurt. For the soldiers of Hother performed
the bidding of their king, and kept off the attack of the spears
by a penthouse of interlocked shields; while not a few of the
spears smote lightly on the bosses and fell into the waves. When
Gelder was emptied of all his store, and saw the enemy picking it
up, and swiftly hurling it back at him, he covered the summit of
the mast with a crimson shield, as a signal of peace, and
surrendered to save his life. Hother received him with the
friendliest face and the kindliest words, and conquered him as
much by his gentleness as he had by his skill.
At this time Helgi, King of Halogaland, was sending frequent
embassies to press his suit for Thora, daughter of Kuse,
sovereign of the Finns and Perms. Thus is weakness ever known by
its wanting help from others. For while all other young men of
that time used to sue in marriage with their own lips, this man
was afflicted with so faulty an utterance that he was ashamed to
be heard not only by strangers, but by those of his own house.
So much doth calamity shun all witnesses; for natural defects are
the more vexing the more manifest they are. Kuse despised his
embassy, answering that that man did not deserve a wife who
trusted too little to his own manhood, and borrowed by entreaty
the aid of others in order to gain his suit. When Helgi heard
this, be besought Hother, whom he knew to be an accomplished
pleader, to favour his desires, promising that he would promptly
perform whatsoever he should command him. The earnest entreaties
of the youth prevailed on Hother, and he went to Norway with an
armed fleet, intending to achieve by arms the end which he could
not by words. And when he had pleaded for Helgi with the most
dulcet eloquence, Kuse rejoined that his daughter's wish must be
consulted, in order that no paternal strictness might forestall
anything against her will. He called her in and asked her
whether she felt a liking for her wooer; and when she assented he
promised Helgi her hand. In this way Hother, by the sweet sounds
of his fluent and well-turned oratory, opened the ears of Kuse,
which were before deaf to the suit he urged.
While this was passing in Halogaland, Balder entered the country
of Gewar armed, in order to sue for Nanna. Gewar bade him learn
Nanna's own mind; so he approached the maiden with the most
choice and cajoling words; and when he could win no hearing for
his prayers, he persisted in asking the reason of his refusal.
She replied, that a god could not wed with a mortal, because the
vast difference of their natures prevented any bond of
intercourse. Also the gods sometimes used to break their
pledges; and the bond contracted between unequals was apt to snap
suddenly. There was no firm tie between those of differing
estate; for beside the great, the fortunes of the lowly were
always dimmed. Also lack and plenty dwelt in diverse tents, nor
was there any fast bond of intercourse between gorgeous wealth
and obscure poverty. In fine, the things of earth would not mate
with those of heaven, being sundered by a great original gulf
through a difference in nature; inasmuch as mortal man was
infinitely far from the glory of the divine majesty. With this
shuffling answer she eluded the suit of Balder, and shrewdly wove
excuses to refuse his hand.
When Hother heard this from Gewar, he complained long to Helgi of
Balder's insolence. Both were in doubt as to what should be
done, and beat their brains over divers plans; for converse with
a friend in the day of trouble, though it removeth not the peril,
yet maketh the heart less sick. Amid all the desires of their
souls the passion of valour prevailed, and a naval battle was
fought with Balder. One would have thought it a contest of men
against gods, for Odin and Thor and the holy array of the gods
fought for Balder. There one could have beheld a war in which
divine and human might were mingled. But Hother was clad in his
steel-defying tunic, and charged the closest bands of the gods,
assailing them as vehemently as a son of earth could assail the
powers above. However, Thor was swinging his club with
marvellous might, and shattered all interposing shields, calling
as loudly on his foes to attack him as upon his friends to back
him up. No kind of armour withstood his onset, no man could
receive his stroke and live. Whatsoever his blow fended off it
crushed; neither shield nor helm endured the weight of its dint;
no greatness of body or of strength could serve. Thus the
victory would have passed to the gods, but that Hother, though
his line had already fallen back, darted up, hewed off the club
at the haft, and made it useless. And the gods, when they had
lost this weapon, fled incontinently. But that antiquity vouches
for it, it were quite against common belief to think that men
prevailed against gods. (We call them gods in a supposititious
rather than in a real sense; for to such we give the title of
deity by the custom of nations, not because of their nature.)
As for Balder, he took to flight and was saved. The conquerors
either hacked his ships with their swords or sunk them in the
sea; not content to have defeated gods, they pursued the wrecks
of the fleet with such rage, as if they would destroy them to
satiate their deadly passion for war. Thus doth prosperity
commonly whet the edge of licence. The haven, recalling by its
name Balder's flight, bears witness to the war. Gelder, the King
of Saxony, who met his end in the same war, was set by Hother
upon the corpses of his oarsmen, and then laid on a pyre built of
vessels, and magnificently honoured in his funeral by Hother, who
not only put his ashes in a noble barrow, treating them as the
remains of a king, but also graced them with most reverent
obsequies. Then, to prevent any more troublesome business
delaying his hopes of marriage, he went back to Gewar and enjoyed
the coveted embraces of Nanna. Next, having treated Helgi and
Thora very generously, he brought his new queen back to Sweden,
being as much honoured by all for his victory as Balder was
laughed at for his flight.
At this time the nobles of the Swedes repaired to Demnark to pay
their tribute; but Hother, who had been honoured as a king by his
countrymen for the splendid deeds of his father, experienced what
a lying pander Fortune is. For he was conquered in the field by
Balder, whom a little before he had crushed, and was forced to
flee to Gewar, thus losing while a king that victory which he had
won as a common man. The conquering Balder, in order to slake
his soldiers, who were parched with thirst, with the blessing of
a timely draught, pierced the earth deep and disclosed a fresh
spring. The thirsty ranks made with gaping lips for the water
that gushed forth everywhere. The traces of these springs,
eternised by the name, are thought not quite to have dried up
yet, though they have ceased to well so freely as of old. Balder
was continually harassed by night phantoms feigning the likeness
of Nanna, and fell into such ill health that he could not so much
as walk, and began the habit of going his journeys in a two horse
car or a four-wheeled carriage. So great was the love that had
steeped his heart and now had brought him down almost to the
extremity of decline. For he thought that his victory had
brought him nothing if Nanna was not his prize. Also Frey, the
regent of the gods, took his abode not far from Upsala, where he
exchanged for a ghastly and infamous sin-offering the old custom
of prayer by sacrifice, which had been used by so many ages and
generations. For he paid to the gods abominable offerings, by
beginning to slaughter human victims.
