summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--2721-0.txt12654
-rw-r--r--2721-0.zipbin0 -> 221926 bytes
-rw-r--r--2721-h.zipbin0 -> 228083 bytes
-rw-r--r--2721-h/2721-h.htm17746
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/2721-8.txt12616
-rw-r--r--old/2721-8.zipbin0 -> 219703 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/2721-h.htm.2021-01-2715307
-rw-r--r--old/2721.txt12616
-rw-r--r--old/2721.zipbin0 -> 219665 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/ericb10.txt12698
-rw-r--r--old/ericb10.zipbin0 -> 218317 bytes
14 files changed, 83653 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/2721-0.txt b/2721-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b47307d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2721-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,12654 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: Eric Brighteyes
+
+Author: H. Rider Haggard
+
+Release Date: July, 2001 [eBook #2721]
+[Most recently updated: May 3, 2021]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: John Bickers, Dagny, Emma Dudding and David Widger
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERIC BRIGHTEYES ***
+
+
+
+
+Eric Brighteyes
+
+by H. Rider Haggard
+
+
+Contents
+
+ DEDICATION
+ INTRODUCTION
+ ERIC BRIGHTEYES
+
+ CHAPTER I. HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST FOUND GROA THE WITCH
+ CHAPTER II. HOW ERIC TOLD HIS LOVE TO GUDRUDA IN THE SNOW ON COLDBACK
+ CHAPTER III. HOW ASMUND BADE ERIC TO HIS YULE-FEAST
+ CHAPTER IV. HOW ERIC CAME DOWN GOLDEN FALLS
+ CHAPTER V. HOW ERIC WON THE SWORD WHITEFIRE
+ CHAPTER VI. HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WAS BETROTHED TO UNNA
+ CHAPTER VII. HOW ERIC WENT UP MOSFELL AGAINST SKALLAGRIM THE BARESARK
+ CHAPTER VIII. HOW OSPAKAR BLACKTOOTH FOUND ERIC BRIGHTEYES AND SKALLAGRIM LAMBSTAIL ON HORSE-HEAD HEIGHTS
+ CHAPTER IX. HOW SWANHILD DEALT WITH GUDRUDA
+ CHAPTER X. HOW ASMUND SPOKE WITH SWANHILD
+ CHAPTER XI. HOW SWANHILD BID FAREWELL TO ERIC
+ CHAPTER XII. HOW ERIC WAS OUTLAWED AND SAILED A-VIKING
+ CHAPTER XIII. HOW HALL THE MATE CUT THE GRAPNEL CHAIN
+ CHAPTER XIV. HOW ERIC DREAMED A DREAM
+ CHAPTER XV. HOW ERIC DWELT IN LONDON TOWN
+ CHAPTER XVI. HOW SWANHILD WALKED THE SEAS
+ CHAPTER XVII. HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WEDDED UNNA, THOROD’S DAUGHTER
+ CHAPTER XVIII. HOW EARL ATLI FOUND ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM ON THE SOUTHERN ROCKS OF STRAUMEY ISLE
+ CHAPTER XIX. HOW KOLL THE HALF-WITTED BROUGHT TIDINGS FROM ICELAND
+ CHAPTER XX. HOW ERIC WAS NAMED ANEW
+ CHAPTER XXI. HOW HALL OF LITHDALE TOOK TIDINGS TO ICELAND
+ CHAPTER XXII. HOW ERIC CAME HOME AGAIN
+ CHAPTER XXIII. HOW ERIC WAS A GUEST AT THE WEDDING-FEAST OF GUDRUDA THE FAIR
+ CHAPTER XXIV. HOW THE FEAST WENT
+ CHAPTER XXV. HOW THE FEAST ENDED
+ CHAPTER XXVI. HOW ERIC VENTURED DOWN TO MIDDALHOF AND WHAT HE FOUND
+ CHAPTER XXVII. HOW GUDRUDA WENT UP TO MOSFELL
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. HOW SWANHILD WON TIDINGS OF ERIC
+ CHAPTER XXIX. HOW WENT THE BRIDAL NIGHT
+ CHAPTER XXX. HOW THE DAWN CAME
+ CHAPTER XXXI. HOW ERIC SENT AWAY HIS MEN FROM MOSFELL
+ CHAPTER XXXII. HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM GREW FEY
+ CHAPTER XXXIII. HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM FOUGHT THEIR LAST GREAT FIGHT
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+
+Madam,
+
+You have graciously conveyed to me the intelligence that during the
+weary weeks spent far from his home—in alternate hope and fear, in
+suffering and mortal trial—a Prince whose memory all men must
+reverence, the Emperor Frederick, found pleasure in the reading of my
+stories: that “they interested and fascinated him.”
+
+While the world was watching daily at the bedside of your Majesty’s
+Imperial husband, while many were endeavouring to learn courage in our
+supremest need from the spectacle of that heroic patience, a distant
+writer little knew that it had been his fortune to bring to such a
+sufferer an hour’s forgetfulness of sorrow and pain.
+
+This knowledge, to an author, is far dearer than any praise, and it is
+in gratitude that, with your Majesty’s permission, I venture to
+dedicate to you the tale of Eric Brighteyes.
+
+The late Emperor, at heart a lover of peace, though by duty a soldier
+of soldiers, might perhaps have cared to interest himself in a warrior
+of long ago, a hero of our Northern stock, whose days were spent in
+strife, and whose latest desire was Rest. But it may not be; like the
+Golden Eric of this Saga, and after a nobler fashion, he has passed
+through the Hundred Gates into the Valhalla of Renown.
+
+To you, then, Madam, I dedicate this book, a token, however slight and
+unworthy, of profound respect and sympathy.
+
+I am, Madam,
+
+Your Majesty’s most obedient servant,
+
+H. Rider Haggard.
+
+November 17, 1889.
+
+To H.I.M. Victoria, Empress Frederick of Germany.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+“Eric Brighteyes” is a romance founded on the Icelandic Sagas. “What is
+a saga?” “Is it a fable or a true story?” The answer is not altogether
+simple. For such sagas as those of Burnt Njal and Grettir the Strong
+partake both of truth and fiction: historians dispute as to the
+proportions. This was the manner of the saga’s growth: In the early
+days of the Iceland community—that republic of aristocrats—say, between
+the dates 900 and 1100 of our era, a quarrel would arise between two
+great families. As in the case of the Njal Saga, its cause, probably,
+was the ill doings of some noble woman. This quarrel would lead to
+manslaughter. Then blood called for blood, and a vendetta was set on
+foot that ended only with the death by violence of a majority of the
+actors in the drama and of large numbers of their adherents. In the
+course of the feud, men of heroic strength and mould would come to the
+front and perform deeds worthy of the iron age which bore them. Women
+also would help to fashion the tale, for good or ill, according to
+their natural gifts and characters. At last the tragedy was covered up
+by death and time, leaving only a few dinted shields and haunted cairns
+to tell of those who had played its leading parts.
+
+But its fame lived on in the minds of men. From generation to
+generation skalds wandered through the winter snows, much as Homer may
+have wandered in his day across the Grecian vales and mountains, to
+find a welcome at every stead, because of the old-time story they had
+to tell. Here, night after night, they would sit in the ingle and while
+away the weariness of the dayless dark with histories of the times when
+men carried their lives in their hands, and thought them well lost if
+there might be a song in the ears of folk to come. To alter the tale
+was one of the greatest of crimes: the skald must repeat it as it came
+to him; but by degrees undoubtedly the sagas did suffer alteration. The
+facts remained the same indeed, but around them gathered a mist of
+miraculous occurrences and legends. To take a single instance: the
+account of the burning of Bergthorsknoll in the Njal Saga is not only a
+piece of descriptive writing that for vivid, simple force and insight
+is scarcely to be matched out of Homer and the Bible, it is also
+obviously true. We feel as we read, that no man could have invented
+that story, though some great skald threw it into shape. That the tale
+is true, the writer of “Eric” can testify, for, saga in hand, he has
+followed every act of the drama on its very site. There he who digs
+beneath the surface of the lonely mound that looks across plain and sea
+to Westman Isles may still find traces of the burning, and see what
+appears to be the black sand with which the hands of Bergthora and her
+women strewed the earthen floor some nine hundred years ago, and even
+the greasy and clotted remains of the whey that they threw upon the
+flame to quench it. He may discover the places where Fosi drew up his
+men, where Skarphedinn died, singing while his legs were burnt from off
+him, where Kari leapt from the flaming ruin, and the dell in which he
+laid down to rest—at every step, in short, the truth of the narrative
+becomes more obvious. And yet the tale has been added to, for, unless
+we may believe that some human beings are gifted with second sight, we
+cannot accept as true the prophetic vision that came to Runolf,
+Thorstein’s son; or that of Njal who, on the evening of the onslaught,
+like Theoclymenus in the Odyssey, saw the whole board and the meats
+upon it “one gore of blood.”
+
+Thus, in the Norse romance now offered to the reader, the tale of Eric
+and his deeds would be true; but the dream of Asmund, the witchcraft of
+Swanhild, the incident of the speaking head, and the visions of Eric
+and Skallagrim, would owe their origin to the imagination of successive
+generations of skalds; and, finally, in the fifteenth or sixteenth
+century, the story would have been written down with all its
+supernatural additions.
+
+The tendency of the human mind—and more especially of the Norse mind—is
+to supply uncommon and extraordinary reasons for actions and facts that
+are to be amply accounted for by the working of natural forces.
+Swanhild would have needed no “familiar” to instruct her in her evil
+schemes; Eric would have wanted no love-draught to bring about his
+overthrow. Our common experience of mankind as it is, in opposition to
+mankind as we fable it to be, is sufficient to teach us that the
+passion of one and the human weakness of the other would suffice to
+these ends. The natural magic, the beauty and inherent power of such a
+woman as Swanhild, are things more forceful than any spell magicians
+have invented, or any demon they are supposed to have summoned to their
+aid. But no saga would be complete without the intervention of such
+extraneous forces: the need of them was always felt, in order to throw
+up the acts of heroes and heroines, and to invest their persons with an
+added importance. Even Homer felt this need, and did not scruple to
+introduce not only second sight, but gods and goddesses, and to bring
+their supernatural agency to bear directly on the personages of his
+chant, and that far more freely than any Norse sagaman. A word may be
+added in explanation of the appearances of “familiars” in the shapes of
+animals, an instance of which will be found in this story. It was
+believed in Iceland, as now by the Finns and Eskimo, that the passions
+and desires of sorcerers took visible form in such creatures as wolves
+or rats. These were called “sendings,” and there are many allusions to
+them in the Sagas.
+
+Another peculiarity that may be briefly alluded to as eminently
+characteristic of the Sagas is their fatefulness. As we read we seem to
+hear the voice of Doom speaking continually. “_Things will happen as
+they are fated_”: that is the keynote of them all. The Norse mind had
+little belief in free will, less even than we have to-day. Men and
+women were born with certain characters and tendencies, given to them
+in order that their lives should run in appointed channels, and their
+acts bring about an appointed end. They do not these things of their
+own desire, though their desires prompt them to the deeds: they do them
+because they must. The Norns, as they name Fate, have mapped out their
+path long and long ago; their feet are set therein, and they must tread
+it to the end. Such was the conclusion of our Scandinavian ancestors—a
+belief forced upon them by their intense realisation of the futility of
+human hopes and schemings, of the terror and the tragedy of life, the
+vanity of its desires, and the untravelled gloom or sleep, dreamless or
+dreamfull, which lies beyond its end.
+
+Though the Sagas are entrancing, both as examples of literature of
+which there is but little in the world and because of their living
+interest, they are scarcely known to the English-speaking public. This
+is easy to account for: it is hard to persuade the nineteenth century
+world to interest itself in people who lived and events that happened a
+thousand years ago. Moreover, the Sagas are undoubtedly difficult
+reading. The archaic nature of the work, even in a translation; the
+multitude of its actors; the Norse sagaman’s habit of interweaving
+endless side-plots, and the persistence with which he introduces the
+genealogy and adventures of the ancestors of every unimportant
+character, are none of them to the taste of the modern reader.
+
+“Eric Brighteyes” therefore, is clipped of these peculiarities, and, to
+some extent, is cast in the form of the romance of our own day,
+archaisms being avoided as much as possible. The author will be
+gratified should he succeed in exciting interest in the troubled lives
+of our Norse forefathers, and still more so if his difficult experiment
+brings readers to the Sagas—to the prose epics of our own race. Too
+ample, too prolix, too crowded with detail, they cannot indeed vie in
+art with the epics of Greece; but in their pictures of life, simple and
+heroic, they fall beneath no literature in the world, save the Iliad
+and the Odyssey alone.
+
+
+
+
+ERIC BRIGHTEYES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST FOUND GROA THE WITCH
+
+
+There lived a man in the south, before Thangbrand, Wilibald’s son,
+preached the White Christ in Iceland. He was named Eric Brighteyes,
+Thorgrimur’s son, and in those days there was no man like him for
+strength, beauty and daring, for in all these things he was the first.
+But he was not the first in good-luck.
+
+Two women lived in the south, not far from where the Westman Islands
+stand above the sea. Gudruda the Fair was the name of the one, and
+Swanhild, called the Fatherless, Groa’s daughter, was the other. They
+were half-sisters, and there were none like them in those days, for
+they were the fairest of all women, though they had nothing in common
+except their blood and hate.
+
+Now of Eric Brighteyes, of Gudruda the Fair and of Swanhild the
+Fatherless, there is a tale to tell.
+
+These two fair women saw the light in the self-same hour. But Eric
+Brighteyes was their elder by five years. The father of Eric was
+Thorgrimur Iron-Toe. He had been a mighty man; but in fighting with a
+Baresark,[*] who fell upon him as he came up from sowing his wheat, his
+foot was hewn from him, so that afterwards he went upon a wooden leg
+shod with iron. Still, he slew the Baresark, standing on one leg and
+leaning against a rock, and for that deed people honoured him much.
+Thorgrimur was a wealthy yeoman, slow to wrath, just, and rich in
+friends. Somewhat late in life he took to wife Saevuna, Thorod’s
+daughter. She was the best of women, strong in mind and second-sighted,
+and she could cover herself in her hair. But these two never loved each
+other overmuch, and they had but one child, Eric, who was born when
+Saevuna was well on in years.
+
+[*] The Baresarks were men on whom a passing fury of battle came; they
+were usually outlawed.
+
+
+The father of Gudruda was Asmund Asmundson, the Priest of Middalhof. He
+was the wisest and the wealthiest of all men who lived in the south of
+Iceland in those days, owning many farms and, also, two ships of
+merchandise and one long ship of war, and having much money out at
+interest. He had won his wealth by viking’s work, robbing the English
+coasts, and black tales were told of his doings in his youth on the
+sea, for he was a “red-hand” viking. Asmund was a handsome man, with
+blue eyes and a large beard, and, moreover, was very skilled in matters
+of law. He loved money much, and was feared of all. Still, he had many
+friends, for as he aged he grew more kindly. He had in marriage
+Gudruda, the daughter of Björn, who was very sweet and kindly of
+nature, so that they called her Gudruda the Gentle. Of this marriage
+there were two children, Björn and Gudruda the Fair; but Björn grew up
+like his father in youth, strong and hard, and greedy of gain, while,
+except for her wonderful beauty, Gudruda was her mother’s child alone.
+
+The mother of Swanhild the Fatherless was Groa the Witch. She was a
+Finn, and it is told of her that the ship on which she sailed, trying
+to run under the lee of the Westman Isles in a great gale from the
+north-east, was dashed to pieces on a rock, and all those on board of
+her were caught in the net of Ran[*] and drowned, except Groa herself,
+who was saved by her magic art. This at the least is true, that, as
+Asmund the Priest rode down by the sea-shore on the morning after the
+gale, seeking for some strayed horses, he found a beautiful woman, who
+wore a purple cloak and a great girdle of gold, seated on a rock,
+combing her black hair and singing the while; and, at her feet, washing
+to and fro in a pool, was a dead man. He asked whence she came, and she
+answered:
+
+“Out of the Swan’s Bath.”
+
+[*] The Norse goddess of the sea.
+
+
+Next, he asked her where were her kin. But, pointing to the dead man,
+she said that this alone was left of them.
+
+“Who was the man, then?” said Asmund the Priest.
+
+She laughed again and sang this song:—
+
+Groa sails up from the Swan’s Bath,
+ Death Gods grip the Dead Man’s hand.
+Look where lies her luckless husband,
+ Bolder sea-king ne’er swung sword!
+Asmund, keep the kirtle-wearer,
+ For last night the Norns were crying,
+And Groa thought they told of thee:
+ Yea, told of thee and babes unborn.
+
+
+“How knowest thou my name?” asked Asmund.
+
+“The sea-mews cried it as the ship sank, thine and others—and they
+shall be heard in story.”
+
+“Then that is the best of luck,” quoth Asmund; “but I think that thou
+art fey.”[*]
+
+[*] _I.e._ subject to supernatural presentiments, generally connected
+with approaching doom.
+
+
+“Ay,” she answered, “fey and fair.”
+
+“True enough thou art fair. What shall we do with this dead man?”
+
+“Leave him in the arms of Ran. So may all husbands lie.”
+
+They spoke no more with her at that time, seeing that she was a
+witchwoman. But Asmund took her up to Middalhof, and gave her a farm,
+and she lived there alone, and he profited much by her wisdom.
+
+Now it chanced that Gudruda the Gentle was with child, and when her
+time came she gave a daughter birth—a very fair girl, with dark eyes.
+On the same day, Groa the witchwoman brought forth a girl-child, and
+men wondered who was its father, for Groa was no man’s wife. It was
+women’s talk that Asmund the Priest was the father of this child also;
+but when he heard it he was angry, and said that no witchwoman should
+bear a bairn of his, howsoever fair she was. Nevertheless, it was still
+said that the child was his, and it is certain that he loved it as a
+man loves his own; but of all things, this is the hardest to know. When
+Groa was questioned she laughed darkly, as was her fashion, and said
+that she knew nothing of it, never having seen the face of the child’s
+father, who rose out of the sea at night. And for this cause some
+thought him to have been a wizard or the wraith of her dead husband;
+but others said that Groa lied, as many women have done on such
+matters. But of all this talk the child alone remained and she was
+named Swanhild.
+
+Now, but an hour before the child of Gudruda the Gentle was born,
+Asmund went up from his house to the Temple, to tend the holy fire that
+burned night and day upon the altar. When he had tended the fire, he
+sat down upon the cross-benches before the shrine, and, gazing on the
+image of the Goddess Freya, he fell asleep and dreamed a very evil
+dream.
+
+He dreamed that Gudruda the Gentle bore a dove most beautiful to see,
+for all its feathers were of silver; but that Groa the Witch bore a
+golden snake. And the snake and the dove dwelt together, and ever the
+snake sought to slay the dove. At length there came a great white swan
+flying over Coldback Fell, and its tongue was a sharp sword. Now the
+swan saw the dove and loved it, and the dove loved the swan; but the
+snake reared itself, and hissed, and sought to kill the dove. But the
+swan covered her with his wings, and beat the snake away. Then he,
+Asmund, came out and drove away the swan, as the swan had driven the
+snake, and it wheeled high into the air and flew south, and the snake
+swam away also through the sea. But the dove drooped and now it was
+blind. Then an eagle came from the north, and would have taken the
+dove, but it fled round and round, crying, and always the eagle drew
+nearer to it. At length, from the south the swan came back, flying
+heavily, and about its neck was twined the golden snake, and with it
+came a raven. And it saw the eagle and loud it trumpeted, and shook the
+snake from it so that it fell like a gleam of gold into the sea. Then
+the eagle and the swan met in battle, and the swan drove the eagle down
+and broke it with his wings, and, flying to the dove, comforted it. But
+those in the house ran out and shot at the swan with bows and drove it
+away, but now he, Asmund, was not with them. And once more the dove
+drooped. Again the swan came back, and with it the raven, and a great
+host were gathered against them, and, among them, all of Asmund’s kith
+and kin, and the men of his quarter and some of his priesthood, and
+many whom he did not know by face. And the swan flew at Björn his son,
+and shot out the sword of its tongue and slew him, and many a man it
+slew thus. And the raven, with a beak and claws of steel, slew also
+many a man, so that Asmund’s kindred fled and the swan slept by the
+dove. But as it slept the golden snake crawled out of the sea, and
+hissed in the ears of men, and they rose up to follow it. It came to
+the swan and twined itself about its neck. It struck at the dove and
+slew it. Then the swan awoke and the raven awoke, and they did battle
+till all who remained of Asmund’s kindred and people were dead. But
+still the snake clung about the swan’s neck, and presently snake and
+swan fell into the sea, and far out on the sea there burned a flame of
+fire. And Asmund awoke trembling and left the Temple.
+
+Now as he went, a woman came running, and weeping as she ran.
+
+“Haste, haste!” she cried; “a daughter is born to thee, and Gudruda thy
+wife is dying!”
+
+“Is it so?” said Asmund; “after ill dreams ill tidings.”
+
+Now in the bed-closet off the great hall of Middalhof lay Gudruda the
+Gentle and she was dying.
+
+“Art thou there, husband?” she said.
+
+“Even so, wife.”
+
+“Thou comest in an evil hour, for it is my last. Now hearken. Take thou
+the new-born babe within thine arms and kiss it, and pour water over
+it, and name it with my name.”
+
+This Asmund did.
+
+“Hearken, my husband. I have been a good wife to thee, though thou hast
+not been all good to me. But thus shalt thou atone: thou shalt swear
+that, though she is a girl, thou wilt not cast this bairn forth to
+perish, but wilt cherish and nurture her.”
+
+“I swear it,” he said.
+
+“And thou shalt swear that thou wilt not take the witchwoman Groa to
+wife, nor have anything to do with her, and this for thine own sake:
+for, if thou dost, she will be thy death. Dost thou swear?”
+
+“I swear it,” he said.
+
+“It is well; but, husband, if thou dost break thine oath, either in the
+words or in the spirit of the words, evil shall overtake thee and all
+thy house. Now bid me farewell, for I die.”
+
+He bent over her and kissed her, and it is said that Asmund wept in
+that hour, for after his fashion he loved his wife.
+
+“Give me the babe,” she said, “that it may lie once upon my breast.”
+
+They gave her the babe and she looked upon its dark eyes and said:
+
+“Fairest of women shalt thou be, Gudruda—fair as no woman in Iceland
+ever was before thee; and thou shalt love with a mighty love—and thou
+shalt lose—and, losing, thou shalt find again.”
+
+Now, it is said that, as she spoke these words, her face grew bright as
+a spirit’s, and, having spoken them, she fell back dead. And they laid
+her in earth, but Asmund mourned her much.
+
+But, when all was over and done, the dream that he had dreamed lay
+heavy on him. Now of all diviners of dreams Groa was the most skilled,
+and when Gudruda had been in earth seven full days, Asmund went to
+Groa, though doubtfully, because of his oath.
+
+He came to the house and entered. On a couch in the chamber lay Groa,
+and her babe was on her breast and she was very fair to see.
+
+“Greeting, lord!” she said. “What wouldest thou here?”
+
+“I have dreamed a dream, and thou alone canst read it.”
+
+“That is as it may be,” she answered. “It is true that I have some
+skill in dreams. At the least I will hear it.”
+
+Then he unfolded it to her every word.
+
+“What wilt thou give me if I read thy dream?” she said.
+
+“What dost thou ask? Methinks I have given thee much.”
+
+“Yea, lord,” and she looked at the babe upon her breast. “I ask but a
+little thing: that thou shalt take this bairn in thy arms, pour water
+over it and name it.”
+
+“Men will talk if I do this, for it is the father’s part.”
+
+“It is a little thing what men say: talk goes by as the wind. Moreover,
+thou shalt give them the lie in the child’s name, for it shall be
+Swanhild the Fatherless. Nevertheless that is my price. Pay it if thou
+wilt.”
+
+“Read me the dream and I will name the child.”
+
+“Nay, first name thou the babe: for then no harm shall come to her at
+thy hands.”
+
+So Asmund took the child, poured water over her, and named her.
+
+Then Groa spoke: “This lord, is the reading of thy dream, else my
+wisdom is at fault: The silver dove is thy daughter Gudruda, the golden
+snake is my daughter Swanhild, and these two shall hate one the other
+and strive against each other. But the swan is a mighty man whom both
+shall love, and, if he love not both, yet shall belong to both. And
+thou shalt send him away; but he shall return and bring bad luck to
+thee and thy house, and thy daughter shall be blind with love of him.
+And in the end he shall slay the eagle, a great lord from the north who
+shall seek to wed thy daughter, and many another shall he slay, by the
+help of that raven with the bill of steel who shall be with him. But
+Swanhild shall triumph over thy daughter Gudruda, and this man, and the
+two of them, shall die at her hands, and, for the rest, who can say?
+But this is true—that the mighty man shall bring all thy race to an
+end. See now, I have read thy rede.”
+
+Then Asmund was very wroth. “Thou wast wise to beguile me to name thy
+bastard brat,” he said; “else had I been its death within this hour.”
+
+“This thou canst not do, lord, seeing that thou hast held it in thy
+arms,” Groa answered, laughing. “Go rather and lay out Gudruda the Fair
+on Coldback Hill; so shalt thou make an end of the evil, for Gudruda
+shall be its very root. Learn this, moreover: that thy dream does not
+tell all, seeing that thou thyself must play a part in the fate. Go,
+send forth the babe Gudruda, and be at rest.”
+
+“That cannot be, for I have sworn to cherish it, and with an oath that
+may not be broken.”
+
+“It is well,” laughed Groa. “Things will befall as they are fated; let
+them befall in their season. There is space for cairns on Coldback and
+the sea can shroud its dead!”
+
+And Asmund went thence, angered at heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+HOW ERIC TOLD HIS LOVE TO GUDRUDA IN THE SNOW ON COLDBACK
+
+
+Now, it must be told that, five years before the day of the death of
+Gudruda the Gentle, Saevuna, the wife of Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, gave
+birth to a son, at Coldback in the Marsh, on Ran River, and when his
+father came to look upon the child he called out aloud:
+
+“Here we have a wondrous bairn, for his hair is yellow like gold and
+his eyes shine bright as stars.” And Thorgrimur named him Eric
+Brighteyes.
+
+Now, Coldback is but an hour’s ride from Middalhof, and it chanced, in
+after years, that Thorgrimur went up to Middalhof, to keep the Yule
+feast and worship in the Temple, for he was in the priesthood of Asmund
+Asmundson, bringing the boy Eric with him. There also was Groa with
+Swanhild, for now she dwelt at Middalhof; and the three fair children
+were set together in the hall to play, and men thought it great sport
+to see them. Now, Gudruda had a horse of wood and would ride it while
+Eric pushed the horse along. But Swanhild smote her from the horse and
+called to Eric to make it move; but he comforted Gudruda and would not,
+and at that Swanhild was angry and lisped out:
+
+“Push thou must, if I will it, Eric.”
+
+Then he pushed sideways and with such good will that Swanhild fell
+almost into the fire of the hearth, and, leaping up, she snatched a
+brand and threw it at Gudruda, firing her clothes. Men laughed at this;
+but Groa, standing apart, frowned and muttered witch-words.
+
+“Why lookest thou so darkly, housekeeper?” said Asmund; “the boy is
+bonny and high of heart.”
+
+“Ah, he is bonny as no child is, and he shall be bonny all his
+life-days. Nevertheless, she shall not stand against his ill luck. This
+I prophesy of him: that women shall bring him to his end, and he shall
+die a hero’s death, but not at the hand of his foes.”
+
+And now the years went by peacefully. Groa dwelt with her daughter
+Swanhild up at Middalhof and was the love of Asmund Asmundson. But,
+though he forgot his oath thus far, yet he would never take her to
+wife. The witchwife was angered at this, and she schemed and plotted
+much to bring it about that Asmund should wed her. But still he would
+not, though in all things else she led him as it were by a halter.
+
+Twenty full years had gone by since Gudruda the Gentle was laid in
+earth; and now Gudruda the Fair and Swanhild the Fatherless were women
+too. Eric, too, was a man of five-and-twenty years, and no such man had
+lived in Iceland. For he was strong and great of stature, his hair was
+yellow as gold, and his grey eyes shone with the light of swords. He
+was gentle and loving as a woman, and even as a lad his strength was
+the strength of two men; and there were none in all the quarter who
+could leap or swim or wrestle against Eric Brighteyes. Men held him in
+honour and spoke well of him, though as yet he had done no deeds, but
+lived at home on Coldback, managing the farm, for now Thorgrimur
+Iron-Toe, his father, was dead. But women loved him much, and that was
+his bane—for of all women he loved but one, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund’s
+daughter. He loved her from a child, and her alone till his day of
+death, and she, too, loved him and him only. For now Gudruda was a maid
+of maids, most beautiful to see and sweet to hear. Her hair, like the
+hair of Eric, was golden, and she was white as the snow on Hecla; but
+her eyes were large and dark, and black lashes drooped above them. For
+the rest she was tall and strong and comely, merry of face, yet tender,
+and the most witty of women.
+
+Swanhild also was very fair; she was slender, small of limb, and dark
+of hue, having eyes blue as the deep sea, and brown curling hair,
+enough to veil her to the knees, and a mind of which none knew the end,
+for, though she was open in her talk, her thoughts were dark and
+secret. This was her joy: to draw the hearts of men to her and then to
+mock them. She beguiled many in this fashion, for she was the
+cunningest girl in matters of love, and she knew well the arts of
+women, with which they bring men to nothing. Nevertheless she was cold
+at heart, and desired power and wealth greatly, and she studied magic
+much, of which her mother Groa also had a store. But Swanhild, too,
+loved a man, and that was the joint in her harness by which the shaft
+of Fate entered her heart, for that man was Eric Brighteyes, who loved
+her not. But she desired him so sorely that, without him, all the world
+was dark to her, and her soul but as a ship driven rudderless upon a
+winter night. Therefore she put out all her strength to win him, and
+bent her witcheries upon him, and they were not few nor small.
+Nevertheless they went by him like the wind, for he dreamed ever of
+Gudruda alone, and he saw no eyes but hers, though as yet they spoke no
+word of love one to the other.
+
+But Swanhild in her wrath took counsel with her mother Groa, though
+there was little liking between them; and, when she had heard the
+maiden’s tale, Groa laughed aloud:
+
+“Dost think me blind, girl?” she said; “all of this I have seen, yea
+and foreseen, and I tell thee thou art mad. Let this yeoman Eric go and
+I will find thee finer fowl to fly at.”
+
+“Nay, that I will not,” quoth Swanhild: “for I love this man alone, and
+I would win him; and Gudruda I hate, and I would overthrow her. Give me
+of thy counsel.”
+
+Groa laughed again. “Things must be as they are fated. This now is my
+rede: Asmund would turn Gudruda’s beauty to account, and that man must
+be rich in friends and money who gets her to wife, and in this matter
+the mind of Björn is as the mind of his father. Now we will watch, and,
+when a good time chances, we will bear tales of Gudruda to Asmund and
+to her brother Björn, and swear that she oversteps her modesty with
+Eric. Then shall Asmund be wroth and drive Eric from Gudruda’s side.
+Meanwhile, I will do this: In the north there dwells a man mighty in
+all things and blown up with pride. He is named Ospakar Blacktooth. His
+wife is but lately dead, and he has given out that he will wed the
+fairest maid in Iceland. Now, it is in my mind to send Koll the
+Half-witted, my thrall, whom Asmund gave to me, to Ospakar as though by
+chance. He is a great talker and very clever, for in his half-wits is
+more cunning than in the brains of most; and he shall so bepraise
+Gudruda’s beauty that Ospakar will come hither to ask her in marriage;
+and in this fashion, if things go well, thou shalt be rid of thy rival,
+and I of one who looks scornfully upon me. But, if this fail, then
+there are two roads left on which strong feet may travel to their end;
+and of these, one is that thou shouldest win Eric away with thine own
+beauty, and that is not little. All men are frail, and I have a draught
+that will make the heart as wax; but yet the other path is surer.”
+
+“And what is that path, my mother?”
+
+“It runs through blood to blackness. By thy side is a knife and in
+Gudruda’s bosom beats a heart. Dead women are unmeet for love!”
+
+Swanhild tossed her head and looked upon the dark face of Groa her
+mother.
+
+“Methinks, with such an end to win, I should not fear to tread that
+path, if there be need, my mother.”
+
+“Now I see thou art indeed my daughter. Happiness is to the bold. To
+each it comes in uncertain shape. Some love power, some wealth, and
+some—a man. Take that which thou lovest—I say, cut thy path to it and
+take it; else shall thy life be but a weariness: for what does it serve
+to win the wealth and power when thou lovest a man alone, or the man
+when thou dost desire gold and the pride of place? This is wisdom: to
+satisfy the longing of thy youth; for age creeps on apace and beyond is
+darkness. Therefore, if thou seekest this man, and Gudruda blocks thy
+path, slay her, girl—by witchcraft or by steel—and take him, and in his
+arms forget that thine own are red. But first let us try the easier
+plan. Daughter, I too hate this proud girl, who scorns me as her
+father’s light-of-love. I too long to see that bright head of hers dull
+with the dust of death, or, at the least, those proud eyes weeping
+tears of shame as the man she hates leads her hence as a bride. Were it
+not for her I should be Asmund’s wife, and, when she is gone, with thy
+help—for he loves thee much and has cause to love thee—this I may be
+yet. So in this matter, if in no other, let us go hand in hand and
+match our wits against her innocence.”
+
+“So be it,” said Swanhild; “fail me not and fear not that I shall fail
+thee.”
+
+Now, Koll the Half-witted went upon his errand, and the time passed
+till it lacked but a month to Yule, and men sat indoors, for the season
+was dark and much snow fell. At length came frost, and with it a clear
+sky, and Gudruda, ceasing from her spinning in the hall, went to the
+woman’s porch, and, looking out, saw that the snow was hard, and a
+great longing came upon her to breathe the fresh air, for there was
+still an hour of daylight. So she threw a cloak about her and walked
+forth, taking the road towards Coldback in the Marsh that is by Ran
+River. But Swanhild watched her till she was over the hill. Then she
+also took a cloak and followed on that path, for she always watched
+Gudruda.
+
+Gudruda walked on for the half of an hour or so, when she became aware
+that the clouds gathered in the sky, and that the air was heavy with
+snow to come. Seeing this she turned homewards, and Swanhild hid
+herself to let her pass. Now flakes floated down as big and soft as
+fifa flowers. Quicker and more quick they came till all the plain was
+one white maze of mist, but through it Gudruda walked on, and after her
+crept Swanhild, like a shadow. And now the darkness gathered and the
+snow fell thick and fast, covering up the track of her footsteps and
+she wandered from the path, and after her wandered Swanhild, being
+loath to show herself. For an hour or more Gudruda wandered and then
+she called aloud and her voice fell heavily against the cloak of snow.
+At the last she grew weary and frightened, and sat down upon a shelving
+rock whence the snow had slipped away. Now, a little way behind was
+another rock and there Swanhild sat, for she wished to be unseen of
+Gudruda. So some time passed, and Swanhild grew heavy as though with
+sleep, when of a sudden a moving thing loomed upon the snowy darkness.
+Then Gudruda leapt to her feet and called. A man’s voice answered:
+
+“Who passes there?”
+
+“I, Gudruda, Asmund’s daughter.”
+
+The form came nearer; now Swanhild could hear the snorting of a horse,
+and now a man leapt from it, and that man was Eric Brighteyes.
+
+“Is it thou indeed, Gudruda!” he said with a laugh, and his great shape
+showed darkly on the snow mist.
+
+“Oh, is it thou, Eric?” she answered. “I was never more joyed to see
+thee; for of a truth thou dost come in a good hour. A little while and
+I had seen thee no more, for my eyes grow heavy with the death-sleep.”
+
+“Nay, say not so. Art lost, then? Why, so am I. I came out to seek
+three horses that are strayed, and was overtaken by the snow. May they
+dwell in Odin’s stables, for they have led me to thee. Art thou cold,
+Gudruda?”
+
+“But a little, Eric. Yea, there is place for thee here on the rock.”
+
+So he sat down by her on the stone, and Swanhild crept nearer; for now
+all weariness had left her. But still the snow fell thick.
+
+“It comes into my mind that we two shall die here,” said Gudruda
+presently.
+
+“Thinkest thou so?” he answered. “Well, I will say this, that I ask no
+better end.”
+
+“It is a bad end for thee, Eric: to be choked in snow, and with all thy
+deeds to do.”
+
+“It is a good end, Gudruda, to die at thy side, for so I shall die
+happy; but I grieve for thee.”
+
+“Grieve not for me, Brighteyes, worse things might befall.”
+
+He drew nearer to her, and now he put his arms about her and clasped
+her to his bosom; nor did she say him nay. Swanhild saw and lifted
+herself up behind them, but for a while she heard nothing but the
+beating of her heart.
+
+“Listen, Gudruda,” Eric said at last. “Death draws near to us, and
+before it comes I would speak to thee, if speak I may.”
+
+“Speak on,” she whispers from his breast.
+
+“This I would say, then: that I love thee, and that I ask no better
+fate than to die in thy arms.”
+
+“First shalt thou see me die in thine, Eric.”
+
+“Be sure, if that is so, I shall not tarry for long. Oh! Gudruda, since
+I was a child I have loved thee with a mighty love, and now thou art
+all to me. Better to die thus than to live without thee. Speak, then,
+while there is time.”
+
+“I will not hide from thee, Eric, that thy words are sweet in my ears.”
+
+And now Gudruda sobs and the tears fall fast from her dark eyes.
+
+“Nay, weep not. Dost thou, then, love me?”
+
+“Ay, sure enough, Eric.”
+
+“Then kiss me before we pass. A man should not die thus, and yet men
+have died worse.”
+
+And so these two kissed, for the first time, out in the snow on
+Coldback, and that first kiss was long and sweet.
+
+Swanhild heard and her blood seethed within her as water seethes in a
+boiling spring when the fires wake beneath. She put her hand to her
+kirtle and gripped the knife at her side. She half drew it, then drove
+it back.
+
+“Cold kills as sure as steel,” she said in her heart. “If I slay her I
+cannot save myself or him. Let us die in peace, and let the snow cover
+up our troubling.” And once more she listened.
+
+“Ah, sweet,” said Eric, “even in the midst of death there is hope of
+life. Swear to me, then, that if by chance we live thou wilt love me
+always as thou lovest me now.”
+
+“Ay, Eric, I swear that and readily.”
+
+“And swear, come what may, that thou wilt wed no man but me.”
+
+“I swear, if thou dost remain true to me, that I will wed none but
+thee, Eric.”
+
+“Then I am sure of thee.”
+
+“Boast not overmuch, Eric: if thou dost live thy days are all before
+thee, and with times come trials.”
+
+Now the snow whirled down faster and more thick, till these two,
+clasped heart to heart, were but a heap of white, and all white was the
+horse, and Swanhild was nearly buried.
+
+“Where go we when we die, Eric?” said Gudruda; “in Odin’s house there
+is no place for maids, and how shall my feet fare without thee?”
+
+“Nay, sweet, my May, Valhalla shuts its gates to me, a deedless man; up
+Bifrost’s rainbow bridge I may not travel, for I do not die with byrnie
+on breast and sword aloft. To Hela shall we go, and hand in hand.”
+
+“Art thou sure, Eric, that men find these abodes? To say sooth, at
+times I misdoubt me of them.”
+
+“I am not so sure but that I also doubt. Still, I know this: that where
+thou goest there I shall be, Gudruda.”
+
+“Then things are well, and well work the Norns.[*] Still, Eric, of a
+sudden I grow fey: for it comes upon me that I shall not die to-night,
+but that, nevertheless, I shall die with thy arms about me, and at thy
+side. There, I see it on the snow! I lie by thee, sleeping, and one
+comes with hands outstretched and sleep falls from them like a mist—by
+Freya, it is Swanhild’s self! Oh! it is gone.”
+
+[*] The Northern Fates.
+
+
+“It was nothing, Gudruda, but a vision of the snow—an untimely dream
+that comes before the sleep. I grow cold and my eyes are heavy; kiss me
+once again.”
+
+“It was no dream, Eric, and ever I doubt me of Swanhild, for I think
+she loves thee also, and she is fair and my enemy,” says Gudruda,
+laying her snow-cold lips on his lips. “Oh, Eric, awake! awake! See,
+the snow is done.”
+
+He stumbled to his feet and looked forth. Lo! out across the sky flared
+the wild Northern fires, throwing light upon the darkness.
+
+“Now it seems that I know the land,” said Eric. “Look: yonder are
+Golden Falls, though we did not hear them because of the snow; and
+there, out at sea, loom the Westmans; and that dark thing is the Temple
+Hof, and behind it stands the stead. We are saved, Gudruda, and thus
+far indeed thou wast fey. Now rise, ere thy limbs stiffen, and I will
+set thee on the horse, if he still can run, and lead thee down to
+Middalhof before the witchlights fail us.”
+
+“So it shall be, Eric.”
+
+Now he led Gudruda to the horse—that, seeing its master, snorted and
+shook the snow from its coat, for it was not frozen—and set her on the
+saddle, and put his arm about her waist, and they passed slowly through
+the deep snow. And Swanhild, too, crept from her place, for her burning
+rage had kept the life in her, and followed after them. Many times she
+fell, and once she was nearly swallowed in a drift of snow and cried
+out in her fear.
+
+“Who called aloud?” said Eric, turning; “I thought I heard a voice.”
+
+“Nay,” answers Gudruda, “it was but a night-hawk screaming.”
+
+Now Swanhild lay quiet in the drift, but she said in her heart:
+
+“Ay, a night-hawk that shall tear out those dark eyes of thine, mine
+enemy!”
+
+The two go on and at length they come to the banked roadway that runs
+past the Temple to Asmund’s hall. Here Swanhild leaves them, and,
+climbing over the turf-wall into the home meadow, passes round the hall
+by the outbuildings and so comes to the west end of the house, and
+enters by the men’s door unnoticed of any. For all the people, seeing a
+horse coming and a woman seated on it, were gathered in front of the
+hall. But Swanhild ran to that shut bed where she slept, and, closing
+the curtain, threw off her garments, shook the snow from her hair, and
+put on a linen kirtle. Then she rested a while, for she was weary, and,
+going to the kitchen, warmed herself at the fire.
+
+Meanwhile Eric and Gudruda came to the house and there Asmund greeted
+them well, for he was troubled in his heart about his daughter, and
+very glad to know her living, seeing that men had but now begun to
+search for her, because of the snow and the darkness.
+
+Now Gudruda told her tale, but not all of it, and Asmund bade Eric to
+the house. Then one asked about Swanhild, and Eric said that he had
+seen nothing of her, and Asmund was sad at this, for he loved Swanhild.
+But as he told all men to go and search, an old wife came and said that
+Swanhild was in the kitchen, and while the carline spoke she came into
+the hall, dressed in white, very pale, and with shining eyes and fair
+to see.
+
+“Where hast thou been, Swanhild?” said Asmund. “I thought certainly
+thou wast perishing with Gudruda in the snow, and now all men go to
+seek thee while the witchlights burn.”
+
+“Nay, foster-father, I have been to the Temple,” she answered, lying.
+“So Gudruda has but narrowly escaped the snow, thanks be to Brighteyes
+yonder! Surely I am glad of it, for we could ill spare our sweet
+sister,” and, going up to her, she kissed her. But Gudruda saw that her
+eyes burned like fire and felt that her lips were cold as ice, and
+shrank back wondering.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+HOW ASMUND BADE ERIC TO HIS YULE-FEAST
+
+
+Now it was supper-time and men sat at meat while the women waited upon
+them. But as she went to and fro, Gudruda always looked at Eric, and
+Swanhild watched them both. Supper being over, people gathered round
+the hearth, and, having finished her service, Gudruda came and sat by
+Eric, so that her sleeve might touch his. They spoke no word, but there
+they sat and were happy. Swanhild saw and bit her lip. Now, she was
+seated by Asmund and Björn his son.
+
+“Look, foster-father,” she said; “yonder sit a pretty pair!”
+
+“That cannot be denied,” answered Asmund. “One may ride many days to
+see such another man as Eric Brighteyes, and no such maid as Gudruda
+flowers between Middalhof and London town, unless it be thou, Swanhild.
+Well, so her mother said that it should be, and without doubt she was
+foresighted at her death.”
+
+“Nay, name me not with Gudruda, foster-father; I am but a grey goose by
+thy white swan. But these shall be well wed and that will be a good
+match for Eric.”
+
+“Let not thy tongue run on so fast,” said Asmund sharply. “Who told
+thee that Eric should have Gudruda?”
+
+“None told me, but in truth, having eyes and ears, I grew certain of
+it,” said Swanhild. “Look at them now: surely lovers wear such faces.”
+
+Now it chanced that Gudruda had rested her chin on her hand, and was
+gazing into Eric’s eyes beneath the shadow of her hair.
+
+“Methinks my sister will look higher than to wed a simple yeoman,
+though he is large as two other men,” said Björn with a sneer. Now
+Björn was jealous of Eric’s strength and beauty, and did not love him.
+
+“Trust nothing that thou seest and little that thou hearest, girl,”
+said Asmund, raising himself from thought: “so shall thy guesses be
+good. Eric, come here and tell us how thou didst chance on Gudruda in
+the snow.”
+
+“I was not so ill seated but that I could bear to stay,” grumbled Eric
+beneath his breath; but Gudruda said “Go.”
+
+So he went and told his tale; but not all of it, for he intended to ask
+Gudruda in marriage on the morrow, though his heart prophesied no luck
+in the matter, and therefore he was not overswift with it.
+
+“In this thing thou hast done me and mine good service,” said Asmund
+coldly, searching Eric’s face with his blue eyes. “It had been sad if
+my fair daughter had perished in the snow, for, know this: I would set
+her high in marriage, for her honour and the honour of my house, and so
+some rich and noble man had lost great joy. But take thou this gift in
+memory of the deed, and Gudruda’s husband shall give thee another such
+upon the day that he makes her wife,” and he drew a gold ring off his
+arm.
+
+Now Eric’s knees trembled as he heard, and his heart grew faint as
+though with fear. But he answered clear and straight:
+
+“Thy gift had been better without thy words, ring-giver; but I pray
+thee to take it back, for I have done nothing to win it, though perhaps
+the time will come when I shall ask thee for a richer.”
+
+“My gifts have never been put away before,” said Asmund, growing angry.
+
+“This wealthy farmer holds the good gold of little worth. It is foolish
+to take fish to the sea, my father,” sneered Björn.
+
+“Nay, Björn, not so,” Eric answered: “but, as thou sayest, I am but a
+farmer, and since my father, Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, died things have not
+gone too well on Ran River. But at the least I am a free man, and I
+will take no gifts that I cannot repay worth for worth. Therefore I
+will not have the ring.”
+
+“As thou wilt,” said Asmund. “Pride is a good horse if thou ridest
+wisely,” and he thrust the ring back upon his arm.
+
+Then people go to rest; but Swanhild seeks her mother, and tells her
+all that has befallen her, nor does Groa fail to listen.
+
+“Now I will make a plan,” she says, “for these things have chanced well
+and Asmund is in a ripe humour. Eric shall come no more to Middalhof
+till Gudruda is gone hence, led by Ospakar Blacktooth.”
+
+“And if Eric does not come here, how shall I see his face? for, mother,
+I long for the sight of it.”
+
+“That is thy matter, thou lovesick fool. Know this: that if Eric comes
+hither and gets speech with Gudruda, there is an end of thy hopes; for,
+fair as thou art, she is too fair for thee, and, strong as thou art, in
+a way she is too strong. Thou hast heard how these two love, and such
+loves mock at the will of fathers. Eric will win his desire or die
+beneath the swords of Asmund and Björn, if such men can prevail against
+his might. Nay, the wolf Eric must be fenced from the lamb till he
+grows hungry. Then let him search the fold and make spoil of thee, for,
+when the best is gone, he will desire the good.”
+
+“So be it, mother. As I sat crouched behind Gudruda in the snow at
+Coldback, I had half a mind to end her love-words with this knife, for
+so I should have been free of her.”
+
+“Yes, and fast in the doom-ring, thou wildcat. The gods help this Eric,
+if thou winnest him. Nay, choose thy time and, if thou must strike,
+strike secretly and home. Remember also that cunning is mightier than
+strength, that lies pierce further than swords, and that witchcraft
+wins where honesty must fail. Now I will go to Asmund, and he shall be
+an angry man before to-morrow comes.”
+
+Then Groa went to the shut bed where Asmund the Priest slept. He was
+sitting on the bed and asked her why she came.
+
+“For love of thee, Asmund, and thy house, though thou dost treat me
+ill, who hast profited so much by me and my foresight. Say now: wilt
+thou that this daughter of thine, Gudruda the Fair, should be the light
+May of yonder long-legged yeoman?”
+
+“That is not in my mind,” said Asmund, stroking his beard.
+
+“Knowest thou, then, that this very day your white Gudruda sat on
+Eric’s lap in the snow, while he fondled her to his heart’s content?”
+
+“Most likely it was for warmth. Men do not dream on love in the hour of
+death. Who saw this?”
+
+“Swanhild, who was behind, and hid herself for shame, and therefore she
+held that these two must soon be wed! Ah, thou art foolish now, Asmund.
+Young blood makes light of cold or death. Art thou blind, or dost thou
+not see that these two turn on each other like birds at nesting-time?”
+
+“They might do worse,” said Asmund, “for they are a proper pair, and it
+seems to me that each was born for each.”
+
+“Then all goes well. Still, it is a pity to see so fair a maid cast
+like rotten bait upon the waters to hook this troutlet of a yeoman.
+Thou hast enemies, Asmund; thou art too prosperous, and there are many
+who hate thee for thy state and wealth. Were it not wise to use this
+girl of thine to build a wall about thee against the evil day?”
+
+“I have been more wont, housekeeper, to trust to my own arm than to
+bought friends. But tell me, for at the least thou art far-seeing, how
+may this be done? As things are, though I spoke roughly to him last
+night, I am inclined to let Eric Brighteyes take Gudruda. I have always
+loved the lad, and he will go far.”
+
+“Listen, Asmund! Surely thou hast heard of Ospakar Blacktooth—the
+priest who dwells in the north?”
+
+“Ay, I have heard of him, and I know him; there is no man like him for
+ugliness, or strength, or wealth and power. We sailed together on a
+viking cruise many years ago, and he did things at which my blood
+turned, and in those days I had no chicken heart.”
+
+“With time men change their temper. Unless I am mistaken, this Ospakar
+wishes above all to have Gudruda in marriage, for, now that everything
+is his, this alone is left for him to ask—the fairest woman in Iceland
+as a housewife. Think then, with Ospakar for a son-in-law, who is there
+that can stand against thee?”
+
+“I am not so sure of this matter, nor do I altogether trust thee, Groa.
+Of a truth it seems to me that thou hast some stake upon the race. This
+Ospakar is evil and hideous. It were a shame to give Gudruda over to
+him when she looks elsewhere. Knowest thou that I swore to love and
+cherish her, and how runs this with my oath? If Eric is not too rich,
+yet he is of good birth and kin, and, moreover, a man of men. If he
+take her good will come of it.”
+
+“It is like thee, Asmund, always to mistrust those who spend their days
+in plotting for thy weal. Do as thou wilt: let Eric take this treasure
+of thine—for whom earls would give their state—and live to rue it. But
+I say this: if he have thy leave to roam here with his dove the matter
+will soon grow, for these two sicken each to each, and young blood is
+hot and ill at waiting, and it is not always snow-time. So betroth her
+or let him go. And now I have said.”
+
+“Thy tongue runs too fast. The man is quite unproved and I will try
+him. To-morrow I will warn him from my door; then things shall go as
+they are fated. And now peace, for I weary of thy talk, and, moreover,
+it is false; for thou lackest one thing—a little honesty to season all
+thy craft. What fee has Ospakar paid thee, I wonder. Thou at least
+hadst never refused the gold ring to-night, for thou wouldst do much
+for gold.”
+
+“And more for love, and most of all for hate,” Groa said, and laughed
+aloud; nor did they speak more on this matter that night.
+
+Now, early in the morning Asmund rose, and, going to the hall, awoke
+Eric, who slept by the centre hearth, saying that he would talk with
+him without. Then Eric followed him to the back of the hall.
+
+“Say now, Eric,” he said, when they stood in the grey light outside the
+house, “who was it taught thee that kisses keep out the cold on snowy
+days?”
+
+Now Eric reddened to his yellow hair, but he answered: “Who was it told
+thee, lord, that I tried this medicine?”
+
+“The snow hides much, but there are eyes that can pierce the snow. Nay,
+more, thou wast seen, and there’s an end. Now know this—I like thee
+well, but Gudruda is not for thee; she is far above thee, who art but a
+deedless yeoman.”
+
+“Then I love to no end,” said Eric; “I long for one thing only, and
+that is Gudruda. It was in my mind to ask her in marriage of thee
+to-day.”
+
+“Then, lad, thou hast thy answer before thou askest. Be sure of one
+thing: if but once again I find thee alone with Gudruda, it is my axe
+shall kiss thee and not her lips.”
+
+“That may yet be put to the proof, lord,” said Eric, and turned to seek
+his horse, when suddenly Gudruda came and stood between them, and his
+heart leapt at the sight of her.
+
+“Listen, Gudruda,” Eric said. “This is thy father’s word: that we two
+speak together no more.”
+
+“Then it is an ill saying for us,” said Gudruda, laying her hand upon
+her breast.
+
+“Saying good or ill, so it surely is, girl,” answered Asmund. “No more
+shalt thou go a-kissing, in the snow or in the flowers.”
+
+“Now I seem to hear Swanhild’s voice,” she said. “Well, such things
+have happened to better folk, and a father’s wish is to a maid what the
+wind is to the grass. Still, the sun is behind the cloud and it will
+shine again some day. Till then, Eric, fare thee well!”
+
+“It is not thy will, lord,” said Eric, “that I should come to thy
+Yule-feast as thou hast asked me these ten years past?”
+
+Now Asmund grew wroth, and pointed with his hand towards the great
+Golden Falls that thunder down the mountain named Stonefell that is
+behind Middalhof, and there are no greater water-falls in Iceland.
+
+“A man may take two roads, Eric, from Coldback to Middalhof, one by the
+bridle-path over Coldback and the other down Golden Falls; but I never
+knew traveller to choose this way. Now, I bid thee to my feast by the
+path over Golden Falls; and, if thou comest that way, I promise thee
+this: if thou livest I will greet thee well, and if I find thee dead in
+the great pool I will bind on thy Hell-shoes and lay thee to earth
+neighbourly fashion. But if thou comest by any other path, then my
+thralls shall cut thee down at my door.” And he stroked his beard and
+laughed.
+
+Now Asmund spoke thus mockingly because he did not think it possible
+that any man should try the path of the Golden Falls.
+
+Eric smiled and said, “I hold thee to thy word, lord; perhaps I shall
+be thy guest at Yule.”
+
+But Gudruda heard the thunder of the mighty Falls as the wind turned,
+and cried “Nay, nay—it were thy death!”
+
+Then Eric finds his horse and rides away across the snow.
+
+Now it must be told of Koll the Half-witted that at length he came to
+Swinefell in the north, having journeyed hard across the snow. Here
+Ospakar Blacktooth had his great hall, in which day by day a hundred
+men sat down to meat. Now Koll entered the hall when Ospakar was at
+supper, and looked at him with big eyes, for he had never seen so
+wonderful a man. He was huge in stature—his hair was black, and black
+his beard, and on his lower lip there lay a great black fang. His eyes
+were small and narrow, but his cheekbones were set wide apart and high,
+like those of a horse. Koll thought him an ill man to deal with and
+half a troll,[*] and grew afraid of his errand, since in Koll’s
+half-wittedness there was much cunning—for it was a cloak in which he
+wrapped himself. But as Ospakar sat in the high seat, clothed in a
+purple robe, with his sword Whitefire on his knee, he saw Koll, and
+called out in a great voice:
+
+[*] An able-bodied Goblin.
+
+
+“Who is this red fox that creeps into my earth?”
+
+For, to look at, Koll was very like a fox.
+
+“My name is Koll the Half-witted, Groa’s thrall, lord. Am I welcome
+here?” he answered.
+
+“That is as it may be. Why do they call thee half-witted?”
+
+“Because I love not work overmuch, lord.”
+
+“Then all my thralls are fellow to thee. Say, what brings thee here?”
+
+“This, lord. It was told among men down in the south that thou wouldst
+give a good gift to him who should discover to thee the fairest maid in
+Iceland. So I asked leave of my mistress to come on a journey and tell
+thee of her.”
+
+“Then a lie was told thee. Still, I love to hear of fair maids, and
+seek one for a wife if she be but fair enough. So speak on, Koll the
+Fox, and lie not to me, I warn thee, else I will knock what wits are
+left there from that red head of thine.”
+
+So Koll took up the tale and greatly bepraised Gudruda’s beauty; nor in
+truth, for all his talk, could he praise it too much. He told of her
+dark eyes and the whiteness of her skin, of the nobleness of her shape
+and the gold of her hair, of her wit and gentleness, till at length
+Ospakar grew afire to see this flower of maids.
+
+“By Thor, thou Koll,” he said, “if the girl be but half of what thou
+sayest, her luck is good, for she shall be wife to Ospakar. But if thou
+hast lied to me about her, beware! for soon there shall be a knave the
+less in Iceland.”
+
+Now a man rose in the hall and said that Koll spoke truth, for he had
+seen Gudruda the Fair, Asmund’s daughter, and there was no maid like
+her in Iceland.
+
+“I will do this now,” said Blacktooth. “To-morrow I will send a
+messenger to Middalhof, saying to Asmund the Priest that I purpose to
+visit him at the time of the Yule-feast; then I shall see if the girl
+pleases me. Meanwhile, Koll, take thou a seat among the thralls, and
+here is something for thy pains,” and he took off the purple cloak and
+threw it to him.
+
+“Thanks to thee, Gold-scatterer,” said Koll. “It is wise to go soon to
+Middalhof, for such a bloom as this maid does not lack a bee. There is
+a youngling in the south, named Eric Brighteyes, who loves Gudruda, and
+she, I think, loves him, though he is but a yeoman of small wealth and
+is only twenty-five years old.”
+
+“Ho! ho!” laughed great Ospakar, “and I am forty-five. But let not this
+suckling cross my desire, lest men call him Eric Holloweyes!”
+
+Now the messenger of Ospakar came to Middalhof, and his words pleased
+Asmund and he made ready a great feast. And Swanhild smiled, but
+Gudruda was afraid.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+HOW ERIC CAME DOWN GOLDEN FALLS
+
+
+Now Ospakar rode up to Middalhof on the day before the Yule-feast. He
+was splendidly apparelled, and with him came his two sons, Gizur the
+Lawman and Mord, young men of promise, and many armed thralls and
+servants. Gudruda, watching at the women’s door, saw his face in the
+moonlight and loathed him.
+
+“What thinkest thou of him who comes to seek thee in marriage,
+foster-sister?” asked Swanhild, watching at her side.
+
+“I think he is like a troll, and that, seek as he will, he shall not
+find me. I had rather lie in the pool beneath Golden Falls than in
+Ospakar’s hall.”
+
+“That shall be proved,” said Swanhild. “At the least he is rich and
+noble, and the greatest of men in size. It would go hard with Eric were
+those arms about him.”
+
+“I am not so sure of that,” said Gudruda; “but it is not likely to be
+known.”
+
+“Comes Eric to the feast by the road of Golden Falls, Gudruda?”
+
+“Nay, no man may try that path and live.”
+
+“Then he will die, for Eric will risk it.”
+
+Now Gudruda thought, and a great fire burned in her heart and shone
+through her eyes. “If Eric dies,” she said, “on thee be his blood,
+Swanhild—on thee and that dark mother of thine, for ye have plotted to
+bring this evil on us. How have I harmed thee that thou shouldst deal
+thus with me?”
+
+Swanhild turned white and wicked-looking, for passion mastered her, and
+she gazed into Gudruda’s face and answered: “How hast thou harmed me?
+Surely I will tell thee. Thy beauty has robbed me of Eric’s love.”
+
+“It would be better to prate of Eric’s love when he had told it thee,
+Swanhild.”
+
+“Thou hast robbed me and therefore I hate thee, and therefore I will
+deliver thee to Ospakar, whom thou dost loath—ay and yet win Brighteyes
+to myself. Am I not also fair and can I not also love, and shall I see
+thee snatch my joy? By the Gods, never! I will see thee dead, and Eric
+with thee, ere it shall be so! but first I will see thee shamed!”
+
+“Thy words are ill-suited to a maiden’s lips, Swanhild! But of this be
+sure: I fear thee not, and shall never fear thee. And one thing I know
+well that, whether thou or I prevail, in the end thou shalt harvest the
+greatest shame, and in times to come men shall speak of thee with
+hatred and name thee by ill names. Moreover, Eric shall never love
+thee; from year to year he shall hate thee with a deeper hate, though
+it may well be that thou wilt bring ruin on him. And now I thank thee
+that thou hast told me all thy mind, showing me what indeed thou art!”
+And Gudruda turned scornfully upon her heel and walked away.
+
+Now Asmund the Priest went out into the courtyard, and meeting Ospakar
+Blacktooth, greeted him heartily, though he did not like his looks, and
+took him by the hand and led him to the hall, that was bravely decked
+with tapestries, and seated him by his side on the high seat. And
+Ospakar’s thralls brought good gifts for Asmund, who thanked the giver
+well.
+
+Now it was supper time, and Gudruda came in, and after her walked
+Swanhild. Ospakar gazed hard at Gudruda and a great desire entered into
+him to make her his wife. But she passed coldly by, nor looked on him
+at all.
+
+“This, then, is that maid of thine of whom I have heard tell, Asmund? I
+will say this: fairer was never born of woman.”
+
+Then men ate and Ospakar drank much ale, but all the while he stared at
+Gudruda and listened for her voice. But as yet he said nothing of what
+he came to seek, though all knew his errand. And his two sons, Gizur
+and Mord, stared also at Gudruda, for they thought her most wonderfully
+fair. But Gizur found Swanhild also fair.
+
+And so the night wore on till it was time to sleep.
+
+On this same day Eric rode up from his farm on Ran River and took his
+road along the brow of Coldback till he came to Stonefell. Now all
+along Coldback and Stonefell is a steep cliff facing to the south, that
+grows ever higher till it comes to that point where Golden River falls
+over it and, parting its waters below, runs east and west—the branch to
+the east being called Ran River and that to the west Laxà—for these two
+streams girdle round the rich plain of Middalhof, till at length they
+reach the sea. But in the midst of Golden River, on the edge of the
+cliff, a mass of rock juts up called Sheep-saddle, dividing the waters
+of the fall, and over this the spray flies, and in winter the ice
+gathers, but the river does not cover it. The great fall is thirty
+fathoms deep, and shaped like a horseshoe, of which the points lie
+towards Middalhof. Yet if he could but gain the Sheep-saddle rock that
+divides the midst of the waters, a strong and hardy man might climb
+down some fifteen fathoms of this depth and scarcely wet his feet.
+
+Now here at the foot of Sheep-saddle rock the double arches of waters
+meet, and fall in one torrent into the bottomless pool below. But, some
+three fathoms from this point of the meeting waters, and beneath it,
+just where the curve is deepest, a single crag, as large as a
+drinking-table and no larger, juts through the foam, and, if a man
+could reach it, he might leap from it some twelve fathoms, sheer into
+the spray-hidden pit beneath, there to sink or swim as it might befall.
+This crag is called Wolf’s Fang.
+
+Now Eric stood for a long while on the edge of the fall and looked,
+measuring every thing with his eye. Then he went up above, where the
+river swirls down to the precipice, and looked again, for it is from
+this bank that the dividing island-rock Sheep-saddle must be reached.
+
+“A man may hardly do this thing; yet I will try it,” he said to himself
+at last. “My honour shall be great for the feat, if I chance to live,
+and if I die—well, there is an end of troubling after maids and all
+other things.”
+
+So he went home and sat silent that evening. Now, since Thorgrimur
+Iron-Toe’s death, his housewife, Saevuna, Eric’s mother, had grown dim
+of sight, and, though she peered and peered again from her seat in the
+ingle nook, she could not see the face of her son.
+
+“What ails thee, Eric, that thou sittest so silent? Was not the meat,
+then, to thy mind at supper?”
+
+“Yes, mother, the meat was well enough, though a little undersmoked.”
+
+“Now I see that thou art not thyself, son, for thou hadst no meat, but
+only stock-fish—and I never knew a man forget his supper on the night
+of its eating, except he was distraught or deep in love.”
+
+“Was it so?” said Brighteyes.
+
+“What troubles thee, Eric?—that sweet lass yonder?”
+
+“Ay, somewhat, mother.”
+
+“What more, then?”
+
+“This, that I go down Golden Falls to-morrow, and I do not know how I
+may come from Sheep-saddle rock to Wolf’s Fang crag and keep my life
+whole in me; and now, I pray thee, weary me not with words, for my
+brain is slow, and I must use it.”
+
+When she heard this Saevuna screamed aloud, and threw herself before
+Eric, praying him to forgo his mad venture. But he would not listen to
+her, for he was slow to make up his mind, but, that being made up,
+nothing could change it. Then, when she learned that it was to get
+sight of Gudruda that he purposed thus to throw his life away, she was
+very angry and cursed her and all her kith and kin.
+
+“It is likely enough that thou wilt have cause to use such words before
+all this tale is told,” said Eric; “nevertheless, mother, forbear to
+curse Gudruda, who is in no way to blame for these matters.”
+
+“Thou art a faithless son,” Saevuna said, “who wilt slay thyself
+striving to win speech with thy May, and leave thy mother childless.”
+
+Eric said that it seemed so indeed, but he was plighted to it and the
+feat must be tried. Then he kissed her, and she sought her bed,
+weeping.
+
+Now it was the day of the Yule-feast, and there was no sun till one
+hour before noon. But Eric, having kissed his mother and bidden her
+farewell, called a thrall, Jon by name, and giving him a sealskin bag
+full of his best apparel, bade him ride to Middalhof and tell Asmund
+the Priest that Eric Brighteyes would come down Golden Falls an hour
+after mid-day, to join his feast; and thence go to the foot of the
+Golden Falls, to await him there. And the man went, wondering, for he
+thought his master mad.
+
+Then Eric took a good rope, and a staff tipped with iron, and, so soon
+as the light served, mounted his horse, forded Ran River, and rode
+along Coldback till he came to the lip of Golden Falls. Here he stayed
+a while till at length he saw many people streaming up the snow from
+Middalhof far beneath, and, among them, two women who by their stature
+should be Gudruda and Swanhild, and, near to them, a great man whom he
+did not know. Then he showed himself for a space on the brink of the
+gulf and turned his horse up stream. The sun shone bright upon the edge
+of the sky, but the frost bit like a sword. Still, he must strip off
+his garments, so that nothing remained on him except his sheepskin
+shoes, shirt and hose, and take the water. Now here the river runs
+mightily, and he must cross full thirty fathoms of the swirling water
+before he can reach Sheep-saddle, and woe to him if his foot slip on
+the boulders, for certainly he must be swept over the brink.
+
+Eric rested the staff against the stony bottom and, leaning his weight
+on it, took the stream, and he was so strong that it could not prevail
+against him till at length he was rather more than half-way across and
+the water swept above his shoulders. Now he was lifted from his feet
+and, letting the staff float, he swam for his life, and with such
+mighty strokes that he felt little of that icy cold. Down he was
+swept—now the lip of the fall was but three fathoms away on his left,
+and already the green water boiled beneath him. A fathom from him was
+the corner of Sheep-saddle. If he may grasp it, all is well; if not, he
+dies.
+
+Three great strokes and he held it. His feet were swept out over the
+brink of the fall, but he clung on grimly, and by the strength of his
+arms drew himself on to the rock and rested a while. Presently he stood
+up, for the cold began to nip him, and the people below became aware
+that he had swum the river above the fall and raised a shout, for the
+deed was great. Now Eric must begin to clamber down Sheep-saddle, and
+this was no easy task, for the rock is almost sheer, and slippery with
+ice, and on either side the waters rushed and thundered, throwing their
+blinding spray about him as they leapt to the depths beneath. He looked
+down, studying the rock; then, feeling that he grew afraid, made an end
+of doubt and, grasping a point with both hands, swung himself down his
+own length and more. Now for many minutes he climbed down Sheep-saddle,
+and the task was hard, for he was bewildered with the booming of the
+waters that bent out on either side of him like the arc of a bow, and
+the rock was very steep and slippery. Still, he came down all those
+fifteen fathoms and fell not, though twice he was near to falling, and
+the watchers below marvelled greatly at his hardihood.
+
+“He will be dashed to pieces where the waters meet,” said Ospakar, “he
+can never gain Wolf’s Fang crag beneath; and, if so it be that he come
+there and leaps to the pool, the weight of water will drive him down
+and drown him.”
+
+“It is certainly so,” quoth Asmund, “and it grieves me much; for it was
+my jest that drove him to this perilous adventure, and we cannot spare
+such a man as Eric Brighteyes.”
+
+Now Swanhild turned white as death; but Gudruda said: “If great heart
+and strength and skill may avail at all, then Eric shall come safely
+down the waters.”
+
+“Thou fool!” whispered Swanhild in her ear, “how can these help him? No
+troll could live in yonder cauldron. Dead is Eric, and thou art the
+bait that lured him to his death!”
+
+“Spare thy words,” she answered; “as the Norns have ordered so it shall
+be.”
+
+Now Eric stood at the foot of Sheep-saddle, and within an arm’s length
+the mighty waters met, tossing their yellow waves and seething
+furiously as they leapt to the mist-hid gulf beneath. He bent over and
+looked through the spray. Three fathoms under him the rock Wolf’s Fang
+split the waters, and thence, if he can come thither, he may leap sheer
+into the pool below. Now he unwound the rope that was about his middle,
+and made one end fast to a knob of rock—and this was difficult, for his
+hands were stiff with cold—and the other end he passed through his
+leathern girdle. Then Eric looked again, and his heart sank within him.
+How might he give himself to this boiling flood and not be shattered?
+But as he looked, lo! a rainbow grew upon the face of the water, and
+one end of it lit upon him, and the other, like a glory from the Gods,
+fell full upon Gudruda as she stood a little way apart, watching at the
+foot of Golden Falls.
+
+“Seest thou that,” said Asmund to Groa, who was at his side, “the Gods
+build their Bifrost bridge between these two. Who now shall keep them
+asunder?”
+
+“Read the portent thus,” she answered: “they shall be united, but not
+here. Yon is a Spirit bridge, and, see: the waters of Death foam and
+fall between them!”
+
+Eric, too, saw the omen and it seemed good to him, and all fear left
+his heart. Round about him the waters thundered, but amidst their roar
+he dreamed that he heard a voice calling:
+
+“Be of good cheer, Eric Brighteyes; for thou shalt live to do mightier
+deeds than this, and in guerdon thou shalt win Gudruda.”
+
+So he paused no longer, but, shortening up the rope, pulled on it with
+all his strength, and then leapt out upon the arch of waters. They
+struck him and he was dashed out like a stone from a sling; again he
+fell against them and again was dashed away, so that his girdle burst.
+Eric felt it go and clung wildly to the rope and lo! with the inward
+swing, he fell on Wolf’s Fang, where never a man has stood before and
+never a man shall stand again. Eric lay a little while on the rock till
+his breath came back to him, and he listened to the roar of the waters.
+Then, rising on his hands and knees, he crept to its point, for he
+could scarcely stand because of the trembling of the stone beneath the
+shock of the fall; and when the people below saw that he was not dead,
+they raised a great shout, and the sound of their voices came to him
+through the noise of the waters.
+
+Now, twelve fathoms beneath him was the surface of the pool; but he
+could not see it because of the wreaths of spray. Nevertheless, he must
+leap and that swiftly, for he grew cold. So of a sudden Eric stood up
+to his full height, and, with a loud cry and a mighty spring, bounded
+out from the point of Wolf’s Fang far into the air, beyond the reach of
+the falling flood, and rushed headlong towards the gulf beneath. Now
+all men watching held their breath as his body travelled, and so great
+is the place and so high the leap that through the mist Eric seemed but
+as a big white stone hurled down the face of the arching waters.
+
+He was gone, and the watchers rushed down to the foot of the pool, for
+there, if he rose at all, he must pass to the shallows. Swanhild could
+look no more, but sank upon the ground. The face of Gudruda was set
+like a stone with doubt and anguish. Ospakar saw and read the meaning,
+and he said to himself: “Now Odin grant that this youngling rise not
+again! for the maid loves him dearly, and he is too much a man to be
+lightly swept aside.”
+
+Eric struck the pool. Down he sank, and down and down—for the water
+falling from so far must almost reach the bottom of the pool before it
+can rise again—and he with it. Now he touched the bottom, but very
+gently, and slowly began to rise, and, as he rose, was carried along by
+the stream. But it was long before he could breathe, and it seemed to
+him that his lungs would burst. Still, he struggled up, striking great
+strokes with his legs.
+
+“Farewell to Eric,” said Asmund, “he will rise no more now.”
+
+But just as he spoke Gudruda pointed to something that gleamed, white
+and golden, beneath the surface of the current, and lo! the bright hair
+of Eric rose from the water, and he drew a great breath, shaking his
+head like a seal, and, though but feebly, struck out for the shallows
+that are at the foot of the pool. Now he found footing, but was swept
+over by the fierce current, and cut his forehead, and he carried that
+scar till his death. Again he rose, and with a rush gained the bank
+unaided and fell upon the snow.
+
+Now people gathered about him in silence and wondering, for none had
+known so great a deed. And presently Eric opened his eyes and looked
+up, and found the eyes of Gudruda fixed on his, and there was that in
+them which made him glad he had dared the path of Golden Falls.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+HOW ERIC WON THE SWORD WHITEFIRE
+
+
+Now Asmund the priest bent down, and Eric saw him and spoke:
+
+“Thou badest me to thy Yule-feast, lord, by yonder slippery road and I
+have come. Dost thou welcome me well?”
+
+“No man better,” quoth Asmund. “Thou art a gallant man, though
+foolhardy; and thou hast done a deed that shall be told of while skalds
+sing and men live in Iceland.”
+
+“Make place, my father,” said Gudruda, “for Eric bleeds.” And she
+loosed the kerchief from her neck and bound it about his wounded brow,
+and, taking the rich cloak from her body, threw it on his shoulders,
+and no man said her nay.
+
+Then they led him to the hall, where Eric clothed himself and rested,
+and he sent back the thrall Jon to Coldback, bidding him tell Saevuna,
+Eric’s mother, that he was safe. But he was somewhat weak all that day,
+and the sound of waters roared in his ears.
+
+Now Ospakar and Groa were ill pleased at the turn things had taken; but
+all the others rejoiced much, for Eric was well loved of men and they
+had grieved if the waters had prevailed against his might. But Swanhild
+brooded bitterly, for Eric never turned to look on her.
+
+The hour of the feast drew on and, according to custom, it was held in
+the Temple, and thither went all men. When they were seated in the nave
+of the Hof, the fat ox that had been made ready for sacrifice was led
+in and dragged before the altar on which the holy fire burned. Now
+Asmund the Priest slew it, amid silence, before the figures of the
+Gods, and, catching its blood in the blood-bowl, sprinkled the altar
+and all the worshippers with the blood-twigs. Then the ox was cut up,
+and the figures of the almighty Gods were anointed with its molten fat
+and wiped with fair linen. Next the flesh was boiled in the cauldrons
+that were hung over fires lighted all down the nave, and the feast
+began.
+
+Now men ate, and drank much ale and mead, and all were merry. But
+Ospakar Blacktooth grew not glad, though he drank much, for he saw that
+the eyes of Gudruda ever watched Eric’s face and that they smiled on
+each other. He was wroth at this, for he knew that the bait must be
+good and the line strong that should win this fair fish to his angle,
+and as he sat, unknowingly his fingers loosed the peace-strings of his
+sword Whitefire, and he half drew it, so that its brightness flamed in
+the firelight.
+
+“Thou hast a wondrous blade there, Ospakar!” said Asmund, “though this
+is no place to draw it. Whence came it? Methinks no such swords are
+fashioned now.”
+
+“Ay, Asmund, a wondrous blade indeed. There is no other such in the
+world, for the dwarfs forged it of old, and he shall be unconquered who
+holds it aloft. This was King Odin’s sword, and it is named Whitefire.
+Ralph the Red took it from King Eric’s cairn in Norway, and he strove
+long with the Barrow-Dweller[*] before he wrenched it from his grasp.
+But my father won it and slew Ralph, though he had never done this had
+Whitefire been aloft against him. But Ralph the Red, being in drink
+when the ships met in battle, fought with an axe, and was slain by my
+father, and since then Whitefire has been the last light that many a
+chief’s eyes have seen. Look at it, Asmund.”
+
+[*] The ghost in the cairn.
+
+
+Now he drew the great sword, and men were astonished as it flashed
+aloft. Its hilt was of gold, and blue stones were set therein. It
+measured two ells and a half from crossbar to point, and so bright was
+the broad blade that no one could look on it for long, and all down its
+length ran runes.
+
+“A wondrous weapon, truly!” said Asmund. “How read the runes?”
+
+“I know not, nor any man—they are ancient.”
+
+“Let me look at them,” said Groa, “I am skilled in runes.” Now she took
+the sword, and heaved it up, and looked at the runes and said, “A
+strange writing truly.”
+
+“How runs it, housekeeper?” said Asmund.
+
+“Thus, lord, if my skill is not at fault:—
+
+“Whitefire is my name—
+Dwarf-folk forged me—
+Odin’s sword was I—
+Eric’s sword was I—
+Eric’s sword shall I be—
+And where I fall there he must follow me.”
+
+
+Now Gudruda looked at Eric Brighteyes wonderingly, and Ospakar saw it
+and became very angry.
+
+“Look not so, maiden,” he said, “for it shall be another Eric than yon
+flapper-duck who holds Whitefire aloft, though it may very well chance
+that he shall feel its edge.”
+
+Now Gudruda bit her lip, and Eric burned red to the brow and spoke:
+
+“It is ill, lord, to throw taunts like an angry woman. Thou art great
+and strong, yet I may dare a deed with thee.”
+
+“Peace, boy! Thou canst climb a waterfall well, I gainsay it not; but
+beware ere thou settest up thyself against my strength. Say now, what
+game wilt thou play with Ospakar?”
+
+“I will go on holmgang with thee, byrnie-clad or baresark,[*] and fight
+thee with axe or sword, or I will wrestle with thee, and Whitefire
+yonder shall be the winner’s prize.”
+
+[*] To a duel, usually fought, in mail or without it, on an
+island—“holm”—within a circle of hazel-twigs.
+
+
+“Nay, I will have no bloodshed here at Middalhof,” said Asmund sternly.
+“Make play with fists, or wrestle if ye will, for that were great sport
+to see; but weapons shall not be drawn.”
+
+Now Ospakar grew mad with anger and drink—and he grinned like a dog,
+till men saw the red gums beneath his lips.
+
+“Thou wilt wrestle with me, youngling—with _me_ whom no man has ever so
+much as lifted from my feet? Good! I will lay thee on thy face and whip
+thee, and Whitefire shall be the stake—I swear it on the holy
+altar-ring; but what hast thou to set against the precious sword? Thy
+poor hovel and its lot of land shall be all too little.”
+
+“I set my life on it; if I lose Whitefire let Whitefire slay me,” said
+Eric.
+
+“Nay, that I will not have, and I am master here in this Temple,” said
+Asmund. “Bethink thee of some other stake, Ospakar, or let the game be
+off.”
+
+Now Ospakar gnawed his lip with his black fang and thought. Then he
+laughed aloud and spoke:
+
+“Bright is Whitefire and thou art named Brighteyes. See now: I set the
+great sword against thy right eye, and, if I win the match, it shall be
+mine to tear it out. Wilt thou play this game with me? If thy heart
+fails thee, let it go; but I will set no other stake against my good
+sword.”
+
+“Eyes and limbs are a poor man’s wealth,” said Eric: “so be it. I stake
+my right eye against the sword Whitefire, and we will try the match
+to-morrow.”
+
+“And to-morrow night thou shalt be called Eric One-eye,” said
+Ospakar—at which some few of his thralls laughed.
+
+But most of the men did not laugh, for they thought this an ill game
+and a worse jest.
+
+Now the feast went on, and Asmund rose from his high seat in the centre
+of the nave, on the left hand looking down from the altar, and gave out
+the holy toasts. First men drank a full horn to Odin, praying for
+triumph on their foes. Then they drank to Frey, asking for plenty; to
+Thor, for strength in battle; to Freya, Goddess of Love (and to her
+Eric drank heartily); to the memory of the dead; and, last of all, to
+Bragi, God of all delight. When this cup was drunk, Asmund rose again,
+according to custom, and asked if none had an oath to swear as to some
+deed that should be done.
+
+For a while there was no answer, but presently Eric Brighteyes stood
+up.
+
+“Lord,” he said, “I would swear an oath.”
+
+“Set forth the matter, then,” said Asmund.
+
+“It is this,” quoth Eric. “On Mosfell mountain, over by Hecla, dwells a
+Baresark of whom all men have ill knowledge, for there are few whom he
+has not harmed. His name is Skallagrim; he is a mighty man and he has
+wrought much mischief in the south country, and brought many to their
+deaths and robbed more of their goods: for none can prevail against
+him. Still, I swear this, that, when the days lengthen, I will go up
+alone against him and challenge him to battle, and conquer him or
+fall.”
+
+“Then, thou yellow-headed puppy-dog, thou shalt go with one eye against
+a Baresark with two,” growled Ospakar.
+
+Men took no heed of his words, but shouted aloud, for Skallagrim had
+plagued them long, and there were none who dared to fight with him any
+more. Only Gudruda looked askance, for it seemed to her that Eric swore
+too fast. Nevertheless he went up to the altar, and, taking hold of the
+holy ring, he set his foot on the holy stone and swore his oath, while
+the feasters applauded, striking their cups upon the board.
+
+And after that the feast went merrily, till all men were drunk, except
+Asmund and Eric.
+
+Now Eric went to rest, but first he rubbed his limbs with the fat of
+seals, for he was still sore with the beating of the waters, and they
+must needs be supple on the morrow if he would keep his eye. Then he
+slept sound, and rose strong and well, and going to the stream behind
+the stead, bathed, and anointed his limbs afresh. But Ospakar did not
+sleep well, because of the ale that he had drunk. Now as Eric came back
+from bathing, in the dark of the morning, he met Gudruda, who watched
+for his coming, and, there being none to see, he kissed her often; but
+she chided him because of the match that he had made with Ospakar and
+the oath that he had sworn.
+
+“Surely,” she said, “thou wilt lose thine eye, for this Ospakar is a
+giant, and strong as a troll; also he is merciless. Still, thou art a
+mighty man, and I shall love thee as well with one eye as with two. Oh!
+Eric, methought I should have died yesterday when thou didst leap from
+Wolf’s Fang! My heart seemed to stop within me.”
+
+“Yet I came safely to shore, sweetheart, and well does this kiss pay
+for all I did. And as for Ospakar, if but once I get these arms about
+him, I fear him little, or any man, and I covet that sword of his
+greatly. But we can talk more certainly of these things to-morrow.”
+
+Now Gudruda clung to him and told him all that had befallen, and of the
+doings and words of Swanhild.
+
+“She honours me beyond my worth,” he said, “who am in no way set on
+her, but on thee only, Gudruda.”
+
+“Art thou so sure of that, Eric? Swanhild is fair and wise.”
+
+“Ay and evil. When I love Swanhild, then thou mayest love Ospakar.”
+
+“It is a bargain,” she said, laughing. “Good luck go with thee in the
+wrestling,” and with a kiss she left him, fearing lest she should be
+seen.
+
+Eric went back to the hall, and sat down by the centre hearth, for all
+men slept, being still heavy with drink, and presently Swanhild glided
+up to him, and greeted him.
+
+“Thou art greedy of deeds, Eric,” she said. “Yesterday thou camest here
+by a path that no man has travelled, to-day thou dost wrestle with a
+giant for thine eye, and presently thou goest up against Skallagrim!”
+
+“It seems that this is true,” said Eric.
+
+“Now all this thou doest for a woman who is the betrothed of another
+man.”
+
+“All this I do for fame’s sake, Swanhild. Moreover, Gudruda is
+betrothed to none.”
+
+“Before another Yule-feast is spread, Gudruda shall be the wife of
+Ospakar.”
+
+“That is yet to be seen, Swanhild.”
+
+Now Swanhild stood silent for a while and then spoke: “Thou art a fool,
+Eric—yes, drunk with folly. Nothing but evil shall come to thee from
+this madness of thine. Forget it and pluck that which lies to thine
+hand,” and she looked sweetly at him.
+
+“They call thee Swanhild the Fatherless,” he answered, “but I think
+that Loki, the God of Guile, was thy father, for there is none to match
+thee in craft and evil-doing, and in beauty one only. I know thy plots
+well and all the sorrow that thou hast brought upon us. Still, each
+seeks honour after his own manner, so seek thou as thou wilt; but thou
+shalt find bitterness and empty days, and thy plots shall come back on
+thine own head—yes, even though they bring Gudruda and me to sorrow and
+death.”
+
+Swanhild laughed. “A day shall dawn, Eric, when thou who dost hate me
+shalt hold me dear, and this I promise thee. Another thing I promise
+thee also: that Gudruda shall never call thee husband.”
+
+But Eric did not answer, fearing lest in his anger he should say words
+that were better unspoken.
+
+Now men rose and sat down to meat, and all talked of the wrestling that
+should be. But in the morning Ospakar repented of the match, for it is
+truly said that _ale is another man_, and men do not like that in the
+morning which seemed well enough on yester eve. He remembered that he
+held Whitefire dear above all things, and that Eric’s eye had no worth
+to him, except that the loss of it would spoil his beauty, so that
+perhaps Gudruda would turn from him. It would be very ill if he should
+chance to lose the play—though of this he had no fear, for he was held
+the strongest man in Iceland and the most skilled in all feats of
+strength—and, at the best, no fame is to be won from the overthrow of a
+deedless man, and the plucking out of his eye. Thus it came to pass
+that when he saw Eric he called to him in a big voice:
+
+“Hearken, thou Eric.”
+
+“I hear thee, thou Ospakar,” said Eric, mocking him, and people
+laughed; while Ospakar grinned angrily and said, “Thou must learn
+manners, puppy. Still, I shall find no honour in teaching thee in this
+wise. Last night we made a match in our cups, and I staked my sword
+Whitefire and thou thine eye. It would be bad that either of us should
+lose sword or eye; therefore, what sayest thou, shall we let it pass?”
+
+“Ay, Blacktooth, if thou fearest; but first pay thou forfeit of the
+sword.”
+
+Now Ospakar grew very mad and shouted, “Thou wilt indeed stand against
+me in the ring! I will break thy back anon, youngster, and afterwards
+tear out thine eye before thou diest.”
+
+“It may so befall,” answered Eric, “but big words do not make big
+deeds.”
+
+Presently the light came and thralls went out with spades and cleared
+away the snow in a circle two rods across, and brought dry sand and
+sprinkled it on the frozen turf, so that the wrestlers should not slip.
+And they piled the snow in a wall around the ring.
+
+But Groa came up to Ospakar and spoke to him apart.
+
+“Knowest thou, lord,” she said, “that my heart bodes ill of this match?
+Eric is a mighty man, and, great though thou art, I think that thou
+shalt lout low before him.”
+
+“It will be a bad business if I am overthrown by an untried man,” said
+Ospakar, and was troubled in his mind, “and it would be evil moreover
+to lose the sword. For no price would I have it so.”
+
+“What wilt thou give me, lord, if I bring thee victory?”
+
+“I will give thee two hundred in silver.”
+
+“Ask no questions and it shall be so,” said Groa.
+
+Now Eric was without, taking note of the ground in the ring, and
+presently Groa called to her the thrall Koll the Half-witted, whom she
+had sent to Swinefell.
+
+“See,” she said, “yonder by the wall stand the wrestling shoes of Eric
+Brighteyes. Haste thee now and take grease, and rub the soles with it,
+then hold them in the heat of the fire, so that the fat sinks in. Do
+this swiftly and secretly, and I will give thee three pennies.”
+
+Koll grinned, and did as he was bid, setting back the shoes just as
+they were before. Scarcely was the deed done when Eric came in, and
+made himself ready for the game, binding the greased shoes upon his
+feet, for he feared no trick.
+
+Now everybody went out to the ring, and Ospakar and Eric stripped for
+wrestling. They were clad in tight woollen jerkins and hose, and
+sheep-skin shoes were on their feet.
+
+They named Asmund master of the game, and his word must be law to both
+of them. Eric claimed that Asmund should hold the sword Whitefire that
+was at stake, but Ospakar gainsaid him, saying that if he gave
+Whitefire into Asmund’s keeping, Eric must also give his eye—and about
+this they debated hotly. Now the matter was brought before Asmund as
+umpire, and he gave judgment for Eric, “for,” he said, “if Eric yield
+up his eye into my hand, I can return it to his head no more if he
+should win; but if Ospakar gives me the good sword and conquers, it is
+easy for me to pass it back to him unharmed.”
+
+Men said that this was a good judgment.
+
+Thus then was the arm-game set. Ospakar and Eric must wrestle thrice,
+and between each bout there would be a space while men could count a
+thousand. They might strike no blow at one another with hand, or head,
+or elbow, foot or knee; and it should be counted no fall if the haunch
+and the head of the fallen were not on the ground at the self-same
+time. He who suffered two falls should be adjudged conquered and lose
+his stake.
+
+Asmund called these rules aloud in the presence of witnesses, and
+Ospakar and Eric said that should bind them. Ospakar drew a small knife
+and gave it to his son Gizur to hold.
+
+“Thou shalt soon know, youngling, how steel tastes in the eyeball,” he
+said.
+
+“We shall soon know many things,” Eric answered.
+
+Now they drew off their cloaks and stood in the ring. Ospakar was great
+beyond the bigness of men and his arms were clothed with black hair
+like the limbs of a goat. Beneath the shoulder joint they were almost
+as thick as a girl’s thigh. His legs also were mighty, and the muscles
+stood out upon him in knotty lumps. He seemed a very giant, and fierce
+as a Baresark, but still somewhat round about the body and heavy in
+movement.
+
+From him men looked at Eric.
+
+“Lo! Baldur and the Troll!” said Swanhild, and everybody laughed, since
+so it was indeed; for, if Ospakar was black and hideous as a troll,
+Eric was beautiful as Baldur, the loveliest of the Gods. He was taller
+than Ospakar by the half of a hand and as broad in the chest. Still, he
+was not yet come to his greatest strength, and, though his limbs were
+well knit, they seemed but as a child’s against the limbs of Ospakar.
+But he was quick as a cat and lithe, his neck and arms were white as
+whey, and beneath his golden hair his bright eyes shone like spears.
+
+Now they stood face to face, with arms outstretched, waiting the word
+of Asmund. He gave it and they circled round each other with arms held
+low. Presently Ospakar made a rush and, seizing Eric about the middle,
+tried to lift him, but with no avail. Thrice he strove and failed, then
+Eric moved his foot and lo! it slipped upon the sanded turf. Again Eric
+moved and again he slipped, a third time and he slipped a third time,
+and before he could recover himself he was full on his back and fairly
+thrown.
+
+Gudruda saw and was sad at heart, and those around her said that it was
+easy to know how the game would end.
+
+“What said I?” quoth Swanhild, “that it would go badly with Eric were
+Ospakar’s arms about him.”
+
+“All is not done yet,” answered Gudruda. “Methinks Eric’s feet slipped
+most strangely, as though he stood on ice.”
+
+But Eric was very sore at heart and could make nothing of this
+matter—for he was not overthrown by strength.
+
+He sat on the snow and Ospakar and his sons mocked him. But Gudruda
+drew near and whispered to him to be of good cheer, for fortune might
+yet change.
+
+“I think that I am bewitched,” said Eric sadly: “my feet have no hold
+of the ground.”
+
+Gudruda covered her eyes with her hand and thought. Presently she
+looked up quickly. “I seem to see guile here,” she said. “Now look
+narrowly on thy shoes.”
+
+He heard, and, loosening his shoe-string, drew a shoe from his foot and
+looked at the sole. The cold of the snow had hardened the fat, and
+there it was, all white upon the leather.
+
+Now Eric rose in wrath. “Methought,” he cried, “that I dealt with men
+of honourable mind, not with cheating tricksters. See now! it is little
+wonder that I slipped, for grease has been set upon my shoes—and, by
+Thor! I will cleave the man who did it to the chin,” and as he said it
+his eyes blazed so dreadfully that folk fell back from him. Asmund took
+the shoes and looked at them. Then he spoke:
+
+“Brighteyes tells the truth, and we have a sorry knave among us.
+Ospakar, canst thou clear thyself of this ill deed?”
+
+“I will swear on the holy ring that I know nothing of it, and if any
+man in my company has had a hand therein he shall die,” said Ospakar.
+
+“That we will swear also,” cried his sons Gizur and Mord.
+
+“This is more like a woman’s work,” said Gudruda, and she looked at
+Swanhild.
+
+“It is no work of mine,” quoth Swanhild.
+
+“Then go and ask thy mother of it,” answered Gudruda.
+
+Now all men cried aloud that this was the greatest shame, and that the
+match must be set afresh; only Ospakar bethought him of that two
+hundred in silver which he had promised to Groa, and looked around, but
+she was not there. Still, he gainsaid Eric in the matter of the match
+being set afresh.
+
+Then Eric cried out in his anger that he would let the game stand as it
+was, since Ospakar swore himself free of the shameful deed. Men thought
+this a mad saying, but Asmund said it should be so. Still, he swore in
+his heart that, even if he were worsted, Eric should not lose his
+eye—no not if swords were held aloft to take it. For of all tricks this
+seemed to him the very worst.
+
+Now Ospakar and Eric faced each other again in the ring, but this time
+the feet of Eric were bare.
+
+Ospakar rushed to get the upper hold, but Eric was too swift for him
+and sprang aside. Again he rushed, but Eric dropped and gripped him
+round the middle. Now they were face to face, hugging each other like
+bears, but moving little. For a time things went thus, while Ospakar
+strove to lift Eric, but in nowise could he stir him. Then of a sudden
+Eric put out his strength, and they staggered round the ring, tearing
+at each other till their jerkins were rent from them, leaving them
+almost bare to the waist. Suddenly, Eric seemed to give, and Ospakar
+put out his foot to trip him. But Brighteyes was watching. He caught
+the foot in the crook of his left leg, and threw his weight forward on
+the chest of Blacktooth. Backward he went, falling with the thud of a
+tree on snow, and there he lay on the ground, and Eric over him.
+
+Then men shouted “A fall! a fair fall!” and were very glad, for the
+fight seemed most uneven to them, and the wrestlers rolled asunder,
+breathing heavily.
+
+Gudruda threw a cloak over Eric’s naked shoulders.
+
+“That was well done, Brighteyes,” she said.
+
+“The game is still to play, sweet,” he gasped, “and Ospakar is a mighty
+man. I threw him by skill, not by strength. Next time it must be by
+strength or not at all.”
+
+Now breathing-time was done, and once more the two were face to face.
+Thrice Ospakar rushed, and thrice did Eric slip away, for he would
+waste Blacktooth’s strength. Again Ospakar rushed, roaring like a bear,
+and fire seemed to come from his eyes, and the steam went up from him
+and hung upon the frosty air like the steam of a horse. This time Eric
+could not get away, but was swept up into that great grip, for Ospakar
+had the lower hold.
+
+“Now there is an end of Eric,” said Swanhild.
+
+“The arrow is yet on the bow,” answered Gudruda.
+
+Blacktooth put out his might and reeled round and round the ring,
+dragging Eric with him. This way and that he twisted, and time on time
+Eric’s leg was lifted from the ground, but so he might not be thrown.
+Now they stood almost still, while men shouted madly, for no such
+wrestling had been known in the southlands. Grimly they hugged and
+strove: forsooth it was a mighty sight to see. Grimly they hugged, and
+their muscles strained and cracked, but they could stir each other no
+inch.
+
+Ospakar grew fearful, for he could make no play with this youngling.
+Black rage swelled in his heart. He ground his fangs, and thought on
+guile. By his foot gleamed the naked foot of Eric. Suddenly he stamped
+on it so fiercely that the skin burst.
+
+“Ill done! ill done!” folk cried; but in his pain Eric moved his foot.
+
+Lo! he was down, but not altogether down, for he did but sit upon his
+haunches, and still he clung to Blacktooth’s thighs, and twined his
+legs about his ankles. Now with all his strength Ospakar strove to
+force the head of Brighteyes to the ground, but still he could not, for
+Eric clung to him like a creeper to a tree.
+
+“A losing game for Eric,” said Asmund, and as he spoke Brighteyes was
+pressed back till his yellow hair almost swept the sand.
+
+Then the folk of Ospakar shouted in triumph, but Gudruda cried aloud:
+
+“Be not overthrown, Eric; loose thee and spring aside.”
+
+Eric heard, and of a sudden loosed all his grip. He fell on his
+outspread hand, then, with a swing sideways and a bound, once more he
+stood upon his feet. Ospakar came at him like a bull made mad with
+goading, but he could no longer roar aloud. They closed and this time
+Eric had the better hold. For a while they struggled round and round
+till their feet tore the frozen turf, then once more they stood face to
+face. Now the two were almost spent; yet Blacktooth gathered up his
+strength and swung Eric from his feet, but he found them again. He grew
+mad with rage, and hugged him till Brighteyes was nearly pressed to
+death, and black bruises sprang upon the whiteness of his flesh.
+Ospakar grew mad, and madder yet, till at length in his fury he fixed
+his fangs in Eric’s shoulder and bit till the blood spurted.
+
+“Ill kissed, thou rat!” gasped Eric, and with the pain and rush of
+blood, his strength came back to him. He shifted his grip swiftly, now
+his right hand was beneath the fork of Blacktooth’s thigh and his left
+on the hollow of Blacktooth’s back. Twice he lifted—twice the bulk of
+Ospakar rose from the ground—a third mighty lift—so mighty that the
+wrapping on Eric’s forehead burst, and the blood streamed down his
+face—and lo! great Blacktooth flew in air. Up he flew, and backward he
+fell into the bank of snow, and was buried there almost to the knees.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WAS BETROTHED TO UNNA
+
+
+For a moment there was silence, for all that company was wonderstruck
+at the greatness of the deed. Then they cheered and cheered again, and
+to Eric it seemed that he slept, and the sound of shouting reached him
+but faintly, as though he heard through snow. Suddenly he woke and saw
+a man rush at him with axe aloft. It was Mord, Ospakar’s son, mad at
+his father’s overthrow. Eric sprang aside, or the blow had been his
+bane, and, as he sprang, smote with his fist, and it struck heavily on
+the head of Mord above the ear, so that the axe flew from his hand, and
+he fell senseless on his father in the snow.
+
+Now swords flashed out, and men ringed round Eric to guard him, and it
+came near to the spilling of blood, for the people of Ospakar gnashed
+their teeth to see so great a hero overthrown by a youngling, while the
+southern folk of Middalhof and Ran River rejoiced loudly, for Eric was
+dear to their hearts.
+
+“Down swords,” cried Asmund the priest, “and haul yon carcass from the
+snow.”
+
+This then they did, and Ospakar sat up, breathing in great gasps, the
+blood running from his mouth and ears, and he was an evil sight to see,
+for what with blood and snow and rage his face was like the face of the
+Swinefell Goblin.
+
+But Swanhild spoke in the ear of Gudruda:
+
+“Here,” she said, looking at Eric, “we two have a man worth loving,
+foster-sister.”
+
+“Ay,” answered Gudruda, “worth and well worth!”
+
+Now Asmund drew near and before all men kissed Eric Brighteyes on the
+brow.
+
+“In sooth,” he said, “thou art a mighty man, Eric, and the glory of the
+south. This I prophesy of thee: that thou shalt do deeds such as have
+not been done in Iceland. Thou hast ill been served, for a knave
+unknown greased thy shoes. Yon swarthy Ospakar, the most mighty of all
+men in Iceland, could not overthrow thee, though, like a wolf, he
+fastened his fangs in thee, and, like a coward, stamped upon thy naked
+foot. Take thou the great sword that thou hast won and wear it
+worthily.”
+
+Now Eric took snow and wiped the blood from his brow. Then he grasped
+Whitefire and drew it from the scabbard, and high aloft flashed the
+war-blade. Thrice he wheeled it round his head, then sang aloud:
+
+“Fast, yestermorn, down Golden Falls,
+Fared young Eric to thy feast,
+Asmund, father of Gudruda—
+Maid whom much he longs to clasp.
+But to-day on Giant Blacktooth
+Hath he done a needful deed:
+Hurling him in heaped-up snowdrift;
+Winning Whitefire for his wage.”
+
+
+And again he sang:
+
+“Lord, if in very truth thou thinkest
+Brighteyes is a man midst men,
+Swear to him, the stalwart suitor,
+Handsel of thy sweet maid’s hand:
+Whom, long loved, to win, down Goldfoss
+Swift he sped through frost and foam;
+Whom, to win, to troll-like Ogre,
+He, ‘gainst Whitefire, waged his eye.”
+
+
+Men thought this well sung, and turned to hear Asmund’s answer, nor
+must they wait long.
+
+“Eric,” he said, “I will promise thee this, that if thou goest on as
+thou hast begun, I will give Gudruda in marriage to no other man.”
+
+“That is good tidings, lord,” said Eric.
+
+“This I say further: in a year I will give thee full answer according
+as to how thou dost bear thyself between now and then, for this is no
+light gift thou askest; also that, if ye will it, you twain may now
+plight troth, for the blame shall be yours if it is broken, and not
+mine, and I give thee my hand on it.”
+
+Eric took his hand, and Gudruda heard her father’s words and happiness
+shone in her dark eyes, and she grew faint for very joy. And now Eric
+turned to her, all torn and bloody from the fray, the great sword in
+his hand, and he spoke thus:
+
+“Thou hast heard thy father’s words, Gudruda? Now it seems that there
+is no great need of troth-plighting between us two. Still, here before
+all men I ask thee, if thou dost love me and art willing to take me to
+husband?”
+
+Gudruda looked up into his face, and answered in a sweet, clear voice
+that could be heard by all:
+
+“Eric, I say to thee now, what I have said before, that I love thee
+alone of all men, and, if it be my father’s wish, I will wed no other
+whilst thou dost remain true to me and hold me dear.”
+
+“Those are good words,” said Eric. “Now, in pledge of them, swear this
+troth of thine upon my sword that I have won.”
+
+Gudruda smiled, and, taking great Whitefire in her hand, she said the
+words again, and, in pledge of them, kissed the bright blade.
+
+Then Eric took back the war-sword and spoke thus: “I swear that I will
+love thee, and thee only, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund’s daughter, whom I
+have desired all my days; and, if I fail of this my oath, then our
+troth is at an end, and thou mayst wed whom thou wilt,” and in turn he
+put his lips upon the sword, while Swanhild watched them do the oath.
+
+Now Ospakar was recovered from the fight, and he sat there upon the
+snow, with bowed head, for he knew well that he had won the greatest
+shame, and had lost both wife and sword. Black rage filled his heart as
+he listened, and he sprang to his feet.
+
+“I came hither, Asmund,” he said, “to ask this maid of thine in
+marriage, and methinks that had been a good match for her and thee. But
+I have been overthrown by witchcraft of this man in a wrestling-bout,
+and thereby lost my good sword; and now I must seem to hear him
+betrothed to the maid before me.”
+
+“Thou hast heard aright, Ospakar,” said Asmund, “and thy wooing is soon
+sped. Get thee back whence thou camest and seek a wife in thine own
+quarter, for thou art unfit in age and aspect to have so sweet a maid.
+Moreover, here in the south we hold men of small account, however great
+and rich they be, who do not shame to seek to overcome a foe by foul
+means. With my own eyes I saw thee stamp on the naked foot of Eric,
+Thorgrimur’s son; with my own eyes I saw thee, like a wolf, fasten that
+black fang of thine upon him—there is the mark of it; and, as for the
+matter of the greased shoes, thou knowest best what hand thou hadst in
+it.”
+
+“I had no hand. If any did this thing, it was Groa the Witch, thy
+Finnish bedmate. For the rest, I was mad and know not what I did. But
+hearken, Asmund: ill shall befall thee and thy house, and I will ever
+be thy foe. Moreover, I will yet wed this maid of thine. And now, thou
+Eric, hearken also: I will have another game with thee. This one was
+but the sport of boys; when we meet again—and the time shall not be
+long—swords shall be aloft, and thou shalt learn the play of men. I
+tell thee that I will slay thee, and tear Gudruda, shrieking, from thy
+arms to be my wife! I tell thee that, with yonder good sword Whitefire,
+I will yet hew off thy head!”—and he choked and stopped.
+
+“Thou art much foam and little water,” said Eric. “These things are
+easily put to proof. If thou willest it, to-morrow I will come with
+thee to a holmgang, and there we may set the twigs and finish what we
+have begun to-day.”
+
+“I cannot do that, for thou hast my sword; and, till I am suited with
+another weapon, I may fight no holmgang. Still, fear not: we shall soon
+meet with weapons aloft and byrnie on breast.”
+
+“Never too soon can the hour come, Blacktooth,” said Eric, and turning
+on his heel, he limped to the hall to clothe himself afresh. On the
+threshold of the men’s door he met Groa the Witch.
+
+“Thou didst put grease upon my shoes, carline and witch-hag that thou
+art,” he said.
+
+“It is not true, Brighteyes.”
+
+“There thou liest, and for all this I will repay thee. Thou art not yet
+the wife of Asmund, nor shalt be, for a plan comes into my head about
+it.”
+
+Groa looked at him strangely. “If thou speakest so, take heed to thy
+meat and drink,” she said. “I was not born among the Finns for nothing;
+and know, I am still minded to wed Asmund. For thy shoes, I would to
+the Gods that they were Hell-shoon, and that I was now binding them on
+thy dead feet.”
+
+“Oh! the cat begins to spit,” said Eric. “But know this: thou mayest
+grease my shoes—fit work for a carline!—but thou mayest never bind them
+on. Thou art a witch, and wilt come to the end of witches; and what thy
+daughter is, that I will not say,” and he pushed past her and entered
+the hall.
+
+Presently Asmund came to seek Eric there, and prayed him to be gone to
+his stead on Ran River. The horses of Ospakar had strayed, and he must
+stop at Middalhof till they were found; but, if these two should abide
+under the same roof, bloodshed would come of it, and that Asmund knew.
+
+Eric said yea to this, and, when he had rested a while, he kissed
+Gudruda, and, taking a horse, rode away to Coldback, bearing the sword
+Whitefire with him, and for a time he saw no more of Ospakar.
+
+When he came there, his mother Saevuna greeted him as one risen from
+the dead, and hung about his neck. Then he told her all that had come
+to pass, and she thought it a marvellous story, and sorrowed that
+Thorgrimur, her husband, was not alive to know it. But Eric mused a
+while, and spoke.
+
+“Mother,” he said, “now my uncle Thorod of Greenfell is dead, and his
+daughter, my cousin Unna, has no home. She is a fair woman and skilled
+in all things. It comes into my mind that we should bid her here to
+dwell with us.”
+
+“Why, I thought thou wast betrothed to Gudruda the Fair,” said Saevuna.
+“Wherefore, then, wouldst thou bring Unna hither?”
+
+“For this cause,” said Eric; “because it seems that Asmund the Priest
+wearies of Groa the Witch, and would take another wife, and I wish to
+draw the bands between us tighter, if it may befall so.”
+
+“Groa will take it ill,” said Saevuna.
+
+“Things cannot be worse between us than they are now, therefore I do
+not fear Groa,” he answered.
+
+“It shall be as thou wilt, son; to-morrow we will send to Unna and bid
+her here, if it pleases her to come.”
+
+Now Ospakar stayed three more days at Middalhof, till his horses were
+found, and he was fit to travel, for Eric had shaken him sorely. But he
+had no words with Gudruda and few with Asmund. Still, he saw Swanhild,
+and she bid him to be of good cheer, for he should yet have Gudruda.
+For now that the maid had passed from him the mind of Ospakar was set
+in winning her. Björn also, Asmund’s son, spoke words of good comfort
+to him, for he envied Eric his great fame, and he thought the match
+with Blacktooth would be good. And so at length Ospakar rode away to
+Swinefell with all his company; but Gizur, his son, left his heart
+behind.
+
+For Swanhild had not been idle this while. Her heart was sore, but she
+must follow her ill-nature, and so she had put out her woman’s strength
+and beguiled Gizur into loving her. But she did not love him at all,
+and the temper of Asmund the Priest was so angry that Gizur dared not
+ask her in marriage. So nothing was said of the matter.
+
+Now Unna came to Coldback, to dwell with Saevuna, Eric’s mother, and
+she was a fair and buxom woman. She had been once wedded, but within a
+month of her marriage her husband was lost at sea, this two years gone.
+At first Gudruda was somewhat jealous of this coming of Unna to
+Coldback; but Eric showed her what was in his mind, and she fell into
+the plan, for she hated and feared Groa greatly, and desired to be rid
+of her.
+
+Since this matter of the greasing of Eric’s wrestling-shoes great
+loathing of Groa had come into Asmund’s mind, and he bethought him
+often of those words that his wife Gudruda the Gentle spoke as she lay
+dying, and grieved that the oath which he swore then had in part been
+broken. He would have no more to do with Groa now, but he could not be
+rid of her; and, notwithstanding her evil doings, he still loved
+Swanhild. But Groa grew thin with spite and rage, and wandered about
+the place glaring with her great black eyes, and people hated her more
+and more.
+
+Now Asmund went to visit at Coldback, and there he saw Unna, and was
+pleased with her, for she was a blithe woman and a bonny. The end of it
+was that he asked her in marriage of Eric; at which Brighteyes was
+glad, but said that he must know Unna’s mind. Unna hearkened, and did
+not say no, for though Asmund was somewhat gone in years, still he was
+an upstanding man, wealthy in lands, goods, and moneys out at interest,
+and having many friends. So they plighted troth, and the wedding-feast
+was to be in the autumn after hay-harvest. Now Asmund rode back to
+Middalhof somewhat troubled at heart, for these tidings must be told to
+Groa, and he feared her and her witchcraft. In the hall he found her,
+standing alone.
+
+“Where hast thou been, lord?” she asked.
+
+“At Coldback,” he answered.
+
+“To see Unna, Eric’s cousin, perchance?”
+
+“That is so.”
+
+“What is Unna to thee, then, lord?”
+
+“This much, that after hay-harvest she will be my wife, and that is ill
+news for thee, Groa.”
+
+Now Groa turned and grasped fiercely at the air with her thin hands.
+Her eyes started out, foam was on her lips, and she shook in her fury
+like a birch-tree in the wind, looking so evil that Asmund drew back a
+little way, saying:
+
+“Now a veil is lifted from thee and I see thee as thou art. Thou hast
+cast a glamour over me these many years, Groa, and it is gone.”
+
+“Mayhap, Asmund Asmundson—mayhap, thou knowest me; but I tell thee that
+thou shalt see me in a worse guise before thou weddest Unna. What! have
+I borne the greatest shame, lying by thy side these many years, and
+shall I live to see a rival, young and fair, creep into my place with
+honour? That I will not while runes have power and spells can conjure
+the evil thing upon thee. I call down ruin on thee and thine—yea and on
+Brighteyes also, for he has brought this thing to pass. Death take ye
+all! May thy blood no longer run in mortal veins anywhere on the earth!
+Go down to Hela, Asmund, and be forgotten!” and she began to mutter
+runes swiftly.
+
+Now Asmund turned white with wrath. “Cease thy evil talk,” he said, “or
+thou shalt be hurled as a witch into Goldfoss pool.”
+
+“Into Goldfoss pool?—yea, there I may lie. I see it!—I seem to see this
+shape of mine rolling where the waters boil fiercest—but thine eyes
+shall never see it! _Thy_ eyes are shut, and shut are the eyes of Unna,
+for ye have gone before!—I do but follow after,” and thrice Groa
+shrieked aloud, throwing up her arms, then fell foaming on the sanded
+floor.
+
+“An evil woman and a fey!” said Asmund as he called people to her. “It
+had been better for me if I had never seen her dark face.”
+
+Now it is to be told that Groa lay beside herself for ten full days,
+and Swanhild nursed her. Then she found her sense again, and craved to
+see Asmund, and spoke thus to him:
+
+“It seems to me, lord, if indeed it be aught but a vision of my dreams,
+that before this sickness struck me I spoke mad and angry words against
+thee, because thou hast plighted troth to Unna, Thorod’s daughter.”
+
+“That is so, in truth,” said Asmund.
+
+“I have to say this, then, lord: that most humbly I crave thy pardon
+for my ill words, and ask thee to put them away from thy mind. Sore
+heart makes sour speech, and thou knowest well that, howsoever great my
+faults, at least I have always loved thee and laboured for thee, and
+methinks that in some fashion thy fortunes are the debtor to my wisdom.
+Therefore when my ears heard that thou hadst of a truth put me away,
+and that another woman comes an honoured wife to rule in Middalhof, my
+tongue forgot its courtesy, and I spoke words that are of all words the
+farthest from my mind. For I know well that I grow old, and have put
+off that beauty with which I was adorned of yore, and that held thee to
+me. ‘_Carline_’ Eric Brighteyes named me, and ‘carline’ I am—an old
+hag, no more! Now, forgive me, and, in memory of all that has been
+between us, let me creep to my place in the ingle and still watch and
+serve thee and thine till my service is outworn. Out of Ran’s net I
+came to thee, and, if thou drivest me hence, I tell thee that I will
+lie down and die upon thy threshold, and when thou sinkest into eld
+surely the memory of it shall grieve thee.”
+
+Thus she spoke and wept much, till Asmund’s heart softened in him, and,
+though with a doubting mind, he said it should be as she willed.
+
+So Groa stayed on at Middalhof, and was lowly in her bearing and soft
+of speech.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+HOW ERIC WENT UP MOSFELL AGAINST SKALLAGRIM THE BARESARK
+
+
+Now Atli the Good, earl of the Orkneys, comes into the story.
+
+It chanced that Atli had sailed to Iceland in the autumn on a business
+about certain lands that had fallen to him in right of his mother
+Helga, who was an Icelander, and he had wintered west of Reyjanes.
+Spring being come, he wished to sail home, and, when his ship was
+bound, he put to sea full early in the year. But it chanced that bad
+weather came up from the south-east, with mist and rain, so he must
+needs beach his ship in a creek under shelter of the Westman Islands.
+
+Now Atli asked what people dwelt in these parts, and, when he heard the
+name of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, he was glad, for in old days he
+and Asmund had gone many a viking cruise together.
+
+“We will leave the ship here,” he said, “till the weather clears, and
+go up to Middalhof to stay with Asmund.”
+
+So they made the ship snug, and left men to watch her; but two of the
+company, with Earl Atli, rode up to Middalhof.
+
+It must be told of Atli that he was the best of the earls who lived in
+those days, and he ruled the Orkneys so well that men gave him a
+by-name and called him Atli the Good. It was said of him that he had
+never turned a poor man away unsuccoured, nor bowed his head before a
+strong man, nor drawn his sword without cause, nor refused peace to him
+who prayed it. He was sixty years old, but age had left few marks on
+him, except that of his long white beard. He was keen-eyed, and
+well-fashioned of form and face, a great warrior and the strongest of
+men. His wife was dead, leaving him no children, and this was a sorrow
+to him; but as yet he had taken no other wife, for he would say: “Love
+makes an old man blind,” and “When age runs with youth, both shall
+fall,” and again, “Mix grey locks and golden and spoil two heads.” For
+this earl was a man of many wise sayings.
+
+Now Atli came to Middalhof just as men sat down to meat and, hearing
+the clatter of arms, all sprang to their feet, thinking that perhaps
+Ospakar had come again as he had promised. But when Asmund saw Atli he
+knew him at once, though they had not met for nearly thirty years, and
+he greeted him lovingly, and put him in the high seat, and gave place
+to his men upon the cross-benches. Atli told all his story, and Asmund
+bade him rest a while at Middalhof till the weather grew clearer.
+
+Now the Earl saw Swanhild and thought the maid wondrous fair, and so
+indeed she was, as she moved scornfully to and fro in her kirtle of
+white. Soft was her curling hair and deep were her dark blue eyes, and
+bent were her red lips as is a bow above her dimpled chin, and her
+teeth shone like pearls.
+
+“Is that fair maid thy daughter, Asmund,” asked Atli.
+
+“She is named Swanhild the Fatherless,” he answered, turning his face
+away.
+
+“Well,” said Atli, looking sharply on him, “were the maid sprung from
+me, she would not long be called the ‘Fatherless,’ for few have such a
+daughter.”
+
+“She is fair enough,” said Asmund, “in all save temper, and that is bad
+to cross.”
+
+“In every sword a flaw,” answers Atli; “but what has an old man to do
+with young maids and their beauty?” and he sighed.
+
+“I have known younger men who would seem less brisk at bridals,” said
+Asmund, and for that time they talked no more of the matter.
+
+Now, Swanhild heard something of this speech, and she guessed more; and
+it came into her mind that it would be the best of sport to make this
+old man love her, and then to mock him and say him nay. So she set
+herself to the task, as it ever was her wont, and she found it easy.
+For all day long, with downcast eyes and gentle looks, she waited upon
+the Earl, and now, at his bidding, she sang to him in a voice soft and
+low, and now she talked so wisely well that Atli thought no such maid
+had trod the earth before. But he checked himself with many learned
+saws, and on a day when the weather had grown fair, and they sat alone,
+he told her that his ship was bound for Orkney Isles.
+
+Then, as though by chance, Swanhild laid her white hand in his, and on
+a sudden looked deep into his eyes, and said with trembling lips, “Ah,
+go not yet, lord!—I pray thee, go not yet!”—and, turning, she fled
+away.
+
+But Atli was much moved, and he said to himself: “Now a strange thing
+is come to pass: a fair maid loves an old man; and yet, methinks, he
+who looks into those eyes sees deep waters,” and he beat his brow and
+thought.
+
+But Swanhild in her chamber laughed till the tears ran from those same
+eyes, for she saw that the great fish was hooked and now the time had
+come to play him.
+
+For she did not know that it was otherwise fated.
+
+Gudruda, too, saw all these things and knew not how to read them, for
+she was of an honest mind, and could not understand how a woman may
+love a man as Swanhild loved Eric and yet make such play with other
+men, and that of her free will. For she guessed little of Swanhild’s
+guilefulness, nor of the coldness of her heart to all save Eric; nor of
+how this was the only joy left to her: to make a sport of men and put
+them to grief and shame. Atli said to himself that he would watch this
+maid well before he uttered a word to Asmund, and he deemed himself
+very cunning, for he was wondrous cautious after the fashion of those
+about to fall. So he set himself to watching, and Swanhild set herself
+to smiling, and he told her tales of warfare and of daring, and she
+clasped her hands and said:
+
+“Was there ever such a man since Odin trod the earth?” And so it went
+on, till the serving-women laughed at the old man in love and the wit
+of her that mocked him.
+
+Now upon a day, Eric having made an end of sowing his corn, bethought
+himself of his vow to go up alone against Skallagrim the Baresark in
+his den on Mosfell over by Hecla. Now, this was a heavy task: for
+Skallagrim was held so mighty among men that none went up against him
+any more; and at times Eric thought of Gudruda, and sighed, for it was
+likely that she would be a widow before she was made a wife. Still, his
+oath must be fulfilled, and, moreover, of late Skallagrim having heard
+that a youngling named Eric Brighteyes had vowed to slay him
+single-handed, had made a mock of him in this fashion. For Skallagrim
+rode down to Coldback on Ran River and at night-time took a lamb from
+the fold. Holding the lamb beneath his arm, he drew near to the house
+and smote thrice on the door with his battle-axe, and they were
+thundering knocks. Then he leapt on to his horse and rode off a space
+and waited. Presently Eric came out, but half clad, a shield in one
+hand and Whitefire in the other, and, looking, by the bright moonlight
+he saw a huge black-bearded man seated on a horse, having a great axe
+in one hand and the lamb beneath his arm.
+
+“Who art thou?” roared Eric.
+
+“I am called Skallagrim, youngling,” answered the man on the horse.
+“Many men have seen me once, none have wished to see me twice, and some
+few have never seen aught again. Now, it has been echoed in my ears
+that thou hast vowed a vow to go up Mosfell against Skallagrim the
+Baresark, and I am come hither to say that I will make thee right
+welcome. See,” and with his axe he cut off the lamb’s tail on the
+pommel of his saddle: “of the flesh of this lamb of thine I will brew
+broth and of his skin I will make me a vest. Take thou this tail, and
+when thou fittest it on to the skin again, Skallagrim will own a lord,”
+and he hurled the tail towards him.
+
+“Bide thou there till I can come to thee,” shouted Eric; “it will spare
+me a ride to Mosfell.”
+
+“Nay, nay. It is good for lads to take the mountain air,” and
+Skallagrim turned his horse away, laughing.
+
+Eric watched Skallagrim vanish over the knoll, and then, though he was
+very angry, laughed also and went in. But first he picked up the tail,
+and on the morrow he skinned it.
+
+Now the time was come when the matter must be tried, and Eric bade
+farewell to Saevuna his mother, and Unna his cousin, and girt Whitefire
+round him and set upon his head a golden helm with wings on it. Then he
+found the byrnie which his father Thorgrimur had stripped, together
+with the helm, from that Baresark who cut off his leg—and this was a
+good piece, forged of the Welshmen—and he put it on his breast, and
+taking a stout shield of bull’s hide studded with nails, rode away with
+one thrall, the strong carle named Jon.
+
+But the women misdoubted them much of this venture; nevertheless Eric
+might not be gainsayed.
+
+Now, the road to Mosfell runs past Middalhof and thither he came. Atli,
+standing at the men’s door, saw him and cried aloud: “Ho! a mighty man
+comes here.”
+
+Swanhild looked out and saw Eric, and he was a goodly sight in his
+war-gear. For now, week by week, he seemed to grow more fair and great,
+as the full strength of his manhood rose in him, like sap in the spring
+grass, and Gudruda was very proud of her lover. That night Eric stayed
+at Middalhof, and sat hand in hand with Gudruda and talked with Earl
+Atli. Now the heart of the old viking went out to Eric, and he took
+great delight in him and in his strength and deeds, and he longed much
+that the Gods had given him such a son.
+
+“I prophesy this of thee, Brighteyes,” he cried: “that it shall go ill
+with this Baresark thou seekest—yes, and with all men who come within
+sweep of that great sword of thine. But remember this, lad: guard thy
+head with thy buckler, cut low beneath his shield, if he carries one,
+and mow the legs from him: for ever a Baresark rushes on, shield up.”
+
+Eric thanked him for his good words and went to rest. But, before it
+was light, he rose, and Gudruda rose also and came into the hall, and
+buckled his harness on him with her own hands.
+
+“This is a sad task for me, Eric!” she sighed, “for how do I know that
+Baresark’s hands shall not loose this helm of thine?”
+
+“That is as it may be, sweet,” he said; “but I fear not the Baresark or
+any man. How goes it with Swanhild now?”
+
+“I know not. She makes herself sweet to that old Earl and he is fain of
+her, and that is beyond my sight.”
+
+“I have seen as much,” said Eric. “It will be well for us if he should
+wed her.”
+
+“Ay, and ill for him; but it is to be doubted if that is in her mind.”
+
+Now Eric kissed her soft and sweet, and went away, bidding her look for
+his return on the day after the morrow.
+
+Gudruda bore up bravely against her fears till he was gone, but then
+she wept a little.
+
+Now it is to be told that Eric and his thrall Jon rode hard up
+Stonefell and across the mountains and over the black sand, till, two
+hours before sunset, they came to the foot of Mosfell, having Hecla on
+their right. It is a grim mountain, grey with moss, standing alone in
+the desert plain; but between it and Hecla there is good grassland.
+
+“Here is the fox’s earth. Now to start him,” said Eric.
+
+He knows something of the path by which this fortress can be climbed
+from the south, and horses may be ridden up it for a space. So on they
+go, till at length they come to a flat place where water runs down the
+black rocks, and here Eric drank of the water, ate food, and washed his
+face and hands. This done, he bid Jon tend the horses—for hereabouts
+there is a little grass—and be watchful till he returned, since he must
+go up against Skallagrim alone. And there with a doubtful heart Jon
+stayed all that night. For of all that came to pass he saw but one
+thing, and that was the light of Whitefire as it flashed out high above
+him on the brow of the mountain when first Brighteyes smote at foe.
+
+Eric went warily up the Baresark path, for he would keep his breath in
+him, and the light shone redly on his golden helm. High he went, till
+at length he came to a pass narrow and dark and hedged on either side
+with sheer cliffs, such as two armed men might hold against a score. He
+peered down this path, but he saw no Baresark, though it was worn by
+Baresark feet. He crept along its length, moving like a sunbeam through
+the darkness of the pass, for the light gathered on his helm and sword,
+till suddenly the path turned and he was on the brink of a gulf that
+seemed to have no bottom, and, looking across and down, he could see
+Jon and the horses more than a hundred fathoms beneath. Now Eric must
+stop, for this path leads but into the black gulf. Also he was
+perplexed to know where Skallagrim had his lair. He crept to the brink
+and gazed. Then he saw that a point of rock jutted from the sheer face
+of the cliff and that the point was worn with the mark of feet.
+
+“Where Baresark passes, there may yeoman follow,” said Eric and,
+sheathing Whitefire, without more ado, though he liked the task little,
+he grasped the overhanging rock and stepped down on to the point below.
+Now he was perched like an eagle over the dizzy gulf and his brain
+swam. Backward he feared to go, and forward he might not, for there was
+nothing but air. Beside him, growing from the face of the cliff, was a
+birch-bush. He grasped it to steady himself. It bent beneath his
+clutch, and then he saw, behind it, a hole in the rock through which a
+man could creep, and down this hole ran footmarks.
+
+“First through air like a bird; now through earth like a fox,” said
+Eric and entered the hole. Doubling his body till his helm almost
+touched his knee he took three paces and lo! he stood on a great
+platform of rock, so large that a hall might be built on it, which,
+curving inwards, cannot be seen from the narrow pass. This platform,
+that is backed by the sheer cliff, looks straight to the south, and
+from it he could search the plain and the path that he had travelled,
+and there once more he saw Jon and the horses far below him.
+
+“A strong place, truly, and well chosen,” said Eric and looked around.
+On the floor of the rock and some paces from him a turf fire still
+smouldered, and by it were sheep’s bones, and beyond, in the face of
+the overhanging precipice, was the mouth of a cave.
+
+“The wolf is at home, or was but lately,” said Eric; “now for his
+lair;” and with that he walked warily to the mouth of the cave and
+peered in. He could see nothing yet a while, but surely he heard a
+sound of snoring?
+
+Then he crept in, and, presently, by the red light of the burning
+embers, he saw a great black-bearded man stretched at length upon a rug
+of sheepskins, and by his side an axe.
+
+“Now it would be easy to make an end of this cave-dweller,” thought
+Eric; “but that is a deed I will not do—no, not even to a Baresark—to
+slay him in his sleep,” and therewith he stepped lightly to the side of
+Skallagrim, and was about to prick him with the point of Whitefire,
+when! as he did so, another man sat up behind Skallagrim.
+
+“By Thor! for two I did not bargain,” said Eric, and sprang from the
+cave.
+
+Then, with a grunt of rage, that Baresark who was behind Skallagrim
+came out like a she-bear robbed of her whelps, and ran straight at
+Eric, sword aloft. Eric gives before him right to the edge of the
+cliff. Then the Baresark smites at him and Brighteyes catches the blow
+on his shield, and smites at him in turn so well and truly, that the
+head of the Baresark flies from his shoulders and spins along the
+ground, but his body, with outstretched arms yet gripping at the air,
+falls over the edge of the gulf sheer into the water, a hundred fathoms
+down. It was the flash that Whitefire made as it circled ere it smote
+that Jon saw while he waited in the dell upon the mountain side. But of
+the Baresark he saw nothing, for he passed down into the great
+fire-riven cleft and was never seen more, save once only, in a strange
+fashion that shall be told. This was the first man whom Brighteyes
+slew.
+
+Now the old tale tells that Eric cried aloud: “Little chance had this
+one,” and that then a wonderful thing came to pass. For the head on the
+rock opened its eyes and answered:
+
+“Little chance indeed against thee, Eric Brighteyes. Still, I tell thee
+this: that where my body fell there thou shalt fall, and where it lies
+there thou shalt lie also.”
+
+Now Eric was afraid, for he thought it a strange thing that a severed
+head should speak to him.
+
+“Here it seems I have to deal with trolls,” he said; “but at the least,
+though he speak, this one shall strike no more,” and he looked at the
+head, but it answered nothing.
+
+Now Skallagrim slept through it all and the light grew so dim that Eric
+thought it time to make an end this way or that. Therefore, he took the
+head of the slain man, though he feared to touch it, and rolled it
+swiftly into the cave, saying, “Now, being so glib of speech, go tell
+thy mate that Eric Brighteyes knocks at his door.”
+
+Then came sounds as of a man rising, and presently Skallagrim rushed
+forth with axe aloft and his fellow’s head in his left hand. He was
+clothed in nothing but a shirt and the skin of Eric’s lamb was bound to
+his chest.
+
+“Where now is my mate?” he said. Then he saw Eric leaning on Whitefire,
+his golden helm ablaze with the glory of the passing sun.
+
+“It seems that thou holdest somewhat of him in thine hand, Skallagrim,
+and for the rest, go seek it in yonder rift.”
+
+“Who art thou?” roared Skallagrim.
+
+“Thou mayest know me by this token,” said Eric, and he threw towards
+him the skin of that lamb’s tail which Skallagrim had lifted from
+Coldback.
+
+Now Skallagrim knew him and the Baresark fit came on. His eyes rolled,
+foam flew to his lips, his mouth grinned, and he was awesome to see. He
+let fall the head, and, swinging the great axe aloft, rushed at Eric.
+But Brighteyes is too swift for him. It would not be well to let that
+stroke fall, and it must go hard with aught it struck. He springs
+forward, he louts low and sweeps upwards with Whitefire. Skallagrim
+sees the sword flare and drops almost to his knee, guarding his head
+with the axe; but Whitefire strikes on the iron half of the axe and
+shears it in two, so that the axe-head falls to earth. Now the Baresark
+is weaponless but unharmed, and it would be an easy task to slay him as
+he rushes by. But it came into Eric’s mind that it is an unworthy deed
+to slay a swordless man, and this came into his mind also, that he
+desired to match his naked might against a Baresark in his rage. So, in
+the hardihood of his youth and strength, he cast Whitefire aside, and
+crying “Come, try a fall with me, Baresark,” rushed on Skallagrim.
+
+“Thou art mad,” yells the Baresark, and they are at it hard. Now they
+grip and rend and tear. Ospakar was strong, but the Baresark strength
+of Skallagrim is more than the strength of Ospakar, and soon Brighteyes
+thinks longingly on Whitefire that he has cast aside. Eric is mighty
+beyond the might of men, but he can scarcely hold his own against this
+mad man, and very soon he knows that only one chance is left to him,
+and that is to cling to Skallagrim till the Baresark fit be passed and
+he is once more like other men. But this is easier to tell of than to
+do, and presently, strive as he will, Eric is on his back, and
+Skallagrim on him. But still he holds the Baresark as with bands of
+iron, and Skallagrim may not free his arms, though he strive furiously.
+Now they roll over and over on the rock, and the gloom gathers fast
+about them till presently Eric sees that they draw near to the brink of
+that mighty rift down which the severed head of the cave-dweller has
+foretold his fall.
+
+“Then we go together,” says Eric, but the Baresark does not heed. Now
+they are on the very brink, and here as it chances, or as the Norns
+decree, a little rock juts up and this keeps them from falling. Eric is
+uppermost, and, strive as he will, Skallagrim may not turn him on his
+back again. Still, Brighteyes’ strength may not endure very long, for
+he grows faint, and his legs slip slowly over the side of the rift till
+now he clings, as it were, by his ribs and shoulder-blades alone, that
+rub against the little rock. The light dies away, and Eric thinks on
+sweet Gudruda and makes ready to die also, when suddenly a last ray
+from the sun falls on the fierce face of Skallagrim, and lo! Brighteyes
+sees it change, for the madness goes out of it, and in a moment the
+Baresark becomes but as a child in his mighty grip.
+
+“Hold!” said Skallagrim, “I crave peace,” and he loosed his clasp.
+
+“Not too soon, then,” gasped Eric as, drawing his legs from over the
+brink of the rift, he gained his feet and, staggering to his sword,
+grasped it very thankfully.
+
+“I am fordone!” said Skallagrim; “come, drag me from this place, for I
+fall; or, if thou wilt, hew off my head.”
+
+“I will not serve thee thus,” said Eric. “Thou art a gallant foe,” and
+he put out his hand and drew him into safety.
+
+For a while Skallagrim lay panting, then he gained his hands and knees
+and crawled to where Eric leaned against the rock.
+
+“Lord,” he said, “give me thy hand.”
+
+Eric stretched forth his left hand, wondering, and Skallagrim took it.
+He did not stretch out his right, for, fearing guile, he gripped
+Whitefire in it.
+
+“Lord,” Skallagrim said again, “of all men who ever were, thou art the
+mightiest. Five other men had not stood before me in my rage, but,
+scorning thy weapon, thou didst overcome me in the noblest fashion, and
+by thy naked strength alone. Now hearken. Thou hast given me my life,
+and it is thine from this hour to the end. Here I swear fealty to thee.
+Slay me if thou wilt, or use me if thou wilt, but I think it will be
+better for thee to do this rather than that, for there is but one who
+has mastered me, and thou art he, and it is borne in upon my mind that
+thou wilt have need of my strength, and that shortly.”
+
+“That may well be, Skallagrim,” said Eric, “yet I put little trust in
+outlaws and cave-dwellers. How do I know, if I take thee to me, that
+thou wilt not murder me in my sleep, as it would have been easy for me
+to do by thee but now?”
+
+“What is it that runs from thy arm,” asked Skallagrim.
+
+“Blood,” said Eric.
+
+“Stretch out thine arm, lord.”
+
+Eric did so, and the Baresark put his lips to the scratch and sucked
+the blood, then said:
+
+“In this blood of thine I pledge thee, Eric Brighteyes! May Valhalla
+refuse me and Hela take me; may I be hunted like a fox from earth to
+earth; may trolls torment me and wizards sport with me o’ night; may my
+limbs shrivel and my heart turn to water; may my foes overtake me, and
+my bones be crushed across the doom-stone—if I fail in one jot from
+this my oath that I have sworn! I will guard thy back, I will smite thy
+enemies, thy hearthstone shall be my temple, thy honour my honour.
+Thrall am I of thine, and thrall I will be, and whiles thou wilt we
+will live one life, and, in the end, we will die one death.”
+
+“It seems that in going to seek a foe I have found a friend,” said
+Eric, “and it is likely enough that I shall need one. Skallagrim,
+Baresark and outlaw as thou art, I take thee at thy word. Henceforth,
+we are master and man and we will do many a deed side by side, and in
+token of it I lengthen thy name and call thee Skallagrim Lambstail.
+Now, if thou hast it, give me food and drink, for I am faint from that
+hug of thine, old bear.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+HOW OSPAKAR BLACKTOOTH FOUND ERIC BRIGHTEYES AND SKALLAGRIM LAMBSTAIL
+ON HORSE-HEAD HEIGHTS
+
+
+Now Skallagrim led Eric to his cave and fed the fire and gave him flesh
+to eat and ale to drink. When he had eaten his fill Eric looked at the
+Baresark. He had black hair streaked with grey that hung down upon his
+shoulders. His nose was hooked like an eagle’s beak, his beard was wild
+and his sunken eyes were keen as a hawk’s. He was somewhat bent and not
+over tall, but of a mighty make, for his shoulders must pass many a
+door sideways.
+
+“Thou art a great man,” said Eric, “and it is something to have
+overcome thee. Now tell me what turned thee Baresark.”
+
+“A shameful deed that was done against me, lord. Ten years ago I was a
+yeoman of small wealth in the north. I had but one good thing, and that
+was the fairest housewife in those parts—Thorunna by name—and I loved
+her much, but we had no children. Now, not far from my stead is a place
+called Swinefell, and there dwells a mighty chief named Ospakar
+Blacktooth; he is an evil man and strong——”
+
+Eric started at the name and then bade Skallagrim take up the tale.
+
+“It chanced that Ospakar saw my wife Thorunna and would take her, but
+at first she did not listen. Then he promised her wealth and all good
+things, and she was weary of our hard way of life and hearkened. Still,
+she would not go away openly, for that had brought shame on her, but
+plotted with Ospakar that he should come and take her as though by
+force. So it came about, as I lay heavily asleep one night at
+Thorunna’s side, having drunk somewhat too deeply of the autumn ale,
+that armed men seized me, bound me, and haled me from my bed. There
+were eight of them, and with them was Ospakar. Then Blacktooth bid
+Thorunna rise, clothe herself and come to be his May, and she made
+pretence to weep at this, but fell to it readily enough. Now she bound
+her girdle round her and to it a knife hung.
+
+“‘Kill thyself, sweet,’ I cried: ‘death is better than shame.’
+
+“‘Not so, husband,’ she answered. ‘It is true that I love but thee; yet
+a woman may find another love, but not another life,’ and I saw her
+laugh through her mock tears. Now Ospakar rode in hot haste away to
+Swinefell and with him went Thorunna, but his men stayed a while and
+drank my ale, and, as they drank, they mocked me who was bound before
+them, and little by little all the truth was told of the doings of
+Ospakar and Thorunna my housewife, and I learned that it was she who
+had planned this sport. Then my eyes grew dark and I drew near to death
+from very shame and bitterness. But of a sudden something leaped up in
+my heart, fire raged before my eyes and voices in my ears called on to
+war and vengeance. I was Baresark—and like hay bands I burst my cords.
+My axe hung on the wainscot. I snatched it thence, and of what befell I
+know this alone, that, when the madness passed, eight men lay stretched
+out before me, and all the place was but a gore of blood.
+
+“‘Then I drew the dead together and piled drinking tables over them,
+and benches, and turf, and anything else that would burn, and put cod’s
+oil on the pile, and fired the stead above them, so that the tale went
+abroad that all these men were burned in their cups, and I with them.
+
+“‘But I took the name of Skallagrim and swore an oath against all men,
+ay, and women too, and away I went to the wood-folk and worked much
+mischief, for I spared few, and so on to Mosfell. Here I have stayed
+these five years, awaiting the time when I shall find Ospakar and
+Thorunna the harlot, and I have fought many men, but, till thou camest
+up against me, none could stand before my might.”
+
+“A strange tale, truly,” said Eric; “but now hearken thou to a
+stranger, for of a truth it seems that we have not come together by
+chance,” and he told him of Gudruda and the wrestling and of the
+overthrow of Blacktooth, and showed him Whitefire which he won out of
+the hand of Ospakar.
+
+Skallagrim listened and laughed aloud. “Surely,” he said, “this is the
+work of the Norns. See, lord, thou and I will yet smite this Ospakar.
+He has taken my wife and he would take thy betrothed. Let it be! Let it
+be! Ah, would that I had been there to see the wrestling—Ospakar had
+never risen from his snow-bed. But there is time left to us, and I
+shall yet see his head roll along the dust. Thou hast his goodly sword
+and with it thou shalt sweep Blacktooth’s head from his shoulders—or
+perchance that shall be my lot,” and with this Skallagrim sprang up,
+gnashing his teeth and clutching at the air.
+
+“Peace,” said Eric. “Blacktooth is not here. Save thy rage until it can
+run along thy sword and strike him.”
+
+“Nay, not here, nor yet so far off, lord. Hearken: I know this Ospakar.
+If he has set eyes of longing on Gudruda, Asmund’s daughter, he will
+not rest one hour till he have her or is slain; and if he has set eyes
+of hate on thee—then take heed to thy going and spy down every path
+before thy feet tread it. Soon shall the matter come on for judgment
+and even now Odin’s Valkyries[*] choose their own.”
+
+[*] The “corse-choosing sisters” who were bidden by Odin to single out
+those warriors whose hour had come to die in battle and win Valhalla.
+
+
+“It is well, then,” said Eric.
+
+“Yea, lord, it is well, for we two have little to fear from any six
+men, if so be that they fall on us in fair fight. But I do not
+altogether like thy tale. Too many women are mixed up in it, and women
+stab in the back. A man may deal with swords aloft, but not with
+tricks, and lies, and false women’s witchery. It was a woman who
+greased thy wrestling soles; mayhap it will be a woman that binds on
+thy Hell-shoes when all is done—ay! and who makes them ready for thy
+feet.”
+
+“Of women, as of men,” answered Eric, “there is this to be said, that
+some are good and some evil.”
+
+“Yes, lord, and this also, that the evil ones plot the ill of their
+evil, but the good do it of their blind foolishness. Forswear women and
+so shalt thou live happy and die in honour—cherish them and live in
+wretchedness and die an outcast.”
+
+“Thy talk is foolish,” said Eric. “Birds must to the air, the sea to
+the shore, and man must to woman. As things are so let them be, for
+they will soon seem as though they had never been. I had rather kiss my
+dear and die, if so it pleases me to do, than kiss her not and live,
+for at the last the end will be one end, and kisses are sweet!”
+
+“That is a good saying,” said Skallagrim, and they fell asleep side by
+side and Eric had no fear.
+
+Now they awoke and the light was already full, for they were weary and
+their sleep had been heavy.
+
+Hard by the mouth of the cave is a little well of water that gathers
+there from the rocks above and in this Eric washed himself. Then
+Skallagrim showed him the cave and the goodly store of arms that he had
+won from those whom he had slain and robbed.
+
+“A wondrous place, truly,” said Eric, “and well fitted to the uses of
+such a chapman[*] as thou art; but, say, how didst thou find it?”
+
+[*] Merchant.
+
+
+“I followed him who was here before me and gave him choice—to go, or to
+fight for the stronghold. But he needs must fight and that was his
+bane, for I slew him.”
+
+“Who was that, then,” asked Eric, “whose head lies yonder?”
+
+“A cave-dweller, lord, whom I took to me because of the lonesomeness of
+the winter tide. He was an evil man, for though it is good to be
+Baresark from time to time, yet to dwell with one who is always
+Baresark is not good, and thou didst a needful deed in smiting his head
+from him—and now let it go to find its trunk,” and he rolled it over
+the edge of the great rift.
+
+“Knowest thou, Skallagrim, that this head spoke to me after it had left
+the man’s shoulders, saying that where its body fell there I should
+fall, and where it lay there I should lie also?”
+
+“Then, lord, that is likely to be thy doom, for this man was
+foresighted, and, but the night before last, as we rode out to seek
+sheep, he felt his head, and said that, before the sun sank again, a
+hundred fathoms of air should link it to his shoulders.”
+
+“It may be so,” answered Eric. “I thought as I lay in thy grip yonder
+that the fate was near. And now arm thyself, and take such goods as
+thou needest, and let us hence, for that thrall of mine who waits me
+yonder will think thou hast been too mighty for me.”
+
+Skallagrim went to the edge of the rift and searched the plain with his
+hawk eyes.
+
+“No need to hasten, lord,” he said. “See yonder rides thy thrall across
+the black sand, and with him goes thy horse. Surely he thought thou
+camest no more down the path by which thou wentest up, and it is not
+thrall’s work to seek Skallagrim in his lair and ask for tidings.”
+
+“Wolves take him for a fool!” said Eric in anger. “He will ride to
+Middalhof and sing my death-song, and that will sound sadly in some
+ears.”
+
+“It is pleasant, lord,” said Skallagrim, “when good tidings dog the
+heels of bad, and womenfolk can spare some tears and be little poorer.
+I have horses in a secret dell that I will show thee, and on them we
+will ride hence to Middalhof—and there thou must claim peace for me.”
+
+“It is well,” said Eric; “now arm thyself, for if thou goest with me
+thou must make an end of thy Baresark ways, or keep them for the hour
+of battle.”
+
+“I will do thy bidding, lord,” said Skallagrim. Then he entered the
+cave and set a plain black steel helm upon his black locks, and a black
+chain byrnie about his breast. He took the great axe-head also and
+fitted to it the half of another axe that lay among the weapons. Then
+he drew out a purse of money and a store of golden rings, and set them
+in a bag of otter skin, and buckled it about him. But the other goods
+he wrapped up in skins and hid behind some stones which were at the
+bottom of the cave—purposing to come another time and fetch them.
+
+Then they went forth by that same perilous path which Eric had trod,
+and Skallagrim showed him how he might pass the rock in safety.
+
+“A rough road this,” said Eric as he gained the deep cleft.
+
+“Yea, lord, and, till thou camest, one that none but wood-folk have
+trodden.”
+
+“I would tread it no more,” said Eric again, “and yet that fellow thief
+of thine said that I should die here,” and for a while his heart was
+heavy.
+
+Now Skallagrim Lambstail led him by secret paths to a dell rich in
+grass, that is hid in the round of the mountain, and here three good
+horses were at feed. Then, going to a certain rock, he brought out bits
+and saddles, and they caught the horses, and, mounting them, rode away
+from Mosfell.
+
+Now Eric and his henchman Skallagrim the Baresark rode four hours and
+saw nobody, till at length they came to the brow of a hill that is
+named Horse-Head Heights, and, crossing it, found themselves almost in
+the midst of a score of armed men who were about to mount their horses.
+
+“Now we have company,” said Skallagrim.
+
+“Yes, and bad company,” answered Eric, “for yonder I spy Ospakar
+Blacktooth, and Gizur and Mord his sons, ay and others. Down, and back
+to back, for they will show us little gentleness.”
+
+Then they sprang to earth and took their stand upon a mound of rising
+ground—and the men rode towards them.
+
+“I shall soon know what thy fellowship is worth,” said Eric.
+
+“Fear not, lord,” answered Skallagrim. “Hold thou thy head and I will
+hold thy back. We are met in a good hour.”
+
+“Good or ill, it is likely to be a short one. Hearken thou: if thou
+must turn Baresark when swords begin to flash, at the least stand and
+be Baresark where thou art, for if thou rushest on the foe, my back
+will be naked and I must soon be sped.”
+
+“It shall be as thou sayest, lord.”
+
+Now men rode round them, but at first they did not know Eric, because
+of the golden helm that hid his face in shadow.
+
+“Who are ye?” called Ospakar.
+
+“I think that thou shouldst know me, Blacktooth,” Eric answered, “for I
+set thee heels up in the snow but lately—or, at the least, thou wilt
+know this,” and he drew great Whitefire.
+
+“Thou mayest know me also, Ospakar,” cried the Baresark. “Skallagrim,
+men called me, Lambstail, Eric Brighteyes calls me, but once thou didst
+call me Ounound. Say, lord, what tidings of Thorunna?”
+
+Now Ospakar shook his sword, laughing. “I came out to seek one foe, and
+I have found two,” he cried. “Hearken, Eric: when thou art slain I go
+hence to burn and kill at Middalhof. Shall I bear thy head as keepsake
+from thee to Gudruda? For thee, Ounound, I thought thee dead; but,
+being yet alive, Thorunna, my sweet love, sends thee this,” and he
+hurled a spear at him with all his might.
+
+But Skallagrim catches the spear as it flies and hurls it back. It
+strikes right on the shield of Ospakar and pierces it, ay and the
+byrnie, and the shoulder that is beneath the byrnie, so that Blacktooth
+was made unmeet for fight, and howled with pain and rage.
+
+“Go, bid Thorunna draw that splinter forth,” says Skallagrim, “and heal
+the hole with kisses.”
+
+Now Ospakar, writhing with his hurt, shouts to his men to slay the two
+of them, and then the fight begins.
+
+One rushes at Eric and smites at him with an axe. The blow falls on his
+shield, and shears off the side of it, then strikes the byrnie beneath,
+but lightly. In answer Eric sweeps low at him with Whitefire, and cuts
+his leg from under him between knee and thigh, and he falls and dies.
+
+Another rushes in. Down flashes Whitefire before he can smite, and the
+carle’s shield is cloven through. Then he chooses to draw back and
+fights no more that day.
+
+Skallagrim slays a man, and wounds another sore. A tall chief with a
+red scar on his face comes at Brighteyes. Twice he feints at the head
+while Eric watches, then lowers the sword beneath the cover of his
+shield, and sweeps suddenly at Eric’s legs. Brighteyes leaps high into
+the air, smiting downward with Whitefire as he leaps, and presently
+that chief is dead, shorn through shoulder to breast.
+
+Now Skallagrim slays another man, and grows Baresark. He looks so
+fierce that men fall back from him.
+
+Two rush on Eric, one from either side. The sword of him on the right
+falls on his shield and sinks in, but Brighteyes twists the shorn
+shield so strongly that the sword is wrenched from the smiter’s hand.
+Now the other sword is aloft above him, and that had been Eric’s bane,
+but Skallagrim glances round and sees it about to fall. He has no time
+to turn, but dashes the hammer of his axe backward. It falls full on
+the swordsman’s head, and the head is shattered.
+
+“That was well done,” says Eric as the sword goes down.
+
+“Not so ill but it might be worse,” growls Skallagrim.
+
+Presently all men drew back from those two, for they have had enough of
+Whitefire and the Baresark’s axe.
+
+Ospakar sits on his horse, his shield pinned to his shoulder and curses
+aloud.
+
+“Close in, you cowards!” he yells, “close in and cut them down!” but no
+man stirs.
+
+Then Eric mocks them. “There are but two of us,” he says, “will no man
+try a game with me? Let it not be sung that twenty were overcome of
+two.”
+
+Now Ospakar’s son Mord hears, and he grows mad with rage. He holds his
+shield aloft and rushes on. But Gizur the Lawman does not come, for
+Gizur was a coward.
+
+Skallagrim turns to meet Mord, but Eric says:—
+
+“This one for me, comrade,” and steps forward.
+
+Mord strikes a mighty blow. Eric’s shield is all shattered and cannot
+stay it. It crashes through and falls full on the golden helm, beating
+Brighteyes to his knee. Now he is up again and blows fall thick and
+fast. Mord is a strong man, unwearied, and skilled in war, and Eric’s
+arms grow faint and his strength sinks low. Mord smites again and
+wounds him somewhat on the shoulder.
+
+Eric throws aside his cloven shield and, shouting, plies Whitefire with
+both arms. Mord gives before him, then rushes and smites; Eric leaps
+aside. Again he rushes and lo! Brighteyes has dropped his point, and it
+stands a full span through the back of Mord, and instantly that was his
+bane.
+
+Now men rush to their horses, mount in hot haste and ride away, crying
+that these are trolls whom they have to do with here, not men.
+Skallagrim sees, and the Baresark fit takes him sore. With axe aloft he
+charges after them, screaming as he comes. There is one man, the same
+whom he had wounded. He cannot mount easily, and when the Baresark
+comes he still lies on the neck of his horse. The great axe wheels on
+high and falls, and it is told of this stroke that it was so mighty
+that man and horse sank dead beneath it, cloven through and through.
+Then the fit leaves Skallagrim and he walks back, and they are alone
+with the dead and dying.
+
+Eric leans on Whitefire and speaks:
+
+“Get thee gone, Skallagrim Lambstail!” he said; “get thee gone!”
+
+“It shall be as thou wilt, lord,” answered the Baresark; “but I have
+not befriended thee so ill that thou shouldst fear for blows to come.”
+
+“I will keep no man with me who puts my word aside, Skallagrim. What
+did I bid thee? Was it not that thou shouldst have done with the
+Baresark ways, and where thou stoodest there thou shouldst bide? and
+see: thou didst forget my word swiftly! Now get thee gone!”
+
+“It is true, lord,” he said. “He who serves must serve wholly,” and
+Skallagrim turned to seek his horse.
+
+“Stay,” said Eric; “thou art a gallant man and I forgive thee: but
+cross my will no more. We have slain several men and Ospakar goes hence
+wounded. We have got honour, and they loss and the greatest shame.
+Nevertheless, ill shall come of this to me, for Ospakar has many
+friends and will set a law-suit on foot against me at the Althing,[*]
+and thou didst draw the first blood.”
+
+[*] The annual assembly of free men which, in Iceland, performed the
+functions of a Parliament and Supreme Court of Law.
+
+
+“Would that the spear had gone more home,” said Skallagrim.
+
+“Ospakar’s time is not yet,” answered Eric; “still, he has something by
+which to bear us in mind.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+HOW SWANHILD DEALT WITH GUDRUDA
+
+
+Now Jon, Eric’s thrall, watched all night on Mosfell, but saw nothing
+except the light of Whitefire as it smote the Baresark’s head from his
+shoulders. He stayed there till daylight, much afraid; then, making
+sure that Eric was slain, Jon rode hard and fast for Middalhof, whither
+he came at evening.
+
+Gudruda was watching by the women’s door. She strained her eyes towards
+Mosfell to catch the light gleaming on Eric’s golden helm, and
+presently it gleamed indeed, white not red.
+
+“See,” said Swanhild at her side, “Eric comes!”
+
+“Not Eric, but his thrall,” answered Gudruda, “to tell us that Eric is
+sped.”
+
+They waited in silence while Jon galloped towards them.
+
+“What news of Brighteyes?” cried Swanhild.
+
+“Little need to ask,” said Gudruda, “look at his face.”
+
+Now Jon told his tale and Gudruda listened, clinging to the door post.
+But Swanhild cursed him for a coward, so that he shrank before her
+eyes.
+
+Gudruda turned and walked into the hall and her face was like the face
+of death. Men saw her, and Asmund asked why she wore so strange a mien.
+Then Gudruda sang this song:
+
+“Up to Mosfell, battle eager,
+Rode helmed Brighteyen to the fray.
+Back from Mosfell, battle shunning,
+Slunk yon coward thrall I ween.
+Now shall maid Gudruda never
+Know a husband’s dear embrace;
+Widowed is she—sunk in sorrow,
+Eric treads Valhalla’s halls!”
+
+
+And with this she walked from the stead, looking neither to the right
+nor to the left.
+
+“Let the maid be,” said Atli the Earl. “Grief fares best alone. But my
+heart is sore for Eric. It should go ill with that Baresark if I might
+get a grip of him.”
+
+“That I will have before summer is gone,” said Asmund, for the death of
+Eric seemed to him the worst of sorrows.
+
+Gudruda walked far, and, crossing Laxà by the stepping stones, climbed
+Stonefell till she came to the head of Golden Falls, for, like a
+stricken thing, she desired to be alone in her grief. But Swanhild saw
+her and followed, coming on her as she sat watching the water thunder
+down the mighty cleft. Presently Swanhild’s shadow fell athwart her,
+and Gudruda looked up.
+
+“What wouldst thou with me, Swanhild?” she asked. “Art thou come to
+mock my grief?”
+
+“Nay, foster-sister, for then I must mock my own. I come to mix my
+tears with thine. See, we loved Eric, thou and I, and Eric is dead. Let
+our hate be buried in his grave, whence neither may draw him back.”
+
+Gudruda looked upon her coldly, for nothing could stir her now.
+
+“Get thee gone,” she said. “Weep thine own tears and leave me to weep
+mine. Not with thee will I mourn Eric.”
+
+Swanhild frowned and bit her lip. “I will not come to thee with words
+of peace a second time, my rival,” she said. “Eric is dead, but my hate
+that was born of Eric’s love for thee lives on and grows, and its
+flower shall be thy death, Gudruda!”
+
+“Now that Brighteyes is dead, I would fain follow on his path: so, if
+thou listest, throw the gates wide,” Gudruda answered, and heeded her
+no more.
+
+Swanhild went, but not far. On the further side of a knoll of grass she
+flung herself to earth and grieved as her fierce heart might. She shed
+no tears, but sat silently, looking with empty eyes adown the past, and
+onward to the future, and finding no good therein.
+
+But Gudruda wept as the weight of her loss pressed in upon her—wept
+heavy silent tears and cried in her heart to Eric who was gone—cried to
+death to come upon her and bring her sleep or Eric.
+
+So she sat and so she grieved till, quite outworn with sorrow, sleep
+stole upon her and she dreamed. Gudruda dreamed that she was dead and
+that she sat nigh to the golden door that is in Odin’s house at
+Valhalla, by which the warriors pass and repass for ever. There she sat
+from age to age, listening to the thunder of ten thousand thousand
+tramping feet, and watching the fierce faces of the chosen as they
+marched out in armies to do battle in the meads. And as she sat, at
+length a one-eyed man, clad in gleaming garments, drew near and spoke
+to her. He was glorious to look on, and old, and she knew him for Odin
+the Allfather.
+
+“Whom seekest thou, maid Gudruda?” he asked, and the voice he spoke
+with was the voice of waters.
+
+“I seek Eric Brighteyes,” she answered, “who passed hither a thousand
+years ago, and for love of whom I am heart-broken.”
+
+“Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur’s son?” quoth Odin. “I know him well; no
+brisker warrior enters at Valhalla’s doors, and none shall do more
+service at the coming of grey wolf Fenrir.[*] Pass on and leave him to
+his glory and his God.”
+
+[*] The foe destined to bring destruction on the Norse gods.
+
+
+Then, in her dream, she wept sore, and prayed of Odin by the name of
+Freya that he would give Eric to her for a little space.
+
+“What wilt thou pay, then, maid Gudruda?” said Odin.
+
+“My life,” she answered.
+
+“Good,” he said; “for a night Eric shall be thine. Then die, and let
+thy death be his cause of death.” And Odin sang this song:
+
+“Now, corse-choosing Daughters, hearken
+To the dread Allfather’s word:
+When the gale of spears’ breath gathers
+Count not Eric midst the slain,
+Till Brighteyen once hath slumbered,
+Wedded, at Gudruda’s side—
+Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;
+Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!”
+
+
+And Gudruda awoke, but in her ears the mighty waters still seemed to
+speak with Odin’s voice, saying:
+
+“Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;
+Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!”
+
+
+She awoke from that fey sleep, and looked upwards, and lo! before her,
+with shattered shield and all besmeared with war’s red rain, stood
+gold-helmed Eric. There he stood, great and beautiful to see, and she
+looked on him trembling and amazed.
+
+“Is it indeed thou, Eric, or is it yet my dream?” she said.
+
+“I am no dream, surely,” said Eric; “but why lookest thou thus on me,
+Gudruda?”
+
+She rose slowly. “Methought,” she said, “methought that thou wast dead
+at the hand of Skallagrim.” And with a great cry she fell into his arms
+and lay there sobbing.
+
+It was a sweet sight thus to see Gudruda the Fair, her head of gold
+pillowed on Eric’s war-stained byrnie, her dark eyes afloat with tears
+of joy; but not so thought Swanhild, watching. She shook in jealous
+rage, then crept away, and hid herself where she could see no more,
+lest she should be smitten with madness.
+
+“Whence camest thou? ah! whence camest thou?” said Gudruda. “I thought
+thee dead, my love; but now I dreamed that I prayed Odin, and he spared
+thee to me for a little.”
+
+“Well, and that he hath, though hardly,” and he told her all that had
+happened, and how, as he rode with Skallagrim, who yet sat yonder on
+his horse, he caught sight of a woman seated on the grass and knew the
+colour of the cloak.
+
+Then Gudruda kissed him for very joy, and they were happy each with
+each—for of all things that are sweet on earth, there is nothing more
+sweet than this: to find him we loved, and thought dead and cold, alive
+and at our side.
+
+And so they talked and were very glad with the gladness of youth and
+love, till Eric said he must on to Middalhof before the light failed,
+for he could not come on horseback the way that Gudruda took, but must
+ride round the shoulder of the hill; and, moreover, he was spent with
+toil and hunger, and Skallagrim grew weary of waiting.
+
+“Go!” said Gudruda; “I will be there presently!”
+
+So he kissed her and went, and Swanhild saw the kiss and saw him go.
+
+“Well, lord,” said Skallagrim, “hast thou had thy fill of kissing?”
+
+“Not altogether,” answered Eric.
+
+They rode a while in silence.
+
+“I thought the maid seemed very fair!” said Skallagrim.
+
+“There are women less favoured, Skallagrim.”
+
+“Rich bait for mighty fish!” said Skallagrim. “This I tell thee: that,
+strive as thou mayest against thy fate, that maid will be thy bane and
+mine also.”
+
+“Things foredoomed will happen,” said Eric; “but if thou fearest a
+maid, the cure is easy: depart from my company.”
+
+“Who was the other?” asked the Baresark—“she who crept and peered,
+listened, then crept back again, hid her face in her hands, and talked
+with a grey wolf that came to her like a dog?”
+
+“That must have been Swanhild,” said Eric, “but I did not see her. Ever
+does she hide like a rat in the thatch, and as for the wolf, he must be
+her Familiar; for, like Groa, her mother, Swanhild plays much with
+witchcraft. Now I will away back to Gudruda, for my heart misdoubts me
+of this matter. Stay thou here till I come, Lambstail!” And Eric turns
+and gallops back to the head of Goldfoss.
+
+When Eric left her, Gudruda drew yet nearer to the edge of the mighty
+falls, and seated herself on their very brink. Her breast was full of
+joy, and there she sat and let the splendour of the night and the
+greatness of the rushing sounds sink into her heart. Yonder shone the
+setting sun, poised, as it were, on Westman’s distant peaks, and here
+sped the waters, and by that path Eric had come back to her. Yea, and
+there on Sheep-saddle was the road that he had trod down Goldfoss; and
+but now he had slain one Baresark and won another to be his thrall, and
+they two alone had smitten the company of Ospakar, and come thence with
+honour and but little harmed. Surely no such man as Eric had ever
+lived—none so fair and strong and tender; and she was right happy in
+his love! She stretched out her arms towards him whom but an hour gone
+she had thought dead, but who had lived to come back to her with
+honour, and blessed his beloved name, and laughed aloud in her
+joyousness of heart, calling:
+
+“_Eric! Eric!_”
+
+But Swanhild, creeping behind her, did not laugh. She heard Gudruda’s
+voice and guessed Gudruda’s gladness, and jealousy arose within her and
+rent her. Should this fair rival live to take her joy from her?
+
+“_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what sayest thou?_”
+
+See, now, if Gudruda were gone, if she rolled a corpse into those
+boiling waters, Eric might yet be hers; or, if he was not hers, yet
+Gudruda’s he could never be.
+
+“_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy counsel?_”
+
+Right on the brink of the great gulf sat Gudruda. One stroke and all
+would be ended. Eric had gone; there was no eye to see—none save the
+Grey Wolf’s; there was no tongue to tell the deed that might be done.
+Who could call her to account? The Gods! Who were the Gods? What were
+the Gods? Were they not dreams? There were no Gods save the Gods of
+Evil—the Gods she knew and communed with.
+
+“_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy rede?_”
+
+There sat Gudruda, laughing in the triumph of her joy, with the
+sunset-glow shining on her beauty, and there, behind her, Swanhild
+crept—crept like a fox upon his sleeping prey.
+
+Now she is there—
+
+“_I hear thee, Grey Wolf! Back to my breast, Grey Wolf!_”
+
+Surely Gudruda heard something? She half turned her head, then again
+fell to calling aloud to the waters:
+
+“Eric! beloved Eric!—ah! is there ever a light like the light of thine
+eyes—is there ever a joy like the joy of thy kiss?”
+
+Swanhild heard, and her springs of mercy froze. Hate and fury entered
+into her. She rose upon her knees and gathered up her strength:
+
+“Seek, then, thy joy in Goldfoss,” she cried aloud, and with all her
+force she thrust.
+
+Gudruda fell a fathom or more, then, with a cry, she clutched wildly at
+a little ledge of rock, and hung there, her feet resting on the
+shelving bank. Thirty fathoms down swirled and poured and rolled the
+waters of the Golden Falls. A fathom above, red in the red light of
+evening, lowered the pitiless face of Swanhild. Gudruda looked beneath
+her and saw. Pale with agony she looked up and saw, but she said
+naught.
+
+“Let go, my rival; let go!” cried Swanhild: “there is none to help
+thee, and none to tell thy tale. Let go, I say, and seek thy
+marriage-bed in Goldfoss!”
+
+But Gudruda clung on and gazed upwards with white face and piteous
+eyes.
+
+“What! art thou so fain of a moment’s life?” said Swanhild. “Then I
+will save thee from thyself, for it must be ill to suffer thus!” and
+she ran to seek a rock. Now she finds one and, staggering beneath its
+weight to the brink of the gulf, peers over. Still Gudruda hangs. Space
+yawns beneath her, the waters roar in her ears, the red sky glows
+above. She sees Swanhild come and shrieks aloud.
+
+Eric is there, though Swanhild hears him not, for the sound of his
+horse’s galloping feet is lost in the roar of waters. But that cry
+comes to his ears, he sees the poised rock, and all grows clear to him.
+He leaps from his horse, and even as she looses the stone, clutches
+Swanhild’s kirtle and hurls her back. The rock bounds sideways and
+presently is lost in the waters.
+
+Eric looks over. He sees Gudruda’s white face gleaming in the gloom.
+Down he leaps upon the ledge, though this is no easy thing.
+
+“Hold fast! I come; hold fast!” he cries.
+
+“I can no more,” gasps Gudruda, and one hand slips.
+
+Eric grasps the rock and, stretching downward, grips her wrist; just as
+her hold loosens he grips it, and she swings loose, her weight hanging
+on his arm.
+
+Now he must needs lift her up and that with one hand, for the ledge is
+narrow and he dare not loose his hold of the rock above. She swings
+over the great gulf and she is senseless as one dead. He gathers all
+his mighty strength and lifts. His feet slip a little, then catch, and
+once more Gudruda swings. The sweat bursts out upon his forehead and
+his blood drums through him. Now it must be, or not at all. Again he
+lifts and his muscles strain and crack, and she lies beside him on the
+narrow ledge!
+
+All is not yet done. The brink of the cleft is the height of a man
+above him. There he must lay her, for he may not leave her to find aid,
+lest she should wake and roll into the chasm. Loosing his hold of the
+cliff, he turns, facing the rock, and, bending over Gudruda, twists his
+hands in her kirtle below the breast and above the knee. Then once more
+Eric puts out his might and draws her up to the level of his breast,
+and rests. Again with all his force he lifts her above the crest of his
+helm and throws her forward, so that now she lies upon the brink of the
+great cliff. He almost falls backward at the effort, but, clutching the
+rock, he saves himself, and with a struggle gains her side, and lies
+there, panting like a wearied hound of chase.
+
+Of all trials of strength that ever were put upon his might, Eric was
+wont to say, this lifting of Gudruda was the greatest; for she was no
+light woman, and there was little to stand on and almost nothing to
+cling to.
+
+Presently Brighteyes rose and peered at Gudruda through the gloom. She
+still swooned. Then he gazed about him—but Swanhild, the witchgirl, was
+gone.
+
+Then he took Gudruda in his arms, and, leading the horse, stumbled
+through the darkness, calling on Skallagrim. The Baresark answered, and
+presently his large form was seen looming in the gloom.
+
+Eric told his tale in few words.
+
+“The ways of womankind are evil,” said Skallagrim; “but of all the
+deeds that I have known done at their hands, this is the worst. It had
+been well to hurl the wolf-witch from the cliff.”
+
+“Ay, well,” said Eric; “but that song must yet be sung.”
+
+Now dimly lighted of the rising moon by turns they bore Gudruda down
+the mountain side, till at length, utterly fordone, they saw the fires
+of Middalhof.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+HOW ASMUND SPOKE WITH SWANHILD
+
+
+Now as the days went, though Atli’s ship was bound for sea, she did not
+sail, and it came about that the Earl sank ever deeper in the toils of
+Swanhild. He called to mind many wise saws, but these availed him
+little: for when Love rises like the sun, wisdom melts like the mists.
+So at length it came to this, that on the day of Eric’s coming back,
+Atli went to Asmund the Priest, and asked him for the hand of Swanhild
+the Fatherless in marriage. Asmund heard and was glad, for he knew well
+that things went badly between Swanhild and Gudruda, and it seemed good
+to him that seas should be set between them. Nevertheless, he thought
+it honest to warn the Earl that Swanhild was apart from other women.
+
+“Thou dost great honour, earl, to my foster-daughter and my house,” he
+said. “Still, it behoves me to move gently in this matter. Swanhild is
+fair, and she shall not go hence a wife undowered. But I must tell thee
+this: that her ways are dark and secret, and strange and fiery are her
+moods, and I think that she will bring evil on the man who weds her.
+Now, I love thee, Atli, were it only for our youth’s sake, and thou art
+not altogether fit to mate with such a maid, for age has met thee on
+thy way. For, as thou wouldst say, youth draws to youth as the tide to
+the shore, and falls away from eld as the wave from the rock. Think,
+then: is it well that thou shouldst take her, Atli?”
+
+“I have thought much and overmuch,” answered the Earl, stroking his
+grey beard; “but ships old and new drive before a gale.”
+
+“Ay, Atli, and the new ship rides, where the old one founders.”
+
+“A true rede, a heavy rede, Asmund; yet I am minded to sail this sea,
+and, if it sink me—well, I have known fair weather! Great longing has
+got hold of me, and I think the maid looks gently on me, and that
+things may yet go well between us. I have many things to give such as
+women love. At the least, if thou givest me thy good word, I will risk
+it, Asmund: for the bold thrower sometimes wins the stake. Only I say
+this, that, if Swanhild is unwilling, let there be an end of my wooing,
+for I do not wish to take a bride who turns from my grey hairs.”
+
+Asmund said that it should be so, and they made an end of talking just
+as the light faded.
+
+Now Asmund went out seeking Swanhild, and presently he met her near the
+stead. He could not see her face, and that was well, for it was not
+good to look on, but her mien was wondrous wild.
+
+“Where hast thou been, Swanhild?” he asked.
+
+“Mourning Eric Brighteyes,” she made answer.
+
+“It is meeter for Gudruda to mourn over Eric than for thee, for her
+loss is heavy,” Asmund said sternly. “What hast thou to do with Eric?”
+
+“Little, or much; or all—read it as thou wilt, foster-father. Still,
+all wept for are not lost, nor all who are lost wept for.”
+
+“Little do I know of thy dark redes,” said Asmund. “Where is Gudruda
+now?”
+
+“High is she or low, sleeping or perchance awakened: naught reck I. She
+also mourned for Eric, and we went nigh to mingling tears—near together
+were brown curls and golden,” and she laughed aloud.
+
+“Thou art surely fey, thou evil girl!” said Asmund.
+
+“Ay, foster-father, fey: yet is this but the first of my feydom. Here
+starts the road that I must travel, and my feet shall be red ere the
+journey’s done.”
+
+“Leave thy dark talk,” said Asmund, “for to me it is as the wind’s
+song, and listen: a good thing has befallen thee—ay, good beyond thy
+deserving.”
+
+“Is it so? Well, I stand greatly in need of good. What is thy tidings,
+foster-father?”
+
+“This: Atli the Earl asks thee in marriage, and he is a mighty man,
+well honoured in his own land, and set higher, moreover, than I had
+looked for thee.”
+
+“Ay,” answered Swanhild, “set like the snow above the fells, set in the
+years that long are dead. Nay, foster-father, this white-bearded dotard
+is no mate for me. What! shall I mix my fire with his frost, my
+breathing youth with the creeping palsy of his age? Never! If Swanhild
+weds she weds not so, for it is better to go maiden to the grave than
+thus to shrink and wither at the touch of eld. Now is Atli’s wooing
+sped, and there’s an end.”
+
+Asmund heard and grew wroth, for the matter seemed strange to him; nor
+are maidens wont thus to put aside the word of those set over them.
+
+“There is no end,” he said; “I will not be answered thus by a girl who
+lives upon my bounty. It is my rede that thou weddest Atli, or else
+thou goest hence. I have loved thee, and for that love’s sake I have
+borne thy wickedness, thy dark secret ways, and evil words; but I will
+be crossed no more by thee, Swanhild.”
+
+“Thou wouldst drive me hence with Groa my mother, though perchance thou
+hast yet more reason to hold me dear, foster-father. Fear not: I will
+go—perhaps further than thou thinkest,” and once more Swanhild laughed,
+and passed from him into the darkness.
+
+But Asmund stood looking after her. “Truly,” he said in his heart, “ill
+deeds are arrows that pierce him who shot them. I have sowed evilly,
+and now I reap the harvest. What means she with her talk of Gudruda and
+the rest?”
+
+Now as he thought, he saw men and horses draw near, and one man, whose
+helm gleamed in the moonlight, bore something in his arms.
+
+“Who passes?” he called.
+
+“Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda, Asmund’s
+daughter,” answered a voice; “who art thou?”
+
+Then Asmund the Priest sprang forward, most glad at heart, for he never
+thought to see Eric again.
+
+“Welcome, and thrice welcome art thou, Eric,” he cried; “for, know, we
+deemed thee dead.”
+
+“I have lately gone near to death, lord,” said Eric, for he knew the
+voice; “but I am hale and whole, though somewhat weary.”
+
+“What has come to pass, then?” asked Asmund, “and why holdest thou
+Gudruda in thy arms? Is the maid dead?”
+
+“Nay, she does but swoon. See, even now she stirs,” and as he spake
+Gudruda awoke, shuddering, and with a little cry threw her arms about
+the neck of Eric.
+
+He set her down and comforted her, then once more turned to Asmund:
+
+“Three things have come about,” he said. “First, I have slain one
+Baresark, and won another to be my thrall, and for him I crave thy
+peace, for he has served me well. Next, we two were set upon by Ospakar
+Blacktooth and his fellowship, and, fighting for our hands, have
+wounded Ospakar, slain Mord his son, and six other men of his
+following.”
+
+“That is good news and bad,” said Asmund, “since Ospakar will ask a
+great weregild[*] for these men, and thou wilt be outlawed, Eric.”
+
+[*] The penalty for manslaying.
+
+
+“That may happen, lord. There is time enough to think of it. Now there
+are other tidings to tell. Coming to the head of Goldfoss I found
+Gudruda, my betrothed, mourning my death, and spoke with her.
+Afterwards I left her, and presently returned again, to see her hanging
+over the gulf, and Swanhild hurling rocks upon her to crush her.”
+
+“These are tidings in truth,” said Asmund—“such tidings as my heart
+feared! Is this true, Gudruda?”
+
+“It is true, my father,” answered Gudruda, trembling. “As I sat on the
+brink of Goldfoss, Swanhild crept behind me and thrust me into the
+gulf. There I clung above the waters, and she brought a rock to hurl
+upon me, when suddenly I saw Eric’s face, and after that my mind left
+me and I can tell no more.”
+
+Now Asmund grew as one mad. He plucked at his beard and stamped on the
+ground. “Maid though she be,” he cried, “yet shall Swanhild’s back be
+broken on the Stone of Doom for a witch and a murderess, and her body
+hurled into the pool of faithless women, and the earth will be well rid
+of her!”
+
+Now Gudruda looked up and smiled: “It would be ill to wreak such a
+vengeance on her, father,” she said; “and this would also bring the
+greatest shame on thee, and all our house. I am saved, by the mercy of
+the Gods and the might of Eric’s arm, and this is my counsel: that
+nothing be told of this tale, but that Swanhild be sent away where she
+can harm us no more.”
+
+“She must be sent to the grave, then,” said Asmund, and fell to
+thinking. Presently he spoke again: “Bid yon man fall back, I would
+speak with you twain,” and Skallagrim went grumbling.
+
+“Hearken now, Eric and Gudruda: only an hour ago hath Atli the Good
+asked Swanhild of me in marriage. But now I met Swanhild here, and her
+mien was wild. Still, I spoke of the matter to her, and she would have
+none of it. Now, this is my counsel: that choice be given to Swanhild,
+either that she go hence Atli’s wife, or take her trial in the
+Doom-ring.”
+
+“That will be bad for the Earl then,” said Eric. “Methinks he is too
+good a man to be played on thus.”
+
+“_Bairn first, then friend_,” answered Asmund.
+
+“Now I will tell thee something that, till this hour, I have hidden
+from all, for it is my shame. This Swanhild is my daughter, and
+therefore I have loved her and put away her evil deeds, and she is
+half-sister to thee, Gudruda. See, then, how sore is my straight, who
+must avenge daughter upon daughter.”
+
+“Knows thy son Björn of this?” asked Eric.
+
+“None knew it till this hour, except Groa and I.”
+
+“Yet I have feared it long, father,” said Gudruda, “and therefore I
+have also borne with Swanhild, though she hates me much and has striven
+hard to draw my betrothed from me. Now thou canst only take one
+counsel, and it is: to give choice to Swanhild of these two things,
+though it is unworthy that Atli should be deceived, and at the best
+little good can come of it.”
+
+“Yet it must be done, for honour is often slain of heavy need,” said
+Asmund. “But we must first swear this Baresark thrall of thine, though
+little faith lives in Baresark’s breast.”
+
+Now Eric called to Skallagrim and charged him strictly that he should
+tell nothing of Swanhild, and of the wolf that he saw by her, and of
+how Gudruda was found hanging over the gulf.
+
+“Fear not,” growled the Baresark, “my tongue is now my master’s. What
+is it to me if women do their wickedness one on another? Let them work
+magic, hate and slay by stealth, so shall evil be lessened in the
+world.”
+
+“Peace!” said Eric; “if anything of this passes thy lips thou art no
+longer a thrall of mine, and I give thee up to the men of thy quarter.”
+
+“And I cleave that wolf’s head of thine down to thy hawk’s eyes; but,
+otherwise, I give thee peace, and will hold thee from harm,
+wood-dweller as thou art,” said Asmund.
+
+The Baresark laughed: “My hands will hold my head against ten such
+mannikins as thou art, Priest. There was never but one man who might
+overcome me in fair fight and there he stands, and his bidding is my
+law. So waste no words and make not niddering threats against greater
+folk,” and he slouched back to his horse.
+
+“A mighty man and a rough,” said Asmund, looking after him; “I like his
+looks little.”
+
+“Natheless a strong in battle,” quoth Eric; “had he not been at my back
+some six hours gone, by now the ravens had torn out these eyes of mine.
+Therefore, for my sake, bear with him.”
+
+Asmund said it should be so, and then they passed on to the stead.
+
+Here Eric stripped off his harness, washed, and bound up his wounds.
+Then, followed by Skallagrim, axe in hand, he came into the hall as men
+made ready to sit at meat. Now the tale of the mighty deeds that he had
+done, except that of the saving of Gudruda, had gone abroad, and as
+Brighteyes came all men rose and with one voice shouted till the roof
+of the great hall rocked:
+
+“_Welcome, Eric Brighteyes, thou glory of the south!_”
+
+Only Björn, Asmund’s son, bit his hand, and did not shout, for he hated
+Eric because of the fame that he had won.
+
+Brighteyes stood still till the clamour died, then said:
+
+“Much noise for little deeds, brethren. It is true that I overthrew the
+Mosfell Baresarks. See, here is one,” and he turned to Skallagrim; “I
+strangled him in my arms on Mosfell’s brink, and that was something of
+a deed. Then he swore fealty to me, and we are blood-brethren now, and
+therefore I ask peace for him, comrades—even from those whom he has
+wronged or whose kin he has slain. I know this, that when thereafter we
+stood back to back and met the company of Ospakar Blacktooth, who came
+to slay us—ay, and Asmund also, and bear away Gudruda to be his wife—he
+warred right gallantly, till seven of their band lay stiff on
+Horse-Head Heights, overthrown of us, and among them Mord, Blacktooth’s
+son; and Ospakar himself went thence sore smitten of this Skallagrim.
+Therefore, for my sake, do no harm to this man who was Baresark, but
+now is my thrall; and, moreover, I beg the aid and friendship of all
+men of this quarter in those suits that will be laid against me at the
+Althing for these slayings, which I hereby give out as done by my hand,
+and by the hand of Skallagrim Lambstail, the Baresark.”
+
+At these words all men shouted again; but Atli the Earl sprang from the
+high seat where Asmund had placed him, and, coming to Eric, kissed him,
+and, drawing a gold chain from his neck, flung it about the neck of
+Eric, crying:
+
+“Thou art a glorious man, Eric Brighteyes. I thought the world had no
+more of such a breed. Listen to my bidding: come thou to the earldom in
+Orkneys and be a son to me, and I will give thee all good gifts, and,
+when I die, thou shalt sit in my seat after me.”
+
+But Eric thought of Swanhild, who must go from Iceland as wife to Atli,
+and answered:
+
+“Thou doest me great honour, Earl, but this may not be. Where the fir
+is planted, there it must grow and fall. Iceland I love, and I will
+stay here among my own people till I am driven away.”
+
+“That may well happen, then,” said Atli, “for be sure Ospakar and his
+kin will not let the matter of these slayings rest, and I think that it
+will not avail thee much that thou smotest for thine own hand. Then,
+come thou and be my man.”
+
+“Where the Norns lead there I must follow,” said Eric, and sat down to
+meat. Skallagrim sat down also at the side-bench; but men shrank from
+him, and he glowered on them in answer.
+
+Presently Gudruda entered, and she seemed pale and faint.
+
+When he had done eating, Eric drew Gudruda on to his knee, and she sat
+there, resting her golden head upon his breast. But Swanhild did not
+come into the hall, though ever Earl Atli sought her dark face and
+lovely eyes of blue, and he wondered greatly how his wooing had sped.
+Still, at this time he spoke no more of it to Asmund.
+
+Now Skallagrim drank much ale, and glared about him fiercely; for he
+had this fault, that at times he was drunken. In front of him were two
+thralls of Asmund’s; they were brothers, and large-made men, and they
+watched Asmund’s sheep upon the fells in winter. These two also grew
+drunk and jeered at Skallagrim, asking him what atonement he would make
+for those ewes of Asmund’s that he had stolen last Yule, and how it
+came to pass that he, a Baresark, had been overthrown of an unarmed
+man.
+
+Skallagrim bore their gibes for a space as he drank on, but suddenly he
+rose and rushed at them, and, seizing a man’s throat in either hand,
+thrust them to the ground beneath him and nearly choked them there.
+
+Then Eric ran down the hall, and, putting out his strength, tore the
+Baresark from them.
+
+“This then is thy peacefulness, thou wolf!” Eric cried. “Thou art
+drunk!”
+
+“Ay,” growled Skallagrim, “ale is many a man’s doom.”
+
+“Have a care that it is not thine and mine, then!” said Eric. “Go,
+sleep; and know that, if I see thee thus once more, I see thee not
+again.”
+
+But after this men jeered no more at Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric’s
+thrall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+HOW SWANHILD BID FAREWELL TO ERIC
+
+
+Now all this while Asmund sat deep in thought; but when, at length, men
+were sunk in sleep, he took a candle of fat and passed to the shut bed
+where Swanhild slept alone. She lay on her bed, and her curling hair
+was all about her. She was awake, for the light gleamed in her blue
+eyes, and on a naked knife that was on the bed beside her, half hidden
+by her hair.
+
+“What wouldst thou, foster-father?” she asked, rising in the couch.
+Asmund closed the curtains, then looked at her sternly and spoke in a
+low voice:
+
+“Thou art fair to be so vile a thing, Swanhild,” he said. “Who now
+would have dreamed that heart of thine could talk with goblins and with
+were-wolves—that those eyes of thine could bear to look on murder and
+those white hands find strength to do the sin?”
+
+She held up her shapely arms and, looking on them, laughed. “Would that
+they had been fashioned in a stronger mould,” she said. “May they
+wither in their woman’s weakness! else had the deed been done outright.
+Now my crime is as heavy upon me and nothing gained by it. Say what
+fate for me, foster-father—the Stone of Doom and the pool where
+faithless women lie? Ah, then might Gudruda laugh indeed, and I will
+not live to hear that laugh. See,” and she gripped the dagger at her
+side: “along this bright edge runs the path to peace and freedom, and,
+if need be, I will tread it.”
+
+“Be silent,” said Asmund. “This Gudruda, my daughter, whom thou wouldst
+have foully done to death, is thine own sister, and it is she who,
+pitying thee, hath pleaded for thy life.”
+
+“I will naught of her pity who have no pity,” she answered; “and this I
+say to thee who art my father: shame be on thee who hast not dared to
+own thy child!”
+
+“Hadst thou not been my child, Swanhild, and had I not loved thee
+secretly as my child, be sure of this, I had long since driven thee
+hence; for my eyes have been open to much that I have not seemed to
+see. But at length thy wickedness has overcome my love, and I will see
+thy face no more. Listen: none have heard of this shameful deed of
+thine save those who saw it, and their tongues are sealed. Now I give
+thee choice: wed Atli and go, or stand in the Doom-ring and take thy
+fate.”
+
+“Have I not said, father, while death may be sought otherwise, that I
+will never do this last? Nor will I do the first. I am not all of the
+tame breed of you Iceland folk—other and quicker blood runs in my
+veins; nor will I be sold in marriage to a dotard as a mare is sold at
+a market. I have answered.”
+
+“Fool! think again, for I go not back upon my word. Wed Atli or die—by
+thy own hand, if thou wilt—there I will not gainsay thee; or, if thou
+fearest this, then anon in the Doom-ring.”
+
+Now Swanhild covered her eyes with her hands and shook the long hair
+about her face, and she seemed wondrous fair to Asmund the Priest who
+watched. And as she sat thus, it came into her mind that marriage is
+not the end of a young maid’s life—that old husbands have been known to
+die, and that she might rule this Atli and his earldom and become a
+rich and honoured woman, setting her sails in such fashion that when
+the wind turned it would fill them. Otherwise she must die—ay, die
+shamed and leave Gudruda with her love.
+
+Suddenly she slipped from the bed to the floor of the chamber, and,
+clasping the knees of Asmund, looked up through the meshes of her hair,
+while tears streamed from her beautiful eyes:
+
+“I have sinned,” she sobbed—“I have sinned greatly against thee and my
+sister. Hearken: I was mad with love of Eric, whom from a child I have
+turned to, and Gudruda is fairer than I and she took him from me. Most
+of all was I mad this night when I wrought the deed of shame, for ill
+things counselled me—things that I did not call; and oh, I thank the
+Gods—if there are Gods—that Gudruda died not at my hand. See now,
+father, I put this evil from me and tear Eric from my heart,” and she
+made as though she rent her bosom—“I will wed Atli, and be a good
+housewife to him, and I crave but this of Gudruda: that she forgive me
+her wrong; for it was not done of my will, but of my madness, and of
+the driving of those whom my mother taught me to know.”
+
+Asmund listened and the springs of his love thawed within him. “Now
+thou dost take good counsel,” he said, “and of this be sure, that so
+long as thou art in that mood none shall harm thee; and for Gudruda,
+she is the most gentle of women, and it may well be that she will put
+away thy sin. So weep no more, and have no more dealings with thy
+Finnish witchcraft, but sleep; and to-morrow I will bear thy word to
+Atli, for his ship is bound and thou must swiftly be made a wife.”
+
+He went out, bearing the light with him; but Swanhild rose from the
+ground and sat on the edge of the bed, staring into the darkness and
+shuddering from time to time.
+
+“I shall soon be made his wife,” she murmured, “who would be but one
+man’s wife—and methinks I shall soon be made a widow also. Thou wilt
+have me, dotard—take me and thy fate! Well, well; better to wed an Earl
+than to be shamed and stretched across the Doom-stone. Oh, weak arms
+that failed me at my need, no more will I put trust in you! When next I
+wound, it shall be with the tongue; when next I strive to slay, it
+shall be by another’s hand. Curses on thee, thou ill counseller of
+darkness, who didst betray me at the last! Is it for this that I
+worshipped thee and swore the oath?”
+
+The morning came, and at the first light Asmund sought the Earl. His
+heart was heavy because of the guile that his tongue must practise, and
+his face was dark as a winter dawn.
+
+“What news, Asmund?” asked Atli. “_Early tidings are bad tidings_, so
+runs the saw, and thy looks give weight to it.”
+
+“Not altogether bad, Earl. Swanhild gives herself to thee.”
+
+“Of her own will, Asmund?”
+
+“Ay, of her own will. But I have warned thee of her temper.”
+
+“Her temper! Little hangs to a maid’s temper. Once a wife and it will
+melt in softness like the snow when summer comes. These are glad
+tidings, comrade, and methinks I grow young again beneath the breath of
+them. Why art thou so glum then?”