Meantime Hother (1) learned that Denmark lacked leaders, and that
Hiartuar had swiftly expiated the death of Rolf; and he used to
say that chance had thrown into his hands that to which he could
scarce have aspired. For first, Rolf, whom he ought to have
killed, since he remembered that Rolf's father had slain his own,
had been punished by the help of another; and also, by the
unexpected bounty of events, a chance had been opened to him of
winning Denmark. In truth, if the pedigree of his forefathers
were rightly traced, that realm was his by ancestral right!
Thereupon he took possession, with a very great fleet, of
Isefjord, a haven of Zealand, so as to make use of his impending
fortune. There the people of the Danes met him and appointed him
king; and a little after, on hearing of the death of his brother
Athisl, whom he had bidden rule the Swedes, he joined the Swedish
empire to that of Denmark. But Athisl was cut off by an
ignominious death. For whilst, in great jubilation of spirit, he
was honouring the funeral rites of Rolf with a feast, he drank
too greedily, and paid for his filthy intemperance by his sudden
end. And so, while he was celebrating the death of another with
immoderate joviality, he forced on his own apace.
While Hother was in Sweden, Balder also came to Zealand with a
fleet; and since he was thought to be rich in arms and of
singular majesty, the Danes accorded him with the readiest of
voices whatever he asked concerning the supreme power. With such
wavering judgment was the opinion of our forefathers divided.
Hother returned from Sweden and attacked him. They both coveted
sway, and the keenest contest for the sovereignty began between
them; but it was cut short by the flight of Hother. He retired
to Jutland, and caused to be named after him the village in which
he was wont to stay. Here he passed the winter season, and then
went back to Sweden alone and unattended. There he summoned the
grandees, and told them that he was weary of the light of life
because of the misfortunes wherewith Balder had twice
victoriously stricken him. Then he took farewell of all, and
went by a circuitous path to a place that was hard of access,
traversing forests uncivilised. For it oft happens that those
upon whom has come some inconsolable trouble of spirit seek, as
though it were a medicine to drive away their sadness, far and
sequestered retreats, and cannot bear the greatness of their
grief amid the fellowship of men; so dear, for the most part, is
solitude to sickness. For filthiness and grime are chiefly
pleasing to those who have been stricken with ailments of the
soul. Now he had been wont to give out from the top of a hill
decrees to the people when they came to consult him; and hence
when they came they upbraided the sloth of the king for hiding
himself, and his absence was railed at by all with the bitterest
complaints.
But Hother, when he had wandered through remotest byways and
crossed an uninhabited forest, chanced to come upon a cave where
dwelt some maidens whom he knew not; but they proved to be the
same who had once given him the invulnerable coat. Asked by them
wherefore he had come thither, he related the disastrous issue of
the war. So he began to bewail the ill luck of his failures and
his dismal misfortunes, condemning their breach of faith, and
lamenting that it had not turned out for him as they had promised
him. But the maidens said that though he had seldom come off
victorious, he had nevertheless inflicted as much defeat on the
enemy as they on him, and had dealt as much carnage as he had
shared in. Moreover, the favour of victory would be speedily
his, if he could first lay hands upon a food of extraordinary
delightsomeness which had been devised to increase the strength
of Balder. For nothing would be difficult if he could only get
hold of the dainty which was meant to enhance the rigour of his
foe.
Hard as it sounded for earthborn endeavours to make armed assault
upon the gods, the words of the maidens inspired Hother's mind
with instant confidence to fight with Balder. Also some of his
own people said that he could not safely contend with those
above; but all regard for their majesty was expelled by the
boundless fire of his spirit. For in brave souls vehemence is
not always sapped by reason, nor doth counsel defeat rashness.
Or perchance it was that Hother remembered how the might of the
lordliest oft proveth unstable, and how a little clod can batter
down great chariots.
On the other side, Balder mustered the Danes to arms and met
Hother in the field. Both sides made a great slaughter; the
carnage of the opposing parties was nearly equal, and night
stayed the battle. About the third watch, Hother, unknown to any
man, went out to spy upon the enemy, anxiety about the impending
peril having banished sleep. This strong excitement favours not
bodily rest, and inward disquiet suffers not outward repose. So,
when he came to the camp of the enemy he heard that three maidens
had gone out carrying the secret feast of Balder. He ran after
them (for their footsteps in the dew betrayed their flight), and
at last entered their accustomed dwelling. When they asked him
who he was, he answered, a lutanist, nor did the trial belie his
profession. For when the lyre was offered him, he tuned its
strings, ordered and governed the chords with his quill, and with
ready modulation poured forth a melody pleasant to the ear. Now
they had three snakes, of whose venom they were wont to mix a
strengthening compound for the food of Balder, and even now a
flood of slaver was dripping on the food from the open mouths of
the serpents. And some of the maidens would, for kindness sake,
have given Hother a share of the dish, had not eldest of the
three forbidden them, declaring that Balder would be cheated if
they increased the bodily powers of his enemy. He had said, not
that he was Hother, but that he was one of his company. Now the
same nymphs, in their gracious kindliness, bestowed on him a belt
of perfect sheen and a girdle which assured victory.
Retracing the path by which he had come, he went back on the same
road, and meeting Balder plunged his sword into his side, and
laid him low half dead. When the news was told to the soldiers,
a cheery shout of triumph rose from all the camp of Hother, while
the Danes held a public mourning for the fate of Balder. He,
feeling no doubt of his impending death, and stung by the anguish
of his wound, renewed the battle on the morrow; and, when it
raged hotly, bade that he should be borne on a litter into the
fray, that he might not seem to die ignobly within his tent. On
the night following, Proserpine was seen to stand by him in a
vision, and to promise that on the morrow he should have her
embrace. The boding of the dream was not idle; for when three
days had passed, Balder perished from the excessive torture of
his wound; and his body given a royal funeral, the army causing
it to be buried in a barrow which they had made.
Certain men of our day, Chief among whom was Harald, (2) since
the story of the ancient burial-place still survived, made a raid
on it by night in the hope of finding money, but abandoned their
attempt in sudden panic. For the hill split, and from its crest
a sudden and mighty torrent of loud-roaring waters seemed to
burst; so that its flying mass, shooting furiously down, poured
over the fields below, and enveloped whatsoever it struck upon,
and at its onset the delvers were dislodged, flung down their
mattocks, and fled divers ways; thinking that if they strove any
longer to carry through their enterprise they would be caught in
the eddies of the water that was rushing down. Thus the guardian
gods of that spot smote fear suddenly into the minds of the
youths, taking them away from covetousness, and turning them to
see to their safety; teaching them to neglect their greedy
purpose and be careful of their lives. Now it is certain that
this apparent flood was not real but phantasmal; not born in the
bowels of the earth (since Nature suffereth not liquid springs to
gush forth in a dry place), but produced by some magic agency.
All men afterwards, to whom the story of that breaking in had
come down, left this hill undisturbed. Wherefore it has never
been made sure whether it really contains any wealth; for the
dread of peril has daunted anyone since Harald from probing its
dark foundations.