+
+“There is something that must yet be told of Swanhild,” said Asmund.
+“She is called the Fatherless, but, if thou wilt have the truth, why
+here it is for thee—she is my daughter, born out of wedlock, and I know
+not how that will please thee.”
+
+Atli laughed aloud, and his bright eyes shone in his wrinkled face. “It
+pleases me well, Asmund, for then the maid is sprung from a sound
+stock. The name of the Priest of Middalhof is famous far south of
+Iceland; and never that Iceland bred a comelier girl. Is that all?”
+
+“One more thing, Earl. This I charge thee: watch thy wife, and hold her
+back from witchcraft and from dealings with evil things and trolls of
+darkness. She is of Finnish blood and the women of the Finns are much
+given to such wicked work.”
+
+“I set little store by witchwork, goblins and their kin,” said Atli. “I
+doubt me much of their power, and I shall soon wean Swanhild from such
+ways, if indeed she practise them.”
+
+Then they fell to talking of Swanhild’s dower, and that was not small.
+Afterwards Asmund sought Eric and Gudruda, and told them what had come
+to pass, and they were glad at the news, though they grieved for Atli
+the Earl. And when Swanhild met Gudruda, she came to her humbly, and
+humbly kissed her hand, and with tears craved pardon of her evil doing,
+saying that she had been mad; nor did Gudruda withhold it, for of all
+women she was the gentlest and most forgiving. But to Eric, Swanhild
+said nothing.
+
+The wedding-feast must be held on the third day from this, for Atli
+would sail on that same day, since his people wearied of waiting and
+his ship might lie bound no longer. Blithe was Atli the Earl, and
+Swanhild was all changed, for now she seemed the gentlest of maids,
+and, as befitted one about to be made a wife, moved through the house
+with soft words and downcast eyes. But Skallagrim, watching her,
+bethought him of the grey wolf that he had seen by Goldfoss, and this
+seemed not well to him.
+
+“It would be bad now,” he said to Eric, as they rode to Coldback, “to
+stand in yon old earl’s shoes. This woman’s weather has changed too
+fast, and after such a calm there’ll come a storm indeed. I am now
+minded of Thorunna, for she went just so the day before she gave
+herself to Ospakar, and me to shame and bonds.”
+
+“Talk not of the raven till you hear his croak,” said Eric.
+
+“He is on the wing, lord,” answered Skallagrim.
+
+Now Eric came to Coldback in the Marsh, and Saevuna his mother and
+Unna, Thorod’s daughter, the betrothed of Asmund, were glad to welcome
+him; for the tidings of his mighty deeds and of the overthrow of
+Ospakar and the slaying of Mord were noised far and wide. But at
+Skallagrim Lambstail they looked askance. Still, when they heard of
+those things that he had wrought on Horse-Head Heights, they welcomed
+him for his deed’s sake.
+
+Eric sat two nights at Coldback, and on the second day Saevuna his
+mother and Unna rode thence with their servants to the wedding-feast of
+Swanhild the Fatherless. But Eric stopped at Coldback that night,
+saying that he would be at Middalhof within two hours of sunrise, for
+he must talk with a shepherd who came from the fells.
+
+Saevuna and her company came to Middalhof and was asked, first by
+Gudruda, then by Swanhild, why Brighteyes tarried. She answered that he
+would be there early on the morrow. Next morning, before it was light,
+Eric girded on Whitefire, took horse and rode from Coldback alone, for
+he would not bring Skallagrim, fearing lest he should get drunk at the
+feast and shed some man’s blood.
+
+It was Swanhild’s wedding-day; but she greeted it with little
+lightsomeness of heart, and her eyes knew no sleep that night, though
+they were heavy with tears.
+
+At the first light she rose, and, gliding from the house, walked
+through the heavy dew down the path by which Eric must draw near, for
+she desired to speak with him. Gudruda also rose a while after, though
+she did not know this, and followed on the same path, for she would
+greet her lover at his coming.
+
+Now three furlongs or more from the stead stood a vetch stack, and
+Swanhild waited on the further side of this stack. Presently she heard
+a sound of singing come from behind the shoulder of the fell and of the
+tramp of a horse’s hoofs. Then she saw the golden wings of Eric’s helm
+all ablaze with the sunlight as he rode merrily along, and great
+bitterness laid hold of her that Eric could be of such a joyous mood on
+the day when she who loved him must be made the wife of another man.
+
+Presently he was before her, and Swanhild stepped from the shadow of
+the stack and laid her hand upon his horse’s bridle.
+
+“Eric,” she said humbly and with bowed head, “Gudruda sleeps yet. Canst
+thou, then, find time to hearken to my words?”
+
+He frowned and said: “Methinks, Swanhild, it would be better if thou
+gavest thy words to him who is thy lord.”
+
+She let the bridle-rein drop from her hands. “I am answered,” she said;
+“ride on.”
+
+Now pity stirred in Eric’s heart, for Swanhild’s mien was most heavy,
+and he leaped down from his horse. “Nay,” he said, “speak on, if thou
+hast anything to tell me.”
+
+“I have this to tell thee, Eric; that now, before we part for ever, I
+am come to ask thy pardon for my ill-doing—ay, and to wish all joy to
+thee and thy fair love,” and she sobbed and choked.
+
+“Speak no more of it, Swanhild,” he said, “but let thy good deeds cover
+up the ill, which are not small; so thou shalt be happy.”
+
+She looked at him strangely, and her face was white with pain.
+
+“How then are we so differently fashioned that thou, Eric, canst prate
+to me of happiness when my heart is racked with grief? Oh, Eric, I
+blame thee not, for thou hast not wrought this evil on me willingly;
+but I say this: that my heart is dead, as I would that I were dead. See
+those flowers: they smell sweet—for me they have no odour. Look on the
+light leaping from Coldback to the sea, from the sea to Westman Isles,
+and from the Westman crown of rocks far into the wide heavens above. It
+is beautiful, is it not? Yet I tell thee, Eric, that now to my eyes
+howling winter darkness is every whit as fair. Joy is dead within me,
+music’s but a jangled madness in my ears, food hath no savour on my
+tongue, my youth is sped ere my dawn is day. Nothing is left to me,
+Eric, save this fair body that thou didst scorn, and the dreams which I
+may gather from my hours of scanty sleep, and such shame as befalls a
+loveless bride.”
+
+“Speak not so, Swanhild,” he said, and clasped her by the hand, for,
+though he loathed her wickedness, being soft-hearted and but young, it
+grieved him to hear her words and see the anguish of her mind. For it
+is so with men, that they are easily moved by the pleading of a fair
+woman who loves them, even though they love her not.
+
+“Yea, I will speak out all my mind before I seal it up for ever. See,
+Eric, this is my state and thou hast set this crown of sorrow on my
+brows: and thou comest singing down the fell, and I go weeping o’er the
+sea! I am not all so ill at heart. It was love of thee that drove me
+down to sin, as love of thee might otherwise have lifted me to
+holiness. But, loving thee as thou seest, this day I wed a dotard, and
+go his chattel and his bride across the sea, and leave thee singing on
+the fell, and by thy side her who is my foe. Thou hast done great
+deeds, Brighteyes, and still greater shalt thou do; yet but as echoes
+they shall reach my ears. Thou wilt be to me as one dead, for it is
+Gudruda’s to bind the byrnie on thy breast when thou goest forth to
+war, and hers to loose the winged helm from thy brow when thou
+returnest, battle-worn and conquering.”
+
+Now Swanhild ceased, and choked with grief; then spoke again:
+
+“So now farewell; doubtless I weary thee, and—Gudruda waits. Nay, look
+not on my foolish tears: they are the heritage of woman, of naught else
+is she sure! While I live, Eric, morn by morn the thought of thee shall
+come to wake me as the sun wakes yon snowy peak, and night by night thy
+memory shall pass as at eve he passes from the valleys, but to dawn
+again in dreams. For, Eric, ‘tis thee I wed to-day—at heart I am thy
+bride, thine and thine only; and when shalt thou find a wife who holds
+thee so dear as that Swanhild whom once thou knewest? So now farewell!
+Yes, this time thou shalt kiss away my tears; then let them stream for
+ever. Thus, Eric! and thus! and thus! do I take farewell of thee.”
+
+And now she clung about his neck, gazing on him with great dewy eyes
+till things grew strange and dim, and he must kiss her if only for her
+love and tender beauty’s sake. And so he kissed, and it chanced that as
+they clung thus, Gudruda, passing by this path to give her betrothed
+greeting, came upon them and stood astonished. Then she turned and,
+putting her hands to her head, fled back swiftly to the stead, and
+waited there, great anger burning in her heart; for Gudruda had this
+fault, that she was very jealous.
+
+Now Eric and Swanhild did not see her, and presently they parted, and
+Swanhild wiped her eyes and glided thence.
+
+As she drew near the stead she found Gudruda watching.
+
+“Where hast thou been, Swanhild?” she said.
+
+“To bid farewell to Brighteyes, Gudruda.”
+
+“Then thou art foolish, for doubtless he thrust thee from him.”
+
+“Nay, Gudruda, he drew me to him. Hearken, I say, thou sister. Vex me
+not, for I go my ways and thou goest thine. Thou art strong and fair,
+and hitherto thou hast overcome me. But I am also fair, and, if I find
+space to strike in, I also have a show of strength. Pray thou that I
+find not space, Gudruda. Now is Eric thine. Perchance one day he may be
+mine. It lies in the lap of the Norns.”
+
+“Fair words from Atli’s bride,” mocked Gudruda.
+
+“Ay, Atli’s bride, but never Atli’s love!” said Swanhild, and swept on.
+
+A while after Eric rode up. He was shamefaced and vexed at heart,
+because he had yielded thus to Swanhild’s beauty, and been melted by
+her tender words and kissed her. Then he saw Gudruda, and at the sight
+of her all thought of Swanhild passed from him, for he loved Gudruda
+and her alone. He leapt down from his horse and ran to her. But, drawn
+to her full height, she stood with dark flashing eyes and fair face set
+in anger.
+
+Still, he would have greeted her loverwise; but she lifted her hand and
+waved him back, and fear took hold of him.
+
+“What now, Gudruda?” he asked, faltering.
+
+“What now, Eric?” she answered, faltering not. “Hast seen Swanhild?”
+
+“Yea, I have seen Swanhild. She came to bid farewell to me. What of
+it?”
+
+“What of it? Why ‘_thus! and thus! and thus!_’ didst thou bid farewell
+to Atli’s bride. Ay, ‘thus and thus,’ with clinging lips and twined
+arms. Warm and soft was thy farewell kiss to her who would have slain
+me, Brighteyes!”
+
+“Gudruda, thou speakest truth, though how thou sawest I know not. Think
+no ill of it, and scourge me not with words, for, sooth to say, I was
+melted by her grief and the music of her talk.”
+
+“It is shame to thee so to speak of her whom but now thou heldest in
+thine arms. By the grief and the music of the talk of her who would
+have murdered me thou wast melted into kisses, Eric!—for I saw it with
+these eyes. Knowest thou what I am minded to say to thee? It is this:
+‘Go hence and see me no more;’ for I have little wish to cleave to such
+a feather-man, to one so blown about by the first breath of woman’s
+tempting.”
+
+“Yet, methinks, Gudruda, I have withstood some such winds. I tell thee
+that, hadst thou been in my place, thyself hadst yielded to Swanhild
+and kissed her in farewell, for she was more than woman in that hour.”
+
+“Nay, Eric, I am no weak man to be led astray thus. Yet she is more
+than woman—troll is she also, that I know; but less than man art thou,
+Eric, thus to fall before her who hates me. Time may come when she
+shall woo thee after a stronger sort, and what wilt thou say to her
+then, thou who art so ready with thy kisses?”
+
+“I will withstand her, Gudruda, for I love thee only, and this is well
+known to thee.”
+
+“Truly I know thou lovest me, Eric; but tell me of what worth is this
+love of man that eyes of beauty and tongue of craft may so readily
+bewray? I doubt me of thee, Eric!”
+
+“Nay, doubt me not, Gudruda. I love thee alone, but I grew soft as wax
+beneath her pleading. My heart consented not, yet I did consent. I have
+no more to say.”
+
+Now Gudruda looked on him long and steadfastly. “Thy plight is sorry,
+Eric,” she said, “and this once I forgive thee. Look to it that thou
+givest me no more cause to doubt thee, for then I shall remember how
+thou didst bid farewell to Swanhild.”
+
+“I will give none,” he answered, and would have embraced her; but this
+she would not suffer then, nor for many days after, for she was angry
+with him. But with Swanhild she was still more angry, though she said
+nothing of it. That Swanhild had tried to murder her, Gudruda could
+forgive, for there she had failed; but not that she had won Eric to
+kiss her, for in this she had succeeded well.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+HOW ERIC WAS OUTLAWED AND SAILED A-VIKING
+
+
+Now the marriage-feast went on, and Swanhild, draped in white and girt
+about with gold, sat by Atli’s side upon the high seat. He was fain of
+her and drew her to him, but she looked at him with cold calm eyes in
+which hate lurked. The feast was done, and all the company rode to the
+sea strand, where the Earl’s ship lay at anchor. They came there, and
+Swanhild kissed Asmund, and talked a while with Groa, her mother, and
+bade farewell to all men. But she bade no farewell to Eric and to
+Gudruda.
+
+“Why sayest thou no word to these two?” asked Atli, her husband.
+
+“For this reason, Earl,” she answered, “because ere long we three shall
+meet again; but I shall see Asmund, my father, and Groa, my mother, no
+more.”
+
+“That is an ill saying, wife,” said Atli. “Methinks thou dost foretell
+their doom.”
+
+“Mayhap! And now I will add to my redes, for I foretell _thy_ doom
+also: it is not yet, but it draws on.”
+
+Then Atli bethought him of many wise saws, but spoke no more, for it
+seemed to him this was a strange bride that he had wed.
+
+They hauled the anchor home, shook out the great sail, and passed away
+into the evening night. But while land could still be seen, Swanhild
+stood near the helm, gazing with her blue eyes upon the lessening
+coast. Then she passed to the hold, and shut herself in alone, and
+there she stayed, saying that she was sick, till at length, after a
+fair voyage of twenty days, they made the Orkney Islands.
+
+But all this pleased Atli wondrous ill, yet he dared not cross her
+mood.
+
+Now, in Iceland the time drew on when men must ride to the Althing, and
+notice was given to Eric Brighteyes of many suits that were laid
+against him, in that he had brought Mord, Ospakar’s son, to his death,
+dealing him a brain or a body or a marrow wound, and others of that
+company. But no suits were laid against Skallagrim, for he was already
+outlaw. Therefore he must go in hiding, for men were out to slay him,
+and this he did unwillingly, at Eric’s bidding. Asmund took up Eric’s
+case, for he was the most famous of all lawmen in that day, and when
+thirteen full weeks of summer were done, they two rode to the Thing,
+and with them a great company of men of their quarter.
+
+Now, men go up to the Lögberg, and there came Ospakar, though he was
+not yet healed of his wound, and all his company, and laid their suits
+against Eric by the mouth of Gizur the Lawman, Ospakar’s son. The
+pleadings were long and cunning on either side; but the end of it was
+that Ospakar brought it about, by the help of his friends—and of these
+he had many—that Eric must go into outlawry for three years. But no
+weregild was to be paid to Ospakar and his men for those who had been
+killed, and no atonement for the great wound that Skallagrim Lambstail
+gave him, or for the death of Mord, his son, inasmuch as Eric fought
+for his own hand to save his life.
+
+The party of Ospakar were ill pleased at this finding, and Eric was not
+over glad, for it was little to his mind that he should sail a-warring
+across the seas, while Gudruda sat at home in Iceland. Still, there was
+no help for the matter.
+
+Now Ospakar spoke with his company, and the end of it was that he
+called on them to take their weapons and avenge themselves by their own
+might. Asmund and Eric, seeing this, mustered their army of freemen and
+thralls. There were one hundred and five of them, all stout men; but
+Ospakar Blacktooth’s band numbered a hundred and thirty-three, and they
+stood with their backs to the Raven’s Rift.
+
+“Now I would that Skallagrim was here to guard my back,” said Eric,
+“for before this fight is done few will be left standing to tell its
+tale.”
+
+“It is a sad thing,” said Asmund, “that so many men must die because
+some men are now dead.”
+
+“A very sad thing,” said Eric, and took this counsel. He stalked alone
+towards the ranks of Ospakar and called in a loud voice, saying:
+
+“It would be grievous that so many warriors should fall in such a
+matter. Now hearken, you company of Ospakar Blacktooth! If there be any
+two among you who will dare to match their might against my single
+sword in holmgang, here I, Eric Brighteyes, stand and wait them. It is
+better that one man, or perchance three men, should fall, than that
+anon so many should roll in the dust. What say ye?”
+
+Now all those who watched called out that this was a good offer and a
+manly one, though it might turn out ill for Eric; but Ospakar answered:
+
+“Were I but well of my wound I alone would cut that golden comb of
+thine, thou braggart; as it is, be sure that two shall be found.”
+
+“Who is the braggart?” answered Eric. “He who twice has learned the
+weight of this arm and yet boasts his strength, or I who stand craving
+that two should come against me? Get thee hence, Ospakar; get thee home
+and bid Thorunna, thy leman, whom thou didst beguile from that Ounound
+who now is named Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark, nurse thee whole of
+the wound her husband gave thee. Be sure we shall yet stand face to
+face, and that combs shall be cut then, combs black or golden. Nurse
+thee! nurse thee! cease thy prating—get thee home, and bid Thorunna
+nurse thee; but first name thou the two who shall stand against me in
+holmgang in Oxarà’s stream.”
+
+Folk laughed aloud while Eric mocked, but Ospakar gnashed his teeth
+with rage. Still, he named the two mightiest men in his company,
+bidding them take up their swords against Brighteyes. This, indeed,
+they were loth to do; still, because of the shame that they must get if
+they hung back, and for fear of the wrath of Ospakar, they made ready
+to obey his bidding.
+
+Then all men passed down to the bank of Oxarà, and, on the other side,
+people came from their booths and sat upon the slope of All Man’s Raft,
+for it was a new thing that one man should fight two in holmgang.
+
+Now Eric crossed to the island where holmgangs are fought to this day,
+and after him came the two chosen, flourishing their swords bravely,
+and taking counsel how one should rush at his face, while the other
+passed behind his back and spitted him, as woodfolk spit a lamb. Eric
+drew Whitefire and leaned on it, waiting for the word, and all the
+women held him to be wondrous fair as, clad in his byrnie and his
+golden helm, he leaned thus on Whitefire. Presently the word was given,
+and Eric, standing not to defend himself as they deemed he surely
+would, whirled Whitefire round his helm and rushed headlong on his
+foes, shield aloft.
+
+The great carles saw the light that played on Whitefire’s edge and the
+other light that burned in Eric’s eyes, and terror got hold of them.
+Now he was almost come, and Whitefire sprang aloft like a tongue of
+flame. Then they stayed no more, but, running one this way and one
+that, cast themselves into the flood and swam for the river-edge. Now
+from either bank rose up a roar of laughter, that grew and grew, till
+it echoed against the lava rifts and scared the ravens from their
+nests.
+
+Eric, too, stopped his charge and laughed aloud; then walked back to
+where Asmund stood, unarmed, to second him in the holmgang.
+
+“I can get little honour from such champions as these,” he said.
+
+“Nay,” answered Asmund, “thou hast got the greatest honour, and they,
+and Ospakar, such shame as may not be wiped out.”
+
+Now when Blacktooth saw what had come to pass, he well-nigh choked, and
+fell from his horse in fury. Still, he could find no stomach for
+fighting, but, mustering his company, rode straightway from the Thing
+home again to Swinefell. But he caused those two whom he had put up to
+do battle with Eric to be set upon with staves and driven from his
+following, and the end of it was that they might stay no more in
+Iceland, but took ship and sailed south, and now they are out of the
+story.
+
+On the next day, Asmund, and with him Eric and all their men, rode back
+to Middalhof. Gudruda greeted Eric well, and for the first time since
+Swanhild went away she kissed him. Moreover, she wept bitterly when she
+learned that he must go into outlawry, while she must bide at home.
+
+“How shall the days pass by, Eric?” she said, “when thou art far, and I
+know not where thou art, nor how it goes with thee, nor if thou livest
+or art already dead?”
+
+“In sooth I cannot say, sweet,” he answered; “but of this I am sure
+that, wheresoever I am, yet more weary shall be my hours.”
+
+“Three years,” she went on—“three long, cold years, and no sight of
+thee, and perchance no tidings from thee, till mayhap I learn that thou
+art in that land whence tidings cannot come. Oh, it would be better to
+die than to part thus.”
+
+“Well I wot that it is better to die than to live, and better never to
+have been born than to live and die,” answered Eric sadly. “Here, it
+would seem, is nothing but hate and strife, weariness and bitter envy
+to fret away our strength, and at last, if we come so far, sorrowful
+age and death, and thereafter we know not what. Little of good do we
+find to our hands, and much of evil; nor know I for what ill-doing
+these burdens are laid upon us. Yet must we needs breathe such an air
+as is blown about us, Gudruda, clasping at this happiness which is
+given, though we may not hold it. At the worst, the game will soon be
+played, and others will stand where we have stood, and strive as we
+have striven, and fail as we have failed, and so on, till man has
+worked out his doom, and the Gods cease from their wrath, or Ragnarrök
+come upon them, and they too are lost in the jaws of grey wolf Fenrir.”
+
+“Men may win one good thing, and that is fame, Eric.”
+
+“Nay, Gudruda, what is it to win fame? Is it not to raise up foes, as
+it were, from the very soil, who, made with secret hate, seek to stab
+us in the back? Is it not to lose peace, and toil on from height to
+height only to be hurled down at last? Happy, then, is the man whom
+fame flies from, for hers is a deadly gift.”
+
+“Yet there is one thing left that thou hast not numbered, Eric, and it
+is love—for love is to our life what the sun is to the world, and,
+though it seems to set in death, yet it may rise again. We are happy,
+then, in our love, for there are many who live their lives and do not
+find it.”
+
+So these two, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair, talked sadly, for
+their hearts were heavy, and on them lay the shadow of sorrows that
+were to come.
+
+“Say, sweet,” said Eric at length, “wilt thou that I go not into
+banishment? Then I must fall into outlawry, and my life will be in the
+hands of him who may take it; yet I think that my foes will find it
+hard to come by while my strength remains, and at the worst I do but
+turn to meet the fate that dogs me.”
+
+“Nay, that I will not suffer, Brighteyes. Now we will go to my father,
+and he shall give thee his dragon of war—she is a good vessel—and thou
+shalt man her with the briskest men of our quarter: for there are many
+who will be glad to fare abroad with thee, Eric. Soon she shall be
+bound and thou shalt sail at once, Eric: for the sooner thou art gone
+the sooner the three years will be sped, and thou shalt come back to
+me. But, oh! that I might go with thee.”
+
+Now Gudruda and Eric went to Asmund and spoke of this matter.
+
+“I desired,” he answered, “that thou, Eric, shouldst bide here in
+Iceland till after harvest, for it is then that I would take Unna,
+Thorod’s daughter, to wife, and it was meet that thou shouldst sit at
+the wedding-feast and give her to me.”
+
+“Nay, father, let Eric go,” said Gudruda, “for well begun is, surely,
+half done. He must remain three years in outlawry: add thou no day to
+them, for, if he stays here for long, I know this: that I shall find no
+heart to let him go, and, if go he must, then I shall go with him.”
+
+“That may never be,” said Asmund; “thou art too young and fair to sail
+a-viking down the sea-path. Hearken, Eric: I give thee the good ship,
+and now we will go about to find stout men to man her.”
+
+“That is a good gift,” said Eric; and afterwards they rode to the
+seashore and overhauled the vessel as she lay in her shed. She was a
+great dragon of war, long and slender, and standing high at stem and
+prow. She was fashioned of oak, all bolted together with iron, and at
+her prow was a gilded dragon most wonderfully carved.
+
+Eric looked on her and his eyes brightened.
+
+“Here rests a wave-horse that shall bear a viking well,” he said.
+
+“Ay,” answered Asmund, “of all the things I own this ship is the very
+best. She is so swift that none may catch her, and she can almost go
+about in her own length. That gale must be heavy that shall fill her,
+with thee to steer; yet I give her to thee freely, Eric, and thou shalt
+do great deeds with this my gift, and, if things go well, she shall
+come back to this shore at last, and thou in her.”
+
+“Now I will name this war-gift with a new name,” said Eric. “‘Gudruda,’
+I name her: for, as Gudruda here is the fairest of all women, so is
+this the fairest of all war-dragons.”
+
+“So be it,” said Asmund.
+
+Then they rode back to Middalhof, and now Eric Brighteyes let it be
+known that he needed men to sail the seas with him. Nor did he ask in
+vain, for, when it was told that Eric went a-viking, so great was his
+fame grown, that many a stout yeoman and many a great-limbed carle
+reached down sword and shield and came up to Middalhof to put their
+hands in his. For mate, he took a certain man named Hall of Lithdale,
+and this because Björn asked it, for Hall was a friend to Björn, and he
+had, moreover, great skill in all manner of seamanship, and had often
+sailed the Northern Seas—ay, and round England to the coast of France.
+
+But when Gudruda saw this man, she did not like him, because of his
+sharp face, uncanny eyes, and smooth tongue, and she prayed Eric to
+have nothing to do with him.
+
+“It is too late now to talk of that,” said Eric. “Hall is a
+well-skilled man, and, for the rest, fear not: I will watch him.”
+
+“Then evil will come of it,” said Gudruda.
+
+Skallagrim also liked Hall little, nor did Hall love Skallagrim and his
+great axe.
+
+At length all were gathered; they were fifty in number and it is said
+that no such band of men ever took ship from Iceland.
+
+Now the great dragon was bound and her faring goods were aboard of her,
+for Eric must sail on the morrow, if the wind should be fair. All day
+long he stalked to and fro among his men; he would trust nothing to
+others, and there was no sword or shield in his company but he himself
+had proved it. All day long he stalked, and at his back went Skallagrim
+Lambstail, axe on shoulder, for he would never leave Eric if he had his
+will, and they were a mighty pair.
+
+At length all was ready and men sat down to the faring-feast in the
+hall at Middalhof, and that was a great feast. Eric’s folk were
+gathered on the side-benches, and by the high seat at Asmund’s side sat
+Brighteyes, and near to him were Björn, Asmund’s son, Gudruda, Unna,
+Asmund’s betrothed, and Saevuna, Eric’s mother. For this had been
+settled between Asmund and Eric, that his mother Saevuna, who was now
+somewhat sunk in age, should flit from Coldback and come with Unna to
+dwell at Middalhof. But Eric set a trusty grieve to dwell at Coldback
+and mind the farm.
+
+When the faring-toasts had been drunk, Eric spoke to Asmund and said:
+“I fear one thing, lord, and it is that when I am gone Ospakar will
+trouble thee. Now, I pray you all to beware of Blacktooth, for, though
+the hound is whipped, he can still bite, and it seems that he has not
+yet put Gudruda from his mind.”
+
+Now Björn had sat silently, thinking much and drinking more, for he
+loved Eric less than ever on this day when he saw how all men did him
+honour and mourned his going, and his father not the least of them.
+
+“Methinks it is thou, Eric,” he said, “whom Ospakar hates, and thee on
+whom he would work his vengeance, and that for no light cause.”
+
+“When bad fortune sits in thy neighbour’s house, she knocks upon thy
+door, Björn. Gudruda, thy sister, is my betrothed, and thou art a party
+to this feud,” said Eric. “Therefore it becomes thee better to hold her
+honour and thy own against this Northlander, than to gird at me for
+that in which I have no blame.”
+
+Björn grew wroth at these words. “Prate not to me,” he said. “Thou art
+an upstart who wouldst teach their duty to thy betters—ay, puffed up
+with light-won fame, like a feather on the breeze. But I say this: the
+breeze shall fail, and thou shalt fall upon the goose’s back once more.
+And I say this also, that, had I my will, Gudruda should wed Ospakar:
+for he is a mighty chief, and not a long-legged carle, outlawed for
+man-slaying.”
+
+Now Eric sprang from his seat and laid hand upon the hilt of Whitefire,
+while men murmured in the hall, for they held this an ill speech of
+Björn’s.
+
+“In thee, it seems, I have no friend,” said Eric, “and hadst thou been
+any other man than Gudruda’s brother, forsooth thou shouldst answer for
+thy mocking words. This I tell thee, Björn, that, wert thou twice her
+brother, if thou plottest with Ospakar when I am gone, thou shalt pay
+dearly for it when I come back again. I know thy heart well: it is
+cunning and greedy of gain, and filled with envy as a cask with ale;
+yet, if thou lovest to feel it beating in thy breast, strive not to
+work me mischief and to put Gudruda from me.”
+
+Now Björn sprang up also and drew his sword, for he was white with
+rage; but Asmund his father cried, “Peace!” in a great voice.
+
+“Peace!” he said. “Be seated, Eric, and take no heed of this foolish
+talk. And for thee, Björn, art thou the Priest of Middalhof, and
+Gudruda’s father, or am I? It has pleased me to betroth Brighteyes to
+Gudruda, and it pleased me not to betroth her to Ospakar, and that is
+enough for thee. For the rest, Ospakar would have slain Eric, not he
+Ospakar, therefore Eric’s hands are clean. Though thou art my son, I
+say this, that, if thou workest ill to Eric when he is over sea, thou
+shalt rightly learn the weight of Whitefire: it is a niddering deed to
+plot against an absent man.”
+
+Eric sat down, but Björn strode scowling from the hall, and, taking
+horse, rode south; nor did he and Eric meet again till three years had
+come and gone, and then they met but once.
+
+“Maggots shall be bred of that fly, nor shall they lack flesh to feed
+on,” said Skallagrim in Eric’s ears as he watched Björn pass. But Eric
+bade him be silent, and turned to Gudruda.
+
+“Look not so sad, sweet,” he said, “for hasty words rise like the foam
+on mead and pass as soon. It vexes Björn that thy father has given me
+the good ship: but his anger will soon pass, or, at the very worst, I
+fear him not while thou art true to me.”
+
+“Then thou hast little to fear, Eric,” she answered. “Look now on thy
+hair: it grows long as a woman’s, and that is ill, for at sea the salt
+will hang to it. Say, shall I cut it for thee?”
+
+“Yes, Gudruda.”
+
+So she cut his yellow locks, and one of them lay upon her heart for
+many a day.
+
+“Now thou shalt swear to me,” she whispered in his ear, “that no other
+man or woman shall cut thy hair till thou comest back to me and I clip
+it again.”
+
+“That I swear, and readily,” he answered. “I will go long-haired like a
+girl for thy sake, Gudruda.”
+
+He spoke low, but Koll the Half-witted, Groa’s thrall, heard this oath
+and kept it in his mind.
+
+Very early on the morrow all men rose, and, taking horse, rode once
+more to the seaside, till they came to that shed where the Gudruda lay.
+
+Then, when the tide was high, Eric’s company took hold of the black
+ship’s thwarts, and at his word dragged her with might and main. She
+ran down the greased blocks and sped on quivering to the sea, and as
+her dragon-prow dipped in the water people cheered aloud.
+
+Now Eric must bid farewell to all, and this he did with a brave heart
+till at the last he came to Saevuna, his mother, and Gudruda, his dear
+love.
+
+“Farewell, son,” said the old dame; “I have little hope that these eyes
+shall look again upon that bonny face of thine, yet I am well paid for
+my birth-pains, for few have borne such a man as thou. Think of me at
+times, for without me thou hadst never been. Be not led astray of
+women, nor lead them astray, or ill shall overtake thee. Be not
+quarrelsome because of thy great might, for there is a stronger than
+the strongest. Spare a fallen foe, and take not a poor man’s goods or a
+brave man’s sword; but, when thou smitest, smite home. So shalt thou
+win honour, and, at the last, peace, that is more than honour.”
+
+Eric thanked her for her counsel, and kissed her, then turned to
+Gudruda, who stood, white and still, plucking at her golden girdle.
+
+“What can I say to thee?” he asked.
+
+“Say nothing, but go,” she answered: “go before I weep.”
+
+“Weep not, Gudruda, or thou wilt unman me. Say, thou wilt think on me?”
+
+“Ay, Eric, by day and by night.”
+
+“And thou wilt be true to me?”
+
+“Ay, till death and after, for so long as thou cleavest to me I will
+cleave to thee. I will first die rather than betray thee. But of thee I
+am not so sure. Perchance thou mayest find Swanhild in thy journeyings
+and crave more kisses of her?”
+
+“Anger me not, Gudruda! thou knowest well that I hate Swanhild more
+than any other woman. When I kiss her again, then thou mayst wed
+Ospakar.”
+
+“Speak not so rashly, Eric,” she said, and as she spoke Skallagrim drew
+near.
+
+“If thou lingerest here, lord, the tide will serve us little round
+Westmans,” he said, eyeing Gudruda as it were with jealousy.
+
+“I come,” said Eric. “Gudruda, fare thee well!”
+
+She kissed him and clung to him, but did not answer, for she could not
+speak.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+HOW HALL THE MATE CUT THE GRAPNEL CHAIN
+
+
+Gudruda bent her head like a drooping flower, and presently sank to
+earth, for her knees would bear her weight no more; but Eric marched to
+the lip of the sea, his head held high and laughing merrily to hide his
+pain of heart. Here stood Asmund, who gripped him by both hands, and
+kissed him on the brow, bidding him good luck.
+
+“I know not whether we shall meet again,” he said; “but, if my hours be
+sped before thou returnest, this I charge thee: that thou mindest
+Gudruda well, for she is the sweetest of all women that I have known,
+and I hold her the most dear.”
+
+“Fear not for that, lord,” said Eric; “and I pray thee this, that, if I
+come back no more, as well may happen, do not force Gudruda into
+marriage, if she wills it not, and I think she will have little leaning
+that way. And I say this also: do not count overmuch on Björn thy son,
+for he has no loyal heart; and beware of Groa, who was thy housekeeper,
+for she loves not that Unna should take her place and more. And now I
+thank thee for many good things, and farewell.”
+
+“Farewell, my son,” said Asmund, “for in this hour thou seemest as a
+son to me.”
+
+Eric turned to enter the sea and wade to the vessel, but Skallagrim
+caught him in his arms as though he were but a child, and, wading into
+the surf till the water covered his waistbelt, bore him to the vessel
+and lifted him up so that Eric reached the bulwarks with his hands.
+
+Then they loosed the cable and got out the oars and soon were dancing
+over the sea. Presently the breeze caught them, and they set the great
+sail and sped away like a gull towards the Westman Isles. But Gudruda
+sat on the shore watching till, at length, the light faded from Eric’s
+golden helm as he stood upon the poop, and the world grew dark to her.
+
+Now Ospakar Blacktooth had news of this sailing and took counsel of
+Gizur his son, and the end of it was that they made ready two great
+ships, dragons of war, and, placing sixty fighting men in each of them,
+sailed round the Iceland coast to the Westmans and waited there to
+waylay Eric. They had spies on the land, and from them they learned of
+Brighteyes’ coming, and sailed out to meet him in the channel between
+the greater and the lesser islands, where they knew that he must pass.
+
+Now it drew towards evening when Eric rowed down this channel, for the
+wind had fallen and he desired to be clear at sea. Presently, as the
+Gudruda came near to the mouth of the channel, that had high cliffs on
+either hand, Eric saw two long dragons of war—for their bulwarks were
+shield-hung—glide from the cover of the island and take their station
+side by side between him and the open sea.
+
+“Now here are vikings,” said Eric to Skallagrim.
+
+“Now here is Ospakar Blacktooth,” answered Skallagrim, “for well I know
+that raven banner of his. This is a good voyage, for we must seek but a
+little while before we come to fighting.”
+
+Eric bade the men lay on their oars, and spoke:
+
+“Before us is Ospakar Blacktooth in two great dragons, and he is here
+to cut us off. Now two choices are left to us: one is to bout ship and
+run before him, and the other to row on and give him battle. What say
+ye, comrades?”
+
+Hall of Lithdale, the mate, answered, saying:
+
+“Let us go back, lest we die. The odds are too great, Eric.”
+
+But a man among the crew cried out, “When thou didst go on holmgang at
+Thingvalla, Eric, Ospakar’s two chosen champions stood before thee, yet
+at Whitefire’s flash they skurried through the water like startled
+ducks. It was an omen, for so shall his great ships fly when we swoop
+on them.” Then the others shouted:
+
+“Ay, ay! Never let it be said that we fled from Ospakar—fie on thy
+woman’s talk, Hall!”
+
+“Then we are all of one mind, save Hall only,” said Eric. “Let us put
+Ospakar to the proof.” And while men shouted “Yea!” he turned to speak
+with Skallagrim. The Baresark was gone, for, wasting no breath in
+words, already he was fixing the long shields on the bulwark rail.
+
+The men busked on their harness and made them fit for fight, and, when
+all was ready, Eric mounted the poop, and with him Skallagrim, and bade
+the rowers give way. The Gudruda leapt forward and rushed on towards
+Ospakar’s ships. Now they saw that these were bound together with a
+cable and yet they must go betwixt them.
+
+Eric ran forward to the prow, and with him Skallagrim, and called aloud
+to a great man who stood upon the ship to starboard, wearing a black
+helm with raven’s wings:
+
+“Who art thou that bars the sea against me?”
+
+“I am named Ospakar Blacktooth,” answered the great man.
+
+“And what must we lose at thy hands, Ospakar?”
+
+“But one thing—your lives!” answered Blacktooth.
+
+“Thrice have we stood face to face, Ospakar,” said Eric, “and it seems
+that hitherto thou hast won no great glory. Now it shall be proved if
+thy luck has bettered.”
+
+“Art yet healed, lord, of that prick in the shoulder which thou camest
+by on Horse-Head Heights?” roared Skallagrim.
+
+For answer, Ospakar seized a spear and hurled it straight at Eric, and
+it had been his death had he not caught it in his hand as it flew. Then
+he cast it back, and that so mightily that it sped right through the
+shield of Ospakar and was the bane of a man who stood beside him.
+
+“A gift for a gift!” laughed Eric. On rushed the Gudruda, but now the
+cable was strained six fathoms from her bow that held together the
+ships of Ospakar and it was too strong for breaking. Eric looked and
+saw. Then he drew Whitefire, and while all men wondered, leaped over
+the prow of the ship and, clasping the golden dragon’s head with his
+arm, set his feet upon its claws and waited. On sped the ship and
+spears flew thick and fast about him, but there Brighteyes hung. Now
+the Gudruda’s bow caught the great rope and strained it taut and, as it
+rose beneath her weight, Eric smote swift and strong with Whitefire and
+clove it in two, so that the severed ends fell with a splash into the
+quiet water.
+
+Eric sprang back to deck while stones and spears hissed about him.
+
+“That was well done, lord,” said Skallagrim; “now we shall be snugly
+berthed.”
+
+“In oars and out grappling-irons,” shouted Eric.
+
+Up rose the rowers, and their war-gear rattled as they rose. They drew
+in the long oars, and not before it was time, for now the Gudruda
+forced her way between the two dragons of Ospakar and lay with her bow
+to their sterns. Then with a shout Eric’s men cast the irons and soon
+the ships were locked fast and the fight began. The spears flew thick,
+and on either side some got their death before them. Then the men of
+that vessel, named the Raven, which was to larboard of the Gudruda,
+made ready to board. On they came with a rush, and were driven back,
+though hardly, for they were many, and those who stood against them
+few. Again they came, scrambling over the bulwarks, and this time a
+score of them leapt aboard. Eric turned from the fight against the
+dragon of Ospakar and saw it. Then, with Skallagrim, he rushed to meet
+the boarders as they swarmed along the hold, and naught might they
+withstand the axe and sword.
+
+Through and through them swept the mighty pair, now Whitefire flashed,
+and now the great axe fell, and at every stroke a man lay dead or
+wounded. Six of the boarders turned to fly, but just then the
+grappling-iron broke and their ship drifted out with the tide towards
+the open sea, and presently no man of that twenty was left alive.
+
+Now the men of the ship of Ospakar and of the Gudruda pressed each
+other hard. Thrice did Ospakar strive to come aboard and thrice he was
+pushed back. Eric was ever where he was most needed, and with him
+Skallagrim, for these two threw themselves from side to side, and were
+now here and now there, so that it seemed as though there were not one
+golden helm and one black, but rather four on board the Gudruda.
+
+Eric looked and saw that the other ship was drawing round, though
+somewhat slowly, to come alongside of them once more.
+
+“Now we must make an end of Ospakar, else our hands will be overfull,”
+he said, and therewith sprang up upon the bulwarks and after him many
+men. Once they were driven back, but came on again, and now they thrust
+all Ospakar’s men before them and passed up his ship on both boards. By
+the mast stood Ospakar and with him Gizur his son, and Eric strove to
+come to him. But many men were between them, and he could not do this.
+
+Presently, while the fight yet went on hotly and men fell fast,
+Brighteyes felt the dragon of Ospakar strike, and, looking, saw that
+they had drifted with the send of the tide on to the rocks of the
+island. There was a great hole in the hull amidships and the water
+rushed in fast.
+
+“Back! men; back!” he cried, and all his folk that were unhurt, ran,
+and leapt on board the Gudruda; but Ospakar and his men sprang into the
+sea and swam for the shore. Then Skallagrim cut loose the
+grappling-irons with his axe, and that not too soon, for, scarcely had
+they pushed clear with great toil when the long warship slipped from
+the rock and foundered, taking many dead and wounded men with her.
+
+Now Ospakar and some of his people stood safe upon the rocks, and Eric
+called to him in mockery, bidding him come aboard the Gudruda.
+
+Ospakar made no answer, but stood gnawing his hand, while the water ran
+from him. Only Gizur his son cursed them aloud.
+
+Eric was greatly minded to follow them, and land and fight them there;
+but he might not do this, because of the rocks and of the other dragon,
+that hung about them, fearing to come on and yet not willing to go
+back.
+
+“We will have her, at the least,” said Eric, and bade the rowers get
+out their oars.
+
+Now, when the men on board the other ship saw the Gudruda drawing on,
+they took to their oars at once and rowed swiftly for the sea, and at
+this a great roar of laughter went down Eric’s ship.
+
+“They shall not slip from us so easily,” said Eric; “give way,
+comrades, and after them.”
+
+But the men were much wearied with fighting, and the decks were all
+cumbered with dead and wounded, so that by the time that the Gudruda
+had put about, and come to the mouth of the waterway, Ospakar’s vessel
+had shaken out her sails and caught the wind, that now blew strong off
+shore, and sped away six furlongs or more from Eric’s prow.
+
+“Now we shall see how the Gudruda sails,” said Eric, and they spread
+their canvas and gave chase.
+
+Then Eric bade men clear the decks of the dead, and tend the wounded.
+He had lost seven men slain outright, and three were wounded, one to
+death. But on board the ship there lay of Ospakar’s force twenty and
+three dead men.
+
+When all were cast into the sea, men ate and rested.
+
+“We have not done so badly,” said Eric to Skallagrim.
+
+“We shall do better yet,” said Skallagrim to Eric; “rather had I seen
+Ospakar’s head lying in the scuppers than those of all his carles; for
+he may get more men, but never another head!”
+
+Now the wind freshened till by midnight it blew strongly. The mate Hall
+came to Eric and said:
+
+“The Gudruda dips her nose deep in Ran’s cup. Say, Eric, shall we
+shorten sail?”
+
+“Nay,” answered Eric, “keep her full and bail. Where yonder Raven
+flies, my Sea-stag must follow,” and he pointed to the warship that
+rode the waves before them.
+
+After midnight clouds came up, with rain, and hid the face of the
+night-sun and the ship they sought. The wind blew ever harder, till at
+length, when the rain had passed and the clouds lifted, there was much
+water in the hold and the bailers could hardly stand at their work.
+
+Men murmured, and Hall the mate murmured most of all; but still Eric
+held on, for there, not two furlongs ahead of them, rode the dragon of
+Ospakar. But now, being afraid of the wind and sea, she had lowered her
+sail somewhat, and made as though she would put about and run for
+Iceland.
+
+“That she may not do,” called Eric to Skallagrim, “if once she rolls
+side on to those seas Ran has her, for she must fill and sink.”
+
+“So they hold, lord,” answered Skallagrim; “see, once more she runs!”
+
+“Ay, but we run faster—she is outsailed. Up, men, up: for presently the
+fight begins.”
+
+“It is bad to join battle in such a sea,” quoth Hall.
+
+“Good or bad,” growled Skallagrim, “do thou thy lord’s bidding,” and he
+half lifted up his axe.
+
+The mate said no more, for he misdoubted him of Skallagrim Lambstail
+and his axe.
+
+Then men made ready for the fray as best they might, and stood, sword
+in hand and drenched with foam, clinging to the bulwarks of the Gudruda
+as she wallowed through the seas.
+
+Eric went aft to the helm and seized it. Now but a length ahead
+Ospakar’s ship laboured on beneath her small sail, but the Gudruda
+rushed towards her with all canvas set and at every leap plunged her
+golden dragon beneath the surf and shook the water from her foredeck.
+
+“Make ready the grapnel!” shouted Eric through the storm. Skallagrim
+seized the iron and stood by. Now the Gudruda rushed alongside the
+Raven, and Eric steered so skilfully that there was a fathom space, and
+no more, between the ships.
+
+Skallagrim cast the iron well and truly, so that it hooked and held. On
+sped the Gudruda and the cable tautened—now her stern kissed the bow of
+Ospakar’s ship, as though she was towing her, and thus for a space they
+travelled through the seas.
+
+Eric’s folk shouted and strove to cast spears; but they did this but
+ill, because of the rocking of the vessel. As for Ospakar’s men, they
+clung to their bulwarks and did nothing, for all the heart was out of
+them between fear of Eric and terror of the sea. Eric called to a man
+to hold the helm, and Skallagrim crept aft to where he stood.
+
+“What counsel shall we take now?” said Eric, and as he spoke a sea
+broke over them—for the gale was strong.
+
+“Board them and make an end,” answered Skallagrim.
+
+“Rough work; still, we will try it,” said Eric, “for we may not lie
+thus for long, and I am loath to leave them.”
+
+Then Eric called for men to follow him, and many answered, creeping as
+best they might to where he stood.
+
+“Thou art mad, Eric,” said Hall the mate; “cut loose and let us drive,
+else we shall both founder, and that is a poor tale to tell.”
+
+Eric took no heed, but, watching his chance, leapt on to the bows of
+the Raven, and after him leapt Skallagrim. Even as he did so, a great
+sea came and swept past and over them, so that half the ship was hid
+for foam. Now, Hall the mate stood near to the grapnel cable, and,
+fearing lest they should sink, out of the cowardice of his heart, he
+let his axe fall upon the chain, and severed it so swiftly that no man
+saw him, except Skallagrim only. Forward sprang the Gudruda, freed from
+her burden, and rushed away before the wind, leaving Eric and
+Skallagrim alone upon the Raven’s prow.
+
+“Now we are in an evil plight,” said Eric, “the cable has parted!”
+
+“Ay,” answered Skallagrim, “and that losel Hall hath parted it! I saw
+his axe fall.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+HOW ERIC DREAMED A DREAM
+
+
+Now, when the men of Ospakar, who were gathered on the poop of the
+Raven, saw what had come about, they shouted aloud and made ready to
+slay the pair. But Eric and Skallagrim clambered to the mast and got
+their backs against it, and swiftly made themselves fast with a rope,
+so that they might not fall with the rolling of the ship. Then the
+people of Ospakar came on to cut them down.
+
+But this was no easy task, for they might scarcely stand, and they
+could not shoot with the bow. Moreover, Eric and Skallagrim, being
+bound to the mast, had the use of both hands and were minded to die
+hard. Therefore Ospakar’s folks got but one thing by their onslaught,
+and that was death, for three of their number fell beneath the long
+sweep of Whitefire, and one bowed before the axe of Skallagrim. Then
+they drew back and strove to throw spears at these two, but they flew
+wide because of the rolling of the vessel. One spear struck the mast
+near the head of Skallagrim. He drew it out, and, waiting till the ship
+steadied herself in the trough of the sea, hurled it at a knot of
+Ospakar’s thralls, and a man got his death from it. After that they
+threw no more spears.
+
+Thence once more the crew came on with swords and axes, but
+faint-heartedly, and the end of it was that they lost some more men
+dead and wounded and fell back again.
+
+Skallagrim mocked at them with bitter words, and one of them, made mad
+by his scoffing, cast a heavy ballast-stone at him. It fell upon his
+shoulder and numbed him.
+
+“Now I am unmeet for fight, lord,” said Skallagrim, “for my right arm
+is dead and I can scarcely hold my axe.”
+
+“That is ill, then,” said Eric, “for we have little help, except from
+each other, and I, too, am well-nigh spent. Well, we have done a great
+deed and now it is time to rest.”
+
+“My left arm is yet whole, lord, and I can make shift for a while with
+it. Cut loose the cord before they bait us to death, and let us rush
+upon these wolves and fall fighting.”
+
+“A good counsel,” said Eric, “and a quick end; but stay a while: what
+plan have they now?”
+
+Now the men of Ospakar, having little heart left in them for such work
+as this, had taken thought together.
+
+“We have got great hurt, and little honour,” said the mate. “There are
+but nineteen of us left alive, and that is scarcely enough to work the
+ship, and it seems that we shall be fewer before Eric Brighteyes and
+Skallagrim Lambstail lie quiet by yonder mast. They are mighty men,
+indeed, and it would be better, methinks, to deal with them by craft,
+rather than by force.”
+
+The sailors said that this was a good word, for they were weary of the
+sight of Whitefire as he flamed on high and the sound of the axe of
+Skallagrim as it crashed through helm and byrnie; and as fear crept in
+valour fled out.
+
+“This is my rede, then,” said the mate: “that we go to them and give
+them peace, and lay them in bonds, swearing that we will put them
+ashore when we are come back to Iceland. But when we have them fast, as
+they sleep at night, we will creep on them and hurl them into the sea,
+and afterwards we will say that we slew them fighting.”
+
+“A shameful deed!” said a man.
+
+“Then go thou up against them,” answered the mate. “If we slay them
+not, then shall this tale be told against us throughout Iceland: that a
+ship’s company were worsted by two men, and we may not live beneath
+that dishonour.”
+
+The man held his peace, and the mate, laying down his arms, crept
+forward alone, towards the mast, just as Eric and Skallagrim were about
+to cut themselves loose and rush on them.
+
+“What wouldest thou?” shouted Eric. “Has it gone so well with you with
+arms that ye are minded to come up against us bearing none?”
+
+“It has gone ill, Eric,” said the mate, “for ye twain are too mighty
+for us. We have lost many men, and we shall lose more ere ye are laid
+low. Therefore we make you this offer: that you lay down your weapons
+and suffer yourselves to be bound till such time as we touch land,
+where we will set you ashore, and give you your arms again. Meanwhile,
+we will deal with you in friendly fashion, giving you of the best we
+have; nor will we set foot any suit against you for those of our number
+whom ye two have slain.”
+
+“Wherefore then should we be bound?” said Eric.
+
+“For this reason only: that we dare not leave you free within our ship.
+Now choose, and, if ye will, take peace, which we swear by all the Gods
+we will keep towards you, and, if ye will not, then we will bear you
+down with beams and sails and stones, and slay you.”
+
+“What thinkest thou, Skallagrim?” said Eric beneath his breath.
+
+“I think that I find little faith in yon carle’s face,” answered
+Skallagrim. “Still, I am unfit to fight, and thy strength is spent, so
+it seems that we must lie low if we would rise again. They can scarcely
+be so base as to do murder having handselled peace to us.”
+
+“I am not so sure of that,” said Eric; “still, starving beggars must
+eat bones. Hearken thou: we take the terms, trusting to your honour;
+and I say this: that ye shall get shame and death if ye depart from
+them to harm us.”
+
+“Have no fear, lord,” said the mate, “we are true men.”
+
+“That we shall look to your deeds to learn,” said Eric, laying down his
+sword and shield.
+
+Skallagrim did likewise, though with no good grace. Then men came with
+strong cords and bound them fast hand and foot, handling them
+fearsomely as men handle a live bear in a net. Then they led them
+forward to the prow.
+
+As they went Eric looked up. Yonder, twenty furlongs and more away,
+sailed the Gudruda.
+
+“This is good fellowship,” said Skallagrim, “thus to leave us in the
+trap.”
+
+“Nay,” answered Eric. “They cannot put about in such a sea, and
+doubtless also they think us dead. Nevertheless, if ever it comes about
+that Hall and I stand face to face again, there will be need for me to
+think of gentleness.”
+
+“I shall think little thereon,” growled Skallagrim.
+
+Now they were come to the prow, and there was a half deck under which
+they were set, out of reach of the wind and water. In the deck was a
+stout iron ring, and the men made them fast with ropes to it, so that
+they might move but little, and they set their helms and weapons behind
+them in such fashion that they could not come at them. Then they flung
+cloaks about them, and brought them food and drink, of which they stood
+much in need, and treated them well in every way. But for all this
+Skallagrim trusted them no more.
+
+“We are new-hooked, lord,” he said, “and they give us line. Presently
+they will haul us in.”
+
+“Evil comes soon enough,” answered Eric, “no need to run to greet it,”
+and he fell to thinking of Gudruda, and of the day’s deeds, till
+presently he dropped asleep, for he was very weary.
+
+Now it chanced that as Eric slept he dreamed a dream so strong and
+strange that it seemed to live within him. He dreamed that he slept
+there beneath the Raven’s deck, and that a rat came and whispered
+spells into his ear. Then he dreamed that Swanhild glided towards him,
+walking on the stormy seas. He saw her afar, and she came swiftly, and
+ever the sea grew smooth before her feet, nor did the wind so much as
+stir her hair. Presently she stood by him in the ship, and, bending
+over him, touched him on the shoulder, saying:
+
+“Awake, Eric Brighteyes! Awake! awake!”
+
+It seemed to him that he awoke and said “What tidings, Swanhild?” and
+that she answered:
+
+“Ill tidings, Eric—so ill that I am come hither from Straumey[*] to
+tell of them—ay, come walking on the seas. Had Gudruda done so much,
+thinkest thou?”
+
+[*] Stroma, the southernmost of the Orkneys.
+
+
+“Gudruda is no witch,” he said in his dream.
+
+“Nay, but I am a witch, and it is well for thee, Eric. Ay, I am a
+witch. Now do I seem to sleep at Atli’s side, and lo! here I stand by
+thine, and I must journey back again many a league before another day
+be born—ay, many a league, and all for love of thee, Eric! Hearken, for
+not long may the spell endure. I have seen this by my magic: that these
+men who bound thee come even now to take thee, sleeping, and cast thee
+and thy thrall into the deep, there to drown.”
+
+“If it is fated it will befall,” he said in his dream.
+
+“Nay, it shall not befall. Put forth all thy might and burst thy bonds.
+Then fetch Whitefire; cut away the bonds of Skallagrim, and give him
+his axe and shield. This done, cover yourselves with your cloaks, and
+wait till ye hear the murderers come. Then rise and rush upon them, the
+two of you, and they shall melt before your might. I have journeyed
+over the great deep to tell thee this, Eric! Had Gudruda done as much,
+thinkest thou?”
+
+And it seemed to him that the wraith of Swanhild kissed him on the
+brow, sighed and vanished, bearing the rat in her bosom.
+
+Eric awoke suddenly, just as though he had never slept, and looked
+around. He knew by the lowness of the sun that it was far into the
+night, and that he had slept for many hours. They were alone beneath
+the deck, and far aft, beyond the mast, as the vessel rose upon the
+waves—for the sea was still rough, though the wind had fallen—Eric saw
+the mate of the Raven talking earnestly with some men of his crew.
+Skallagrim snored beside him.
+
+“Awake!” Eric said in his ear, “awake and listen!”
+
+He yawned and roused himself. “What now, lord?” he said.
+
+“This,” said Eric, and he told him the dream that he had dreamed.
+
+“That was a fey dream,” said Skallagrim, “and now we must do as the
+wraith bade thee.”
+
+“Easy to say, but hard to do,” quoth Eric; “this is a great rope that
+holds us, and a strong.”
+
+“Yes, it is great and strong; still, we must burst it.”
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim were made fast in this fashion: their hands
+were bound behind them, and their legs were lashed above the feet and
+above the knee. Moreover, a thick cord was fixed about the waist of
+each, and this cord was passed through the iron ring and knotted there.
+But it chanced that beneath the hollows of their knees ran an oaken
+beam, which held the forepart of the dragon together.
+
+“We may try this,” said Eric: “to set our feet against the beam and
+strain with all our strength upon the rope; though I think that no two
+men can part it.”
+
+“We shall know that presently,” said Skallagrim, gathering up his legs.
+
+Then they set their feet against the beam and pulled till it groaned;
+but, though the rope gave somewhat, it would not break. They rested a
+while, then strained again till the sweat burst out upon them and the
+rope cut into their flesh, but still it would not part.
+
+“We have found our match,” said Eric.
+
+“That is not altogether proved yet,” answered the Baresark. “Many a
+shield is riven at the third stroke.”
+
+So once again they set their feet against the beam, and put out all
+their strength.
+
+“The ring bends,” gasped Eric. “Now, when the roll of the ship throws
+our weight to leeward, in the name of Thor pull!”
+
+They waited, then put out their might, and lo! though the rope did not
+break, the iron ring burst asunder and they rolled upon the deck.
+
+“Well pulled, truly,” said Skallagrim as he struggled to his haunches:
+“I am marked about the middle with rope-twists for many a day to come,
+that I will swear. What next, lord?”
+
+“Whitefire,” answered Eric.
+
+Now, their arms were piled a fathom or more from where they sat, and
+right in the prow of the ship. Hither, then, they must crawl upon their
+knees, and this was weary work, for ever as the ship rolled they fell,
+and could in no wise save themselves from hurt. Eric was bleeding at
+the brow, and bloody was the hooked nose of Skallagrim, before they
+came to where Whitefire was. At length they reached the sword, and
+pushed aside the bucklers that were over it with their heads. The great
+war-blade was sheathed, and Eric must needs lie upon his breast and
+draw the weapon somewhat with his teeth.
+
+“This is an ill razor to shave with,” he said, rising, for the keen
+blade had cut his chin.
+
+“So some have thought and perchance more shall think,” answered
+Skallagrim. “Now set the rope on the edge and rub.”
+
+This they did, and presently the thick cord that bound them was in two.
+Then Eric knelt upon the deck and pressed the bonds that bound his legs
+upon the blade, and after him Skallagrim. They were free now, except
+for their hands, and it was no easy thing to cut away the bonds upon
+their wrists. It was done thus: Skallagrim sat upon the deck, and Eric
+pushed the sword between his fingers with his feet. Then the Baresark
+rose, holding the sword, and Eric, turning back to back with him,
+fretted the cords upon his wrists against the blade. Twice he cut
+himself, but the third time the cord parted and he was free. He
+stretched his arms, for they were stiff; then took Whitefire and cut
+away the bonds of Skallagrim.
+
+“How goes it with that hurt of thine?” he asked.
+
+“Better than I had thought,” answered Skallagrim; “the soreness has
+come out with the bruise.”
+
+“That is good news,” said Eric, “for methinks, unless Swanhild walked
+the seas for nothing, thou wilt soon need thine arms.”
+
+“They have never failed me yet,” said Skallagrim and took his axe and
+shield. “What counsel now?”
+
+“This, Skallagrim: that we lie down as we were, and put the cloaks
+about us as though we were yet in bonds. Then, if these knaves come, we
+can take them unawares as they think to take us.”
+
+So they went again to where they had been bound, and lay down upon
+their shields and weapons, drawing cloaks over them. Scarcely had they
+done this and rested a while, when they saw the mate and all the crew
+coming along both boards towards them. They bore no weapons in their
+hands.
+
+“None too soon did Swanhild walk,” said Eric; “now we shall learn their
+purpose. Be thou ready to leap forth when I give the word.”
+
+“Ay, lord,” answered Skallagrim as he worked his stiff arms to and fro.
+“In such matters few have thought me backward.”
+
+“What news, friends?” cried Eric as the men drew near.
+
+“Bad news for thee, Brighteyes,” answered the mate, “and that Baresark
+thrall of thine, for we must loose your bands.”
+
+“That is good news, then,” said Eric, “for our limbs are numb and dead
+because of the nipping of the cords. Is land in sight?”
+
+“Nay, nor will be for thee, Eric.”
+
+“How now, friend? how now? Sure, having handselled peace to us, ye mean
+no harm towards two unarmed men?”
+
+“We swore to do you no harm, nor will we, Eric; this only will we do:
+deliver you, bound, to Ran, and leave her to deal with you as she may.”
+
+“Bethink you, sirs,” said Eric: “this is a cruel deed and most unmanly.
+We yielded to you in faith—will ye break your troth?”
+
+“War has no troth,” he answered, “ye are too great to let slip between
+our fingers. Shall it be said of us that two men overcame us all?”
+
+“Mayhap!” murmured Skallagrim beneath his breath.
+
+“Oh, sirs, I beseech you,” said Eric; “I am young, and there is a maid
+who waits me out in Iceland, and it is hard to die,” and he made as
+though he wept, while Skallagrim laughed within his sleeve, for it was
+strange to see Eric feigning fear.
+
+But the men mocked aloud.
+
+“This is the great man,” they cried, “this is that Eric of whose deeds
+folk sing! Look! he weeps like a child when he sees the water. Drag him
+forth and away with him into the sea!”
+
+“Little need for that,” cried Eric, and lo! the cloaks about him and
+Skallagrim flew aside. Out they came with a roar; they came out as a
+she-bear from her cave, and high above Brighteyes’ golden curls
+Whitefire shone in the pale light, and nigh to it shone the axe of
+Skallagrim. Whitefire flared aloft, then down he fell and sought the
+false heart of the mate. The great axe of Skallagrim shone and was lost
+in the breast of the carle who stood before him.
+
+“Trolls!” shrieked one. “Here are trolls!” and turned to fly. But again
+Whitefire was up and that man flew not far—one pace, and no more. Then
+they fled screaming and after them came axe and sword. They fled, they
+fell, they leaped into the sea, till none were left to fall and leap,
+for they had no time or heart to find or draw their weapons, and
+presently Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail stood alone upon the
+deck—alone with the dead.
+
+“Swanhild is a wise witch,” gasped Eric, “and, whatever ill she has
+done, I will remember this to her honour.”
+
+“Little good comes of witchcraft,” answered Skallagrim, wiping his
+brow: “to-day it works for our hands, to-morrow it shall work against
+them.”
+
+“To the helm,” said Eric; “the ship yaws and comes side on to the
+seas.”
+
+Skallagrim sprang to the tiller and put his strength on it, and but
+just in time, for one big sea came aboard them and left much water in
+the hold.
+
+“We owe this to thy Baresark ways,” said Eric. “Hadst thou not slain
+the steersman we had not filled with water.”
+
+“True, lord,” answered Skallagrim; “but when once my axe is aloft, it
+seems to fly of itself, till nothing is left before it. What course
+now?”
+
+“The same on which the Gudruda was laid. Perhaps, if we may endure till
+we come to the Farey Isles,[*] we shall find her in harbour there.”
+
+[*] The Faroes.
+
+
+“There is not much chance of that,” said Skallagrim; “still, the wind
+is fair, and we fly fast before it.”
+
+Then they lashed the tiller and set to bailing. They bailed long, and
+it was heavy work, but they rid the ship of much water. After that they
+ate food, for it was now morning, and it came on to blow yet more
+strongly.
+
+For three days and three nights it blew thus, and the Raven sped along
+before the gale. All this time, turn and turn about, Eric and
+Skallagrim stood at the helm and tended the sails. They had little time
+to eat, and none to sleep. They were so hard pressed also, and must
+harbour their strength so closely, that the bodies of the dead men yet
+cumbered the hold. Thus they grew very weary and like to fall from
+faintness, but still they held the Raven on her course. In the
+beginning of the fourth night a great sea struck the good ship so that
+she quivered from stem to stern.
+
+“Methinks I hear water bubbling up,” said Skallagrim in a hoarse voice.
+
+Eric climbed down into the well and lifted the bottom planks, and there
+beneath them was a leak through which the water spouted in a thin
+stream. He stopped up the rent as best he might with garments from the
+dead men, and placed ballast stones upon them, then clambered on to the
+deck again.
+
+“Our hours are short now,” he said, “the water rushes in apace.”
+
+“Well, it is time to rest,” said Skallagrim; “but see, lord!” and he
+pointed ahead. “What land is that?”
+
+“It must be the Fareys,” answered Eric; “now, if we can but keep afloat
+for three hours more, we may yet die ashore.”
+
+After this the wind began to fall, but still there was enough to drive
+the Raven on swiftly.
+
+And ever the water gained in the hold.
+
+Now they were not far from land, for ahead of them the bleak hills
+towered up, shining in the faint midnight light, and between the hills
+was a cleft that seemed to be a fjord. Another hour passed, and they
+were no more than ten furlongs from the mouth of the fjord, when
+suddenly the wind fell, and they were in calm water under shelter of
+the land. They went amidships and looked. The hold was half full of
+water, and in it floated the bodies of Ospakar’s men.
+
+“She has not long to live,” said Skallagrim, “but we may still be saved
+if the boat is not broken.”
+
+Now aft, near the tiller, a small boat was bound on the half deck of
+the Raven. They went to it and looked; it was whole, with oars lashed
+in it, but half full of water, which they must bail out. This they did
+as swiftly as they might; then they cut the little boat loose, and,
+having made it fast with a rope, lifted it over the side-rail and let
+it fall into the sea, and that was no great way, for the Raven had sunk
+deep. It fell on an even keel, and Eric let himself down the rope into
+it and called to Skallagrim to follow.
+
+“Bide a while, lord,” he answered; “there is that which I would bring
+with me.”
+
+For a space Eric waited and then called aloud, “Swift! thou fool;
+swift! the ship sinks!”
+
+And as he called, Skallagrim came, and his arms were full of swords and
+byrnies, and red rings of gold that he had found time to gather from
+the dead and out of the cabin.
+
+“Throw all aside and come,” said Eric, laying on to the oars, for the
+Raven wallowed before she sank.
+
+“There is yet time, lord, and the gear is good,” answered Skallagrim,
+and one by one he threw pieces down into the boat. As the last fell the
+Raven sank to her bulwarks. Then Skallagrim stepped from the sinking
+deck into the boat, and cut the cord, not too soon.
+
+Eric gave way with all his strength, and, as he pulled, when he was no
+more than five fathoms from her, the Raven vanished with a huge swirl.
+
+“Hold still,” he said, “or we shall follow.”
+
+Round spun the boat in the eddy, she was sucked down till the water
+trickled over her gunwale, and for a moment they knew not if they were
+lost or saved. Eric held his breath and watched, then slowly the boat
+lifted her nose, and they were safe from the whirlpool of the lost
+dragon.
+
+“Greed is many a man’s bane,” said Eric, “and it was nearly thine and
+mine, Skallagrim.”
+
+“I had no heart to leave the good gear,” he answered; “and thou seest,
+lord, it is safe and we with it.”
+
+Then they got the boat’s head round slowly into the mouth of the fjord,
+pausing now and again to rest, for their strength was spent. For two
+hours they rowed down a gulf, as it were, and on either side of them
+were barren hills. At length the water-way opened out into a great
+basin, and there, on the further side of the basin, they saw green
+slopes running down to the water’s edge, strewn with white stock-fish
+set to dry in the wind and sun, and above the slopes a large hall, and
+about it booths. Moreover, they saw a long dragon of war at anchor near
+the shore. For a while they rowed on, easing now and again. Then Eric
+spoke to Skallagrim.
+
+“What thinkest thou of yonder ship, Lambstail?”
+
+“I think this, lord: that she is fashioned wondrous like to the
+Gudruda.”
+
+“That is in my mind also,” said Eric, “and our fortune is good if it is
+she.”
+
+They rowed on again, and presently a ray from the sun came over the
+hills—for now it was three hours past midnight—and, the ship having
+swung a little with the tide, lit upon her prow, and lo! there gleamed
+the golden dragon of the Gudruda.
+
+“This is a strange thing,” said Eric.
+
+“Ay, lord, a strange and a merry, for now I shall talk with Hall the
+mate,” and the Baresark smiled grimly.
+
+“Thou shalt do no hurt to Hall,” said Eric. “I am lord here, and I must
+judge.”
+
+“Thy will is my will,” said Skallagrim; “but if my will were thine, he
+would hang on the mast till sea-birds nested amidst his bones.”
+
+Now they were close to the ship, but they could see no man. Skallagrim
+would have called aloud, but Eric bade him hold his peace.
+
+“Either they are dead, and thy calling cannot wake them, or perchance
+they sleep and will wake of themselves. We will row under the stern,
+and, having made fast, climb aboard and see with our own eyes.”
+
+This, then, they did as silently as might be, and saw that the Gudruda
+had not been handled gently by the winds and waves, for her shield rail
+was washed away. This they found also, that all men lay deep in sleep.
+Now, amidships a fire still burned, and by it was food. They came there
+and ate of the food, of which they had great need. Then they took two
+cloaks that lay on the deck, and, throwing them about them, warmed
+themselves over the fire: for they were cold and wet, ay, and utterly
+outworn.
+
+As they sat thus warming themselves, a man of the crew awoke and saw
+them, and being amazed, at once called to his fellows, saying that two
+giants were aboard, warming themselves at the fire. Now men sprang up,
+and, seizing their weapons, ran towards them, and among them was Hall
+the mate.
+
+Then suddenly Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail threw aside the
+cloaks and stood up. They were gaunt and grim to see. Their cheeks were
+hollow and their eyes stared wide with want of sleep. Thick was their
+harness with brine, and open wounds gaped upon their faces and their
+hands. Men saw and fell back in fear, for they held them to be wizards
+risen from the sea in the shapes of Eric and the Baresark.
+
+Then Eric sang this song:
+
+“Swift and sure across the Swan’s Bath
+Sped Sea-stag on Raven’s track,
+Heav’d Ran’s breast in raging billows,
+Stream’d gale-banners through the sky!
+Yet did Eric the war-eager
+Leap with Baresark-mate aboard,
+Fierce their onset on the foemen!
+Wherefore brake the grapnel-chain?”
+
+
+Hall heard and slunk back, for now he saw that these were indeed Eric
+and Skallagrim come up alive from the sea, and that they knew his
+baseness.
+
+Eric looked at him and sang again:
+
+“Swift away sped ship Gudruda,
+Left her lord in foeman’s ring;
+Brighteyes back to back with Baresark
+Held his head ‘gainst mighty odds.
+Down amidst the ballast tumbling,
+Ospakar’s shield-carles were rolled.
+Holy peace at length they handselled,
+Eric must in bonds be laid!
+
+“Came the Grey Rat, came the Earl’s wife,
+Came the witch-word from afar;
+Cag’d wolves roused them, and with struggling
+Tore their fetter from its hold.
+Now they watch upon their weapons;
+Now they weep and pray for life;
+Now they leap forth like a torrent—
+Swept away is foeman’s strength!
+
+“Then alone upon the Raven
+Three long days they steer and sail,
+Till the waters, welling upwards,
+Wash dead men about their feet.
+Fails the gale and sinks the dragon,
+Barely may they win the boat:
+Safe they stand on ship Gudruda—
+Say, who cut the grapnel-chain?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+HOW ERIC DWELT IN LONDON TOWN
+
+
+Men stood astonished, but Hall the mate slunk back.
+
+“Hold, comrade,” said Eric, “I have something to say that songs cannot
+carry. Hearken, my shield-mates: we swore to be true to each other,
+even to death: is it not so? What then shall be said of that man who
+cut loose the Gudruda and left us two to die at the foeman’s hand?”
+
+“Who was the man?” asked a voice.
+
+“That man was Hall of Lithdale,” said Eric.
+
+“It is false!” said Hall, gathering up his courage; “the cable parted
+beneath the straining of the ship, and afterwards we could not put
+about because of the great sea.”
+
+“Thou art false!” roared Skallagrim. “With my eyes I saw thee let thine
+axe fall upon the cable. Liar art thou and dastard! Thou art jealous
+also of Brighteyes thy lord, and this was in thy mind: to let him die
+upon the Raven and then to bind his shoes upon thy cowardly feet.
+Though none else saw, I saw; and I say this: that if I may have my
+will, I will string thee, living, to the prow in that same cable till
+gulls tear out thy fox-heart!”
+
+Now Hall grew very white and his knees trembled beneath him. “It is
+true,” he said, “that I cut the chain, but not from any thought of
+evil. Had I not cut it the vessel must have sunk and all been lost.”
+
+“Did we not swear, Hall,” said Eric sternly, “together to fight and
+together to fall—together to fare and, if need be, together to cease
+from faring, and dost thou read the oath thus? Say, mates, what reward
+shall be paid to this man for his good fellowship to us and his
+tenderness for your lives?”
+
+As with one voice the men answered “_Death!_”
+
+“Thou hearest, Hall?” said Eric. “Yet I would deal more gently with one
+to whom I swore fellowship so lately. Get thee gone from our company,
+and let us see thy cur’s face no more. Get thee gone, I say, before I
+repent of my mercy.”
+
+Then amidst a loud hooting, Hall took his weapons and without a word
+slunk into the boat of the Raven that lay astern, and rowed ashore; nor
+did Eric see his face for many months.
+
+“Thou hast done foolishly, lord, to let that weasel go,” said
+Skallagrim, “for he will live to nip thy hand.”
+
+“For good or evil, he is gone,” said Eric, “and now I am worn out and
+desire to sleep.”
+
+After this Eric and Skallagrim rested three full days, and they were so
+weary that they were awake for little of this time. But on the third
+day they rose up, strong and well, except for their hurts and soreness.
+Then they told the men of that which had come to pass, and all wondered
+at their might and hardihood. To them indeed Eric seemed as a God, for
+few such deeds as his had been told of since the God-kind were on
+earth.
+
+But Brighteyes thought little of his deeds, and much of Gudruda. At
+times also he thought of Swanhild, and of that witch-dream she sent
+him: for it was wonderful to him that she should have saved him thus
+from Ran’s net.
+
+Eric was heartily welcomed by the Earl of the Farey Isles, for, when he
+heard his deeds, he made a feast in his honour, and set him in the high
+seat. It was a great feast, but Skallagrim became drunk at it and ran
+down the chamber, axe aloft, roaring for Hall of Lithdale.
+
+This angered Eric much and he would scarcely speak to Skallagrim for
+many days, though the great Baresark slunk about after him like his
+shadow, or a whipped hound at its master’s heel, and at length humbled
+his pride so far as to ask pardon for his fault.
+
+“I grant it for thy deeds’ sake,” said Eric shortly; “but this is upon
+my mind: that thou wilt err thus again, and it shall be my cause of
+death—ay, and that of many more.”
+
+“First may my bones be white,” said Skallagrim.
+
+“They shall be white thereafter,” answered Eric.
+
+At Fareys Eric shipped twelve good men and true, to take the seats of
+those who had been slain by Ospakar’s folk. Afterwards, when the
+wounded were well of their hurts (except one man who died), and the
+Gudruda was made fit to take the sea again, Brighteyes bade farewell to
+the Earl of those Isles, who gave him a good cloak and a gold ring at
+parting, and sailed away.
+
+Now it were too long to tell of all the deeds that Eric and his men
+did. Never, so scalds sing, was there a viking like him for strength
+and skill and hardihood, and, in those days, no such war-dragon as the
+Gudruda had been known upon the sea. Wherever Eric joined battle, and
+that was in many places, he conquered, for none prevailed against him,
+till at last foes would fly before the terror of his name, and earls
+and kings would send from far craving the aid of his hands. Withal he
+was the best and gentlest of men. It is said of Eric that in all his
+days he did no base deed, nor hurt the weak, nor refused peace to him
+who prayed it, nor lifted sword against prisoner or wounded foe. From
+traders he would take a toll of their merchandise only and let them go,
+and whatever gains he won he would share equally, asking no larger part
+than the meanest of his band. All men loved Eric, and even his foes
+gave him honour and spoke well of him. Now that Hall of Lithdale was
+gone, there was no man among his mates who would not have passed to
+death for him, for they held him dearer than their lives. Women, too,
+loved him much; but his heart was set upon Gudruda, and he seldom
+turned to look on them.
+
+The first summer of his outlawry Eric warred along the coast of
+Ireland, but in the winter he came to Dublin, and for a while served in
+the body-guard of the king of that town, who held him in honour, and
+would have had him stay there. But Eric would not bide there, and next
+spring, the Gudruda being ready for sea, he sailed for the shores of
+England. There he gave battle to two vikings’ ships of war, and took
+them after a hard fight. It was in this fight that Skallagrim Lambstail
+was wounded almost to death. For when, having taken one ship, Eric
+boarded the other with but few men, he was driven back and fell over a
+beam, and would have been slain, had not Skallagrim thrown himself
+across his body, taking on his own back that blow of a battle-axe which
+was aimed at Eric’s head. This was a great wound, for the axe shore
+through the steel of the byrnie and sank into the flesh. But when
+Eric’s men saw their lord down, and Skallagrim, as they deemed, dead
+athwart him, they made so fierce a rush that the foemen fell before
+them like leaves before a winter gale, and the end of it was that the
+vikings prayed peace of Eric. Skallagrim lay sick for many days, but he
+was hard to kill, and Eric nursed him back to life. After this these
+two loved each other as brother loves twin brother, and they could
+scarcely bear to be apart. But other people did not love Skallagrim,
+nor he them.
+
+Eric sailed on up the Thames to London, bringing the viking ships with
+him, and he delivered their captains bound to Edmund, Edward’s son, the
+king who was called Edmund the Magnificent. These captains the King
+hung, for they had wrought damage to his ships.
+
+Eric found much favour with the King, and, indeed, his fame had gone
+before him. So when he came into the court, bravely clad, with
+Skallagrim at his back, who was now almost recovered of his wound, the
+King called out to him to draw near, saying that he desired to look on
+the bravest viking and most beauteous man who sailed the seas, and on
+that fierce Baresark whom men called “Eric’s Death-shadow.”
+
+So Eric came forward up the long hall that was adorned with things more
+splendid than ever his eyes had seen, and stood before the King. With
+him came Skallagrim, driving the two captive viking chiefs before him
+with his axe, as a flesher drives lambs. Now, during these many months
+Brighteyes had grown yet more great in girth and glorious to look on
+than he was before. Moreover, his hair was now so long that it flowed
+like a flood of gold down towards his girdle, for since Gudruda trimmed
+it no shears had come near his head, and his locks grew fast as a
+woman’s. The King looked at him and was astonished.
+
+“Of a truth,” he said, “men have not lied about thee, Icelander, nor
+concerning that great wolf-hound of thine,” and he pointed at
+Skallagrim with his sword of state. “Never saw I such a man;” and he
+bade all the mightiest men of his body-guard stand forward that he
+might measure them against Eric. But Brighteyes was an inch taller than
+the tallest, and measured half a span more round the chest than the
+biggest.
+
+“What wouldest thou of me, Icelander?” asked the King.
+
+“This, lord,” said Eric: “to serve thee a while, and all my men with
+me.”
+
+“That is an offer that few would turn from,” answered the King. “Thou
+shalt go into my body-guard, and, if I have my will, thou shalt be near
+me in battle, and thy wolf-dog also.”
+
+Eric said that he asked no better, and thereafter he went up with
+Edmund the King to make war on the Danes of Mercia, and he and
+Skallagrim did great deeds before the eyes of the Englishmen.
+
+That winter Eric and his company came back to London, and abode with
+the King in much state and honour. Now, there was a certain lady of the
+court named Elfrida. She was both fair and wealthy, the sweetest of
+women, and of royal blood by her mother’s side. So soon as her eyes
+fell on Eric she loved him, and no one thing did she desire more than
+to be his wife. But Brighteyes kept aloof from her, for he loved
+Gudruda alone; and so the winter wore away, and in the spring he went
+away warring, nor did he come back till autumn was at hand.
+
+The Lady Elfrida sat at a window when Eric rode through London Town in
+the King’s following, and as he passed she threw him a wreath of
+flowers. The King saw it and laughed.
+
+“My cold kinswoman seems to melt before those bright eyes of thine,
+Icelander,” he said, “as my foes melt before Whitefire’s flame. Well, I
+could wish her a worse mate,” and he looked on him strangely.
+
+Eric bowed, but made no answer.
+
+That night, as they sat at meat in the palace, the Lady Elfrida, being
+bidden in jest of Edmund the King to fill the cup of the bravest,
+passed down the board, and, before all men, poured wine into Eric’s
+cup, and, as she did so, welcomed him back with short sweet words.
+
+Eric grew red as dawn, and thanked her graciously; but after the feast
+he spoke with Skallagrim, asking him of the Gudruda, and when she could
+be ready to take the sea.
+
+“In ten days, lord,” said Skallagrim; “but stay we not here with the
+King this winter? It is late to sail.”
+
+“Nay,” said Eric, “we bide not here. I would winter this year in
+Fareys, for they are the nighest place to Iceland that I may reach.
+Next summer my three years of outlawry are over, and I would fare back
+homewards.”
+
+“Now, I see the shadow of a woman’s hand,” said Skallagrim. “It is very
+late to face the northern seas, and we may sail to Iceland from London
+in the spring.”
+
+“It is my will that we should sail,” answered Eric.
+
+“Past Orkneys runs the road to Fareys,” said Skallagrim, “and in
+Orkneys sits a hawk to whom the Lady Elfrida is but a dove. In faring
+from ill we may hap on worse.”
+
+“It is my will that we sail,” said Eric stubbornly.
+
+“As thou wilt, and as the King wills,” answered Skallagrim.
+
+On the morrow Eric went in before the King, and craved a boon.
+
+“There is little that thou canst ask, Brighteyes,” said the King, “that
+I will not give thee, for, by my troth, I hold thee dear.”
+
+“I am come back to seek no great thing, lord,” answered Eric, “but this
+only: leave to bid thee farewell. I would wend homeward.”
+
+“Say, Eric,” said the King, “have I not dealt well with thee?”
+
+“Well, and overwell, lord.”
+
+“Why, then, wouldst thou leave me? I have this in my mind—to bring thee
+to great honour. See, now, there is a fair lady in this court, and in
+her veins runs blood that even an Iceland viking might be proud to mate
+with. She has great lands, and, mayhap, she shall have more. Canst thou
+not find a home on them, thinkest thou, Brighteyes?”
+
+“In Iceland only I am at home, lord,” said Eric.
+
+Then the King was wroth, and bade him begone when it pleased him, and
+Eric bowed before him and went out.
+
+Two days afterwards, while Eric was walking in the Palace gardens he
+met the Lady Elfrida face to face. She held white flowers in her hand,
+and she was fair to see and pale as the flowers she bore.
+
+He greeted her, and, after a while, she spoke to him in a gentle voice:
+“They say that thou goest from England, Brighteyes?” she said.
+
+“Yes, lady; I go,” he answered.
+
+She looked on him once and twice and then burst out weeping. “Why goest
+thou hence to that cold land of thine?” she sobbed—“that hateful land
+of snow and ice! Is not England good enough for thee?”
+
+“I am at home there, lady, and there my mother waits me.”
+
+“‘There thy mother waits thee,’ Eric?—say, does a maid called Gudruda
+the Fair wait thee there also?”
+
+“There is such a maid in Iceland,” said Eric.
+
+“Yes; I know it—I know it all,” she answered, drying her tears, and of
+a sudden growing cold and proud; “Eric, thou art betrothed to this
+Gudruda; and, for thy welfare, somewhat overfaithful to thy troth. For
+hearken, Eric Brighteyes. I know this: that little luck shall come to
+thee from the maid Gudruda. It would become me ill to say more;
+nevertheless, this is true—that here, in England, good fortune waits
+thy hand, and there in Iceland such fortune as men mete to their foes.
+Knowest thou this?”
+
+Eric looked at her and answered: “Lady,” he said, “men are not born of
+their own will, they live and do little that they will, they do and go,
+perchance, whither they would not. Yet it may happen to a man that one
+meets him whose hand he fain would hold, if it be but for an hour’s
+travel over icy ways; and it is better to hold that hand for this short
+hour than to wend his life through at a stranger’s side.”
+
+“Perhaps there is wisdom in thy folly,” said the Lady Elfrida. “Still,
+I tell thee this: that no good luck waits thee there in Iceland.”
+
+“It well may be,” said Eric: “my days have been stormy, and the gale is
+still brewing. But it is a poor heart that fears the storm. Better to
+sink; for, coward or hero, all must sink at last.”
+
+“Say, Eric,” said the lady, “if that hand thou dost desire to hold is
+lost to thee, what then?”
+
+“If that hand is cold in death, then henceforth I wend my ways alone.”
+
+“And if it be held of another hand than thine?”
+
+“Then I will journey back to England, lady, and here in this fair
+garden I may crave speech of thee again.”
+
+They looked one on another. “Fare thee well, Eric!” said the Lady
+Elfrida. “Here in this garden we may talk again; and, if we talk no
+more—why, fare thee well! Days come and go; the swallow takes flight at
+winter, and lo! at spring it twitters round the eaves. And if it come
+not again, then farewell to that swallow. The world is a great house,
+Eric, and there is room for many swallows. But alas! for her who is
+left desolate—alas, alas!” And she turned and went.
+
+It is told of this lady Elfrida that she became very wealthy and was
+much honoured for her gentleness and wisdom, and that, when she was
+old, she built a great church and named it Ericskirk. It is also told
+that, though many sought her in marriage, she wedded none.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+HOW SWANHILD WALKED THE SEAS
+
+
+Within two days afterwards, the Gudruda being bound for sea, Eric went
+up to bid farewell to the King. But Edmund was so angry with him
+because of his going that he would not see him. Thereon Eric took horse
+and rode down sadly from the Palace to the river-bank where the Gudruda
+lay. But when he was about to give the word to get out the oars, the
+King himself rode up, and with him men bearing costly gifts. Eric went
+ashore to speak with him.
+
+“I am angry with thee, Brighteyes,” said Edmund, “yet it is not in my
+heart to let thee go without words and gifts of farewell. This only I
+ask of thee now, that, if things go not well with thee there, out in
+Iceland, thou wilt come back to me.”
+
+“I will—that I promise thee, King,” said Eric, “for I shall never find
+a better lord.”
+
+“Nor I a braver servant,” said the King. Then he gave him the gifts and
+kissed him before all men. To Skallagrim also he gave a good byrnie of
+Welsh steel coloured black.
+
+Then Eric went aboard again and dropped down the river with the tide.
+
+For five days all went well with them, the sea being calm and the winds
+light and favourable. But on the fifth night, as they sailed slowly
+along the coasts of East Anglia over against Yarmouth sands, the moon
+rose red and ringed and the sea fell dead calm.
+
+“Yonder hangs a storm-lamp, lord,” said Skallagrim, pointing to the
+angry moon. “We shall soon be bailing, for the autumn gales draw near.”
+
+“Wait till they come, then speak,” said Eric. “Thou croakest ever like
+a raven.”
+
+“And ravens croak before foul weather,” answered Skallagrim, and just
+as he spoke a sudden gust of wind came up from the south-east and laid
+the Gudruda over. After this it came on to blow, and so fiercely that
+for whole days and nights their clothes were scarcely dry. They ran
+northwards before the storm and still northward, sighting no land and
+seeing no stars. And ever as they scudded on the gale grew fiercer,
+till at length the men were worn out with bailing and starved with wet
+and cold. Three of their number also were washed away by the seas, and
+all were in sorry plight.
+
+It was the fourth night of the gale. Eric stood at the helm, and by him
+Skallagrim. They were alone, for their comrades were spent and lay
+beneath decks, waiting for death. The ship was half full of water, but
+they had no more strength to bail. Eric seemed grim and gaunt in the
+white light of the moon, and his long hair streamed about him wildly.
+Grimmer yet was Skallagrim as he clung to the shield-rail and stared
+across the deep.
+
+“She rolls heavily, lord,” he shouted, “and the water gains fast.”
+
+“Can the men bail no more?” asked Eric.
+
+“Nay, they are outworn and wait for death.”
+
+“They need not wait long,” said Eric. “What do they say of me?”
+
+“Nothing.”
+
+Then Eric groaned aloud. “It was my stubbornness that brought us to
+this pass,” he said; “I care little for myself, but it is ill that all
+should die for one man’s folly.”
+
+“Grieve not, lord,” answered Skallagrim, “that is the world’s way, and
+there are worse things than to drown. Listen! methinks I hear the roar
+of breakers yonder,” and he pointed to the left.
+
+“Breakers they surely are,” said Eric. “Now the end is near. But see,
+is not that land looming up on the right, or is it cloud?”
+
+“It is land,” said Skallagrim, “and I am sure of this, that we run into
+a firth. Look, the seas boil like a hot spring. Hold on thy course,
+lord, perchance we may yet steer between rocks and land. Already the
+wind falls and the current lessens the seas.”
+
+“Ay,” said Eric, “already the fog and rain come up,” and he pointed
+ahead where dense clouds gathered in the shape of a giant, whose head
+reached to the skies and moved towards them, hiding the moon.
+
+Skallagrim looked, then spoke: “Now here, it seems, is witchwork. Say,
+lord, hast thou ever seen mist travel against wind as it travels now?”
+
+“Never before,” said Eric, and as he spoke the light of the moon went
+out.
+
+Swanhild, Atli’s wife, sat in beauty in her bower on Straumey Isle and
+looked with wide eyes towards the sea. It was midnight. None stirred in
+Atli’s hall, but still Swanhild looked out towards the sea.
+
+Now she turned and spoke into the darkness, for there was no light in
+the bower save the light of her great eyes.
+
+“Art thou there?” she said. “I have summoned thee thrice in the words
+thou knowest. Say, Toad, art there?”
+
+“Ay, Swanhild the Fatherless! Swanhild, Groa’s daughter! Witch-mother’s
+witch-child! I am here. What is thy will with me?” piped a thin voice
+like the voice of a dying babe.
+
+Swanhild shuddered a little and her eyes grew brighter—as bright as the
+eyes of a cat.
+
+“This first,” she said: “that thou show thyself. Hideous as thou art, I
+had rather see thee, than speak with thee seeing thee not.”
+
+“Mock not my form, lady,” answered the thin voice, “for it is as thou
+dost fashion it in thy thought. To the good I am fair as day; to the
+evil, foul as their heart. _Toad_ thou didst call me: look, now I come
+as a toad!”
+
+Swanhild looked, and behold! a ring of the darkness grew white with
+light, and in it crouched a thing hideous to see. It was shaped as a
+great spotted toad, and on it was set a hag’s face, with white locks
+hanging down on either side. Its eyes were blood-red and sunken, black
+were its fangs, and its skin was dead yellow. It grinned horribly as
+Swanhild shrank from it, then spoke again:
+
+“_Grey Wolf_ thou didst call me once, Swanhild, when thou wouldst have
+thrust Gudruda down Goldfoss gulf, and as a grey wolf I came, and gave
+thee counsel that thou tookest but ill. _Rat_ didst thou call me once,
+when thou wouldst save Brighteyes from the carles of Ospakar, and as a
+rat I came and in thy shape I walked the seas. _Toad_ thou callest me
+now, and as a toad I creep about thy feet. Name thy will, Swanhild, and
+I will name my price. But be swift, for there are other fair ladies
+whose wish I must do ere dawn.”
+
+“Thou art hideous to look on!” said Swanhild, placing her hand before
+her eyes.
+
+“Say not so, lady; say not so. Look at this face of mine. Knowest thou
+it not? It is thy mother’s—dead Groa lent it me. I took it from where
+she lies; and my toad’s skin I drew from thy spotted heart, Swanhild,
+and more hideous than I am shalt thou be in a day to come, as once I
+was more fair than thou art to-day.”
+
+Swanhild opened her lips to shriek, but no sound came.
+
+“Troll,” she whispered, “mock me not with lies, but hearken to my
+bidding: where sails Eric now?”
+
+“Look out into the night, lady, and thou shalt see.”
+
+Swanhild looked, and the ways of the darkness opened before her
+witch-sight. There at the mouth of Pentland Firth the Gudruda laboured
+heavily in the great seas, and by the tiller stood Eric, and with him
+Skallagrim.
+
+“Seest thou thy love?” asked the Familiar.
+
+“Yea,” she answered, “full clearly; he is worn with wind and sea, but
+more glorious than aforetime, and his hair is long. Say, what shall
+befall him if thou aidest not?”
+
+“This, that he shall safely pass the Firth, for the gale falls, and
+come safely to Fareys, and from Fareys isles to Gudruda’s arms.”
+
+“And what canst thou do, Goblin?”
+
+“This: I can lure Eric’s ship to wreck, and give his comrades, all save
+Skallagrim, to Ran’s net, and bring him to thy arms, Swanhild,
+witch-mother’s witch-child!”
+
+She hearkened. Her breast heaved and her eyes flashed.
+
+“And thy price, Toad?”
+
+“_Thou_ art the price, lady,” piped the goblin. “Thou shalt give
+thyself to me when thy day is done, and merrily will we sisters dwell
+in Hela’s halls, and merrily for ever will we fare about the earth o’
+nights, doing such tasks as this task of thine, Swanhild, and working
+wicked woe till the last woe is worked on us. Art thou content?”
+
+Swanhild thought. Twice her breath went from her lips in great sighs.
+Then she stood, pale and silent.
+
+“Safely shall he sail the Firth,” piped the thin voice. “Safely shall
+he sit in Fareys. Safely shall he lie in white Gudruda’s arms—_hee!
+hee!_ Think of it, lady!”
+
+Then Swanhild shook like a birth-tree in the gale, and her face grew
+ashen.
+
+“I am content,” she said.
+
+“_Hee! hee!_ Brave lady! She is content! Ah, we sisters shall be merry.
+Hearken: if I aid thee thus I may do no more. Thrice has the night-owl
+come at thy call—now it must wing away. Yet things will be as I have
+said; thine own wisdom shall guide the rest. Ere morn Brighteyes shall
+stand in Atli’s hall, ere spring he will be thy love, and ere autumn
+Gudruda shall sit on the high seat in the hall of Middalhof the bride
+of Ospakar. Draw nigh, give me thine arm, sister, that blood may seal
+our bargain.”
+
+Swanhild drew near the toad, and, shuddering, stretched out her arm,
+and then and there the red blood ran, and there they sealed their
+sisterhood. And as the nameless deed was wrought, it seemed to Swanhild
+as though fire shot through her veins, and fire surged before her eyes,
+and in the fire a shape passed up weeping.
+
+“It is done, Blood-sister,” piped the voice; “now I must away in thy
+form to be about thy tasks. Seat thee here before me—so. Now lay thy
+brow upon my brow—fear not, it was thy mother’s—life on death! curling
+locks on corpse hair! See, so we change—we change. Now thou art the
+Death-toad and I am Swanhild, Atli’s wife, who shall be Eric’s love.”
+
+Then Swanhild knew that her beauty had entered into the foulness of the
+toad, and the foulness of the toad into her beauty, for there before
+her stood her own shape and here she crouched a toad upon the floor.
+
+“Away to work, away!” said a soft low voice, her own voice speaking
+from her own body that stood before her, and lo! it was gone.
+
+But Swanhild crouched, in the shape of a hag-headed toad, upon the
+ground in her bower of Atli’s hall, and felt wickedness and evil
+longings and hate boil and seethe within her heart. She looked out
+through her sunken horny eyes and she seemed to see strange sights. She
+saw Atli, her lord, dead upon the grass. She saw a woman asleep, and
+above her flashed a sword. She saw the hall of Middalhof red with
+blood. She saw a great gulf in a mountain’s heart, and men fell down
+it. And, last, she saw a war-ship sailing fast out on the sea, afire,
+and vanish there.
+
+Now the witch-hag who wore Swanhild’s loveliness stood upon the cliffs
+of Straumey and tossed her white arms towards the north.
+
+“Come, fog! come, sleet!” she cried. “Come, fog! come, sleet! Put out
+the moon and blind the eyes of Eric!” And as she called, the fog rose
+up like a giant and stretched his arms from shore to shore.
+
+“Move, fog! beat, rain!” she cried. “Move and beat against the gale,
+and blind the eyes of Eric!”
+
+And the fog moved on against the wind, and with it sleet and rain.
+
+“Now I am afeared,” said Eric to Skallagrim, as they stood in darkness
+upon the ship: “the gale blows from behind us, and yet the mist drives
+fast in our faces. What comes now?”
+
+“This is witch-work, lord,” answered Skallagrim, “and in such things no
+counsel can avail. Hold the tiller straight and drive on, say I.
+Methinks the gale lessens more and more.”
+
+So they did for a little while, and all around them sounded the roar of
+breakers. Darker grew the sky and darker yet, till at the last, though
+they stood side by side, they could not see each other’s shapes.
+
+“This is strange sailing,” said Eric. “I hear the roar of breakers as
+it were beneath the prow.”
+
+“Lash the helm, lord, and let us go forward. If there are breakers,
+perhaps we shall see their foam through the blackness,” said
+Skallagrim.
+
+Eric did so, and they crept forward on the starboard board right to the
+prow of the ship, and there Skallagrim peered into the fog and sleet.
+
+“Lord,” he whispered presently, and his voice shook strangely, “what is
+that yonder on the waters? Seest thou aught?”
+
+Eric stared and said, “By Odin! I see a shape of light like to the
+shape of a woman; it walks upon the waters towards us and the mist
+melts before it, and the sea grows calm beneath its feet.”
+
+“I see that also!” said Skallagrim.
+
+“She comes nigh!” gasped Eric. “See how swift she comes! By the dead,
+it is Swanhild’s shape! Look, Skallagrim! look how her eyes flame!—look
+how her hair streams upon the wind!”
+
+“It is Swanhild, and we are fey!” quoth Skallagrim, and they ran back
+to the helm, where Skallagrim sank upon the deck in fear.
+
+“See, Skallagrim, she glides before the Gudruda’s beak! she glides
+backwards and she points yonder—there to the right! Shall I put the
+helm down and follow her?”
+
+“Nay, lord, nay; set no faith in witchcraft or evil will befall us.”
+
+As he spoke a great gust of wind shook the ship, the music of the
+breakers roared in their ears, and the gleaming shape upon the waters
+tossed its arms wildly and pointed to the right.
+
+“The breakers call ahead,” said Eric. “The shape points yonder, where I
+hear no sound of sea. Once before, thou mindest, Swanhild walked the
+waves to warn us and thereby saved us from the men of Ospakar. Ever she
+swore she loved me; now she is surely come in love to save us and all
+our comrades. Say, shall I put about? Look: once more she waves her
+arms and points,” and as he spoke he gripped the helm.
+
+“I have no rede, lord,” said Skallagrim, “and I love not witch-work. We
+can die but once, and death is all around; be it as thou wilt.”
+
+Eric put down the helm with all his might. The good ship answered, and
+her timbers groaned loudly, as though in woe, when the strain of the
+sea struck her abeam. Then once more she flew fast across the waters,
+and fast before her glided the wraith of Swanhild. Now it pointed here
+and now there, and as it pointed so Eric shaped his course. For a while
+the noise of breakers lessened, but now again came a thunder, like the
+thunder of waves smiting on a cliff, and about the sides of the Gudruda
+the waves hissed like snakes.
+
+Suddenly the Shape threw up its arms and seemed to sink beneath the
+waves, while a sound like the sound of a great laugh went up from sea
+to sky.
+
+“Now here is the end,” said Skallagrim, “and we are lured to doom.”
+
+Ere ever the words had passed his lips the ship struck, and so fiercely
+that they were rolled upon the deck. Suddenly the sky grew clear, the
+moon shone out, and before them were cliffs and rocks, and behind them
+a great wave rushed on. From the hold of the ship there came a cry, for
+now their comrades were awake and they knew that death was here.
+
+Eric gripped Skallagrim round the middle and looked aft. On rushed the
+wave, no such wave had he ever seen. Now it struck and the Gudruda
+burst asunder beneath the blow.
+
+But Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail were lifted on its crest
+and knew no more.
+
+Swanhild, crouching in hideous guise upon the ground in the bower of
+Atli’s hall, looked upon the visions that passed before her. Suddenly a
+woman’s shape, her own shape, was there.
+
+“It is done, Blood-sister,” said a voice, her own voice. “Merrily I
+walked the waves, and oh, merry was the cry of Eric’s folk when Ran
+caught them in her net! Be thyself, again, Blood-sister—be fair as thou
+art foul; then arise, wake Atli thy lord, and go down to the sea’s lip
+by the southern cliffs and see what thou shalt find. We shall meet no
+more till all this game is played and another game is set,” and the
+shape of Swanhild crouched upon the floor before the hag-headed toad
+muttering “Pass! pass!”
+
+Then Swanhild felt her flesh come back to her, and as it grew upon her
+so the shape of the Death-headed toad faded away.
+
+“Farewell, Blood-sister!” piped a voice; “make merry as thou mayest,
+but merrier shall be our nights when thou hast gone a-sailing with Eric
+on the sea. Farewell! farewell! _Were-wolf_ thou didst call me once,
+and as a wolf I came. _Rat_ thou didst call me once, and as a rat I
+came. _Toad_ didst thou call me once, and as a toad I came. Say, at the
+last, what wilt thou call me and in what shape shall I come,
+Blood-sister? Till then farewell!”
+
+And all was gone and all was still.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WEDDED UNNA, THOROD’S DAUGHTER
+
+
+Now the story goes back to Iceland.
+
+When Brighteyes was gone, for a while Gudruda the Fair moved sadly
+about the stead, like one new-widowed. Then came tidings. Men told how
+Ospakar Blacktooth had waylaid Eric on the seas with two long ships,
+dragons of war, and how Eric had given him battle and sunk one dragon
+with great loss to Ospakar. They told also how Blacktooth’s other
+dragon, the Raven, had sailed away before the wind, and Eric had sailed
+after it in a rising gale. But of what befell these ships no news came
+for many a month, and it was rumoured that this had befallen them—that
+both had sunk in the gale, and that Eric was dead.
+
+But Gudruda would not believe this. When Asmund the Priest, her father,
+asked her why she did not believe it, she answered that, had Eric been
+dead, her heart would surely have spoken to her of it. To this Asmund
+said that it might be so.
+
+Hay-harvest being done, Asmund made ready for his wedding with Unna,
+Thorod’s daughter and Eric’s cousin.
+
+Now it was agreed that the marriage-feast should be held at Middalhof;
+for Asmund wished to ask a great company to the wedding, and there was
+no place at Coldback to hold so many. Also some of the kin of Thorod,
+Unna’s father, were bidden to the feast from the east and north. At
+length all was prepared and the guests came in great companies, for no
+such feast had been made in this quarter for many years.
+
+On the eve of the marriage Asmund spoke with Groa. The witch-wife had
+borne herself humbly since she was recovered from her sickness. She
+passed about the stead like a rat at night, speaking few words and with
+downcast eyes. She was busy also making all things ready for the
+feasting.
+
+Now as Asmund went up the hall seeing that everything was in order,
+Groa drew near to him and touched him gently on the shoulder.
+
+“Are things to thy mind, lord?” she said.
+
+“Yes, Groa,” he answered, “more to my mind than to thine I fear.”
+
+“Fear not, lord; thy will is my will.”
+
+“Say, Groa, is it thy wish to bide here in Middalhof when Unna is my
+housewife?”
+
+“It is my wish to serve thee as aforetime,” she answered softly, “if so
+be that Unna wills it.”
+
+“That is her desire,” said Asmund and went his ways.
+
+But Groa stood looking after him and her face was fierce and evil.
+
+“While bane has virtue, while runes have power, and while hand has
+cunning, never, Unna, shalt thou take my place at Asmund’s side! Out of
+the water I came to thee, Asmund; into the water I go again. Unquiet
+shall I lie there—unquiet shall I wend through Hela’s halls; but Unna
+shall rest at Asmund’s side—in Asmund’s cairn!”
+
+Then again she moved about the hall, making all things ready for the
+feast. But at midnight, when the light was low and folk slept, Groa
+rose, and, veiled in a black robe, with a basket in her hand, passed
+like a shadow through the hall out upon the meads. Thence she glided
+into the mists that hang about the river’s edge, and in silence, always
+looking behind her, like one who fears a hidden foe, culled flowers of
+noisome plants that grow in the marsh. Her basket being filled, she
+passed round the stead to a hidden dell upon the mountain side. Here a
+man stood waiting, and near him burned a fire of turf. In his hand he
+held an iron-pot. It was Koll the Half-witted, Groa’s thrall.
+
+“Are all things ready, Koll?” she said.
+
+“Yes,” he answered; “but I like not these tasks of thine, mistress. Say
+now, what wouldst thou do with the fire and the pot?”
+
+“This, then, Koll. I would brew a love-potion for Asmund the Priest as
+he has bidden me to do.”
+
+“I have done many an ill deed for thee, mistress, but of all of them I
+love this the least,” said the thrall, doubtfully.
+
+“I have done many a good deed for thee, Koll. It was I who saved thee
+from the Doom-stone, seeming to prove thee innocent—ay, even when thy
+back was stretched on it, because thou hadst slain a man in his sleep.
+Is it not so?”
+
+“Yea, mistress.”
+
+“And yet thou wast guilty, Koll. And I have given thee many good gifts,
+is it not so?”
+
+“Yes, it is so.”
+
+“Listen then: serve me this once and I will give thee one last gift—thy
+freedom, and with it two hundred in silver.”
+
+Koll’s eyes glistened. “What must I do, mistress?”
+
+“To-day at the wedding-feast it will be thy part to pour the cups while
+Asmund calls the toasts. Last of all, when men are merry, thou wilt mix
+that cup in which Asmund shall pledge Unna his wife and Unna must
+pledge Asmund. Now, when thou hast poured, thou shalt pass the cup to
+me, as I stand at the foot of the high seat, waiting to give the bride
+greeting on behalf of the serving-women of the household. Thou shalt
+hand the cup to me as though in error, and that is but a little thing
+to ask of thee.”
+
+“A little thing indeed,” said Koll, staring at her, and pulling with
+his hand at his red hair, “yet I like it not. What if I say no,
+mistress?”
+
+“Say no or speak of this and I will promise thee one thing only, thou
+knave, and it is, before winter comes, that the crows shall pick thy
+bones! Now, brave me, if thou darest,” and straightway Groa began to
+mutter some witch-words.
+
+“Nay,” said Koll, holding up his hand as though to ward away a blow.
+“Curse me not: I will do as thou wilt. But when shall I touch the two
+hundred in silver?”
+
+“I will give thee half before the feast begins, and half when it is
+ended, and with it freedom to go where thou wilt. And now leave me, and
+on thy life see that thou fail me not.”
+
+“I have never failed thee yet,” said Koll, and went his ways.
+
+Now Groa set the pot upon the fire, and, placing in it the herbs that
+she had gathered, poured water on them. Presently they began to boil
+and as they boiled she stirred them with a peeled stick and muttered
+spells over them. For long she sat in that dim and lonely place
+stirring the pot and muttering spells, till at length the brew was
+done.
+
+She lifted the pot from the fire and smelt at it. Then drawing a phial
+from her robe she poured out the liquor and held it to the sky. The
+witch-water was white as milk, but presently it grew clear. She looked
+at it, then smiled evilly.
+
+“Here is a love-draught for a queen—ah, a love-draught for a queen!”
+she said, and, still smiling, she placed the phial in her breast.
+
+Then, having scattered the fire with her foot, Groa took the pot and
+threw it into a deep pool of water, where it could not be found
+readily, and crept back to the stead before men were awake.
+
+Now the day wore on and all the company were gathered at the
+marriage-feast to the number of nearly two hundred. Unna sat in the
+high seat, and men thought her a bonny bride, and by her side sat
+Asmund the Priest. He was a hale, strong man to look on, though he had
+seen some three-score winters; but his mien was sad, and his heart
+heavy. He drank cup after cup to cheer him, but all without avail. For
+his thought sped back across the years and once more he seemed to see
+the face of Gudruda the Gentle as she lay dying, and to hear her voice
+when she foretold evil to him if he had aught to do with Groa the
+Witch-wife. And now it seemed to him that the evil was at hand, though
+whence it should come he knew not. He looked up. There Groa moved along
+the hall, ministering to the guests; but he saw as she moved that her
+eyes were always fixed, now on him and now on Unna. He remembered that
+curse also which Groa had called down upon him when he had told her
+that he was betrothed to Unna, and his heart grew cold with fear. “Now
+I will change my counsel,” Asmund said to himself: “Groa shall not stay
+here in this stead, for I will look no longer on that dark face of
+hers. She goes hence to-morrow.”
+
+Not far from Asmund sat Björn, his son. As Gudruda the Fair, his
+sister, brought him mead he caught her by the sleeve, whispering in her
+ear. “Methinks our father is sad. What weighs upon his heart?”
+
+“I know not,” said Gudruda, but as she spoke she looked first on
+Asmund, then at Groa.
+
+“It is ill that Groa should stop here,” whispered Björn again.
+
+“It is ill,” answered Gudruda, and glided away.
+
+Asmund saw their talk and guessed its purport. Rousing himself he
+laughed aloud and called to Koll the Half-witted to pour the cups that
+he might name the toasts.
+
+Koll filled, and, as Asmund called the toasts one by one, Koll handed
+the cups to him. Asmund drank deep of each, till at length his sorrow
+passed from him, and, together with all who sat there, he grew merry.
+
+Last of all came the toast of the bride’s cup. But before Asmund called
+it, the women of the household drew near the high seat to welcome Unna,
+when she should have drunk. Gudruda stood foremost, and Groa was next
+to her.
+
+Now Koll filled as before, and it was a great cup of gold that he
+filled.
+
+Asmund rose to call the toast, and with him all who were in the hall.
+Koll brought up the cup, and handed it, not to Asmund, but to Groa; but
+there were few who noted this, for all were listening to Asmund’s toast
+and most of the guests were somewhat drunken.
+
+“The cup,” cried Asmund—“give me the cup that I may drink.”
+
+Then Groa started forward, and as she did so she seemed to stumble, so
+that for a moment her robe covered up the great bride-cup. Then she
+gathered herself together slowly, and, smiling, passed up the cup.
+
+Asmund lifted it to his lips and drank deep. Then he turned and gave it
+to Unna his wife, but before she drank he kissed her on the lips.
+
+Now while all men shouted such a welcome that the hall shook, and as
+Unna, smiling, drank from the cup, the eyes of Asmund fell upon Groa
+who stood beneath him, and lo! her eyes seemed to flame and her face
+was hideous as the face of a troll.
+
+Asmund grew white and put his hand to his head, as though to think,
+then cried aloud:
+
+“Drink not, Unna! the draught is drugged!” and he struck at the vessel
+with his hand.
+
+He smote it indeed, and so hard that it flew from her hand far down the
+hall.
+
+But Unna had already drunk deep.
+
+“The draught is drugged!” Asmund cried, and pointed to Groa, while all
+men stood silent, not knowing what to do.
+
+“The draught is drugged!” he cried a third time, “and that witch has
+drugged it!” And he began to tear at his breast.
+
+Then Groa laughed so shrilly that men trembled to hear her.
+
+“Yes, lord,” she screamed, “the draught is drugged, and Groa the
+Witch-wife hath drugged it! Ay, tear thy heart out, Asmund, and Unna,
+grow thou white as snow—soon, if my medicine has virtue, thou shalt be
+whiter yet! Hearken all men. Asmund the Priest is Swanhild’s father,
+and for many a year I have been Asmund’s mate. What did I tell thee,
+lord?—that I would see the two of you dead ere Unna should take my
+place!—ay, and on Gudruda the Fair, thy daughter, and Björn thy son,
+and Eric Brighteyes, Gudruda’s love, and many another man—on them too
+shall my curse fall! Tear thy heart out, Asmund! Unna, grow thou white
+as snow! The draught is drugged and Groa, Ran’s gift! Groa the
+Witch-Wife! Groa, Asmund’s love! hath drugged it!”
+
+And ere ever a man might lift a hand to stay her Groa glided past the
+high seat and was gone.
+
+For a space all stood silent. Asmund ceased clutching at his breast.
+Rising he spoke heavily:
+
+“Now I learn that sin is a stone to smite him who hurled it. Gudruda
+the Gentle spoke sooth when she warned me against this woman. _New wed,
+new dead!_ Unna, fare thee well!”
+
+And straightway Asmund fell down and died there by the high seat in his
+own hall.
+
+Unna gazed at him with ashen face. Then, plucking at her bosom she
+sprang from the dais and rushed along the hall, screaming. Men made way
+for her, and at the door she also fell dead.
+
+This then was the end of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, and Unna,
+Thorod’s daughter, Eric’s cousin, his new-made wife.
+
+For a moment there was silence in the hall. But before the echoes of
+Unna’s screams had died away, Björn cried aloud:
+
+“The witch! where is the witch?”
+
+Then with a yell of rage, men leaped to their feet, seizing their
+weapons, and rushed from the stead. Out they ran. There, on the
+hill-side far above them, a black shape climbed and leapt swiftly. They
+gave tongue like dogs set upon a wolf and sped up the hill.
+
+They gained the crest of the hill, and now they were at Goldfoss brink.
+Lo! the witch-wife had crossed the bed of the torrent, for little rain
+had fallen and the river was low. She stood on Sheep-saddle, the water
+running from her robes. On Sheep-saddle she stood and cursed them.
+
+Björn took a bow and set a shaft upon the string. He drew it and the
+arrow sung through the air and smote her, speeding through her heart.
+With a cry Groa threw up her arms.
+
+Then down she plunged. She fell on Wolf’s Fang, where Eric once had
+stood and, bouncing thence, rushed to the boiling deeps below and was
+no more seen for ever.
+
+Thus, then, did Asmund the Priest wed Unna, Thorod’s daughter, and this
+was the end of the feasting.
+
+Thereafter Björn, Asmund’s son, ruled at Middalhof, and was Priest in
+his place. He sought for Koll the Half-witted to kill him, but Koll
+took the fells, and after many months he found passage in a ship that
+was bound for Scotland.
+
+Now Björn was a hard man and a greedy. He was no friend to Eric
+Brighteyes, and always pressed it on Gudruda that she should wed
+Ospakar Blacktooth. But to this counsel Gudruda would not listen, for
+day and night she thought upon her love. Next summer there came tidings
+that Eric was safe in Ireland, and men spoke of his deeds, and of how
+he and Skallagrim had swept the ship of Ospakar single-handed. Now
+after these tidings, for a while Gudruda walked singing through the
+meads, and no flower that grew in them was half so fair as she.
+
+That summer also Ospakar Blacktooth met Björn, Asmund’s son, at the
+Thing, and they talked much together in secret.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+HOW EARL ATLI FOUND ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM ON THE SOUTHERN ROCKS OF
+STRAUMEY ISLE
+
+
+Swanhild, robed in white, as though new risen from sleep, stood, candle
+in hand, by the bed of Atli the Earl, her lord, crying “Awake!”
+
+“What passes now?” said Atli, lifting himself upon his arm. “What
+passes, Swanhild, and why dost thou ever wander alone at nights,
+looking so strangely? I love not thy dark witch-ways, Swanhild, and I
+was wed to thee in an ill hour, wife who art no wife.”
+
+“In an ill hour indeed, Earl Atli,” she answered, “an ill hour for thee
+and me, for, as thou hast said, eld and youth are strange yokefellows
+and pull different paths. Arise now, Earl, for I have dreamed a dream.”
+
+“Tell it to me on the morrow, then,” quoth Atli; “there is small
+joyousness in thy dreams, that always point to evil, and I must bear
+enough evil of late.”
+
+“Nay, lord, my rede may not be put aside so. Listen now: I have dreamed
+that a great dragon of war has been cast away upon Straumey’s
+south-western rocks. The cries of those who drowned rang in my ears.
+But I thought that some came living to the shore, and lie there
+senseless, to perish of the cold. Arise, therefore, take men and go
+down to the rocks.”
+
+“I will go at daybreak,” said Atli, letting his head fall upon the
+pillow. “I have little faith in such visions, and it is too late for
+ships of war to try the passage of the Firth.”
+
+“Arise, I say,” answered Swanhild sternly, “and do my bidding, else I
+will myself go to search the rocks.”
+
+Then Atli rose grumbling, and shook the heavy sleep from his eyes: for
+of all living folk he most feared Swanhild his wife. He donned his
+garments, threw a thick cloak about him, and, going to the hall where
+men snored around the dying fires, for the night was bitter, he awoke
+some of them. Now among those men whom he called was Hall of Lithdale,
+Hall the mate who had cut the grapnel-chain. For this Hall, fearing to
+return to Iceland, had come hither saying that he had been wounded off
+Fareys, in the great fight between Eric and Ospakar’s men, and left
+there to grow well of his hurt or die. Then Atli, not knowing that the
+carle lied, had bid him welcome for Eric’s sake, for he still loved
+Eric above all men.
+
+But Hall loved not labour and nightfarings to search for shipwrecked
+men of whom the Lady Swanhild had chanced to dream. So he turned
+himself upon his side and slept again. Still, certain of Atli’s folk
+rose at his bidding, and they went together down to the south-western
+rocks.
+
+But Swanhild, a cloak thrown over her night-gear, sat herself in the
+high seat of the hall and fixing her eyes, now upon the dying fires and
+now upon the blood-marks in her arm, waited in silence. The night was
+cold and windy, but the moon shone bright, and by its light Atli and
+his people made their way to the south-western rocks, on which the sea
+beat madly.
+
+“What lies yonder?” said Atli, pointing to some black things that lay
+beneath them upon the rock, cast there by the waves. A man climbed down
+the cliff’s side that is here as though it were cut in steps, and then
+cried aloud:
+
+“A ship’s mast, new broken, lord.”
+
+“It seems that Swanhild dreams true,” muttered Atli; “but I am sure of
+this: that none have come ashore alive in such a sea.”
+
+Presently the man who searched the rocks below cried aloud again:
+
+“Here lie two great men, locked in each other’s arms. They seem to be
+dead.”
+
+Now all the men climb down the slippery rocks as best they may, though
+the spray wets them, and with them goes Atli. The Earl is a brisk man,
+though old in years, and he comes first to where the two lie. He who
+was undermost lay upon his back, but his face is hid by the thick
+golden hair that flowed across it.
+
+“Man’s body indeed, but woman’s locks,” said Atli as he put out his
+hand and drew the hair away, so that the light of the moon fell on the
+face beneath.
+
+He looked, then staggered back against the rock.
+
+“By Thor!” he cried, “here lies the corpse of Eric Brighteyes!” and
+Atli wrung his hands and wept, for he loved Eric much.
+
+“Be not so sure that the men are dead, Earl,” said one, “I thought I
+saw yon great carle move but now.”
+
+“He is Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric’s Death-shadow,” said Atli again. “Up
+with them, lads—see, yonder lies a plank—and away to the hall. I will
+give twenty in silver to each of you if Eric lives,” and he unclasped
+his cloak and threw it over both of them.
+
+Then with much labour they loosed the grip of the two men one from the
+other, and they set Skallagrim on the plank. But eight men bore Eric up
+the cliff between them, and the task was not light, though the Earl
+held his head, from which the golden hair hung like seaweed from a
+rock.
+
+At length they came to the hall and carried them in. Swanhild, seeing
+them come, moved down from the high seat.
+
+“Bring lamps, and pile up the fires,” cried Atli. “A strange thing has
+come to pass, Swanhild, and thou dost dream wisely, indeed, for here we
+have Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail. They were locked like
+lovers in each other’s arms, but I know not if they are dead or
+living.”
+
+Now Swanhild started and came on swiftly. Had the Familiar tricked her
+and had she paid the price for nothing? Was Eric taken from Gudruda and
+given to her indeed—but given dead? She bent over him, gazing keenly on
+his face. Then she spoke.
+
+“He is not dead but senseless. Bring dry clothes, and make water hot,”
+and, kneeling down, she loosed Eric’s helm and harness and ungirded
+Whitefire from his side.
+
+For long Swanhild and Atli tended Eric at one fire, and the serving
+women tended Skallagrim at the other. Presently there came a cry that
+Skallagrim stirred, and Atli with others ran to see. At this moment
+also the eyes of Eric were unsealed, and Swanhild saw them looking at
+her dimly from beneath. Moved to it by her passion and her joy that he
+yet lived, Swanhild let her face fall till his was hidden in her
+unbound hair, and kissed him upon the lips. Eric shut his eyes again,
+sighing heavily, and presently he was asleep. They bore him to a bed
+and heaped warm wrappings upon him. At daybreak he woke, and Atli, who
+sat watching at his side, gave him hot mead to drink.
+
+“Do I dream?” said Eric, “or is it Earl Atli who tends me, and did I
+but now see the face of Swanhild bending over me?”
+
+“It is no dream, Eric, but the truth. Thou hast been cast away here on
+my isle of Straumey.”
+
+“And Skallagrim—where is Skallagrim?”
+
+“Skallagrim lives—fear not!”
+
+“And my comrades, how went it with them?”
+
+“But ill, Eric. Ran has them all. Now sleep!”
+
+Eric groaned aloud. “I had rather died also than live to hear such
+heavy tidings,” he said. “Witch-work! witch-work! and that fair
+witch-face wrought it.” And once again he slept, nor did he wake till
+the sun was high. But Atli could make nothing of his words.
+
+When Swanhild left the side of Eric she met Hall of Lithdale face to
+face and his looks were troubled.
+
+“Say, lady,” he asked, “will Brighteyes live?”
+
+“Grieve not, Hall,” she answered, “Eric will surely live and he will be
+glad to find a messmate here to greet him, having left so many yonder,”
+and she pointed to the sea.
+
+“I shall not be glad,” said Hall, letting his eyes fall.
+
+“Why not, Hall? Fearest thou Skallagrim? or hast thou done ill by
+Eric?”
+
+“Ay, lady, I fear Skallagrim, for he swore to slay me, and that kind of
+promise he ever keeps. Also, if the truth must out, I have not dealt
+altogether well with Eric, and of all men I least wish to talk with
+him.”
+
+“Speak on,” she said.
+
+Then, being forced to it, Hall told her something of the tale of the
+cutting of the cable, being careful to put another colour on it.
+
+“Now it seems that thou art a coward, Hall,” Swanhild said when he had
+done, “and I scarcely looked for that in thee,” for she had not been
+deceived by the glozing of his speech. “It will be bad for thee to meet
+Eric and Skallagrim, and this is my counsel: that thou goest hence
+before they wake, for they will sit this winter here in Atli’s hall.”
+
+“And whither shall I go, lady?”
+
+Swanhild gazed on him, and as she did so a dark thought came into her
+heart: here was a knave who might serve her ends.
+
+“Hall,” she said, “thou art an Icelander, and I have known of thee from
+a child, and therefore I wish to serve thee in thy strait, though thou
+deservest it little. See now, Atli the Earl has a farm on the mainland
+not two hours’ ride from the sea. Thither thou shalt go, if thou art
+wise, and thou shalt sit there this winter and be hidden from Eric and
+Skallagrim. Nay, thank me not, but listen: it may chance that I shall
+have a service for thee to do before spring is come.”
+
+“Lady, I shall wait upon thy word,” said Hall.
+
+“Good. Now, so soon as it is light, I will find a man to sail with thee
+across the Firth, for the sea falls, and bear my message to the steward
+at Atli’s farm. Also if thou needest faring-money thou shalt have it.
+Farewell.”
+
+Thus then did Hall fly before Eric and Skallagrim.
+
+On the morrow Eric and Skallagrim arose, sick and bruised indeed, but
+not at all harmed, and went down to the shore. There they found many
+dead men of their company, but never a one in whom the breath of life
+remained.
+
+Skallagrim looked at Eric and spoke: “Last night the mist came up
+against the wind: last night we saw Swanhild’s wraith upon the waves,
+and there is the path it showed, and there”—and he pointed to the dead
+men—“is the witch-seed’s flower. Now to-day we sit in Atli’s hall and
+here we must stay this winter at Swanhild’s side, and in all this there
+lies a riddle that I cannot read.”
+
+But Eric shook his head, making no answer. Then, leaving Skallagrim
+with the dead, he turned, and striding back alone towards the hall, sat
+down on a rock in the home meadows and, covering his face with his
+hands, wept for his comrades.
+
+As he wept Swanhild came to him, for she had seen him from afar, and
+touched him gently on the arm.
+
+“Why weepest thou, Eric?” she said.
+
+“I weep for the dead, Swanhild,” he answered.
+
+“Weep not for the dead—they are at peace; if thou must weep, weep for
+the living. Nay, weep not at all; rejoice rather that thou art here to
+mourn. Hast thou no word of greeting for me who have not heard thy
+voice these many months?”
+
+“How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who would never have seen thy face
+again if I might have had my will? Knowest thou that yesternight, as we
+laboured in yonder Firth, we saw a shape walking the waters to lead us
+to our doom? How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who art a witch and
+evil?”
+
+“And knowest thou, Eric, that yesternight I woke from sleep, having
+dreamed that thou didst lie upon the shore, and thus I saved thee
+alive, as perchance I have saved thee aforetime? If thou didst see a
+shape walking the waters it was that shape which led thee here. Hadst
+thou sailed on, not only those thou mournest, but Skallagrim and thou
+thyself had now been numbered with the lost.”
+
+“Better so than thus,” said Brighteyes. “Knowest thou also, Swanhild,
+that when last night my life came back again in Atli’s hall, methought
+that Atli’s wife leaned over me and kissed me on the lips? That was an
+ill dream, Swanhild.”
+
+“Some had found it none so ill, Eric,” she made answer, looking on him
+strangely. “Still, it was but a dream. Thou didst dream that Atli’s
+wife breathed back the breath of life into thy pale lips—be sure of it
+thou didst but dream. Ah, Eric, fear me no more; forget the evil that I
+have wrought in the blindness and folly of my youth. Now things are
+otherwise with me. Now I am a wedded wife and faithful hearted to my
+lord. Now, if I still love thee, it is with a sister’s love. Therefore
+forget my sins, remember only that as children we played upon the
+Iceland fells. Remember that, as boy and girl, we rode along the
+marshes, while the sea-mews clamoured round our heads. The world is
+cold, Eric, and few are the friends we find in it; many are already
+gone, and soon the friendless dark draws near. So put me not away, my
+brother and my friend; but, for a little space, whilst thou art here in
+Atli’s hall, let us walk hand in hand as we walked long years ago in
+Iceland, gathering up the fifa-bloom, and watching the midnight shadows
+creep up the icy jökul’s crest.”
+
+Thus Swanhild spoke to him most sweetly, in a low voice of music, while
+the tears gathered in her eyes, talking ever of Iceland that he loved,
+and of days long dead, till Eric’s heart softened in him.
+
+“Almost do I believe thee, Swanhild,” he said, stretching out his hand;
+“but I know thus: that thou art never twice in the same mood, and that
+is beyond my measuring. Thou hast done much evil and thou hast striven
+to do more; also I love not those who seem to walk the seas o’ nights.
+Still, hold thou to this last saying of thine and there shall be peace
+between us while I bide here.”
+
+She touched his hand humbly and turned to go. But as she went Eric
+spoke again: “Say, Swanhild, hast thou tidings from Iceland yonder? I
+have heard no word of Asmund or of Gudruda for two long years and
+more.”
+
+She stood still, and a dark shadow that he could not see flitted across
+her face.
+
+“I have few tidings, Eric,” she said, turning, “and those few, if I may
+trust them, bad enough. For this is the rumour that I have heard: that
+Asmund the Priest, my father, is dead; that Groa, my mother, is
+dead—how, I know not; and, lastly, that Gudruda the Fair, thy love, is
+betrothed to Ospakar Blacktooth and weds him in the spring.”
+
+Now Eric sprang up with an oath and grasped the hilt of Whitefire. Then
+he sat down again upon the stone and covered his face with his hands.
+
+“Grieve not, Eric,” she said gently; “I put no faith in this news, for
+rumour, like the black-backed gull, often changes colour in its flight
+across the seas. Also I had it but at fifth hand. I am sure of this, at
+least, that Gudruda will never forsake thee without a cause.”
+
+“It shall go ill with Ospakar if this be true,” said Eric, smiling
+grimly, “for Whitefire is yet left me and with it one true friend.”
+
+“Run not to meet the evil, Eric. Thou shalt come to Iceland with the
+summer flowers and find Gudruda faithful and yet fairer than of yore.
+Knowest thou that Hall of Lithdale, who was thy mate, has sat here
+these two months? He is gone but this morning, I know not whither,
+leaving a message that he returns no more.”
+
+“He did well to go,” said Eric, and he told her how Hall had cut the
+cable.
+
+“Ay, well indeed,” answered Swanhild. “Had Atli known this he would
+have scourged Hall hence with rods of seaweed. And now, Eric, I desire
+to ask thee one more thing: why wearest thou thy hair long like a
+woman’s? Indeed, few women have such hair as thine is now.”
+
+“For this cause, Swanhild: I swore to Gudruda that none should cut my
+hair till she cut it once more. It is a great burden to me surely, for
+never did hair grow so fast and strong as mine, and once in a fray I
+was held fast by it and went near to the losing of my life. Still, I
+will keep the oath even if it grows on to my feet,” and he laughed a
+little and shook back his golden locks.
+
+Swanhild smiled also and, turning, went. But when her face was hidden
+from him she smiled no more.
+
+“As I live,” she said in her heart, “before spring rains fall I again
+will cause thee to break this oath, Eric. Ay, I will cut a lock of that
+bright hair of thine and send it for a love-token to Gudruda.”
+
+But Eric still sat upon the rock thinking. Swanhild had set an evil
+seed of doubt in his heart, and already it put forth roots. What if the
+tale were true? What if Gudruda had given herself to Ospakar? Well, if
+so—she should soon be a widow, that he swore.
+
+Then he rose, and stalked grimly towards the hall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+HOW KOLL THE HALF-WITTED BROUGHT TIDINGS FROM ICELAND
+
+
+Presently as Eric walked he met Atli the Earl seeking him. Atli greeted
+him.
+
+“I have seen strange things, Eric,” he said, “but none more strange
+than this coming of thine and the manner of it. Swanhild is
+foresighted, and that was a doom-dream of hers.”
+
+“I think her foresighted also,” said Eric. “And now, Earl, knowest thou
+this: that little good can come to thee at the hands of one whom thou
+hast saved from the sea.”
+
+“I set no faith in such old wives’ tales,” answered Atli. “Here thou
+art come, and it is my will that thou shouldest sit here. At the least,
+I will give thee no help to go hence.”
+
+“Then we must bide in Straumey, it seems,” said Eric: “for of all my
+goods and gear this alone is left me,” and he looked at Whitefire.
+
+“Thou hast still a gold ring or two upon thy arm,” answered the Earl,
+laughing. “But surely, Eric, thou wouldst not begone?”
+
+“I know not, Earl. Listen: it is well that I should be plain with thee.
+Once, before thou didst wed Swanhild, she had another mind.”
+
+“I have heard something of that, and I have guessed more, Brighteyes;
+but methinks Swanhild is little given to gadding now. She is as cold as
+ice, and no good wife for any man,” and Atli sighed, “‘Snow melts not
+if sun shines not,’ so runs the saw. Thou art an honest man, Eric, and
+no whisperer in the ears of others’ wives.”
+
+“I am not minded indeed to do thee such harm, Earl, but this thou
+knowest: that woman’s guile and beauty are swords few shields can
+brook. Now I have spoken—and they are hard words to speak—be it as thou
+wilt.”
+
+“It is my will that thou shouldest sit here this winter, Eric. Had I my
+way, indeed, never wouldest thou sit elsewhere. Listen: things have not
+gone well with me of late. Age hath a grip of me, and foes rise up
+against one who has no sons. That was an ill marriage, too, which I
+made with Swanhild yonder: for she loves me not, and I have found no
+luck since first I saw her face. Moreover, it is in my mind that my
+days are almost sped. Swanhild has already foretold my death, and, as
+thou knowest well, she is foresighted. So I pray thee, Eric, bide thou
+here while thou mayest, for I would have thee at my side.”
+
+“It shall be as thou wilt, Earl,” said Eric.
+
+So Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail sat that winter in the hall
+of Atli the Earl at Straumey. For many weeks all things went well and
+Eric forgot his fears. Swanhild was gentle to him and kindly. She loved
+much to talk with him, even of Gudruda her rival; but no word of love
+passed her lips. Nevertheless, she did but bide her time, for when she
+struck she determined to strike home. Atli and Eric were ever side by
+side, and Eric gave the Earl much good counsel. He promised to do this
+also, for now, being simple-minded, his doubts had passed and he had no
+more fear of Swanhild. On the mainland lived a certain chief who had
+seized large lands of Atli’s, and held them for a year or more. Now
+Eric gave his word that, before he sailed for Iceland in the early
+summer, he would go up against this man and drive him from the lands,
+if he could. For Brighteyes might not come to Iceland till hard upon
+midsummer, when his three years of outlawry were spent.
+
+The winter wore away and the spring came. Then Atli gathered his men
+and went with Eric in boats to where the chief dwelt who held his
+lands. There they fell on him and there was a fierce fight. But in the
+end the man was slain by Skallagrim, and Eric did great deeds, as was
+his wont. Now in this fray Eric was wounded in the foot by a spear, so
+that he must be borne back to Straumey, and he lay there in the hall
+for many days. Swanhild nursed him, and most days he sat talking with
+her in her bower.
+
+When Eric was nearly healed of his hurt, the Earl went with all his
+people to a certain island of the Orkneys to gather scat[*] that was
+unpaid, and Skallagrim went with him. But Eric did not go, because of
+his hurt, fearing lest the wound should open if he walked overmuch.
+Thus it came to pass that, except for some women, he was left almost
+alone with Swanhild.
+
+[*] Tribute.
+
+
+Now, when Atli had been gone three days, it chanced on an afternoon
+that Swanhild heard how a man from Iceland sought speech with her. She
+bade them bring him in to where she was alone in her bower, for Eric
+was not there, having gone down to the sea to fish.
+
+The man came and she knew him at once for Koll the Half-witted, who had
+been her mother Groa’s thrall. On his shoulders was the cloak that
+Ospakar Blacktooth had given him; it was much torn now, and he had a
+worn and hungry look.
+
+“Whence comest thou, Koll?” she asked, “and what are thy tidings?”
+
+“From Scotland last, lady, where I sat this winter; before that, from
+Iceland. As for my tidings, they are heavy, if thou hast not heard
+them. Asmund the Priest is dead, and dead is Unna his wife, poisoned by
+thy mother, Groa, at their marriage-feast. Dead, too, is thy mother,
+Groa. Björn, Asmund’s son, shot her with an arrow, and she lies in
+Goldfoss pool.”
+
+Now Swanhild hid her face for a while in her hands. Then she lifted it
+and it was white to see. “Speakest thou truth, fox? If thou liest, this
+I swear to thee—thy tongue shall be dragged from thee by the roots!”
+
+“I speak the truth, lady,” he answered. But still he spoke not all the
+truth, for he said nothing of the part which he had played in the
+deaths of Asmund and Unna. Then he told her of the manner of their end.
+
+Swanhild listened silently—then said:
+
+“What news of Gudruda, Asmund’s daughter? Is she wed?”
+
+“Nay, lady. Folk spoke of her and Ospakar, that was all.”
+
+“Hearken, Koll,” said Swanhild, “bearing such heavy tidings, canst thou
+not weight the ship a little more? Eric Brighteyes is here. Canst thou
+not swear to him that, when thou didst leave Iceland it was said
+without question that Gudruda had betrothed herself to Ospakar, and
+that the wedding-feast was set for this last Yule? Thou hast a hungry
+look, Koll, and methinks that things have not gone altogether well with
+thee of late. Now, if thou canst so charge thy memory, thou shalt lose
+little by it. But, if thou canst not, then thou goest hence from
+Straumey with never a luck-penny in thy purse, and never a sup to stay
+thy stomach with.”
+
+Now of all things Koll least desired to be sent from Straumey; for,
+though Swanhild did not know it, he was sought for on the mainland as a
+thief.
+
+“That I may do, lady,” he said, looking at her cunningly. “Now I
+remember that Gudruda the Fair charged me with a certain message for
+Eric Brighteyes, if I should chance to see him as I journeyed.”
+
+Then Swanhild, Atli’s wife, and Koll the Half-witted talked long and
+earnestly together.
+
+At nightfall Eric came in from his fishing. His heart was light, for
+the time drew near when he should sail for home, and he did not think
+on evil. For now he feared Swanhild no longer, and, no fresh tidings
+having come from Iceland about Ospakar and Gudruda, he had almost put
+the matter from his mind. On he walked to the hall, limping somewhat
+from his wound, but singing as he came, and bearing his fish slung upon
+a pole.
+
+At the men’s door of the hall a woman stood waiting. She told Eric that
+the lady Swanhild would speak with him in her bower. Thither he went
+and knocked. Getting no answer he knocked again, then entered.
+
+Swanhild sat on a couch. She was weeping, and her hair fell about her
+face.
+
+“What now, Swanhild?” he said.
+
+She looked up heavily. “Ill news for thee and me, Eric. Koll, who was
+my mother’s thrall, has come hither from Iceland, and these are his
+tidings: that Asmund is dead, and Unna, thy cousin, Thorod of
+Greenfell’s daughter, is dead, and my mother Groa is dead also.”
+
+“Heavy tidings, truly!” said Eric; “and what of Gudruda, is she also
+dead?”
+
+“Nay, Eric she is wed—wed to Ospakar.”
+
+Now Eric reeled against the wall, clutching it, and for a space all
+things swam round him. “Where is this Koll?” he gasped. “Send me Koll
+hither.”
+
+Presently he came, and Eric questioned him coldly and calmly. But Koll
+could lie full well. It is said that in his day there was no one in
+Iceland who could lie so well as Koll the Half-witted. He told Eric how
+it was said that Gudruda was plighted to Ospakar, and how the match had
+been agreed on at the Althing in the summer that was gone (and indeed
+there had been some such talk), and how that the feast was to be at
+Middalhof on last Yule Day.
+
+“Is that all thy tidings?” said Eric. “If so, I give no heed to them:
+for ever, Koll, I have known thee for a liar!”
+
+“Nay, Eric, it is not all,” answered Koll. “As it chanced, two days
+before the ship in which I sailed was bound, I saw Gudruda the Fair.
+Then she asked me whither I was going, and I told her that I would
+journey to London, where men said thou wert, and asked her if she would
+send a message. Then she alighted from her horse, Blackmane, and spoke
+with me apart. ‘Koll,’ she said, ‘it well may happen that thou wilt see
+Eric Brighteyes in London town. Now, if thou seest him, I charge thee
+straightly tell him this. Tell him that my father is dead, and my
+brother Björn, who rules in his place, is a hard man, and has ever
+urged me on to wed Ospakar, till at last, having no choice, I have
+consented to it. And say to Eric that I grieve much and sorely, and
+that, though we twain should never meet more, yet I shall always hold
+his memory dear.’”
+
+“It is not like Gudruda to speak thus,” said Eric: “she had ever a
+stout heart and these are craven words. Koll, I hold that thou liest;
+and, if indeed I find it so, I’ll wring the head from off thee!”
+
+“Nay, Eric, I lie not. Wherefore should I lie? Hearken: thou hast not
+heard all my tale. When the lady Gudruda had made an end of speaking
+she drew something from her breast and gave it me, saying: ‘Give this
+to Eric, in witness of my words.’”
+
+“Show me the token,” said Eric.
+
+Now, many years ago, when they were yet boy and girl, it chanced that
+Eric had given to Gudruda the half of an ancient gold piece that he had
+found upon the shore. He had given her half, and half he had kept,
+wearing it next his heart. But he knew not this, for she feared to tell
+him, that Gudruda had lost her half. Nor indeed had she lost it, for
+Swanhild had taken the love-token and hidden it away. Now she brought
+it forth for Koll to build his lies upon.
+
+Then Koll drew out the half-piece from a leather purse and passed it to
+him. Eric plunged his hand into his breast and found his half. He
+placed the two side by side, while Swanhild watched him. Lo! they
+fitted well.
+
+Then Eric laughed aloud, a hard and bitter laugh. “There will be
+slaying,” he cried, “before all this tale is told. Take thy fee and
+begone, thou messenger of ill,” and he cast the broken piece at Koll.
+“For once thou hast spoken the truth.”
+
+Koll stooped, found the gold and went, leaving Brighteyes and Swanhild
+face to face.
+
+He hid his brow in his arms and groaned aloud. Softly Swanhild crept up
+to him—softly she drew his hands away, holding them between her own.
+
+“Heavy tidings, Eric,” she said, “heavy tidings for thee and me! She is
+a murderess who gave me birth and she has slain my own father—my father
+and thy cousin Unna also. Gudruda is a traitress, a traitress fair and
+false. I did ill to be born of such a woman; thou didst ill to put thy
+faith in such a woman. Together let us weep, for our woe is equal.”
+
+“Ay, let us weep together,” Eric answered. “Nay, why should we weep?
+Together let us be merry, for we know the worst. All words are said—all
+hopes are sped! Let us be merry, then, for now we have no more tidings
+to fear.”
+
+“Ay,” Swanhild answered, looking on him darkly, “we will be merry and
+laugh our sorrows down. Ah! thou foolish Eric, under what unlucky star
+wast thou born that thou knewest not true from false?” and she called
+the serving-women, bidding them bring food and wine.
+
+Now Eric sat alone with Swanhild in her bower and made pretence to eat.
+But he could eat little, though he drank deep of the southern wine.
+Close beside him sat Swanhild, filling his cup. She was wondrous fair
+that night, and it seemed to Eric that her eyes gleamed like stars.
+Sweetly she spoke also and wisely. She told strange tales and she sang
+strange songs, and ever her eyes shone more and more, and ever she
+crept closer to him. Eric’s brain was afire, though his heart was cold
+and dead. He laughed loud and mightily, he told great tales of deeds
+that he had done, growing boastful in his folly, and still Swanhild’s
+eyes shone more and more, and still she crept closer, wooing him in
+many ways.
+
+Now of a sudden Eric thought of his friend, Earl Atli, and his mind
+grew clear.
+
+“This may not be, Swanhild,” he said. “Yet I would that I had loved
+thee from the first, and not the false Gudruda: for, with all thy dark
+ways, at least thou art better than she.”
+
+“Thou speakest wisely, Eric,” Swanhild answered, though she meant not
+that he should go. “The Norns have appointed us an evil fate, giving me
+as wife to an old man whom I do not love, and thee for a lover to a
+woman who has betrayed thee. Ah, Eric Brighteyes, thou foolish Eric!
+why knewest thou not the false from the true while yet there was time?
+Now are all words said and all things done—nor can they be undone. Go
+hence, Eric, ere ill come of it; but, before thou goest, drink one cup
+of parting, and then farewell.”
+
+And she slipped from him and filled the cup, mixing in it a certain
+love-portion that she had made ready.
+
+“Give it me that I may swear an oath on it,” said Eric.
+
+Swanhild gave him the cup and stood before him, watching him.
+
+“Hearken,” he said: “I swear this, that before snow falls again in
+Iceland I will see Ospakar dead at my feet or lie dead at the feet of
+Ospakar.”
+
+“Well spoken, Eric,” Swanhild answered. “Now, before thou drinkest,
+grant me one little boon. It is but a woman’s fancy, and thou canst
+scarce deny me. The years will be long when thou art gone, for from
+this night it is best that we should meet no more, and I would keep
+something of thee to call back thy memory and the memories of our youth
+when thou hast passed away and I grow old.”
+
+“What wouldst have then, Swanhild? I have nothing left to give, except
+Whitefire alone.”
+
+“I do not ask Whitefire, Eric, though Whitefire shall kiss the gift. I
+ask nothing but one tress of that golden hair of thine.”
+
+“Once I swore that none should touch my hair again except Gudruda’s
+self.”
+
+“It will grow long, then, Eric, for now Gudruda tends black locks and
+thinks little on golden. Broken are all oaths.”
+
+Eric groaned. “All oaths are broken in sooth,” he said. “Have then thy
+will;” and, loosing the peace-strings, he drew Whitefire from its
+sheath and gave her the great war-sword.
+
+Swanhild took it by the hilt, and, lifting a tress of Eric’s yellow
+hair, she shore through it deftly with Whitefire’s razor-edge, smiling
+as she shore. With the same war-blade on which Eric and Gudruda had
+pledged their troth, did Swanhild cut the locks that Eric had sworn no
+hand should clip except Gudruda’s.
+
+He took back the sword and sheathed it, and, knotting the long tress,
+Swanhild hid it in her bosom.
+
+“Now drink the cup, Eric,” she said—“pledge me and go.”
+
+Eric drank to the dregs and cast the cup down, and lo! all things
+changed to him, for his blood was afire, and seas seemed to roll within
+his brain. Only before him stood Swanhild like a shape of light and
+glory, and he thought that she sang softly over him, always drawing
+nearer, and that with her came a scent of flowers like the scent of the
+Iceland meads in May.
+
+“All oaths are broken, Eric,” she murmured, “all oaths are broken
+indeed, and now must new oaths be sworn. For cut is thy golden hair,
+Brighteyes, and not by Gudruda’s hand!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+HOW ERIC WAS NAMED ANEW
+
+
+Eric dreamed. He dreamed that Gudruda stood by him looking at him with
+soft, sad eyes, while with her hand she pointed to his hair, and spake.
+
+“Thou hast done ill, Eric,” she seemed to say. “Thou hast done ill to
+doubt me; and now thou art for ever shamed, for thou hast betrayed
+Atli, thy friend. Thou hast broken thy oath, and therefore hast thou
+fallen into this pit; for when Swanhild shore that lock of thine, my
+watching Spirit passed, leaving thee to Swanhild and thy fate. Now, I
+tell thee this: that shame shall lead to shame, and many lives shall
+pay forfeit for thy sin, Eric.”
+
+Eric awoke, thinking that this was indeed an evil dream which he had
+dreamed. He woke, and lo! by him was Swanhild, Atli’s wife. He looked
+upon her beauty, and fear and shame crept into his heart, for now he
+knew that it was no dream, but he was lost indeed. He looked again at
+Swanhild, and hatred and loathing of her shook him. She had overcome
+him by her arts; that cup was drugged which he had drunk, and he was
+mad with grief. Yes, she had played upon his woe like a harper on a
+harp, and now he was ashamed—now he had betrayed his friend who loved
+him! Had Whitefire been to his hand at that moment, Eric had surely
+slain himself. But the great sword was not there, for it hung in
+Swanhild’s bower. Eric groaned aloud, and Swanhild turned at the sound.
+But he sprang away and stood over her, cursing her.
+
+“Thou witch!” he cried, “what hast thou done? What didst thou mix in
+that cup yestre’en? Thou hast brought me to this that I have betrayed
+Atli, my friend—Atli, thy lord, who left thee in my keeping!”
+
+He seemed so terrible in his woe and rage that Swanhild shrank from
+him, and, throwing her hair about her face, peeped at him through its
+meshes as once she had peeped at Asmund.
+
+“It is like a man,” she said, gathering up her courage and her wit;
+“‘tis like a man, having won my love, now to turn upon me and upbraid
+me. Fie upon thee, Eric! thou hast dealt ill with me to bring me to
+this.”
+
+Now Eric ceased his raving, and spoke more calmly.
+
+“Well thou knowest the truth, Swanhild,” he said.
+
+“Hearken, Eric,” she answered. “Let this be secret between us. Atli is
+old, and methinks that not for long shall he bide here in Straumey.
+Soon he will die; it is upon my mind that he soon will die, and, being
+childless, his lands and goods pass to me. Then, Eric, thou shalt sit
+in Atli’s hall, and in all honour shall Atli’s wife become thy bride.”
+
+Eric listened coldly. “I can well believe,” he said, “that thou hast it
+in mind to slay thy lord, for all evil is in thy heart, Swanhild. Now
+know this: that if in honour or dishonour my lips touch that fair face
+of thine again, may the limbs rot from my trunk, and may I lie a log
+for ever in the halls of Hela! If ever my eyes of their own will look
+again upon thy beauty, may I go blind and beg my meat from homestead to
+homestead! If ever my tongue whisper word of love into thy ears, may
+dumbness seize it, and may it wither to the root!”
+
+Swanhild heard and sank upon the ground before him, her head bowed
+almost to her feet.
+
+“Now, Swanhild, fare thee well,” said Eric. “Living or dead, may I
+never see thy face again!”
+
+She gazed up through her falling hair; her face was wild and white, and
+her eyes glowed in it as live embers glow in the ashes of burnt wood.
+
+“We are not so easily parted, Eric,” she said. “Not for this came I to
+witchcraft and to sin. Thou fool! hast thou never heard that, of all
+the foes a man may have, none is so terrible as the woman he has
+scorned? Thou shalt learn this lesson, Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur’s
+son: for here we have but the beginning of the tale. For its end, I
+will write it in runes of blood.”
+
+“Write on,” said Eric. “Thou canst do no worse than thou hast done,”
+and he passed thence.
+
+For a while Swanhild crouched upon the ground, brooding in silence.
+Then she rose, and, throwing up her arms, wept aloud.
+
+“Is it for this that I have sold my soul to the Hell-hag?” she cried.
+“Is it for this that I have become a witch, and sunk so low as I sank
+last night—to be scorned, to be hated, to be betrayed? Now Eric will go
+to Atli and tell this tale. Nay, there I will be beforehand with him,
+and with another story—an ancient wile of women truly, but one that
+never yet has failed them, nor ever will. And then for vengeance! I
+will see thee dead, Eric, and dead will I see Gudruda at thy side!
+Afterwards let darkness come—ay, though the horror rides it! Swift!—I
+must be swift!”
+
+Eric passed into Swanhild’s bower, and, finding Whitefire, bore it
+thence. On the table was food. He took it. Then, going to the place
+where he was wont to sleep, he armed himself, girding his byrnie on his
+breast and his golden helm upon his head, and taking shield and spear
+in his hand. Then he passed out. By the men’s door he found some women
+spreading fish in the sun. Eric greeted them, saying that when the Earl
+came back, for he was to come on that morning, he would find him on the
+south-western rocks nigh to where the Gudruda sank. This he begged of
+them to tell Atli, for he desired speech with him.
+
+The women wondered that Brighteyes should go forth thus and fully
+armed, but, holding that he had some deed to do, they said nothing.
+
+Eric came to the rocks, and there he sat all day long looking on the
+sea, and grieving so bitterly that he thought his heart would burst
+within him. For of all the days of Eric’s life this was the heaviest,
+except one other only.
+
+But Swanhild, going to her bower, caused Koll the Half-witted to be
+summoned. To him she spoke long and earnestly, and they made a shameful
+plot together. Then she bade Koll watch for Atli’s coming and, when he
+saw the Earl leave his boats, to run to him and say that she would
+speak with him.
+
+After this Swanhild sent a man across the firth to the stead where Hall
+of Lithdale sat, bidding him to come to her at speed.
+
+When the afternoon grew towards the evening, Koll, watching, saw the
+boats of Atli draw to the landing-place. Then he went down, and, going
+to the Earl, bowed before him:
+
+“What wouldst thou, fellow, and who art thou?” asked Atli.
+
+“I am a man from Iceland; perchance, lord, thou sawest me in Asmund’s
+hall at Middalhof. I am sent here by the Lady Swanhild to say that she
+desires speech with thee, and that at once.” Then, seeing Skallagrim,
+Koll fled back to the house, for he feared Skallagrim.
+
+Now Atli was uneasy in his mind, and, saying nothing, he hurried up to
+the hall, and through it into Swanhild’s bower.
+
+There she sat on a couch, her eyes red with weeping, and her curling
+hair unbound.
+
+“What now, Swanhild?” he asked. “Why lookest thou thus?”
+
+“Why look I thus, my lord?” she answered heavily. “Because I have to
+tell thee that which I cannot find words to fit,” and she ceased.
+
+“Speak on,” he said. “Is aught wrong with Eric?”
+
+Then Swanhild drew near and told him a false tale.
+
+When it was done for a moment or so Atli stood still, and grew white
+beneath his ruddy skin, white as his beard. Then he staggered back
+against the wainscoting of the bower.
+
+“Woman, thou liest!” he said. “Never will I believe so vile a thing of
+Eric Brighteyes, whom I have loved.”
+
+“Would that I could not believe it!” she answered. “Would that I could
+think it was but an evil dream! But alas! Nay, I will prove it. Suffer
+that I summon Koll, the Icelander, who was my mother’s thrall—Groa who
+now is dead, for I have that tidings also. He saw something of this
+thing, and he will bear me witness.”
+
+“Call the man,” said Atli sternly.
+
+So Koll was summoned, and told his lies with a bold face. He was so
+well taught, and so closely did his story tally with that of Swanhild,
+that Atli could find no flaw in it.
+
+“Now I am sure, Swanhild, that thou speakest truth,” said the Earl when
+Koll had gone. “And now also I have somewhat to say to this Eric. For
+thee, rest thyself; that which cannot be mended must be borne,” and he
+went out.
+
+Now, when Skallagrim came to the house he asked for Eric. The women
+told him that Brighteyes had gone down to the sea, fully armed, in the
+morning, and had not returned.
+
+“Then there must be fighting toward, and that I am loth to miss,” said
+Skallagrim, and, axe aloft, he started for the south-western rocks at a
+run. Skallagrim came to the rocks. There he found Eric, sitting in his
+harness, looking out across the sea. The evening was wet and windy; the
+rain beat upon him as he sat, but Eric took no heed.
+
+“What seekest thou, lord?” asked the Baresark.
+
+“Rest,” said Eric, “and I find none.”
+
+“Thou seekest rest helm on head and sword in hand? This is a strange
+thing, truly!”
+
+“Stranger things have been, Skallagrim. Wouldst thou hear a tale?” and
+he told him all.
+
+“What said I?” asked Skallagrim. “We had fared better in London town.
+Flying from the dove thou hast found the falcon.”
+
+“I have found the falcon, comrade, and she has pecked out my eyes. Now
+I would speak with Atli, and then I go hence.”
+
+“Hence go the twain of us, lord. The Earl will be here presently and
+rough words will fly in this rough weather. Is Whitefire sharp,
+Brighteyes?”
+
+“Whitefire was sharp enough to shear my hair, Skallagrim; but if Atli
+would strike let him lay on. Whitefire will not be aloft for him.”
+
+“That we shall see,” said Skallagrim. “At least, if thou art harmed
+because of this loose quean, my axe will be aloft.”
+
+“Keep thou thine axe in its place,” said Eric, and as he spoke Atli
+came, and with him many men.
+
+Eric rose and turned to meet the Earl, looking on him with sad eyes.
+For Atli, his face was as the face of a trapped wolf, for he was mad
+with rage at the shame that had been put upon him and the ill tale that
+Swanhild had told of Eric’s dealings with her.
+
+“It seems that the Earl has heard of these tidings,” said Skallagrim.
+
+“Then I shall be spared the telling of them,” answered Eric.
+
+Now they stood face to face; Atli leaned upon his drawn sword, and his
+wrath was so fierce that for a while he could not speak. At length he
+found words.
+
+“See ye that man, comrades?” he said, pointing at Eric with the sword.
+“He has been my guest these many months. He has sat in my hall and
+eaten of my bread, and I have loved him as a son. And wot ye how he has
+repaid me? He has put me to the greatest shame, me and my wife the Lady
+Swanhild, whom I left in his guard—to such shame, indeed, that I cannot
+speak it.”
+
+“True words, Earl,” said Eric, while folk murmured and handled their
+swords.
+
+“True, but not all the truth,” growled Skallagrim. “Methinks the Earl
+has heard a garbled tale.”
+
+“True words, thyself thou sayest it,” went on Atli, “thou hound that I
+saved from the sea! ‘Ran’s gift, Hela’s gift,’ so runs the saw, and now
+from Ran to Hela thou shalt go, thou mishandler of defenceless women!”
+
+“Here is somewhat of which I know nothing,” said Eric.
+
+“And here is something of which thou shalt know,” answered Atli, and he
+shook his sword before Eric’s eyes. “Guard thyself!”
+
+“Nay, Earl; thou art old, and I have done the wrong—I may not fight
+with thee.”
+
+“Art thou a coward also?” said the Earl.
+
+“Some have deemed otherwise,” said Eric, “but it is true that heavy
+heart makes weak hand. Nevertheless this is my rede. With thee are ten
+men. Stand thou aside and let them fall on me till I am slain.”
+
+“The odds are too heavy even for thee,” said Skallagrim. “Back to back,
+lord, as we have stood aforetime, and let us play this game together.”
+
+“Not so,” cried Atli, “this shame is mine, and I have sworn to Swanhild
+that I will wipe it out in Eric’s blood. Stand thou before me and
+draw!”
+
+Then Eric drew Whitefire and raised his shield. Atli the Earl rushed at
+him and smote a great two-handed blow. Eric caught it on his shield and
+suffered no harm; but he would not smite back.
+
+Atli dropped his point. “Niddering art thou, and coward to the last!”
+he cried. “See, men, Eric Brighteyes fears to fight. I am not come to
+this that I will cut down a man who is too faint-hearted to give blow
+for blow. This is my word: take ye your spear-shafts and push this
+coward to the shore. Then put him in a boat and drive him hence.”
+
+Now Eric grew red as the red light of sunset, for his manhood might not
+bear this.
+
+“Take shield,” he said, “and, Earl, on thine own head be thy blood, for
+none shall live to call Eric niddering and coward.”
+
+Atli laughed in his folly and his rage. He took a shield, and, once
+more springing on Brighteyes, struck a great blow.
+
+Eric parried, then whirled Whitefire on high and smote—once and once
+only! Down rushed the bright blade like a star through the night. Sword
+and shield did Atli lift to catch the blow. Through shield it sheared,
+and arm that held the shield, through byrnie mail and deep into Earl
+Atli’s side. He fell prone to earth, while men held their breath,
+wondering at the greatness of that stroke.
+
+But Eric leaned on Whitefire and looked at the old Earl upon the rock.
+
+“Now, Atli, thou hast had thy way,” he said, “and methinks things are
+worse than they were before. But I will say this: would that I lay
+there and thou stoodest to watch me die, for as lief would I have slain
+my father as thee, Earl Atli. There lies Swanhild’s work!”
+
+Atli gazed upwards into Eric’s sad eyes and, while he gazed so, his
+rage left him, and of a sudden a light brake upon his mind, as even
+then the light of the setting sun brake through the driving mist.
+
+“Eric,” he said, “draw near and speak with me ere I am sped. Methinks
+that I have been beguiled and that thou didst not do this thing that
+Swanhild said and Koll bore witness to.”
+
+“What did Swanhild say, then, Earl Atli?”
+
+The Earl told him.
+
+“It was to be looked for from her,” said Eric, “though I never thought
+of it. Now hearken!” and he told him all.
+
+Atli groaned aloud. “I know this now, Eric,” he said: “that thou
+speakest truth, and once more I have been deceived. Eric, I forgive
+thee all, for no man may fight against woman’s witchcraft, and witch’s
+wine. Swanhild is evil to the heart. Yet, Eric, I lay this doom upon
+thee—I do not lay it of my own will, for I would not harm thee, whom I
+love, but because of the words that the Norns put in my mouth, for now
+I am fey in this the hour of my death. Thou hast sinned, and that thou
+didst sin against thy will shall avail thee nothing, for of thy sin
+fate shall fashion a handle to the spear which pierces thee. Henceforth
+thou art accursed. For I tell thee that this wicked woman Swanhild
+shall drag thee down to death, and worse than death, and with thee
+those thou lovest. By witchcraft she brought thee to Straumey, by lies
+she laid me here before thee. Now by hate and might and cruel deeds
+shall she bring thee to lie more low than I do. For, Eric, thou art
+bound to her, and thou shalt never loose the bond!”
+
+Atli ceased a while, then spoke again more faintly:
+
+“Hearken, comrades,” he cried; “my strength is well-nigh spent. Ye
+shall swear four things to me—that ye will give Eric Brighteyes and
+Skallagrim Lambstail safe passage from Straumey. That ye will tell
+Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa’s daughter and Atli’s wife, that, at
+last, I know her for what she is—a murderess, a harlot, a witch and a
+liar; and that I forgive Eric whom she tricked, but that her I hate and
+spit upon. That ye will slay Koll the Half-witted, Groa’s thrall, who
+came hither about two days gone, since by his lies he hath set an edge
+upon this sword of falsehood. That ye will raise no blood-feud against
+Eric for this my slaying, for I goaded him to the deed. Do ye swear?”
+
+“We swear,” said the men.
+
+“Then farewell! And to thee farewell, also, Eric Brighteyes! Now take
+my hand and hold it while I die. Behold! I give thee a new name, and by
+that name thou shalt be called in story. I name thee _Eric the
+Unlucky_. Of all tales that are told, thine shall be the greatest. A
+mighty stroke that was of thine—a mighty stroke! Farewell!”
+
+Then his head fell back upon the rock and Earl Atli died. And as he
+died the last rays of light went out of the sky.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+HOW HALL OF LITHDALE TOOK TIDINGS TO ICELAND
+
+
+Now on the same night that Atli died at the hand of Eric, Swanhild
+spake with Hall of Lithdale, whom she had summoned from the mainland.
+She bade him do this: take passage in a certain ship that should sail
+for Iceland on the morrow from the island that is called Westra, and
+there tell all these tidings of the ill-doings of Eric and of the
+slaying of Atli by his hand.
+
+“Thou shalt say this,” she went on, “that Eric had been my love for
+long, but that at length the matter came to the ears of Atli, the Earl.
+Then, holding this the greatest shame, he went on holmgang with Eric
+and was slain by him. This shalt thou add to thy tale also, that
+presently Eric and I will wed, and that Eric shall rule as Earl in
+Orkneys. Now these tidings must soon come to the ears of Gudruda the
+Fair, and she will send for thee, and question thee straightly
+concerning them, and thou shalt tell her the tale as thou toldest it at
+first. Then thou shalt give Gudruda this packet, which I send her as a
+gift, saying, that I bade her remember a certain oath which Eric took
+as to the cutting of his hair. And when she sees that which is within
+the packet is somewhat stained, tell her that is but the blood of Atli
+that is upon it, as his blood is upon Eric’s hands. Now remember thou
+this, Hall, that if thou fail in the errand thy life shall pay forfeit,
+for presently I will also come to Iceland and hear how thou hast sped.”
+
+Then Swanhild gave him faring-money and gifts of wadmal and gold rings,
+promising that he should have so much again when she came to Iceland.
+
+Hall said that he would do all these things, and went at once; nor did
+he fail in his tasks.
+
+Atli being dead, Eric loosed his hand and called to the men to take up
+his body and bear it to the hall. This they did. Eric stood and watched
+them till they were lost in the darkness.
+
+“Whither now, lord?” said Skallagrim.
+
+“It matters little,” said Eric. “What is thy counsel?”
+
+“This is my counsel. That we take ship and sail back to the King in
+London. There we will tell all this tale. It is a far cry from Straumey
+to London town, and there we shall sit in peace, for the King will
+think little of the slaying of an Orkney Earl in a brawl about a woman.
+Mayhap, too, the Lady Elfrida will not set great store by it.
+Therefore, I say, let us fare back to London.”
+
+“In but one place am I at home, and that is Iceland,” said Eric.
+“Thither I will go, Skallagrim, though it be but to miss friend from
+stead and bride from bed. At the least I shall find Ospakar there.”
+
+“Listen, lord!” said Skallagrim. “Was it not my rede that we should
+bide this winter through in London? Thou wouldst none of it, and what
+came about? Our ship is sunk, gone are our comrades, thine honour is
+tarnished, and dead is thy host at thine own hand. Yet I say all is not
+lost. Let us hence south, and see no more of Swanhild, of Gudruda, of
+Björn and Ospakar. So shall we break the spell. But if thou goest to
+Iceland, I am sure of this: that the evil fate which Atli foretold will
+fall on thee, and the days to come shall be even more unlucky than the
+days that have been.”
+
+“It may be so,” said Eric. “Methinks, indeed, it will be so. Henceforth
+I am Eric the Unlucky. I will go back to Iceland and there play out the
+game. I care little if I live or am slain—I have no more joy in my
+life. I stand alone, like a fir upon a mountain-top, and every wind
+from heaven and every storm of hail and snow beats upon my head. But I
+say to thee, Skallagrim: go thy road, and leave a luckless man to his
+ill fate. Otherwise it shall be thine also. Good friend hast thou been
+to me; now let us part and wend south and north. The King will be glad
+to greet thee yonder in London, Lambstail.”
+
+“But one severing shall we know, lord,” said Skallagrim, “and that
+shall be sword’s work, nor will it be for long. It is ill to speak such
+words as these of the parting of lord and thrall. Bethink thee of the
+oath I swore on Mosfell. Let us go north, since it is thy will: in
+fifty years it will count for little which way we wended from the
+Isles.”
+
+So they went together down to the shore, and, finding a boat and men
+who as yet knew nothing of what had chanced to Atli, they sailed across
+the firth at the rising of the moon.
+
+Two days afterwards they found a ship at Wick that was bound for
+Fareys, and sailed in her, Eric buying a passage with the half of a
+gold ring that the King had given him in London.
+
+Here at Fareys they sat a month or more; but not in the Earl’s hall as
+when Eric came with honour in the Gudruda, but in a farmer’s stead. For
+the tale of Eric’s dealings with Atli and Atli’s wife had reached
+Fareys, and the Earl there had been a friend of Atli’s. Moreover, Eric
+was now a poor man, having neither ship nor goods, nor friends.
+Therefore all looked coldly on him, though they wondered at his beauty
+and his might. Still, they dared not to speak ill or make a mock of
+him; for, two men having done so, were nearly slain of Skallagrim, who
+seized the twain by the throat, one in either hand, and dashed their
+heads together. After that men said little.
+
+They sat there a month, till at length a chapman put in at Fareys,
+bound for Iceland, and they took passage with him, Eric paying the
+other half of his gold ring for ship-room. The chapman was not willing
+to give them place at first, for he, too, had heard the tale; but
+Skallagrim offered him choice, either to do so or to go on holmgang
+with him. Then the chapman gave them passage.
+
+Now it is told that when his thralls and house-carles bore the corpse
+of Atli the Earl to his hall in Straumey, Swanhild met it and wept over
+it. And when the spokesman among them stood forward and told her those
+words that Atli had bidden them to say to her, sparing none, she spoke
+thus:
+
+“My lord was distraught and weak with loss of blood when he spoke thus.
+The tale I told him was true, and now Eric has added to his sin by
+shedding the blood of him whom he wronged so sorely.”
+
+And thereafter she spoke so sweetly and with so much gentleness, craft,
+and wisdom that, though they still doubted them, all men held her words
+weighty. For Swanhild had this art, that she could make the false sound
+true in the ears of men and the true sound false.
+
+Still, being mindful of their oath, they hunted for Koll and found him.
+And when the thrall knew that they would slay him he ran thence
+screaming. Nor did Swanhild lift a hand to save his life, for she
+desired that Koll should die, lest he should bear witness against her.
+Away he ran towards the cliffs, and after him sped Atli’s house-carles,
+till he came to the great cliffs that edge in the sea. Now they were
+close upon him and their swords were aloft. Then, sooner than know the
+kiss of steel, the liar leapt from the cliffs and was crushed, dying
+miserably on the rocks below. This was the end of Koll the Half-witted,
+Groa’s thrall.
+
+Swanhild sat in Straumey for a while, and took all Atli’s heritage into
+her keeping, for he had no male kin; nor did any say her nay. Also she
+called in the moneys that he had out at interest, and that was a great
+sum, for Atli was a careful and a wealthy man. Then Swanhild made ready
+to go to Iceland. Atli had a great dragon of war, and she manned that
+ship and filled it with stores and all things needful. This done, she
+set stewards and grieves over the Orkney lands and farms, and, when the
+Earl was six weeks dead, she sailed for Iceland, giving out that she
+went thither to set a blood-suit on foot against Eric for the death of
+Atli, her lord. There she came in safety just as folk rode to the
+Thing.
+
+Now Hall of Lithdale came to Iceland and told his tale of the doings of
+Eric and the death of Atli. Oft and loud he told it, and soon people
+gossiped of it in field and fair and stead. Björn, Asmund’s son, heard
+this talk and sent for Hall. To him also Hall told the tale.
+
+“Now,” said Björn, “we will go to my sister Gudruda the Fair, and learn
+how she takes these tidings.”
+
+So they went in to where Gudruda sat spinning in the hall, singing as
+she span.
+
+“Greeting, Gudruda,” said Björn; “say, hast thou tidings of Eric
+Brighteyes, thy betrothed?”
+
+“I have no tidings,” said Gudruda.
+
+“Then here is one who brings them.”
+
+Now for the first time Gudruda the Fair saw Hall of Lithdale. Up she
+sprang. “Thou hast tidings of Eric, Hall? Ah! thou art welcome, for no
+tidings have come of him for many a month. Speak on,” and she pressed
+her hand against her heart and leaned towards him.
+
+“My tidings are ill, lady.”
+
+“Is Eric dead? Say not that my love is dead!”
+
+“He is worse than dead,” said Hall. “He is shamed.”
+
+“There thou liest, Hall,” she answered. “Shame and Eric are things
+apart.”
+
+“Mayst thou think so when thou hast heard my tale, lady,” said Hall,
+“for I am sad at heart to speak it of one who was my mate.”
+
+“Speak on, I say,” answered Gudruda, in such a voice that Hall shrank
+from her. “Speak on; but of this I warn thee: that if in one word thou
+liest, that shall be thy death when Eric comes.”
+
+Now Hall was afraid, thinking of the axe of Skallagrim. Still, he might
+not go back upon his word. So he began at the beginning, telling the
+story of how he was wounded in the fight with Ospakar’s ships and left
+Farey isles, and how he came thence to Scotland and sat in Atli’s hall
+on Orkneys. Then he told how the Gudruda was wrecked on Straumey, and,
+of all aboard, Eric and Skallagrim alone were saved because of
+Swanhild’s dream.
+
+“Herein I see witch-work,” said Gudruda.
+
+Then Hall told that Eric became Swanhild’s love, but of the other tale
+which Swanhild had whispered to Atli he said nothing. For he knew that
+Gudruda would not believe this, and, moreover, if it were so, Swanhild
+had not sent the token which he should give.
+
+“It may well be,” said Gudruda, proudly; “Swanhild is fair and light of
+mind. Perchance she led Brighteyes into this snare.” But, though she
+spoke thus, bitter jealousy and anger burned in her breast and she
+remembered the sight which she had seen when Eric and Swanhild met on
+the morn of Atli’s wedding.
+
+Then Hall told of the slaying of Atli the Good by Eric, but he said
+nothing of the Earl’s dying words, nor of how he goaded Brighteyes with
+his bitter words.
+
+“It was an ill deed in sooth,” said Gudruda, “for Eric to slay an old
+man whom he had wronged. Still, it may chance that he was driven to it
+for his own life’s sake.”
+
+Then Hall said that he had seen Swanhild after Atli’s slaying, and that
+she had told him that she and Eric should wed shortly, and that Eric
+would rule in Orkneys by her side.
+
+Gudruda asked if that was all his tale.
+
+“Yes, lady,” answered Hall, “that is all my tale, for after that I
+sailed and know not what happened. But I am charged to give something
+to thee, and that by the Lady Swanhild. She bade me say this also:
+that, when thou lookest on the gift, thou shouldst think on a certain
+oath which Eric took as to the cutting of his hair.” And he drew a
+linen packet from his breast and gave it to her.
+
+Thrice Gudruda looked on it, fearing to open it. Then, seeing the smile
+of mockery on Björn’s cold face, she took the shears that hung at her
+side and cut the thread with them. And as she cut, a lock of golden
+hair rose from the packet, untwisting itself like a living snake. The
+lock was long, and its end was caked with gore.
+
+“Whose hair is this?” said Gudruda, though she knew the hair well.
+
+“Eric’s hair,” said Hall, “that Swanhild cut from his head with Eric’s
+sword.”
+
+Now Gudruda put her hand to her bosom. She drew out a satchel, and from
+the satchel a lock of yellow hair. Side by side she placed the locks,
+looking first at one and then at the other.
+
+“This is Eric’s hair in sooth,” she said—“Eric’s hair that he swore
+none but I should cut! Eric’s hair that Swanhild shore with Whitefire
+from Eric’s head—Whitefire whereon we plighted troth! Say now, whose
+blood is this that stains the hair of Eric?”
+
+“It is Atli’s blood, whom Eric first dishonoured and then slew with his
+own hand,” answered Hall.
+
+Now there burned a fire on the hearth, for the day was cold. Gudruda
+the Fair stood over the fire and with either hand she let the two locks
+of Eric’s hair fall upon the embers. Slowly they twisted up and burned.
+She watched them burn, then she threw up her hands and with a great cry
+fled from the hall.
+
+Björn and Hall of Lithdale looked on each other.
+
+“Thou hadst best go hence!” said Björn; “and of this I warn thee, Hall,
+though I hold thy tidings good, that, if thou hast spoken one false
+word, that will be thy death. For then it would be better for thee to
+face all the wolves in Iceland than to stand before Eric in his rage.”
+
+Again Hall bethought himself of the axe of Skallagrim, and he went out
+heavily.
+
+That day a messenger came from Gudruda to Björn, saying that she would
+speak with him. He went to where she sat alone upon her bed. Her face
+was white as death, and her dark eyes glowed.
+
+“Eric has dealt badly with thee, sister, to bring thee to this sorrow,”
+said Björn.
+
+“Speak no evil of Eric to me,” Gudruda answered. “The evil that he has
+done will be paid back to him; there is little need for thee to heap
+words upon his head. Hearken, Björn my brother: is it yet thy will that
+I should wed Ospakar Blacktooth?”
+
+“That is my will, surely. There is no match in Iceland as this Ospakar,
+and I should win many friends by it.”
+
+“Do this then, Björn. Send messengers to Swinefell and say to Ospakar
+that if he would still wed Gudruda the Fair, Asmund’s daughter, let him
+come to Middalhof when folk ride from the Thing and he shall not go
+hence alone. Nay, I have done. Now, I pray thee speak no more to me of
+Eric or of Ospakar. Of the one I have seen and heard enough, and of the
+other I shall hear and see enough in the years that are to come.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+HOW ERIC CAME HOME AGAIN
+
+
+Swanhild made a good passage from the Orkneys, and was in Iceland
+thirty-five days before Eric and Skallagrim set foot there. But she did
+not land by Westman Isles, for she had no wish to face Gudruda at that
+time, but by Reyjaness. Now she rode thence with her company to
+Thingvalla, for here all men were gathered for the Thing. At first
+people hung aloof from her, notwithstanding her wealth and beauty; but
+Swanhild knew well how to win the hearts of men. For now she told the
+same story of Eric that she had told to Atli, and there were none to
+say her nay. So it came to pass that she was believed, and Eric
+Brighteyes held to be shamed indeed. Now, too, she set a suit on foot
+against Eric for the death of Atli at his hand, claiming that sentence
+of the greater outlawry should be passed against him, and that his
+lands at Coldback in the Marsh on Ran River should be given, half to
+her in atonement for the Earl’s death, and half to the men of Eric’s
+quarter.
+
+On the day of the opening of the Thing Ospakar Blacktooth came from the
+north, and with him his son Gizur and a great company of men. Ospakar
+was blithe, for from the Thing he should ride to Middalhof, there to
+wed Gudruda the Fair. Then Swanhild clad herself in beautiful attire,
+and, taking men with her, went to the booth of Ospakar.
+
+Blacktooth sat in his booth and by him sat Gizur his son the Lawman.
+When he saw a beauteous lady, very richly clad, enter the booth he did
+not know who it might be. But Gizur knew her well, for he could never
+put Swanhild from his mind.
+
+“Lo! here comes Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli’s widow,” said Gizur,
+flushing red with joy at the sight of her.
+
+Then Ospakar greeted her heartily, and made place for her by him at the
+top of the booth.
+
+“Ospakar Blacktooth,” she said, “I am come to ask this of thee: that
+thou shalt befriend me in the suit which I have against Eric Brighteyes
+for the slaying of Earl Atli, my husband.”
+
+“Thou couldst have come to no man who is more willing,” said Ospakar,
+“for, if thou hast something against Eric, I have yet more.”
+
+“I would ask this, too, Ospakar: that thy son Gizur should take up my
+suit and plead it; for I know well that he is the most skilful of all
+lawmen.”
+
+“I will do that,” said Gizur, his eyes yet fixed upon her face.
+
+“I looked for no less from thee,” said Swanhild, “and be sure of this,
+that thou shalt not plead for nothing,” and she glanced at him
+meaningly. Then she set out her case with a lying tongue, and
+afterwards went back to her booth, glad at heart. For now she learned
+that Hall had not failed in his errand, seeing that Gudruda was about
+to wed Ospakar.
+
+Gizur gave warning of the blood-suit, and the end of it was that,
+though he had no notice and was not there to answer to the charge,
+against all right and custom Eric was declared outlaw and his lands
+were given, half to Swanhild and half to the men of his quarter. For
+now all held that Swanhild’s was a true tale, and Eric the most
+shameful of men, and therefore they were willing to stretch the law
+against him. Also, being absent, he had few friends, and those men of
+small account; whereas Ospakar, who backed Swanhild’s suit, was the
+most powerful of the northern chiefs, as Gizur was the most skilled
+lawman in Iceland. Moreover, Björn the Priest, Asmund’s son, was among
+the judges, and, though Swanhild’s tale seemed strange to him after
+that which he had heard from Hall of Lithdale, he loved Eric little. He
+feared also that if Eric came a free man to Iceland before Gudruda was
+wed to Ospakar, her love would conquer her anger, for he could see well
+that she still loved Brighteyes. Therefore he strove with might and
+main that Eric should be brought in guilty, nor did he fail in this.
+
+So the end of it was that Eric Brighteyes was outlawed, his lands
+declared forfeit, and his head a wolf’s head, to be taken by him who
+might, should he set foot in Iceland.
+
+Thereafter, the Althing being ended, Björn, Gizur, and Ospakar, with
+all their company, rode away to Middalhof to sit at the marriage-feast.
+But Swanhild and her folk went by sea in the long war-ship to Westmans.
+For this was her plan: to seize on Coldback and to sit there for a
+while, till she saw if Eric came out to Iceland. Also she desired to
+see the wedding of Ospakar and Gudruda, for she had been bidden to it
+by Björn, her half-brother.
+
+Now Ospakar came to Middalhof, and found Gudruda waiting his coming.
+
+She stood in the great hall, pale and cold as April snow, and greeted
+him courteously. But when he would have kissed her, she shrank from
+him, for now he was more hideous in her sight than he had ever been,
+and she loathed him in her heart.
+
+That night there was feasting in the hall, and at the feast Gudruda
+heard that Eric had been made outlaw. Then she spoke:
+
+“This is an ill deed, thus to judge an absent man.”
+
+“Say, Gudruda,” said Björn in her ear, “hast thou not also judged Eric
+who is absent?”
+
+She turned her head and spoke no more of Eric; but Björn’s words fixed
+themselves in her heart like arrows. The tale was strange to her, for
+it seemed that Eric had been made outlaw at Swanhild’s suit, and yet
+Eric was Swanhild’s love: for Swanhild’s self had sent the lock of
+Brighteyes’ hair by Hall, saying that he was her love and soon would
+wed her. How, then, did Swanhild bring a suit against him who should be
+her husband? Moreover, she heard that Swanhild sailed down to Coldback,
+and was bidden to the marriage-feast, that should be on the third day
+from now. Could it be, then, when all was said and done, that Eric was
+less faithless than she deemed? Gudruda’s heart stood still and the
+blood rushed to her brow when she thought on it. Also, even if it were
+so, it was now too late. And surely it was not so, for had not Eric
+been made outlaw? Men were not made outlaw for a little thing. Nay, she
+would meet her fate, and ask no more of Eric and his doings.
+
+On the morrow, as Gudruda sat in her chamber, it was told her that
+Saevuna, Thorgrimur’s widow and Eric’s mother, had come from Coldback
+to speak with her. For, after the death of Asmund and of Unna, Saevuna
+had moved back to Coldback on the Marsh.
+
+“Nay, how can this be?” said Gudruda astonished, for she knew well that
+Saevuna was now both blind and bed-ridden.
+
+“She has been borne here in a chair,” said the woman who told her, “and
+that is a strange sight to see.”
+
+At first Gudruda was minded to say her nay; but her heart softened, and
+she bade them bring Saevuna in. Presently she came, being set in a
+chair upon the shoulders of four men. She was white to see, for
+sickness had aged her much, and she stared about her with sightless
+eyes. But she was still tall and straight, and her face was stern to
+look on. To Gudruda it seemed like that of Eric when he was angered.
+
+“Am I nigh to Gudruda the Fair, Asmund’s daughter?” asked Saevuna.
+“Methinks I hear her breathe.”
+
+“I am here, mother,” said Gudruda. “What is thy will with me?”
+
+“Set down, carles, and begone!” quoth Saevuna; “that which I have to
+say I would say alone. When I summon you, come.”
+
+The carles set down the chair upon the floor and went.
+
+“Gudruda,” said the dame, “I am risen from my deathbed, and I have
+caused myself to be borne on my last journey here across the meads,
+that I may speak with thee and warn thee. I hear that thou hast put
+away my son, Eric Brighteyes, to whom thou art sworn in marriage, and
+art about to give thyself to Ospakar Blacktooth. I hear also that thou
+hast done this deed because a certain man, Hall of Lithdale—whom from
+his youth up I have known for a liar and a knave, and whom thou thyself
+didst mistrust in years gone by—has come hither to Iceland from
+Orkneys, bearing a tale of Eric’s dealings with thy half-sister
+Swanhild. This I hear, further: that Swanhild, Atli’s widow, hath come
+out to Iceland and laid a suit against Eric for the slaying of Atli the
+Earl, her husband, and that Eric has been outlawed and his lands at
+Coldback are forfeit. Tell me now, Gudruda, Asmund’s daughter, if these
+tales be true?”
+
+“The tales are true, mother,” said Gudruda.
+
+“Then hearken to me, girl. Eric sprang from my womb, who of all living
+men is the best and first, as he is the bravest and most strong. I have
+reared this Eric from a babe and I know his heart well. Now I tell thee
+this, that, whatever Eric has done or left undone, naught of dishonour
+is on his hands. Mayhap Swanhild has deceived him—thou art a woman, and
+thou knowest well the arts which women have, and the strength that
+Freya gives them. Well thou knowest, also, of what breed this Swanhild
+came; and perchance thou canst remember how she dealt with thee, and
+with what mind she looked on Eric. Perchance thou canst remember how
+she plotted against thee and Eric—ay, how she thrust thee from Goldfoss
+brink. Say, then, wilt thou take her word? Wilt thou take the word of
+this witch-daughter of a witch? Wilt thou not think on Groa, her
+mother, and of Groa’s dealings with thy father, and with Unna my
+kinswoman? As the mother is, so shall the daughter be. Wilt thou cast
+Eric aside, and that unheard?”
+
+“There is no more room for doubt, mother,” said Gudruda. “I have proof
+of this: that Eric has forsaken me.”
+
+“So thou thinkest, child; but I tell thee that thou art wrong! Eric
+loves thee now as he loved thee aforetime, and will love thee always.”
+
+“Would that I could believe it!” said Gudruda. “If I could believe that
+Eric still loved me—ay, even though he had been faithless to me—I would
+die ere I wed Ospakar!”
+
+“Thou art foolish, Gudruda, and thou shalt rue thy folly bitterly. I am
+outworn, and death draws near to me—far from me now are hates and
+loves, hopes and fears; but I know this: that woman is mad who, loving
+a man, weds where she loves not. Shame shall be her portion and
+bitterness her bread. Unhappy shall she live, and when she comes to
+die, but as a wilderness—but as the desolate winter snow, shall be the
+record of her days!”
+
+Now Gudruda wept aloud. “What is done is done,” she cried; “the
+bridegroom sits within the hall—the bride awaits him in the bower. What
+is done is done—I may hope no more to be saved from Ospakar.”
+
+“What is done is done, yet it can be brought to nothing; but soon that
+shall be done which may never be undone! Gudruda, fare thee well! Never
+shall I listen to thy voice again. I hold thee shameless, thou
+unfaithful woman, who in thy foolish jealousy art ready to sell thyself
+to the arms of one thou hatest! Ho! carles; come hither. Bear me
+hence!”
+
+Now the men came in and took up Saevuna’s chair. Gudruda watched them
+bear her forth. Then suddenly she sprang from her seat and ran after
+her into the hall, weeping bitterly.
+
+Now as Saevuna, Eric’s mother, was carried out she was met by Ospakar
+and Björn.
+
+“Stay,” said Björn. “What does this carline here?—and why weeps
+Gudruda, my sister?”
+
+The men halted. “Who calls me ‘carline’?” said Saevuna. “Is the voice I
+hear the voice of Björn, Asmund’s son?”
+
+“It is my voice, truly,” said Björn, “and I would know this—and this
+would Ospakar, who stands at my side, know also—why thou comest here,
+carline? and why Gudruda weeps?”
+
+“Gudruda weeps because she has good cause to weep, Björn. She weeps
+because she has betrayed her love, Eric Brighteyes, my son, and is
+about to be sold in marriage—to be sold to thee, Ospakar Blacktooth,
+like a heifer at a fair.”
+
+Then Björn grew angry and cursed Saevuna, nor did Ospakar spare to add
+his ill words. But the old dame sat in her chair, listening silently
+till all their curses were spent.
+
+“Ye are evil, the twain of you,” she said, “and ye have told lies of
+Eric, my son; and ye have taken his bride for lust and greed, playing
+on the jealous folly of a maid like harpers on a harp. Now I tell you
+this, Björn and Ospakar! My blind eyes are opened and I see this hall
+of Middalhof, and lo! it is but a gore of blood! Blood flows upon the
+board—blood streams along the floor, and ye—ye twain!—lie dead thereon,
+and about your shapes are shrouds, and on her feet are Hell-shoon! Eric
+comes and Whitefire is aloft, and no more shall ye stand before him
+whom ye have slandered than stands the birch before the lightning
+stroke! Eric comes! I see his angry eyes—I see his helm flash in the
+door-place! Red was that marriage-feast at which sat Unna, my
+kinswoman, and Asmund, thy father—redder shall be the feast where sit
+Gudruda, thy sister, and Ospakar! The wolf howls at thy door, Björn!
+the grave-worm opens his mouth! trolls run to and fro upon thy
+threshold, and the ghosts of men speed Hellwards! Ill were the deeds of
+Groa—worse shall be the deeds of Groa’s daughter! Red is thy hall with
+blood, Björn!—for Whitefire is aloft and—_I tell thee Eric comes!_”—and
+with one great cry she fell back—dead.
+
+Now they stood amazed, and trembling in their fear.
+
+“Saevuna hath spoken strange words,” said Björn.
+
+“Shall we be frightened by a dead hag?” quoth Ospakar, drawing his
+breath again. “Fellows, bear this carrion forth, or we fling it to the
+dogs.”
+
+Then the men tied the body of Saevuna, Thorgrimur’s widow, Eric’s
+mother, fast in the chair, and bore it thence. But when at length they
+came to Coldback, they found that Swanhild was there with all her
+following, and had driven Eric’s grieve and his folk to the fells. But
+one old carline, who had been nurse to Eric, was left there, and she
+sat wailing in an outhouse, being too weak to move.
+
+Then the men set down the corpse of Saevuna in the outhouse, and,
+having told all their tale to the carline, they fled also.
+
+That night passed, and passed the morrow; but on the next day at dawn
+Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail landed near Westman Isles.
+They had made a bad passage from Fareys, having been beat about by
+contrary winds; but at length they came safe and well to land.
+
+Now this was the day of the marriage-feast of Gudruda the Fair and
+Ospakar; but Eric knew nothing of these tidings.
+
+“Where to now, lord?” said Skallagrim.
+
+“To Coldback first, to see my mother, if she yet lives, and to learn
+tidings of Gudruda. Then as it may chance.”
+
+Near to the beach was a yeoman’s house. Thither they went to hire
+horses; but none were in the house, for all had gone to Gudruda’s
+marriage-feast. In the home meadow ran two good horses, and in the
+outhouses were saddles and bridles. They caught the horses, saddled
+them and rode for Coldback. When they had ridden for something over an
+hour they came to the crest of a height whence they could see Coldback
+in the Marsh.