But Odin, though he was accounted the chief of the gods, began to
inquire of the prophets and diviners concerning the way to
acomplish vengeance for his son, as well as all others whom he
had beard were skilled in the most recondite arts of soothsaying.
For godhead that is incomplete is oft in want of the help of man.
Rostioph (Hrossthiof), the Finn, foretold to him that another son
must be born to him by Rinda (Wrinda), daughter of the King of
the Ruthenians; this son was destined to exact punishment for the
slaying of his brother. For the gods had appointed to the
brother that was yet to be born the task of avenging his kinsman.
Odin, when he heard this, muffled his face with a cap, that his
garb might not betray him, and entered the service of the said
king as a soldier; and being made by him captain of the soldiers,
and given an army, won a splendid victory over the enemy. And
for his stout achievement in this battle the king admitted him
into the chief place in his friendship, distinguishing him as
generously with gifts as with honours. A very little while
afterwards Odin routed the enemy single-handed, and returned, at
once the messenger and the doer of the deed. All marvelled that
the strength of one man could deal such slaughter upon a
countless host. Trusting in these services, he privily let the
king into the secret of his love, and was refreshed by his most
gracious favour; but when he sought a kiss from the maiden, he
received a cuff. But he was not driven from his purpose either
by anger at the slight or by the odiousness of the insult.
Next year, loth to quit ignobly the quest he had taken up so
eagerly, he put on the dress of a foreigner and went back to
dwell with the king. It was hard for those who met him to
recognise him; for his assumed filth obliterated his true
features, and new grime hid his ancient aspect. He said that his
name was Roster (Hrosstheow), and that he was skilled in
smithcraft. And his handiwork did honour to his professions: for
he portrayed in bronze many and many a shape most beautifully, so
that he received a great mass of gold from the king, and was
ordered to hammer out the ornaments of the matrons. So, after
having wrought many adornments for women's wearing, he at last
offered to the maiden a bracelet which he had polished more
laboriously than the rest and several rings which were adorned
with equal care. But no services could assuage the wrath of
Rinda; when he was fain to kiss her she cuffed him; for gifts
offered by one we hate are unacceptable, while those tendered by
a friend are far more grateful: so much doth the value of the
offering oft turn on the offerer. For this stubborn-hearted
maiden never doubted that the crafty old man was feigning
generosity in order to seize an opening to work his lust. His
temper, moreover, was keen and indomitable; for she knew that his
homage covered guile, and that under the devotion of his gifts
there lay a desire for crime. Her father fell to upbraiding her
heavily for refusing the match; but she loathed to wed an old
man, and the plea of her tender years lent her some support in
her scorning of his hand; for she said that a young girl ought
not to marry prematurely.
But Odin, who had found that nothing served the wishes of lovers
more than tough persistency, though he was stung with the shame
of his double rebuff, nevertheless, effacing the form he had worn
before, went to the king for the third time, professing the
completest skill in soldiership. He was led to take this pains
not only by pleasure but by the wish to wipe out his disgrace.
For of old those who were skilled in magic gained this power of
instantly changing their aspect and exhibiting the most different
shapes. Indeed, they were clever at imitating any age, not only
in its natural bodily appearance, but also in its stature; and so
the old man, in order to exhibit his calling agreeably, used to
ride proudly up and down among the briskest of them. But not
even such a tribute could move the rigour of the maiden; for it
is hard for the mind to come back to a genuine liking for one
against whom it has once borne heavy dislike. When he tried to
kiss her at his departure, she repulsed him so that he tottered
and smote his chin upon the ground. Straightway he touched her
with a piece of bark whereon spells were written, and made her
like unto one in frenzy: which was a gentle revenge to take for
all the insults he had received.
But still he did not falter in the fulfilment of his purpose; for
trust in his divine majesty buoyed him up with confidence; so,
assuming the garb of a maiden, this indefatigable journeyer
repaired for the fourth time to the king, and, on being received
by him, showed himself assiduous and even forward. Most people
believed him to be a woman, as he was dressed almost in female
attire. Also he declared that his name wa s Wecha, and his
calling that of a physician: and this assertion he confirmed by
the readiest services. At last he was taken into the household
of the queen, and played the part of a waiting-woman to the
princess, and even used to wash the soil off her feet at
eventide; and as he was applying the water he was suffered to
touch her calves and the upper part of the thighs. But fortune
goes with mutable steps, and thus chance put into his hand what
his address had never won. For it happened that the girl fell
sick, and looked around for a cure; and she summoned to protect
her health those very hands which aforetime she had rejected, and
appealed for preservation to him whom she had ever held in
loathing. He examined narrowly all the symptoms of the trouble,
and declared that, in order to check the disease as soon as
possible, it was needful to use a certain drugged draught; but
that it was so bitterly compounded, that the girl could never
endure so violent a cure unless she submitted to be bound; since
the stuff of the malady must be ejected from the very innermost
tissues. When her father heard this he did not hesitate to bind
his daughter; and laying her on the bed, he bade her endure
patiently all the applications of the doctor. For the king was
tricked by the sight of the female dress, which the old man was
using to disguise his persistent guile; and thus the seeming
remedy became an opportunity of outrage. For the physician
seized the chance of love, and, abandoning his business of
healing, sped to the work, not of expelling the fever, but of
working his lust; making use of the sickness of the princess,
whom in sound health he had found adverse to him. It will not be
wearisome if I subjoin another version of this affair. For there
are certain who say that the king, when he saw the physician
groaning with love, but despite all his expense of mind and body
accomplishing nothing, did not wish to rob of his due reward one
who had so well earned it, and allowed him to lie privily with
his daughter. So doth the wickedness of the father sometimes
assail the child, when vehement passion perverts natural
mildness. But his fault was soon followed by a remorse that was
full of shame, when his daughter bore a child.