+
+Eric drew rein and looked, and his heart swelled within him at the
+sight of the place where he was born. But as he looked he saw a great
+train of people ride away from Coldback towards Middalhof—and in the
+company a woman wearing a purple cloak.
+
+“Now what may this mean?” said Eric.
+
+“Ride on and we shall learn,” answered Skallagrim.
+
+So they rode on, and as they rode Eric’s breast grew heavy with fear.
+Now they passed up the banked way through the home meadows of the
+house, but they could see no one; and now they were at the door. Down
+sprang Eric and walked into the hall. But none were there to greet him,
+though a fire yet burned upon the earth. Only a gaunt hound wandered
+about the hall, and, seeing him, sprang towards him, growling. Eric
+knew him for his old wolf-hound, and called him by his name. The dog
+listened, then ran up and smelt his hands, and straightway howled with
+joy and leapt upon him. For a while he leapt thus, while Eric stared
+around him wondering and sad at heart. Then the dog ran to the door and
+stopped, whining. Eric followed after him. The hound passed through the
+entrance, and across the yard till he came to an outhouse. Here the dog
+stopped and scratched at the door, still whining. Eric thrust it open.
+Lo! there before him sat Saevuna, his mother, dead in a chair, and at
+her feet crouched the carline—she who had been Eric’s nurse.
+
+Now he grasped the door-posts to steady himself, and his shadow fell
+upon the white face of his mother and the old carline at her feet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+HOW ERIC WAS A GUEST AT THE WEDDING-FEAST OF GUDRUDA THE FAIR
+
+
+Eric looked, but said nothing.
+
+“Who art thou?” whined the carline, gazing up at him with tear-blinded
+eyes. But Eric’s face was in the shadow, and she only saw the glint of
+his golden hair and the flash of the golden helm. For Eric could not
+speak yet a while.
+
+“Art thou one of the Swanhild’s folk, come to drive me hence with the
+rest? Good sir, I cannot go to the fells, my limbs are too weak. Slay
+me, if thou wilt, but drive me not from this,” and she pointed to the
+corpse. “Say now, will thou not help me to give it burial? It is unmeet
+that she who in her time had husband, and goods, and son, should lie
+unburied like a dead cow on the fells. I have still a hundred in
+silver, if I might but come at it. It is hidden, sir, and I will pay
+thee if thou wilt help me to bury her. These old hands are too feeble
+to dig a grave, nor could I bear her there alone if it were dug. Thou
+wilt not help me?—then may thine own mother’s bones lie uncovered, and
+be picked of gulls and ravens. Oh, that Eric Brighteyes would come home
+again! Oh, that Eric was here! there is work to do and never a man to
+do it.”
+
+Now Eric gave a great sob and cried, “Nurse, nurse! knowest thou me
+not! _I_ am Eric Brighteyes.”
+
+She uttered a loud cry, and, clasping him by the knees, looked up into
+his face.
+
+“Thanks be to Odin! Thou art Eric—Eric come home again! But alas, thou
+hast come too late!”
+
+“What has happened, then?” said Eric.
+
+“What has happened? All evil things. Thou art outlawed, Eric, at the
+suit of Swanhild for the slaying of Atli the Earl. Swanhild sits here
+in Coldback, for she hath seized thy lands. Saevuna, thy mother, died
+two days ago in the hall of Middalhof, whither she went to speak with
+Gudruda.”
+
+“Gudruda! what of Gudruda?” cried Eric.
+
+“This, Brighteyes: to-day she weds Ospakar Blacktooth.”
+
+Eric covered his face with his hand. Presently he lifted it.
+
+“Thou art rich in evil tidings, nurse, though, it would seem, poor in
+all besides. Tell me at what hour is the wedding-feast?”
+
+“An hour after noon, Eric; but now Swanhild has ridden thither with her
+company.”
+
+“Then room must be found at Middalhof for one more guest,” said Eric,
+and laughed aloud. “Go on!—pour out thy evil news and spare me not!—for
+nothing has any more power to harm me now! Come hither, Skallagrim, and
+see and hearken.”
+
+Skallagrim came and looked on the face of dead Saevuna.
+
+“I am outlawed at Swanhild’s suit, Lambstail. My life lies in thy hand,
+if so be thou wouldst take it! Hew off my head, if thou wilt, and bear
+it to Gudruda the Fair—she will thank thee for the gift. Lay on,
+Lambstail; lay on with that axe of thine.”
+
+“Child’s talk!” said Skallagrim.
+
+“Child’s talk, but man’s work! Thou hast not heard the tale out.
+Swanhild hath seized my lands and sits here at Coldback! And—what
+thinkest thou, Skallagrim?—but now she has ridden a-guesting to the
+marriage-feast of Ospakar Blacktooth with Gudruda the Fair! Swanhild at
+Gudruda’s wedding!—the eagle in the wild swan’s nest! But there will be
+another guest,” and again he laughed aloud.
+
+“_Two_ other guests,” said Skallagrim.
+
+“More of thy tale, old nurse!—more of thy tale!” quoth Eric. “No better
+didst thou ever tell me when, as a lad, I sat by thee, in the ingle o’
+winter nights—and the company is fitting to the tale!” and he pointed
+to dead Saevuna.
+
+Then the carline told on. She told how Hall of Lithdale had come out to
+Iceland, and of the story that he bore to Gudruda, and of the giving of
+the lock of hair.
+
+“What did I say, lord?” broke in Skallagrim—“that in Hall thou hadst
+let a weasel go who would live to nip thee?”
+
+“Him I will surely live to shorten by a head,” quoth Eric.
+
+“Nay, lord, this one for me—Ospakar for thee, Hall for me!”
+
+“As thou wilt, Baresark. Among so many there is room to pick and
+choose. Tell on, nurse!”
+
+Then she told how Swanhild came out to Iceland, and, having won Ospakar
+Blacktooth and Gizur to her side, had laid a suit against Eric at the
+Thing, and there bore false witness against him, so that Brighteyes was
+declared outlaw, being absent. She told, too, how Gudruda had betrothed
+herself to Ospakar, and how Swanhild had moved down to Coldback and
+seized the lands. Lastly she told of the rising of Saevuna from her
+deathbed, of her going to Middalhof, of the words she spoke to Björn
+and Ospakar, and of her death in the hall at Middalhof.
+
+When all was told, Eric stooped and kissed the cold brow of his mother.
+
+“There is little time to bury thee now, my mother,” he said, “and
+perchance before six hours are sped there will be one to bury at thy
+side. Nevertheless, thou shalt sit in a better place than this.”
+
+Then he cut loose the cords that bound the body of Saevuna to the
+chair, and, lifting it in his arms, bore it to the hall. There he set
+the corpse in the high seat of the hall.
+
+“We need not start yet a while, Skallagrim,” said Eric, “if indeed thou
+wouldst go a-guesting with me to Middalhof. Therefore let us eat and
+drink, for there are deeds to do this day.”
+
+So they found meat and mead and ate and drank. Then Eric washed
+himself, combed out his golden locks, and looked well to his harness
+and to Whitefire’s edge. Skallagrim also ground his great axe upon the
+whetstone in the yard, singing as he ground. When all was ready, the
+horses were caught, and Eric spoke to the carline:
+
+“Hearken, nurse. If it may be that thou canst find any of our folk—and
+perchance now that they see that Swanhild has ridden to Middalhof some
+one of them will come down to spy—thou shalt say this to them. Thou
+shalt say that, if Eric Brighteyes yet lives, he will be at the foot of
+Mosfell to-morrow before midday, and if, for the sake of old days and
+fellowship, they are minded to befriend a friendless man, let them come
+thither with food, for by then food will be needed, and I will speak
+with them. And now farewell,” and Eric kissed her and went, leaving her
+weeping.
+
+As it chanced, before another hour was sped, Jon, Eric’s thrall, who
+had stayed at home in Iceland, seeing Coldback empty, crept down from
+the fells and looked in. The carline saw him, and told him these
+tidings. Then he went thence to find the other men. Having found them
+he told them Eric’s words, and a great gladness came upon them when
+they learned that Brighteyes still lived, and was in Iceland. Then they
+gathered food and gear, and rode away to the foot of Mosfell that is
+now called Ericsfell.
+
+Ospakar sat in the hall at Middalhof, near to the high seat. He was
+fully armed, and a black helm with a raven’s crest was on his head.
+For, though he said nothing of it, not a little did he fear that
+Saevuna spoke sooth—that her words would come true, and, before this
+day was done, he and Eric should once more stand face to face. At his
+side sat Gudruda the Fair, robed in white, a worked head-dress on her
+head, golden clasps upon her breast and golden rings about her arms.
+Never had she been more beautiful to see; but her face was whiter than
+her robes. She looked with loathing on Blacktooth at her side, rough
+like a bear, and hideous as a troll. But he looked on her with longing,
+and laughed from side to side of his great mouth when he thought that
+at last he had got her for his own.
+
+“Ah, if Eric would but come, faithless though he be!—if Eric would but
+come!” thought Gudruda; but no Eric came to save her. The guests
+gathered fast, and presently Swanhild swept in with all her company,
+wrapped about in her purple cloak. She came up to the high seat where
+Gudruda sat, and bent the knee before her, looking on her with lovely
+mocking face and hate in her blue eyes.
+
+“Greeting, Gudruda, my sister!” she said. “When last we met I sat,
+Atli’s bride, where to-day thou sittest the bride of Ospakar. Then Eric
+Brighteyes held thy hand, and little thou didst think of wedding
+Ospakar. Now Eric is afar—so strangely do things come about—and
+Blacktooth, Brighteyes’ foe, holds that fair hand of thine.”
+
+Gudruda looked on her and turned whiter yet in her pain, but she
+answered never a word.
+
+“What! no word for me, sister?” said Swanhild. “And yet it is through
+me that thou comest to this glad hour. It is through me that thou art
+rid of Eric, and it is I who have given thee to the arms of mighty
+Ospakar. No word of thanks for so great a service!—fie on thee,
+Gudruda! fie!”
+
+Then Gudruda spoke: “Strange tales are told of thee and Eric, Groa’s
+daughter! I have done with Eric, but I have done with thee also. Thou
+hast thrust thyself here against my will and, if I may, I would see thy
+face no more.”
+
+“Wouldst thou see Eric’s face, Gudruda?—say, wouldst see Eric’s face? I
+tell thee it is fair!”
+
+But Gudruda answered nothing, and Swanhild fell back, laughing.
+
+Now the feast began, and men waxed merry. But ever Gudruda’s heart grew
+heavier, for in it echoed those words that Saevuna had spoken. Her eyes
+were dim, and she seemed to see naught but the face of Eric as it had
+looked when he came back to her that day on the brink of Goldfoss Falls
+and she had thought him dead. Oh! what if he still loved her and were
+yet true at heart? Swanhild mocked her!—what if this was a plot of
+Swanhild’s? Had not Swanhild plotted aforetime, and could a wolf cease
+from ravening or a witch from witch-work? Nay, she had seen Eric’s
+hair—that he had sworn none save she should touch! Perchance he had
+been drugged, and the hair shorn from him in his sleep? Too late to
+think! Of what use was thought?—beside her sat Ospakar, in one short
+hour she would be his. Ah! that she could see him dead—the troll who
+had trafficked her to shame, the foe she had summoned in her wrath and
+jealousy! She had done ill—she had fallen into Swanhild’s snare, and
+now Swanhild came to mock her!
+
+The feast went on—cup followed cup. Now they poured the bride-cup!
+Before her heart beat two hundred times she would be the wife of
+Ospakar!
+
+Blacktooth took the cup—pledged her in it, and drank deep. Then he
+turned and strove to kiss her. But Gudruda shrank from him with horror
+in her eyes, and all men wondered. Still she must drink the bridal cup.
+She took it. Dimly she saw the upturned faces, faintly she heard the
+murmur of a hundred voices.
+
+What was that voice she caught above them all—there—without the hall?
+
+Holding the cup in her hand, Gudruda bent forward, staring down the
+skali. Then she cried aloud, pointing to the door, and the cup fell
+clattering from her hand and rolled along the ground.
+
+Men turned and looked. They saw this: there on the threshold stood a
+man, glorious to look at, and from his winged helm of gold the rays of
+light flashed through the dusky hall. The man was great and beautiful
+to see. He had long yellow hair bound in about his girdle, and in his
+left hand he held a pointed shield, in his right a spear, and at his
+thigh there hung a mighty sword. Nor was he alone, for by his side, a
+broad axe on his shoulder and shield in hand, stood another man, clad
+in black-hued mail—a man well-nigh as broad and big, with hawk’s eyes,
+eagle beak, and black hair streaked with grey.
+
+For a moment there was silence. Then a voice spoke:
+
+“Lo! here be the Gods Baldur and Thor!—come from Valhalla to grace the
+marriage-feast!”
+
+Then the man with golden hair cried aloud in a voice that made the
+rafters ring:
+
+“Here are Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail, his thrall, come
+from over sea to grace the feast, indeed!”
+
+“I could have looked for no worse guests,” said Björn, beneath his
+breath, and rose to bid men thrust them out. But before he could speak,
+lo! gold-helmed Eric and black-helmed Skallagrim were stalking up the
+length of that great hall. Side by side they stalked, with faces fierce
+and cold; nor stayed they till they stood before the high seat. Eric
+looked up and round, and the light of his eyes was as the light of a
+sword. Men marvelled at his greatness and his wonderful beauty, and to
+Gudruda he seemed like a God.
+
+“Here I see faces that are known to me,” said Eric. “Greetings,
+comrades!”
+
+“Greetings, Brighteyes!” shouted the Middalhof folk and the company of
+Swanhild; but the carles of Ospakar laid hand on sword—they too knew
+Eric. For still all men loved Eric, and the people of his quarter were
+proud of the deeds he had done oversea.
+
+“Greeting, Björn, Asmund’s son!” quoth Eric. “Greeting, Ospakar
+Blacktooth! Greeting, Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli’s witch-wife—Groa’s
+witch-bairn! Greeting, Hall of Lithdale, Hall the liar—Hall who cut the
+grapnel-chain! And to thee, sweet Bride, to thee Gudruda the Fair,
+greeting!”
+
+Now Björn spoke: “I will take no greeting from a shamed and outlawed
+man. Get thee gone, Eric Brighteyes, and take thy wolf-hound with thee,
+lest thou bidest here stiff and cold.”
+
+“Speak not so loud, rat, lest hound’s fang worry thee!” growled
+Skallagrim.
+
+But Eric laughed aloud and cried—
+
+“Words must be said, and perchance men shall die, ere ever I leave this
+hall, Björn!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+HOW THE FEAST WENT
+
+
+“Hearken all men!” said Eric.
+
+“Thrust him out!” quoth Björn.
+
+“Nay, cut him down!” said Ospakar, “he is an outlawed man.”
+
+“Words first, then deeds,” answered Skallagrim. “Thou shalt have thy
+fill of both, Blacktooth, before day is done.”
+
+“Let Eric say his say,” said Gudruda, lifting her head. “He has been
+doomed unheard, and it is my will that he shall say his say.”
+
+“What hast thou to do with Eric?” snarled Ospakar.
+
+“The bride-cup is not yet drunk, lord,” she answered.
+
+“To thee, then, I will speak, lady,” quoth Eric. “How comes it that,
+being betrothed to me, thou dost sit there the bride of Ospakar?”
+
+“Ask of Swanhild,” said Gudruda in a low voice. “Ask also of Hall of
+Lithdale yonder, who brought me Swanhild’s gift from Straumey.”
+
+“I must ask much of Hall and he must answer much,” said Eric. “What
+tale, then, did he bring thee from Straumey?”
+
+“He said this, Eric,” Gudruda answered: “that thou wast Swanhild’s
+love; that for Swanhild’s sake thou hadst basely killed Atli the Good,
+and that thou wast about to wed Swanhild’s self and take the Earl’s
+seat in Orkneys.”
+
+“And for what cause was I made outlaw at the Althing?”
+
+“For this cause, Eric,” said Björn, “that thou hadst dealt evilly with
+Swanhild, bringing her to shame against her will, and thereafter that
+thou hadst slain the Earl, her husband.”
+
+“Which, then, of these tales is true? for both cannot be true,” said
+Brighteyes. “Speak, Swanhild.”
+
+“Thou knowest well that the last is true,” said Swanhild boldly.
+
+“How then comes it that thou didst charge Hall with that message to
+Gudruda? How then comes it that thou didst send her the lock of hair
+which thou didst cozen me to give thee?”
+
+“I charged Hall with no message, and I sent no lock of hair,” Swanhild
+answered.
+
+“Stand thou forward, Hall!” said Eric, “and liar and coward though thou
+art, dare not to speak other than the truth! Nay, look not at the door:
+for, if thou stirrest, this spear shall find thee before thou hast gone
+a pace!”
+
+Now Hall stood forward, trembling with fear, for he saw the eye of
+Skallagrim watching him close, and while Lambstail watched, his fingers
+toyed with the handle of his axe.
+
+“It is true, lord, that Swanhild charged me with that message which I
+gave to the Lady Gudruda. Also she bade me give the lock of hair.”
+
+“And for this service thou didst take money, Hall?”
+
+“Ay, lord, she gave me money for my faring.”
+
+“And all the while thou knewest the tidings false?”
+
+Hall made no reply.
+
+“Answer!” thundered Eric—“answer the truth, knave, or by every God that
+passes the hundred gates I will not spare thee twice!”
+
+“It is so, lord,” said Hall.
+
+“Thou liest, fox!” cried Swanhild, white with wrath and casting a
+fierce look upon Hall. But men took no heed of Swanhild’s words, for
+all eyes were bent on Eric.
+
+“Is it now your pleasure, comrades, that I should tell you the truth?”
+said Brighteyes.
+
+The most part of the company shouted “Yea!” but the men of Ospakar
+stood silent.
+
+“Speak on, Eric,” quoth Gudruda.
+
+“This is the truth, then: Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli’s wife, has
+always sought my love, and she has ever hated Gudruda whom I loved.
+From a child she has striven to work mischief between us. Ay, and she
+did this, though till now it has been hidden: she strove to murder
+Gudruda; it was on the day that Skallagrim and I overcame Ospakar and
+his band on Horse-Head Heights. She thrust Gudruda from the brink of
+Golden Falls while she sat looking on the waters, and as she hung there
+I dragged her back. Is it not so, Gudruda?”
+
+“It is so,” said Gudruda.
+
+Now men murmured and looked at Swanhild. But she shrank back, plucking
+at her purple cloak.
+
+“It was for this cause,” said Eric, “that Asmund, Swanhild’s father,
+gave her choice to wed Atli the Earl and pass over sea or to take her
+trial in the Doom-Ring. She wedded Atli and went away. Afterwards, by
+witchcraft, she brought my ship to wreck on Straumey’s Isle—ay, she
+walked the waters like a shape of light and lured us on to ruin, so
+that all were drowned except Skallagrim and myself. Is it not so,
+Skallagrim?”
+
+“It is so, lord. I saw her with my eyes.”
+
+Again folk murmured.
+
+“Then we must sit in Atli’s hall,” said Eric, “and there we dwelt last
+winter. For a while Swanhild did no harm, till I feared her no more.
+But some three months ago, I was left with her: and a man called Koll,
+Groa’s thrall, of whom ye know, came out from Iceland, bringing news of
+the death of Asmund the priest, of Unna my cousin, and of Groa the
+witch. To these ill-tidings Swanhild bribed him to add something. She
+bribed him to add this: that thou, Gudruda, wast betrothed to Ospakar,
+and wouldst wed him on last Yule Day. Moreover, he gave me a certain
+message from thee, Gudruda, and, in token of its truth, the half of
+that coin which I broke with thee long years ago. Say now, lady, didst
+thou send the coin?”
+
+“Nay, never!” cried Gudruda; “many years ago I lost the half thou
+gavest me, though I feared to tell thee.”
+
+“Perchance one stands there who found it,” said Eric, pointing with his
+spear at Swanhild. “At the least I was deceived by it. Now the tale is
+short. Swanhild mourned with me, and in my sorrow I mourned bitterly.
+Then it was she asked a boon, that lock of mine, Gudruda, and, thinking
+thee faithless, I gave it, holding all oaths broken. Then too, when I
+would have left her, she drugged me with a witch-draught—ay, she
+drugged me, and I woke to find myself false to my oath, false to Atli,
+and false to thee, Gudruda. I cursed her and I left her, waiting for
+the Earl, to tell him all. But Swanhild outwitted me. She told him that
+other tale of shame that ye have heard, and brought Koll to him as
+witness of the tale. Atli was deceived by her, and not until I had cut
+him down in anger at the bitter words he spoke, calling me coward and
+niddering, did he know the truth. But before he died he knew it; and he
+died, holding my hand and bidding those about him find Koll and slay
+him. Is it not so, ye who were Atli’s men?”
+
+“It is so, Eric!” they cried; “we heard it with our own ears, and we
+slew Koll. But afterwards Swanhild brought us to believe that Earl Atli
+was distraught when he spoke thus, and that things were indeed as she
+had said.”
+
+Again men murmured, and a strange light shone in Gudruda’s eyes.
+
+“Now, Gudruda, thou hast heard all my story,” said Eric. “Say, dost
+thou believe me?”
+
+“I believe thee, Eric.”
+
+“Say then, wilt thou still wed yon Ospakar?”
+
+Gudruda looked on Blacktooth, then she looked at golden Eric and opened
+her lips to speak. But before a word could pass them Ospakar rose in
+wrath, laying his hand upon his sword.
+
+“Thinkest thou thus to lure away my dove, outlaw? First I will see thee
+food for crows.”
+
+“Well spoken, Blacktooth,” laughed Eric. “I waited for such words from
+thee. Thrice have we striven together—once out yonder in the snow, once
+on Horse-Head Heights, and once by Westman Isles—and still we live to
+tell the tale. Come down, Ospakar: come down from that soft seat of
+thine and here and now let us put it to the proof who is the better
+man. When we met before, the stake was Whitefire set against my eye.
+Now the stake is our lives and fair Gudruda’s hand. Talk no more,
+Ospakar, but fall to it.”
+
+“Gudruda shall never wed thee, while I live!” said Björn; “thou art a
+landless loon, a brawler, and an outlaw. Get thee gone, Eric, with thy
+wolf-hound!”
+
+“Squeak not so loud, rat—squeak not so loud, lest hound’s fang worry
+thee!” said Skallagrim.
+
+“Whether I wed Gudruda or whether I wed her not is a matter that shall
+be known in its season,” said Eric. “For thy words, I say this: that it
+is risky to hurl names at such as I am, Björn, lest perchance I answer
+them with spear-thrusts. Thy answer, Ospakar! What need to wait? Thy
+answer!”
+
+Now Ospakar looked at Brighteyes and grew afraid. He was a mighty man,
+but he knew the weight of Eric’s arm.
+
+“I will not fight with thee, carle,” he said, “who hast naught to
+lose.”
+
+“Then thou art coward and niddering!” said Eric. “Ospakar _Niddering_ I
+name thee here before all men! What! thou couldst plot against me—thou
+couldst waylay me, ten to one and two ships to one, but face to face
+with me alone thou dost not dare to stand? Comrades, look on your
+lord!—look at Ospakar the _Niddering!_”
+
+Now the swarthy brow of Blacktooth grew red with rage, and his breath
+came in great gasps. “Ho, men!” he cried, “drive this knave away. Strip
+his harness off him and whip him hence with rods.”
+
+“Let but a man stir towards me and this spear flies through thy heart,
+Niddering,” cried Eric. “Gudruda, what thinkest thou of thy lord?”
+
+“I know this,” said Gudruda, “that I will not wed a man who is named
+‘Niddering’ in the face of all and lifts no sword.”
+
+Gudruda spoke thus, because she was mad with love and fear and shame,
+and she desired that Eric should stand face to face with Ospakar
+Blacktooth, for thus, alone, she might perhaps be rid of Ospakar.
+
+“Such words do not come well from gentle lips,” said Björn.
+
+“Is it to be borne, brother,” answered Gudruda, “that the man who would
+call me wife should be named Ospakar the Niddering? When that shame is
+washed away, and then only, can I think on marriage. I will never be
+Niddering’s bride!”
+
+“Thou hearest, Ospakar Niddering?” said Eric. Then he gave the spear in
+his hand to Skallagrim, and, gripping Whitefire’s hilt, he burst the
+peace-strings, and tore it from the scabbard.
+
+Now the great sword shone on high like lightning leaping from a cloud,
+and as it shone men shouted, “_Ospakar! Ospakar Niddering!_ Come, win
+back Whitefire from Eric’s hand, or be for ever shamed!”
+
+Blacktooth could endure this no more. He snatched sword and shield,
+and, like a bear from a cave, like a wolf from his lair, rushed roaring
+from his seat. On he came, and the ground shook beneath his bulk.
+
+“At last, Niddering!” cried Eric, and sprang to meet him.
+
+“Back! all men, back!” shouted Skallagrim, “now we shall see blows.”
+
+As he spoke the great swords flashed aloft and clanged upon the iron
+shields. So heavy were the blows that fire leapt out from them. Ospakar
+reeled back beneath the shock, and Eric was beaten to his knee. Now he
+was up, but as he rushed, Ospakar struck again and swept away half of
+Brighteyen’s pointed shield so that it fell upon the floor. Eric smote
+also, but Ospakar dropped his knee to earth and the sword hissed over
+him. Blacktooth cut at Eric’s legs; but Brighteyes sprang from the
+ground and took no harm.
+
+Now some cried, “_Eric! Eric!_” and some cried “_Ospakar! Ospakar!_”
+for no one knew how the fight would go.
+
+Gudruda sat watching in the high seat, and as blows fell her colour
+came and went.
+
+Swanhild drew near, watching also, and she desired in her fierce heart
+to see Eric brought to shame and death, for, should he win, then
+Gudruda would be rid of Ospakar. Now by her side stood Gizur, Ospakar’s
+son, and near to her was Björn. These two held their breath, for, if
+Eric conquered, all their plans were brought to nothing.
+
+Even as he sprang into the air, Eric smote down with all his strength.
+The blow fell on Ospakar’s shield. It shore through the shield and
+struck on the shoulder beneath. But Blacktooth’s byrnie was good, nor
+did the sword bite into it. Still the stroke was so heavy that Ospakar
+staggered back four paces beneath it, then fell upon the ground.
+
+Now folk raised a shout of “_Eric! Eric!_” for it seemed that Ospakar
+was sped. Brighteyes, too, cried aloud, then rushed forward. Now, as he
+came, Swanhild whispered an eager word into the ear of Björn. By
+Björn’s foot lay that half of Eric’s shield which had been shorn away
+by the sword of Ospakar. Gudruda, watching, saw Björn push it with his
+shoe so that it slid before the feet of Brighteyes. His right foot
+caught on it, he stumbled heavily—stumbled again, then fell prone on
+his face, and, as he fell, stretched out his sword hand to save
+himself, so that Whitefire flew from his grasp. The blade struck its
+hilt against the ground, then circled in the air and fixed itself,
+point downwards, in the clay of the flooring. The hand of Ospakar
+rising from the ground smote against the hilt of Whitefire. He saw it,
+with a shout he cast his own sword away and clasped Whitefire.
+
+Away circled the sword of Ospakar; and of that cast this strange thing
+is told, false or true. Far in the corner of the hall lurked Thorunna,
+she who had betrayed Skallagrim when he was named Ounound. She had come
+with a heavy heart to Middalhof in the company of Ospakar; but when she
+saw Skallagrim, her husband—whom she had betrayed, and who had turned
+Baresark because of her wickedness—shame smote her, and she crept away
+and hid herself behind the hangings of the hall. The sword sped along
+point first, it rushed like a spear through the air. It fell on the
+hangings, piercing them, piercing the heart of Thorunna, who cowered
+behind them, so that with one cry she sank dead to earth, slain by her
+lover’s hand.
+
+Now when men saw that Ospakar once more held Whitefire in his
+hand—Whitefire that Brighteyes had won from him—they called aloud that
+it was an omen. The sword of Blacktooth had come back to Blacktooth and
+now Eric would surely be slain of it!
+
+Eric sprang from the ground. He heard the shouts and saw Whitefire
+blazing in Ospakar’s hand.
+
+“Now thou art weaponless, fly! Brighteyes; fly!” cried some.
+
+Gudruda’s cheek grew white with fear, and for a moment Eric’s heart
+failed him.
+
+“Fly not!” roared Skallagrim. “Björn tripped thee. Yet hast thou half a
+shield!”
+
+Ospakar rushed on, and Whitefire flickered over Eric’s helm. Down it
+came and shore one wing from the helm. Again it shone and fell, but
+Brighteyes caught the blow on his broken shield.
+
+Then, while men waited to see him slain, Eric gave a great war-shout
+and sprang forward.
+
+“Thou art mad!” shouted the folk.
+
+“Ye shall see! Ye shall see!” screamed Skallagrim.
+
+Again Ospakar smote and again Eric caught the blow; and behold! he
+struck back, thrusting with the point of the shorn shield straight at
+the face of Ospakar.
+
+“_Peck! Eagle; peck!_” cried Skallagrim.
+
+Once more Whitefire shone above him. Eric rushed in beneath the sword,
+and with all his mighty strength thrust the buckler-point at
+Blacktooth’s face. It struck fair and full, and lo! the helm of Ospakar
+burst asunder. He threw wide his giant arms, then fell as a pine falls
+upon the mountain edge. He fell back, and he lay still.
+
+But Eric, stooping over him, took Whitefire from his hand.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+HOW THE FEAST ENDED
+
+
+For a moment there was silence in the hall, for men had known no such
+fight as this.
+
+“Why, then, do ye gape?” laughed Skallagrim, pointing with the spear.
+“Dead is Ospakar!—slain by the swordless man! Eric Brighteyes hath
+slain Ospakar Blacktooth!”
+
+Then there went up such a shout as never was heard in the hall of
+Middalhof.
+
+Now when Gudruda knew that Ospakar was sped, she looked at Eric as he
+rested, leaning on his sword, and her heart was filled with awe and
+love. She sprang from her seat, and, coming to where Brighteyes stood,
+she greeted him.
+
+“Welcome to Iceland, Eric!” she said. “Welcome, thou glory of the
+south!”
+
+Now Swanhild grew wild, for she saw that Eric was about to take Gudruda
+in his arms and kiss her before all men.
+
+“Say, Björn,” she cried; “wilt thou suffer that this outlaw, having
+slain Ospakar, should lead Gudruda hence as wife?”
+
+“He shall never do so while I live,” cried Björn, nearly mad with rage.
+“This is my command, sister: that thou dost see Eric no more.”
+
+“Say, Björn,” answered Gudruda, “did I dream, or did I indeed see thee
+thrust the broken buckler before Eric’s feet, so that he stumbled on it
+and fell?”
+
+“That thou sawest, lady,” said Skallagrim; “for I saw it also.”
+
+Now Björn grew white in his anger. He did not answer Gudruda, but
+called aloud to his men to slay Eric and Skallagrim. Gizur called also
+to the folk of Ospakar, and Swanhild to those who came with her.
+
+Then Gudruda fled back to her seat.
+
+But Eric cried aloud also: “Ye who love me, cleave to me. Suffer it not
+that Brighteyes be cut down of northerners and outland men. Hear me,
+Atli’s folk; hear me, carles of Coldback and of Middalhof!”
+
+And so greatly did many love Eric that half of the thralls of Björn,
+and almost all of the company of Swanhild who had been Atli’s
+shield-men and Brighteyes’ comrades, drew swords, shouting “Eric!
+Eric!” But the carles of Ospakar came on to make an end of him.
+
+Björn saw, and, drawing sword, smote at Brighteyes, taking him
+unawares. But Skallagrim caught the blow upon his axe, and before Björn
+could smite again Whitefire was aloft and down fell Björn, dead!
+
+That was the end of Björn, Asmund’s son.
+
+“Thou hast squeaked thy last, rat! What did I tell thee?” cried
+Skallagrim. “Take Björn’s shield and back to back, lord, for here come
+foes.”
+
+“There goes one,” answered Eric, pointing to the door.
+
+Now Hall of Lithdale slunk through the doorway—Hall, the liar, who cut
+the grapnel-chain—for he wished to see the last of Skallagrim. But the
+Baresark still held Eric’s spear in his hand. He whirled it aloft, and
+it hissed through the air. The aim was good, for, as he crept away, the
+spear struck Hall between neck and shoulder, pinning him to the
+doorpost, and there the liar died.
+
+“Now the weasel is nailed to the beam,” said Skallagrim. “Hall of
+Lithdale, what did I promise thee?”
+
+“Guard thy head and my back,” quoth Eric; “blows fall!”
+
+Now men smote at Eric and Skallagrim, nor did they spare to smite in
+turn. And as foes fell before him, Eric stepped one pace forward
+towards the door, and Skallagrim, who, back to back with him, held off
+those who pressed behind, took one step rearwards. Thus, a foe for
+every step, they won their way down the long hall. Fierce raged the
+fray around them, for, mad with hate and drink and the lust of fight,
+Swanhild’s folk—Eric’s friends—remembering the words of Atli, fell on
+Ospakar’s; and the people of Björn fell on each other, brother on
+brother, and father on son—nor might the fray be stayed. The boards
+were overthrown, dead men lay among the meats and mead, and the blood
+of freeman, lord and thrall ran adown the floor. Everywhere through the
+dusky hall glittered the sheen of flashing swords and rose the clang of
+war. Darts clove the air like tongues of flame, and the clamour of
+battle beat against the roof.
+
+Blinded of the Norns who brought these things to pass, men sought no
+mercy and they gave none, but smote and slew till few were left to
+slay.
+
+And still Gudruda sat in her bride-seat, and, with eyes fixed in
+horror, watched the waxing of the war. Near to her stood Swanhild,
+marking all things with a fierce-set face, and calling down curses on
+her folk, who one and all cried “Eric! Eric!” and swept the thralls of
+Ospakar as corn is swept of the sickle.
+
+And there, nigh to the door, pale of face and beautiful to see, golden
+Eric clove his way, and with him went black Skallagrim. Terrible was
+the flare of Whitefire as he flicked aloft like the levin in the cloud.
+Terrible was the flare of Whitefire; but more terrible was the light of
+Eric’s eyes, for they seemed to flame in his head, and wherever that
+fire fell it lighted men the way to death. Whitefire sung and
+flickered, and crashed the axe of Skallagrim, and still through the
+press of war they won their way. Now Gizur stands before them, spear
+aloft, and Whitefire leaps up to meet him. Lo! he turns and flies. The
+coward son of Ospakar does not seek the fate of Ospakar!
+
+The door is won. They stand without but little harmed, while women wail
+aloud.
+
+“To horse!” cried Skallagrim; “to horse, ere our luck fail us!”
+
+“There is no luck in this,” gasped Eric; “for I have slain many men,
+and among them is Björn, the brother of her whom I would make my
+bride.”
+
+“Better one such fight than many brides,” said Skallagrim, shaking his
+red axe. “We have won great glory this day, Brighteyes, and Ospakar is
+dead—slain by a swordless man!”
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim ran to their horses, none hindering them, and,
+mounting, rode towards Mosfell.
+
+All that evening and all the night they rode, and at morning they came
+across the black sand to Mosfell slopes that are by the Hecla. Here
+they rested, and, taking off their armour, washed themselves in the
+stream: for they were very weary and foul with blood and wounds. When
+they had finished washing and had buckled on their harness again,
+Skallagrim, peering across the plain with his hawk’s eyes, saw men
+riding fast towards them.
+
+“Foes are soon afoot, lord,” he said. “I thought we had stayed their
+hunger for a while.”
+
+“Would that I might stay mine,” quoth Eric. “I am weary, and unfit for
+fight.”
+
+“I have still strength for one or two,” said Skallagrim, “and then
+good-night! But these are no foes. They are of the Coldback folk. The
+carline has kept her word.”
+
+Then Eric was glad, and presently six men, headed by Jon his thrall,
+the same man who had watched on Mosfell when Eric went up to slay the
+Baresark, rode to them and greeted them. “Beggar women,” said Jon,
+“whom they met at Ran River, had told them of the death of Ospakar, and
+of the great slaying at Middalhof, and they would know if the tidings
+were true.”
+
+“It is true, Jon,” said Eric; “but first give us food, if ye have it,
+for we are hungered and spent. When we have eaten we will speak.”
+
+So they led up a pack-horse and from it took stockfish and smoked meat,
+of which Eric and Skallagrim ate heartily, till their strength came
+back to them.
+
+Then Eric spoke. “Comrades,” he said, “I am an outlawed man, and,
+though I have not sought it, much blood is on my head. Atli is dead at
+my hand; Ospakar is dead at my hand; Björn the Priest, Asmund’s son, is
+dead at my hand, and with them many another man. Nor may the matter
+stay here, for Gizur, Blacktooth’s son, yet lives, and Björn has kin in
+the south, and Swanhild will buy friends with gold, and all of these
+will set on me to slay me, so that at the last I die by the sword.”
+
+“No need for that,” said Skallagrim. “Our vengeance is wrought, and
+now, as before, the sea is open, and I think that a welcome awaits us
+in London.”
+
+“Now Gudruda is widowed before she was fully wed,” said Eric,
+“therefore I bide an outlawed man here in Iceland. I go hence no more,
+though it be death to stay, unless indeed Gudruda the Fair goes with
+me.”
+
+“It will be death, then,” said Skallagrim, “and the swords are forged
+that we shall feel. The odds are too heavy, lord.”
+
+“Mayhap,” answered Eric. “No man may flee his fate, and I shall not
+altogether grieve when mine finds me. Hearken, comrades: I go up to
+Mosfell height, and there I stay, till those be found who can drag me
+from my hole. But this is my counsel to you: that ye leave me to my
+doom, for I am an unlucky man who always chooses the wrong road.”
+
+“That will not I,” said Skallagrim.
+
+“Nor we,” said Eric’s folk; “Swanhild holds Coldback, and we are driven
+to the fells. To the fells then we will go with thee, Eric Brighteyes,
+and become cave-dwellers and outlaws for thy sake. Fear not, thou shalt
+still find many friends.”
+
+“I did not look for such a thing at your hands,” said Eric; “but stormy
+waters show how the boat is built. May no bad luck come to you from
+your good fellowship. And now let us to our nest.”
+
+Then they caught the horses, and rode with Brighteyes up the steep side
+of Mosfell, till at length they came to that secret dell which
+Skallagrim had once shown to Eric. Here they turned the horses loose to
+feed, and, going forward on foot, reached the dark and narrow pass that
+Brighteyes had trod when he sought for the Baresark foe. Skallagrim led
+the way along it, then came Eric and the rest. One by one they stepped
+on to the giddy point of rock, and, catching at the birch-bush, entered
+the hole. So they gained the platform and the great cave beyond; and
+they found that no man had set foot there since the day when Eric had
+striven with Skallagrim. For there on the rock, rotten with the
+weather, lay that haft of wood which Brighteyes had hewed from the axe
+of Skallagrim, and in the cave were many things beside as the Baresark
+had left them.
+
+So they took up their dwelling in the cave, Eric, Skallagrim, and the
+six Coldback men, and there they dwelt many months. But Eric sent out
+his men, one at a time, and got together food and a store of
+sheepskins, and other needful things. For he knew this well: that Gizur
+and Swanhild would before long come up against them, and, if they could
+not take them by force, would set themselves to watch the mountain-path
+and starve them out.
+
+When Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Middalhof the fight still raged
+fiercely in the hall, and nothing but death might stay it. The minds of
+men were mad, and they smote one another, and slew each other, till at
+length of all that marriage company few were left unharmed, except
+Gizur, Swanhild, and Gudruda. For the serving thralls and womenfolk had
+fled the hall, and with them some peaceful men.
+
+Then Gudruda spoke as one in a dream.
+
+“Saevuna’s prophecy was true,” she said, “red was the marriage-feast of
+Asmund my father, redder has been the marriage-feast of Ospakar! She
+saw the hall of Middalhof one gore of blood, and lo! it is so; look
+upon thy work, Swanhild,” and she pointed to the piled-up dead—“look
+upon thy work, witch-sister, and grow fearful: for all this death is on
+thy head!”
+
+Swanhild laughed aloud. “I think it a merry sight,” she cried. “The
+marriage-feast of Asmund our father was red, and thy marriage-feast,
+Gudruda, has been redder. Would that thy blood and the blood of Eric
+ran with the blood of Björn and Ospakar! That tale must yet be told,
+Gudruda. There shall be binding on of Hell-shoes at Middalhof, but I
+bind them not. My task is still to come: for I will live to fasten the
+Hell-shoes on the feet of Eric, and on thy feet, Gudruda! At the least,
+I have brought about this much, that thou canst scarcely wed Eric the
+outlaw: for with his own hand he slew Björn our brother, and because of
+this I count all that death as nothing. Thou canst not mate with
+Brighteyes, lest the wide wounds of Björn thy brother should take
+tongues and cry thy shame from sea to sea!”
+
+Gudruda made no answer, but sat as one carved in stone. Then Swanhild
+spoke again:
+
+“Let us away to the north, Gizur; there to gather strength to make an
+end of Eric. Say, wilt thou help us, Gudruda? The blood-feud for the
+death of Björn is thine.”
+
+“Ye are enough to bring about the fall of one unfriended man,” Gudruda
+said. “Go, and leave me with my sorrow and the dead. Nay! before thou
+goest, listen, Swanhild, for there is that in my heart which tells me I
+shall never look again upon thy face. From evil to evil thou hast ever
+gone, Swanhild, and from evil to evil thou wilt go. It may well chance
+that thy wickedness will win. It may well chance that thou wilt crown
+thy crimes with my slaying and the slaying of the man who loves me. But
+I tell thee this, traitress—murderess, as thou art—that here the tale
+ends not. Not by death, Swanhild, shalt thou escape the deeds of life!
+_There_ they shall rise up against thee, and _there_ every shame that
+thou hast worked, every sin that thou hast sinned, and every soul that
+thou hast brought to Hela’s halls, shall come to haunt thee and to
+drive thee on from age to age! That witchcraft which thou lovest shall
+mesh thee. Shadows shall bewilder thee; from the bowl of empty longings
+thou shalt drink and drink, and not be satisfied. Yea! lusts shall mock
+and madden thee. Thou shalt ride the winds, thou shalt sail the seas,
+but thou shalt find no harbour, and never shalt thou set foot upon a
+shore of peace.
+
+“Go on, Swanhild—dye those hands in blood—wade through the river of
+shame! Seek thy desire, and finding, lose! Work thy evil, and winning,
+fail! I yet shall triumph—I yet shall trample thee; and, in a place to
+come, with Eric at my side, I shall make a mock of Swanhild the
+murderess! Swanhild the liar, and the wanton, and the witch! Now get
+thee gone!”
+
+Swanhild heard. She looked up at Gudruda’s face and it was alight as
+with a fire. She strove to answer, but no words came. Then Groa’s
+daughter turned and went, and with her went Gizur.
+
+Now women and thralls came in and drew out the wounded and those who
+still breathed from among the dead, taking them to the temple. They
+bore away the body of Ospakar also, but they left the rest.
+
+All night long Gudruda sat in the bride’s seat. There she sat in the
+silver summer midnight, looking on the slain who were strewn about the
+great hall. All night she sat alone in the bride’s seat thinking—ever
+thinking.
+
+How, then, would it end? There her brother Björn lay a-cold—Björn the
+justly slain of Brighteyes; yet how could she wed the man who slew her
+brother? From Ospakar she was divorced by death; from Eric she was
+divorced by the blood of Björn her brother! How might she unravel this
+tangled skein and float to weal upon this sea of death? All things went
+amiss! The doom was on her! She had lived to an ill purpose—her love
+had wrought evil! What availed it to have been born to be fair among
+women and to have desired that which might not be? And she herself had
+brought these things to pass—she had loosed the rock which crushed her!
+Why had she hearkened to that false tale?
+
+Gudruda sat on high in the bride’s seat, asking wisdom of the piled-up
+dead, while the cold blue shadows of the nightless night gathered over
+her and them—gathered, and waned, and grew at last to the glare of day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+HOW ERIC VENTURED DOWN TO MIDDALHOF AND WHAT HE FOUND
+
+
+Gizur went north to Swinefell, and Swanhild went with him. For now that
+Ospakar was dead at Eric’s hand, Gizur ruled in his place at Swinefell,
+and was the greatest lord in all the north. He loved Swanhild, and
+desired to make her his wife; but she played with him, talking darkly
+of what might be. Swanhild was not minded to be the wife of any man,
+except of Eric; to all others she was cold as the winter earth. Still,
+she fooled Gizur as she had fooled Atli the Good, and he grew blind
+with love of her. For still the beauty of Swanhild waxed as the moon
+waxes in the sky, and her wicked eyes shone as the stars shine when the
+moon has set.
+
+Now they came to Swinefell, and there Gizur buried Ospakar Blacktooth,
+his father, with much state. He set him in a chamber of rock and
+timbers on a mountain-top, whence he might see all the lands that once
+were his, and built up a great mound of earth above him. To this day
+people tell that here on Yule night black Ospakar bursts out, and
+golden Eric rides down the blast to meet him. Then come the clang of
+swords, and groans, and the sound of riven helms, till presently
+Brighteyes passes southward on the wind, bearing in his hand the half
+of a cloven shield.
+
+So Gizur bound the Hell-shoes on his father, and swore that he would
+neither rest nor stay till Eric Brighteyes was dead and dead was
+Skallagrim Lambstail. Then he gathered a great force of men and rode
+south to Coldback, to the slaying of Eric, and with him went Swanhild.
+
+Gudruda sat alone in the haunted hall of Middalhof and brooded on her
+love and on her fate. Eric, too, sat in Mosfell cave and brooded on his
+evil chance. His heart was sick with sorrow, and there was little that
+he could do except think about the past. He would not go to foray,
+after the fashion of outlaws, and there was no need of this. For the
+talk of his mighty deeds spread through the land, so that the people
+spoke of little else. And the men of his quarter were so proud of these
+deeds of Eric’s that, though some of their kind had fallen at his hands
+in the great fight of Middalhof and some at the hands of Skallagrim,
+yet they spoke of him as men speak of a God. Moreover they brought him
+gifts of food and clothing and arms, as many as his people could carry
+away, and laid them in a booth that is on the plain near the foot of
+Mosfell, which thenceforth was named Ericsfell. Further, they bade his
+thralls tell him that, if he wished it, they would find him a good ship
+of war to take him from Iceland—ay, and man it with loyal men and true.
+
+Eric thanked them through Jon his thrall, but answered that he wished
+to die here in Iceland.
+
+Now, when Eric had sat two months and more in Mosfell cave and autumn
+was coming, he learned that Gizur and Swanhild had moved down to
+Coldback, and with them a great company of men who were sworn to slay
+him. He asked if Gudruda the Fair had also gathered men for his
+slaying. They told him no; that Gudruda stayed with her thralls and
+women at Middalhof, mourning for Björn her brother. From these tidings
+Eric took some heart of hope: at the least Gudruda laid no blood-feud
+against him. For he waited, thinking, if indeed she yet loved him, that
+Gudruda would send him some word or token of her love. But no word
+came, since between them ran the blood of Björn. On the morrow of these
+tidings Skallagrim spoke to Eric.
+
+“This is my counsel, lord,” he said, “that we ride out by night and
+fall on the folk of Gizur at Coldback, and burn the stead over them,
+putting them to the sword. I am weary of sitting here like an eagle in
+a cage.”
+
+“Such is no counsel of mine, Skallagrim,” answered Brighteyes. “I am
+weary of sitting here, indeed; but I am yet more weary of bringing men
+to their death. I will shed no more blood, unless it is to save my own
+head. When the people of Gizur come to seek me on Mosfell, they shall
+find me here; but I will not go to them.”
+
+“Thy heart is out of thee, lord,” said Skallagrim; “thou wast not wont
+to speak thus.”
+
+“Ay, Skallagrim,” said Eric, “the heart is out of me. Yet I ride from
+Mosfell to-day.”
+
+“Whither, lord?”
+
+“To Middalhof, to have speech with Gudruda the Fair.”
+
+“Like enough, then, thou wilt be silent thereafter.”
+
+“It well may be,” said Eric. “Yet I will ride. I can bear this doubt no
+longer.”
+
+“Then I shall come with thee,” said Skallagrim.
+
+“As thou wilt,” answered Eric.
+
+So at midday Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Mosfell in a storm of
+rain. The rain was so heavy that those of Gizur’s spies who watched the
+mountain did not see them. All that day they rode and all the night,
+till by morning they came to Middalhof. Eric told Skallagrim to stay
+with the horses and let them feed, while he went on foot to see if by
+chance he might get speech with Gudruda. This the Baresark did, though
+he grumbled at the task, fearing lest Eric should be done to death, and
+he not there to die with him.
+
+Now Eric walked to within two bowshots of the house, then sat down in a
+dell by the river, from the edge of which he could see those who passed
+in and out. Presently his heart gave a leap, for there came out from
+the woman’s door a lady tall and beautiful to see, and with golden hair
+that flowed about her breast. It was Gudruda, and he saw that she bore
+a napkin in her hand. Then Eric knew, according to her custom on the
+warm mornings, that she came alone to bathe in the river, as she had
+always done from a child. It was her habit to bathe here in this place:
+for at the bottom of the dell was a spot where reeds and bushes grew
+thick, and the water lay in a basin of rock and was clear and still.
+For at this spot a hot spring ran into the river.
+
+Eric went down the dell, hid himself close in the bushes and waited,
+for he feared to speak with Gudruda in the open field. A while passed,
+and presently the shadow of the lady crept over the edge of the dell,
+then she came herself in that beauty which since her day has not been
+known in Iceland. Her face was sad and sweet, her dark and lovely eyes
+were sad. On she came, till she stood within a spear’s length of where
+Eric lay, crouched in the bush, and looking at her through the hedge of
+reeds. Here a flat rock overhung the water, and Gudruda sat herself on
+this rock, and, shaking off her shoes, dipped her white feet in the
+water. Then suddenly she threw aside her cloak, baring her arms, and,
+gazing upon the shadow of her beauty in the mirror of the water, sighed
+and sighed again, while Eric looked at her with a bursting heart, for
+as yet he could find no words to say.
+
+Now she spoke aloud. “Of what use to be so fair?” she said. “Oh,
+wherefore was I born so fair to bring death to many and sorrow on
+myself and him I love?” And she shook her golden hair about her arms of
+snow, and, holding the napkin to her eyes, wept softly. But it seemed
+to Eric that between her sobs she called upon his name.
+
+Now Eric could no longer bear the sight of Gudruda weeping. While she
+wept, hiding her eyes, he rose from behind the screen of reeds and
+stood beside her in such fashion that his shadow fell upon her. She
+felt the sunlight pass and looked up. Lo! it was no cloud, but the
+shape of Eric, and the sun glittered on his golden helm and hair.
+
+“Eric!” Gudruda cried; “Eric!” Then, remembering how she was attired,
+snatching her cloak, she threw it about her arms and thrust her wet
+feet into her shoes. “Out upon thee!” she said; “is it not enough,
+then, that thou shouldst break thy troth for Swanhild’s sake, that thou
+shouldst slay my brother and turn my hall to shambles? Wouldst now
+steal upon me thus!”
+
+“Methought that thou didst weep and call upon my name, Gudruda,” he
+said humbly.
+
+“By what right art thou here to hearken to my words?” she answered. “Is
+it, then, strange that I should speak the name of him who slew my
+brother? Is it strange that I should weep over that brother whom thou
+didst slay? Get thee gone, Brighteyes, before I call my folk to kill
+thee!”
+
+“Call on, Gudruda. I set little price upon my life. I laid it in the
+hands of chance when I came from Mosfell to speak with thee, and now I
+will pay it down if so it pleases thee. Fear not, thy thralls shall
+have an easy task: for I shall scarcely care to hold my own. Say, shall
+I call for thee?”
+
+“Hush! Speak not so loud! Folk may hear thee, Eric, and then thou wilt
+be in danger—I would say that, then shall ill things be told of me,
+because I am found with him who slew my brother?”
+
+“I slew Ospakar too, Gudruda. Surely the death of him by whose side
+thou didst sit as wife is more to thee than the death of Björn?”
+
+“The bride-cup was not yet drunk, Eric; therefore I have no blood-feud
+for Ospakar.”
+
+“Is it, then, thy will that I should go, lady?”
+
+“Yes, go!—go! Never let me see thy face again!”
+
+Brighteyes turned without a word. He took three paces and Gudruda
+watched him as he went.
+
+“Eric!” she called. “Eric! thou mayest not go yet: for at this hour the
+thralls bring down the kine to milk, and they will see thee. Liest thou
+hid here. I—I will go. For though, indeed, thou dost deserve to die, I
+am not willing to bring thee to thy end—because of old friendship I am
+not willing!”
+
+“If thou goest, I will go also,” said Eric. “Thralls or no thralls, I
+will go, Gudruda.”
+
+“Thou art cruel to drive me to such a choice, and I have a mind to give
+thee to thy fate.”
+
+“As thou wilt,” said Eric; but she made as though she did not hear his
+words.
+
+“Now,” she said, “if we must stay here, it is better that we hide where
+thou didst hide, lest some come upon thee.” And she passed through the
+screen of rushes and sat down in a grassy place beyond, and spoke
+again.
+
+“Nay, sit not near me; sit yonder. I would not touch thee, nor look
+upon thee, who wast Swanhild’s love, and didst slay Björn my brother.”
+
+“Say, Gudruda,” said Eric, “did I not tell thee of the magic arts of
+Swanhild? Did I not tell thee before all men yonder in the hall, and
+didst thou not say that thou didst believe my words? Speak.”
+
+“That is true,” said Gudruda.
+
+“Wherefore, then, dost thou taunt me with being Swanhild’s love—with
+being the love of her whom of all alive I hate the most—and whose
+wicked guile has brought these sorrows on us?”
+
+But Gudruda did not answer.
+
+“And for this matter of the death of Björn at my hands, think, Gudruda:
+was I to blame in it? Did not Björn thrust the cloven shield before my
+feet, and thus give me into the hand of Ospakar? Did he not afterwards
+smite at me from behind, and would he not have slain me if Skallagrim
+had not caught the blow? Was I, then, to blame if I smote back and if
+the sword flew home? Wilt thou let the needful deed rise up against our
+love? Speak, Gudruda!”
+
+“Talk no more of love to me, Eric,” she answered; “the blood of Björn
+has blotted out our love: it cries to me for vengeance. How may I speak
+of love with him who slew my brother? Listen!” she went on, looking on
+him sidelong, as one who wished to look and yet not seem to see: “here
+thou must hide an hour, and, since thou wilt not sit in silence, speak
+no tender words to me, for it is not fitting; but tell me of those
+deeds thou didst in the south lands over sea, before thou wentest to
+woo Swanhild and camest hither to kill my brother. For till then thou
+wast mine—till then I loved thee—who now love thee not. Therefore I
+would hear of the deeds of that Eric whom once I loved, before he
+became as one dead to me.”
+
+“Heavy words, lady,” said Eric—“words to make death easy.”
+
+“Speak not so,” she said; “it is unmanly thus to work upon my fears.
+Tell me those tidings of which I ask.”
+
+So Eric told her all his deeds, though he showed small boastfulness
+about them. He told her how he had smitten the war-dragons of Ospakar,
+how he had boarded the Raven and with Skallagrim slain those who sailed
+in her. He told her also of his deeds in Ireland, and of how he took
+the viking ships and came to London town.
+
+And as he told, Gudruda listened as one who hung upon her lover’s dying
+words, and there was but one light in the world for her, the light of
+Eric’s eyes, and there was but one music, the music of his voice. Now
+she looked upon him sidelong no longer, but with open eyes and parted
+lips she drank in his words, and always, though she knew it not
+herself, she crept closer to his side.
+
+Then he told her how he had been greatly honoured of the King of
+England, and of the battles he had fought in at his side. Lastly, Eric
+told her how the King would have given him a certain great lady of
+royal blood in marriage, and how Edmund had been angered because he
+would not stay in England.
+
+“Tell me of this lady,” said Gudruda, quickly. “Is she fair, and how is
+she named?”
+
+“She is fair, and her name is Elfrida,” said Eric.
+
+“And didst thou have speech with her on this matter?”
+
+“Somewhat.”
+
+Now Gudruda drew herself away from Eric’s side.
+
+“What was the purport of thy speech?” she said, looking down. “Speak
+truly, Eric.”
+
+“It came to little,” he answered. “I told her that there was one in
+Iceland to whom I was betrothed, and to Iceland I must go.”
+
+“And what said this Elfrida, then?”
+
+“She said that I should get little luck at the hands of Gudruda the
+Fair. Moreover, she asked, should my betrothed be faithless to me, or
+put me from her, if I should come again to England.”
+
+Now Gudruda looked him in the face and spoke. “Say, Eric, is it in thy
+mind to sail for England in the spring, if thou canst escape thy foes
+so long?”
+
+Now Eric took counsel with himself, and in his love and doubt grew
+guileful as he had never been before. For he knew well that Gudruda had
+this weakness—she was a jealous woman.
+
+“Since thou dost put me from thee, that is in my mind, lady,” he
+answered.
+
+Gudruda heard. She thought on the great and beauteous Lady Elfrida, far
+away in England, and of Eric walking at her side, and sorrow took hold
+of her. She said no word, but fixed her dark eyes on Brighteyes’ face,
+and lo! they filled with tears.
+
+Eric might not bear this sight, for his heart beat within him as though
+it would burst the byrnie over it. Suddenly he stretched out his arms
+and swept her to his breast. Soft and sweet he kissed her, again and
+yet again, and she struggled not, though she wept a little.
+
+“It is small blame to me,” she whispered, “if thou dost hold me on thy
+breast and kiss me, for thou art more strong than I. Björn must know
+this if his dead eyes see aught. Yet for thee, Eric, it is the greatest
+shame of all thy shames.”
+
+“Talk not, my sweet; talk not,” said Eric, “but kiss thou me: for thou
+knowest well that thou lovest me yet as I love thee.”
+
+Now the end of it was that Gudruda yielded and kissed him whom she had
+not kissed for many years.
+
+“Loose me, Eric,” she said; “I would speak with thee,” and he loosed
+her, though unwillingly.
+
+“Hearken,” she went on, hiding her fair face in her hands: “it is true
+that for life and death I love thee now as ever—how much thou mayest
+never know. Though Björn be dead at thy hands, yet I love thee; but how
+I may wed thee and not win the greatest shame, that I know not. I am
+sure of one thing, that we may not bide here in Iceland. Now if,
+indeed, thou lovest me, listen to my rede. Get thee back to Mosfell,
+Eric, and sit there in safety through this winter, for they may not
+come at thee yonder on Mosfell. Then, if thou art willing, in the
+spring I will make ready a ship, for I have no ship now, and, moreover,
+it is too late to sail. Then, perchance, leaving all my lands and
+goods, I will take thy hand, Eric, and we will fare together to
+England, seeking such fortune as the Norns may give us. What sayest
+thou?”
+
+“I say it is a good rede, and would that the spring were come.”
+
+“Ay, Eric, would that the spring were come. Our lot has been hard, and
+I doubt much if things will go well with us at the last. And now thou
+must hence, for presently the serving-women will come to seek me. Guard
+thyself, Eric, as thou lovest me—guard thyself, and beware of
+Swanhild!” Then once more they kissed soft and long, and Eric went.
+
+But Gudruda sat a while behind the screen of reeds, and was very happy
+for a space. For it was as though the winter were past and summer shone
+upon her heart again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+HOW GUDRUDA WENT UP TO MOSFELL
+
+
+Eric walked warily till he came to the dell where he had left
+Skallagrim and the horses. It was the same dell in which Groa had
+brewed the poison-draught for Asmund the Priest and Unna, Thorod’s
+daughter.
+
+“What news, lord?” said Skallagrim. “Thou wast gone so long that I
+thought of seeking thee. Hast thou seen Gudruda?”
+
+“Ay,” said Eric, “and this is the upshot of it, that in the spring we
+sail for England and bid farewell to Iceland and our ill luck.”
+
+“Would, then, that it were spring,” said Skallagrim, speaking
+Brighteyes’ own words. “Why not sail now and make an end?”
+
+“Gudruda has no ship and it is late to take the sea. Also I think that
+she would let a time go by because of the blood-feud which she has
+against me for the death of Björn.”
+
+“I would rather risk these things than stay the winter through in
+Iceland,” said Skallagrim, “it is long from now to spring, and yon
+wolf’s den is cold-lying in the dark months, as I know well.”
+
+“There is light beyond the darkness,” said Eric, and they rode away.
+Everything went well with them till late at night they came to the
+slopes of Mosfell. They were half asleep on their horses, being weary
+with much riding, and the horses were weary also. Suddenly, Skallagrim,
+looking up, caught the faint gleam of light from swords hidden behind
+some stones.
+
+“Awake, lord!” he cried, “here are foes ahead.”
+
+Gizur’s folk behind the stones heard his voice and came out from their
+ambush. There were six of them, and they formed in line before the
+pair. They were watching the mountain, for a rumour had reached them
+that Eric was abroad, and, seeing him, they had hidden hastily behind
+the stones.
+
+“Now what counsel shall we take?” said Eric, drawing Whitefire.
+
+“We have often stood against men more than six, and sometimes we have
+left more men than six to mark where we stood,” answered Skallagrim.
+“It is my counsel that we ride at them!”
+
+“So be it,” said Eric, and he spurred his weary horse with his heels.
+Now when the six saw Eric and Skallagrim charge on them boldly, they
+wavered, and the end of it was that they broke and fled to either side
+before a blow was struck. For it had come to this pass, so great was
+the terror of the names of Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail,
+that no six men dared to stand before them in open fight.
+
+So the path being clear they rode on up the slope. But when they had
+gone a little way, Skallagrim turned his horse, and mocked those who
+had lain in ambush, saying:
+
+“Ye fight well, ye carles of Gizur, Ospakar’s son! Ye are heroes,
+surely! Say now, mighty men, will ye stand there if I come down alone
+against you?”
+
+At these words the men grew mad with wrath, and flung their spears.
+Skallagrim caught one on his shield and it fell to the earth, but
+another passed over his head and struck Eric on the left shoulder, near
+the neck, making a deep wound. Feeling the spear fast in him, Eric
+grasped it with his right hand, drew it forth, and turning, hurled it
+so hard, that the man before it got his death from the blow, for his
+shield did not serve to stay it. Then the rest fled.
+
+Skallagrim bound up Eric’s wound as well as he could, and they went on
+to the cave. But when Eric’s folk, watching above, saw the fight they
+ran down and met him. Now the hurt was bad and Eric bled much; still,
+within ten days it healed up for the time.
+
+But a little while after Eric’s wound was skinned over, the snows set
+in on Mosfell, and the days grew short and the nights long. Once
+Gizur’s men to the number of fifty came half way up the mountain to
+take it; but, when they saw how strong the place was, they feared, and
+went back, and after that returned no more, though they always watched
+the fell.
+
+It was very dark and lonesome there upon the fell. For a while Eric
+kept in good heart, but as the days went by he grew troubled. For since
+he was wounded this had come upon him, that he feared the dark, and the
+death of Atli at his hand and Atli’s words weighed more and more upon
+his mind. They had no candles on the fell, yet, rather than stay in the
+blackness of the cave, Eric would wrap sheepskins about him and sit by
+the edge of that gulf down which the head of the Baresark had foretold
+his fall, and look out at the wide plains and fells and ice-mountains,
+gleaming in the silver shine of the Northern lights or in the white
+beams of the stars.
+
+It chanced that Eric had bidden the men who stayed with him to build a
+stone hut upon the flat space of rock before the cave, and to roof it
+with turves. He had done this that work might keep them in heart, also
+that they might have a place to store such goods as they had gathered.
+Now there was one stone lying near that no two men of their number
+could move, except Skallagrim and one other. One day, while it was
+light, Eric watched these two rolling the stone along to where it must
+stand, and it was slow work. Presently they stayed to rest. Then Eric
+came and putting his hands beneath the stone, lifted, and while men
+wondered, he rolled the mass alone, to where it should be set as the
+corner stone of the hut.
+
+“Ye are all children,” he said, and laughed merrily.
+
+“Ay, when we set our strength against thine, lord,” answered
+Skallagrim; “but look: the blood runs from thy neck—the spear-wound has
+broken out afresh.”
+
+“So it is, surely,” said Eric. Then he washed the wound and bound it
+up, thinking little of the matter.
+
+But that night, according to his custom, Eric sat on the edge of the
+gulf and looked at the winter lights as they played over Hecla’s snows.
+He was sad and heavy at heart, for he thought of Gudruda and wondered
+much if they should live to wed. Remembering Atli’s words, he had
+little faith in his good luck. Now as Eric sat and thought, the bandage
+on his neck slipped, so that the hurt bled, and the frost got hold of
+the wound and froze it, and froze his long hair to it also, in such
+fashion that when he went to the cave where all men slept, he could not
+loose his hair from the sore, but lay down with it frozen to him. On
+the morrow the hair was caked so fast about his neck that it could only
+be freed by shearing it. But this Eric would not suffer. None, he said,
+should shear his hair, except Gudruda. Thus he had sworn, and when he
+broke the oath misfortune had come of it. He would break that vow no
+more, if it cost him his life. For sorrow and his ill luck had taken so
+great a hold of Eric’s mind that in some ways he was scarcely himself.
+
+So it came to pass that he fell more and more sick, till at length he
+could not rise from his bed in the cave, but lay there all day and
+night, staring at the little light which pierced the gloom. Still, he
+would not suffer that anyone should touch his hair. And when one stole
+upon him sleeping, thinking so to cut it before he woke, and come at
+the wound, suddenly he sat up and dealt the man such a buffet on the
+head that he went near to death from it.
+
+Then Skallagrim spoke.
+
+“On this matter,” he said, “it seems that Brighteyes is mad. He will
+not suffer that any touch his hair, except Gudruda, and yet, if his
+hair is not shorn, he must die, for the wound will fester under it. Nor
+may we cut it by strength, for then he will kill himself in struggling.
+It is come to this then: either Gudruda must be brought hither or Eric
+will shortly die.”
+
+“That may not be,” they answered. “How can the lady Gudruda come here
+across the snows, even if she will come?”
+
+“Come she can, if she has the heart,” said Skallagrim, “though I put
+little trust in women’s hearts. Still, I ride down to Middalhof, and
+thou, Jon, shalt go with me. For the rest, I charge you watch your
+lord; for, if I come back and find anything amiss, that shall be the
+death of some, and if I do not come back but perish on the road, yet I
+will haunt you.”
+
+Now Jon liked not this task; still, for love of Eric and fear of
+Skallagrim, he set out with the Baresark. They had a hard journey
+through the snow-drifts and the dark, but on the third day they came to
+Middalhof, knocked upon the door and entered.
+
+Now it was supper-time, and people, sitting at meat, saw a great black
+man, covered with snow and rime, stalk up the hall, and after him
+another smaller man, who groaned with the cold, and they wondered at
+the sight. Gudruda sat on the high seat and the firelight beat upon her
+face.
+
+“Who comes here?” she said.
+
+“One who would speak with thee, lady,” answered Skallagrim.
+
+“Here is Skallagrim the Baresark,” said a man. “He is an outlaw, let us
+kill him!”
+
+“Ay, it is Skallagrim,” he answered, “and if there is killing to be
+done, why here’s that which shall do it,” and he drew out his axe and
+smiled grimly.
+
+Then all held their peace, for they feared the axe of Skallagrim.
+
+“Lady,” he said, “I do not come for slaying or such child’s play, I
+come to speak a word in thine ear—but first I ask a cup of mead and a
+morsel of food, for we have spent three days in the snows.”
+
+So they ate and drank. Then Gudruda bade the Baresark draw near and
+tell her his tale.
+
+“Lady,” said he, “Eric, my lord, lies dying on Mosfell.”
+
+Gudruda turned white as the snow.
+
+“Dying?—Eric lies dying?” she said. “Why, then, art thou here?”
+
+“For this cause, lady: I think that thou canst save him, if he is not
+already sped.” And he told her all the tale.
+
+Now Gudruda thought a while.
+
+“This is a hard journey,” she said, “and it does not become a maid to
+visit outlaws in their caves. Yet I am come to this, that I will die
+before I shrink from anything that may save the life of Eric. When must
+we ride, Skallagrim?”
+
+“This night,” said the Baresark. “This night while the men sleep, for
+now night and day are almost the same. The snow is deep and we have no
+time to lose if we would find Brighteyes living.”
+
+“Then we will ride to-night,” answered Gudruda.
+
+Afterwards, when people slept, Gudruda the Fair summoned her women, and
+bade them say to all who asked for her that she lay sick in bed. But
+she called three trusty thralls, bidding them bring two pack-horses
+laden with hay, food, drugs, candles made of sheep’s fat, and other
+goods, and ride with her. Then, all being ready, they rode away
+secretly up Stonefell, Gudruda on her horse Blackmane, and the others
+on good geldings that had been hay-fed in the yard, and by daylight
+they passed up Horse-Head Heights. They slept two nights in the snow,
+and on the second night almost perished there, for much soft snow fell.
+But afterwards came frost and a bitter northerly wind and they passed
+on. Gudruda was a strong woman and great of heart and will, and so it
+came about that on the third day she reached Mosfell, weary but little
+harmed, though the fingers of her left hand were frostbitten. They
+climbed the mountain, and when they came to the dell where the horses
+were kept, certain of Eric’s men met them and their faces were sad.
+
+“How goes it now with Brighteyes?” said Skallagrim, for Gudruda could
+scarcely speak because of doubt and cold. “Is he dead, then?”
+
+“Nay,” they answered, “but like to die, for he is beside himself and
+raves wildly.”
+
+“Push on,” quoth Gudruda; “push on, lest it be too late.”
+
+So they climbed the mountain on foot, won the pass and came to that
+giddy point of rock where he must tread who would reach the platform
+that is before the cave. Now since she had hung by her hands over
+Goldfoss gulf, Gudruda had feared to tread upon a height with nothing
+to hold to. Skallagrim went first, then called to her to follow. Thrice
+she looked, and turned away, trembling, for the place was awful and the
+fall bottomless. Then she spoke aloud to herself:
+
+“Eric did not fear to risk his life to save me when I hung over Golden
+Falls; less, then, should I fear to risk mine to save him,” and she
+stepped boldly down upon the point. But when she stood there, over the
+giddy height, shivers ran along her body, and her mind grew dark. She
+clutched at the rock, gave one low cry and began to fall. Indeed she
+would have fallen and been lost, had not Skallagrim, lying on his
+breast in the narrow hole, stretched out his arms, caught her by the
+cloak and kirtle and dragged her to him. Presently her senses came
+back.
+
+“I am safe!” she gasped, “but by a very little. Methinks that here in
+this place I must live and die, for I can never tread yonder rock
+again.”
+
+“Thou shalt pass it safe enough, lady, with a rope round thee,” said
+Skallagrim, and led the way to the cave.
+
+Gudruda entered, forgetting all things in her love of Eric. A great
+fire of turf burned in the mouth of the cave to temper the bitter wind
+and frost, and by its light Gudruda saw her love through the
+smoke-reek. He lay upon a bed of skins at the far end of the cave and
+his bright grey eyes were wild, his wan face was white, and now of a
+sudden it grew red with fever, and then was white again. He had thrown
+the sheepskins from his mighty chest, the bones of which stood out
+grimly. His long arms were thrust through the locks of his golden hair,
+and on one side of his neck the hair clung to him and it was but a
+black mass.
+
+He raved loudly in his madness. “Touch me not, carles, touch me not; ye
+think me spent and weak, but, by Thor! if ye touch my hair, I will
+loosen the knees of some. Gudruda alone shall shear my hair: I have
+sworn and I will keep the oath that I once broke. Give me snow! snow!
+my throat burns! Heap snow on my head, I bid you. Ye will not? Ye mock
+me, thinking me weak! Where, then, is Whitefire?—I have yet a deed to
+do! Who comes yonder? Is it a woman’s shape or is it but a
+smoke-wraith? ‘Tis Swanhild the Fatherless who walks the waters.
+Begone, Swanhild, thou witch! thou hast worked evil enough upon me.
+Nay, it is not Swanhild, it is Elfrida; lady, here in England I may not
+stay. In Iceland I am at home. Yea, yea, things go crossly; perchance
+in this garden we may speak again!”
+
+Now Gudruda could bear his words no longer, bur ran to him and knelt
+beside him.
+
+“Peace, Eric!” she whispered. “Peace! It is I, thy love. It is Gudruda,
+who am come to thee.”
+
+He turned his head and looked upon her strangely.
+
+“No, no,” he said, “it is not Gudruda the Fair. She will have little to
+do with outlaws, and this is too rough a place for her to come to. It
+is dark also and Atli speaks in the darkness. If thou art Gudruda, give
+me a sign. Why comest thou here and where is Skallagrim? Ah! that was a
+good fight—
+
+Down among the ballast tumbling
+Ospakar’s shield-carles were rolled.
+
+
+But he should never have slain the steersman. The axe goes first and
+Skallagrim follows after. Ha, ha! Ay, Swanhild, we’ll mingle tears.
+Give me the cup. Why, what is this? Thou art afire, a glory glows about
+thee, and from thee floats a scent like the scent of the Iceland meads
+in May.”
+
+“Eric! Eric!” cried Gudruda, “I am come to shear thy hair, as thou
+didst swear that I alone should do.”
+
+“Now I know that thou art Gudruda,” said the crazed man. “Cut, cut; but
+let not those knaves touch my head, lest I should slay them.”
+
+Then Gudruda drew out her shears, and without more ado shore off
+Brighteyes’ golden locks. It was no easy task, for they were thick as a
+horse’s mane, and glued to the wound. Yet when she had cut them, she
+loosened the hair from the flesh with water which she heated upon the
+fire. The wound was in a bad state and blue, still Eric never winced
+while she dragged the hair from it. Then she washed the sore clean, and
+put sweet ointment on it and covered it with napkins.
+
+This done, she gave Eric broth and he drank. Then, laying her hand upon
+his head, she looked into his eyes and bade him sleep. And presently he
+slept—which he had scarcely done for many days—slept like a little
+child.
+
+Eric slept for a day and a night. But at that same hour of the evening,
+when he had fallen asleep, Gudruda, watching him by the light of a
+taper that was set upon a rock, saw him smile in his dreams. Presently
+he opened his eyes and stared at the fire which glowed in the mouth of
+the cave, and the great shadows that fell upon the rocks.
+
+“Strange!” she heard him murmur, “it is very strange! but I dreamed I
+slept, and that Gudruda the Fair leaned over me as I slept. Where,
+then, is Skallagrim? Perhaps I am dead and that is Hela’s fire,” and he
+tried to lift himself upon his arm, but fell back from faintness, for
+he was very weak. Then Gudruda took his hand, and, leaning over him,
+spoke:
+
+“Hush, Eric!” she said; “that was no dream, for I am here. Thou hast
+been sick to death, Eric; but now, if thou wilt rest, things shall go
+well with thee.”
+
+“_Thou_ art here?” said Eric, turning his white face towards her. “Do I
+still dream, or how comest thou here to Mosfell, Gudruda?”
+
+“I came through the snows, Eric, to cut thy hair, which clung to the
+festering wound, for in thy madness thou wouldst not suffer anyone to
+touch it.”
+
+“Thou camest through the snows—over the snows—to nurse me, Gudruda?
+Thou must love me much then,” and he was so weak that, as he spoke, the
+tears rolled down Eric’s cheeks.
+
+Then Gudruda kissed him, weeping also, and, laying her face by his,
+bade him be at peace, for she was there to watch him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+HOW SWANHILD WON TIDINGS OF ERIC
+
+
+Now Eric’s strength came back to him and his heart opened in the light
+of Gudruda’s eyes like a flower in the sunshine. For all day long she
+sat at his side, holding his hand and talking to him, and they found
+much to say.
+
+But on the fifth day from the day of his awakening she spoke thus:
+
+“Eric, now I must go back to Middalhof. Thou art safe and it is not
+well that I should stay here.”
+
+“Not yet, Gudruda,” he said; “leave me not yet.”
+
+“Yes, love, I must leave thee. The moon is bright, the sky has cleared,
+and the snow is hard with frost and fit for the hoofs of horses. I must
+go before more storms come. Listen now: in the second week of spring,
+if all is well, I will send thee a messenger with words of token, then
+shalt thou come down secretly to Middalhof, and there, Eric, we will be
+wed. Then, on the next day, we will sail for England in a trading-ship
+that I shall get ready, to seek our fortune there.”
+
+“It will be a good fortune if thou art by my side,” said Eric, “so good
+that I doubt greatly if I may find it, for I am Eric the Unlucky.
+Swanhild must yet be reckoned with, Gudruda. Yes, thou art right: thou
+must go hence, Gudruda, and swiftly, though it grieves me much to part
+with thee.”
+
+Then Eric called Skallagrim and bade him make things ready to ride down
+to Middalhof with the Lady Gudruda.
+
+This Skallagrim did swiftly, and afterwards Eric and Gudruda kissed and
+parted, and they were sad at heart to part.
+
+Now on the fifth day after the going of Gudruda, Skallagrim came back
+to Mosfell somewhat cold and weary. And he told Eric, who could now
+walk and grew strong again, that he and Jon had ridden with Gudruda the
+Fair to Horse-Head Heights, seeing no man, and had left her there to go
+on with her thralls. He had come back also seeing no one, for the
+weather was too cold for the men of Gizur to watch the fell in the
+snows.
+
+Now Gudruda came safely to Middalhof, having been eleven days gone, and
+found that few had visited the house, and that these had been told that
+she lay sick abed. Her secret had been well kept, and, though Swanhild
+had no lack of spies, many days went by before she learned that Gudruda
+had gone up to Mosfell to nurse Eric.
+
+After this Gudruda began to make ready for her flight from Iceland. She
+called in the moneys that she had out at interest, and with them bought
+from a certain chapman a good trading-ship which lay in its shed under
+the shelter of Westman Isles. This ship she began to make ready for sea
+so soon as the heart of the winter was broken, putting it about that
+she intended to send her on a trading voyage to Scotland in the spring.
+And also to give colour to this tale she bought many pelts and other
+goods, such as chapmen deal in.
+
+Thus the days passed on—not so badly for Gudruda, who strove to fill
+their emptiness in making ready for the full and happy time; but for
+Eric in his cave they were very heavy, for he could find nothing to do
+except to sleep and eat, and think of Gudruda, whom he might not see.
+
+For Swanhild also, sitting at Coldback, the days did not go well. She
+was weary of the courting of Gizur, whom she played with as a cat plays
+with a rat, and her heart was sick with love, hate, and jealousy. For
+she well knew that Gudruda and Eric still clung to each other and found
+means of greeting, if not of speech. At that time she wished to kill
+Eric if she could, though she would rather kill Gudruda if she dared.
+Still, she could not come at Eric, for her men feared to try the narrow
+way of Mosfell, and when they met him in the open they fled before him.
+
+Presently it came to her ears that Gudruda made a ship ready to sail to
+Scotland on a trading voyage, and she was perplexed by this tale, for
+she knew that Gudruda had no love of trading and never thought of gain.
+So she set spies to watch the ship. Still, the slow days drew on, and
+at length the air grew soft with spring, and flowers showed through the
+snow.
+
+Eric sat in his mountain nest waiting for tidings, and watched the
+nesting eagles wheel about the cliffs. At length news came. For one
+morning, as he rose, Skallagrim told him that a man wanted to speak
+with him. He had come to the mountain in the darkness, and had lain in
+a dell till the breaking of the light, for, now that the snows were
+melting, the men of Gizur and Swanhild watched the ways.
+
+Eric bade them bring the man to him. When he saw him he knew that he
+was a thrall of Gudruda’s and welcomed him heartily.
+
+“What tidings?” he asked.
+
+“This, lord,” said the thrall: “Gudruda the Fair bids me say that she
+is well and that the snows melt on the roof of Middalhof.”
+
+Now this was the signal word that had been agreed upon between Eric and
+Gudruda, that she should send him when all was ready.
+
+“Good,” said Eric, “ride back to Gudruda the Fair and say that Eric
+Brighteyes is well, but on Hecla the snows melt not.”
+
+By this answer he meant that he would be with her presently, though the
+thrall could make nothing of it. Then Skallagrim asked tidings of the
+man, and learned that Swanhild was still at Middalhof, and with her
+Gizur, and that they gave out that they wished to make an end of
+waiting and slay Eric.
+
+“First snare your bird, then wring his neck,” laughed Skallagrim.
+
+Then Eric did this: among his men were some who he knew were not
+willing to sail from Iceland, and Jon, his thrall, was of them, for Jon
+did not love the angry sea. He bade these bide a while on Mosfell and
+make fires nightly on the platform of rock which is in front of the
+cave, that the spies of Gizur and Swanhild might be deceived by them,
+and think that Eric was still on the fell. Then, when they heard that
+he had sailed, they were to come down and hide themselves with friends
+till Gizur and his following rode north. But he told two of the men who
+would sail with him to make ready.
+
+That night before the moon rose Eric said farewell to Jon and the
+others who stayed on Mosfell, and rode away with Skallagrim and the two
+who went with him. They passed the plain of black sand in safety, and
+so on to Horse-Head Heights. Now at length, as the afternoon drew on to
+evening, from Stonefell’s crest they saw the Hall of Middalhof before
+them, and Eric’s heart swelled in his breast. Yet they must wait till
+darkness fell before they dared enter the place, lest they should be
+seen and notice of their coming should be carried to Gizur and
+Swanhild. And this came into the mind of Eric, that of all the hours of
+his life that hour of waiting was the longest. Scarcely, indeed, could
+Skallagrim hold him back from going down the mountain side, he was so
+set on coming to Gudruda whom he should wed that night.
+
+At length the darkness fell, and they went on. Eric rode swiftly down
+the rough mountain path, while Skallagrim and the two men followed
+grumbling, for they feared that their horses would fall. At length they
+came to the place, and riding into the yard, Eric sprang from his horse
+and strode to the women’s door. Now Gudruda stood in the porch,
+listening; and while he was yet some way off, she heard the clang of
+Brighteyen’s harness, and the colour came and went upon her cheek. Then
+she turned and fled to the high seat of the hall, and sat down there.
+Only two women were left in Middalhof with her, and some thralls who
+tended the kine and horses. But these slept, not in the hall, but in an
+outhouse. Gudruda had sent the rest of her people down to the ship to
+help in the lading, for it was given out that the vessel sailed on the
+morrow. She had done this that there might be no talk of the coming of
+Eric to Middalhof.
+
+Now Brighteyes came to the porch, and, finding the door wide, walked
+in. But Skallagrim and the men stayed without a while, and tended the
+horses. A fire burned upon the centre hearth in the hall, and threw
+shadows on the panelling. Eric walked on by its light, looking to left
+and right, but seeing neither man nor woman. Then a great fear took him
+lest Gudruda should be gone, or perhaps slain of Swanhild, Groa’s
+daughter, and he trembled at the thought. He stood by the fire, and
+Gudruda, watching from the shadow of the high seat, saw the dull light
+glow upon his golden helm, and a sigh of joy broke from her lips. Eric
+heard the sigh and looked, and as he looked a stick of pitchy driftwood
+fell into the fire and flared up fiercely. Then he saw. There, in the
+carved high seat, robed all in bridal white, sat Gudruda the Fair, his
+love. Her golden hair flowed about her breast, her white arms were
+stretched towards him, and on her sweet face shone such a look of love
+as he had never seen.
+
+“_Eric!_” she whispered softly, and the breath of her voice ran down
+the empty panelled hall, that from all sides seemed to answer,
+“_Eric._”
+
+Slowly he drew near to her. He saw nothing but the glory of Gudruda’s
+face and the light shining on Gudruda’s hair; he heard nothing save the
+sighing of her breath; he knew nothing except that before him sat his
+fair bride, won after many years.
+
+Now he had climbed the high seat, and now, wrapped in each other’s
+arms, they sat and gazed into each other’s eyes, and lo! the air of the
+great hall rolled round them a sea of glory, and sweet voices whispered
+in their ears. Now Freya smiled upon them and led them through her
+gates of love, and they were glad that they had been born.
+
+Thus then they were wed.
+
+Now the story tells that Swanhild spoke with Gizur, Ospakar’s son, in
+the house at Coldback.
+
+“I tire of this slow play,” she said. “We have tarried here for many
+weeks, and Atli’s blood yet cries out for vengeance, and cries for
+vengeance the blood of black Ospakar, thy father, and the blood of many
+another, dead at great Eric’s hand.”
+
+“I tire also,” said Gizur, “and I am much needed in the north. I say
+this to thee, Swanhild, that, hadst thou not so strictly laid it on me
+that Eric must die ere thou weddest me, I had flitted back to Swinefell
+before now, and there bided my time to bring Brighteyes to his end.”
+
+“I will never wed thee, Gizur, till Eric is dead,” said Swanhild
+fiercely.
+
+“How shall we come at him then?” he answered. “We may not go up that
+mountain path, for two men can hold it against all our strength, and
+folk do not love to meet Eric and Skallagrim in a narrow way.”
+
+“The place has been badly watched,” said Swanhild. “I am sure of this,
+that Eric has been down to Middalhof and seen Gudruda, my half-sister.
+She is shameless, who still holds commune with him who slew her brother
+and my husband. Death should be her reward, and I am minded to slay her
+because of the shame that she has brought upon our blood.”
+
+“That is a deed which thou wilt do alone, then,” said Gizur, “for I
+will have no hand in the murder of that fair maid—no, nor will any who
+live in Iceland!”
+
+Swanhild glanced at him strangely. “Hearken, Gizur!” she said: “Gudruda
+makes a ship ready to sail with goods to Scotland and bring a cargo
+thence before winter comes again. Now I find this strange, for never
+before did I know Gudruda turn her thoughts to trading. I think that
+she has it in her mind to sail from Iceland with this outlaw Eric, and
+seek a home over seas, and that I will not bear.”
+
+“It may be,” said Gizur, “and I should not be sorry to see the last of
+Brighteyes, for I think that more men will die at his hand before he
+stiffens in his barrow.”
+
+“Thou art cowardly-hearted, thou son of Ospakar!” Swanhild said. “Thou
+sayest thou lovest me and wouldest win me to wife: I tell thee that
+there is but one road to my arms, and it leads over the corpse of Eric.
+Now this is my counsel: that we send the most of our men to watch that
+ship of Gudruda’s, and, when she lifts anchor, to board her and search,
+for she is already bound for sea. Also among the people here I have a
+carle who was born near Hecla, and he swears this to me, that, when he
+was a lad, searching for an eagle’s eyrie, he found a path by which
+Mosfell might be climbed from the north, and that in the end he came to
+a large flat place, and, looking over, saw that platform where Eric
+dwells with his thralls. But he could not see the cave, because of the
+overhanging brow of the rock. Now we will do this: thou and I, and the
+carle alone—no more, for I do not wish that our search should be noised
+abroad—to-morrow at the dawn we will ride away for Mosfell, and,
+passing under Hecla, come round the mountain and see if this path may
+still be scaled. For, if so, we will return with men and make an end of
+Brighteyes.”
+
+This plan pleased Gizur, and he said that it should be so.
+
+So very early on the following morning Swanhild, having sent many men
+to watch Gudruda’s ship, rode away secretly with Gizur and the thrall,
+and before it was again dawn they were on the northern slopes of
+Mosfell. It was on this same night that Eric went down from the
+mountain to wed Gudruda.
+
+For a while the climbing was easy, but at length they came to a great
+wall of rock, a hundred fathoms high, on which no fox might find a
+foothold, nor anything that had not wings.
+
+“Here now is an end of our journey,” said Gizur, “and I only pray this,
+that Eric may not ride round the mountain before we are down again.”
+For he did not know that Brighteyes already rode hard for Middalhof.
+
+“Not so,” said the thrall, “if only I can find the place by which, some
+thirty summers ago, I won yonder rift, and through it the crest of the
+fell,” and he pointed to a narrow cleft in the face of the rock high
+above their heads, that was clothed with grey moss.
+
+Then he moved to the right and searched, peering behind stones and
+birch-bushes, till presently he held up his hand and whistled. They
+passed along the slope and found him standing by a little stream of
+water which welled from beneath a great rock.
+
+“Here is the place,” the man said.
+
+“I see no place,” answered Swanhild.
+
+“Still, it is there, lady,” and he climbed on to the rock, drawing her
+after him. At the back of it was a hole, almost overgrown with moss.
+“Here is the path,” he said again.
+
+“Then it is one that I have no mind to follow,” answered Swanhild.
+“Gizur, go thou with the man and see if his tale is true. I will stay
+here till ye come back.”
+
+Then the thrall let himself down into the hole and Gizur went after
+him. But Swanhild sat there in the shadow of the rock, her chin resting
+on her hand, and waited. Presently, as she sat, she saw two men ride
+round the base of the fell, and strike off to the right towards a
+turf-booth which stood the half of an hour’s ride away. Now Swanhild
+was the keenest-sighted of all women of her day in Iceland, and when
+she looked at these two men she knew one of them for Jon, Eric’s
+thrall, and she knew the horse also—it was a white horse with black
+patches, that Jon had ridden for many years. She watched them go till
+they came to the booth, and it seemed to her that they left their
+horses and entered.
+
+Swanhild waited upon the side of the fell for nearly two hours in all.
+Then, hearing a noise above her, she looked up, and there, black with
+dirt and wet with water, was Gizur, and with him was the thrall.
+
+“What luck, Gizur?” she asked.
+
+“This, Swanhild: Eric may hold Mosfell no more, for we have found a way
+to bolt the fox.”
+
+“That is good news, then,” said Swanhild. “Say on.”
+
+“Yonder hole, Swanhild, leads to the cleft above, having been cut
+through the cliff by fire, or perhaps by water. Now up that cleft a man
+may climb, though hardly, as by a difficult stair, till he comes to the
+flat crest of the fell. Then, crossing the crest, on the further side,
+perhaps six fathoms below him, he sees that space of rock where is
+Eric’s cave; but he cannot see the cave itself, because the brow of the
+cliff hangs over. And so it is that, if any come from the cave on to
+the space of rock, it will be an easy matter to roll stones upon them
+from above and crush them.”
+
+Now when Swanhild heard this she laughed aloud.
+
+“Eric shall mock us no more,” she said, “and his might can avail
+nothing against rocks rolled on him from above. Let us go back to
+Coldback and summon men to make an end of Brighteyes.”
+
+So they went on down the mountain till they came to the place where
+they had hidden their horses. Then Swanhild remembered Jon and the
+other man whom she had seen riding to the booth, and she told Gizur of
+them.
+
+“Now,” she said, “we will snare these birds, and perchance they will
+twitter tidings when we squeeze them.”
+
+So they turned and rode for the booth, and drawing near, they saw two
+horses grazing without. Now they got off their horses, and creeping up
+to the booth, looked in through the door which was ajar. And they saw
+this, that one man sat on the ground with his back to the door, eating
+stock-fish, while Jon made bundles of fish and meal ready to tie on the
+horses. For it was here that those of his quarter who loved Eric
+brought food to be carried by his men to the cave on Mosfell.
+
+Now Swanhild touched Gizur on the arm, pointing first to the man who
+sat eating the fish and then to the spear in Gizur’s hand. Gizur
+thought a while, for he shrank from this deed.
+
+Then Swanhild whispered in his ear, “Slay the man and seize the other;
+I would learn tidings from him.”
+
+So Gizur cast the spear, and it passed through the man’s heart, and he
+was dead at once. Then he and the thrall leapt into the booth and threw
+themselves on Jon, hurling him to the ground, and holding swords over
+him. Now Jon was a man of small heart, and when he saw his plight and
+his fellow dead he was afraid, and prayed for mercy.
+
+“If I spare thee, knave,” said Swanhild, “thou shalt do this: thou
+shalt lead me up Mosfell to speak with Eric.”
+
+“I may not do that, lady,” groaned Jon; “for Eric is not on Mosfell.”
+
+“Where is he, then?” asked Swanhild.
+
+Now Jon saw that he had said an unlucky thing, and answered:
+
+“Nay, I know not. Last night he rode from Mosfell with Skallagrim
+Lambstail.”
+
+“Thou liest, knave,” said Swanhild. “Speak, or thou shalt be slain.”
+
+“Slay on,” groaned Jon, glancing at the swords above him, and shutting
+his eyes. For, though he feared much to die, he had no will to make
+known Eric’s plans.
+
+“Look not at the swords; thou shalt not die so easily. Hearken: speak,
+and speak truly, or thou shalt seek Hela’s lap after this fashion,”
+and, bending down, she whispered in his ear, then laughed aloud.
+
+Now Jon grew faint with fear; his lips turned blue, and his teeth
+chattered at the thought of how he should be made to die. Still, he
+would say nothing.
+
+Then Swanhild spoke to Gizur and the thrall, and bade them bind him
+with a rope, tear the garments from him, and bring snow. They did this,
+and pushed the matter to the drawing of knives. But when he saw the
+steel Jon cried aloud that he would tell all.
+
+“Now thou takest good counsel,” said Swanhild.
+
+Then in his fear Jon told how Eric had gone down to Middalhof to wed
+Gudruda, and thence to fly with her to England.
+
+Now Swanhild was mad with wrath, for she had sooner died than that this
+should come about.
+
+“Let us away,” she said to Gizur. “But first kill this man.”
+
+“Nay,” said Gizur, “I will not do that. He has told his tidings; let
+him go free.”
+
+“Thou art chicken-hearted,” said Swanhild, who, after the fashion of
+witches, had no mercy in her. “At the least, he shall not go hence to
+warn Eric and Gudruda of our coming. If thou wilt not kill him, then
+bind him and leave him.”
+
+So Jon was bound, and there in the booth he sat two days before anyone
+came to loose him.
+
+“Whither away?” said Gizur to Swanhild.
+
+“To Middalhof first,” Swanhild answered.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+HOW WENT THE BRIDAL NIGHT
+
+
+Now Eric and Gudruda sat silent in the high seat of the hall at
+Middalhof till they heard Skallagrim enter by the women’s door. Then
+they came down from the high seat, and stood hand in hand by the fire
+on the hearth. Skallagrim greeted Gudruda, looking at her askance, for
+Skallagrim stood in fear of women alone.