But the gods, whose chief seat was then at Byzantium, (Asgard),
seeing that Odin had tarnished the fair name of godhead by divers
injuries to its majesty, thought that he ought to be removed from
their society. And they had him not only ousted from the
headship, but outlawed and stripped of all worship and honour at
home; thinking it better that the power of their infamous
president should be overthrown than that public religion should
be profaned; and fearing that they might themselves be involved
in the sin of another, and though guiltless be punished for the
crime of the guilty. For they saw that, now the derision of
their great god was brought to light, those whom they had lured
to proffer them divine honours were exchanging obeisance for
scorn and worship for shame; that holy rites were being accounted
sacrilege, and fixed and regular ceremonies deemed so much
childish raving. Fear was in their souls, death before their
eyes, and one would have supposed that the fault of one was
visited upon the heads of all. So, not wishing Odin to drive
public religion into exile, they exiled him and put one Oller
(Wulder?) in his place, to bear the symbols not only Of royalty
but also of godhead, as though it had been as easy a task to
create a god as a king. And though they had appointed him priest
for form's sake, they endowed him actually with full distinction,
that he might be seen to be the lawful heir to the dignity, and
no mere deputy doing another's work. Also, to omit no
circumstance of greatness, they further gave his the name of
Odin, trying by the prestige of that title to be rid of the
obloquy of innovation. For nearly ten years Oller held the
presidency of the divine senate; but at last the gods pitied the
horrible exile of Odin, and thought that he had now been punished
heavily enough; so he exchanged his foul and unsightly estate for
his ancient splendour; for the lapse of time had now wiped out
the brand of his earlier disgrace. Yet some were to be found who
judged that he was not worthy to approach and resume his rank,
because by his stage-tricks and his assumption of a woman's work
he had brought the foulest scandal on the name of the gods. Some
declare that he bought back the fortune of his lost divinity with
money; flattering some of the gods and mollifying some with
bribes; and that at the cost of a vast sum he contrived to get
back to the distinction which he had long quitted. If you ask
how much he paid for them, inquire of those who have found out
what is the price of a godhead. I own that to me it is but
little worth.
Thus Oller was driven out from Byzantium by Odin and retired into
Sweden. Here, while he was trying, as if in a new world, to
repair the records of his glory, the Danes slew him. The story
goes that he was such a cunning wizard that he used a certain
bone, which he had marked with awful spells, wherewith to cross
the seas, instead of a vessel; and that by this bone he passed
over the waters that barred his way as quickly as by rowing.
But Odin, now that he had regained the emblems of godhead, shone
over all parts of the world with such a lustre of renown that all
nations welcomed him as though he were light restored to the
universe; nor was any spot to be found on the earth which did not
hornage to his might. Then finding that Boe, his son by Rhlda,
was enamoured of the hardships of war, he called him, and bade
him bear in mind the slaying of his brother: saying that it would
be better for him to take vengeande on the murderers of Balder
than to overcome the im~occ~}t in battle; for warfare was most
fitting and wholesome when a holy occ,tsion fot' waging it was
furnished by a righteous opening for vengeande.
News came meantime that Gewar had been slain by the guile of his
own satrap (jarl), Gunne. Hother determined to visit his murder
with the strongest and sharpest revenge. So he surprised Gunne,
cast him on a blazing pyre, and burnt him; for Gunne had himself
treacherously waylaid Gewar, and burnt him alive in the night.
This was his offering of vengeance to the shade of his foster-
father; and then he made his sons, Herlek and Gerit, rulers of
Norway.
Then he summoned the elders to assembly, and told them that he
would perish in the war wherein he was bound to meet Boe, and
said that he knew this by no doubtful guesswork, but by sure
prophecies of seers. So he besought them to make his son RORIK
king, so that the judgment of wicked men should not transfer the
royalty to strange and unknown houses; averring that he would
reap more joy from the succession of his son than bitterness from
his own impending death. This request was speedily granted.
Then he met Boe in battle and was killed; but small joy the
victory gave Boe. Indeed, he left the battle so sore stricken
that he was lifted on his shield and carried home by his foot-
soldiers supporting him in turn, to perish next day of the pain
of his wounds. The Ruthenian army gave his body a gorgeous
funeral and buried it in a splendid howe, which it piled in his
name, to save the record of so mighty a warrior from slipping out
of the recollection of after ages.
So the Kurlanders and the Swedes, as though the death of Hother
set them free from the burden of their subjection, resolved to
attack Denmark, to which they were accustomed to do homage with a
yearly tax. By this the Slavs also were emboldened to revolt,
and a number of others were turned from subjects into foes.
Rorik, in order to check this wrongdoing, summoned his country to
arms, recounted the deeds of his forefathers, and urged them in a
passionate harangue unto valorous deeds. But the barbarians,
loth to engage without a general, and seeing that they needed a
head, appointed a king over them; and, displaying all the rest of
their military force, hid two companies of armed men in a dark
spot. But Rorik saw the trap; and perceiving that his fleet was
wedged in a certain narrow creek among the shoal water, took it
out from the sands where it was lying, and brought it forth to
sea; lest it should strike on the oozy swamps, and be attacked by
the foe on different sides. Also, he resolved that his men
should go into hiding during the day, where they could stay and
suddenly fall on the invaders of his ships. He said that
perchance the guile might in the end recoil on the heads of its
devisors. And in fact the barbarians who had been appointed to
the ambuscade knew nothing of the wariness of the Danes, and
sallying against them rashly, were all destroyed. The remaining
force of the Slavs, knowing nothing of the slaughter of their
friends, hung in doubt wondering over the reason of Rorik's
tarrying. And after waiting long for him as the months wearily
rolled by, and finding delay every day more burdensome, they at
last thought they should attack him with their fleet.
Now among them there was a man of remarkable stature, a wizard by
calling. He, when he beheld the squadrons of the Danes, said:
"Suffer a private combat to forestall a public slaughter, so that
the danger of many may be bought off at the cost of a few. And
if any of you shall take heart to fight it out with me, I will
not flinch from these terms of conflict. But first of all I
demand that you accept the terms I prescribe, the form whereof I
have devised as follows: If I conquer, let freedom be granted us
from taxes; if I am conquered, let the tribute be paid you as of
old: For to-day I will either free my country from the yoke of
slavery by my victory or bind her under it by my defeat. Accept
me as the surety and the pledge for either issue." One of the
Danes, whose spirit was stouter than his strength, heard this,
and proceeded to ask Rorik, what would be the reward for the man
who met the challenger in combat? Rorik chanced to have six
bracelets, which were so intertwined that they could not be
parted from one another, the chain of knots being inextricaly
laced; and he promised them as a reward for the man who would
venture on the combat. But the youth, who doubted his fortune,
said: "Rorik, if I prove successful, let thy generosity award the
prize of the conqueror, do thou decide and allot the palm; but if
my enterprise go little to my liking, what prize canst thou owe
to the beaten, who will be wrapped either in cruel death or in
bitter shame? These things commonly go with feebleness, these
are the wages of the defeated, for whom naught remains but utter
infamy. What guerdon must be paid, what thanks offered, to him
who lacks the prize of courage? Who has ever garlanded with ivy
the weakling in War, or decked him with a conqueror's wage?
Valour wins the prize, not sloth, and failure lacks renown. For
one is followed by triumph and honour, the other by an unsightly
life or by a stagnant end. I, who know not which way the issue
of this duel inclines, dare not boldly anticipate that as a
reward, of which I know not whether it be rightly mine. For one
whose victory is doubtful may not seize the assured reward of the
victor. I forbear, while I am not sure of the day, to claim
firmly the title to the wreath. I refuse the gain, which may be
the wages of my death as much as of my life. It is folly to lay
hands on the fruit before it is ripe, and to be fain to pluck
that which one is not yet sure is one's title. This hand shall
win me the prize, or death." Having thus spoken, he smote the
barbarian with his sword; but his fortune was tardier than his
spirit; for the other smote him back, and he fell dead under the
force of the first blow. Thus he was a sorry sight unto the
Danes, but the Slavs granted their triumphant comrade a great
procession, and received him with splendid dances. On the morrow
the same man, whether he was elated with the good fortune of his
late victory, or was fired with the wish to win another, came
close to the enemy, and set to girding at them in the words of
his former challenge. For, supposing that he had laid low the
bravest of the Danes, he did not think that any of them would
have any heart left to fight further with him upon his challenge.
Also, trusting that, now one champion had fallen, he had
shattered the strength of the whole army, he thought that naught
would be hard to achieve upon which his later endeavours were
bent. For nothing pampers arrogance more than success, or
prompts to pride more surely than prosperity.
So Rorik was vexed that the general courage should be sapped by
the impudence of one man; and that the Danes, with their roll of
victories, should be met presumptuously by those whom they had
beaten of old; nay, should be ignominiously spurned; further,
that in all that host not one man should be found so quick of
spirit or so vigorous of arm, that he longed to sacrifice his
life for his country. It was the high-hearted Ubbe who first
wiped off this infamous reproach upon the hesitating Danes. For
he was of great bodily strength and powerful in incantations. He
also purposely asked the prize of the combat, and the king
promised him the bracelets. Then said he: "How can I trust the
promise when thou keepest the pledge in thine own hands, and dost
not deposit the gift in the charge of another? Let there be some
one to whom thou canst entrust the pledge, that thou mayst not be
able to take thy promise back. For the courage of the champion
is kindled by the irrevocable certainty of the prize." Of course
it was plain that he had said this in jest; sheer courage had
armed him to repel the insult to his country. But Rorik thought
he was tempted by avarice, and was loth to seem as if, contrary
to royal fashion, he meant to take back the gift or revoke his
promise; so, being stationed on his vessel, he resolved to shake
off the bracelets, and with a mighty swing send them to the
asker. But his attempt was baulked by the width of the gap
between them; for the bracelets fell short of the intended spot,
the impulse being too faint and slack, and were reft away by the
waters. For this nickname of Slyngebond, (swing-bracelet) clung
to Rorik. But this event testified much to the valour of Ubbe.
For the loss of his drowned prize never turned his mind from his
bold venture; he would not seem to let his courage be tempted by
the wages of covetousness. So he eagerly went to fight, showing
that he was a seeker of honour and not thc slave of lucre, and
that he set bravery before lust of pelf; and intent to prove that
his confidence was based not on hire, but on his own great soul.
Not a moment is lost; a ring is made; the course is thronged with
soldiers; the champions engage; a din arises; the crowd of
onlookers shouts in discord, each backing his own. And so the
valour of the champions blazes to white-heat; falling dead under
the wounds dealt by one another, they end together the combat and
their lives. I think that it was a provision of fortune that
neither of them should reap joy and honour by the other's death.
This event won back to Rorik the hearts of the insurgents and
regained him the tribute.
At this time Horwendil and Feng, whose father Gerwendil had been
governor of the Jutes, were appointed in his place by Rorik to
defend Jutland. But Horwendil held the monarchy for three years,
and then, to will the height of glory, devoted himself to roving.
Then Koller, King of Norway, in rivalry of his great deeds and
renown, deemed it would be a handsome deed if by his greater
strength in arms he could bedim the far-famed glory of the rover;
and cruising about the sea, he watched for Horwendil's fleet and
came up with it. There was an island lying in the middle of the
sea, which each of the rovers, bringing his ships up on either
side, was holding. The captains were tempted by the pleasant
look of the beach, and the comeliness of the shores led them to
look through the interior of the springtide woods, to go through
the glades, and roam over the sequestered forests. It was here
that the advance of Koller and Horwendil brought them face to
face without any witness. Then Horwendil endeavoured to address
the king first, asking him in what way it was his pleasure to
fight, and declaring that one best which needed the courage of as
few as possible. For, said he, the duel was the surest of all
modes of combat for winning the meed of bravery, because it
relied only upon native courage, and excluded all help from the
hand of another. Koller marvelled at so brave a judgment in a
youth, and said: "Since thou hast granted me the choice of
battle, I think it is best to employ that kind which needs only
the endeavours of two, and is free from all the tumult.
Certainly it is more venturesome, and allows of a speedier award
of the victory. This thought we share, in this opinion we agree
of our own accord. But since the issue remains doubtful, we must
pay some regard to gentle dealing, and must not give way so far
to our inclinations as to leave the last offices undone. Hatred
is in our hearts; yet let piety be there also, which in its due
time may take the place of rigour. For the rights of nature
reconcile us, though we are parted by differences of purpose;
they link us together, howsoever rancour estrange our spirit.
Let us, therefore, have this pious stipulation, that the
conqueror shall give funeral rites to the conquered. For all
allow that these are the last duties of human kind, from which no
righteous man shrinks. Let each army lay aside its sternness and
perform this function in harmony. Let jealousy depart at death,
let the feud be buried in the tomb. Let us not show such an
example of cruelty as to persecute one another's dust, though
hatred has come between us in our lives. It will be a boast for
the victor if he has borne his beaten foe in a lordly funeral.
For the man who pays the rightful dues over his dead enemy wins
the goodwill of the survivor; and whoso devotes gentle dealing to
him who is no more, conquers the living by his kindness. Also
there is another disaster, not less lamentable, which sometimes
befalls the living -- the loss of some part of their body; and I
think that succor is due to this just as much as to the worst hap
that may befall. For often those who fight keep their lives
safe, but suffer maiming; and this lot is commonly thought more
dismal than any death; for death cuts off memory of all things,
while the living cannot forget the devastation of his own body.
Therefore this mischief also must be helped somehow; so let it be
agreed, that the injury of either of us by the other shall be
made good with ten talents (marks) of gold. For if it be
righteous to have compassion on the calamities of another, how
much more is it to pity one's own? No man but obeys nature's
prompting; and he who slights it is a self-murderer."
After mutually pledging their faiths to these terms, they began
the battle. Nor was their strangeness his meeting one another,
nor the sweetness of that spring-green spot, so heeded as to
prevent them from the fray. Horwendil, in his too great ardour,
became keener to attack his enemy than to defend his own body;
and, heedless of his shield, had grasped his sword with both
hands; and his boldness did not fail. For by his rain of blows
he destroyed Koller's shield and deprived him of it, and at last
hewed off his foot and drove him lifeless to the ground. Then,
not to fail of his compact, he buried him royally, gave him a
howe of lordly make and pompous obsequies. Then he pursued and
slew Koller's sister Sela, who was a skilled warrior and
experienced in roving.