+
+“What counsel now, lord?” said the Baresark.
+
+“Tell us thy plans, Gudruda,” said Eric, for as yet no word had passed
+between them of what they should do.
+
+“This is my plan, Eric,” she answered. “First, that we eat; then that
+thy men take horse and ride hence through the night to where the ship
+lies, bearing word that we will be there at dawn when the tide serves,
+and bidding the mate make everything ready for sailing. But thou and I
+and Skallagrim will stay here till to-morrow is three hours old, and
+this because I have tidings that Gizur’s folk will search the ship
+to-night. Now, when they search and do not find us, they will go away.
+Then, at the dawning, thou and I and Skallagrim will row on board the
+ship as she lies at anchor, and, slipping the cable, put to sea before
+they know we are there, and so bid farewell to Swanhild and our woes.”
+
+“Yet it is a risk for us to sleep here alone,” said Eric.
+
+“There is little danger,” said Gudruda. “Nearly all of Gizur’s men
+watch the ship; and I have learned this from a spy, that, two days ago,
+Gizur, Swanhild, and one thrall rode from Coldback towards Mosfell, and
+they have not come back yet. Moreover, the place is strong, and thou
+and Skallagrim are here to guard it.”
+
+“So be it, then,” answered Eric, for indeed he had little thought left
+for anything, except Gudruda.
+
+After this the women came in and set meat on the board, and all ate.
+
+Now, when they had eaten, Eric bade Skallagrim fill a cup, and bring it
+to him as he sat on the high seat with Gudruda. Skallagrim did so; and
+then, looking deep into each other’s eyes, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda
+the Fair, Asmund’s daughter, drank the bride’s cup.
+
+“There are few guests to grace our marriage-feast, husband,” said
+Gudruda.
+
+“Yet shall our vows hold true, wife,” said Eric.
+
+“Ay, Brighteyes,” she answered, “in life and in death, now and for
+ever!” and they kissed.
+
+“It is time for us to be going, methinks,” growled Skallagrim to those
+about him. “We are not wanted here.”
+
+Then the men who were to go on to the ship rose, fetched their horses,
+and rode away. Also they caught the horses of Skallagrim, Eric, and
+Gudruda, saddled them and, slipping their bridles, made them fast in a
+shed in the yard, giving them hay to eat. Afterwards Skallagrim barred
+the men’s door and the women’s door, and, going to Gudruda, asked where
+he should stay the night till it was time to ride for the sea.
+
+“In the store-chamber,” she answered, “for there is a shutter of which
+the latch has gone. See that thou watch it well, Skallagrim; though I
+think none will come to trouble thee.”
+
+“I know the place. It shall go badly with the head that looks through
+yonder hole,” said Skallagrim, glancing at his axe.
+
+Now Gudruda forgot this, that in the store-chamber were casks of strong
+ale.
+
+Then Gudruda told him to wake them when the morrow was two hours old,
+for Eric had neither eyes nor words except for Gudruda alone, and
+Skallagrim went.
+
+The women went also to their shut bed at the end of the hall, leaving
+Brighteyes and Gudruda alone. Eric looked at her.
+
+“Where do I sleep to-night?” he asked.
+
+“Thou sleepest with me, husband,” she answered soft, “for nothing,
+except Death, shall come between us any more.”
+
+Now Skallagrim went to the store-room, and sat down with his back
+against a cask. His heart was heavy in him, for he boded no good of
+this marriage. Moreover, he was jealous. Skallagrim loved but one thing
+in the world truly, and that was Eric Brighteyes, his lord. Now he knew
+that henceforth he must take a second place, and that for one thought
+which Eric gave to him, he would give ten to Gudruda. Therefore
+Skallagrim was very sad at heart.
+
+“A pest upon the women!” he said to himself, “for from them comes all
+evil. Brighteyes owes his ill luck to Swanhild and this fair wife of
+his, and that is scarcely done with yet. Well, well, ‘tis nature; but
+would that we were safe at sea! Had I my will, we had not slept here
+to-night. But they are newly wed, and—well, ‘tis nature! Better the
+bride loves to lie abed than to ride the cold wolds and seek the common
+deck.”
+
+Now, as Skallagrim grumbled, fear gathered in his heart, he knew not of
+what. He began to think on trolls and goblins. It was dark in the
+store-room, except for a little line of light that crept through the
+crack of the shutter. At length he could bear the darkness and his
+thoughts no longer, but, rising, threw the shutter wide and let the
+bright moonlight pour into the chamber, whence he could see the
+hillside behind, and watch the shadows of the clouds as they floated
+across it. Again Skallagrim sat down against his cask, and as he sat it
+moved, and he heard the wash of ale inside it.
+
+“That is a good sound,” said Skallagrim, and he turned and smelt at the
+cask; “aye, and a good smell, too! We tasted little ale yonder on
+Mosfell, and we shall find less at sea.” Again he looked at the cask.
+There was a spigot in it, and lo! on the shelf stood horn cups.
+
+“It surely is on draught,” he said; “and now it will stand till it goes
+sour. ‘Tis a pity; but I will not drink. I fear ale—ale is another man!
+No, I will not drink,” and all the while his hand went up to the cups
+upon the shelf. “Eric is better lain yonder in Gudruda’s chamber than I
+am here alone with evil thoughts and trolls,” he said. “Why, what fish
+was that we ate at supper? My throat is cracked with thirst! If there
+were water now I’d drink it, but I see none. Well, one cup to wish them
+joy! There is no harm in a cup of ale,” and he drew the spigot from the
+cask and watched the brown drink flow into the cup. Then he lifted it
+to his lips and drank, saying “Skoll! skoll!”[*] nor did he cease till
+the horn was drained. “This is wondrous good ale,” said Skallagrim as
+he wiped his grizzled beard. “One more cup, and evil thoughts shall
+cease to haunt me.”
+
+[*] “Health! health!”
+
+
+Again he filled, drank, sat down, and for a while was merry. But
+presently the black thoughts came back into his mind. He rose, looked
+through the shutter-hole to the hillside. He could see nothing on it
+except the shadows of the clouds.
+
+“Trolls walk the winds to-night,” he said. “I feel them pulling at my
+beard. One more cup to frighten them.”
+
+He drank another draught of ale and grew merry. Then ale called for
+ale, and Skallagrim drained cup on cup, singing as he drained, till at
+last heavy sleep overcame him, and he sank drunken on the ground there
+by the barrel, while the brown ale trickled round him.
+
+Now Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair slept side by side, locked in
+each other’s arms. Presently Gudruda was wide awake.
+
+“Rouse thee, Eric,” she said, “I have dreamed an evil dream.”
+
+He awoke and kissed her.
+
+“What, then, was thy dream, sweet?” he said. “This is no hour for bad
+dreams.”
+
+“No hour for bad dreams, truly, husband; yet dreams do not weigh the
+hour of their coming. I dreamed this: that I lay dead beside thee and
+thou knewest it not, while Swanhild looked at thee and mocked.”
+
+“An evil dream, truly,” said Eric; “but see, thou art not dead. Thou
+hast thought too much on Swanhild of late.”
+
+Now they slept once more, till presently Eric was wide awake.
+
+“Rouse thee, Gudruda,” he said, “I too have dreamed a dream, and it is
+full of evil.”
+
+“What, then, was thy dream, husband?” she asked.
+
+“I dreamed that Atli the Earl, whom I slew, stood by the bed. His face
+was white, and white as snow was his beard, and blood from his great
+wound ran down his byrnie. ‘Eric Brighteyes,’ he said, ‘I am he whom
+thou didst slay, and I come to tell thee this: that before the moon is
+young again thou shalt lie stiff, with Hell-shoes on thy feet. Thou art
+Eric the Unlucky! Take thy joy and say thy say to her who lies at thy
+side, for wet and cold is the bed that waits thee and soon shall thy
+white lips be dumb.’ Then he was gone, and lo! in his place stood
+Asmund, thy father, and he also spoke to me, saying, ‘Thou who dost lie
+in my bed and at my daughter’s side, know this: the words of Atli are
+true; but I add these to them: ye shall die, yet is death but the gate
+of life and love and rest,’ and he was gone.”
+
+Now Gudruda shivered with fear, and crept closer to Eric’s side.
+
+“We are surely fey, for the Norns speak with the voices of Atli and of
+Asmund,” she said. “Oh, Eric! Eric! whither go we when we die? Will
+Valhalla take thee, being so mighty a man, and must I away to Hela’s
+halls, where thou art not? Oh! that would be death indeed! Say, Eric,
+whither do we go?”
+
+“What said the voice of Asmund?” answered Brighteyes. “That death is
+but the gate of life and love and rest. Hearken, Gudruda, my May! Odin
+does not reign over all the world, for when I sat out yonder in
+England, a certain holy man taught me of another God—a God who loves
+not slaughter, a God who died that men might live for ever in peace
+with those they love.”
+
+“How is this God named, Eric?”
+
+“They name Him the White Christ, and there are many who cling to Him.”
+
+“Would that I knew this Christ, Eric. I am weary of death and blood and
+evil deeds, such as are pleasing to our Gods. Oh, Eric, if I am taken
+from thee, swear this to me: that thou wilt slay no more, save for thy
+life’s sake only.”
+
+“I swear that, sweet,” he made answer. “For I too am weary of death and
+blood, and desire peace most of all things. The world is sad, and sad
+have been our days. Yet it is well to have lived, for through many
+heavy days we have wandered to this happy night.”
+
+“Yea, Eric, it is well to have lived; though I think that death draws
+on. Now this is my counsel: that we rise, and that thou dost put on thy
+harness and summon Skallagrim, so that, if evil comes, thou mayst meet
+it armed. Surely I thought I heard a sound—yonder in the hall!”
+
+“There is little use in that,” said Eric, “for things will befall as
+they are fated. We may do nothing of our own will, I am sure of this,
+and it is no good to struggle with the Norns. Yet I will rise.”
+
+So he kissed her, and made ready to leave the bed, when suddenly, as he
+lingered, a great heaviness seized him.
+
+“Gudruda,” he said, “I am pressed down with sleep.”
+
+“That I am also, Eric,” she said. “My eyes shut of themselves and I can
+scarcely stir my limbs. Ah, Eric, we are fey indeed, and this is—death
+that comes!”
+
+“Perchance!” he said, speaking heavily.
+
+“Eric!—wake, Eric! Thou canst not move? Yet hearken to me—ah! this
+weight of sleep! Thou lovest me, Eric!—is it not so?”
+
+“Yea,” he answered.
+
+“Now and for ever thou lovest me—and wilt cleave to me always wherever
+we go?”
+
+“Surely, sweet. Oh, sweet, farewell!” he said, and his voice sounded
+like the voice of one who speaks across the water.
+
+“Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!—my love—my love, farewell!” she answered
+very slowly, and together they sank into a sleep that was heavy as
+death.
+
+Now Gizur, Ospakar’s son, and Swanhild, Atli’s widow, rode fast and
+hard from Mosfell, giving no rest to their horses, and with them rode
+that thrall who had showed the secret path to Gizur. They stayed a
+while on Horse-Head Heights till the moon rose. Now one path led hence
+to the shore that is against the Westmans, where Gudruda’s ship lay
+bound. Then Swanhild turned to the thrall. Her beautiful face was
+fierce and she had said few words all this while, but in her heart
+raged a fire of hate and jealousy which shone through her blue eyes.
+
+“Listen,” she said to the thrall. “Thou shalt ride hence to the bay
+where the ship of Gudruda the Fair lies at anchor. Thou knowest where
+our folk are in hiding. Thou shalt speak thus to them. Before it is
+dawn they must take boats and board Gudruda’s ship and search her. And,
+if they find Eric, the outlaw, aboard, they shall slay him, if they
+may.”
+
+“That will be no easy task,” said the thrall.
+
+“And if they find Gudruda they shall keep her prisoner. But if they
+find neither the one nor the other, they shall do this: they shall
+drive the crew ashore, killing as few as may be, and burn the ship.”
+
+“It is an ill deed thus to burn another’s ship,” said Gizur.
+
+“Good or ill, it shall be done,” answered Swanhild fiercely. “Thou art
+a lawman, and well canst thou meet the suit; moreover Gudruda has
+wedded an outlaw and shall suffer for her sin. Now go, and see thou
+tarry not, or thy back shall pay the price.”
+
+The man rode away swiftly. Then Gizur turned to Swanhild, asking:
+“Whither, then, go we?”
+
+“I have said to Middalhof.”
+
+“That is into the wolf’s den, if Eric and Skallagrim are there,” he
+answered: “I have little chance against the two of them.”
+
+“Nay, nor against the one, Gizur. Why, if Eric’s right hand were hewn
+from him, and he stood unarmed, he would still slay thee with his left,
+as, swordless, he slew Ospakar thy father. Yet I shall find a way to
+come at him, if he is there.”
+
+Then they rode on, and Gizur’s heart was heavy for fear of Eric and
+Skallagrim the Baresark. So fiercely did they ride that, within one
+hour after midnight, they were at the stead of Middalhof.
+
+“We will leave the horses here in the field,” said Swanhild.
+
+So they leaped to earth and, tying the reins of the horses together,
+left them to feed on the growing grass. Then they crept into the yard
+and listened. Presently there came a sound of horses stamping in the
+far corner of the yard. They went thither, and there they found a horse
+and two geldings saddled, but with the bits slipped, and on the horse
+was such a saddle as women use.
+
+“Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda the Fair,”
+whispered Swanhild, naming the horses and laughing evilly—“the birds
+are within! Now to snare them.”
+
+“Were it not best to meet them by the ship?” asked Gizur.
+
+“Nay, thou fool; if once Eric and Skallagrim are back to back, and
+Whitefire is aloft, how many shall be dead before they are down,
+thinkest thou? We shall not find them sleeping twice.”
+
+“It is shameful to slay sleeping men,” said Gizur.
+
+“They are outlaws,” she answered. “Hearken, Ospakar’s son. Thou sayest
+thou dost love me and wouldst wed me: know this, that if thou dost fail
+me now, I will never look upon thy face again, but will name thee
+Niddering in all men’s ears.”
+
+Now Gizur loved Swanhild much, for she had thrown her glamour on him as
+once she did on Atli, and he thought of her day and night. For there
+was this strange thing about Swanhild that, though she was a witch and
+wicked, being both fair and gentle she could lead all men, except Eric,
+to love her.
+
+But of men she loved Eric alone.
+
+Then Gizur held his peace; but Swanhild spoke again:
+
+“It will be of no use to try the doors, for they are strong. Yet when I
+was a child before now I have passed in and out the house at night by
+the store-room casement. Follow me, Gizur.” Then she crept along the
+shadow of the wall, for she knew it every stone, till she came to the
+store-room, and lo! the shutter stood open, and through it the
+moonlight poured into the chamber. Swanhild lifted her head above the
+sill and looked, then started back.
+
+“Hush!” she said, “Skallagrim lies asleep within.”
+
+“Pray the Gods he wake not!” said Gizur beneath his breath, and turned
+to go. But Swanhild caught him by the arm; then gently raised her head
+and looked again, long and steadily. Presently she turned and laughed
+softly.
+
+“Things go well for us,” she said; “the sot lies drunk. We have nothing
+to fear from him. He lies drunk in a pool of ale.”
+
+Then Gizur looked. The moonlight poured into the little room, and by it
+he saw the great shape of Skallagrim. His head was thrown back, his
+mouth was wide. He snored loudly in his drunken sleep, and all about
+him ran the brown ale, for the spigot of the cask lay upon the floor.
+In his left hand was a horn cup, but in his right he still grasped his
+axe.
+
+“Now we must enter,” said Swanhild. Gizur hung back, but she sprang
+upon the sill lightly as a fox, and slid thence into the store-room.
+Then Gizur must follow, and presently he stood beside her in the room,
+and at their feet lay drunken Skallagrim. Gizur looked first at his
+sword, then on the Baresark, and lastly at Swanhild.
+
+“Nay,” she whispered, “touch him not. Perchance he would cry out—and we
+seek higher game. He has that within him which will hold him fast for a
+while. Follow where I shall lead.”
+
+She took his hand and, gliding through the doorway, passed along the
+passage till she came to the great hall. Swanhild could see well in the
+dark, and moreover she knew the road. Presently they stood in the empty
+hall. The fire had burnt down, but two embers yet glowed upon the
+hearth, like red and angry eyes.
+
+For a while Swanhild stood still listening, but there was nothing to
+hear. Then she drew near to the shut bed where Gudruda slept, and, with
+her ear to the curtain, listened once more. Gizur came with her, and as
+he came his foot struck against a bench and stirred it. Now Swanhild
+heard murmured words and the sound of kisses. She started back, and
+fury filled her heart. Gizur also heard the voice of Eric, saying: “I
+will rise.” Then he would have fled, but Swanhild caught him by the
+arm.
+
+“Fear not,” she whispered, “they shall soon sleep sound.”
+
+He felt her stretch out her arms and presently he saw this wonderful
+thing: the eyes of Swanhild glowing in the darkness as the embers
+glowed upon the hearth. Now they glowed brightly, so brightly that he
+could see the outstretched arms and the hard white face beneath them,
+and now they grew dim, of a sudden to shine bright again. And all the
+while she hissed words through her clenched teeth.
+
+Thus she hissed, fierce and low:
+
+“Gudruda, Sister mine, hearken and sleep!
+By the bond of blood I bid thee sleep!—
+By the strength that is in me I bid thee sleep!—
+ Sleep! sleep sound!
+
+“Eric Brighteyes, hearken and sleep!
+By the bond of sin I charge thee sleep!—
+By the blood of Atli I charge thee, sleep!—
+ Sleep! sleep sound!”
+
+
+Then thrice she tossed her hands aloft, saying:
+
+“From love to sleep!
+From sleep to death!
+From death to Hela!
+Say, lovers, where shall ye kiss again?”
+
+
+Then the light went out of her eyes and she laughed low. And ever as
+she whispered, the spoken words of the two in the shut bed grew fainter
+and more faint, till at length they died away, and a silence fell upon
+the place.
+
+“Thou hast no cause to fear the sword of Eric, Gizur,” she said.
+“Nothing will wake him now till daylight comes.”
+
+“Thou art awesome!” answered Gizur, for he shook with fear. “Look not
+on me with those flaming eyes, I pray thee!”
+
+“Fear not,” she said, “the fire is out. Now to the work.”
+
+“What must we do, then?”
+
+“_Thou_ must do this. Thou must enter and slay Eric.”
+
+“That I can not—that I will not!” said Gizur.
+
+She turned and looked at him, and lo! her eyes began to flame
+again—upon his eyes they seemed to burn.
+
+“Thou wilt do as I bid thee,” she said. “With Eric’s sword thou shalt
+slay Eric, else I will curse thee where thou art, and bring such evil
+on thee as thou knowest not of.”
+
+“Look not so, Swanhild,” he said. “Lead on—I come.”
+
+Now they creep into the shut chamber of Gudruda. It is so dark that
+they can see nothing, and nothing can they hear except the heavy
+breathing of the sleepers.
+
+This is to be told, that at this time Swanhild had it in her mind to
+kill, not Eric but Gudruda, for thus she would smite the heart of
+Brighteyes. Moreover, she loved Eric, and while he lived she might yet
+win him; but Eric dead must be Eric lost. But on Gudruda she would be
+bitterly avenged—Gudruda, who, for all her scheming, had yet been a
+wife to Eric!
+
+Now they stand by the bed. Swanhild puts out her hand, draws down the
+clothes, and feels the breast of Gudruda beneath, for Gudruda slept on
+the outside of the bed.
+
+Then she searches by the head of the bed and finds Whitefire which hung
+there, and draws the sword.
+
+“Here lies Eric, on the outside,” she says to Gizur, “and here is
+Whitefire. Strike and strike home, leaving Whitefire in the wound.”
+
+Gizur takes the sword and lifts it. He is sore at heart that he must do
+such a coward deed; but the spell of Swanhild is upon him, and he may
+not flinch from it. Then a thought takes him and he also puts down his
+hand to feel. It lights upon Gudruda’s golden hair, that hangs about
+her breast and falls from the bed to the ground.
+
+“Here is woman’s hair,” he whispers.
+
+“No,” Swanhild answers, “it is Eric’s hair. The hair of Eric is long,
+as thou hast seen.”
+
+Now neither of them knows that Gudruda cut Eric’s locks when he lay
+sick on Mosfell, though Swanhild knows well that it is not Brighteyes
+whom she bids Gizur slay.
+
+Then Gizur, Ospakar’s son, lifts the sword, and the faint starlight
+struggling into the chamber gathers and gleams upon the blade. Thrice
+he lifts it, and thrice he draws it back. Then with an oath he
+strikes—and drives it home with all his strength!
+
+From the bed beneath there comes one long sigh and a sound as of limbs
+trembling against the bed-gear. Then all is still.
+
+“It is done!” he says faintly.
+
+Swanhild puts down her hand once more. Lo! it is wet and warm. Then she
+bends herself and looks, and behold! the dead eyes of Gudruda glare up
+into her eyes. She can see them plainly, but none know what she read
+there. At the least it was something that she loved not, for she reels
+back against the panelling, then falls upon the floor.
+
+Presently, while Gizur stands as one in a dream, she rises, saying: “I
+am avenged of the death of Atli. Let us hence!—ah! let us hence
+swiftly! Give me thy hand, Gizur, for I am faint!”
+
+So Gizur gives her his hand and they pass thence. Presently they stand
+in the store-room, and there lies Skallagrim, still plunged in his
+drunken sleep.
+
+“Must I do more murder?” asks Gizur hoarsely.
+
+“Nay,” Swanhild says. “I am sick with blood. Leave the knave.”
+
+They pass out by the casement into the yard and so on till they find
+their horses.
+
+“Lift me, Gizur; I can no more,” says Swanhild.
+
+He lifts her to the saddle.
+
+“Whither away?” he asks.
+
+“To Coldback, Gizur, and thence to cold Death.”
+
+Thus did Gudruda, Eric’s bride and Asmund’s daughter, the fairest woman
+who ever lived in Iceland, die on her marriage night by the hand of
+Gizur, Ospakar’s son, and through the hate and witchcraft of Swanhild
+the Fatherless, her half-sister.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+HOW THE DAWN CAME
+
+
+The dawn broke over Middalhof. Slowly the light gathered in the empty
+hall, it crept slowly into the little chamber where Eric slept, and
+Gudruda slept also with a deeper sleep.
+
+Now the two women came from their chamber at the far end of the hall,
+and drew near the hearth, shivering, for the air was cold. They knelt
+by the fire, blowing at the embers till the sticks they cast upon them
+crackled to a blaze.
+
+“It seems that Gudruda is not yet gone,” said one to the other. “I
+thought she should ride away with Eric before the dawn.”
+
+“Newly wed lie long abed!” laughed the other.
+
+“I am glad to see the blessed light,” said the first woman, “for last
+night I dreamed that once again this hall ran red with blood, as at the
+marriage-feast of Ospakar.”
+
+“Ah,” answered the other, “it will be well for the south when Eric
+Brighteyes and Gudruda are gone over sea, for their loves have brought
+much bloodshed upon the land.”
+
+“Well, indeed!” sighed the first. “Had Asmund the Priest never found
+Groa, Ran’s gift, singing by the sea, Valhalla had not been so full
+to-day. Mindest thou the day he brought her here?”
+
+“I remember it well,” she answered, “though I was but a girl at the
+time. Still, when I saw those dark eyes of hers—just such eyes as
+Swanhild’s!—I knew her for a witch, as all Finn women are. It is an
+evil world: my husband is dead by the sword; dead are both my sons,
+fighting for Eric; dead is Unna, Thorod’s daughter; Asmund, my lord, is
+dead, and dead is Björn; and now Gudruda the Fair, whom I have rocked
+to sleep, leaves us to go over sea. I may not go with her, for my
+daughter’s sake; yet I almost wish that I too were dead.”
+
+“That will come soon enough,” said the other, who was young and fair.
+
+Now the witch-sleep began to roll from Eric’s heart, though his eyes
+were not yet open. But the talk of the women echoed in his ears, and
+the words “_dead!_” “_dead!_” “_dead!_” fell heavily on his slumbering
+sense. At length he opened his eyes, only to shut them again, because
+of a bright gleam of light that ran up and down something at his side.
+Heavily he wondered what this might be, that shone so keen and
+bright—that shone like a naked sword.
+
+Now he looked again. Yes, it was a sword which stood by him upon the
+bed, and the golden hilt was like the hilt of Whitefire. He lifted up
+his hand to touch it, thinking that he dreamed. Lo! his hand and arm
+were red!
+
+Then he remembered, and the thought of Gudruda flashed through his
+heart. He sat up, gazing down into the shadow at his side.
+
+Presently the women at the fire heard a sound as of a great man falling
+to earth.
+
+“What is that noise?” said one.
+
+“Eric leaping from his bed,” answered the other. “He has slept too
+long, as we have also.”
+
+As they spoke the curtain of the shut bed was pushed away, and through
+it staggered Eric in his night-gear, and lo! the left side of it was
+red. His eyes were wide with horror, his mouth was open, and his face
+was white as ice.
+
+He stopped, looking at them, made as though to speak, and could not.
+Then, while they shrank from him in terror, he turned, and, walking
+like a drunken man, staggered from the hall down that passage which led
+to the store-chamber. The door stood wide, the shutter was wide, and on
+the floor, soaked in the dregs of ale, Skallagrim yet lay snoring, his
+axe in one hand and a cup in the other.
+
+Eric looked and understood.
+
+“Awake, drunkard!” he cried, in so terrible a voice that the room
+shook. “Awake, and look upon thy work!”
+
+Skallagrim sat up, yawning.
+
+“Forsooth, my head swims,” he said. “Give me ale, I am thirsty.”
+
+“Never wilt thou look on ale again, Skallagrim, when thou hast seen
+that which I have to show!” said Eric, in the same dread voice.
+
+Then Skallagrim rose to his feet and gaped upon him.
+
+“What means this, lord? Is it time to ride? and say! why is thy shirt
+red with blood?”
+
+“Follow me, drunkard, and look upon thy work!” Eric said again.
+
+Then Skallagrim grew altogether sober, and grasping his axe, followed
+after Brighteyes, sore afraid of what he might see.
+
+They went down the passage, past the high seat of the hall, till they
+came to the curtain of the shut bed; and after them followed the women.
+Eric seized the curtain in his hand, rent it from its fastenings, and
+cast it on the ground. Now the light flowed in and struck upon the bed.
+It fell upon the bed, it fell upon Whitefire’s hilt and ran along the
+blade, it gleamed on a woman’s snowy breast and golden hair, and shone
+in her staring eyes—a woman who lay stiff and cold upon the bed, the
+great sword fixed within her heart!
+
+“Look upon thy work, drunkard!” Eric cried again, while the women who
+peeped behind sent their long wail of woe echoing down the panelled
+hall.
+
+“Hearken!” said Eric: “while thou didst lie wallowing in thy swine’s
+sleep, foes crept across thy carcase, and this is their
+handiwork:—yonder she lies who was my bride!—now is Gudruda the Fair a
+death-wife who last night was my bride! This is thy work, drunkard! and
+now what meed for thee?”
+
+Skallagrim looked. Then he spoke in a hoarse slow voice:
+
+“What meed, lord? But one—death!”
+
+Then with one hand he covered his eyes and with the other held out his
+axe to Eric Brighteyes.
+
+Eric took the axe, and while the women ran thence screaming, he whirled
+it thrice about his head. Then he smote down towards the skull of
+Skallagrim, but as he smote it seemed to him that a voice whispered in
+his ear: “_Thy oath!_”—and he remembered that he had sworn to slay no
+more, save for his own life’s sake.
+
+The mighty blow was falling and he might only do this—loose the axe
+before it clove Skallagrim in twain. He loosed and away the great axe
+flew. It passed over the head of Skallagrim, and sped like light across
+the wide hall, till it crashed through the panelling on the further
+side, and buried itself to the haft in the wall beyond.
+
+“It is not for me to kill thee, drunkard! Go, die in thy drink!”
+
+“Then I will kill myself!” cried the Baresark, and, rushing across the
+hall he tore the great axe from its bed.
+
+“Hold!” said Eric; “perhaps there is yet a deed for thee to do. Then
+thou mayest die, if it pleases thee.”
+
+“Ay,” said Skallagrim coming back, “perchance there is still a deed to
+do!”
+
+And, flinging down the axe, Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark fell upon
+the floor and wept.
+
+But Eric did not weep. Only he drew Whitefire from the heart of Gudruda
+and looked at it.
+
+“Thou art a strange sword, Whitefire,” he said, “who slayest both
+friend and foe! Shame on thee, Whitefire! We swore our oath on thee,
+Whitefire, and thou hast cut its chain! Now I am minded to shatter
+thee.” And as Eric looked on the great blade, lo! it hummed strangely
+in answer.
+
+“‘First must thou be the death of some,’ thou sayest? Well, maybe,
+Whitefire! But never yet didst thou drink so sweet a life as hers who
+now lies dead, nor ever shalt again.”
+
+Then he sheathed the sword, but neither then nor afterwards did he wipe
+the blood of Gudruda from its blade.
+
+“Last night a-marrying—to-day a-burying,” said Eric, and he called to
+the women to bring spades. Then, having clothed himself, he went to the
+centre of the hall, and, brushing away the sand, broke the hard
+clay-flooring, dealing great blows on it with an axe. Now Skallagrim,
+seeing his purpose, came to him and took one of the spades, and
+together they laboured in silence till they had dug a grave a fathom
+deep.
+
+“Here,” said Eric, “here, in thine own hall where thou wast born and
+lived, Gudruda the Fair, thou shalt sleep at the last. And of Middalhof
+I say this: that none shall live there henceforth. It shall be haunted
+and accursed till the rafters rot and the walls fall in, making thy
+barrow, Gudruda.”
+
+Now this indeed came to pass, for none have lived in Middalhof since
+the days of Gudruda the Fair, Asmund’s daughter. It has been ruined
+these many years, and now it is but a pile of stones.
+
+When the grave was dug, Eric washed himself and ate some food. Then he
+went in to where Gudruda lay dead, and bade the women make her ready
+for burial. This they did. When she was washed and clad in a clean
+white robe, Eric came to her, and with his own hand bound the
+Hell-shoes on her feet and closed her eyes.
+
+It was just then that a man came who said that the people of Gizur and
+of Swanhild had burned Gudruda’s ship, driving the crew ashore.
+
+“It is well,” said Eric. “We need the ship no more; now hath she whom
+it should bear wings with which to fly.” Then he went in and sat down
+on the bed by the body of Gudruda, while Skallagrim crouched on the
+ground without, tearing at his beard and muttering. For the fierce
+heart of Skallagrim was broken because of that evil which his
+drunkenness had brought about.
+
+All day Eric sat thus, looking on his dead love’s face, till the hour
+came round when he and Gudruda had drunk the bride-cup. Then he rose
+and kissed dead Gudruda on the lips, saying:
+
+“I did not look to part with thee thus, sweet! It is sad that thou
+shouldst have gone and left me here. Natheless, I shall soon follow on
+thy path.”
+
+Then he called aloud:
+
+“Art sober, drunkard?”
+
+Skallagrim came and stood before him, saying nothing.
+
+“Take thou the feet of her whom thou didst bring to death, and I will
+take her head.”
+
+So they lifted up Gudruda and bore her to the grave. Then Eric stood
+near the grave, and, taking dead Gudruda in his arms, looked upon her
+face by the light of the fire and of the candles that were set about.
+
+He looked thrice, then sang aloud:
+
+“Long ago, when swept the snow-blast,
+Close we clung and plighted troth.
+Many a year, through storm and sword-song,
+Sore I strove to win thee, sweet!
+But last night I held thee, Fairest,
+Lock’d, a wife, in lover’s arms.
+Now, Gudruda, in thy death-rest,
+Sleep thou soft till Eric come!
+
+“Hence I go to wreak thy murder.
+Hissing fire of flaming stead,
+Groan of spear-carles, wail of women,
+Soon shall startle through the night.
+Then on Mosfell, Kirtle-Wearer,
+Eric waits the face of Death.
+Freed from weary life and sorrow,
+Soon we’ll kiss in Hela’s halls!”
+
+
+Then he laid her in the grave, and, having shrouded a sheet over her,
+they filled it in together, hiding Gudruda the Fair from the sight of
+men for ever.
+
+Afterwards Eric armed himself, and this Skallagrim did also. Then he
+strode from the hall, and Skallagrim followed him. In the yard those
+horses were still tied that should have carried them to the ship, and
+on one was the saddle of Gudruda. She had ridden on this horse for many
+years, and loved it much, for it would follow her like a dog. Eric
+looked at him, then said aloud:
+
+“Gudruda may need thee where she is, Blackmane,” for so the horse was
+named. “At the least, none shall ride thee more!” And he snatched the
+axe from the hand of Skallagrim and slew the horse at a blow.
+
+Then they rode away, heading for Coldback. The night was wild and
+windy, and the sky dark with scudding clouds, through which the moon
+peeped out at times. Eric looked up, then spoke to Skallagrim:
+
+“A good night for burning, drunkard!”
+
+“Ay, lord; the flames will fly briskly,” answered Skallagrim.
+
+“How many, thinkest thou, walked over thee, drunkard, when thou didst
+lie yonder in the ale?”
+
+“I know not,” groaned Skallagrim; “but I found this in the soft earth
+without: the print of a man’s and a woman’s feet; and this on the hill
+side: the track of two horses ridden hard.”
+
+“Gizur and Swanhild, drunkard,” said Eric. “Swanhild cast us into deep
+sleep by witchcraft, and Gizur dealt the blow. Better for him that he
+had never been born than that he has lived to deal that coward’s blow!”
+
+Then they rode on, and when midnight was a little while gone they came
+to the stead at Coldback. Now this house was roofed with turves, and
+the windows were barred so that none could pass through them. Also in
+the yard were faggots of birch and a stack of hay.
+
+Eric and Skallagrim tied their horses in a dell that is to the north of
+the stead and crept up to the house. All was still; but a fire burnt in
+the hall, and, looking through a crack, Eric could see many men
+sleeping about it. Then he made signs to Skallagrim and together, very
+silently, they fetched hay and faggots, piling them against the north
+door of the house, for the wind blew from the north. Now Eric spoke to
+Skallagrim, bidding him stand, axe in hand, by the south door, and slay
+those who came out when the reek began to smart them: but he went
+himself to fire the pile.
+
+When Brighteyes had made all things ready for the burning, it came into
+his mind that, perhaps, Gizur and Swanhild were not in the house. But
+he would not hold his hand for this, for he was mad with grief and
+rage. So once more he prepared for the deed, when again he heard a
+voice in his ear—the voice of Gudruda, and it seemed to say:
+
+“_Thine oath, Eric! remember thine oath!_”
+
+Then he turned and the rage went out of his heart.
+
+“Let them seek me on Mosfell,” he said, “I will not slay them secretly
+and by reek, the innocent and the guilty together.” And he strode round
+the house to where Skallagrim stood at the south door, axe aloft and
+watching.
+
+“Does the fire burn, lord? I see no smoke,” whispered Skallagrim.
+
+“Nay, I have made none. I will shed no more blood, except to save my
+life. I leave vengeance to the Norns.”
+
+Now Skallagrim thought that Brighteyes was mad, but he dared say
+nothing. So they went to their horses, and when they found them, Eric
+rode back to the house. Presently they drew near, and Eric told
+Skallagrim to stay where he was, and riding on to the house, smote
+heavy blows upon the door, just as Skallagrim once had smitten, before
+Eric went up to Mosfell.
+
+Now Swanhild lay in her shut bed; but she could not sleep, because of
+what she saw in the eyes of Gudruda. Little may she ever sleep again,
+for when she shuts her eyes once more she sees that which was written
+in the dead eyes of Gudruda. So, as she lay, she heard the blows upon
+the door, and sprang frightened from her bed. Now there was tumult in
+the hall, for every man rose to his feet in fear, searching for his
+weapons. Again the loud knocks came.
+
+“It is the ghost of Eric!” cried one, for Gizur had given out that Eric
+was dead at his hand in fair fight.
+
+“Open!” said Gizur, and they opened, and there, a little way from the
+door, sat Brighteyes on a horse, great and shadowy to see, and behind
+him was Skallagrim the Baresark.
+
+“It is the ghost of Eric!” they cried again.
+
+“I am no ghost,” said Brighteyes. “I am no ghost, ye men of Swanhild.
+Tell me: is Gizur, the son of Ospakar, among you?”
+
+“Gizur is here,” said a voice; “but he swore he slew thee last night.”
+
+“Then he lied,” quoth Eric. “Gizur did not slay me—he murdered Gudruda
+the Fair as she lay asleep at my side. See!” and he drew Whitefire from
+its scabbard and held it in the rays of the moon that now shone out
+between the cloud rifts. “Whitefire is red with Gudruda’s blood—Gudruda
+slaughtered in her sleep by Gizur’s coward hand!”
+
+Now men murmured, for this seemed to them the most shameful of all
+deeds. But Gizur, hearing, shrank back aghast.
+
+“Listen again!” said Eric. “I was minded but now to burn you all as ye
+slept—ay, the firing is piled against the door. Still, I held my hand,
+for I have sworn to slay no more, except to save my life. Now I ride
+hence to Mosfell. Thither let Gizur come, Gizur the murderer, and
+Swanhild the witch, and with them all who will. There I will give them
+greeting, and wipe away the blood of Gudruda from Whitefire’s blade.”
+
+“Fear not, Eric,” cried Swanhild, “I will come, and there thou mayst
+kill me, if thou canst.”
+
+“Against thee, Swanhild,” said Eric, “I lift no hand. Do thy worst, I
+leave thee to thy fate and the vengeance of the Norns. I am no
+woman-slayer. But to Gizur the murderer I say, come.”
+
+Then he turned and went, and Skallagrim went with him.
+
+“Up, men, and cut Eric down!” cried Gizur, seeking to cover his shame.
+
+But no man stirred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+HOW ERIC SENT AWAY HIS MEN FROM MOSFELL
+
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim came to Mosfell in safety, and during all that
+ride Brighteyes spoke no word. He rode in silence, and in silence
+Skallagrim rode after him. The heart of Skallagrim was broken because
+of the sorrow which his drunkenness had brought about, and the heart of
+Eric was buried in Gudruda’s grave.
+
+On Mosfell Eric found four of his own men, two of whom had been among
+those that the people of Gizur and Swanhild had driven from Gudruda’s
+ship before they fired her. For no fight had been made on the ship.
+There also he found Jon, who had been loosed from his bands in the
+booth by one who heard his cries as he rode past. Now when Jon saw
+Brighteyes, he told him all, and fell at Eric’s feet and wept because
+he had betrayed him in his fear.
+
+But Eric spoke no angry word to him. Stooping down he raised him,
+saying, “Thou wast never overstout of heart, Jon, and thou art scarcely
+to be blamed because thou didst speak rather than die in torment,
+though perhaps some had chosen so to die and not to speak. Now I am a
+luckless man, and all things happen as they are fated, and the words of
+Atli come true, as was to be looked for. The Norns, against whom none
+may stand, did but work their will through thy mouth, Jon; so grieve no
+more for that which cannot be undone.”
+
+Then he turned away, but Jon wept long and loudly.
+
+That night Eric slept well and dreamed no dreams. But on the morrow he
+woke at dawn, and clothed himself and ate. Then he called his men
+together, and with them Skallagrim. They came and stood before him, and
+Eric, drawing Whitefire, leaned upon it and spoke:
+
+“Hearken, mates,” he said: “I know this, that my hours are short and
+death draws on. My years have been few and evil, and I cannot read the
+purpose of my life. She whom I loved has been slain by the witchcraft
+of Swanhild and the coward hand of Gizur the murderer, and I go to seek
+her where she waits. I am very glad to go, for now I have no more joy
+in life, being but a luckless man; it is an ill world, friends, and all
+the ways are red with blood. I have shed much blood, though but one
+life haunts me now at the last, and that is the life of Atli the Earl,
+for he was no match for my might and he is dead because of my sin. With
+my own blood I will wash away the blood of Atli, and then I seek
+another place, leaving nothing but a tale to be told in the ingle when
+fall the winter snows. For to this end we all come at the last, and it
+matters little if it find us at midday or at nightfall. We live in
+sorrow, we die in pain and darkness: for this is the curse that the
+Gods have laid upon men and each must taste it in his season. But I
+have sworn that no more men shall die for me. I will fight the last
+great fight alone; for I know this: I shall not easily be overcome, and
+with my fallen foes I will tread on Bifrost Bridge. Therefore,
+farewell! When the bones of Eric Brighteyes lie in their barrow, or are
+picked by ravens on the mountain side, Gizur will not trouble to hunt
+out those who clung to him, if indeed Gizur shall live to tell the
+tale. Nor need ye fear the hate of Swanhild, for she aims her spears at
+me alone. Go, therefore, and when I am dead, do not forget me, and do
+not seek to avenge me, for Death the avenger of all will find them
+also.”
+
+Now Eric’s men heard and groaned aloud, saying that they would die with
+him, for they loved Eric one and all. Only Skallagrim said nothing.
+
+Then Brighteyes spoke again: “Hear me, comrades. If ye will not go, my
+blood will be on your heads, for I will ride out alone, and meet the
+men of Gizur in the plain and fall there fighting.”
+
+Then one by one they crept away to seek their horses in the dell. And
+each man as he went came to Eric and kissed his hand, then passed
+thence weeping. Jon was the last to go, except Skallagrim only, and he
+was so moved that he could not speak at all.
+
+It was this Jon who, in after years, when he was grown very old,
+wandered from stead to stead telling the deeds of Eric Brighteyes, and
+always finding a welcome because of his tale, till at length, as he
+journeyed, he was overtaken by a snowstorm and buried in a drift. For
+Jon, who lacked much, had this gift: he had a skald’s tongue. Men have
+always held that it was to the honour of Jon that he told the tale
+thus, hiding nothing, seeing that some of it is against himself.
+
+Now when all had gone, Eric looked at Skallagrim, who still stood near
+him, axe in hand.
+
+“Wherefore goest thou not, drunkard?” he said. “Surely thou wilt find
+ale and mead in the vales or oversea. Here there is none. Hasten! I
+would be alone!”
+
+Now the great body of Skallagrim shook with grief and shame, and the
+red blood poured up beneath his dark sin. Then he spoke in a thick
+voice:
+
+“I did not think to live to hear such words from the lips of Eric
+Brighteyes. They are well earned, yet it is unmanly of thee, lord, thus
+to taunt one who loves thee. I would sooner die as Swanhild said yonder
+thrall should die than live to listen to such words. I have sinned
+against thee, indeed, and because of my sin my heart is broken. Hast
+thou, then, never sinned that thou wouldst tear it living from my
+breast as eagles tear a foundered horse? Think on thine own sins, Eric,
+and pity mine! Taunt me thus once more or bid me go once more and I
+will go indeed! I will go thus—on the edge of yonder gulf thou didst
+overcome me by thy naked might, and there I swore fealty to thee, Eric
+Brighteyes. Many a year have we wandered side by side, and, standing
+back to back, have struck many a blow. I am minded to do this: to stand
+by thee in the last great fight that draws on and to die there with
+thee. I have loved no other man save thee, and I am too old to seek new
+lords. Yet, if still thou biddest me, I will go thus. Where I swore my
+oath to thee, there I will end it. For I will lay me down on the brink
+of yonder gulf, as once I lay when thy hand was at my throat, and call
+out that thou art no more my lord and I am no more thy thrall. Then I
+will roll into the depths beneath, and by this death of shame thou
+shalt be freed of me, Eric Brighteyes.”
+
+Eric looked at the great man—he looked long and sadly. Then he spoke:
+
+“Skallagrim Lambstail, thou hast a true heart. I too have sinned, and
+now I put away thy sin, although Gudruda is dead through thee and I
+must die because of thee. Stay by me if thou wilt and let us fall
+together.”
+
+Then Skallagrim came to Eric, and, kneeling before him, took his hands
+and kissed them.
+
+“Now I am once more a man,” he said, “and I know this: we two shall die
+such a great death that it will be well to have lived to die it!” and
+he arose and shouted:
+
+“A! hai! A! hai! I see foes pass in pride!
+A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!
+Hear the song of the sword!
+Whitefire is aloft—aloft!
+Bare is the axe of the Baresark!
+Croak, ye nesting ravens;
+Flap your wings, ye eagles,
+For bright is Mosfell’s cave with blood!
+Lap! lap! thou Grey Wolf,
+Laugh aloud, Odin!
+
+“Laugh till shake the golden doors;
+Heroes’ feet are set on Bifrost,
+Open, ye hundred gates!
+A! hai! A! hai! red runs the fray!
+A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!”
+
+
+Then Skallagrim turned and went to clean his harness and the golden
+helm of Eric.
+
+Now at Coldback Gizur spoke with Swanhild.
+
+“Thou hast brought the greatest shame upon me,” he said, “for thou hast
+caused me to slay a sleeping woman. Knowest thou that my own men will
+scarcely speak with me? I have come to this evil pass, through love of
+thee, that I have slain a sleeping woman!”
+
+“It was not my fault that thou didst kill Gudruda,” answered Swanhild;
+“surely I thought it was Eric whom thy sword pierced! I have not sought
+thy love, Gizur, and I say this to thee: go, if thou wilt, and leave me
+alone!”
+
+Now Gizur looked at her, and was minded to go; but, as Swanhild knew
+well, she held him too fast in the net of her witcheries.
+
+“I would go, if I might go!” answered Gizur; “but I am bound to thee
+for good or evil, since it is fated that I shall wed thee.”
+
+“Thou wilt never wed me while Eric lives,” said Swanhild.
+
+Now she spoke thus truthfully, and by chance, as it were, not as
+driving Gizur on to slay Eric—for, now that Gudruda was dead, she was
+in two minds as to this matter, since, if she might, she still desired
+to take Eric to herself—but meaning that while Eric lived she would wed
+no other man. But Gizur took it otherwise.
+
+“Eric shall certainly die if I may bring it about,” he answered, and
+went to speak with his men.
+
+Now all were gathered in the yard at Coldback, and that was a great
+company. But their looks were heavy because of the shame that Gizur,
+Ospakar’s son, had brought upon them by the murder of Gudruda in her
+sleep.
+
+“Hearken, comrades!” said Gizur: “great shame is come upon me because
+of a deed that I have done unwittingly, for I aimed at the eagle Eric
+and I have slain the swan Gudruda.”
+
+Then a certain old viking in the company, named Ketel, whom Gizur had
+hired for the slaying of Eric, spoke:
+
+“Man or woman, it is a niddering deed to kill folk in their sleep,
+Gizur! It is murder, and no less, and small luck can be hoped for from
+the stroke.”
+
+Now Gizur felt that his people looked on him askance and heavily, and
+knew that it would be hard to show them that he was driven to this deed
+against his will, and by the witchcraft of Swanhild. So, as was his
+nature, he turned to guile for shelter, like a fox to his hole, and
+spoke to them with the tongue of a lawman; for Gizur had great skill in
+speech.
+
+“That tale was not all true which Eric Brighteyes told you,” he said.
+“He was mad with grief, and moreover it seems that he slept, and only
+woke to find Gudruda dead. It came about thus: I stood with the lady
+Swanhild, and was about to call aloud on Eric to arm himself and come
+forth and meet me face to face——”
+
+“Then, lord, methinks thou hadst never met another foe,” quoth the
+viking Ketel who had spoken first.
+
+“When of a sudden,” went on Gizur, taking no note of Ketel’s words,
+“one clothed in white sprang from the bed and rushed on me. Then I,
+thinking that it was Eric, lifted sword, not to smite, but to ward him
+away; but the linen-wearer met the sword and fell down dead. Then I
+fled, fearing lest men should wake and trap us, and that is all the
+tale. It was no fault of mine if Gudruda died upon the sword.”
+
+Thus he spoke, but still men looked doubtfully upon him, for his eye
+was the eye of a liar—and Eric, as they knew, did not lie.
+
+“It is hard to find the truth between lawman’s brain and tongue,” said
+the old viking Ketel. “Eric is no lawman, but a true man, and he sang
+another song. I would slay Eric indeed, for between him and me there is
+a blood-feud, since my brother died at his hand when, with Whitefire
+for a crook, Brighteyes drove armed men like sheep down the hall of
+Middalhof—ay and swordless, slew Ospakar. Yet I say that Eric is a true
+man, and, whether or no thou art true, Gizur the Lawman, that thou
+knowest best—thou and Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa’s daughter. If thou
+didst slay Gudruda as thou tellest, say, how came Gudruda’s blood on
+Whitefire’s blade? How did it chance, Gizur, that thou heldest
+Whitefire in thy hand and not thine own sword? Now I tell thee this:
+either thou shalt go up against Eric and clear thyself by blows, or I
+leave thee; and methinks there are others among this company who will
+do the same, for we have no wish to be partners with murderers and
+their wickedness.”
+
+“Ay, a good word!” said many who stood by. “Let Gizur go up with us to
+Mosfell, and there stand face to face with Eric and clear himself by
+blows.”
+
+“I ask no more,” said Gizur; “we will ride to-night.”
+
+“But much more shalt thou get, liar,” quoth Ketel to himself, “for that
+hour when thou lookest once again on Whitefire shall be thy last!”
+
+So Gizur and Swanhild made ready to go up against Eric. That day they
+rode away with a great company, a hundred and one in all, and this was
+their plan. They sent six men with that thrall who had shown them the
+secret path, bidding him guide them to the mountain-top. Then, when
+they were come thither, and heard the shouts of those who sought to
+gain the platform from the south, they were to watch till Eric and his
+folk came out from the cave, and shoot them with arrows from above or
+crush them with stones. But if perchance Eric left the platform and
+came to meet his foes in the narrow pass, then they must let themselves
+down with ropes from the height above, and, creeping after him round
+the rock, must smite him in the back. Moreover, in secret, Gizur
+promised a great reward of ten hundreds in silver to him who should
+kill Eric, for he did not long to stand face to face with him alone.
+Swanhild also in secret made promise of reward to those who should
+bring Eric to her, bound, but living; and she bade them do this—to bear
+him down with shields and tie him with ropes.
+
+So they rode away, the seven who should climb the mountain from behind
+going first, and on the morrow morning they crossed the sand and came
+to Mosfell.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM GREW FEY
+
+
+Now the night came down upon Mosfell, and of all nights this was the
+strangest. The air was quiet and heavy, yet no rain fell. It was so
+silent, moreover, that, did a stone slip upon the mountain side or a
+horse neigh far off on the plains, the sound of it crept up the fell
+and was echoed from the crags.
+
+Eric and Skallagrim sat together on the open space of rock that is
+before the cave, and great heaviness and fear came into their hearts,
+so that they had no desire to sleep.
+
+“Methinks the night is ghost-ridden,” said Eric, “and I am fey, for I
+grow cold, and it seems to me that one strokes my hair.”
+
+“It is ghost-ridden, lord,” answered Skallagrim. “Trolls are abroad,
+and the God-kind gather to see Eric die.”
+
+For a while they sat in silence, then suddenly the mountain heaved up
+gently beneath them. Thrice it seemed to heave like a woman’s breast,
+and left them frightened.
+
+“Now the dwarf-folk come from their caves,” quoth Skallagrim, “and
+great deeds may be looked for, since they are not drawn to the upper
+earth by a little thing.”
+
+Then once more they sat silent; and thick darkness came down upon the
+mountain, hiding the stars.
+
+“Look,” said Eric of a sudden, and he pointed to Hecla.
+
+Skallagrim looked, and lo! the snowy dome of Hecla was aglow with a
+rosy flame like the light of dawn.
+
+“Winter lights,” said Lambstail, shuddering.
+
+“Death lights!” answered Eric. “Look again!”
+
+They looked, and behold! in the rosy glow there sat three giant forms
+of fire, and their shapes were the shapes of women. Before them was a
+loom of blackness that stretched from earth to sky, and they wove at it
+with threads of flame. They were splendid and terrible to see. Their
+hair streamed behind them like meteor flames, their eyes shone like
+lightning, and their breasts gleamed like the polished bucklers of the
+gods. They wove fiercely at the loom of blackness, and as they wove
+they sang. The voice of the one was as the wind whistling through the
+pines; the voice of the other was as the sound of rain hissing on deep
+waters; and the voice of the third was as the moan of the sea. They
+wove fearfully and they sang loudly, but what they sang might not be
+known. Now the web grew and the woof grew, and a picture came upon the
+loom—a great picture written in fire.
+
+Behold! it was the semblance of a storm-awakened sea, and a giant ship
+fled before the gale—a dragon of war, and in the ship were piled the
+corses of men, and on these lay another corse, as one lies upon a bed.
+They looked, and the face of the corse grew bright. It was the face of
+Eric, and his head rested upon the dead heart of Skallagrim.
+
+Clinging to each other, Eric and Skallagrim saw the sight of fear that
+was written on the loom of the Norns. They saw it for a breath. Then,
+with a laugh like the wail of wolves, the shapes of fire sprang up and
+rent the web asunder. Then the first passed upward to the sky, the
+second southward towards Middalhof, but the third swept over Mosfell,
+so that the brightness of her flaming form shone on the rock where they
+sat by the cave, and the lightning of her eyes was mirrored in the
+byrnie of Skallagrim and on Eric’s golden helm. She swept past,
+pointing downwards as she went, and lo! she was gone, and once more
+darkness and silence lay upon the earth.
+
+Now this sight was seen of Jon the thrall also, and he told it in his
+story of the deeds of Eric. For Jon lay hid in a secret place on
+Mosfell, waiting for tidings of what came to pass.
+
+For a while Eric and Skallagrim clung to each other. Then Skallagrim
+spoke.
+
+“We have seen the Valkyries,” he said.
+
+“Nay,” answered Eric, “we have seen the Norns—who are come to warn us
+of our doom! We shall die to-morrow.”
+
+“At the least,” said Skallagrim, “we shall not die alone: we had a
+goodly bed on yonder goblin ship, and all of our own slaying methinks.
+It is not so ill to die thus, lord!”
+
+“Not so ill!” said Eric; “and yet I am weary of blood and war, of glory
+and of my strength. Now I desire rest alone. Light fire—I can bear this
+darkness no longer; the marrow freezes in my bones.”
+
+“Fire can be seen of foes,” said Skallagrim.
+
+“It matters little now,” said Eric, “we are feyfolk.”
+
+So Skallagrim lighted the fire, piling much brushwood and dry turf over
+it, till presently it burnt up brightly, throwing light on all the
+space of rock, and heavy shadows against the cliff behind. They sat
+thus a while in the light of the flames, looking towards the deep gulf,
+till suddenly there came a sound as of one who climbed the gulf.
+
+“Who comes now, climbing where no man may pass?” cried Eric, seizing
+Whitefire and springing to his feet. Presently he sank down again with
+white face and staring eyes, and pointed at the edge of the cliff. And
+as he pointed, the neck of a man rose in the shadow above the brink,
+and the hands of a man grasped the rock. But there was no head on the
+neck. The shape of the headless man drew itself slowly over the brink,
+it walked slowly into the light towards the fire, then sat itself down
+in the glare of the flames, which shrank away from it as from a draught
+of wind. Pale with terror, Eric and Skallagrim looked on the headless
+thing and knew it. It was the wraith of the Baresark that Brighteyes
+had slain—the first of all the men he slew.
+
+“It is my mate, Eric, whom thou didst kill years ago and whose severed
+head spoke with thee!” gasped Skallagrim.
+
+“It is he, sure enough!” said Eric; “but where may his head be?”
+
+“Perchance the head will come,” answered Skallagrim. “He is an evil
+sight to see, surely. Say, lord, shall I fall upon him, though I love
+not the task?”
+
+“Nay, Skallagrim, let him bide; he does but come to warn us of our
+fate. Moreover, ghosts can only be laid in one way—by the hewing off of
+the head and the laying of it at the thigh. But this one has no head to
+hew.”
+
+Now as he spoke the headless man turned his neck as though to look.
+Once more there came the sound of feet and lo! men marched in from the
+darkness on either side. Eric and Skallagrim looked up and knew them.
+They were those of Ospakar’s folk whom they had slain on Horse-Head
+Heights; all their wounds were on them and in front of them marched
+Mord, Ospakar’s son. The ghosts gazed upon Eric and Skallagrim with
+cold dead eyes, then they too sat down by the fire. Now once more there
+came the sound of feet, and from every side men poured in who had died
+at the hands of Eric and Skallagrim. First came those who fell on that
+ship of Ospakar’s which Eric sank by Westmans; then the crew of the
+Raven who had perished upon the sea-path. Even as the man died, so did
+each ghost come. Some had been drowned and their harness dripped water!
+Some had died of spear-thrusts and the spears were yet fixed in their
+breasts! Some had fallen beneath the flash of Whitefire and the weight
+of the axe of Skallagrim, and there they sat, looking on their wide
+wounds!
+
+Then came more and more. There were those whom Eric and Skallagrim had
+slain upon the seas, those who had fallen before them in the English
+wars, and all that company who had been drowned in the waters of the
+Pentland Firth when the witchcraft of Swanhild had brought the Gudruda
+to her wreck.
+
+“Now here we have a goodly crew,” said Eric at length. “Is it done,
+thinkest thou, or will Mosfell send forth more dead?”
+
+As he spoke the wraith of a grey-headed man drew near. He had but one
+arm, for the other was hewn from him, and the byrnie on his left side
+was red with blood.
+
+“Welcome, Earl Atli!” cried Eric. “Sit thou over against me, who
+to-morrow shall be with thee.”
+
+The ghost of the Earl seated itself and looked on Eric with sad eyes,
+but it spake never a word.
+
+Then came another company, and at their head stalked black Ospakar.
+
+“These be they who died at Middalhof,” cried Eric. “Welcome, Ospakar!
+that marriage-feast of thine went ill!”
+
+“Now methinks we are overdone with trolls,” said Skallagrim; “but see!
+here come more.”
+
+As he spoke, Hall of Lithdale came, and with him Koll the Half-witted,
+and others. And so it went on till all the men whom Eric and Skallagrim
+had slain, or who had died because of them, or at their side, were
+gathered in deep ranks before them.
+
+“Now it is surely done,” said Eric.
+
+“There is yet a space,” said Skallagrim, pointing to the other side of
+the fire, “and Hell holds many dead.”
+
+Even as the words left his lips there came a noise of the galloping of
+horse’s hoofs, and one clad in white rode up. It was a woman, for her
+golden hair flowed down about her white arms. Then she slid from the
+horse and stood in the light of the fire, and behold! her white robe
+was red with blood, a great sword was set in her heart, and the face
+and eyes were the face and eyes of Gudruda the Fair, and the horse she
+rode was Blackmane, that Eric had slain.
+
+Now when Brighteyes saw her he gave a great cry.
+
+“Greeting, sweet!” he said. “I am no longer afraid, since thou comest
+to bear me company. Thou art dear to my sight—ay even in yon
+death-sheet. Greeting, sweet, my May! I laid thee stiff and cold in the
+earth at Middalhof, but, like a loving wife, thou hast burst thy bonds,
+and art come to save me from the grip of trolls. Thou art welcome,
+Gudruda, Asmund’s daughter! Come, wife, sit thou at my side.”
+
+The ghost of Gudruda spake no word. She walked through the fire towards
+him, and the flames went out beneath her feet, to burn up again when
+she had passed. Then she sat down over against Eric and looked on him
+with wide and tender eyes. Thrice he stretched out his arms to clasp
+her, but thrice their strength left them and they fell back to his
+side. It was as though they struck a wall of ice and were numbed by the
+bitter cold.
+
+“Look, here are more,” groaned Skallagrim.
+
+Then Eric looked, and lo! the empty space to the left of the fire was
+filled with shadowy shapes like shapes of mist. Amongst them was Gizur,
+Ospakar’s son, and many a man of his company. There, too, was Swanhild,
+Groa’s daughter, and a toad nestled in her breast. She looked with wide
+eyes upon the eyes of dead Gudruda’s ghost, that seemed not to see her,
+and a stare of fear was set on her lovely face. Nor was this all; for
+there, before that shadowy throng, stood two great shapes clad in their
+harness, and one was the shape of Eric and one the shape of Skallagrim.
+
+Thus, being yet alive, did these two look upon their own wraiths!
+
+Then Eric and Skallagrim cried out aloud and their brains swam and
+their senses left them, so that they swooned.
+
+When they opened their eyes and life came back to them the fire was
+dead, and it was day. Nor was there any sign of that company which had
+been gathered on the rock before them.
+
+“Skallagrim,” quoth Eric, “it seems that I have dreamed a strange
+dream—a most strange dream of Norns and trolls!”
+
+“Tell me thy dream, lord,” said Skallagrim.
+
+So Eric told all the vision, and the Baresark listened in silence.
+
+“It was no dream, lord,” said Skallagrim, “for I myself have seen the
+same things. Now this is in my mind, that yonder sun is the last that
+we shall see, for we have beheld the death-shadows. All those who were
+gathered here last night wait to welcome us on Bifrost Bridge. And the
+mist-shapes who sat there, amongst whom our wraiths were numbered, are
+the shapes of those who shall die in the great fight to-day. For days
+are fled and we are sped!”
+
+“I would not have it otherwise,” said Eric. “We have been greatly
+honoured of the Gods, and of the ghost-kind that are around us and
+above us. Now let us make ready to die as becomes men who have never
+turned back to blow, for the end of the story should fit the beginning,
+and of us there is a tale to tell.”
+
+“A good word, lord,” answered Skallagrim: “I have struck few strokes to
+be shamed of, and I do not fear to tread Bifrost Bridge in thy company.
+Now we will wash ourselves and eat, so that our strength may be whole
+in us.”
+
+So they washed themselves with water, and ate merrily, and for the
+first time for many months Eric was merry. For now that the end was at
+hand his heart grew light within him. And when they had put the desire
+of food from them, and buckled on their harness, they looked out from
+their mountain height, and saw a cloud of dust rise in the desert plain
+of black sand beneath, and through it the sheen of spears.
+
+“Here come those of whom, if there is truth in visions, some few shall
+never go back again,” said Eric. “Now, what counsel hast thou,
+Skallagrim? Where shall we meet them? Here on the space of rock, or
+yonder in the deep way of the cliff?”
+
+“My counsel is that we meet them here,” said Skallagrim, “and cut them
+down one by one as they try to turn the rock. They can scarcely come at
+us to slay us here so long as our arms have strength to smite.”
+
+“Yet they will come, though I know not how,” answered Eric, “for I am
+sure of this, that our death lies before us. Here, then, we will meet
+them.”
+
+Now the cloud of dust drew nearer, and they saw that this was a great
+company which came up against them. At the foot of the fell the men
+stayed and rested a while, and it was not till afternoon that they
+began to climb the mountain.
+
+“Night will be at hand before the game is played,” said Skallagrim.
+“See, they climb slowly, saving their strength, and yonder among them
+is Swanhild in a purple cloak.”
+
+“Ay, night will be at hand, Skallagrim—a last long night! A hundred to
+two—the odds are heavy; yet some shall wish them heavier. Now let us
+bind on our helms.”
+
+Meanwhile Gizur and his folk crept up the paths from below. Now that
+thrall who knew the secret way had gone on with six chosen men, and
+already they climbed the watercourse and drew near to the flat crest of
+the fell. But Eric and Skallagrim knew nothing of this. So they sat
+down by the turning place that is over the gulf and waited, singing of
+the taking of the Raven and of the slaying in the stead at Middalhof,
+and telling tales of deeds that they had done. And the thrall and his
+six men climbed on till at length they gained the crest of the fell,
+and, looking over, saw Eric and Skallagrim beneath them.
+
+“The birds are in the snare, and hark! they sing,” said the thrall;
+“now bring rocks and be silent.”
+
+But Gizur and his people, having learned that Eric and Skallagrim were
+alone upon the mountain, pushed on.
+
+“We have not much to fear from two men,” said Gizur.
+
+“That we shall learn presently,” answered Swanhild. “I tell thee this,
+that I saw strange sights last night, though I did not sleep. I may
+sleep little now that Gudruda is dead, for that which I saw in her eyes
+haunts me.”
+
+Then they went on, and the face of Gizur grew white with fear.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM FOUGHT THEIR LAST GREAT FIGHT
+
+
+Now the thrall and those with him on the crest of the fell heard the
+murmur of the company of Gizur and Swanhild as they won the mountain
+side, though they could not see them because of the rocks.
+
+“Now it is time to begin and knock these birds from their perch,” said
+the thrall, “for that is an awkward corner for our folk to turn with
+Whitefire and the axe of Skallagrim waiting on the farther side.”
+
+So he balanced a great stone, as heavy as three men could lift, on the
+brow of the rock, and aimed it. Then he pushed and let it go. It smote
+the platform beneath with a crash, two fathoms behind the spot where
+Eric and Skallagrim sat. Then it flew into the air, and, just as
+Brighteyes turned at the sound, it struck the wings of his helm, and,
+bursting the straps, tore the golden helm-piece from his head and
+carried it away into the gulf beneath.
+
+Skallagrim looked up and saw what had come about.
+
+“They have gained the crest of the fell,” he cried. “Now we must fly
+into the cave or down the narrow way and hold it.”
+
+“Down the narrow way, then,” said Eric, and while rocks, spears and
+arrows rushed between and around them, they stepped on to the stone and
+won the path beyond. It was clear, for Gizur’s folk had not yet come,
+and they ran nearly to the mouth of it, where there was a bend in the
+way, and stood there side by side.
+
+“Thou wast at death’s door then, lord!” said Skallagrim.
+
+“Head-piece is not head,” answered Eric; “but I wonder how they won the
+crest of the fell. I have never heard tell of any path by which it
+might be gained.”
+
+“There they are at the least,” said Skallagrim. “Now this is my will,
+that thou shouldst take my helm. I am Baresark and put little trust in
+harness, but rather in my axe and strength alone.”
+
+“I will not do that,” said Eric. “Listen: I hear them come.”
+
+Presently the tumult of voices and the tramp of feet grew clearer, and
+after a while Gizur, Swanhild, and the men of their following turned
+the corner of the narrow way, and lo! there before them—ay within three
+paces of them—stood Eric and Skallagrim shoulder to shoulder, and the
+light poured down upon them from above.
+
+They were terrible to see, and the light shone brightly on Eric’s
+golden hair and Whitefire’s flashing blade, and the shadows lay dark on
+the black helm of Skallagrim and in the fierce black eyes beneath.
+
+Back surged Gizur and those with him. Skallagrim would have sprung upon
+them, but Eric caught him by the arm, saying: “A truce to thy Baresark
+ways. Rush not and move not! Let us stand here till they overwhelm us.”
+
+Now those behind Gizur cried out to know what ailed them that they
+pushed back.
+
+“Only this,” said Gizur, “that Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail
+stand like two grey wolves and hold the narrow way.”
+
+“Now we shall have fighting worth the telling of,” quoth Ketel the
+viking. “On, Gizur, Ospakar’s son, and cut them down!”
+
+“Hold!” said Swanhild; “I will speak with Eric first,” and, together
+with Gizur and Ketel, she passed round the corner of the path and came
+face to face with those who stood at bay there.
+
+“Now yield, Eric,” she cried. “Foes are behind and before thee. Thou
+art trapped, and hast little chance of life. Yield thee, I say, with
+thy black wolf-hound, so perchance thou mayest find mercy even at the
+hands of her whose husband thou didst wrong and slay.”
+
+“It is not my way to yield, lady,” answered Eric, “and still less
+perchance is it the way of Skallagrim. Least of all will we yield to
+thee who, after working many ills, didst throw me in a witch-sleep, and
+to him who slew the wife sleeping at my side. Hearken, Swanhild: here
+we stand, awaiting death, nor will we take mercy from thy hand. For
+know this, we shall not die alone. Last night as we sat on Mosfell we
+saw the Norns weave our web of fate upon their loom of darkness. They
+sat on Helca’s dome and wove their pictures in living flame, then rent
+the web and flew upward and southward and westward, crying our doom to
+sky and earth and sea. Last night as we sat by the fire on Mosfell all
+the company of the dead were gathered round us—ay! and all the company
+of those who shall die to-day. Thou wast there, Gizur the murderer,
+Ospakar’s son! thou wast there, Swanhild the witch, Groa’s daughter!
+thou wast there, Ketel Viking! with many another man; and there were we
+two also. Valkyries have kissed us and death draws near. Therefore,
+talk no more, but come and make an end. Greeting, Gizur, thou
+woman-murderer! Draw nigh! draw nigh! Out sword! up shield! and on,
+thou son of Ospakar!”
+
+Swanhild spoke no more, and Gizur had no word.
+
+“On, Gizur! Eric calls thee,” quoth Ketel Viking; but Gizur slunk back,
+not forward.
+
+Then Ketel grew mad with rage and shame. He called to the men, and they
+drew near, as many as might, and looked doubtfully at the pair who
+stood before them like rocks upon a plain. Eric laughed aloud and
+Skallagrim gnawed the edge of his shield. Eric laughed aloud and the
+sound of his laughter ran up the rocks.
+
+“We are but two,” he cried, “and ye are many! Is there never a pair
+among you will stand face to face with a Baresark and a helmless man?”
+and he tossed Whitefire high into the air and caught it by the hilt.
+
+Then Ketel and another man of his following sprang forward with an
+oath, and their axes thundered loud on the shields of Eric and of
+Skallagrim. But Whitefire flickered up and the axe of Skallagrim
+crashed, and at once their knees were loosened, so that they sank down
+dead.
+
+“More men! more men!” cried Eric. “These were brave, but their might
+was little. More men for the Grey Wolf’s maw!”
+
+Then Swanhild lashed the folk with bitter words, and two of them sprang
+on. They sprang on like hounds upon a deer at bay, and they rolled back
+as gored hounds roll from the deer’s horns.
+
+“More men! more men!” cried Eric. “Here lie but four and a hundred
+press behind. Now he shall win great honour who lays Brighteyes low and
+brings down the helm of Skallagrim.”
+
+Again two came on, but they found no luck, for presently they also were
+down upon the bodies of those who went before. Now none could be found
+to come up against the pair, for they fought like Baldur and Thor, and
+none could touch them, and no harness might withstand the weight of
+their blows that shore through shield and helm and byrnie, deep to the
+bone beneath. Then Eric and Skallagrim leaned upon their weapons and
+mocked their foes, while these cursed and tore their beards with rage
+and shame.
+
+Now it is to be told that when the thrall and those with him saw Eric
+and Skallagrim had escaped their rocks and spears, they took counsel,
+and the end of it was that they slid down a rope to the platform that
+is under the crest of the fell. Thence, though they could see nothing,
+they could hear the clang of blows and the shouts of those who fought
+and fell—ay! and the mocking of Eric and of Skallagrim.
+
+“Now it goes thus,” said the thrall, who was a cunning man: “Eric and
+Skallagrim hold the narrow way and none can stand against them. This,
+then, is my rede: that we turn the rock and take them in the back.”
+
+His fellows thought this a good saying, and one by one they stood upon
+the little rock and won the narrow way. They crept along this till they
+were near to Eric and Skallagrim. Now Swanhild, looking up, saw them
+and started. Skallagrim noted this and glanced over his shoulder, and
+that not too soon, for, as he looked, the thrall lifted sword to smite
+the head of Eric.
+
+With a shout of “Back to back!” the Baresark swung round and ere ever
+the sword might fall his axe was buried deep in the thrall’s breast.
+
+“Now we must cut our path through them,” said Skallagrim, “and, if it
+may be, win the space that is before the cave. Keep them off in front,
+and I will mind these mannikins.”
+
+Now Gizur’s folk, seeing what had come about, took heart and fell upon
+Eric with a rush, and those who were with the dead thrall rushed at
+Skallagrim, and there began such a fight as has not been known in
+Iceland. But the way was so narrow that scarce more than one man could
+come to each of them at a time. And so fierce and true were the blows
+of Eric and Skallagrim that of those who came on few went back. Down
+they fell, and where they fell they died, and for every man who died
+Eric and Skallagrim won a pace towards the point of rock. Whitefire
+flamed so swift and swept so wide that it seemed to Swanhild, watching,
+as though three swords were aloft at once, and the axe of Skallagrim
+thundered down like the axe of a woodman against a tree, and those
+groaned on whom it fell as groans a falling tree. Now the shields of
+these twain were hewn through and through, and cast away, and their
+blood ran from many wounds. Still, their life was whole in them and
+they plied axe and sword with both hands. And ever men fell, and ever,
+fighting hard, they drew nearer to the point of rock.
+
+Now it was won, and now all the company that came with the thrall from
+over the mountain brow were dead or sorely wounded at the hands of
+black Skallagrim. Lo! one springs on Eric, and Gizur creeps behind him.
+Whitefire leaps to meet the man and does not leap in vain; but Gizur
+smites a coward blow at Eric’s uncovered head, and wounds him sorely,
+so that he falls to his knee.
+
+“Now I am smitten to the death, Skallagrim,” cries Eric. “Win the rock
+and leave me.” Yet he rises from his knee.
+
+Then Skallagrim turns, red with blood and terrible to see.
+
+“‘Tis but a scratch. Climb thou the rock—I follow,” he says, and,
+screaming like a horse, with weapon aloft he leaps alone upon the foe.
+They break before the Baresark rush; they break, they fall—they are
+cloven by Baresark axe and trodden of Baresark feet! They roll back,
+leaving the way clear—save for the dead. Then Skallagrim follows
+Brighteyes to the rock.
+
+Now Eric wipes the gore from his eyes and sees. Then, slowly, and with
+a reeling brain, he steps down upon the giddy point. He goes near to
+falling, yet does not fall, for now he lies upon the open space, and
+creeps on hands and knees to the rock-wall that is by the cave, and
+sits resting his back against it, Whitefire on his knee.
+
+Before he is there, Skallagrim staggers to his side with a rush.
+
+“Now we have time to breathe, lord,” he gasps. “See, here is water,”
+and he takes a pitcher that stands by, and gives Eric to drink from the
+pool, then drinks himself and pours the rest of the water on Eric’s
+wound. Then new life comes to them, and they both stand on their feet
+and win back their breath.
+
+“We have not done so badly!” says Skallagrim, “and we are still a match
+for one or two. See, they come! Say, where shall we meet them, lord?”
+
+“Here,” quoth Eric; “I cannot stand well upon my legs without the help
+of the rock. Now I am all unmeet for fight.”
+
+“Yet shall this last stand of thine be sung of!” says Skallagrim.
+
+Now finding none to stay them, the men of Gizur climb one by one upon
+the rock and win the space that is beyond. Swanhild goes first of all,
+because she knows well that Eric will not harm her, and after her come
+Gizur and the others. But many do not come, for they will lift sword no
+more.
+
+Now Swanhild draws near and looks on Eric and mocks him in the
+fierceness of her heart and the rage of her wolf-love.
+
+“Now,” she says, “now are Brighteyes dim eyes! What! weepest thou,
+Eric?”
+
+“Ay, Swanhild,” he answered, “I weep tears of blood for those whom thou
+hast brought to doom.”
+
+She draws nearer and speaks low to him: “Hearken, Eric. Yield thee!
+Thou hast done enough for honour, and thou art not smitten to the death
+of yonder cowardly hound. Yield and I will nurse thee back to health
+and bear thee hence, and together we will forget our hates and woes.”
+
+“Not twice may a man lie in a witch’s bed,” said Eric, “and my troth is
+plighted to other than thee, Swanhild.”
+
+“She is dead,” says Swanhild.
+
+“Yes, she is dead, Swanhild; and I go to seek her amongst the dead—I go
+to seek her and to find her!”
+
+But the face of Swanhild grew fierce as the winter sea.
+
+“Thou hast put me away for the last time, Eric! Now thou shalt die, as
+I have promised thee and as I promised Gudruda the Fair!”
+
+“So shall I the more quickly find Gudruda and lose sight of thy evil
+face, Swanhild the harlot! Swanhild the murderess! Swanhild the witch!
+For I know this: thou shalt not escape!—thy doom draws on also!—and
+haunted and accursed shalt thou be for ever! Fare thee well, Swanhild;
+we shall meet no more, and the hour comes when thou shalt grieve that
+thou wast ever born!”
+
+Now Swanhild turned and called to the folk: “Come, cut down these
+outlaw rogues and make an end. Come, cut them down, for night draws
+on.”
+
+Then once more the men of Gizur closed in upon them. Eric smote thrice
+and thrice the blow went home, then he could smite no more, for his
+strength was spent with toil and wounds, and he sank upon the ground.
+For a while Skallagrim stood over him like a she-bear o’er her young
+and held the mob at bay. Then Gizur, watching, cast a spear at Eric. It
+entered his side through a cleft in his byrnie and pierced him deep.
+
+“I am sped, Skallagrim Lambstail,” cried Eric in a loud voice, and all
+men drew back to see giant Brighteyes die. Now his head fell against
+the rock and his eyes closed.
+
+Then Skallagrim, stooping, drew out the spear and kissed Eric on the
+forehead.
+
+“Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!” he said. “Iceland shall never see such
+another man, and few have died so great a death. Tarry a while, lord;
+tarry a while—I come—I come!”
+
+Then crying “_Eric! Eric!_” the Baresark fit took him, and once more
+and for the last time Skallagrim rushed screaming upon the foe, and
+once more they rolled to earth before him. To and fro he rushed,
+dealing great blows, and ever as he went they stabbed and cut and
+thrust at his side and back, for they dared not stand before him, till
+he bled from a hundred wounds. Now, having slain three more men, and
+wounded two others, Skallagrim might no more. He stood a moment swaying
+to and fro, then let his axe drop, threw his arms high above him, and
+with one loud cry of “_Eric!_” fell as a rock falls—dead upon the dead.
+
+But Eric was not yet gone. He opened his eyes and saw the death of
+Skallagrim and smiled.
+
+“Well ended, Lambstail!” he said in a faint voice.
+
+“Lo!” cried Gizur, “yon outlawed hound still lives! Now I will do a
+needful task and make an end of him, and so shall Ospakar’s sword come
+back to Ospakar’s son.”
+
+“Thou art wondrous brave now that the bear lies dying!” said Swanhild.
+
+Now it seemed that Eric heard the words, for suddenly his might came
+back to him, and he staggered to his knees and thence to his feet.
+Then, as folk fall from him, with all his strength he whirls Whitefire
+round his head till it shines like a wheel of fire. “Thy service is
+done and thou art clean of Gudruda’s blood—go back to those who forged
+thee!” Brighteyes cries, and casts Whitefire from him towards the gulf.
+
+Away speeds the great blade, flashing like lightning through the rays
+of the setting sun, and behold! as men watch it is gone—gone in
+mid-air!
+
+Since that day no such sword as Whitefire has been known in Iceland.
+
+“Now slay thou me, Gizur,” says the dying Eric.
+
+Gizur comes on with little eagerness, and Eric cries aloud:
+
+“Swordless I slew thy father!—swordless, shieldless, and wounded to the
+death I will yet slay _thee_, Gizur the Murderer!” and with a loud cry
+he staggered towards him.
+
+Gizur smites him with his sword, but Eric does not stay, and while men
+wait and wonder, Brighteyes sweeps him into his great arms—ay, sweeps
+him up, lifts him from the ground and reels on.
+
+Eric reels on to the brink of the gulf. Gizur sees his purpose,
+struggles and shrieks aloud. But the strength of the dying Eric is more
+than the strength of Gizur. Now Brighteyes stands on the dizzy edge and
+the light of the passing sun flames about his head. And now, bearing
+Gizur with him, he hurls himself out into the gulf, and lo! the sun
+sinks!
+
+Men stand wondering, but Swanhild cries aloud:
+
+“Nobly done, Eric! nobly done! So I would have seen thee die who of all
+men wast the first!”
+
+This then was the end of Eric Brighteyes the Unlucky, who of all
+warriors that have lived in Iceland was the mightiest, the goodliest,
+and the best beloved of women and of those who clung to him.
+
+Now, on the morrow, Swanhild caused the body of Eric to be searched for
+in the cleft, and there they found it, floating in water and with the
+dead Gizur yet clasped in its bear-grip. Then she cleansed it and
+clothed it again in its rent armour, and bound on the Hell-shoes, and
+it was carried on horses to the sea-side, and with it were borne the
+bodies of Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark, Eric’s thrall, and of all
+those men whom they had slain in the last great fight on Mosfell, that
+is now named Ericsfell.
+
+Then Swanhild drew her long dragon of war, in which she had come from
+Orkneys, from its shed over against Westman Isles, and in the centre of
+the ship, she piled the bodies of the slain in the shape of a bed, and
+lashed them fast. And on this bed she laid the corpse of Eric
+Brighteyes, and the breast of black Skallagrim the Baresark was his
+pillow, and the breast of Gizur, Ospakar’s son, was his foot-rest.
+
+Then she caused the sails to be hoisted, and went alone aboard the long
+ship, the rails of which were hung with the shields of the dead men.
+
+And when at evening the breeze freshened to a gale that blew from the
+land, she cut the cable with her own hand, and the ship leapt forward
+like a thing alive, and rushed out in the red light of the sunset
+towards the open sea.
+
+Now ever the gale freshened and folk, standing on Westman Heights, saw
+the long ship plunge past, dipping her prow beneath the waves and
+sending the water in a rain of spray over the living Swanhild, over the
+dead Eric and those he lay upon.
+
+And by the head of Eric Brighteyes, her hair streaming on the wind,
+stood Swanhild the Witch, clad in her purple cloak, and with rings of
+gold about her throat and arms. She stood by Eric’s head, swaying with
+the rush of the ship, and singing so sweet and wild a song that men
+grew weak who heard it.
+
+Now, as the people watched, two white swans came down from the clouds
+and sped on wide wings side by side over the vessel’s mast.
+
+The ship rushed on through the glow of sunset into the gathering night.
+On sped the ship, but still Swanhild sung, and still the swans flew
+over her.
+
+The gale grew fierce, and fiercer yet. The darkness gathered deep upon
+the raging sea.
+
+Now that ship was seen no more, and the death-song of Swanhild as she
+passed to doom was never heard again.
+
+For swans and ship, and Swanhild, and dead Eric and his dead foes, were
+lost in the wind and the night.
+
+But far out on the sea a great flame of fire leapt up towards the sky.
+
+Now this is the tale of Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur’s son; of Gudruda
+the Fair, Asmund’s daughter; of Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli’s wife,
+and of Ounound, named Skallagrim Lambstail, the Baresark, Eric’s
+thrall, all of whom lived and died before Thangbrand, Wilibald’s son,
+preached the White Christ in Iceland.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERIC BRIGHTEYES ***
+
+***** This file should be named 2721-0.txt or 2721-0.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/2/2721/
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
+be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
+United States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
+the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
+of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
+copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
+easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
+of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
+Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
+do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
+by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
+license, especially commercial redistribution.
+
+START: FULL LICENSE
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
+person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
+1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
+Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country other than the United States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
+on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+
+ This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+ most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
+ restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
+ under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
+ eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
+ United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where
+ you are located before using this eBook.
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
+other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
+Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+provided that:
+
+* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
+ works.
+
+* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+
+* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
+the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
+forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
+www.gutenberg.org
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
+Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
+to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
+and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
+widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
+state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+
+Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
+facility: www.gutenberg.org
+
+This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
diff --git a/2721-0.zip b/2721-0.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..adef8aa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2721-0.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/2721-h.zip b/2721-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..181632c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2721-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/2721-h/2721-h.htm b/2721-h/2721-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bc9f47b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2721-h/2721-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,17746 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard</title>
+
+<style type="text/css">
+
+body { margin-left: 20%;
+ margin-right: 20%;
+ text-align: justify; }
+
+h1, h2, h3, h4, h5 {text-align: center; font-style: normal; font-weight:
+normal; line-height: 1.5; margin-top: .5em; margin-bottom: .5em;}
+
+h1 {font-size: 300%;
+ margin-top: 0.6em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.6em;
+ letter-spacing: 0.12em;
+ word-spacing: 0.2em;
+ text-indent: 0em;}
+h2 {font-size: 150%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em;}
+h3 {font-size: 130%; margin-top: 1em;}
+h4 {font-size: 120%;}
+h5 {font-size: 110%;}
+
+.no-break {page-break-before: avoid;} /* for epubs */
+
+div.chapter {page-break-before: always; margin-top: 4em;}
+
+hr {width: 80%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;}
+
+p {text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-top: 0.25em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
+
+.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
+
+p.poem {text-indent: 0%;
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ font-size: 90%;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+
+p.noindent {text-indent: 0% }
+
+p.footnote {font-size: 90%;
+ text-indent: 0%;
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+
+a:link {color:blue; text-decoration:none}
+a:visited {color:blue; text-decoration:none}
+a:hover {color:red}
+
+</style>
+
+</head>
+
+<body>
+
+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold;'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Eric Brighteyes</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: H. Rider Haggard</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July, 2001 [eBook #2721]<br />
+[Most recently updated: May 3, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: John Bickers, Dagny, Emma Dudding and David Widger</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERIC BRIGHTEYES ***</div>
+
+<h1>Eric Brighteyes</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by H. Rider Haggard</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#pref01">DEDICATION</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#pref02">INTRODUCTION</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap00"><b>ERIC BRIGHTEYES</b></a><br /><br /></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST FOUND GROA THE WITCH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. HOW ERIC TOLD HIS LOVE TO GUDRUDA IN THE SNOW ON COLDBACK</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. HOW ASMUND BADE ERIC TO HIS YULE-FEAST</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. HOW ERIC CAME DOWN GOLDEN FALLS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. HOW ERIC WON THE SWORD WHITEFIRE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WAS BETROTHED TO UNNA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. HOW ERIC WENT UP MOSFELL AGAINST SKALLAGRIM THE BARESARK</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII. HOW OSPAKAR BLACKTOOTH FOUND ERIC BRIGHTEYES AND SKALLAGRIM LAMBSTAIL ON HORSE-HEAD HEIGHTS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX. HOW SWANHILD DEALT WITH GUDRUDA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X. HOW ASMUND SPOKE WITH SWANHILD</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI. HOW SWANHILD BID FAREWELL TO ERIC</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII. HOW ERIC WAS OUTLAWED AND SAILED A-VIKING</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII. HOW HALL THE MATE CUT THE GRAPNEL CHAIN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV. HOW ERIC DREAMED A DREAM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap15">CHAPTER XV. HOW ERIC DWELT IN LONDON TOWN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI. HOW SWANHILD WALKED THE SEAS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII. HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WEDDED UNNA, THOROD&rsquo;S DAUGHTER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII. HOW EARL ATLI FOUND ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM ON THE SOUTHERN ROCKS OF STRAUMEY ISLE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX. HOW KOLL THE HALF-WITTED BROUGHT TIDINGS FROM ICELAND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap20">CHAPTER XX. HOW ERIC WAS NAMED ANEW</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI. HOW HALL OF LITHDALE TOOK TIDINGS TO ICELAND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII. HOW ERIC CAME HOME AGAIN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap23">CHAPTER XXIII. HOW ERIC WAS A GUEST AT THE WEDDING-FEAST OF GUDRUDA THE FAIR</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap24">CHAPTER XXIV. HOW THE FEAST WENT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap25">CHAPTER XXV. HOW THE FEAST ENDED</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap26">CHAPTER XXVI. HOW ERIC VENTURED DOWN TO MIDDALHOF AND WHAT HE FOUND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap27">CHAPTER XXVII. HOW GUDRUDA WENT UP TO MOSFELL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap28">CHAPTER XXVIII. HOW SWANHILD WON TIDINGS OF ERIC</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap29">CHAPTER XXIX. HOW WENT THE BRIDAL NIGHT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap30">CHAPTER XXX. HOW THE DAWN CAME</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap31">CHAPTER XXXI. HOW ERIC SENT AWAY HIS MEN FROM MOSFELL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap32">CHAPTER XXXII. HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM GREW FEY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap33">CHAPTER XXXIII. HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM FOUGHT THEIR LAST GREAT FIGHT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="pref01"></a>DEDICATION</h2>
+
+<p>
+Madam,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You have graciously conveyed to me the intelligence that during the weary weeks
+spent far from his home&mdash;in alternate hope and fear, in suffering and
+mortal trial&mdash;a Prince whose memory all men must reverence, the Emperor
+Frederick, found pleasure in the reading of my stories: that &ldquo;they
+interested and fascinated him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While the world was watching daily at the bedside of your Majesty&rsquo;s
+Imperial husband, while many were endeavouring to learn courage in our
+supremest need from the spectacle of that heroic patience, a distant writer
+little knew that it had been his fortune to bring to such a sufferer an
+hour&rsquo;s forgetfulness of sorrow and pain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This knowledge, to an author, is far dearer than any praise, and it is in
+gratitude that, with your Majesty&rsquo;s permission, I venture to dedicate to
+you the tale of Eric Brighteyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The late Emperor, at heart a lover of peace, though by duty a soldier of
+soldiers, might perhaps have cared to interest himself in a warrior of long
+ago, a hero of our Northern stock, whose days were spent in strife, and whose
+latest desire was Rest. But it may not be; like the Golden Eric of this Saga,
+and after a nobler fashion, he has passed through the Hundred Gates into the
+Valhalla of Renown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To you, then, Madam, I dedicate this book, a token, however slight and
+unworthy, of profound respect and sympathy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I am, Madam,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Your Majesty&rsquo;s most obedient servant,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+H. Rider Haggard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+November 17, 1889.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To H.I.M. Victoria, Empress Frederick of Germany.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="pref02"></a>INTRODUCTION</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric Brighteyes&rdquo; is a romance founded on the Icelandic Sagas.
+&ldquo;What is a saga?&rdquo; &ldquo;Is it a fable or a true story?&rdquo; The
+answer is not altogether simple. For such sagas as those of Burnt Njal and
+Grettir the Strong partake both of truth and fiction: historians dispute as to
+the proportions. This was the manner of the saga&rsquo;s growth: In the early
+days of the Iceland community&mdash;that republic of aristocrats&mdash;say,
+between the dates 900 and 1100 of our era, a quarrel would arise between two
+great families. As in the case of the Njal Saga, its cause, probably, was the
+ill doings of some noble woman. This quarrel would lead to manslaughter. Then
+blood called for blood, and a vendetta was set on foot that ended only with the
+death by violence of a majority of the actors in the drama and of large numbers
+of their adherents. In the course of the feud, men of heroic strength and mould
+would come to the front and perform deeds worthy of the iron age which bore
+them. Women also would help to fashion the tale, for good or ill, according to
+their natural gifts and characters. At last the tragedy was covered up by death
+and time, leaving only a few dinted shields and haunted cairns to tell of those
+who had played its leading parts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But its fame lived on in the minds of men. From generation to generation skalds
+wandered through the winter snows, much as Homer may have wandered in his day
+across the Grecian vales and mountains, to find a welcome at every stead,
+because of the old-time story they had to tell. Here, night after night, they
+would sit in the ingle and while away the weariness of the dayless dark with
+histories of the times when men carried their lives in their hands, and thought
+them well lost if there might be a song in the ears of folk to come. To alter
+the tale was one of the greatest of crimes: the skald must repeat it as it came
+to him; but by degrees undoubtedly the sagas did suffer alteration. The facts
+remained the same indeed, but around them gathered a mist of miraculous
+occurrences and legends. To take a single instance: the account of the burning
+of Bergthorsknoll in the Njal Saga is not only a piece of descriptive writing
+that for vivid, simple force and insight is scarcely to be matched out of Homer
+and the Bible, it is also obviously true. We feel as we read, that no man could
+have invented that story, though some great skald threw it into shape. That the
+tale is true, the writer of &ldquo;Eric&rdquo; can testify, for, saga in hand,
+he has followed every act of the drama on its very site. There he who digs
+beneath the surface of the lonely mound that looks across plain and sea to
+Westman Isles may still find traces of the burning, and see what appears to be
+the black sand with which the hands of Bergthora and her women strewed the
+earthen floor some nine hundred years ago, and even the greasy and clotted
+remains of the whey that they threw upon the flame to quench it. He may
+discover the places where Fosi drew up his men, where Skarphedinn died, singing
+while his legs were burnt from off him, where Kari leapt from the flaming ruin,
+and the dell in which he laid down to rest&mdash;at every step, in short, the
+truth of the narrative becomes more obvious. And yet the tale has been added
+to, for, unless we may believe that some human beings are gifted with second
+sight, we cannot accept as true the prophetic vision that came to Runolf,
+Thorstein&rsquo;s son; or that of Njal who, on the evening of the onslaught,
+like Theoclymenus in the Odyssey, saw the whole board and the meats upon it
+&ldquo;one gore of blood.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus, in the Norse romance now offered to the reader, the tale of Eric and his
+deeds would be true; but the dream of Asmund, the witchcraft of Swanhild, the
+incident of the speaking head, and the visions of Eric and Skallagrim, would
+owe their origin to the imagination of successive generations of skalds; and,
+finally, in the fifteenth or sixteenth century, the story would have been
+written down with all its supernatural additions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tendency of the human mind&mdash;and more especially of the Norse
+mind&mdash;is to supply uncommon and extraordinary reasons for actions and
+facts that are to be amply accounted for by the working of natural forces.
+Swanhild would have needed no &ldquo;familiar&rdquo; to instruct her in her
+evil schemes; Eric would have wanted no love-draught to bring about his
+overthrow. Our common experience of mankind as it is, in opposition to mankind
+as we fable it to be, is sufficient to teach us that the passion of one and the
+human weakness of the other would suffice to these ends. The natural magic, the
+beauty and inherent power of such a woman as Swanhild, are things more forceful
+than any spell magicians have invented, or any demon they are supposed to have
+summoned to their aid. But no saga would be complete without the intervention
+of such extraneous forces: the need of them was always felt, in order to throw
+up the acts of heroes and heroines, and to invest their persons with an added
+importance. Even Homer felt this need, and did not scruple to introduce not
+only second sight, but gods and goddesses, and to bring their supernatural
+agency to bear directly on the personages of his chant, and that far more
+freely than any Norse sagaman. A word may be added in explanation of the
+appearances of &ldquo;familiars&rdquo; in the shapes of animals, an instance of
+which will be found in this story. It was believed in Iceland, as now by the
+Finns and Eskimo, that the passions and desires of sorcerers took visible form
+in such creatures as wolves or rats. These were called &ldquo;sendings,&rdquo;
+and there are many allusions to them in the Sagas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another peculiarity that may be briefly alluded to as eminently characteristic
+of the Sagas is their fatefulness. As we read we seem to hear the voice of Doom
+speaking continually. &ldquo;<i>Things will happen as they are
+fated</i>&rdquo;: that is the keynote of them all. The Norse mind had little
+belief in free will, less even than we have to-day. Men and women were born
+with certain characters and tendencies, given to them in order that their lives
+should run in appointed channels, and their acts bring about an appointed end.