He had now passed three years in valiant deeds of war; and, in
order to win higher rank in Rorik's favour, he assigned to him
the best trophies and the pick of the plunder. His friendship
with Rorik enabled him to woo and will in marriage his daughter
Gerutha, who bore him a son Amleth.
Such great good fortune stung Feng with jealousy, so that he
resolved treacherously to waylay his brother, thus showing that
goodness is not safe even from those of a man's own house. And
behold, when a chance came to murder him, his bloody hand sated
the deadly passion of his soul. Then he took the wife of the
brother he had butchered, capping unnatural murder with incest.
For whoso yields to one iniquity, speedily falls an easier victim
to the next, the first being an incentive to the second. Also,
the man veiled the monstrosity of his deed with such hardihood of
cunning, that he made up a mock pretence of goodwill to excuse
his crime, and glossed over fratricide with a show of
righteousness. Gerutha, said he, though so gentle that she would
do no man the slightest hurt, had been visited with her husband's
extremest hate; and it was all to save her that he had slain his
brother; for he thought it shameful that a lady so meek and
unrancorous should suffer the heavy disdain of her husband. Nor
did his smooth words fail in their intent; for at courts, where
fools are sometimes favoured and backbiters preferred, a lie
lacks not credit. Nor did Feng keep from shameful embraces the
hands that had slain a brother; pursuing with equal guilt both of
his wicked and impious deeds.
Amleth beheld all this, but feared lest too shrewd a behaviour
might make his uncle suspect him. So he chose to feign dulness,
and pretend an utter lack of wits. This cunning course not only
concealed his intelligence but ensured his safety. Every day he
remained in his mother's house utterly listless and unclean,
flinging himself on the ground and bespattering his person with
foul and filthy dirt. His discoloured face and visage smutched
with slime denoted foolish and grotesque madness. All he said
was of a piece with these follies; all he did savoured of utter
lethargy. In a word, you would not have thought him a man at
all, but some absurd abortion due to a mad fit of destiny. He
used at times to sit over the fire, and, raking up the embers
with his hands, to fashion wooden crooks, and harden them in the
fire, shaping at their lips certain barbs, to make them hold more
tightly to their fastenings. When asked what he was about, he
said that he was preparing sharp javelins to avenge his father.
This answer was not a little scoffed at, all men deriding his
idle and ridiculous pursuit; but the thing helped his purpose
afterwards. Now it was his craft in this matter that first
awakened in the deeper observers a suspicion of his cunning. For
his skill in a trifling art betokened the hidden talent of the
craftsman; nor could they believe the spirit dull where the hand
had acquired so cunning a workmanship. Lastly, he always watched
with the most punctual care over his pile of stakes that he had
pointed in the fire. Some people, therefore, declared that his
mind was quick enough, and fancied that he only played the
simpleton in order to hide his understanding, and veiled some
deep purpose under a cunning feint. His wiliness (said these)
would be most readily detected, if a fair woman were put in his
way in some secluded place, who should provoke his mind to the
temptations of love; all men's natural temper being too blindly
amorous to be artfully dissembled, and this passion being also
too impetuous to be checked by cunning. Therefore, if his
lethargy were feigned, he would seize the opportunity, and yield
straightway to violent delights. So men were commissioned to
draw the young man in his rides into a remote part of the forest,
and there assail him with a temptation of this nature. Among
these chanced to be a foster-brother of Amleth, who had not
ceased to have regard to their common nurture; and who esteemed
his present orders less than the memory of their past fellowship.
He attended Amleth among his appointed train, being anxious not
to entrap, but to warn him; and was persuaded that he would
suffer the worst if he showed the slightest glimpse of sound
reason, and above all if he did the act of love openly. This was
also plain enough to Amleth himself. For when he was bidden
mount his horse, he deliberately set himself in such a fashion
that he turned his back to the neck and faced about, fronting the
tail; which he proceeded to encompass with the reins, just as if
on that side he would check the horse in its furious pace. By
this cunning thought he eluded the trick, and overcame the
treachery of his uncle. The reinless steed galloping on, with
rider directing its tail, was ludicrous enough to behold.
Amleth went on, and a wolf crossed his path amid the thicket.
When his companions told him that a young colt had met him, he
retorted, that in Feng's stud there were too few of that kind
fighting. This was a gentle but witty fashion of invoking a
curse upon his uncle's riches. When they averred that he had
given a cunning answer, he answered that he had spoken
deliberately; for he was loth, to be thought prone to lying about
any matter, and wished to be held a stranger to falsehood; and
accordingly he mingled craft and candour in such wise that,
though his words did lack truth, yet there was nothing to betoken
the truth and betray how far his keenness went.
Again, as he passed along the beach, his companions found the
rudder of a ship, which had been wrecked, and said they had
discovered a huge knife. "This," said he, "was the right thing
to carve such a huge ham;" by which he really meant the sea, to
whose infinitude, he thought, this enormous rudder matched.
Also, as they passed the sandhills, and bade him look at the
meal, meaning the sand, he replied that it had been ground small
by the hoary tempests of the ocean. His companions praising his
answer, he said that he had spoken it wittingly. Then they
purposely left him, that he might pluck up more courage to
practise wantonness. The woman whom his uncle had dispatched met
him in a dark spot, as though she had crossed him by chance; and
he took her and would have ravished her, had not his foster-
brother, by a secret device, given him an inkling of the trap.
For this man, while pondering the fittest way to play privily the
prompter's part, and forestall the young man's hazardous
lewdness, found a straw on the ground and fastened it underneath
the tail of a gadfly that was flying past; which he then drove
towards the particular quarter where he knew Amleth to be: an act
which served the unwary prince exceedingly well. The token was
interpreted as shrewdly as it had been sent. For Amleth saw the
gadfly, espied with curiosity the straw which it wore embedded in
its tail, and perceived that it was a secret warning to beware of
treachery. Alarmed, scenting a trap, and fain to possess his
desire in greater safety, he caught up the woman in his arms and
dragged her off to a distant and impenetrable fen. Moreover,
when they had lain together, he conjured her earnestly to
disclose the matter to none, and the promise of silence was
accorded as heartily as it was asked. For both of them had been
under the same fostering in their childhood; and this early
rearing in common had brought Amleth and the girl into great
intimacy.
So, when he had returned home, they all jeeringly asked him
whether he had given way to love, and he avowed that he had
ravished the maid. When he was next asked where he did it, and
what had been his pillow, he said that he had rested upon the
hoof of a beast of burden, upon a cockscomb, and also upon a
ceiling. For, when he was starting into temptation, he had
gathered fragments of all these things, in order to avoid lying.
And though his jest did not take aught of the truth out of the
story, the answer was greeted with shouts of merriment from the
bystanders. The maiden, too, when questioned on the matter,
declared that he had done no such thing; and her denial was the
more readily credited when it was found that the escort had not
witnessed the deed. Then he who had marked the gadfly in order
to give a hint, wishing to show Amleth that to his trick he owed
his salvation, observed that latterly he had been singly devoted
to Amleth. The young man's reply was apt. Not to seem forgetful
of his informant's service, he said that he had seen a certain
thing bearing a straw flit by suddenly, wearing a stalk of chaff
fixed in its hinder parts. The cleverness of this speech, which
made the rest split with laughter, rejoiced the heart of Amleth's
friend.
Thus all were worsted, and none could open the secret lock of the
young man's wisdom. But a friend of Feng, gifted more with
assurance than judgment, declared that the unfathomable cunning
of such a mind could not be detected by any vulgar plot, for the
man's obstinacy was so great that it ought not to be assailed
with any mild measures; there were many sides to his wiliness,
and it ought not to be entrapped by any one method. Accordingly,
said he, his own profounder acuteness had hit on a more delicate
way, which was well fitted to be put in practice, and would
effectually discover what they desired to know. Feng was
purposely to absent himself, pretending affairs of great import.
Amleth should be closeted alone with his mother in her chamber;
but a man should first be commissioned to place himself in a
concealed part of the room and listen heedfully to what they
talked about. For if the son had any wits at all he would not
hesitate to speak out in the hearing of his mother, or fear to
trust himself to the fidelity of her who bore him. The speaker,
loth to seem readier to devise than to carry out the plot,
zealously proffered himself as the agent of the eavesdropping.
Feng rejoiced at the scheme, and departed on pretence of a long
journey. Now he who had given this counsel repaired privily to
the room where Amleth was shut up with his mother, and lay flown
skulking in the straw. But Amleth had his antidote for the
treachery. Afraid of being overheard by some eavesdropper, he at
first resorted to his usual imbecile ways, and crowed like a
noisy cock, beating his arms together to mimic the flapping of
wings. Then he mounted the straw and began to swing his body and
jump again and again, wishing to try if aught lurked there in
hiding. Feeling a lump beneath his feet, he drove his sword into
the spot, and impaled him who lay hid. Then he dragged him from
his concealment and slew him. Then, cutting his body into
morsels, he seethed it in boiling water, and flung it through the
mouth of an open sewer for the swine to eat, bestrewing the
stinking mire with his hapless limbs. Having in this wise eluded
the snare, he went back to the room. Then his mother set up a
great wailing, and began to lament her son's folly to his face;
but he said: "Most infamous of women; dost thou seek with such
lying lamentations to hide thy most heavy guilt? Wantoning like
a harlot, thou hast entered a wicked and abominable state of
wedlock, embracing with incestuous bosom thy husband's slayer,
and wheedling with filthy lures of blandishment him who had slain
the father of thy son. This, forsooth, is the way that the mares
couple with the vanquishers of their mates; for brute beasts are
naturally incited to pair indiscriminately; and it would seem
that thou, like them, hast clean forgot thy first husband. As
for me, not idly do I wear the mask of folly; for I doubt not
that he who destroyed his brother will riot as ruthlessly in the
blood of his kindred. Therefore it is better to choose the garb
of dulness than that of sense, and to borrow some protection from
a show of utter frenzy. Yet the passion to avenge my father
still burns in my heart; but I am watching the chances, I await
the fitting hour. There is a place for all things; against so
merciless and dark spirit must be used the deeper devices of the
mind. And thou, who hadst been better employed in lamenting
thine own disgrace, know it is superfluity to bewail my
witlessness; thou shouldst weep for the blemish in thine own
mind, not for that in another's. On the rest see thou keep
silence." With such reproaches he rent the heart of his mother
and redeemed her to walk in the ways of virtue; teaching her to
set the fires of the past above the seductions of the present.
When Feng returned, nowhere could he find the man who had
suggested the treacherous espial; he searched for him long and
carefully, but none said they had seen him anywhere. Amleth,
among others, was asked in jest if he had come on any trace of
him, and replied that the man had gone to the sewer, but had
fallen through its bottom and been stifled by the floods of
filth, and that he had then been devoured by the swine that came
up all about that place. This speech was flouted by those who
heard; for it seemed senseless, though really it expressly avowed
the truth.
Feng now suspected that his stepson was certainly full of guile,
and desired to make away with him, but durst not do the deed for
fear of the displeasure, not only of Amleth's grandsire Rorik,
but also of his own wife. So he thought that the King of Britain
should be employed to slay him, so that another could do the
deed, and he be able to feign innocence. Thus, desirous to hide
his cruelty, he chose rather to besmirch his friend than to bring
disgrace on his own head. Amleth, on departing, gave secret
orders to his mother to hang the hall with woven knots, and to
perform pretended obsequies for him a year thence; promising that
he would then return. Two retainers of Feng then accompanied
him, bearing a letter graven on wood -- a kind of writing
material frequent in old times; this letter enjoined the king of
the Britons to put to death the youth who was sent over to him.
While they were reposing, Amleth searched their coffers, found
the letter, and read the instructions therein. Whereupon he
erased all the writing on the surface, substituted fresh
characters, and so, changing the purport of the instructions,
shifted his own doom upon his companions. Nor was he satisfied
with removing from himself the sentence of death and passing the
beril on to others, but added an entreaty that the King of
Britain would grant his daughter in marriage to a youth of great
judgment whom he was sending to him. Under this was falsely
marked the signature of Feng.
Now when they had reached Britain, the envoys went to the king,
and proffered him the letter which they supposed was an implement
of destruction to another, but which really betokened death to
themselves. The king dissembled the truth, and entreated them
hospitably and kindly. Then Amleth scouted all the splendour of
the royal banquet like vulgar viands, and abstaining very
strangely, rejected that plenteous feast, refraining from the
drink even as from the banquet. All marvelled that a youth and a
foreigner should disdain the carefully cooked dainties of the
royal board and the luxurious banquet provided, as if it were
some peasant's relish. So, when the revel broke up, and the king
was dismissing his friends to rest, he had a man sent into the
sleeping-room to listen secretly, in order that he might hear the
midnight conversation of his guests. Now, when Amleth's
companions asked him why he had refrained from the feast of
yestereve, as if it were poison, he answered that the bread was
flecked with blood and tainted; that there was a tang of iron in
the liquor; while the meats of the feast reeked of the stench of
a human carcase, and were infected by a kind of smack of the
odour of the charnel. He further said that the king had the eyes
of a slave, and that the queen had in three ways shown the
behaviour of a bondmaid. Thus he reviled with insulting
invective not so much the feast as its givers. And presently his
companions, taunting him with his old defect of wits, began to
flout him with many saucy jeers, because he blamed and cavilled
at seemly and worthy things, and because he attacked thus ignobly
an illustrous king and a lady of so refined a behaviour,
bespattering with the shamefullest abuse those who merited all
praise.