+They do not these things of their own desire, though their desires prompt them
+to the deeds: they do them because they must. The Norns, as they name Fate,
+have mapped out their path long and long ago; their feet are set therein, and
+they must tread it to the end. Such was the conclusion of our Scandinavian
+ancestors&mdash;a belief forced upon them by their intense realisation of the
+futility of human hopes and schemings, of the terror and the tragedy of life,
+the vanity of its desires, and the untravelled gloom or sleep, dreamless or
+dreamfull, which lies beyond its end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though the Sagas are entrancing, both as examples of literature of which there
+is but little in the world and because of their living interest, they are
+scarcely known to the English-speaking public. This is easy to account for: it
+is hard to persuade the nineteenth century world to interest itself in people
+who lived and events that happened a thousand years ago. Moreover, the Sagas
+are undoubtedly difficult reading. The archaic nature of the work, even in a
+translation; the multitude of its actors; the Norse sagaman&rsquo;s habit of
+interweaving endless side-plots, and the persistence with which he introduces
+the genealogy and adventures of the ancestors of every unimportant character,
+are none of them to the taste of the modern reader.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric Brighteyes&rdquo; therefore, is clipped of these peculiarities,
+and, to some extent, is cast in the form of the romance of our own day,
+archaisms being avoided as much as possible. The author will be gratified
+should he succeed in exciting interest in the troubled lives of our Norse
+forefathers, and still more so if his difficult experiment brings readers to
+the Sagas&mdash;to the prose epics of our own race. Too ample, too prolix, too
+crowded with detail, they cannot indeed vie in art with the epics of Greece;
+but in their pictures of life, simple and heroic, they fall beneath no
+literature in the world, save the Iliad and the Odyssey alone.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap00"></a>ERIC BRIGHTEYES</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>CHAPTER I<br />
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST FOUND GROA THE WITCH</h2>
+
+<p>
+There lived a man in the south, before Thangbrand, Wilibald&rsquo;s son,
+preached the White Christ in Iceland. He was named Eric Brighteyes,
+Thorgrimur&rsquo;s son, and in those days there was no man like him for
+strength, beauty and daring, for in all these things he was the first. But he
+was not the first in good-luck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two women lived in the south, not far from where the Westman Islands stand
+above the sea. Gudruda the Fair was the name of the one, and Swanhild, called
+the Fatherless, Groa&rsquo;s daughter, was the other. They were half-sisters,
+and there were none like them in those days, for they were the fairest of all
+women, though they had nothing in common except their blood and hate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now of Eric Brighteyes, of Gudruda the Fair and of Swanhild the Fatherless,
+there is a tale to tell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These two fair women saw the light in the self-same hour. But Eric Brighteyes
+was their elder by five years. The father of Eric was Thorgrimur Iron-Toe. He
+had been a mighty man; but in fighting with a Baresark,[*] who fell upon him as
+he came up from sowing his wheat, his foot was hewn from him, so that
+afterwards he went upon a wooden leg shod with iron. Still, he slew the
+Baresark, standing on one leg and leaning against a rock, and for that deed
+people honoured him much. Thorgrimur was a wealthy yeoman, slow to wrath, just,
+and rich in friends. Somewhat late in life he took to wife Saevuna,
+Thorod&rsquo;s daughter. She was the best of women, strong in mind and
+second-sighted, and she could cover herself in her hair. But these two never
+loved each other overmuch, and they had but one child, Eric, who was born when
+Saevuna was well on in years.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] The Baresarks were men on whom a passing fury of battle came; they were
+usually outlawed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The father of Gudruda was Asmund Asmundson, the Priest of Middalhof. He was the
+wisest and the wealthiest of all men who lived in the south of Iceland in those
+days, owning many farms and, also, two ships of merchandise and one long ship
+of war, and having much money out at interest. He had won his wealth by
+viking&rsquo;s work, robbing the English coasts, and black tales were told of
+his doings in his youth on the sea, for he was a &ldquo;red-hand&rdquo; viking.
+Asmund was a handsome man, with blue eyes and a large beard, and, moreover, was
+very skilled in matters of law. He loved money much, and was feared of all.
+Still, he had many friends, for as he aged he grew more kindly. He had in
+marriage Gudruda, the daughter of Björn, who was very sweet and kindly of
+nature, so that they called her Gudruda the Gentle. Of this marriage there were
+two children, Björn and Gudruda the Fair; but Björn grew up like his father in
+youth, strong and hard, and greedy of gain, while, except for her wonderful
+beauty, Gudruda was her mother&rsquo;s child alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mother of Swanhild the Fatherless was Groa the Witch. She was a Finn, and
+it is told of her that the ship on which she sailed, trying to run under the
+lee of the Westman Isles in a great gale from the north-east, was dashed to
+pieces on a rock, and all those on board of her were caught in the net of
+Ran[*] and drowned, except Groa herself, who was saved by her magic art. This
+at the least is true, that, as Asmund the Priest rode down by the sea-shore on
+the morning after the gale, seeking for some strayed horses, he found a
+beautiful woman, who wore a purple cloak and a great girdle of gold, seated on
+a rock, combing her black hair and singing the while; and, at her feet, washing
+to and fro in a pool, was a dead man. He asked whence she came, and she
+answered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Out of the Swan&rsquo;s Bath.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] The Norse goddess of the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next, he asked her where were her kin. But, pointing to the dead man, she said
+that this alone was left of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who was the man, then?&rdquo; said Asmund the Priest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed again and sang this song:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Groa sails up from the Swan&rsquo;s Bath,<br />
+    Death Gods grip the Dead Man&rsquo;s hand.<br />
+Look where lies her luckless husband,<br />
+    Bolder sea-king ne&rsquo;er swung sword!<br />
+Asmund, keep the kirtle-wearer,<br />
+    For last night the Norns were crying,<br />
+And Groa thought they told of thee:<br />
+    Yea, told of thee and babes unborn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How knowest thou my name?&rdquo; asked Asmund.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The sea-mews cried it as the ship sank, thine and others&mdash;and they
+shall be heard in story.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then that is the best of luck,&rdquo; quoth Asmund; &ldquo;but I think
+that thou art fey.&rdquo;[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] <i>I.e.</i> subject to supernatural presentiments, generally connected with
+approaching doom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;fey and fair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;True enough thou art fair. What shall we do with this dead man?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Leave him in the arms of Ran. So may all husbands lie.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They spoke no more with her at that time, seeing that she was a witchwoman. But
+Asmund took her up to Middalhof, and gave her a farm, and she lived there
+alone, and he profited much by her wisdom.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now it chanced that Gudruda the Gentle was with child, and when her time came
+she gave a daughter birth&mdash;a very fair girl, with dark eyes. On the same
+day, Groa the witchwoman brought forth a girl-child, and men wondered who was
+its father, for Groa was no man&rsquo;s wife. It was women&rsquo;s talk that
+Asmund the Priest was the father of this child also; but when he heard it he
+was angry, and said that no witchwoman should bear a bairn of his, howsoever
+fair she was. Nevertheless, it was still said that the child was his, and it is
+certain that he loved it as a man loves his own; but of all things, this is the
+hardest to know. When Groa was questioned she laughed darkly, as was her
+fashion, and said that she knew nothing of it, never having seen the face of
+the child&rsquo;s father, who rose out of the sea at night. And for this cause
+some thought him to have been a wizard or the wraith of her dead husband; but
+others said that Groa lied, as many women have done on such matters. But of all
+this talk the child alone remained and she was named Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, but an hour before the child of Gudruda the Gentle was born, Asmund went
+up from his house to the Temple, to tend the holy fire that burned night and
+day upon the altar. When he had tended the fire, he sat down upon the
+cross-benches before the shrine, and, gazing on the image of the Goddess Freya,
+he fell asleep and dreamed a very evil dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He dreamed that Gudruda the Gentle bore a dove most beautiful to see, for all
+its feathers were of silver; but that Groa the Witch bore a golden snake. And
+the snake and the dove dwelt together, and ever the snake sought to slay the
+dove. At length there came a great white swan flying over Coldback Fell, and
+its tongue was a sharp sword. Now the swan saw the dove and loved it, and the
+dove loved the swan; but the snake reared itself, and hissed, and sought to
+kill the dove. But the swan covered her with his wings, and beat the snake
+away. Then he, Asmund, came out and drove away the swan, as the swan had driven
+the snake, and it wheeled high into the air and flew south, and the snake swam
+away also through the sea. But the dove drooped and now it was blind. Then an
+eagle came from the north, and would have taken the dove, but it fled round and
+round, crying, and always the eagle drew nearer to it. At length, from the
+south the swan came back, flying heavily, and about its neck was twined the
+golden snake, and with it came a raven. And it saw the eagle and loud it
+trumpeted, and shook the snake from it so that it fell like a gleam of gold
+into the sea. Then the eagle and the swan met in battle, and the swan drove the
+eagle down and broke it with his wings, and, flying to the dove, comforted it.
+But those in the house ran out and shot at the swan with bows and drove it
+away, but now he, Asmund, was not with them. And once more the dove drooped.
+Again the swan came back, and with it the raven, and a great host were gathered
+against them, and, among them, all of Asmund&rsquo;s kith and kin, and the men
+of his quarter and some of his priesthood, and many whom he did not know by
+face. And the swan flew at Björn his son, and shot out the sword of its tongue
+and slew him, and many a man it slew thus. And the raven, with a beak and claws
+of steel, slew also many a man, so that Asmund&rsquo;s kindred fled and the
+swan slept by the dove. But as it slept the golden snake crawled out of the
+sea, and hissed in the ears of men, and they rose up to follow it. It came to
+the swan and twined itself about its neck. It struck at the dove and slew it.
+Then the swan awoke and the raven awoke, and they did battle till all who
+remained of Asmund&rsquo;s kindred and people were dead. But still the snake
+clung about the swan&rsquo;s neck, and presently snake and swan fell into the
+sea, and far out on the sea there burned a flame of fire. And Asmund awoke
+trembling and left the Temple.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now as he went, a woman came running, and weeping as she ran.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Haste, haste!&rdquo; she cried; &ldquo;a daughter is born to thee, and
+Gudruda thy wife is dying!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it so?&rdquo; said Asmund; &ldquo;after ill dreams ill
+tidings.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now in the bed-closet off the great hall of Middalhof lay Gudruda the Gentle
+and she was dying.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art thou there, husband?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Even so, wife.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou comest in an evil hour, for it is my last. Now hearken. Take thou
+the new-born babe within thine arms and kiss it, and pour water over it, and
+name it with my name.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Asmund did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken, my husband. I have been a good wife to thee, though thou hast
+not been all good to me. But thus shalt thou atone: thou shalt swear that,
+though she is a girl, thou wilt not cast this bairn forth to perish, but wilt
+cherish and nurture her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I swear it,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And thou shalt swear that thou wilt not take the witchwoman Groa to
+wife, nor have anything to do with her, and this for thine own sake: for, if
+thou dost, she will be thy death. Dost thou swear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I swear it,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is well; but, husband, if thou dost break thine oath, either in the
+words or in the spirit of the words, evil shall overtake thee and all thy
+house. Now bid me farewell, for I die.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He bent over her and kissed her, and it is said that Asmund wept in that hour,
+for after his fashion he loved his wife.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give me the babe,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that it may lie once upon my
+breast.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They gave her the babe and she looked upon its dark eyes and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fairest of women shalt thou be, Gudruda&mdash;fair as no woman in
+Iceland ever was before thee; and thou shalt love with a mighty love&mdash;and
+thou shalt lose&mdash;and, losing, thou shalt find again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, it is said that, as she spoke these words, her face grew bright as a
+spirit&rsquo;s, and, having spoken them, she fell back dead. And they laid her
+in earth, but Asmund mourned her much.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, when all was over and done, the dream that he had dreamed lay heavy on
+him. Now of all diviners of dreams Groa was the most skilled, and when Gudruda
+had been in earth seven full days, Asmund went to Groa, though doubtfully,
+because of his oath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came to the house and entered. On a couch in the chamber lay Groa, and her
+babe was on her breast and she was very fair to see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Greeting, lord!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;What wouldest thou here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have dreamed a dream, and thou alone canst read it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is as it may be,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;It is true that I have
+some skill in dreams. At the least I will hear it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he unfolded it to her every word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What wilt thou give me if I read thy dream?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What dost thou ask? Methinks I have given thee much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yea, lord,&rdquo; and she looked at the babe upon her breast. &ldquo;I
+ask but a little thing: that thou shalt take this bairn in thy arms, pour water
+over it and name it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Men will talk if I do this, for it is the father&rsquo;s part.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a little thing what men say: talk goes by as the wind. Moreover,
+thou shalt give them the lie in the child&rsquo;s name, for it shall be
+Swanhild the Fatherless. Nevertheless that is my price. Pay it if thou
+wilt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Read me the dream and I will name the child.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, first name thou the babe: for then no harm shall come to her at thy
+hands.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Asmund took the child, poured water over her, and named her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Groa spoke: &ldquo;This lord, is the reading of thy dream, else my wisdom
+is at fault: The silver dove is thy daughter Gudruda, the golden snake is my
+daughter Swanhild, and these two shall hate one the other and strive against
+each other. But the swan is a mighty man whom both shall love, and, if he love
+not both, yet shall belong to both. And thou shalt send him away; but he shall
+return and bring bad luck to thee and thy house, and thy daughter shall be
+blind with love of him. And in the end he shall slay the eagle, a great lord
+from the north who shall seek to wed thy daughter, and many another shall he
+slay, by the help of that raven with the bill of steel who shall be with him.
+But Swanhild shall triumph over thy daughter Gudruda, and this man, and the two
+of them, shall die at her hands, and, for the rest, who can say? But this is
+true&mdash;that the mighty man shall bring all thy race to an end. See now, I
+have read thy rede.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Asmund was very wroth. &ldquo;Thou wast wise to beguile me to name thy
+bastard brat,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;else had I been its death within this
+hour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This thou canst not do, lord, seeing that thou hast held it in thy
+arms,&rdquo; Groa answered, laughing. &ldquo;Go rather and lay out Gudruda the
+Fair on Coldback Hill; so shalt thou make an end of the evil, for Gudruda shall
+be its very root. Learn this, moreover: that thy dream does not tell all,
+seeing that thou thyself must play a part in the fate. Go, send forth the babe
+Gudruda, and be at rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That cannot be, for I have sworn to cherish it, and with an oath that
+may not be broken.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is well,&rdquo; laughed Groa. &ldquo;Things will befall as they are
+fated; let them befall in their season. There is space for cairns on Coldback
+and the sea can shroud its dead!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Asmund went thence, angered at heart.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>CHAPTER II<br />
+HOW ERIC TOLD HIS LOVE TO GUDRUDA IN THE SNOW ON COLDBACK</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now, it must be told that, five years before the day of the death of Gudruda
+the Gentle, Saevuna, the wife of Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, gave birth to a son, at
+Coldback in the Marsh, on Ran River, and when his father came to look upon the
+child he called out aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here we have a wondrous bairn, for his hair is yellow like gold and his
+eyes shine bright as stars.&rdquo; And Thorgrimur named him Eric Brighteyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, Coldback is but an hour&rsquo;s ride from Middalhof, and it chanced, in
+after years, that Thorgrimur went up to Middalhof, to keep the Yule feast and
+worship in the Temple, for he was in the priesthood of Asmund Asmundson,
+bringing the boy Eric with him. There also was Groa with Swanhild, for now she
+dwelt at Middalhof; and the three fair children were set together in the hall
+to play, and men thought it great sport to see them. Now, Gudruda had a horse
+of wood and would ride it while Eric pushed the horse along. But Swanhild smote
+her from the horse and called to Eric to make it move; but he comforted Gudruda
+and would not, and at that Swanhild was angry and lisped out:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Push thou must, if I will it, Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he pushed sideways and with such good will that Swanhild fell almost into
+the fire of the hearth, and, leaping up, she snatched a brand and threw it at
+Gudruda, firing her clothes. Men laughed at this; but Groa, standing apart,
+frowned and muttered witch-words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why lookest thou so darkly, housekeeper?&rdquo; said Asmund; &ldquo;the
+boy is bonny and high of heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, he is bonny as no child is, and he shall be bonny all his life-days.
+Nevertheless, she shall not stand against his ill luck. This I prophesy of him:
+that women shall bring him to his end, and he shall die a hero&rsquo;s death,
+but not at the hand of his foes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+And now the years went by peacefully. Groa dwelt with her daughter Swanhild up
+at Middalhof and was the love of Asmund Asmundson. But, though he forgot his
+oath thus far, yet he would never take her to wife. The witchwife was angered
+at this, and she schemed and plotted much to bring it about that Asmund should
+wed her. But still he would not, though in all things else she led him as it
+were by a halter.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Twenty full years had gone by since Gudruda the Gentle was laid in earth; and
+now Gudruda the Fair and Swanhild the Fatherless were women too. Eric, too, was
+a man of five-and-twenty years, and no such man had lived in Iceland. For he
+was strong and great of stature, his hair was yellow as gold, and his grey eyes
+shone with the light of swords. He was gentle and loving as a woman, and even
+as a lad his strength was the strength of two men; and there were none in all
+the quarter who could leap or swim or wrestle against Eric Brighteyes. Men held
+him in honour and spoke well of him, though as yet he had done no deeds, but
+lived at home on Coldback, managing the farm, for now Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, his
+father, was dead. But women loved him much, and that was his bane&mdash;for of
+all women he loved but one, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter. He loved
+her from a child, and her alone till his day of death, and she, too, loved him
+and him only. For now Gudruda was a maid of maids, most beautiful to see and
+sweet to hear. Her hair, like the hair of Eric, was golden, and she was white
+as the snow on Hecla; but her eyes were large and dark, and black lashes
+drooped above them. For the rest she was tall and strong and comely, merry of
+face, yet tender, and the most witty of women.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild also was very fair; she was slender, small of limb, and dark of hue,
+having eyes blue as the deep sea, and brown curling hair, enough to veil her to
+the knees, and a mind of which none knew the end, for, though she was open in
+her talk, her thoughts were dark and secret. This was her joy: to draw the
+hearts of men to her and then to mock them. She beguiled many in this fashion,
+for she was the cunningest girl in matters of love, and she knew well the arts
+of women, with which they bring men to nothing. Nevertheless she was cold at
+heart, and desired power and wealth greatly, and she studied magic much, of
+which her mother Groa also had a store. But Swanhild, too, loved a man, and
+that was the joint in her harness by which the shaft of Fate entered her heart,
+for that man was Eric Brighteyes, who loved her not. But she desired him so
+sorely that, without him, all the world was dark to her, and her soul but as a
+ship driven rudderless upon a winter night. Therefore she put out all her
+strength to win him, and bent her witcheries upon him, and they were not few
+nor small. Nevertheless they went by him like the wind, for he dreamed ever of
+Gudruda alone, and he saw no eyes but hers, though as yet they spoke no word of
+love one to the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Swanhild in her wrath took counsel with her mother Groa, though there was
+little liking between them; and, when she had heard the maiden&rsquo;s tale,
+Groa laughed aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dost think me blind, girl?&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;all of this I have
+seen, yea and foreseen, and I tell thee thou art mad. Let this yeoman Eric go
+and I will find thee finer fowl to fly at.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, that I will not,&rdquo; quoth Swanhild: &ldquo;for I love this man
+alone, and I would win him; and Gudruda I hate, and I would overthrow her. Give
+me of thy counsel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Groa laughed again. &ldquo;Things must be as they are fated. This now is my
+rede: Asmund would turn Gudruda&rsquo;s beauty to account, and that man must be
+rich in friends and money who gets her to wife, and in this matter the mind of
+Björn is as the mind of his father. Now we will watch, and, when a good time
+chances, we will bear tales of Gudruda to Asmund and to her brother Björn, and
+swear that she oversteps her modesty with Eric. Then shall Asmund be wroth and
+drive Eric from Gudruda&rsquo;s side. Meanwhile, I will do this: In the north
+there dwells a man mighty in all things and blown up with pride. He is named
+Ospakar Blacktooth. His wife is but lately dead, and he has given out that he
+will wed the fairest maid in Iceland. Now, it is in my mind to send Koll the
+Half-witted, my thrall, whom Asmund gave to me, to Ospakar as though by chance.
+He is a great talker and very clever, for in his half-wits is more cunning than
+in the brains of most; and he shall so bepraise Gudruda&rsquo;s beauty that
+Ospakar will come hither to ask her in marriage; and in this fashion, if things
+go well, thou shalt be rid of thy rival, and I of one who looks scornfully upon
+me. But, if this fail, then there are two roads left on which strong feet may
+travel to their end; and of these, one is that thou shouldest win Eric away
+with thine own beauty, and that is not little. All men are frail, and I have a
+draught that will make the heart as wax; but yet the other path is
+surer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what is that path, my mother?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It runs through blood to blackness. By thy side is a knife and in
+Gudruda&rsquo;s bosom beats a heart. Dead women are unmeet for love!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild tossed her head and looked upon the dark face of Groa her mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Methinks, with such an end to win, I should not fear to tread that path,
+if there be need, my mother.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I see thou art indeed my daughter. Happiness is to the bold. To each
+it comes in uncertain shape. Some love power, some wealth, and some&mdash;a
+man. Take that which thou lovest&mdash;I say, cut thy path to it and take it;
+else shall thy life be but a weariness: for what does it serve to win the
+wealth and power when thou lovest a man alone, or the man when thou dost desire
+gold and the pride of place? This is wisdom: to satisfy the longing of thy
+youth; for age creeps on apace and beyond is darkness. Therefore, if thou
+seekest this man, and Gudruda blocks thy path, slay her, girl&mdash;by
+witchcraft or by steel&mdash;and take him, and in his arms forget that thine
+own are red. But first let us try the easier plan. Daughter, I too hate this
+proud girl, who scorns me as her father&rsquo;s light-of-love. I too long to
+see that bright head of hers dull with the dust of death, or, at the least,
+those proud eyes weeping tears of shame as the man she hates leads her hence as
+a bride. Were it not for her I should be Asmund&rsquo;s wife, and, when she is
+gone, with thy help&mdash;for he loves thee much and has cause to love
+thee&mdash;this I may be yet. So in this matter, if in no other, let us go hand
+in hand and match our wits against her innocence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So be it,&rdquo; said Swanhild; &ldquo;fail me not and fear not that I
+shall fail thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now, Koll the Half-witted went upon his errand, and the time passed till it
+lacked but a month to Yule, and men sat indoors, for the season was dark and
+much snow fell. At length came frost, and with it a clear sky, and Gudruda,
+ceasing from her spinning in the hall, went to the woman&rsquo;s porch, and,
+looking out, saw that the snow was hard, and a great longing came upon her to
+breathe the fresh air, for there was still an hour of daylight. So she threw a
+cloak about her and walked forth, taking the road towards Coldback in the Marsh
+that is by Ran River. But Swanhild watched her till she was over the hill. Then
+she also took a cloak and followed on that path, for she always watched
+Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda walked on for the half of an hour or so, when she became aware that the
+clouds gathered in the sky, and that the air was heavy with snow to come.
+Seeing this she turned homewards, and Swanhild hid herself to let her pass. Now
+flakes floated down as big and soft as fifa flowers. Quicker and more quick
+they came till all the plain was one white maze of mist, but through it Gudruda
+walked on, and after her crept Swanhild, like a shadow. And now the darkness
+gathered and the snow fell thick and fast, covering up the track of her
+footsteps and she wandered from the path, and after her wandered Swanhild,
+being loath to show herself. For an hour or more Gudruda wandered and then she
+called aloud and her voice fell heavily against the cloak of snow. At the last
+she grew weary and frightened, and sat down upon a shelving rock whence the
+snow had slipped away. Now, a little way behind was another rock and there
+Swanhild sat, for she wished to be unseen of Gudruda. So some time passed, and
+Swanhild grew heavy as though with sleep, when of a sudden a moving thing
+loomed upon the snowy darkness. Then Gudruda leapt to her feet and called. A
+man&rsquo;s voice answered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who passes there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I, Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The form came nearer; now Swanhild could hear the snorting of a horse, and now
+a man leapt from it, and that man was Eric Brighteyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it thou indeed, Gudruda!&rdquo; he said with a laugh, and his great
+shape showed darkly on the snow mist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, is it thou, Eric?&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I was never more joyed
+to see thee; for of a truth thou dost come in a good hour. A little while and I
+had seen thee no more, for my eyes grow heavy with the death-sleep.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, say not so. Art lost, then? Why, so am I. I came out to seek three
+horses that are strayed, and was overtaken by the snow. May they dwell in
+Odin&rsquo;s stables, for they have led me to thee. Art thou cold,
+Gudruda?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But a little, Eric. Yea, there is place for thee here on the
+rock.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he sat down by her on the stone, and Swanhild crept nearer; for now all
+weariness had left her. But still the snow fell thick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It comes into my mind that we two shall die here,&rdquo; said Gudruda
+presently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thinkest thou so?&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;Well, I will say this, that
+I ask no better end.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a bad end for thee, Eric: to be choked in snow, and with all thy
+deeds to do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a good end, Gudruda, to die at thy side, for so I shall die happy;
+but I grieve for thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Grieve not for me, Brighteyes, worse things might befall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He drew nearer to her, and now he put his arms about her and clasped her to his
+bosom; nor did she say him nay. Swanhild saw and lifted herself up behind them,
+but for a while she heard nothing but the beating of her heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen, Gudruda,&rdquo; Eric said at last. &ldquo;Death draws near to
+us, and before it comes I would speak to thee, if speak I may.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak on,&rdquo; she whispers from his breast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This I would say, then: that I love thee, and that I ask no better fate
+than to die in thy arms.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;First shalt thou see me die in thine, Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be sure, if that is so, I shall not tarry for long. Oh! Gudruda, since I
+was a child I have loved thee with a mighty love, and now thou art all to me.
+Better to die thus than to live without thee. Speak, then, while there is
+time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not hide from thee, Eric, that thy words are sweet in my
+ears.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now Gudruda sobs and the tears fall fast from her dark eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, weep not. Dost thou, then, love me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, sure enough, Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then kiss me before we pass. A man should not die thus, and yet men have
+died worse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so these two kissed, for the first time, out in the snow on Coldback, and
+that first kiss was long and sweet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild heard and her blood seethed within her as water seethes in a boiling
+spring when the fires wake beneath. She put her hand to her kirtle and gripped
+the knife at her side. She half drew it, then drove it back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cold kills as sure as steel,&rdquo; she said in her heart. &ldquo;If I
+slay her I cannot save myself or him. Let us die in peace, and let the snow
+cover up our troubling.&rdquo; And once more she listened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, sweet,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;even in the midst of death there is
+hope of life. Swear to me, then, that if by chance we live thou wilt love me
+always as thou lovest me now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Eric, I swear that and readily.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And swear, come what may, that thou wilt wed no man but me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I swear, if thou dost remain true to me, that I will wed none but thee,
+Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I am sure of thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Boast not overmuch, Eric: if thou dost live thy days are all before
+thee, and with times come trials.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the snow whirled down faster and more thick, till these two, clasped heart
+to heart, were but a heap of white, and all white was the horse, and Swanhild
+was nearly buried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where go we when we die, Eric?&rdquo; said Gudruda; &ldquo;in
+Odin&rsquo;s house there is no place for maids, and how shall my feet fare
+without thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, sweet, my May, Valhalla shuts its gates to me, a deedless man; up
+Bifrost&rsquo;s rainbow bridge I may not travel, for I do not die with byrnie
+on breast and sword aloft. To Hela shall we go, and hand in hand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art thou sure, Eric, that men find these abodes? To say sooth, at times
+I misdoubt me of them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not so sure but that I also doubt. Still, I know this: that where
+thou goest there I shall be, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then things are well, and well work the Norns.[*] Still, Eric, of a
+sudden I grow fey: for it comes upon me that I shall not die to-night, but
+that, nevertheless, I shall die with thy arms about me, and at thy side. There,
+I see it on the snow! I lie by thee, sleeping, and one comes with hands
+outstretched and sleep falls from them like a mist&mdash;by Freya, it is
+Swanhild&rsquo;s self! Oh! it is gone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] The Northern Fates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was nothing, Gudruda, but a vision of the snow&mdash;an untimely
+dream that comes before the sleep. I grow cold and my eyes are heavy; kiss me
+once again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was no dream, Eric, and ever I doubt me of Swanhild, for I think she
+loves thee also, and she is fair and my enemy,&rdquo; says Gudruda, laying her
+snow-cold lips on his lips. &ldquo;Oh, Eric, awake! awake! See, the snow is
+done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stumbled to his feet and looked forth. Lo! out across the sky flared the
+wild Northern fires, throwing light upon the darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now it seems that I know the land,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Look: yonder
+are Golden Falls, though we did not hear them because of the snow; and there,
+out at sea, loom the Westmans; and that dark thing is the Temple Hof, and
+behind it stands the stead. We are saved, Gudruda, and thus far indeed thou
+wast fey. Now rise, ere thy limbs stiffen, and I will set thee on the horse, if
+he still can run, and lead thee down to Middalhof before the witchlights fail
+us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So it shall be, Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now he led Gudruda to the horse&mdash;that, seeing its master, snorted and
+shook the snow from its coat, for it was not frozen&mdash;and set her on the
+saddle, and put his arm about her waist, and they passed slowly through the
+deep snow. And Swanhild, too, crept from her place, for her burning rage had
+kept the life in her, and followed after them. Many times she fell, and once
+she was nearly swallowed in a drift of snow and cried out in her fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who called aloud?&rdquo; said Eric, turning; &ldquo;I thought I heard a
+voice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answers Gudruda, &ldquo;it was but a night-hawk
+screaming.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild lay quiet in the drift, but she said in her heart:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, a night-hawk that shall tear out those dark eyes of thine, mine
+enemy!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two go on and at length they come to the banked roadway that runs past the
+Temple to Asmund&rsquo;s hall. Here Swanhild leaves them, and, climbing over
+the turf-wall into the home meadow, passes round the hall by the outbuildings
+and so comes to the west end of the house, and enters by the men&rsquo;s door
+unnoticed of any. For all the people, seeing a horse coming and a woman seated
+on it, were gathered in front of the hall. But Swanhild ran to that shut bed
+where she slept, and, closing the curtain, threw off her garments, shook the
+snow from her hair, and put on a linen kirtle. Then she rested a while, for she
+was weary, and, going to the kitchen, warmed herself at the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Eric and Gudruda came to the house and there Asmund greeted them
+well, for he was troubled in his heart about his daughter, and very glad to
+know her living, seeing that men had but now begun to search for her, because
+of the snow and the darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda told her tale, but not all of it, and Asmund bade Eric to the
+house. Then one asked about Swanhild, and Eric said that he had seen nothing of
+her, and Asmund was sad at this, for he loved Swanhild. But as he told all men
+to go and search, an old wife came and said that Swanhild was in the kitchen,
+and while the carline spoke she came into the hall, dressed in white, very
+pale, and with shining eyes and fair to see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where hast thou been, Swanhild?&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;I thought
+certainly thou wast perishing with Gudruda in the snow, and now all men go to
+seek thee while the witchlights burn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, foster-father, I have been to the Temple,&rdquo; she answered,
+lying. &ldquo;So Gudruda has but narrowly escaped the snow, thanks be to
+Brighteyes yonder! Surely I am glad of it, for we could ill spare our sweet
+sister,&rdquo; and, going up to her, she kissed her. But Gudruda saw that her
+eyes burned like fire and felt that her lips were cold as ice, and shrank back
+wondering.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>CHAPTER III<br />
+HOW ASMUND BADE ERIC TO HIS YULE-FEAST</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now it was supper-time and men sat at meat while the women waited upon them.
+But as she went to and fro, Gudruda always looked at Eric, and Swanhild watched
+them both. Supper being over, people gathered round the hearth, and, having
+finished her service, Gudruda came and sat by Eric, so that her sleeve might
+touch his. They spoke no word, but there they sat and were happy. Swanhild saw
+and bit her lip. Now, she was seated by Asmund and Björn his son.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look, foster-father,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;yonder sit a pretty
+pair!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That cannot be denied,&rdquo; answered Asmund. &ldquo;One may ride many
+days to see such another man as Eric Brighteyes, and no such maid as Gudruda
+flowers between Middalhof and London town, unless it be thou, Swanhild. Well,
+so her mother said that it should be, and without doubt she was foresighted at
+her death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, name me not with Gudruda, foster-father; I am but a grey goose by
+thy white swan. But these shall be well wed and that will be a good match for
+Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let not thy tongue run on so fast,&rdquo; said Asmund sharply.
+&ldquo;Who told thee that Eric should have Gudruda?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;None told me, but in truth, having eyes and ears, I grew certain of
+it,&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;Look at them now: surely lovers wear such
+faces.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it chanced that Gudruda had rested her chin on her hand, and was gazing
+into Eric&rsquo;s eyes beneath the shadow of her hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Methinks my sister will look higher than to wed a simple yeoman, though
+he is large as two other men,&rdquo; said Björn with a sneer. Now Björn was
+jealous of Eric&rsquo;s strength and beauty, and did not love him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Trust nothing that thou seest and little that thou hearest, girl,&rdquo;
+said Asmund, raising himself from thought: &ldquo;so shall thy guesses be good.
+Eric, come here and tell us how thou didst chance on Gudruda in the
+snow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was not so ill seated but that I could bear to stay,&rdquo; grumbled
+Eric beneath his breath; but Gudruda said &ldquo;Go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he went and told his tale; but not all of it, for he intended to ask Gudruda
+in marriage on the morrow, though his heart prophesied no luck in the matter,
+and therefore he was not overswift with it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In this thing thou hast done me and mine good service,&rdquo; said
+Asmund coldly, searching Eric&rsquo;s face with his blue eyes. &ldquo;It had
+been sad if my fair daughter had perished in the snow, for, know this: I would
+set her high in marriage, for her honour and the honour of my house, and so
+some rich and noble man had lost great joy. But take thou this gift in memory
+of the deed, and Gudruda&rsquo;s husband shall give thee another such upon the
+day that he makes her wife,&rdquo; and he drew a gold ring off his arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric&rsquo;s knees trembled as he heard, and his heart grew faint as though
+with fear. But he answered clear and straight:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thy gift had been better without thy words, ring-giver; but I pray thee
+to take it back, for I have done nothing to win it, though perhaps the time
+will come when I shall ask thee for a richer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My gifts have never been put away before,&rdquo; said Asmund, growing
+angry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This wealthy farmer holds the good gold of little worth. It is foolish
+to take fish to the sea, my father,&rdquo; sneered Björn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, Björn, not so,&rdquo; Eric answered: &ldquo;but, as thou sayest, I
+am but a farmer, and since my father, Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, died things have not
+gone too well on Ran River. But at the least I am a free man, and I will take
+no gifts that I cannot repay worth for worth. Therefore I will not have the
+ring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As thou wilt,&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;Pride is a good horse if thou
+ridest wisely,&rdquo; and he thrust the ring back upon his arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then people go to rest; but Swanhild seeks her mother, and tells her all that
+has befallen her, nor does Groa fail to listen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I will make a plan,&rdquo; she says, &ldquo;for these things have
+chanced well and Asmund is in a ripe humour. Eric shall come no more to
+Middalhof till Gudruda is gone hence, led by Ospakar Blacktooth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if Eric does not come here, how shall I see his face? for, mother, I
+long for the sight of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is thy matter, thou lovesick fool. Know this: that if Eric comes
+hither and gets speech with Gudruda, there is an end of thy hopes; for, fair as
+thou art, she is too fair for thee, and, strong as thou art, in a way she is
+too strong. Thou hast heard how these two love, and such loves mock at the will
+of fathers. Eric will win his desire or die beneath the swords of Asmund and
+Björn, if such men can prevail against his might. Nay, the wolf Eric must be
+fenced from the lamb till he grows hungry. Then let him search the fold and
+make spoil of thee, for, when the best is gone, he will desire the good.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So be it, mother. As I sat crouched behind Gudruda in the snow at
+Coldback, I had half a mind to end her love-words with this knife, for so I
+should have been free of her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, and fast in the doom-ring, thou wildcat. The gods help this Eric,
+if thou winnest him. Nay, choose thy time and, if thou must strike, strike
+secretly and home. Remember also that cunning is mightier than strength, that
+lies pierce further than swords, and that witchcraft wins where honesty must
+fail. Now I will go to Asmund, and he shall be an angry man before to-morrow
+comes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Groa went to the shut bed where Asmund the Priest slept. He was sitting on
+the bed and asked her why she came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For love of thee, Asmund, and thy house, though thou dost treat me ill,
+who hast profited so much by me and my foresight. Say now: wilt thou that this
+daughter of thine, Gudruda the Fair, should be the light May of yonder
+long-legged yeoman?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is not in my mind,&rdquo; said Asmund, stroking his beard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Knowest thou, then, that this very day your white Gudruda sat on
+Eric&rsquo;s lap in the snow, while he fondled her to his heart&rsquo;s
+content?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Most likely it was for warmth. Men do not dream on love in the hour of
+death. Who saw this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Swanhild, who was behind, and hid herself for shame, and therefore she
+held that these two must soon be wed! Ah, thou art foolish now, Asmund. Young
+blood makes light of cold or death. Art thou blind, or dost thou not see that
+these two turn on each other like birds at nesting-time?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They might do worse,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;for they are a proper
+pair, and it seems to me that each was born for each.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then all goes well. Still, it is a pity to see so fair a maid cast like
+rotten bait upon the waters to hook this troutlet of a yeoman. Thou hast
+enemies, Asmund; thou art too prosperous, and there are many who hate thee for
+thy state and wealth. Were it not wise to use this girl of thine to build a
+wall about thee against the evil day?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have been more wont, housekeeper, to trust to my own arm than to
+bought friends. But tell me, for at the least thou art far-seeing, how may this
+be done? As things are, though I spoke roughly to him last night, I am inclined
+to let Eric Brighteyes take Gudruda. I have always loved the lad, and he will
+go far.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen, Asmund! Surely thou hast heard of Ospakar Blacktooth&mdash;the
+priest who dwells in the north?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, I have heard of him, and I know him; there is no man like him for
+ugliness, or strength, or wealth and power. We sailed together on a viking
+cruise many years ago, and he did things at which my blood turned, and in those
+days I had no chicken heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;With time men change their temper. Unless I am mistaken, this Ospakar
+wishes above all to have Gudruda in marriage, for, now that everything is his,
+this alone is left for him to ask&mdash;the fairest woman in Iceland as a
+housewife. Think then, with Ospakar for a son-in-law, who is there that can
+stand against thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not so sure of this matter, nor do I altogether trust thee, Groa.
+Of a truth it seems to me that thou hast some stake upon the race. This Ospakar
+is evil and hideous. It were a shame to give Gudruda over to him when she looks
+elsewhere. Knowest thou that I swore to love and cherish her, and how runs this
+with my oath? If Eric is not too rich, yet he is of good birth and kin, and,
+moreover, a man of men. If he take her good will come of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is like thee, Asmund, always to mistrust those who spend their days
+in plotting for thy weal. Do as thou wilt: let Eric take this treasure of
+thine&mdash;for whom earls would give their state&mdash;and live to rue it. But
+I say this: if he have thy leave to roam here with his dove the matter will
+soon grow, for these two sicken each to each, and young blood is hot and ill at
+waiting, and it is not always snow-time. So betroth her or let him go. And now
+I have said.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thy tongue runs too fast. The man is quite unproved and I will try him.
+To-morrow I will warn him from my door; then things shall go as they are fated.
+And now peace, for I weary of thy talk, and, moreover, it is false; for thou
+lackest one thing&mdash;a little honesty to season all thy craft. What fee has
+Ospakar paid thee, I wonder. Thou at least hadst never refused the gold ring
+to-night, for thou wouldst do much for gold.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And more for love, and most of all for hate,&rdquo; Groa said, and
+laughed aloud; nor did they speak more on this matter that night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, early in the morning Asmund rose, and, going to the hall, awoke Eric, who
+slept by the centre hearth, saying that he would talk with him without. Then
+Eric followed him to the back of the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say now, Eric,&rdquo; he said, when they stood in the grey light outside
+the house, &ldquo;who was it taught thee that kisses keep out the cold on snowy
+days?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric reddened to his yellow hair, but he answered: &ldquo;Who was it told
+thee, lord, that I tried this medicine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The snow hides much, but there are eyes that can pierce the snow. Nay,
+more, thou wast seen, and there&rsquo;s an end. Now know this&mdash;I like thee
+well, but Gudruda is not for thee; she is far above thee, who art but a
+deedless yeoman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I love to no end,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;I long for one thing
+only, and that is Gudruda. It was in my mind to ask her in marriage of thee
+to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, lad, thou hast thy answer before thou askest. Be sure of one
+thing: if but once again I find thee alone with Gudruda, it is my axe shall
+kiss thee and not her lips.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That may yet be put to the proof, lord,&rdquo; said Eric, and turned to
+seek his horse, when suddenly Gudruda came and stood between them, and his
+heart leapt at the sight of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen, Gudruda,&rdquo; Eric said. &ldquo;This is thy father&rsquo;s
+word: that we two speak together no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then it is an ill saying for us,&rdquo; said Gudruda, laying her hand
+upon her breast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Saying good or ill, so it surely is, girl,&rdquo; answered Asmund.
+&ldquo;No more shalt thou go a-kissing, in the snow or in the flowers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I seem to hear Swanhild&rsquo;s voice,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Well,
+such things have happened to better folk, and a father&rsquo;s wish is to a
+maid what the wind is to the grass. Still, the sun is behind the cloud and it
+will shine again some day. Till then, Eric, fare thee well!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not thy will, lord,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;that I should come to
+thy Yule-feast as thou hast asked me these ten years past?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Asmund grew wroth, and pointed with his hand towards the great Golden Falls
+that thunder down the mountain named Stonefell that is behind Middalhof, and
+there are no greater water-falls in Iceland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A man may take two roads, Eric, from Coldback to Middalhof, one by the
+bridle-path over Coldback and the other down Golden Falls; but I never knew
+traveller to choose this way. Now, I bid thee to my feast by the path over
+Golden Falls; and, if thou comest that way, I promise thee this: if thou livest
+I will greet thee well, and if I find thee dead in the great pool I will bind
+on thy Hell-shoes and lay thee to earth neighbourly fashion. But if thou comest
+by any other path, then my thralls shall cut thee down at my door.&rdquo; And
+he stroked his beard and laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Asmund spoke thus mockingly because he did not think it possible that any
+man should try the path of the Golden Falls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric smiled and said, &ldquo;I hold thee to thy word, lord; perhaps I shall be
+thy guest at Yule.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Gudruda heard the thunder of the mighty Falls as the wind turned, and cried
+&ldquo;Nay, nay&mdash;it were thy death!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric finds his horse and rides away across the snow.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now it must be told of Koll the Half-witted that at length he came to Swinefell
+in the north, having journeyed hard across the snow. Here Ospakar Blacktooth
+had his great hall, in which day by day a hundred men sat down to meat. Now
+Koll entered the hall when Ospakar was at supper, and looked at him with big
+eyes, for he had never seen so wonderful a man. He was huge in
+stature&mdash;his hair was black, and black his beard, and on his lower lip
+there lay a great black fang. His eyes were small and narrow, but his
+cheekbones were set wide apart and high, like those of a horse. Koll thought
+him an ill man to deal with and half a troll,[*] and grew afraid of his errand,
+since in Koll&rsquo;s half-wittedness there was much cunning&mdash;for it was a
+cloak in which he wrapped himself. But as Ospakar sat in the high seat, clothed
+in a purple robe, with his sword Whitefire on his knee, he saw Koll, and called
+out in a great voice:
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] An able-bodied Goblin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who is this red fox that creeps into my earth?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For, to look at, Koll was very like a fox.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My name is Koll the Half-witted, Groa&rsquo;s thrall, lord. Am I welcome
+here?&rdquo; he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is as it may be. Why do they call thee half-witted?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because I love not work overmuch, lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then all my thralls are fellow to thee. Say, what brings thee
+here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This, lord. It was told among men down in the south that thou wouldst
+give a good gift to him who should discover to thee the fairest maid in
+Iceland. So I asked leave of my mistress to come on a journey and tell thee of
+her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then a lie was told thee. Still, I love to hear of fair maids, and seek
+one for a wife if she be but fair enough. So speak on, Koll the Fox, and lie
+not to me, I warn thee, else I will knock what wits are left there from that
+red head of thine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Koll took up the tale and greatly bepraised Gudruda&rsquo;s beauty; nor in
+truth, for all his talk, could he praise it too much. He told of her dark eyes
+and the whiteness of her skin, of the nobleness of her shape and the gold of
+her hair, of her wit and gentleness, till at length Ospakar grew afire to see
+this flower of maids.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By Thor, thou Koll,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if the girl be but half of
+what thou sayest, her luck is good, for she shall be wife to Ospakar. But if
+thou hast lied to me about her, beware! for soon there shall be a knave the
+less in Iceland.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now a man rose in the hall and said that Koll spoke truth, for he had seen
+Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, and there was no maid like her in
+Iceland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will do this now,&rdquo; said Blacktooth. &ldquo;To-morrow I will send
+a messenger to Middalhof, saying to Asmund the Priest that I purpose to visit
+him at the time of the Yule-feast; then I shall see if the girl pleases me.
+Meanwhile, Koll, take thou a seat among the thralls, and here is something for
+thy pains,&rdquo; and he took off the purple cloak and threw it to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thanks to thee, Gold-scatterer,&rdquo; said Koll. &ldquo;It is wise to
+go soon to Middalhof, for such a bloom as this maid does not lack a bee. There
+is a youngling in the south, named Eric Brighteyes, who loves Gudruda, and she,
+I think, loves him, though he is but a yeoman of small wealth and is only
+twenty-five years old.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ho! ho!&rdquo; laughed great Ospakar, &ldquo;and I am forty-five. But
+let not this suckling cross my desire, lest men call him Eric
+Holloweyes!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now the messenger of Ospakar came to Middalhof, and his words pleased Asmund
+and he made ready a great feast. And Swanhild smiled, but Gudruda was afraid.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>CHAPTER IV<br />
+HOW ERIC CAME DOWN GOLDEN FALLS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar rode up to Middalhof on the day before the Yule-feast. He was
+splendidly apparelled, and with him came his two sons, Gizur the Lawman and
+Mord, young men of promise, and many armed thralls and servants. Gudruda,
+watching at the women&rsquo;s door, saw his face in the moonlight and loathed
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What thinkest thou of him who comes to seek thee in marriage,
+foster-sister?&rdquo; asked Swanhild, watching at her side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think he is like a troll, and that, seek as he will, he shall not find
+me. I had rather lie in the pool beneath Golden Falls than in Ospakar&rsquo;s
+hall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That shall be proved,&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;At the least he is
+rich and noble, and the greatest of men in size. It would go hard with Eric
+were those arms about him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not so sure of that,&rdquo; said Gudruda; &ldquo;but it is not
+likely to be known.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Comes Eric to the feast by the road of Golden Falls, Gudruda?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, no man may try that path and live.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then he will die, for Eric will risk it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda thought, and a great fire burned in her heart and shone through her
+eyes. &ldquo;If Eric dies,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;on thee be his blood,
+Swanhild&mdash;on thee and that dark mother of thine, for ye have plotted to
+bring this evil on us. How have I harmed thee that thou shouldst deal thus with
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild turned white and wicked-looking, for passion mastered her, and she
+gazed into Gudruda&rsquo;s face and answered: &ldquo;How hast thou harmed me?
+Surely I will tell thee. Thy beauty has robbed me of Eric&rsquo;s love.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be better to prate of Eric&rsquo;s love when he had told it
+thee, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast robbed me and therefore I hate thee, and therefore I will
+deliver thee to Ospakar, whom thou dost loath&mdash;ay and yet win Brighteyes
+to myself. Am I not also fair and can I not also love, and shall I see thee
+snatch my joy? By the Gods, never! I will see thee dead, and Eric with thee,
+ere it shall be so! but first I will see thee shamed!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thy words are ill-suited to a maiden&rsquo;s lips, Swanhild! But of this
+be sure: I fear thee not, and shall never fear thee. And one thing I know well
+that, whether thou or I prevail, in the end thou shalt harvest the greatest
+shame, and in times to come men shall speak of thee with hatred and name thee
+by ill names. Moreover, Eric shall never love thee; from year to year he shall
+hate thee with a deeper hate, though it may well be that thou wilt bring ruin
+on him. And now I thank thee that thou hast told me all thy mind, showing me
+what indeed thou art!&rdquo; And Gudruda turned scornfully upon her heel and
+walked away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Asmund the Priest went out into the courtyard, and meeting Ospakar
+Blacktooth, greeted him heartily, though he did not like his looks, and took
+him by the hand and led him to the hall, that was bravely decked with
+tapestries, and seated him by his side on the high seat. And Ospakar&rsquo;s
+thralls brought good gifts for Asmund, who thanked the giver well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it was supper time, and Gudruda came in, and after her walked Swanhild.
+Ospakar gazed hard at Gudruda and a great desire entered into him to make her
+his wife. But she passed coldly by, nor looked on him at all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This, then, is that maid of thine of whom I have heard tell, Asmund? I
+will say this: fairer was never born of woman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then men ate and Ospakar drank much ale, but all the while he stared at Gudruda
+and listened for her voice. But as yet he said nothing of what he came to seek,
+though all knew his errand. And his two sons, Gizur and Mord, stared also at
+Gudruda, for they thought her most wonderfully fair. But Gizur found Swanhild
+also fair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so the night wore on till it was time to sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+On this same day Eric rode up from his farm on Ran River and took his road
+along the brow of Coldback till he came to Stonefell. Now all along Coldback
+and Stonefell is a steep cliff facing to the south, that grows ever higher till
+it comes to that point where Golden River falls over it and, parting its waters
+below, runs east and west&mdash;the branch to the east being called Ran River
+and that to the west Laxà&mdash;for these two streams girdle round the rich
+plain of Middalhof, till at length they reach the sea. But in the midst of
+Golden River, on the edge of the cliff, a mass of rock juts up called
+Sheep-saddle, dividing the waters of the fall, and over this the spray flies,
+and in winter the ice gathers, but the river does not cover it. The great fall
+is thirty fathoms deep, and shaped like a horseshoe, of which the points lie
+towards Middalhof. Yet if he could but gain the Sheep-saddle rock that divides
+the midst of the waters, a strong and hardy man might climb down some fifteen
+fathoms of this depth and scarcely wet his feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now here at the foot of Sheep-saddle rock the double arches of waters meet, and
+fall in one torrent into the bottomless pool below. But, some three fathoms
+from this point of the meeting waters, and beneath it, just where the curve is
+deepest, a single crag, as large as a drinking-table and no larger, juts
+through the foam, and, if a man could reach it, he might leap from it some
+twelve fathoms, sheer into the spray-hidden pit beneath, there to sink or swim
+as it might befall. This crag is called Wolf&rsquo;s Fang.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric stood for a long while on the edge of the fall and looked, measuring
+every thing with his eye. Then he went up above, where the river swirls down to
+the precipice, and looked again, for it is from this bank that the dividing
+island-rock Sheep-saddle must be reached.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A man may hardly do this thing; yet I will try it,&rdquo; he said to
+himself at last. &ldquo;My honour shall be great for the feat, if I chance to
+live, and if I die&mdash;well, there is an end of troubling after maids and all
+other things.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he went home and sat silent that evening. Now, since Thorgrimur
+Iron-Toe&rsquo;s death, his housewife, Saevuna, Eric&rsquo;s mother, had grown
+dim of sight, and, though she peered and peered again from her seat in the
+ingle nook, she could not see the face of her son.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What ails thee, Eric, that thou sittest so silent? Was not the meat,
+then, to thy mind at supper?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, mother, the meat was well enough, though a little
+undersmoked.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I see that thou art not thyself, son, for thou hadst no meat, but
+only stock-fish&mdash;and I never knew a man forget his supper on the night of
+its eating, except he was distraught or deep in love.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was it so?&rdquo; said Brighteyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What troubles thee, Eric?&mdash;that sweet lass yonder?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, somewhat, mother.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What more, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This, that I go down Golden Falls to-morrow, and I do not know how I may
+come from Sheep-saddle rock to Wolf&rsquo;s Fang crag and keep my life whole in
+me; and now, I pray thee, weary me not with words, for my brain is slow, and I
+must use it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she heard this Saevuna screamed aloud, and threw herself before Eric,
+praying him to forgo his mad venture. But he would not listen to her, for he
+was slow to make up his mind, but, that being made up, nothing could change it.
+Then, when she learned that it was to get sight of Gudruda that he purposed
+thus to throw his life away, she was very angry and cursed her and all her kith
+and kin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is likely enough that thou wilt have cause to use such words before
+all this tale is told,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;nevertheless, mother, forbear
+to curse Gudruda, who is in no way to blame for these matters.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art a faithless son,&rdquo; Saevuna said, &ldquo;who wilt slay
+thyself striving to win speech with thy May, and leave thy mother
+childless.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric said that it seemed so indeed, but he was plighted to it and the feat must
+be tried. Then he kissed her, and she sought her bed, weeping.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now it was the day of the Yule-feast, and there was no sun till one hour before
+noon. But Eric, having kissed his mother and bidden her farewell, called a
+thrall, Jon by name, and giving him a sealskin bag full of his best apparel,
+bade him ride to Middalhof and tell Asmund the Priest that Eric Brighteyes
+would come down Golden Falls an hour after mid-day, to join his feast; and
+thence go to the foot of the Golden Falls, to await him there. And the man
+went, wondering, for he thought his master mad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric took a good rope, and a staff tipped with iron, and, so soon as the
+light served, mounted his horse, forded Ran River, and rode along Coldback till
+he came to the lip of Golden Falls. Here he stayed a while till at length he
+saw many people streaming up the snow from Middalhof far beneath, and, among
+them, two women who by their stature should be Gudruda and Swanhild, and, near
+to them, a great man whom he did not know. Then he showed himself for a space
+on the brink of the gulf and turned his horse up stream. The sun shone bright
+upon the edge of the sky, but the frost bit like a sword. Still, he must strip
+off his garments, so that nothing remained on him except his sheepskin shoes,
+shirt and hose, and take the water. Now here the river runs mightily, and he
+must cross full thirty fathoms of the swirling water before he can reach
+Sheep-saddle, and woe to him if his foot slip on the boulders, for certainly he
+must be swept over the brink.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric rested the staff against the stony bottom and, leaning his weight on it,
+took the stream, and he was so strong that it could not prevail against him
+till at length he was rather more than half-way across and the water swept
+above his shoulders. Now he was lifted from his feet and, letting the staff
+float, he swam for his life, and with such mighty strokes that he felt little
+of that icy cold. Down he was swept&mdash;now the lip of the fall was but three
+fathoms away on his left, and already the green water boiled beneath him. A
+fathom from him was the corner of Sheep-saddle. If he may grasp it, all is
+well; if not, he dies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three great strokes and he held it. His feet were swept out over the brink of
+the fall, but he clung on grimly, and by the strength of his arms drew himself
+on to the rock and rested a while. Presently he stood up, for the cold began to
+nip him, and the people below became aware that he had swum the river above the
+fall and raised a shout, for the deed was great. Now Eric must begin to clamber
+down Sheep-saddle, and this was no easy task, for the rock is almost sheer, and
+slippery with ice, and on either side the waters rushed and thundered, throwing
+their blinding spray about him as they leapt to the depths beneath. He looked
+down, studying the rock; then, feeling that he grew afraid, made an end of
+doubt and, grasping a point with both hands, swung himself down his own length
+and more. Now for many minutes he climbed down Sheep-saddle, and the task was
+hard, for he was bewildered with the booming of the waters that bent out on
+either side of him like the arc of a bow, and the rock was very steep and
+slippery. Still, he came down all those fifteen fathoms and fell not, though
+twice he was near to falling, and the watchers below marvelled greatly at his
+hardihood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He will be dashed to pieces where the waters meet,&rdquo; said Ospakar,
+&ldquo;he can never gain Wolf&rsquo;s Fang crag beneath; and, if so it be that
+he come there and leaps to the pool, the weight of water will drive him down
+and drown him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is certainly so,&rdquo; quoth Asmund, &ldquo;and it grieves me much;
+for it was my jest that drove him to this perilous adventure, and we cannot
+spare such a man as Eric Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild turned white as death; but Gudruda said: &ldquo;If great heart and
+strength and skill may avail at all, then Eric shall come safely down the
+waters.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou fool!&rdquo; whispered Swanhild in her ear, &ldquo;how can these
+help him? No troll could live in yonder cauldron. Dead is Eric, and thou art
+the bait that lured him to his death!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Spare thy words,&rdquo; she answered; &ldquo;as the Norns have ordered
+so it shall be.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric stood at the foot of Sheep-saddle, and within an arm&rsquo;s length
+the mighty waters met, tossing their yellow waves and seething furiously as
+they leapt to the mist-hid gulf beneath. He bent over and looked through the
+spray. Three fathoms under him the rock Wolf&rsquo;s Fang split the waters, and
+thence, if he can come thither, he may leap sheer into the pool below. Now he
+unwound the rope that was about his middle, and made one end fast to a knob of
+rock&mdash;and this was difficult, for his hands were stiff with cold&mdash;and
+the other end he passed through his leathern girdle. Then Eric looked again,
+and his heart sank within him. How might he give himself to this boiling flood
+and not be shattered? But as he looked, lo! a rainbow grew upon the face of the
+water, and one end of it lit upon him, and the other, like a glory from the
+Gods, fell full upon Gudruda as she stood a little way apart, watching at the
+foot of Golden Falls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Seest thou that,&rdquo; said Asmund to Groa, who was at his side,
+&ldquo;the Gods build their Bifrost bridge between these two. Who now shall
+keep them asunder?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Read the portent thus,&rdquo; she answered: &ldquo;they shall be united,
+but not here. Yon is a Spirit bridge, and, see: the waters of Death foam and
+fall between them!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric, too, saw the omen and it seemed good to him, and all fear left his heart.
+Round about him the waters thundered, but amidst their roar he dreamed that he
+heard a voice calling:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be of good cheer, Eric Brighteyes; for thou shalt live to do mightier
+deeds than this, and in guerdon thou shalt win Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he paused no longer, but, shortening up the rope, pulled on it with all his
+strength, and then leapt out upon the arch of waters. They struck him and he
+was dashed out like a stone from a sling; again he fell against them and again
+was dashed away, so that his girdle burst. Eric felt it go and clung wildly to
+the rope and lo! with the inward swing, he fell on Wolf&rsquo;s Fang, where
+never a man has stood before and never a man shall stand again. Eric lay a
+little while on the rock till his breath came back to him, and he listened to
+the roar of the waters. Then, rising on his hands and knees, he crept to its
+point, for he could scarcely stand because of the trembling of the stone
+beneath the shock of the fall; and when the people below saw that he was not
+dead, they raised a great shout, and the sound of their voices came to him
+through the noise of the waters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, twelve fathoms beneath him was the surface of the pool; but he could not
+see it because of the wreaths of spray. Nevertheless, he must leap and that
+swiftly, for he grew cold. So of a sudden Eric stood up to his full height,
+and, with a loud cry and a mighty spring, bounded out from the point of
+Wolf&rsquo;s Fang far into the air, beyond the reach of the falling flood, and
+rushed headlong towards the gulf beneath. Now all men watching held their
+breath as his body travelled, and so great is the place and so high the leap
+that through the mist Eric seemed but as a big white stone hurled down the face
+of the arching waters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was gone, and the watchers rushed down to the foot of the pool, for there,
+if he rose at all, he must pass to the shallows. Swanhild could look no more,
+but sank upon the ground. The face of Gudruda was set like a stone with doubt
+and anguish. Ospakar saw and read the meaning, and he said to himself:
+&ldquo;Now Odin grant that this youngling rise not again! for the maid loves
+him dearly, and he is too much a man to be lightly swept aside.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric struck the pool. Down he sank, and down and down&mdash;for the water
+falling from so far must almost reach the bottom of the pool before it can rise
+again&mdash;and he with it. Now he touched the bottom, but very gently, and
+slowly began to rise, and, as he rose, was carried along by the stream. But it
+was long before he could breathe, and it seemed to him that his lungs would
+burst. Still, he struggled up, striking great strokes with his legs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Farewell to Eric,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;he will rise no more
+now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But just as he spoke Gudruda pointed to something that gleamed, white and
+golden, beneath the surface of the current, and lo! the bright hair of Eric
+rose from the water, and he drew a great breath, shaking his head like a seal,
+and, though but feebly, struck out for the shallows that are at the foot of the
+pool. Now he found footing, but was swept over by the fierce current, and cut
+his forehead, and he carried that scar till his death. Again he rose, and with
+a rush gained the bank unaided and fell upon the snow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now people gathered about him in silence and wondering, for none had known so
+great a deed. And presently Eric opened his eyes and looked up, and found the
+eyes of Gudruda fixed on his, and there was that in them which made him glad he
+had dared the path of Golden Falls.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>CHAPTER V<br />
+HOW ERIC WON THE SWORD WHITEFIRE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now Asmund the priest bent down, and Eric saw him and spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou badest me to thy Yule-feast, lord, by yonder slippery road and I
+have come. Dost thou welcome me well?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No man better,&rdquo; quoth Asmund. &ldquo;Thou art a gallant man,
+though foolhardy; and thou hast done a deed that shall be told of while skalds
+sing and men live in Iceland.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Make place, my father,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;for Eric
+bleeds.&rdquo; And she loosed the kerchief from her neck and bound it about his
+wounded brow, and, taking the rich cloak from her body, threw it on his
+shoulders, and no man said her nay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they led him to the hall, where Eric clothed himself and rested, and he
+sent back the thrall Jon to Coldback, bidding him tell Saevuna, Eric&rsquo;s
+mother, that he was safe. But he was somewhat weak all that day, and the sound
+of waters roared in his ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar and Groa were ill pleased at the turn things had taken; but all the
+others rejoiced much, for Eric was well loved of men and they had grieved if
+the waters had prevailed against his might. But Swanhild brooded bitterly, for
+Eric never turned to look on her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hour of the feast drew on and, according to custom, it was held in the
+Temple, and thither went all men. When they were seated in the nave of the Hof,
+the fat ox that had been made ready for sacrifice was led in and dragged before
+the altar on which the holy fire burned. Now Asmund the Priest slew it, amid
+silence, before the figures of the Gods, and, catching its blood in the
+blood-bowl, sprinkled the altar and all the worshippers with the blood-twigs.
+Then the ox was cut up, and the figures of the almighty Gods were anointed with
+its molten fat and wiped with fair linen. Next the flesh was boiled in the
+cauldrons that were hung over fires lighted all down the nave, and the feast
+began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now men ate, and drank much ale and mead, and all were merry. But Ospakar
+Blacktooth grew not glad, though he drank much, for he saw that the eyes of
+Gudruda ever watched Eric&rsquo;s face and that they smiled on each other. He
+was wroth at this, for he knew that the bait must be good and the line strong
+that should win this fair fish to his angle, and as he sat, unknowingly his
+fingers loosed the peace-strings of his sword Whitefire, and he half drew it,
+so that its brightness flamed in the firelight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast a wondrous blade there, Ospakar!&rdquo; said Asmund,
+&ldquo;though this is no place to draw it. Whence came it? Methinks no such
+swords are fashioned now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Asmund, a wondrous blade indeed. There is no other such in the
+world, for the dwarfs forged it of old, and he shall be unconquered who holds
+it aloft. This was King Odin&rsquo;s sword, and it is named Whitefire. Ralph
+the Red took it from King Eric&rsquo;s cairn in Norway, and he strove long with
+the Barrow-Dweller[*] before he wrenched it from his grasp. But my father won
+it and slew Ralph, though he had never done this had Whitefire been aloft
+against him. But Ralph the Red, being in drink when the ships met in battle,
+fought with an axe, and was slain by my father, and since then Whitefire has
+been the last light that many a chief&rsquo;s eyes have seen. Look at it,
+Asmund.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] The ghost in the cairn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now he drew the great sword, and men were astonished as it flashed aloft. Its
+hilt was of gold, and blue stones were set therein. It measured two ells and a
+half from crossbar to point, and so bright was the broad blade that no one
+could look on it for long, and all down its length ran runes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A wondrous weapon, truly!&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;How read the
+runes?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know not, nor any man&mdash;they are ancient.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me look at them,&rdquo; said Groa, &ldquo;I am skilled in
+runes.&rdquo; Now she took the sword, and heaved it up, and looked at the runes
+and said, &ldquo;A strange writing truly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How runs it, housekeeper?&rdquo; said Asmund.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thus, lord, if my skill is not at fault:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Whitefire is my name&mdash;<br />
+Dwarf-folk forged me&mdash;<br />
+Odin&rsquo;s sword was I&mdash;<br />
+Eric&rsquo;s sword was I&mdash;<br />
+Eric&rsquo;s sword shall I be&mdash;<br />
+And where I fall there he must follow me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda looked at Eric Brighteyes wonderingly, and Ospakar saw it and
+became very angry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look not so, maiden,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for it shall be another Eric
+than yon flapper-duck who holds Whitefire aloft, though it may very well chance
+that he shall feel its edge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda bit her lip, and Eric burned red to the brow and spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is ill, lord, to throw taunts like an angry woman. Thou art great and
+strong, yet I may dare a deed with thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peace, boy! Thou canst climb a waterfall well, I gainsay it not; but
+beware ere thou settest up thyself against my strength. Say now, what game wilt
+thou play with Ospakar?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will go on holmgang with thee, byrnie-clad or baresark,[*] and fight
+thee with axe or sword, or I will wrestle with thee, and Whitefire yonder shall
+be the winner&rsquo;s prize.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] To a duel, usually fought, in mail or without it, on an
+island&mdash;&ldquo;holm&rdquo;&mdash;within a circle of hazel-twigs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, I will have no bloodshed here at Middalhof,&rdquo; said Asmund
+sternly. &ldquo;Make play with fists, or wrestle if ye will, for that were
+great sport to see; but weapons shall not be drawn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar grew mad with anger and drink&mdash;and he grinned like a dog, till
+men saw the red gums beneath his lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou wilt wrestle with me, youngling&mdash;with <i>me</i> whom no man
+has ever so much as lifted from my feet? Good! I will lay thee on thy face and
+whip thee, and Whitefire shall be the stake&mdash;I swear it on the holy
+altar-ring; but what hast thou to set against the precious sword? Thy poor
+hovel and its lot of land shall be all too little.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I set my life on it; if I lose Whitefire let Whitefire slay me,&rdquo;
+said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, that I will not have, and I am master here in this Temple,&rdquo;
+said Asmund. &ldquo;Bethink thee of some other stake, Ospakar, or let the game
+be off.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar gnawed his lip with his black fang and thought. Then he laughed
+aloud and spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bright is Whitefire and thou art named Brighteyes. See now: I set the
+great sword against thy right eye, and, if I win the match, it shall be mine to
+tear it out. Wilt thou play this game with me? If thy heart fails thee, let it
+go; but I will set no other stake against my good sword.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eyes and limbs are a poor man&rsquo;s wealth,&rdquo; said Eric:
+&ldquo;so be it. I stake my right eye against the sword Whitefire, and we will
+try the match to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And to-morrow night thou shalt be called Eric One-eye,&rdquo; said
+Ospakar&mdash;at which some few of his thralls laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But most of the men did not laugh, for they thought this an ill game and a
+worse jest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the feast went on, and Asmund rose from his high seat in the centre of the
+nave, on the left hand looking down from the altar, and gave out the holy
+toasts. First men drank a full horn to Odin, praying for triumph on their foes.
+Then they drank to Frey, asking for plenty; to Thor, for strength in battle; to
+Freya, Goddess of Love (and to her Eric drank heartily); to the memory of the
+dead; and, last of all, to Bragi, God of all delight. When this cup was drunk,
+Asmund rose again, according to custom, and asked if none had an oath to swear
+as to some deed that should be done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a while there was no answer, but presently Eric Brighteyes stood up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I would swear an oath.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Set forth the matter, then,&rdquo; said Asmund.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is this,&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;On Mosfell mountain, over by
+Hecla, dwells a Baresark of whom all men have ill knowledge, for there are few
+whom he has not harmed. His name is Skallagrim; he is a mighty man and he has
+wrought much mischief in the south country, and brought many to their deaths
+and robbed more of their goods: for none can prevail against him. Still, I
+swear this, that, when the days lengthen, I will go up alone against him and
+challenge him to battle, and conquer him or fall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, thou yellow-headed puppy-dog, thou shalt go with one eye against a
+Baresark with two,&rdquo; growled Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Men took no heed of his words, but shouted aloud, for Skallagrim had plagued
+them long, and there were none who dared to fight with him any more. Only
+Gudruda looked askance, for it seemed to her that Eric swore too fast.
+Nevertheless he went up to the altar, and, taking hold of the holy ring, he set
+his foot on the holy stone and swore his oath, while the feasters applauded,
+striking their cups upon the board.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And after that the feast went merrily, till all men were drunk, except Asmund
+and Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric went to rest, but first he rubbed his limbs with the fat of seals, for
+he was still sore with the beating of the waters, and they must needs be supple
+on the morrow if he would keep his eye. Then he slept sound, and rose strong
+and well, and going to the stream behind the stead, bathed, and anointed his
+limbs afresh. But Ospakar did not sleep well, because of the ale that he had
+drunk. Now as Eric came back from bathing, in the dark of the morning, he met
+Gudruda, who watched for his coming, and, there being none to see, he kissed
+her often; but she chided him because of the match that he had made with
+Ospakar and the oath that he had sworn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;thou wilt lose thine eye, for this
+Ospakar is a giant, and strong as a troll; also he is merciless. Still, thou
+art a mighty man, and I shall love thee as well with one eye as with two. Oh!
+Eric, methought I should have died yesterday when thou didst leap from
+Wolf&rsquo;s Fang! My heart seemed to stop within me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yet I came safely to shore, sweetheart, and well does this kiss pay for
+all I did. And as for Ospakar, if but once I get these arms about him, I fear
+him little, or any man, and I covet that sword of his greatly. But we can talk
+more certainly of these things to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda clung to him and told him all that had befallen, and of the doings
+and words of Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She honours me beyond my worth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;who am in no way
+set on her, but on thee only, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art thou so sure of that, Eric? Swanhild is fair and wise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay and evil. When I love Swanhild, then thou mayest love Ospakar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a bargain,&rdquo; she said, laughing. &ldquo;Good luck go with
+thee in the wrestling,&rdquo; and with a kiss she left him, fearing lest she
+should be seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric went back to the hall, and sat down by the centre hearth, for all men
+slept, being still heavy with drink, and presently Swanhild glided up to him,
+and greeted him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art greedy of deeds, Eric,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Yesterday thou
+camest here by a path that no man has travelled, to-day thou dost wrestle with
+a giant for thine eye, and presently thou goest up against Skallagrim!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems that this is true,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now all this thou doest for a woman who is the betrothed of another
+man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All this I do for fame&rsquo;s sake, Swanhild. Moreover, Gudruda is
+betrothed to none.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Before another Yule-feast is spread, Gudruda shall be the wife of
+Ospakar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is yet to be seen, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild stood silent for a while and then spoke: &ldquo;Thou art a fool,
+Eric&mdash;yes, drunk with folly. Nothing but evil shall come to thee from this
+madness of thine. Forget it and pluck that which lies to thine hand,&rdquo; and
+she looked sweetly at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They call thee Swanhild the Fatherless,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;but I
+think that Loki, the God of Guile, was thy father, for there is none to match
+thee in craft and evil-doing, and in beauty one only. I know thy plots well and
+all the sorrow that thou hast brought upon us. Still, each seeks honour after
+his own manner, so seek thou as thou wilt; but thou shalt find bitterness and
+empty days, and thy plots shall come back on thine own head&mdash;yes, even
+though they bring Gudruda and me to sorrow and death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild laughed. &ldquo;A day shall dawn, Eric, when thou who dost hate me
+shalt hold me dear, and this I promise thee. Another thing I promise thee also:
+that Gudruda shall never call thee husband.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric did not answer, fearing lest in his anger he should say words that
+were better unspoken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now men rose and sat down to meat, and all talked of the wrestling that should
+be. But in the morning Ospakar repented of the match, for it is truly said that
+<i>ale is another man</i>, and men do not like that in the morning which seemed
+well enough on yester eve. He remembered that he held Whitefire dear above all
+things, and that Eric&rsquo;s eye had no worth to him, except that the loss of
+it would spoil his beauty, so that perhaps Gudruda would turn from him. It
+would be very ill if he should chance to lose the play&mdash;though of this he
+had no fear, for he was held the strongest man in Iceland and the most skilled
+in all feats of strength&mdash;and, at the best, no fame is to be won from the
+overthrow of a deedless man, and the plucking out of his eye. Thus it came to
+pass that when he saw Eric he called to him in a big voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken, thou Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hear thee, thou Ospakar,&rdquo; said Eric, mocking him, and people
+laughed; while Ospakar grinned angrily and said, &ldquo;Thou must learn
+manners, puppy. Still, I shall find no honour in teaching thee in this wise.
+Last night we made a match in our cups, and I staked my sword Whitefire and
+thou thine eye. It would be bad that either of us should lose sword or eye;
+therefore, what sayest thou, shall we let it pass?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Blacktooth, if thou fearest; but first pay thou forfeit of the
+sword.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar grew very mad and shouted, &ldquo;Thou wilt indeed stand against me
+in the ring! I will break thy back anon, youngster, and afterwards tear out
+thine eye before thou diest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It may so befall,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;but big words do not make
+big deeds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the light came and thralls went out with spades and cleared away the
+snow in a circle two rods across, and brought dry sand and sprinkled it on the
+frozen turf, so that the wrestlers should not slip. And they piled the snow in
+a wall around the ring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Groa came up to Ospakar and spoke to him apart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Knowest thou, lord,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that my heart bodes ill of
+this match? Eric is a mighty man, and, great though thou art, I think that thou
+shalt lout low before him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will be a bad business if I am overthrown by an untried man,&rdquo;
+said Ospakar, and was troubled in his mind, &ldquo;and it would be evil
+moreover to lose the sword. For no price would I have it so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What wilt thou give me, lord, if I bring thee victory?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will give thee two hundred in silver.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask no questions and it shall be so,&rdquo; said Groa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric was without, taking note of the ground in the ring, and presently Groa
+called to her the thrall Koll the Half-witted, whom she had sent to Swinefell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;See,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;yonder by the wall stand the wrestling
+shoes of Eric Brighteyes. Haste thee now and take grease, and rub the soles
+with it, then hold them in the heat of the fire, so that the fat sinks in. Do
+this swiftly and secretly, and I will give thee three pennies.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Koll grinned, and did as he was bid, setting back the shoes just as they were
+before. Scarcely was the deed done when Eric came in, and made himself ready
+for the game, binding the greased shoes upon his feet, for he feared no trick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now everybody went out to the ring, and Ospakar and Eric stripped for
+wrestling. They were clad in tight woollen jerkins and hose, and sheep-skin
+shoes were on their feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They named Asmund master of the game, and his word must be law to both of them.
+Eric claimed that Asmund should hold the sword Whitefire that was at stake, but
+Ospakar gainsaid him, saying that if he gave Whitefire into Asmund&rsquo;s
+keeping, Eric must also give his eye&mdash;and about this they debated hotly.
+Now the matter was brought before Asmund as umpire, and he gave judgment for
+Eric, &ldquo;for,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if Eric yield up his eye into my hand,
+I can return it to his head no more if he should win; but if Ospakar gives me
+the good sword and conquers, it is easy for me to pass it back to him
+unharmed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Men said that this was a good judgment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus then was the arm-game set. Ospakar and Eric must wrestle thrice, and
+between each bout there would be a space while men could count a thousand. They
+might strike no blow at one another with hand, or head, or elbow, foot or knee;
+and it should be counted no fall if the haunch and the head of the fallen were
+not on the ground at the self-same time. He who suffered two falls should be
+adjudged conquered and lose his stake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asmund called these rules aloud in the presence of witnesses, and Ospakar and
+Eric said that should bind them. Ospakar drew a small knife and gave it to his
+son Gizur to hold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou shalt soon know, youngling, how steel tastes in the eyeball,&rdquo;
+he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall soon know many things,&rdquo; Eric answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they drew off their cloaks and stood in the ring. Ospakar was great beyond
+the bigness of men and his arms were clothed with black hair like the limbs of
+a goat. Beneath the shoulder joint they were almost as thick as a girl&rsquo;s
+thigh. His legs also were mighty, and the muscles stood out upon him in knotty
+lumps. He seemed a very giant, and fierce as a Baresark, but still somewhat
+round about the body and heavy in movement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From him men looked at Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lo! Baldur and the Troll!&rdquo; said Swanhild, and everybody laughed,
+since so it was indeed; for, if Ospakar was black and hideous as a troll, Eric
+was beautiful as Baldur, the loveliest of the Gods. He was taller than Ospakar
+by the half of a hand and as broad in the chest. Still, he was not yet come to
+his greatest strength, and, though his limbs were well knit, they seemed but as
+a child&rsquo;s against the limbs of Ospakar. But he was quick as a cat and
+lithe, his neck and arms were white as whey, and beneath his golden hair his
+bright eyes shone like spears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they stood face to face, with arms outstretched, waiting the word of
+Asmund. He gave it and they circled round each other with arms held low.
+Presently Ospakar made a rush and, seizing Eric about the middle, tried to lift
+him, but with no avail. Thrice he strove and failed, then Eric moved his foot
+and lo! it slipped upon the sanded turf. Again Eric moved and again he slipped,
+a third time and he slipped a third time, and before he could recover himself
+he was full on his back and fairly thrown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda saw and was sad at heart, and those around her said that it was easy to
+know how the game would end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What said I?&rdquo; quoth Swanhild, &ldquo;that it would go badly with
+Eric were Ospakar&rsquo;s arms about him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All is not done yet,&rdquo; answered Gudruda. &ldquo;Methinks
+Eric&rsquo;s feet slipped most strangely, as though he stood on ice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric was very sore at heart and could make nothing of this matter&mdash;for
+he was not overthrown by strength.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat on the snow and Ospakar and his sons mocked him. But Gudruda drew near
+and whispered to him to be of good cheer, for fortune might yet change.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think that I am bewitched,&rdquo; said Eric sadly: &ldquo;my feet have
+no hold of the ground.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda covered her eyes with her hand and thought. Presently she looked up
+quickly. &ldquo;I seem to see guile here,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Now look
+narrowly on thy shoes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He heard, and, loosening his shoe-string, drew a shoe from his foot and looked
+at the sole. The cold of the snow had hardened the fat, and there it was, all
+white upon the leather.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric rose in wrath. &ldquo;Methought,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;that I dealt
+with men of honourable mind, not with cheating tricksters. See now! it is
+little wonder that I slipped, for grease has been set upon my shoes&mdash;and,
+by Thor! I will cleave the man who did it to the chin,&rdquo; and as he said it
+his eyes blazed so dreadfully that folk fell back from him. Asmund took the
+shoes and looked at them. Then he spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brighteyes tells the truth, and we have a sorry knave among us. Ospakar,
+canst thou clear thyself of this ill deed?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will swear on the holy ring that I know nothing of it, and if any man
+in my company has had a hand therein he shall die,&rdquo; said Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That we will swear also,&rdquo; cried his sons Gizur and Mord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is more like a woman&rsquo;s work,&rdquo; said Gudruda, and she
+looked at Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is no work of mine,&rdquo; quoth Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then go and ask thy mother of it,&rdquo; answered Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now all men cried aloud that this was the greatest shame, and that the match
+must be set afresh; only Ospakar bethought him of that two hundred in silver
+which he had promised to Groa, and looked around, but she was not there. Still,
+he gainsaid Eric in the matter of the match being set afresh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric cried out in his anger that he would let the game stand as it was,
+since Ospakar swore himself free of the shameful deed. Men thought this a mad
+saying, but Asmund said it should be so. Still, he swore in his heart that,
+even if he were worsted, Eric should not lose his eye&mdash;no not if swords
+were held aloft to take it. For of all tricks this seemed to him the very
+worst.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar and Eric faced each other again in the ring, but this time the feet
+of Eric were bare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ospakar rushed to get the upper hold, but Eric was too swift for him and sprang
+aside. Again he rushed, but Eric dropped and gripped him round the middle. Now
+they were face to face, hugging each other like bears, but moving little. For a
+time things went thus, while Ospakar strove to lift Eric, but in nowise could
+he stir him. Then of a sudden Eric put out his strength, and they staggered
+round the ring, tearing at each other till their jerkins were rent from them,
+leaving them almost bare to the waist. Suddenly, Eric seemed to give, and
+Ospakar put out his foot to trip him. But Brighteyes was watching. He caught
+the foot in the crook of his left leg, and threw his weight forward on the
+chest of Blacktooth. Backward he went, falling with the thud of a tree on snow,
+and there he lay on the ground, and Eric over him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then men shouted &ldquo;A fall! a fair fall!&rdquo; and were very glad, for the
+fight seemed most uneven to them, and the wrestlers rolled asunder, breathing
+heavily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda threw a cloak over Eric&rsquo;s naked shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That was well done, Brighteyes,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The game is still to play, sweet,&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;and Ospakar
+is a mighty man. I threw him by skill, not by strength. Next time it must be by
+strength or not at all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now breathing-time was done, and once more the two were face to face. Thrice
+Ospakar rushed, and thrice did Eric slip away, for he would waste
+Blacktooth&rsquo;s strength. Again Ospakar rushed, roaring like a bear, and
+fire seemed to come from his eyes, and the steam went up from him and hung upon
+the frosty air like the steam of a horse. This time Eric could not get away,
+but was swept up into that great grip, for Ospakar had the lower hold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now there is an end of Eric,&rdquo; said Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The arrow is yet on the bow,&rdquo; answered Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blacktooth put out his might and reeled round and round the ring, dragging Eric
+with him. This way and that he twisted, and time on time Eric&rsquo;s leg was
+lifted from the ground, but so he might not be thrown. Now they stood almost
+still, while men shouted madly, for no such wrestling had been known in the
+southlands. Grimly they hugged and strove: forsooth it was a mighty sight to
+see. Grimly they hugged, and their muscles strained and cracked, but they could
+stir each other no inch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ospakar grew fearful, for he could make no play with this youngling. Black rage
+swelled in his heart. He ground his fangs, and thought on guile. By his foot
+gleamed the naked foot of Eric. Suddenly he stamped on it so fiercely that the
+skin burst.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ill done! ill done!&rdquo; folk cried; but in his pain Eric moved his
+foot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lo! he was down, but not altogether down, for he did but sit upon his haunches,
+and still he clung to Blacktooth&rsquo;s thighs, and twined his legs about his
+ankles. Now with all his strength Ospakar strove to force the head of
+Brighteyes to the ground, but still he could not, for Eric clung to him like a
+creeper to a tree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A losing game for Eric,&rdquo; said Asmund, and as he spoke Brighteyes
+was pressed back till his yellow hair almost swept the sand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the folk of Ospakar shouted in triumph, but Gudruda cried aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be not overthrown, Eric; loose thee and spring aside.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric heard, and of a sudden loosed all his grip. He fell on his outspread hand,
+then, with a swing sideways and a bound, once more he stood upon his feet.
+Ospakar came at him like a bull made mad with goading, but he could no longer
+roar aloud. They closed and this time Eric had the better hold. For a while
+they struggled round and round till their feet tore the frozen turf, then once
+more they stood face to face. Now the two were almost spent; yet Blacktooth
+gathered up his strength and swung Eric from his feet, but he found them again.
+He grew mad with rage, and hugged him till Brighteyes was nearly pressed to
+death, and black bruises sprang upon the whiteness of his flesh. Ospakar grew
+mad, and madder yet, till at length in his fury he fixed his fangs in
+Eric&rsquo;s shoulder and bit till the blood spurted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ill kissed, thou rat!&rdquo; gasped Eric, and with the pain and rush of
+blood, his strength came back to him. He shifted his grip swiftly, now his
+right hand was beneath the fork of Blacktooth&rsquo;s thigh and his left on the
+hollow of Blacktooth&rsquo;s back. Twice he lifted&mdash;twice the bulk of
+Ospakar rose from the ground&mdash;a third mighty lift&mdash;so mighty that the
+wrapping on Eric&rsquo;s forehead burst, and the blood streamed down his
+face&mdash;and lo! great Blacktooth flew in air. Up he flew, and backward he
+fell into the bank of snow, and was buried there almost to the knees.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>CHAPTER VI<br />
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WAS BETROTHED TO UNNA</h2>
+
+<p>
+For a moment there was silence, for all that company was wonderstruck at the
+greatness of the deed. Then they cheered and cheered again, and to Eric it
+seemed that he slept, and the sound of shouting reached him but faintly, as
+though he heard through snow. Suddenly he woke and saw a man rush at him with
+axe aloft. It was Mord, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, mad at his father&rsquo;s
+overthrow. Eric sprang aside, or the blow had been his bane, and, as he sprang,
+smote with his fist, and it struck heavily on the head of Mord above the ear,
+so that the axe flew from his hand, and he fell senseless on his father in the
+snow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now swords flashed out, and men ringed round Eric to guard him, and it came
+near to the spilling of blood, for the people of Ospakar gnashed their teeth to
+see so great a hero overthrown by a youngling, while the southern folk of
+Middalhof and Ran River rejoiced loudly, for Eric was dear to their hearts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Down swords,&rdquo; cried Asmund the priest, &ldquo;and haul yon carcass
+from the snow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This then they did, and Ospakar sat up, breathing in great gasps, the blood
+running from his mouth and ears, and he was an evil sight to see, for what with
+blood and snow and rage his face was like the face of the Swinefell Goblin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Swanhild spoke in the ear of Gudruda:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here,&rdquo; she said, looking at Eric, &ldquo;we two have a man worth
+loving, foster-sister.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, &ldquo;worth and well worth!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Asmund drew near and before all men kissed Eric Brighteyes on the brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In sooth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;thou art a mighty man, Eric, and the
+glory of the south. This I prophesy of thee: that thou shalt do deeds such as
+have not been done in Iceland. Thou hast ill been served, for a knave unknown
+greased thy shoes. Yon swarthy Ospakar, the most mighty of all men in Iceland,
+could not overthrow thee, though, like a wolf, he fastened his fangs in thee,
+and, like a coward, stamped upon thy naked foot. Take thou the great sword that
+thou hast won and wear it worthily.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric took snow and wiped the blood from his brow. Then he grasped Whitefire
+and drew it from the scabbard, and high aloft flashed the war-blade. Thrice he
+wheeled it round his head, then sang aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Fast, yestermorn, down Golden Falls,<br />
+Fared young Eric to thy feast,<br />
+Asmund, father of Gudruda&mdash;<br />
+Maid whom much he longs to clasp.<br />
+But to-day on Giant Blacktooth<br />
+Hath he done a needful deed:<br />
+Hurling him in heaped-up snowdrift;<br />
+Winning Whitefire for his wage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And again he sang:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Lord, if in very truth thou thinkest<br />
+Brighteyes is a man midst men,<br />
+Swear to him, the stalwart suitor,<br />
+Handsel of thy sweet maid&rsquo;s hand:<br />
+Whom, long loved, to win, down Goldfoss<br />
+Swift he sped through frost and foam;<br />
+Whom, to win, to troll-like Ogre,<br />
+He, &lsquo;gainst Whitefire, waged his eye.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Men thought this well sung, and turned to hear Asmund&rsquo;s answer, nor must
+they wait long.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I will promise thee this, that if thou
+goest on as thou hast begun, I will give Gudruda in marriage to no other
+man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is good tidings, lord,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This I say further: in a year I will give thee full answer according as
+to how thou dost bear thyself between now and then, for this is no light gift
+thou askest; also that, if ye will it, you twain may now plight troth, for the
+blame shall be yours if it is broken, and not mine, and I give thee my hand on
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric took his hand, and Gudruda heard her father&rsquo;s words and happiness
+shone in her dark eyes, and she grew faint for very joy. And now Eric turned to
+her, all torn and bloody from the fray, the great sword in his hand, and he
+spoke thus:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast heard thy father&rsquo;s words, Gudruda? Now it seems that
+there is no great need of troth-plighting between us two. Still, here before
+all men I ask thee, if thou dost love me and art willing to take me to
+husband?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda looked up into his face, and answered in a sweet, clear voice that
+could be heard by all:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric, I say to thee now, what I have said before, that I love thee alone
+of all men, and, if it be my father&rsquo;s wish, I will wed no other whilst
+thou dost remain true to me and hold me dear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Those are good words,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Now, in pledge of them,
+swear this troth of thine upon my sword that I have won.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda smiled, and, taking great Whitefire in her hand, she said the words
+again, and, in pledge of them, kissed the bright blade.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric took back the war-sword and spoke thus: &ldquo;I swear that I will
+love thee, and thee only, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, whom I
+have desired all my days; and, if I fail of this my oath, then our troth is at
+an end, and thou mayst wed whom thou wilt,&rdquo; and in turn he put his lips
+upon the sword, while Swanhild watched them do the oath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar was recovered from the fight, and he sat there upon the snow, with
+bowed head, for he knew well that he had won the greatest shame, and had lost
+both wife and sword. Black rage filled his heart as he listened, and he sprang
+to his feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I came hither, Asmund,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to ask this maid of thine
+in marriage, and methinks that had been a good match for her and thee. But I
+have been overthrown by witchcraft of this man in a wrestling-bout, and thereby
+lost my good sword; and now I must seem to hear him betrothed to the maid
+before me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast heard aright, Ospakar,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;and thy
+wooing is soon sped. Get thee back whence thou camest and seek a wife in thine
+own quarter, for thou art unfit in age and aspect to have so sweet a maid.