All this the king heard from his retainer; and declared that he
who could say such things had either more than mortal wisdom or
more than mortal folly; in these few words fathoming the full
depth of Amleth's penetration. Then he summoned his steward and
asked him whence he had procured the bread. The steward declared
that it had been made by the king's own baker. The king asked
where the corn had grown of which it was made, and whether any
sign was to be found there of human carnage? The other answered,
that not far off was a field, covered with the ancient bones of
slaughtered men, and still bearing plainly all the signs of
ancient carnage; and that he had himself planted this field with
grain in springtide, thinking it more fruitful than the rest, and
hoping for plenteous abundance; and so, for aught he knew, the
bread had caught some evil savour from this bloodshed. The king,
on hearing this, surmised that Amleth had spoken truly, and took
the pains to learn also what had been the source of the lard.
The other declared that his hogs had, through negligence, strayed
from keeping, and battened on the rotten carcase of a robber, and
that perchance their pork had thus come to have something of a
corrupt smack. The king, finding that Amlet11's judgment was
right in this thing also, asked of what liquor the steward had
mixed the drink? Hearing that it had been brewed of water and
meal, he had the spot of the spring pointed out to him, and set
to digging deep down; and there he found, rusted away, several
swords, the tang whereof it was thought had tainted the waters.
Others relate that Amleth blamed the drink because, while
quaffing it, he had detected some bees that had fed in the paunch
of a dead man; and that the taint, which had formerly been
imparted to the combs, had reappeared in the taste. The king,
seeing that Amleth had rightly given the causes of the taste he
had found so faulty, and learning that the ignoble eyes wherewith
Amleth had reproached him concerned some stain upon his birth,
had a secret interview with his mother, and asked her who his
father had really been. She said she had submitted to no man but
the king. But when he threatened that he would have the truth
out of her by a trial, he was told that he was the offspring of a
slave. By the evidence of the avowal thus extorted he understood
the whole mystery of the reproach upon his origin. Abashed as he
was with shame for his low estate, he was so ravished with the
young man's cleverness, that he asked him why he had aspersed the
queen with the reproach that she had demeaned herself like a
slave? But while resenting that the courtliness of his wife had
been accused in the midnight gossip of guest, he found that her
mother had been a bondmaid. For Amleth said he had noted in her
three blemishes showing the demeanor of a slave; first, she had
muffled her head in her mantle as handmaids do; next, that she
had gathered up her gown for walking; and thirdly, that she had
first picked out with a splinter, and then chewed up, the remnant
of food that stuck in the crevices between her teeth. Further,
he mentioned that the king's mother had been brought into slavery
from captivity, lest she should seem servile only in her habits,
yet not in her birth.
Then the king adored the wisdom of Amleth as though it were
inspired, and gave him his daughter to wife; accepting his bare
word as though it were a witness from the skies. Moreover, in
order to fulfil the bidding of his friend, he hanged Amleth's
companions on the morrow. Amleth, feigning offence, treated this
piece of kindness as a grievance, and received from the king, as
compensation, some gold, which he afterwards melted in the fire,
and secretly caused to be poured into some hollowed sticks.
When he had passed a whole year with the king he obtained leave
to make a journey, and returned to his own land, carrying away of
all his princely wealth and state only the sticks which held the
gold. On reaching Jutland, he exchanged his present attire for
his ancient demeanour, which he had adopted for righteous ends,
purposely assuming an aspect of absurdity. Covered with filth,
he entered the banquet-room where his own obsequies were being
held, and struck all men utterly aghast, rumour having falsely
noised abroad his death. At last terror melted into mirth, and
the guests jeered and taunted one another, that he whose last
rites they were celebrating as through he were dead, should
appear in the flesh. When he was asked concerning his comrades,
he pointed to the sticks he was carrying, and said, "Here is both
the one and the other." This he observed with equal truth and
pleasantry; for his speech, though most thought it idle, yet
departed not from the truth; for it pointed at the weregild of
the slain as though it were themselves. Thereon, wishing to
bring the company into a gayer mood, he jollied the cupbearers,
and diligently did the office of plying the drink. Then, to
prevent his loose dress hampering his walk, he girdled his sword
upon his side, and purposely drawing it several times, pricked
his fingers with its point. The bystantlers accordingly had both
sword and scabbard riveted across with all iron nail. Then, to
smooth the way more safely to his plot, he went to the lords and
plied them heavily with draught upon draught, and drenched them
all so deep in wine, that their feet were made feeble with
drunkenness, and they turned to rest within the palace, making
their bed where they had revelled. Then he saw they were in a
fit state for his plots, and thought that here was a chance
offered to do his purpose. So he took out of his bosom the
stakes he has long ago prepared, and went into the building,
where the ground lay covered with the bodies of the nobles
wheezing off their sleep and their debauch. Then, cutting away
its support, he brought dlown the hanging his mother had knitted,
which covered the inner as well as the outer walls of the hall.
This he flung upon the snorers, and then applying the crooked
stakes, he knotted and bound them up in such insoluble intricacy,
that not one of the men beneath, however hard he might struggle,
could contrive to rise. After this he set fire to the palace.
The flames spread, scattering the conflagration far and wide. It
enveloped the whole dwelling, destroyed the palace, and burnt
them all while they were either buried in deep sleep or vainly
striving to arise. Then he went to the chamber of Feng, who had
before this been conducted by his train into his pavilion;
plucked up a sword that chanced to be hanging to the bed, and
planted his own in its place. Then, awakening his uncle, he told
him that his nobles were perishing in the flames, and that Amleth
was here, armed with his crooks to help him, and thirsting to
exact the vengeance, now long overdue, for his father's murder.
Feng, on hearing this, leapt from his couch, but was cut down
while deprived of his own sword, and as he strove in vain to draw
the strange one. O valiant Amleth, and worthy of immortal fame,
who being shrewdly armed with a feint of folly, covered a wisdom
too high for human wit under a marvellous disguise of silliness!
And not only found in his subtlety means to protect his own
safety, but also by its guidance found opportunity to avenge his
father. By this skilful defence of himself, and strenuous
revenge for his parent, he has left it doubtful whether we are to
think more of his wit or his bravery.
_____
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