+Moreover, here in the south we hold men of small account, however great and
+rich they be, who do not shame to seek to overcome a foe by foul means. With my
+own eyes I saw thee stamp on the naked foot of Eric, Thorgrimur&rsquo;s son;
+with my own eyes I saw thee, like a wolf, fasten that black fang of thine upon
+him&mdash;there is the mark of it; and, as for the matter of the greased shoes,
+thou knowest best what hand thou hadst in it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I had no hand. If any did this thing, it was Groa the Witch, thy Finnish
+bedmate. For the rest, I was mad and know not what I did. But hearken, Asmund:
+ill shall befall thee and thy house, and I will ever be thy foe. Moreover, I
+will yet wed this maid of thine. And now, thou Eric, hearken also: I will have
+another game with thee. This one was but the sport of boys; when we meet
+again&mdash;and the time shall not be long&mdash;swords shall be aloft, and
+thou shalt learn the play of men. I tell thee that I will slay thee, and tear
+Gudruda, shrieking, from thy arms to be my wife! I tell thee that, with yonder
+good sword Whitefire, I will yet hew off thy head!&rdquo;&mdash;and he choked
+and stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art much foam and little water,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;These
+things are easily put to proof. If thou willest it, to-morrow I will come with
+thee to a holmgang, and there we may set the twigs and finish what we have
+begun to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I cannot do that, for thou hast my sword; and, till I am suited with
+another weapon, I may fight no holmgang. Still, fear not: we shall soon meet
+with weapons aloft and byrnie on breast.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never too soon can the hour come, Blacktooth,&rdquo; said Eric, and
+turning on his heel, he limped to the hall to clothe himself afresh. On the
+threshold of the men&rsquo;s door he met Groa the Witch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou didst put grease upon my shoes, carline and witch-hag that thou
+art,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not true, Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There thou liest, and for all this I will repay thee. Thou art not yet
+the wife of Asmund, nor shalt be, for a plan comes into my head about
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Groa looked at him strangely. &ldquo;If thou speakest so, take heed to thy meat
+and drink,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I was not born among the Finns for nothing;
+and know, I am still minded to wed Asmund. For thy shoes, I would to the Gods
+that they were Hell-shoon, and that I was now binding them on thy dead
+feet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! the cat begins to spit,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;But know this: thou
+mayest grease my shoes&mdash;fit work for a carline!&mdash;but thou mayest
+never bind them on. Thou art a witch, and wilt come to the end of witches; and
+what thy daughter is, that I will not say,&rdquo; and he pushed past her and
+entered the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently Asmund came to seek Eric there, and prayed him to be gone to his
+stead on Ran River. The horses of Ospakar had strayed, and he must stop at
+Middalhof till they were found; but, if these two should abide under the same
+roof, bloodshed would come of it, and that Asmund knew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric said yea to this, and, when he had rested a while, he kissed Gudruda, and,
+taking a horse, rode away to Coldback, bearing the sword Whitefire with him,
+and for a time he saw no more of Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he came there, his mother Saevuna greeted him as one risen from the dead,
+and hung about his neck. Then he told her all that had come to pass, and she
+thought it a marvellous story, and sorrowed that Thorgrimur, her husband, was
+not alive to know it. But Eric mused a while, and spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;now my uncle Thorod of Greenfell is dead,
+and his daughter, my cousin Unna, has no home. She is a fair woman and skilled
+in all things. It comes into my mind that we should bid her here to dwell with
+us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, I thought thou wast betrothed to Gudruda the Fair,&rdquo; said
+Saevuna. &ldquo;Wherefore, then, wouldst thou bring Unna hither?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For this cause,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;because it seems that Asmund
+the Priest wearies of Groa the Witch, and would take another wife, and I wish
+to draw the bands between us tighter, if it may befall so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Groa will take it ill,&rdquo; said Saevuna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Things cannot be worse between us than they are now, therefore I do not
+fear Groa,&rdquo; he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It shall be as thou wilt, son; to-morrow we will send to Unna and bid
+her here, if it pleases her to come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar stayed three more days at Middalhof, till his horses were found,
+and he was fit to travel, for Eric had shaken him sorely. But he had no words
+with Gudruda and few with Asmund. Still, he saw Swanhild, and she bid him to be
+of good cheer, for he should yet have Gudruda. For now that the maid had passed
+from him the mind of Ospakar was set in winning her. Björn also, Asmund&rsquo;s
+son, spoke words of good comfort to him, for he envied Eric his great fame, and
+he thought the match with Blacktooth would be good. And so at length Ospakar
+rode away to Swinefell with all his company; but Gizur, his son, left his heart
+behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Swanhild had not been idle this while. Her heart was sore, but she must
+follow her ill-nature, and so she had put out her woman&rsquo;s strength and
+beguiled Gizur into loving her. But she did not love him at all, and the temper
+of Asmund the Priest was so angry that Gizur dared not ask her in marriage. So
+nothing was said of the matter.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now Unna came to Coldback, to dwell with Saevuna, Eric&rsquo;s mother, and she
+was a fair and buxom woman. She had been once wedded, but within a month of her
+marriage her husband was lost at sea, this two years gone. At first Gudruda was
+somewhat jealous of this coming of Unna to Coldback; but Eric showed her what
+was in his mind, and she fell into the plan, for she hated and feared Groa
+greatly, and desired to be rid of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since this matter of the greasing of Eric&rsquo;s wrestling-shoes great
+loathing of Groa had come into Asmund&rsquo;s mind, and he bethought him often
+of those words that his wife Gudruda the Gentle spoke as she lay dying, and
+grieved that the oath which he swore then had in part been broken. He would
+have no more to do with Groa now, but he could not be rid of her; and,
+notwithstanding her evil doings, he still loved Swanhild. But Groa grew thin
+with spite and rage, and wandered about the place glaring with her great black
+eyes, and people hated her more and more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Asmund went to visit at Coldback, and there he saw Unna, and was pleased
+with her, for she was a blithe woman and a bonny. The end of it was that he
+asked her in marriage of Eric; at which Brighteyes was glad, but said that he
+must know Unna&rsquo;s mind. Unna hearkened, and did not say no, for though
+Asmund was somewhat gone in years, still he was an upstanding man, wealthy in
+lands, goods, and moneys out at interest, and having many friends. So they
+plighted troth, and the wedding-feast was to be in the autumn after
+hay-harvest. Now Asmund rode back to Middalhof somewhat troubled at heart, for
+these tidings must be told to Groa, and he feared her and her witchcraft. In
+the hall he found her, standing alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where hast thou been, lord?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At Coldback,&rdquo; he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To see Unna, Eric&rsquo;s cousin, perchance?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is Unna to thee, then, lord?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This much, that after hay-harvest she will be my wife, and that is ill
+news for thee, Groa.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Groa turned and grasped fiercely at the air with her thin hands. Her eyes
+started out, foam was on her lips, and she shook in her fury like a birch-tree
+in the wind, looking so evil that Asmund drew back a little way, saying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now a veil is lifted from thee and I see thee as thou art. Thou hast
+cast a glamour over me these many years, Groa, and it is gone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mayhap, Asmund Asmundson&mdash;mayhap, thou knowest me; but I tell thee
+that thou shalt see me in a worse guise before thou weddest Unna. What! have I
+borne the greatest shame, lying by thy side these many years, and shall I live
+to see a rival, young and fair, creep into my place with honour? That I will
+not while runes have power and spells can conjure the evil thing upon thee. I
+call down ruin on thee and thine&mdash;yea and on Brighteyes also, for he has
+brought this thing to pass. Death take ye all! May thy blood no longer run in
+mortal veins anywhere on the earth! Go down to Hela, Asmund, and be
+forgotten!&rdquo; and she began to mutter runes swiftly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Asmund turned white with wrath. &ldquo;Cease thy evil talk,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;or thou shalt be hurled as a witch into Goldfoss pool.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Into Goldfoss pool?&mdash;yea, there I may lie. I see it!&mdash;I seem
+to see this shape of mine rolling where the waters boil fiercest&mdash;but
+thine eyes shall never see it! <i>Thy</i> eyes are shut, and shut are the eyes
+of Unna, for ye have gone before!&mdash;I do but follow after,&rdquo; and
+thrice Groa shrieked aloud, throwing up her arms, then fell foaming on the
+sanded floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;An evil woman and a fey!&rdquo; said Asmund as he called people to her.
+&ldquo;It had been better for me if I had never seen her dark face.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it is to be told that Groa lay beside herself for ten full days, and
+Swanhild nursed her. Then she found her sense again, and craved to see Asmund,
+and spoke thus to him:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems to me, lord, if indeed it be aught but a vision of my dreams,
+that before this sickness struck me I spoke mad and angry words against thee,
+because thou hast plighted troth to Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s daughter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is so, in truth,&rdquo; said Asmund.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have to say this, then, lord: that most humbly I crave thy pardon for
+my ill words, and ask thee to put them away from thy mind. Sore heart makes
+sour speech, and thou knowest well that, howsoever great my faults, at least I
+have always loved thee and laboured for thee, and methinks that in some fashion
+thy fortunes are the debtor to my wisdom. Therefore when my ears heard that
+thou hadst of a truth put me away, and that another woman comes an honoured
+wife to rule in Middalhof, my tongue forgot its courtesy, and I spoke words
+that are of all words the farthest from my mind. For I know well that I grow
+old, and have put off that beauty with which I was adorned of yore, and that
+held thee to me. &lsquo;<i>Carline</i>&rsquo; Eric Brighteyes named me, and
+&lsquo;carline&rsquo; I am&mdash;an old hag, no more! Now, forgive me, and, in
+memory of all that has been between us, let me creep to my place in the ingle
+and still watch and serve thee and thine till my service is outworn. Out of
+Ran&rsquo;s net I came to thee, and, if thou drivest me hence, I tell thee that
+I will lie down and die upon thy threshold, and when thou sinkest into eld
+surely the memory of it shall grieve thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus she spoke and wept much, till Asmund&rsquo;s heart softened in him, and,
+though with a doubting mind, he said it should be as she willed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Groa stayed on at Middalhof, and was lowly in her bearing and soft of
+speech.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>CHAPTER VII<br />
+HOW ERIC WENT UP MOSFELL AGAINST SKALLAGRIM THE BARESARK</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now Atli the Good, earl of the Orkneys, comes into the story.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It chanced that Atli had sailed to Iceland in the autumn on a business about
+certain lands that had fallen to him in right of his mother Helga, who was an
+Icelander, and he had wintered west of Reyjanes. Spring being come, he wished
+to sail home, and, when his ship was bound, he put to sea full early in the
+year. But it chanced that bad weather came up from the south-east, with mist
+and rain, so he must needs beach his ship in a creek under shelter of the
+Westman Islands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Atli asked what people dwelt in these parts, and, when he heard the name of
+Asmund Asmundson the Priest, he was glad, for in old days he and Asmund had
+gone many a viking cruise together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We will leave the ship here,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;till the weather
+clears, and go up to Middalhof to stay with Asmund.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they made the ship snug, and left men to watch her; but two of the company,
+with Earl Atli, rode up to Middalhof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must be told of Atli that he was the best of the earls who lived in those
+days, and he ruled the Orkneys so well that men gave him a by-name and called
+him Atli the Good. It was said of him that he had never turned a poor man away
+unsuccoured, nor bowed his head before a strong man, nor drawn his sword
+without cause, nor refused peace to him who prayed it. He was sixty years old,
+but age had left few marks on him, except that of his long white beard. He was
+keen-eyed, and well-fashioned of form and face, a great warrior and the
+strongest of men. His wife was dead, leaving him no children, and this was a
+sorrow to him; but as yet he had taken no other wife, for he would say:
+&ldquo;Love makes an old man blind,&rdquo; and &ldquo;When age runs with youth,
+both shall fall,&rdquo; and again, &ldquo;Mix grey locks and golden and spoil
+two heads.&rdquo; For this earl was a man of many wise sayings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Atli came to Middalhof just as men sat down to meat and, hearing the
+clatter of arms, all sprang to their feet, thinking that perhaps Ospakar had
+come again as he had promised. But when Asmund saw Atli he knew him at once,
+though they had not met for nearly thirty years, and he greeted him lovingly,
+and put him in the high seat, and gave place to his men upon the cross-benches.
+Atli told all his story, and Asmund bade him rest a while at Middalhof till the
+weather grew clearer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the Earl saw Swanhild and thought the maid wondrous fair, and so indeed she
+was, as she moved scornfully to and fro in her kirtle of white. Soft was her
+curling hair and deep were her dark blue eyes, and bent were her red lips as is
+a bow above her dimpled chin, and her teeth shone like pearls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that fair maid thy daughter, Asmund,&rdquo; asked Atli.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She is named Swanhild the Fatherless,&rdquo; he answered, turning his
+face away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Atli, looking sharply on him, &ldquo;were the maid
+sprung from me, she would not long be called the &lsquo;Fatherless,&rsquo; for
+few have such a daughter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She is fair enough,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;in all save temper, and
+that is bad to cross.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In every sword a flaw,&rdquo; answers Atli; &ldquo;but what has an old
+man to do with young maids and their beauty?&rdquo; and he sighed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have known younger men who would seem less brisk at bridals,&rdquo;
+said Asmund, and for that time they talked no more of the matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, Swanhild heard something of this speech, and she guessed more; and it came
+into her mind that it would be the best of sport to make this old man love her,
+and then to mock him and say him nay. So she set herself to the task, as it
+ever was her wont, and she found it easy. For all day long, with downcast eyes
+and gentle looks, she waited upon the Earl, and now, at his bidding, she sang
+to him in a voice soft and low, and now she talked so wisely well that Atli
+thought no such maid had trod the earth before. But he checked himself with
+many learned saws, and on a day when the weather had grown fair, and they sat
+alone, he told her that his ship was bound for Orkney Isles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, as though by chance, Swanhild laid her white hand in his, and on a sudden
+looked deep into his eyes, and said with trembling lips, &ldquo;Ah, go not yet,
+lord!&mdash;I pray thee, go not yet!&rdquo;&mdash;and, turning, she fled away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Atli was much moved, and he said to himself: &ldquo;Now a strange thing is
+come to pass: a fair maid loves an old man; and yet, methinks, he who looks
+into those eyes sees deep waters,&rdquo; and he beat his brow and thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Swanhild in her chamber laughed till the tears ran from those same eyes,
+for she saw that the great fish was hooked and now the time had come to play
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For she did not know that it was otherwise fated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda, too, saw all these things and knew not how to read them, for she was
+of an honest mind, and could not understand how a woman may love a man as
+Swanhild loved Eric and yet make such play with other men, and that of her free
+will. For she guessed little of Swanhild&rsquo;s guilefulness, nor of the
+coldness of her heart to all save Eric; nor of how this was the only joy left
+to her: to make a sport of men and put them to grief and shame. Atli said to
+himself that he would watch this maid well before he uttered a word to Asmund,
+and he deemed himself very cunning, for he was wondrous cautious after the
+fashion of those about to fall. So he set himself to watching, and Swanhild set
+herself to smiling, and he told her tales of warfare and of daring, and she
+clasped her hands and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was there ever such a man since Odin trod the earth?&rdquo; And so it
+went on, till the serving-women laughed at the old man in love and the wit of
+her that mocked him.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now upon a day, Eric having made an end of sowing his corn, bethought himself
+of his vow to go up alone against Skallagrim the Baresark in his den on Mosfell
+over by Hecla. Now, this was a heavy task: for Skallagrim was held so mighty
+among men that none went up against him any more; and at times Eric thought of
+Gudruda, and sighed, for it was likely that she would be a widow before she was
+made a wife. Still, his oath must be fulfilled, and, moreover, of late
+Skallagrim having heard that a youngling named Eric Brighteyes had vowed to
+slay him single-handed, had made a mock of him in this fashion. For Skallagrim
+rode down to Coldback on Ran River and at night-time took a lamb from the fold.
+Holding the lamb beneath his arm, he drew near to the house and smote thrice on
+the door with his battle-axe, and they were thundering knocks. Then he leapt on
+to his horse and rode off a space and waited. Presently Eric came out, but half
+clad, a shield in one hand and Whitefire in the other, and, looking, by the
+bright moonlight he saw a huge black-bearded man seated on a horse, having a
+great axe in one hand and the lamb beneath his arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who art thou?&rdquo; roared Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am called Skallagrim, youngling,&rdquo; answered the man on the horse.
+&ldquo;Many men have seen me once, none have wished to see me twice, and some
+few have never seen aught again. Now, it has been echoed in my ears that thou
+hast vowed a vow to go up Mosfell against Skallagrim the Baresark, and I am
+come hither to say that I will make thee right welcome. See,&rdquo; and with
+his axe he cut off the lamb&rsquo;s tail on the pommel of his saddle: &ldquo;of
+the flesh of this lamb of thine I will brew broth and of his skin I will make
+me a vest. Take thou this tail, and when thou fittest it on to the skin again,
+Skallagrim will own a lord,&rdquo; and he hurled the tail towards him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bide thou there till I can come to thee,&rdquo; shouted Eric; &ldquo;it
+will spare me a ride to Mosfell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, nay. It is good for lads to take the mountain air,&rdquo; and
+Skallagrim turned his horse away, laughing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric watched Skallagrim vanish over the knoll, and then, though he was very
+angry, laughed also and went in. But first he picked up the tail, and on the
+morrow he skinned it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the time was come when the matter must be tried, and Eric bade farewell to
+Saevuna his mother, and Unna his cousin, and girt Whitefire round him and set
+upon his head a golden helm with wings on it. Then he found the byrnie which
+his father Thorgrimur had stripped, together with the helm, from that Baresark
+who cut off his leg&mdash;and this was a good piece, forged of the
+Welshmen&mdash;and he put it on his breast, and taking a stout shield of
+bull&rsquo;s hide studded with nails, rode away with one thrall, the strong
+carle named Jon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the women misdoubted them much of this venture; nevertheless Eric might not
+be gainsayed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, the road to Mosfell runs past Middalhof and thither he came. Atli,
+standing at the men&rsquo;s door, saw him and cried aloud: &ldquo;Ho! a mighty
+man comes here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild looked out and saw Eric, and he was a goodly sight in his war-gear.
+For now, week by week, he seemed to grow more fair and great, as the full
+strength of his manhood rose in him, like sap in the spring grass, and Gudruda
+was very proud of her lover. That night Eric stayed at Middalhof, and sat hand
+in hand with Gudruda and talked with Earl Atli. Now the heart of the old viking
+went out to Eric, and he took great delight in him and in his strength and
+deeds, and he longed much that the Gods had given him such a son.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I prophesy this of thee, Brighteyes,&rdquo; he cried: &ldquo;that it
+shall go ill with this Baresark thou seekest&mdash;yes, and with all men who
+come within sweep of that great sword of thine. But remember this, lad: guard
+thy head with thy buckler, cut low beneath his shield, if he carries one, and
+mow the legs from him: for ever a Baresark rushes on, shield up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric thanked him for his good words and went to rest. But, before it was light,
+he rose, and Gudruda rose also and came into the hall, and buckled his harness
+on him with her own hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is a sad task for me, Eric!&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;for how do I
+know that Baresark&rsquo;s hands shall not loose this helm of thine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is as it may be, sweet,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but I fear not the
+Baresark or any man. How goes it with Swanhild now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know not. She makes herself sweet to that old Earl and he is fain of
+her, and that is beyond my sight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have seen as much,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;It will be well for us if
+he should wed her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, and ill for him; but it is to be doubted if that is in her
+mind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric kissed her soft and sweet, and went away, bidding her look for his
+return on the day after the morrow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda bore up bravely against her fears till he was gone, but then she wept a
+little.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now it is to be told that Eric and his thrall Jon rode hard up Stonefell and
+across the mountains and over the black sand, till, two hours before sunset,
+they came to the foot of Mosfell, having Hecla on their right. It is a grim
+mountain, grey with moss, standing alone in the desert plain; but between it
+and Hecla there is good grassland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here is the fox&rsquo;s earth. Now to start him,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knows something of the path by which this fortress can be climbed from the
+south, and horses may be ridden up it for a space. So on they go, till at
+length they come to a flat place where water runs down the black rocks, and
+here Eric drank of the water, ate food, and washed his face and hands. This
+done, he bid Jon tend the horses&mdash;for hereabouts there is a little
+grass&mdash;and be watchful till he returned, since he must go up against
+Skallagrim alone. And there with a doubtful heart Jon stayed all that night.
+For of all that came to pass he saw but one thing, and that was the light of
+Whitefire as it flashed out high above him on the brow of the mountain when
+first Brighteyes smote at foe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric went warily up the Baresark path, for he would keep his breath in him, and
+the light shone redly on his golden helm. High he went, till at length he came
+to a pass narrow and dark and hedged on either side with sheer cliffs, such as
+two armed men might hold against a score. He peered down this path, but he saw
+no Baresark, though it was worn by Baresark feet. He crept along its length,
+moving like a sunbeam through the darkness of the pass, for the light gathered
+on his helm and sword, till suddenly the path turned and he was on the brink of
+a gulf that seemed to have no bottom, and, looking across and down, he could
+see Jon and the horses more than a hundred fathoms beneath. Now Eric must stop,
+for this path leads but into the black gulf. Also he was perplexed to know
+where Skallagrim had his lair. He crept to the brink and gazed. Then he saw
+that a point of rock jutted from the sheer face of the cliff and that the point
+was worn with the mark of feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where Baresark passes, there may yeoman follow,&rdquo; said Eric and,
+sheathing Whitefire, without more ado, though he liked the task little, he
+grasped the overhanging rock and stepped down on to the point below. Now he was
+perched like an eagle over the dizzy gulf and his brain swam. Backward he
+feared to go, and forward he might not, for there was nothing but air. Beside
+him, growing from the face of the cliff, was a birch-bush. He grasped it to
+steady himself. It bent beneath his clutch, and then he saw, behind it, a hole
+in the rock through which a man could creep, and down this hole ran footmarks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;First through air like a bird; now through earth like a fox,&rdquo; said
+Eric and entered the hole. Doubling his body till his helm almost touched his
+knee he took three paces and lo! he stood on a great platform of rock, so large
+that a hall might be built on it, which, curving inwards, cannot be seen from
+the narrow pass. This platform, that is backed by the sheer cliff, looks
+straight to the south, and from it he could search the plain and the path that
+he had travelled, and there once more he saw Jon and the horses far below him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A strong place, truly, and well chosen,&rdquo; said Eric and looked
+around. On the floor of the rock and some paces from him a turf fire still
+smouldered, and by it were sheep&rsquo;s bones, and beyond, in the face of the
+overhanging precipice, was the mouth of a cave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The wolf is at home, or was but lately,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;now for
+his lair;&rdquo; and with that he walked warily to the mouth of the cave and
+peered in. He could see nothing yet a while, but surely he heard a sound of
+snoring?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he crept in, and, presently, by the red light of the burning embers, he
+saw a great black-bearded man stretched at length upon a rug of sheepskins, and
+by his side an axe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now it would be easy to make an end of this cave-dweller,&rdquo; thought
+Eric; &ldquo;but that is a deed I will not do&mdash;no, not even to a
+Baresark&mdash;to slay him in his sleep,&rdquo; and therewith he stepped
+lightly to the side of Skallagrim, and was about to prick him with the point of
+Whitefire, when! as he did so, another man sat up behind Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By Thor! for two I did not bargain,&rdquo; said Eric, and sprang from
+the cave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, with a grunt of rage, that Baresark who was behind Skallagrim came out
+like a she-bear robbed of her whelps, and ran straight at Eric, sword aloft.
+Eric gives before him right to the edge of the cliff. Then the Baresark smites
+at him and Brighteyes catches the blow on his shield, and smites at him in turn
+so well and truly, that the head of the Baresark flies from his shoulders and
+spins along the ground, but his body, with outstretched arms yet gripping at
+the air, falls over the edge of the gulf sheer into the water, a hundred
+fathoms down. It was the flash that Whitefire made as it circled ere it smote
+that Jon saw while he waited in the dell upon the mountain side. But of the
+Baresark he saw nothing, for he passed down into the great fire-riven cleft and
+was never seen more, save once only, in a strange fashion that shall be told.
+This was the first man whom Brighteyes slew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the old tale tells that Eric cried aloud: &ldquo;Little chance had this
+one,&rdquo; and that then a wonderful thing came to pass. For the head on the
+rock opened its eyes and answered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Little chance indeed against thee, Eric Brighteyes. Still, I tell thee
+this: that where my body fell there thou shalt fall, and where it lies there
+thou shalt lie also.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric was afraid, for he thought it a strange thing that a severed head
+should speak to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here it seems I have to deal with trolls,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but at
+the least, though he speak, this one shall strike no more,&rdquo; and he looked
+at the head, but it answered nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Skallagrim slept through it all and the light grew so dim that Eric thought
+it time to make an end this way or that. Therefore, he took the head of the
+slain man, though he feared to touch it, and rolled it swiftly into the cave,
+saying, &ldquo;Now, being so glib of speech, go tell thy mate that Eric
+Brighteyes knocks at his door.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then came sounds as of a man rising, and presently Skallagrim rushed forth with
+axe aloft and his fellow&rsquo;s head in his left hand. He was clothed in
+nothing but a shirt and the skin of Eric&rsquo;s lamb was bound to his chest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where now is my mate?&rdquo; he said. Then he saw Eric leaning on
+Whitefire, his golden helm ablaze with the glory of the passing sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems that thou holdest somewhat of him in thine hand, Skallagrim,
+and for the rest, go seek it in yonder rift.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who art thou?&rdquo; roared Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou mayest know me by this token,&rdquo; said Eric, and he threw
+towards him the skin of that lamb&rsquo;s tail which Skallagrim had lifted from
+Coldback.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Skallagrim knew him and the Baresark fit came on. His eyes rolled, foam
+flew to his lips, his mouth grinned, and he was awesome to see. He let fall the
+head, and, swinging the great axe aloft, rushed at Eric. But Brighteyes is too
+swift for him. It would not be well to let that stroke fall, and it must go
+hard with aught it struck. He springs forward, he louts low and sweeps upwards
+with Whitefire. Skallagrim sees the sword flare and drops almost to his knee,
+guarding his head with the axe; but Whitefire strikes on the iron half of the
+axe and shears it in two, so that the axe-head falls to earth. Now the Baresark
+is weaponless but unharmed, and it would be an easy task to slay him as he
+rushes by. But it came into Eric&rsquo;s mind that it is an unworthy deed to
+slay a swordless man, and this came into his mind also, that he desired to
+match his naked might against a Baresark in his rage. So, in the hardihood of
+his youth and strength, he cast Whitefire aside, and crying &ldquo;Come, try a
+fall with me, Baresark,&rdquo; rushed on Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art mad,&rdquo; yells the Baresark, and they are at it hard. Now
+they grip and rend and tear. Ospakar was strong, but the Baresark strength of
+Skallagrim is more than the strength of Ospakar, and soon Brighteyes thinks
+longingly on Whitefire that he has cast aside. Eric is mighty beyond the might
+of men, but he can scarcely hold his own against this mad man, and very soon he
+knows that only one chance is left to him, and that is to cling to Skallagrim
+till the Baresark fit be passed and he is once more like other men. But this is
+easier to tell of than to do, and presently, strive as he will, Eric is on his
+back, and Skallagrim on him. But still he holds the Baresark as with bands of
+iron, and Skallagrim may not free his arms, though he strive furiously. Now
+they roll over and over on the rock, and the gloom gathers fast about them till
+presently Eric sees that they draw near to the brink of that mighty rift down
+which the severed head of the cave-dweller has foretold his fall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then we go together,&rdquo; says Eric, but the Baresark does not heed.
+Now they are on the very brink, and here as it chances, or as the Norns decree,
+a little rock juts up and this keeps them from falling. Eric is uppermost, and,
+strive as he will, Skallagrim may not turn him on his back again. Still,
+Brighteyes&rsquo; strength may not endure very long, for he grows faint, and
+his legs slip slowly over the side of the rift till now he clings, as it were,
+by his ribs and shoulder-blades alone, that rub against the little rock. The
+light dies away, and Eric thinks on sweet Gudruda and makes ready to die also,
+when suddenly a last ray from the sun falls on the fierce face of Skallagrim,
+and lo! Brighteyes sees it change, for the madness goes out of it, and in a
+moment the Baresark becomes but as a child in his mighty grip.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;I crave peace,&rdquo; and he loosed
+his clasp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not too soon, then,&rdquo; gasped Eric as, drawing his legs from over
+the brink of the rift, he gained his feet and, staggering to his sword, grasped
+it very thankfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am fordone!&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;come, drag me from this
+place, for I fall; or, if thou wilt, hew off my head.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not serve thee thus,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Thou art a gallant
+foe,&rdquo; and he put out his hand and drew him into safety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a while Skallagrim lay panting, then he gained his hands and knees and
+crawled to where Eric leaned against the rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;give me thy hand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric stretched forth his left hand, wondering, and Skallagrim took it. He did
+not stretch out his right, for, fearing guile, he gripped Whitefire in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; Skallagrim said again, &ldquo;of all men who ever were,
+thou art the mightiest. Five other men had not stood before me in my rage, but,
+scorning thy weapon, thou didst overcome me in the noblest fashion, and by thy
+naked strength alone. Now hearken. Thou hast given me my life, and it is thine
+from this hour to the end. Here I swear fealty to thee. Slay me if thou wilt,
+or use me if thou wilt, but I think it will be better for thee to do this
+rather than that, for there is but one who has mastered me, and thou art he,
+and it is borne in upon my mind that thou wilt have need of my strength, and
+that shortly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That may well be, Skallagrim,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;yet I put little
+trust in outlaws and cave-dwellers. How do I know, if I take thee to me, that
+thou wilt not murder me in my sleep, as it would have been easy for me to do by
+thee but now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it that runs from thy arm,&rdquo; asked Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Blood,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stretch out thine arm, lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric did so, and the Baresark put his lips to the scratch and sucked the blood,
+then said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In this blood of thine I pledge thee, Eric Brighteyes! May Valhalla
+refuse me and Hela take me; may I be hunted like a fox from earth to earth; may
+trolls torment me and wizards sport with me o&rsquo; night; may my limbs
+shrivel and my heart turn to water; may my foes overtake me, and my bones be
+crushed across the doom-stone&mdash;if I fail in one jot from this my oath that
+I have sworn! I will guard thy back, I will smite thy enemies, thy hearthstone
+shall be my temple, thy honour my honour. Thrall am I of thine, and thrall I
+will be, and whiles thou wilt we will live one life, and, in the end, we will
+die one death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems that in going to seek a foe I have found a friend,&rdquo; said
+Eric, &ldquo;and it is likely enough that I shall need one. Skallagrim,
+Baresark and outlaw as thou art, I take thee at thy word. Henceforth, we are
+master and man and we will do many a deed side by side, and in token of it I
+lengthen thy name and call thee Skallagrim Lambstail. Now, if thou hast it,
+give me food and drink, for I am faint from that hug of thine, old bear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br />
+HOW OSPAKAR BLACKTOOTH FOUND ERIC BRIGHTEYES AND SKALLAGRIM LAMBSTAIL ON
+HORSE-HEAD HEIGHTS</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+Now Skallagrim led Eric to his cave and fed the fire and gave him flesh to eat
+and ale to drink. When he had eaten his fill Eric looked at the Baresark. He
+had black hair streaked with grey that hung down upon his shoulders. His nose
+was hooked like an eagle&rsquo;s beak, his beard was wild and his sunken eyes
+were keen as a hawk&rsquo;s. He was somewhat bent and not over tall, but of a
+mighty make, for his shoulders must pass many a door sideways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art a great man,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and it is something to
+have overcome thee. Now tell me what turned thee Baresark.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A shameful deed that was done against me, lord. Ten years ago I was a
+yeoman of small wealth in the north. I had but one good thing, and that was the
+fairest housewife in those parts&mdash;Thorunna by name&mdash;and I loved her
+much, but we had no children. Now, not far from my stead is a place called
+Swinefell, and there dwells a mighty chief named Ospakar Blacktooth; he is an
+evil man and strong&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric started at the name and then bade Skallagrim take up the tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It chanced that Ospakar saw my wife Thorunna and would take her, but at
+first she did not listen. Then he promised her wealth and all good things, and
+she was weary of our hard way of life and hearkened. Still, she would not go
+away openly, for that had brought shame on her, but plotted with Ospakar that
+he should come and take her as though by force. So it came about, as I lay
+heavily asleep one night at Thorunna&rsquo;s side, having drunk somewhat too
+deeply of the autumn ale, that armed men seized me, bound me, and haled me from
+my bed. There were eight of them, and with them was Ospakar. Then Blacktooth
+bid Thorunna rise, clothe herself and come to be his May, and she made pretence
+to weep at this, but fell to it readily enough. Now she bound her girdle round
+her and to it a knife hung.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;Kill thyself, sweet,&rsquo; I cried: &lsquo;death is better than
+shame.&rsquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;Not so, husband,&rsquo; she answered. &lsquo;It is true that I
+love but thee; yet a woman may find another love, but not another life,&rsquo;
+and I saw her laugh through her mock tears. Now Ospakar rode in hot haste away
+to Swinefell and with him went Thorunna, but his men stayed a while and drank
+my ale, and, as they drank, they mocked me who was bound before them, and
+little by little all the truth was told of the doings of Ospakar and Thorunna
+my housewife, and I learned that it was she who had planned this sport. Then my
+eyes grew dark and I drew near to death from very shame and bitterness. But of
+a sudden something leaped up in my heart, fire raged before my eyes and voices
+in my ears called on to war and vengeance. I was Baresark&mdash;and like hay
+bands I burst my cords. My axe hung on the wainscot. I snatched it thence, and
+of what befell I know this alone, that, when the madness passed, eight men lay
+stretched out before me, and all the place was but a gore of blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;Then I drew the dead together and piled drinking tables over
+them, and benches, and turf, and anything else that would burn, and put
+cod&rsquo;s oil on the pile, and fired the stead above them, so that the tale
+went abroad that all these men were burned in their cups, and I with them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;But I took the name of Skallagrim and swore an oath against all
+men, ay, and women too, and away I went to the wood-folk and worked much
+mischief, for I spared few, and so on to Mosfell. Here I have stayed these five
+years, awaiting the time when I shall find Ospakar and Thorunna the harlot, and
+I have fought many men, but, till thou camest up against me, none could stand
+before my might.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A strange tale, truly,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but now hearken thou to
+a stranger, for of a truth it seems that we have not come together by
+chance,&rdquo; and he told him of Gudruda and the wrestling and of the
+overthrow of Blacktooth, and showed him Whitefire which he won out of the hand
+of Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim listened and laughed aloud. &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;this is the work of the Norns. See, lord, thou and I will yet smite this
+Ospakar. He has taken my wife and he would take thy betrothed. Let it be! Let
+it be! Ah, would that I had been there to see the wrestling&mdash;Ospakar had
+never risen from his snow-bed. But there is time left to us, and I shall yet
+see his head roll along the dust. Thou hast his goodly sword and with it thou
+shalt sweep Blacktooth&rsquo;s head from his shoulders&mdash;or perchance that
+shall be my lot,&rdquo; and with this Skallagrim sprang up, gnashing his teeth
+and clutching at the air.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peace,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Blacktooth is not here. Save thy rage
+until it can run along thy sword and strike him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, not here, nor yet so far off, lord. Hearken: I know this Ospakar.
+If he has set eyes of longing on Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, he will not
+rest one hour till he have her or is slain; and if he has set eyes of hate on
+thee&mdash;then take heed to thy going and spy down every path before thy feet
+tread it. Soon shall the matter come on for judgment and even now Odin&rsquo;s
+Valkyries[*] choose their own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] The &ldquo;corse-choosing sisters&rdquo; who were bidden by Odin to single
+out those warriors whose hour had come to die in battle and win Valhalla.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is well, then,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yea, lord, it is well, for we two have little to fear from any six men,
+if so be that they fall on us in fair fight. But I do not altogether like thy
+tale. Too many women are mixed up in it, and women stab in the back. A man may
+deal with swords aloft, but not with tricks, and lies, and false women&rsquo;s
+witchery. It was a woman who greased thy wrestling soles; mayhap it will be a
+woman that binds on thy Hell-shoes when all is done&mdash;ay! and who makes
+them ready for thy feet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of women, as of men,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;there is this to be
+said, that some are good and some evil.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, lord, and this also, that the evil ones plot the ill of their evil,
+but the good do it of their blind foolishness. Forswear women and so shalt thou
+live happy and die in honour&mdash;cherish them and live in wretchedness and
+die an outcast.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thy talk is foolish,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Birds must to the air, the
+sea to the shore, and man must to woman. As things are so let them be, for they
+will soon seem as though they had never been. I had rather kiss my dear and
+die, if so it pleases me to do, than kiss her not and live, for at the last the
+end will be one end, and kisses are sweet!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is a good saying,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, and they fell asleep side
+by side and Eric had no fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they awoke and the light was already full, for they were weary and their
+sleep had been heavy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hard by the mouth of the cave is a little well of water that gathers there from
+the rocks above and in this Eric washed himself. Then Skallagrim showed him the
+cave and the goodly store of arms that he had won from those whom he had slain
+and robbed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A wondrous place, truly,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and well fitted to the
+uses of such a chapman[*] as thou art; but, say, how didst thou find it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] Merchant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I followed him who was here before me and gave him choice&mdash;to go,
+or to fight for the stronghold. But he needs must fight and that was his bane,
+for I slew him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who was that, then,&rdquo; asked Eric, &ldquo;whose head lies
+yonder?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A cave-dweller, lord, whom I took to me because of the lonesomeness of
+the winter tide. He was an evil man, for though it is good to be Baresark from
+time to time, yet to dwell with one who is always Baresark is not good, and
+thou didst a needful deed in smiting his head from him&mdash;and now let it go
+to find its trunk,&rdquo; and he rolled it over the edge of the great rift.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Knowest thou, Skallagrim, that this head spoke to me after it had left
+the man&rsquo;s shoulders, saying that where its body fell there I should fall,
+and where it lay there I should lie also?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, lord, that is likely to be thy doom, for this man was foresighted,
+and, but the night before last, as we rode out to seek sheep, he felt his head,
+and said that, before the sun sank again, a hundred fathoms of air should link
+it to his shoulders.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It may be so,&rdquo; answered Eric. &ldquo;I thought as I lay in thy
+grip yonder that the fate was near. And now arm thyself, and take such goods as
+thou needest, and let us hence, for that thrall of mine who waits me yonder
+will think thou hast been too mighty for me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim went to the edge of the rift and searched the plain with his hawk
+eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No need to hasten, lord,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;See yonder rides thy
+thrall across the black sand, and with him goes thy horse. Surely he thought
+thou camest no more down the path by which thou wentest up, and it is not
+thrall&rsquo;s work to seek Skallagrim in his lair and ask for tidings.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wolves take him for a fool!&rdquo; said Eric in anger. &ldquo;He will
+ride to Middalhof and sing my death-song, and that will sound sadly in some
+ears.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is pleasant, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;when good tidings
+dog the heels of bad, and womenfolk can spare some tears and be little poorer.
+I have horses in a secret dell that I will show thee, and on them we will ride
+hence to Middalhof&mdash;and there thou must claim peace for me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is well,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;now arm thyself, for if thou goest
+with me thou must make an end of thy Baresark ways, or keep them for the hour
+of battle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will do thy bidding, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. Then he entered the
+cave and set a plain black steel helm upon his black locks, and a black chain
+byrnie about his breast. He took the great axe-head also and fitted to it the
+half of another axe that lay among the weapons. Then he drew out a purse of
+money and a store of golden rings, and set them in a bag of otter skin, and
+buckled it about him. But the other goods he wrapped up in skins and hid behind
+some stones which were at the bottom of the cave&mdash;purposing to come
+another time and fetch them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they went forth by that same perilous path which Eric had trod, and
+Skallagrim showed him how he might pass the rock in safety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A rough road this,&rdquo; said Eric as he gained the deep cleft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yea, lord, and, till thou camest, one that none but wood-folk have
+trodden.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would tread it no more,&rdquo; said Eric again, &ldquo;and yet that
+fellow thief of thine said that I should die here,&rdquo; and for a while his
+heart was heavy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Skallagrim Lambstail led him by secret paths to a dell rich in grass, that
+is hid in the round of the mountain, and here three good horses were at feed.
+Then, going to a certain rock, he brought out bits and saddles, and they caught
+the horses, and, mounting them, rode away from Mosfell.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now Eric and his henchman Skallagrim the Baresark rode four hours and saw
+nobody, till at length they came to the brow of a hill that is named Horse-Head
+Heights, and, crossing it, found themselves almost in the midst of a score of
+armed men who were about to mount their horses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now we have company,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, and bad company,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;for yonder I spy
+Ospakar Blacktooth, and Gizur and Mord his sons, ay and others. Down, and back
+to back, for they will show us little gentleness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they sprang to earth and took their stand upon a mound of rising
+ground&mdash;and the men rode towards them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall soon know what thy fellowship is worth,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fear not, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim. &ldquo;Hold thou thy head
+and I will hold thy back. We are met in a good hour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good or ill, it is likely to be a short one. Hearken thou: if thou must
+turn Baresark when swords begin to flash, at the least stand and be Baresark
+where thou art, for if thou rushest on the foe, my back will be naked and I
+must soon be sped.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It shall be as thou sayest, lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now men rode round them, but at first they did not know Eric, because of the
+golden helm that hid his face in shadow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who are ye?&rdquo; called Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think that thou shouldst know me, Blacktooth,&rdquo; Eric answered,
+&ldquo;for I set thee heels up in the snow but lately&mdash;or, at the least,
+thou wilt know this,&rdquo; and he drew great Whitefire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou mayest know me also, Ospakar,&rdquo; cried the Baresark.
+&ldquo;Skallagrim, men called me, Lambstail, Eric Brighteyes calls me, but once
+thou didst call me Ounound. Say, lord, what tidings of Thorunna?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar shook his sword, laughing. &ldquo;I came out to seek one foe, and I
+have found two,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Hearken, Eric: when thou art slain I go
+hence to burn and kill at Middalhof. Shall I bear thy head as keepsake from
+thee to Gudruda? For thee, Ounound, I thought thee dead; but, being yet alive,
+Thorunna, my sweet love, sends thee this,&rdquo; and he hurled a spear at him
+with all his might.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Skallagrim catches the spear as it flies and hurls it back. It strikes
+right on the shield of Ospakar and pierces it, ay and the byrnie, and the
+shoulder that is beneath the byrnie, so that Blacktooth was made unmeet for
+fight, and howled with pain and rage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go, bid Thorunna draw that splinter forth,&rdquo; says Skallagrim,
+&ldquo;and heal the hole with kisses.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar, writhing with his hurt, shouts to his men to slay the two of them,
+and then the fight begins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One rushes at Eric and smites at him with an axe. The blow falls on his shield,
+and shears off the side of it, then strikes the byrnie beneath, but lightly. In
+answer Eric sweeps low at him with Whitefire, and cuts his leg from under him
+between knee and thigh, and he falls and dies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another rushes in. Down flashes Whitefire before he can smite, and the
+carle&rsquo;s shield is cloven through. Then he chooses to draw back and fights
+no more that day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim slays a man, and wounds another sore. A tall chief with a red scar
+on his face comes at Brighteyes. Twice he feints at the head while Eric
+watches, then lowers the sword beneath the cover of his shield, and sweeps
+suddenly at Eric&rsquo;s legs. Brighteyes leaps high into the air, smiting
+downward with Whitefire as he leaps, and presently that chief is dead, shorn
+through shoulder to breast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Skallagrim slays another man, and grows Baresark. He looks so fierce that
+men fall back from him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two rush on Eric, one from either side. The sword of him on the right falls on
+his shield and sinks in, but Brighteyes twists the shorn shield so strongly
+that the sword is wrenched from the smiter&rsquo;s hand. Now the other sword is
+aloft above him, and that had been Eric&rsquo;s bane, but Skallagrim glances
+round and sees it about to fall. He has no time to turn, but dashes the hammer
+of his axe backward. It falls full on the swordsman&rsquo;s head, and the head
+is shattered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That was well done,&rdquo; says Eric as the sword goes down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not so ill but it might be worse,&rdquo; growls Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently all men drew back from those two, for they have had enough of
+Whitefire and the Baresark&rsquo;s axe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ospakar sits on his horse, his shield pinned to his shoulder and curses aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Close in, you cowards!&rdquo; he yells, &ldquo;close in and cut them
+down!&rdquo; but no man stirs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric mocks them. &ldquo;There are but two of us,&rdquo; he says,
+&ldquo;will no man try a game with me? Let it not be sung that twenty were
+overcome of two.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar&rsquo;s son Mord hears, and he grows mad with rage. He holds his
+shield aloft and rushes on. But Gizur the Lawman does not come, for Gizur was a
+coward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim turns to meet Mord, but Eric says:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This one for me, comrade,&rdquo; and steps forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mord strikes a mighty blow. Eric&rsquo;s shield is all shattered and cannot
+stay it. It crashes through and falls full on the golden helm, beating
+Brighteyes to his knee. Now he is up again and blows fall thick and fast. Mord
+is a strong man, unwearied, and skilled in war, and Eric&rsquo;s arms grow
+faint and his strength sinks low. Mord smites again and wounds him somewhat on
+the shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric throws aside his cloven shield and, shouting, plies Whitefire with both
+arms. Mord gives before him, then rushes and smites; Eric leaps aside. Again he
+rushes and lo! Brighteyes has dropped his point, and it stands a full span
+through the back of Mord, and instantly that was his bane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now men rush to their horses, mount in hot haste and ride away, crying that
+these are trolls whom they have to do with here, not men. Skallagrim sees, and
+the Baresark fit takes him sore. With axe aloft he charges after them,
+screaming as he comes. There is one man, the same whom he had wounded. He
+cannot mount easily, and when the Baresark comes he still lies on the neck of
+his horse. The great axe wheels on high and falls, and it is told of this
+stroke that it was so mighty that man and horse sank dead beneath it, cloven
+through and through. Then the fit leaves Skallagrim and he walks back, and they
+are alone with the dead and dying.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric leans on Whitefire and speaks:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get thee gone, Skallagrim Lambstail!&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;get thee
+gone!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It shall be as thou wilt, lord,&rdquo; answered the Baresark; &ldquo;but
+I have not befriended thee so ill that thou shouldst fear for blows to
+come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will keep no man with me who puts my word aside, Skallagrim. What did
+I bid thee? Was it not that thou shouldst have done with the Baresark ways, and
+where thou stoodest there thou shouldst bide? and see: thou didst forget my
+word swiftly! Now get thee gone!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is true, lord,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;He who serves must serve
+wholly,&rdquo; and Skallagrim turned to seek his horse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stay,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;thou art a gallant man and I forgive
+thee: but cross my will no more. We have slain several men and Ospakar goes
+hence wounded. We have got honour, and they loss and the greatest shame.
+Nevertheless, ill shall come of this to me, for Ospakar has many friends and
+will set a law-suit on foot against me at the Althing,[*] and thou didst draw
+the first blood.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] The annual assembly of free men which, in Iceland, performed the functions
+of a Parliament and Supreme Court of Law.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would that the spear had gone more home,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ospakar&rsquo;s time is not yet,&rdquo; answered Eric; &ldquo;still, he
+has something by which to bear us in mind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>CHAPTER IX<br />
+HOW SWANHILD DEALT WITH GUDRUDA</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now Jon, Eric&rsquo;s thrall, watched all night on Mosfell, but saw nothing
+except the light of Whitefire as it smote the Baresark&rsquo;s head from his
+shoulders. He stayed there till daylight, much afraid; then, making sure that
+Eric was slain, Jon rode hard and fast for Middalhof, whither he came at
+evening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda was watching by the women&rsquo;s door. She strained her eyes towards
+Mosfell to catch the light gleaming on Eric&rsquo;s golden helm, and presently
+it gleamed indeed, white not red.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;See,&rdquo; said Swanhild at her side, &ldquo;Eric comes!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not Eric, but his thrall,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, &ldquo;to tell us
+that Eric is sped.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They waited in silence while Jon galloped towards them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What news of Brighteyes?&rdquo; cried Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Little need to ask,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;look at his face.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Jon told his tale and Gudruda listened, clinging to the door post. But
+Swanhild cursed him for a coward, so that he shrank before her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda turned and walked into the hall and her face was like the face of
+death. Men saw her, and Asmund asked why she wore so strange a mien. Then
+Gudruda sang this song:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Up to Mosfell, battle eager,<br />
+Rode helmed Brighteyen to the fray.<br />
+Back from Mosfell, battle shunning,<br />
+Slunk yon coward thrall I ween.<br />
+Now shall maid Gudruda never<br />
+Know a husband&rsquo;s dear embrace;<br />
+Widowed is she&mdash;sunk in sorrow,<br />
+Eric treads Valhalla&rsquo;s halls!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And with this she walked from the stead, looking neither to the right nor to
+the left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let the maid be,&rdquo; said Atli the Earl. &ldquo;Grief fares best
+alone. But my heart is sore for Eric. It should go ill with that Baresark if I
+might get a grip of him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That I will have before summer is gone,&rdquo; said Asmund, for the
+death of Eric seemed to him the worst of sorrows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda walked far, and, crossing Laxà by the stepping stones, climbed
+Stonefell till she came to the head of Golden Falls, for, like a stricken
+thing, she desired to be alone in her grief. But Swanhild saw her and followed,
+coming on her as she sat watching the water thunder down the mighty cleft.
+Presently Swanhild&rsquo;s shadow fell athwart her, and Gudruda looked up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What wouldst thou with me, Swanhild?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;Art thou
+come to mock my grief?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, foster-sister, for then I must mock my own. I come to mix my tears
+with thine. See, we loved Eric, thou and I, and Eric is dead. Let our hate be
+buried in his grave, whence neither may draw him back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda looked upon her coldly, for nothing could stir her now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get thee gone,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Weep thine own tears and leave me
+to weep mine. Not with thee will I mourn Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild frowned and bit her lip. &ldquo;I will not come to thee with words of
+peace a second time, my rival,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Eric is dead, but my
+hate that was born of Eric&rsquo;s love for thee lives on and grows, and its
+flower shall be thy death, Gudruda!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now that Brighteyes is dead, I would fain follow on his path: so, if
+thou listest, throw the gates wide,&rdquo; Gudruda answered, and heeded her no
+more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild went, but not far. On the further side of a knoll of grass she flung
+herself to earth and grieved as her fierce heart might. She shed no tears, but
+sat silently, looking with empty eyes adown the past, and onward to the future,
+and finding no good therein.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Gudruda wept as the weight of her loss pressed in upon her&mdash;wept heavy
+silent tears and cried in her heart to Eric who was gone&mdash;cried to death
+to come upon her and bring her sleep or Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So she sat and so she grieved till, quite outworn with sorrow, sleep stole upon
+her and she dreamed. Gudruda dreamed that she was dead and that she sat nigh to
+the golden door that is in Odin&rsquo;s house at Valhalla, by which the
+warriors pass and repass for ever. There she sat from age to age, listening to
+the thunder of ten thousand thousand tramping feet, and watching the fierce
+faces of the chosen as they marched out in armies to do battle in the meads.
+And as she sat, at length a one-eyed man, clad in gleaming garments, drew near
+and spoke to her. He was glorious to look on, and old, and she knew him for
+Odin the Allfather.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whom seekest thou, maid Gudruda?&rdquo; he asked, and the voice he spoke
+with was the voice of waters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I seek Eric Brighteyes,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;who passed hither a
+thousand years ago, and for love of whom I am heart-broken.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur&rsquo;s son?&rdquo; quoth Odin. &ldquo;I
+know him well; no brisker warrior enters at Valhalla&rsquo;s doors, and none
+shall do more service at the coming of grey wolf Fenrir.[*] Pass on and leave
+him to his glory and his God.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] The foe destined to bring destruction on the Norse gods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, in her dream, she wept sore, and prayed of Odin by the name of Freya that
+he would give Eric to her for a little space.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What wilt thou pay, then, maid Gudruda?&rdquo; said Odin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My life,&rdquo; she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;for a night Eric shall be thine. Then die,
+and let thy death be his cause of death.&rdquo; And Odin sang this song:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Now, corse-choosing Daughters, hearken<br />
+To the dread Allfather&rsquo;s word:<br />
+When the gale of spears&rsquo; breath gathers<br />
+Count not Eric midst the slain,<br />
+Till Brighteyen once hath slumbered,<br />
+Wedded, at Gudruda&rsquo;s side&mdash;<br />
+Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;<br />
+Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Gudruda awoke, but in her ears the mighty waters still seemed to speak with
+Odin&rsquo;s voice, saying:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;<br />
+Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She awoke from that fey sleep, and looked upwards, and lo! before her, with
+shattered shield and all besmeared with war&rsquo;s red rain, stood gold-helmed
+Eric. There he stood, great and beautiful to see, and she looked on him
+trembling and amazed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it indeed thou, Eric, or is it yet my dream?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am no dream, surely,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but why lookest thou
+thus on me, Gudruda?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rose slowly. &ldquo;Methought,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;methought that thou
+wast dead at the hand of Skallagrim.&rdquo; And with a great cry she fell into
+his arms and lay there sobbing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a sweet sight thus to see Gudruda the Fair, her head of gold pillowed on
+Eric&rsquo;s war-stained byrnie, her dark eyes afloat with tears of joy; but
+not so thought Swanhild, watching. She shook in jealous rage, then crept away,
+and hid herself where she could see no more, lest she should be smitten with
+madness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whence camest thou? ah! whence camest thou?&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+&ldquo;I thought thee dead, my love; but now I dreamed that I prayed Odin, and
+he spared thee to me for a little.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, and that he hath, though hardly,&rdquo; and he told her all that
+had happened, and how, as he rode with Skallagrim, who yet sat yonder on his
+horse, he caught sight of a woman seated on the grass and knew the colour of
+the cloak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Gudruda kissed him for very joy, and they were happy each with
+each&mdash;for of all things that are sweet on earth, there is nothing more
+sweet than this: to find him we loved, and thought dead and cold, alive and at
+our side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so they talked and were very glad with the gladness of youth and love, till
+Eric said he must on to Middalhof before the light failed, for he could not
+come on horseback the way that Gudruda took, but must ride round the shoulder
+of the hill; and, moreover, he was spent with toil and hunger, and Skallagrim
+grew weary of waiting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go!&rdquo; said Gudruda; &ldquo;I will be there presently!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he kissed her and went, and Swanhild saw the kiss and saw him go.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;hast thou had thy fill of
+kissing?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not altogether,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They rode a while in silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought the maid seemed very fair!&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There are women less favoured, Skallagrim.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rich bait for mighty fish!&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;This I tell
+thee: that, strive as thou mayest against thy fate, that maid will be thy bane
+and mine also.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Things foredoomed will happen,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but if thou
+fearest a maid, the cure is easy: depart from my company.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who was the other?&rdquo; asked the Baresark&mdash;&ldquo;she who crept
+and peered, listened, then crept back again, hid her face in her hands, and
+talked with a grey wolf that came to her like a dog?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That must have been Swanhild,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;but I did not see
+her. Ever does she hide like a rat in the thatch, and as for the wolf, he must
+be her Familiar; for, like Groa, her mother, Swanhild plays much with
+witchcraft. Now I will away back to Gudruda, for my heart misdoubts me of this
+matter. Stay thou here till I come, Lambstail!&rdquo; And Eric turns and
+gallops back to the head of Goldfoss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Eric left her, Gudruda drew yet nearer to the edge of the mighty falls,
+and seated herself on their very brink. Her breast was full of joy, and there
+she sat and let the splendour of the night and the greatness of the rushing
+sounds sink into her heart. Yonder shone the setting sun, poised, as it were,
+on Westman&rsquo;s distant peaks, and here sped the waters, and by that path
+Eric had come back to her. Yea, and there on Sheep-saddle was the road that he
+had trod down Goldfoss; and but now he had slain one Baresark and won another
+to be his thrall, and they two alone had smitten the company of Ospakar, and
+come thence with honour and but little harmed. Surely no such man as Eric had
+ever lived&mdash;none so fair and strong and tender; and she was right happy in
+his love! She stretched out her arms towards him whom but an hour gone she had
+thought dead, but who had lived to come back to her with honour, and blessed
+his beloved name, and laughed aloud in her joyousness of heart, calling:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Eric! Eric!</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Swanhild, creeping behind her, did not laugh. She heard Gudruda&rsquo;s
+voice and guessed Gudruda&rsquo;s gladness, and jealousy arose within her and
+rent her. Should this fair rival live to take her joy from her?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what sayest thou?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+See, now, if Gudruda were gone, if she rolled a corpse into those boiling
+waters, Eric might yet be hers; or, if he was not hers, yet Gudruda&rsquo;s he
+could never be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy counsel?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Right on the brink of the great gulf sat Gudruda. One stroke and all would be
+ended. Eric had gone; there was no eye to see&mdash;none save the Grey
+Wolf&rsquo;s; there was no tongue to tell the deed that might be done. Who
+could call her to account? The Gods! Who were the Gods? What were the Gods?
+Were they not dreams? There were no Gods save the Gods of Evil&mdash;the Gods
+she knew and communed with.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy rede?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There sat Gudruda, laughing in the triumph of her joy, with the sunset-glow
+shining on her beauty, and there, behind her, Swanhild crept&mdash;crept like a
+fox upon his sleeping prey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now she is there&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>I hear thee, Grey Wolf! Back to my breast, Grey Wolf!</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Surely Gudruda heard something? She half turned her head, then again fell to
+calling aloud to the waters:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric! beloved Eric!&mdash;ah! is there ever a light like the light of
+thine eyes&mdash;is there ever a joy like the joy of thy kiss?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild heard, and her springs of mercy froze. Hate and fury entered into her.
+She rose upon her knees and gathered up her strength:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Seek, then, thy joy in Goldfoss,&rdquo; she cried aloud, and with all
+her force she thrust.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda fell a fathom or more, then, with a cry, she clutched wildly at a
+little ledge of rock, and hung there, her feet resting on the shelving bank.
+Thirty fathoms down swirled and poured and rolled the waters of the Golden
+Falls. A fathom above, red in the red light of evening, lowered the pitiless
+face of Swanhild. Gudruda looked beneath her and saw. Pale with agony she
+looked up and saw, but she said naught.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let go, my rival; let go!&rdquo; cried Swanhild: &ldquo;there is none to
+help thee, and none to tell thy tale. Let go, I say, and seek thy marriage-bed
+in Goldfoss!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Gudruda clung on and gazed upwards with white face and piteous eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What! art thou so fain of a moment&rsquo;s life?&rdquo; said Swanhild.
+&ldquo;Then I will save thee from thyself, for it must be ill to suffer
+thus!&rdquo; and she ran to seek a rock. Now she finds one and, staggering
+beneath its weight to the brink of the gulf, peers over. Still Gudruda hangs.
+Space yawns beneath her, the waters roar in her ears, the red sky glows above.
+She sees Swanhild come and shrieks aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric is there, though Swanhild hears him not, for the sound of his
+horse&rsquo;s galloping feet is lost in the roar of waters. But that cry comes
+to his ears, he sees the poised rock, and all grows clear to him. He leaps from
+his horse, and even as she looses the stone, clutches Swanhild&rsquo;s kirtle
+and hurls her back. The rock bounds sideways and presently is lost in the
+waters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric looks over. He sees Gudruda&rsquo;s white face gleaming in the gloom. Down
+he leaps upon the ledge, though this is no easy thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hold fast! I come; hold fast!&rdquo; he cries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can no more,&rdquo; gasps Gudruda, and one hand slips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric grasps the rock and, stretching downward, grips her wrist; just as her
+hold loosens he grips it, and she swings loose, her weight hanging on his arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now he must needs lift her up and that with one hand, for the ledge is narrow
+and he dare not loose his hold of the rock above. She swings over the great
+gulf and she is senseless as one dead. He gathers all his mighty strength and
+lifts. His feet slip a little, then catch, and once more Gudruda swings. The
+sweat bursts out upon his forehead and his blood drums through him. Now it must
+be, or not at all. Again he lifts and his muscles strain and crack, and she
+lies beside him on the narrow ledge!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All is not yet done. The brink of the cleft is the height of a man above him.
+There he must lay her, for he may not leave her to find aid, lest she should
+wake and roll into the chasm. Loosing his hold of the cliff, he turns, facing
+the rock, and, bending over Gudruda, twists his hands in her kirtle below the
+breast and above the knee. Then once more Eric puts out his might and draws her
+up to the level of his breast, and rests. Again with all his force he lifts her
+above the crest of his helm and throws her forward, so that now she lies upon
+the brink of the great cliff. He almost falls backward at the effort, but,
+clutching the rock, he saves himself, and with a struggle gains her side, and
+lies there, panting like a wearied hound of chase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of all trials of strength that ever were put upon his might, Eric was wont to
+say, this lifting of Gudruda was the greatest; for she was no light woman, and
+there was little to stand on and almost nothing to cling to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently Brighteyes rose and peered at Gudruda through the gloom. She still
+swooned. Then he gazed about him&mdash;but Swanhild, the witchgirl, was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he took Gudruda in his arms, and, leading the horse, stumbled through the
+darkness, calling on Skallagrim. The Baresark answered, and presently his large
+form was seen looming in the gloom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric told his tale in few words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The ways of womankind are evil,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;but of
+all the deeds that I have known done at their hands, this is the worst. It had
+been well to hurl the wolf-witch from the cliff.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, well,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but that song must yet be
+sung.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now dimly lighted of the rising moon by turns they bore Gudruda down the
+mountain side, till at length, utterly fordone, they saw the fires of
+Middalhof.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>CHAPTER X<br />
+HOW ASMUND SPOKE WITH SWANHILD</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now as the days went, though Atli&rsquo;s ship was bound for sea, she did not
+sail, and it came about that the Earl sank ever deeper in the toils of
+Swanhild. He called to mind many wise saws, but these availed him little: for
+when Love rises like the sun, wisdom melts like the mists. So at length it came
+to this, that on the day of Eric&rsquo;s coming back, Atli went to Asmund the
+Priest, and asked him for the hand of Swanhild the Fatherless in marriage.
+Asmund heard and was glad, for he knew well that things went badly between
+Swanhild and Gudruda, and it seemed good to him that seas should be set between
+them. Nevertheless, he thought it honest to warn the Earl that Swanhild was
+apart from other women.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou dost great honour, earl, to my foster-daughter and my house,&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;Still, it behoves me to move gently in this matter. Swanhild is
+fair, and she shall not go hence a wife undowered. But I must tell thee this:
+that her ways are dark and secret, and strange and fiery are her moods, and I
+think that she will bring evil on the man who weds her. Now, I love thee, Atli,
+were it only for our youth&rsquo;s sake, and thou art not altogether fit to
+mate with such a maid, for age has met thee on thy way. For, as thou wouldst
+say, youth draws to youth as the tide to the shore, and falls away from eld as
+the wave from the rock. Think, then: is it well that thou shouldst take her,
+Atli?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have thought much and overmuch,&rdquo; answered the Earl, stroking his
+grey beard; &ldquo;but ships old and new drive before a gale.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Atli, and the new ship rides, where the old one founders.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A true rede, a heavy rede, Asmund; yet I am minded to sail this sea,
+and, if it sink me&mdash;well, I have known fair weather! Great longing has got
+hold of me, and I think the maid looks gently on me, and that things may yet go
+well between us. I have many things to give such as women love. At the least,
+if thou givest me thy good word, I will risk it, Asmund: for the bold thrower
+sometimes wins the stake. Only I say this, that, if Swanhild is unwilling, let
+there be an end of my wooing, for I do not wish to take a bride who turns from
+my grey hairs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asmund said that it should be so, and they made an end of talking just as the
+light faded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Asmund went out seeking Swanhild, and presently he met her near the stead.
+He could not see her face, and that was well, for it was not good to look on,
+but her mien was wondrous wild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where hast thou been, Swanhild?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mourning Eric Brighteyes,&rdquo; she made answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is meeter for Gudruda to mourn over Eric than for thee, for her loss
+is heavy,&rdquo; Asmund said sternly. &ldquo;What hast thou to do with
+Eric?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Little, or much; or all&mdash;read it as thou wilt, foster-father.
+Still, all wept for are not lost, nor all who are lost wept for.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Little do I know of thy dark redes,&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;Where is
+Gudruda now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;High is she or low, sleeping or perchance awakened: naught reck I. She
+also mourned for Eric, and we went nigh to mingling tears&mdash;near together
+were brown curls and golden,&rdquo; and she laughed aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art surely fey, thou evil girl!&rdquo; said Asmund.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, foster-father, fey: yet is this but the first of my feydom. Here
+starts the road that I must travel, and my feet shall be red ere the
+journey&rsquo;s done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Leave thy dark talk,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;for to me it is as the
+wind&rsquo;s song, and listen: a good thing has befallen thee&mdash;ay, good
+beyond thy deserving.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it so? Well, I stand greatly in need of good. What is thy tidings,
+foster-father?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This: Atli the Earl asks thee in marriage, and he is a mighty man, well
+honoured in his own land, and set higher, moreover, than I had looked for
+thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; answered Swanhild, &ldquo;set like the snow above the fells,
+set in the years that long are dead. Nay, foster-father, this white-bearded
+dotard is no mate for me. What! shall I mix my fire with his frost, my
+breathing youth with the creeping palsy of his age? Never! If Swanhild weds she
+weds not so, for it is better to go maiden to the grave than thus to shrink and
+wither at the touch of eld. Now is Atli&rsquo;s wooing sped, and there&rsquo;s
+an end.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asmund heard and grew wroth, for the matter seemed strange to him; nor are
+maidens wont thus to put aside the word of those set over them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no end,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I will not be answered thus by a
+girl who lives upon my bounty. It is my rede that thou weddest Atli, or else
+thou goest hence. I have loved thee, and for that love&rsquo;s sake I have
+borne thy wickedness, thy dark secret ways, and evil words; but I will be
+crossed no more by thee, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou wouldst drive me hence with Groa my mother, though perchance thou
+hast yet more reason to hold me dear, foster-father. Fear not: I will
+go&mdash;perhaps further than thou thinkest,&rdquo; and once more Swanhild
+laughed, and passed from him into the darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Asmund stood looking after her. &ldquo;Truly,&rdquo; he said in his heart,
+&ldquo;ill deeds are arrows that pierce him who shot them. I have sowed evilly,
+and now I reap the harvest. What means she with her talk of Gudruda and the
+rest?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now as he thought, he saw men and horses draw near, and one man, whose helm
+gleamed in the moonlight, bore something in his arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who passes?&rdquo; he called.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s
+daughter,&rdquo; answered a voice; &ldquo;who art thou?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Asmund the Priest sprang forward, most glad at heart, for he never thought
+to see Eric again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Welcome, and thrice welcome art thou, Eric,&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;for,
+know, we deemed thee dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have lately gone near to death, lord,&rdquo; said Eric, for he knew
+the voice; &ldquo;but I am hale and whole, though somewhat weary.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What has come to pass, then?&rdquo; asked Asmund, &ldquo;and why holdest
+thou Gudruda in thy arms? Is the maid dead?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, she does but swoon. See, even now she stirs,&rdquo; and as he spake
+Gudruda awoke, shuddering, and with a little cry threw her arms about the neck
+of Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He set her down and comforted her, then once more turned to Asmund:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Three things have come about,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;First, I have slain
+one Baresark, and won another to be my thrall, and for him I crave thy peace,
+for he has served me well. Next, we two were set upon by Ospakar Blacktooth and
+his fellowship, and, fighting for our hands, have wounded Ospakar, slain Mord
+his son, and six other men of his following.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is good news and bad,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;since Ospakar will
+ask a great weregild[*] for these men, and thou wilt be outlawed, Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] The penalty for manslaying.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That may happen, lord. There is time enough to think of it. Now there
+are other tidings to tell. Coming to the head of Goldfoss I found Gudruda, my
+betrothed, mourning my death, and spoke with her. Afterwards I left her, and
+presently returned again, to see her hanging over the gulf, and Swanhild
+hurling rocks upon her to crush her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;These are tidings in truth,&rdquo; said Asmund&mdash;&ldquo;such tidings
+as my heart feared! Is this true, Gudruda?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is true, my father,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, trembling. &ldquo;As I
+sat on the brink of Goldfoss, Swanhild crept behind me and thrust me into the
+gulf. There I clung above the waters, and she brought a rock to hurl upon me,
+when suddenly I saw Eric&rsquo;s face, and after that my mind left me and I can
+tell no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Asmund grew as one mad. He plucked at his beard and stamped on the ground.
+&ldquo;Maid though she be,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;yet shall Swanhild&rsquo;s
+back be broken on the Stone of Doom for a witch and a murderess, and her body
+hurled into the pool of faithless women, and the earth will be well rid of
+her!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda looked up and smiled: &ldquo;It would be ill to wreak such a
+vengeance on her, father,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;and this would also bring the
+greatest shame on thee, and all our house. I am saved, by the mercy of the Gods
+and the might of Eric&rsquo;s arm, and this is my counsel: that nothing be told
+of this tale, but that Swanhild be sent away where she can harm us no
+more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She must be sent to the grave, then,&rdquo; said Asmund, and fell to
+thinking. Presently he spoke again: &ldquo;Bid yon man fall back, I would speak
+with you twain,&rdquo; and Skallagrim went grumbling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken now, Eric and Gudruda: only an hour ago hath Atli the Good asked
+Swanhild of me in marriage. But now I met Swanhild here, and her mien was wild.
+Still, I spoke of the matter to her, and she would have none of it. Now, this
+is my counsel: that choice be given to Swanhild, either that she go hence
+Atli&rsquo;s wife, or take her trial in the Doom-ring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That will be bad for the Earl then,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Methinks he
+is too good a man to be played on thus.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Bairn first, then friend</i>,&rdquo; answered Asmund.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I will tell thee something that, till this hour, I have hidden from
+all, for it is my shame. This Swanhild is my daughter, and therefore I have
+loved her and put away her evil deeds, and she is half-sister to thee, Gudruda.
+See, then, how sore is my straight, who must avenge daughter upon
+daughter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Knows thy son Björn of this?&rdquo; asked Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;None knew it till this hour, except Groa and I.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yet I have feared it long, father,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;and
+therefore I have also borne with Swanhild, though she hates me much and has
+striven hard to draw my betrothed from me. Now thou canst only take one
+counsel, and it is: to give choice to Swanhild of these two things, though it
+is unworthy that Atli should be deceived, and at the best little good can come
+of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yet it must be done, for honour is often slain of heavy need,&rdquo;
+said Asmund. &ldquo;But we must first swear this Baresark thrall of thine,
+though little faith lives in Baresark&rsquo;s breast.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric called to Skallagrim and charged him strictly that he should tell
+nothing of Swanhild, and of the wolf that he saw by her, and of how Gudruda was
+found hanging over the gulf.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fear not,&rdquo; growled the Baresark, &ldquo;my tongue is now my
+master&rsquo;s. What is it to me if women do their wickedness one on another?
+Let them work magic, hate and slay by stealth, so shall evil be lessened in the
+world.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peace!&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;if anything of this passes thy lips thou
+art no longer a thrall of mine, and I give thee up to the men of thy
+quarter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I cleave that wolf&rsquo;s head of thine down to thy hawk&rsquo;s
+eyes; but, otherwise, I give thee peace, and will hold thee from harm,
+wood-dweller as thou art,&rdquo; said Asmund.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Baresark laughed: &ldquo;My hands will hold my head against ten such
+mannikins as thou art, Priest. There was never but one man who might overcome
+me in fair fight and there he stands, and his bidding is my law. So waste no
+words and make not niddering threats against greater folk,&rdquo; and he
+slouched back to his horse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A mighty man and a rough,&rdquo; said Asmund, looking after him;
+&ldquo;I like his looks little.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Natheless a strong in battle,&rdquo; quoth Eric; &ldquo;had he not been
+at my back some six hours gone, by now the ravens had torn out these eyes of
+mine. Therefore, for my sake, bear with him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asmund said it should be so, and then they passed on to the stead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here Eric stripped off his harness, washed, and bound up his wounds. Then,
+followed by Skallagrim, axe in hand, he came into the hall as men made ready to
+sit at meat. Now the tale of the mighty deeds that he had done, except that of
+the saving of Gudruda, had gone abroad, and as Brighteyes came all men rose and
+with one voice shouted till the roof of the great hall rocked:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Welcome, Eric Brighteyes, thou glory of the south!</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Only Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, bit his hand, and did not shout, for he hated
+Eric because of the fame that he had won.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brighteyes stood still till the clamour died, then said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Much noise for little deeds, brethren. It is true that I overthrew the
+Mosfell Baresarks. See, here is one,&rdquo; and he turned to Skallagrim;
+&ldquo;I strangled him in my arms on Mosfell&rsquo;s brink, and that was
+something of a deed. Then he swore fealty to me, and we are blood-brethren now,
+and therefore I ask peace for him, comrades&mdash;even from those whom he has
+wronged or whose kin he has slain. I know this, that when thereafter we stood
+back to back and met the company of Ospakar Blacktooth, who came to slay
+us&mdash;ay, and Asmund also, and bear away Gudruda to be his wife&mdash;he
+warred right gallantly, till seven of their band lay stiff on Horse-Head
+Heights, overthrown of us, and among them Mord, Blacktooth&rsquo;s son; and
+Ospakar himself went thence sore smitten of this Skallagrim. Therefore, for my
+sake, do no harm to this man who was Baresark, but now is my thrall; and,
+moreover, I beg the aid and friendship of all men of this quarter in those
+suits that will be laid against me at the Althing for these slayings, which I
+hereby give out as done by my hand, and by the hand of Skallagrim Lambstail,
+the Baresark.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At these words all men shouted again; but Atli the Earl sprang from the high
+seat where Asmund had placed him, and, coming to Eric, kissed him, and, drawing
+a gold chain from his neck, flung it about the neck of Eric, crying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art a glorious man, Eric Brighteyes. I thought the world had no
+more of such a breed. Listen to my bidding: come thou to the earldom in Orkneys
+and be a son to me, and I will give thee all good gifts, and, when I die, thou
+shalt sit in my seat after me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric thought of Swanhild, who must go from Iceland as wife to Atli, and
+answered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou doest me great honour, Earl, but this may not be. Where the fir is
+planted, there it must grow and fall. Iceland I love, and I will stay here
+among my own people till I am driven away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That may well happen, then,&rdquo; said Atli, &ldquo;for be sure Ospakar
+and his kin will not let the matter of these slayings rest, and I think that it
+will not avail thee much that thou smotest for thine own hand. Then, come thou
+and be my man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where the Norns lead there I must follow,&rdquo; said Eric, and sat down
+to meat. Skallagrim sat down also at the side-bench; but men shrank from him,
+and he glowered on them in answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently Gudruda entered, and she seemed pale and faint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he had done eating, Eric drew Gudruda on to his knee, and she sat there,
+resting her golden head upon his breast. But Swanhild did not come into the
+hall, though ever Earl Atli sought her dark face and lovely eyes of blue, and
+he wondered greatly how his wooing had sped. Still, at this time he spoke no
+more of it to Asmund.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Skallagrim drank much ale, and glared about him fiercely; for he had this
+fault, that at times he was drunken. In front of him were two thralls of
+Asmund&rsquo;s; they were brothers, and large-made men, and they watched
+Asmund&rsquo;s sheep upon the fells in winter. These two also grew drunk and
+jeered at Skallagrim, asking him what atonement he would make for those ewes of
+Asmund&rsquo;s that he had stolen last Yule, and how it came to pass that he, a
+Baresark, had been overthrown of an unarmed man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim bore their gibes for a space as he drank on, but suddenly he rose
+and rushed at them, and, seizing a man&rsquo;s throat in either hand, thrust
+them to the ground beneath him and nearly choked them there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric ran down the hall, and, putting out his strength, tore the Baresark
+from them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This then is thy peacefulness, thou wolf!&rdquo; Eric cried. &ldquo;Thou
+art drunk!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; growled Skallagrim, &ldquo;ale is many a man&rsquo;s
+doom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have a care that it is not thine and mine, then!&rdquo; said Eric.
+&ldquo;Go, sleep; and know that, if I see thee thus once more, I see thee not
+again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+But after this men jeered no more at Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric&rsquo;s thrall.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap11"></a>CHAPTER XI<br />
+HOW SWANHILD BID FAREWELL TO ERIC</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now all this while Asmund sat deep in thought; but when, at length, men were
+sunk in sleep, he took a candle of fat and passed to the shut bed where
+Swanhild slept alone. She lay on her bed, and her curling hair was all about
+her. She was awake, for the light gleamed in her blue eyes, and on a naked
+knife that was on the bed beside her, half hidden by her hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What wouldst thou, foster-father?&rdquo; she asked, rising in the couch.
+Asmund closed the curtains, then looked at her sternly and spoke in a low
+voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art fair to be so vile a thing, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;Who now would have dreamed that heart of thine could talk with goblins
+and with were-wolves&mdash;that those eyes of thine could bear to look on
+murder and those white hands find strength to do the sin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She held up her shapely arms and, looking on them, laughed. &ldquo;Would that
+they had been fashioned in a stronger mould,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;May they
+wither in their woman&rsquo;s weakness! else had the deed been done outright.
+Now my crime is as heavy upon me and nothing gained by it. Say what fate for
+me, foster-father&mdash;the Stone of Doom and the pool where faithless women
+lie? Ah, then might Gudruda laugh indeed, and I will not live to hear that
+laugh. See,&rdquo; and she gripped the dagger at her side: &ldquo;along this
+bright edge runs the path to peace and freedom, and, if need be, I will tread
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be silent,&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;This Gudruda, my daughter, whom
+thou wouldst have foully done to death, is thine own sister, and it is she who,
+pitying thee, hath pleaded for thy life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will naught of her pity who have no pity,&rdquo; she answered;
+&ldquo;and this I say to thee who art my father: shame be on thee who hast not
+dared to own thy child!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hadst thou not been my child, Swanhild, and had I not loved thee
+secretly as my child, be sure of this, I had long since driven thee hence; for
+my eyes have been open to much that I have not seemed to see. But at length thy
+wickedness has overcome my love, and I will see thy face no more. Listen: none
+have heard of this shameful deed of thine save those who saw it, and their
+tongues are sealed. Now I give thee choice: wed Atli and go, or stand in the
+Doom-ring and take thy fate.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have I not said, father, while death may be sought otherwise, that I
+will never do this last? Nor will I do the first. I am not all of the tame
+breed of you Iceland folk&mdash;other and quicker blood runs in my veins; nor
+will I be sold in marriage to a dotard as a mare is sold at a market. I have
+answered.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fool! think again, for I go not back upon my word. Wed Atli or
+die&mdash;by thy own hand, if thou wilt&mdash;there I will not gainsay thee;
+or, if thou fearest this, then anon in the Doom-ring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild covered her eyes with her hands and shook the long hair about her
+face, and she seemed wondrous fair to Asmund the Priest who watched. And as she
+sat thus, it came into her mind that marriage is not the end of a young
+maid&rsquo;s life&mdash;that old husbands have been known to die, and that she
+might rule this Atli and his earldom and become a rich and honoured woman,
+setting her sails in such fashion that when the wind turned it would fill them.
+Otherwise she must die&mdash;ay, die shamed and leave Gudruda with her love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly she slipped from the bed to the floor of the chamber, and, clasping
+the knees of Asmund, looked up through the meshes of her hair, while tears
+streamed from her beautiful eyes:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have sinned,&rdquo; she sobbed&mdash;&ldquo;I have sinned greatly
+against thee and my sister. Hearken: I was mad with love of Eric, whom from a
+child I have turned to, and Gudruda is fairer than I and she took him from me.
+Most of all was I mad this night when I wrought the deed of shame, for ill
+things counselled me&mdash;things that I did not call; and oh, I thank the
+Gods&mdash;if there are Gods&mdash;that Gudruda died not at my hand. See now,
+father, I put this evil from me and tear Eric from my heart,&rdquo; and she
+made as though she rent her bosom&mdash;&ldquo;I will wed Atli, and be a good
+housewife to him, and I crave but this of Gudruda: that she forgive me her
+wrong; for it was not done of my will, but of my madness, and of the driving of
+those whom my mother taught me to know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asmund listened and the springs of his love thawed within him. &ldquo;Now thou
+dost take good counsel,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and of this be sure, that so
+long as thou art in that mood none shall harm thee; and for Gudruda, she is the
+most gentle of women, and it may well be that she will put away thy sin. So
+weep no more, and have no more dealings with thy Finnish witchcraft, but sleep;
+and to-morrow I will bear thy word to Atli, for his ship is bound and thou must
+swiftly be made a wife.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went out, bearing the light with him; but Swanhild rose from the ground and
+sat on the edge of the bed, staring into the darkness and shuddering from time
+to time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall soon be made his wife,&rdquo; she murmured, &ldquo;who would be
+but one man&rsquo;s wife&mdash;and methinks I shall soon be made a widow also.
+Thou wilt have me, dotard&mdash;take me and thy fate! Well, well; better to wed
+an Earl than to be shamed and stretched across the Doom-stone. Oh, weak arms
+that failed me at my need, no more will I put trust in you! When next I wound,
+it shall be with the tongue; when next I strive to slay, it shall be by
+another&rsquo;s hand. Curses on thee, thou ill counseller of darkness, who
+didst betray me at the last! Is it for this that I worshipped thee and swore
+the oath?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+The morning came, and at the first light Asmund sought the Earl. His heart was
+heavy because of the guile that his tongue must practise, and his face was dark
+as a winter dawn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What news, Asmund?&rdquo; asked Atli. &ldquo;<i>Early tidings are bad
+tidings</i>, so runs the saw, and thy looks give weight to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not altogether bad, Earl. Swanhild gives herself to thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of her own will, Asmund?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, of her own will. But I have warned thee of her temper.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Her temper! Little hangs to a maid&rsquo;s temper. Once a wife and it
+will melt in softness like the snow when summer comes. These are glad tidings,
+comrade, and methinks I grow young again beneath the breath of them. Why art
+thou so glum then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is something that must yet be told of Swanhild,&rdquo; said
+Asmund. &ldquo;She is called the Fatherless, but, if thou wilt have the truth,
+why here it is for thee&mdash;she is my daughter, born out of wedlock, and I
+know not how that will please thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Atli laughed aloud, and his bright eyes shone in his wrinkled face. &ldquo;It
+pleases me well, Asmund, for then the maid is sprung from a sound stock. The
+name of the Priest of Middalhof is famous far south of Iceland; and never that
+Iceland bred a comelier girl. Is that all?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One more thing, Earl. This I charge thee: watch thy wife, and hold her
+back from witchcraft and from dealings with evil things and trolls of darkness.
+She is of Finnish blood and the women of the Finns are much given to such
+wicked work.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I set little store by witchwork, goblins and their kin,&rdquo; said
+Atli. &ldquo;I doubt me much of their power, and I shall soon wean Swanhild
+from such ways, if indeed she practise them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they fell to talking of Swanhild&rsquo;s dower, and that was not small.
+Afterwards Asmund sought Eric and Gudruda, and told them what had come to pass,
+and they were glad at the news, though they grieved for Atli the Earl. And when
+Swanhild met Gudruda, she came to her humbly, and humbly kissed her hand, and
+with tears craved pardon of her evil doing, saying that she had been mad; nor
+did Gudruda withhold it, for of all women she was the gentlest and most
+forgiving. But to Eric, Swanhild said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wedding-feast must be held on the third day from this, for Atli would sail
+on that same day, since his people wearied of waiting and his ship might lie
+bound no longer. Blithe was Atli the Earl, and Swanhild was all changed, for
+now she seemed the gentlest of maids, and, as befitted one about to be made a
+wife, moved through the house with soft words and downcast eyes. But
+Skallagrim, watching her, bethought him of the grey wolf that he had seen by
+Goldfoss, and this seemed not well to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be bad now,&rdquo; he said to Eric, as they rode to Coldback,
+&ldquo;to stand in yon old earl&rsquo;s shoes. This woman&rsquo;s weather has
+changed too fast, and after such a calm there&rsquo;ll come a storm indeed. I
+am now minded of Thorunna, for she went just so the day before she gave herself
+to Ospakar, and me to shame and bonds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Talk not of the raven till you hear his croak,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is on the wing, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric came to Coldback in the Marsh, and Saevuna his mother and Unna,
+Thorod&rsquo;s daughter, the betrothed of Asmund, were glad to welcome him; for
+the tidings of his mighty deeds and of the overthrow of Ospakar and the slaying
+of Mord were noised far and wide. But at Skallagrim Lambstail they looked
+askance. Still, when they heard of those things that he had wrought on
+Horse-Head Heights, they welcomed him for his deed&rsquo;s sake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric sat two nights at Coldback, and on the second day Saevuna his mother and
+Unna rode thence with their servants to the wedding-feast of Swanhild the
+Fatherless. But Eric stopped at Coldback that night, saying that he would be at
+Middalhof within two hours of sunrise, for he must talk with a shepherd who
+came from the fells.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saevuna and her company came to Middalhof and was asked, first by Gudruda, then
+by Swanhild, why Brighteyes tarried. She answered that he would be there early
+on the morrow. Next morning, before it was light, Eric girded on Whitefire,
+took horse and rode from Coldback alone, for he would not bring Skallagrim,
+fearing lest he should get drunk at the feast and shed some man&rsquo;s blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Swanhild&rsquo;s wedding-day; but she greeted it with little
+lightsomeness of heart, and her eyes knew no sleep that night, though they were
+heavy with tears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the first light she rose, and, gliding from the house, walked through the
+heavy dew down the path by which Eric must draw near, for she desired to speak
+with him. Gudruda also rose a while after, though she did not know this, and
+followed on the same path, for she would greet her lover at his coming.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now three furlongs or more from the stead stood a vetch stack, and Swanhild
+waited on the further side of this stack. Presently she heard a sound of
+singing come from behind the shoulder of the fell and of the tramp of a
+horse&rsquo;s hoofs. Then she saw the golden wings of Eric&rsquo;s helm all
+ablaze with the sunlight as he rode merrily along, and great bitterness laid
+hold of her that Eric could be of such a joyous mood on the day when she who
+loved him must be made the wife of another man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently he was before her, and Swanhild stepped from the shadow of the stack
+and laid her hand upon his horse&rsquo;s bridle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric,&rdquo; she said humbly and with bowed head, &ldquo;Gudruda sleeps
+yet. Canst thou, then, find time to hearken to my words?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He frowned and said: &ldquo;Methinks, Swanhild, it would be better if thou
+gavest thy words to him who is thy lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She let the bridle-rein drop from her hands. &ldquo;I am answered,&rdquo; she
+said; &ldquo;ride on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now pity stirred in Eric&rsquo;s heart, for Swanhild&rsquo;s mien was most
+heavy, and he leaped down from his horse. &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;speak on, if thou hast anything to tell me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have this to tell thee, Eric; that now, before we part for ever, I am
+come to ask thy pardon for my ill-doing&mdash;ay, and to wish all joy to thee
+and thy fair love,&rdquo; and she sobbed and choked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak no more of it, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but let thy good
+deeds cover up the ill, which are not small; so thou shalt be happy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him strangely, and her face was white with pain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How then are we so differently fashioned that thou, Eric, canst prate to
+me of happiness when my heart is racked with grief? Oh, Eric, I blame thee not,
+for thou hast not wrought this evil on me willingly; but I say this: that my
+heart is dead, as I would that I were dead. See those flowers: they smell
+sweet&mdash;for me they have no odour. Look on the light leaping from Coldback
+to the sea, from the sea to Westman Isles, and from the Westman crown of rocks
+far into the wide heavens above. It is beautiful, is it not? Yet I tell thee,
+Eric, that now to my eyes howling winter darkness is every whit as fair. Joy is
+dead within me, music&rsquo;s but a jangled madness in my ears, food hath no
+savour on my tongue, my youth is sped ere my dawn is day. Nothing is left to
+me, Eric, save this fair body that thou didst scorn, and the dreams which I may
+gather from my hours of scanty sleep, and such shame as befalls a loveless
+bride.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak not so, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said, and clasped her by the hand,
+for, though he loathed her wickedness, being soft-hearted and but young, it
+grieved him to hear her words and see the anguish of her mind. For it is so
+with men, that they are easily moved by the pleading of a fair woman who loves
+them, even though they love her not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yea, I will speak out all my mind before I seal it up for ever. See,
+Eric, this is my state and thou hast set this crown of sorrow on my brows: and
+thou comest singing down the fell, and I go weeping o&rsquo;er the sea! I am
+not all so ill at heart. It was love of thee that drove me down to sin, as love
+of thee might otherwise have lifted me to holiness. But, loving thee as thou
+seest, this day I wed a dotard, and go his chattel and his bride across the
+sea, and leave thee singing on the fell, and by thy side her who is my foe.
+Thou hast done great deeds, Brighteyes, and still greater shalt thou do; yet
+but as echoes they shall reach my ears. Thou wilt be to me as one dead, for it
+is Gudruda&rsquo;s to bind the byrnie on thy breast when thou goest forth to
+war, and hers to loose the winged helm from thy brow when thou returnest,
+battle-worn and conquering.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild ceased, and choked with grief; then spoke again:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So now farewell; doubtless I weary thee, and&mdash;Gudruda waits. Nay,
+look not on my foolish tears: they are the heritage of woman, of naught else is
+she sure! While I live, Eric, morn by morn the thought of thee shall come to
+wake me as the sun wakes yon snowy peak, and night by night thy memory shall
+pass as at eve he passes from the valleys, but to dawn again in dreams. For,
+Eric, &lsquo;tis thee I wed to-day&mdash;at heart I am thy bride, thine and
+thine only; and when shalt thou find a wife who holds thee so dear as that
+Swanhild whom once thou knewest? So now farewell! Yes, this time thou shalt
+kiss away my tears; then let them stream for ever. Thus, Eric! and thus! and
+thus! do I take farewell of thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now she clung about his neck, gazing on him with great dewy eyes till
+things grew strange and dim, and he must kiss her if only for her love and
+tender beauty&rsquo;s sake. And so he kissed, and it chanced that as they clung
+thus, Gudruda, passing by this path to give her betrothed greeting, came upon
+them and stood astonished. Then she turned and, putting her hands to her head,
+fled back swiftly to the stead, and waited there, great anger burning in her
+heart; for Gudruda had this fault, that she was very jealous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric and Swanhild did not see her, and presently they parted, and Swanhild
+wiped her eyes and glided thence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As she drew near the stead she found Gudruda watching.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where hast thou been, Swanhild?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To bid farewell to Brighteyes, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then thou art foolish, for doubtless he thrust thee from him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, Gudruda, he drew me to him. Hearken, I say, thou sister. Vex me
+not, for I go my ways and thou goest thine. Thou art strong and fair, and
+hitherto thou hast overcome me. But I am also fair, and, if I find space to
+strike in, I also have a show of strength. Pray thou that I find not space,
+Gudruda. Now is Eric thine. Perchance one day he may be mine. It lies in the
+lap of the Norns.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fair words from Atli&rsquo;s bride,&rdquo; mocked Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Atli&rsquo;s bride, but never Atli&rsquo;s love!&rdquo; said
+Swanhild, and swept on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A while after Eric rode up. He was shamefaced and vexed at heart, because he
+had yielded thus to Swanhild&rsquo;s beauty, and been melted by her tender
+words and kissed her. Then he saw Gudruda, and at the sight of her all thought
+of Swanhild passed from him, for he loved Gudruda and her alone. He leapt down
+from his horse and ran to her. But, drawn to her full height, she stood with
+dark flashing eyes and fair face set in anger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still, he would have greeted her loverwise; but she lifted her hand and waved
+him back, and fear took hold of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What now, Gudruda?&rdquo; he asked, faltering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What now, Eric?&rdquo; she answered, faltering not. &ldquo;Hast seen
+Swanhild?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yea, I have seen Swanhild. She came to bid farewell to me. What of
+it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What of it? Why &lsquo;<i>thus! and thus! and thus!</i>&rsquo; didst
+thou bid farewell to Atli&rsquo;s bride. Ay, &lsquo;thus and thus,&rsquo; with
+clinging lips and twined arms. Warm and soft was thy farewell kiss to her who
+would have slain me, Brighteyes!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gudruda, thou speakest truth, though how thou sawest I know not. Think
+no ill of it, and scourge me not with words, for, sooth to say, I was melted by
+her grief and the music of her talk.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is shame to thee so to speak of her whom but now thou heldest in
+thine arms. By the grief and the music of the talk of her who would have
+murdered me thou wast melted into kisses, Eric!&mdash;for I saw it with these
+eyes. Knowest thou what I am minded to say to thee? It is this: &lsquo;Go hence
+and see me no more;&rsquo; for I have little wish to cleave to such a
+feather-man, to one so blown about by the first breath of woman&rsquo;s
+tempting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yet, methinks, Gudruda, I have withstood some such winds. I tell thee
+that, hadst thou been in my place, thyself hadst yielded to Swanhild and kissed
+her in farewell, for she was more than woman in that hour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, Eric, I am no weak man to be led astray thus. Yet she is more than
+woman&mdash;troll is she also, that I know; but less than man art thou, Eric,
+thus to fall before her who hates me. Time may come when she shall woo thee
+after a stronger sort, and what wilt thou say to her then, thou who art so
+ready with thy kisses?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will withstand her, Gudruda, for I love thee only, and this is well
+known to thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Truly I know thou lovest me, Eric; but tell me of what worth is this
+love of man that eyes of beauty and tongue of craft may so readily bewray? I
+doubt me of thee, Eric!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, doubt me not, Gudruda. I love thee alone, but I grew soft as wax
+beneath her pleading. My heart consented not, yet I did consent. I have no more
+to say.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda looked on him long and steadfastly. &ldquo;Thy plight is sorry,
+Eric,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and this once I forgive thee. Look to it that
+thou givest me no more cause to doubt thee, for then I shall remember how thou
+didst bid farewell to Swanhild.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will give none,&rdquo; he answered, and would have embraced her; but
+this she would not suffer then, nor for many days after, for she was angry with
+him. But with Swanhild she was still more angry, though she said nothing of it.
+That Swanhild had tried to murder her, Gudruda could forgive, for there she had
+failed; but not that she had won Eric to kiss her, for in this she had
+succeeded well.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap12"></a>CHAPTER XII<br />
+HOW ERIC WAS OUTLAWED AND SAILED A-VIKING</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now the marriage-feast went on, and Swanhild, draped in white and girt about
+with gold, sat by Atli&rsquo;s side upon the high seat. He was fain of her and
+drew her to him, but she looked at him with cold calm eyes in which hate
+lurked. The feast was done, and all the company rode to the sea strand, where
+the Earl&rsquo;s ship lay at anchor. They came there, and Swanhild kissed
+Asmund, and talked a while with Groa, her mother, and bade farewell to all men.
+But she bade no farewell to Eric and to Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why sayest thou no word to these two?&rdquo; asked Atli, her husband.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For this reason, Earl,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;because ere long we
+three shall meet again; but I shall see Asmund, my father, and Groa, my mother,
+no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is an ill saying, wife,&rdquo; said Atli. &ldquo;Methinks thou dost
+foretell their doom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mayhap! And now I will add to my redes, for I foretell <i>thy</i> doom
+also: it is not yet, but it draws on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Atli bethought him of many wise saws, but spoke no more, for it seemed to
+him this was a strange bride that he had wed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They hauled the anchor home, shook out the great sail, and passed away into the
+evening night. But while land could still be seen, Swanhild stood near the
+helm, gazing with her blue eyes upon the lessening coast. Then she passed to
+the hold, and shut herself in alone, and there she stayed, saying that she was
+sick, till at length, after a fair voyage of twenty days, they made the Orkney
+Islands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But all this pleased Atli wondrous ill, yet he dared not cross her mood.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now, in Iceland the time drew on when men must ride to the Althing, and notice
+was given to Eric Brighteyes of many suits that were laid against him, in that
+he had brought Mord, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, to his death, dealing him a brain or
+a body or a marrow wound, and others of that company. But no suits were laid
+against Skallagrim, for he was already outlaw. Therefore he must go in hiding,
+for men were out to slay him, and this he did unwillingly, at Eric&rsquo;s
+bidding. Asmund took up Eric&rsquo;s case, for he was the most famous of all
+lawmen in that day, and when thirteen full weeks of summer were done, they two
+rode to the Thing, and with them a great company of men of their quarter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, men go up to the Lögberg, and there came Ospakar, though he was not yet
+healed of his wound, and all his company, and laid their suits against Eric by
+the mouth of Gizur the Lawman, Ospakar&rsquo;s son. The pleadings were long and
+cunning on either side; but the end of it was that Ospakar brought it about, by
+the help of his friends&mdash;and of these he had many&mdash;that Eric must go
+into outlawry for three years. But no weregild was to be paid to Ospakar and
+his men for those who had been killed, and no atonement for the great wound
+that Skallagrim Lambstail gave him, or for the death of Mord, his son, inasmuch
+as Eric fought for his own hand to save his life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The party of Ospakar were ill pleased at this finding, and Eric was not over
+glad, for it was little to his mind that he should sail a-warring across the
+seas, while Gudruda sat at home in Iceland. Still, there was no help for the
+matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar spoke with his company, and the end of it was that he called on
+them to take their weapons and avenge themselves by their own might. Asmund and
+Eric, seeing this, mustered their army of freemen and thralls. There were one
+hundred and five of them, all stout men; but Ospakar Blacktooth&rsquo;s band
+numbered a hundred and thirty-three, and they stood with their backs to the
+Raven&rsquo;s Rift.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I would that Skallagrim was here to guard my back,&rdquo; said Eric,
+&ldquo;for before this fight is done few will be left standing to tell its
+tale.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a sad thing,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;that so many men must die
+because some men are now dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A very sad thing,&rdquo; said Eric, and took this counsel. He stalked
+alone towards the ranks of Ospakar and called in a loud voice, saying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be grievous that so many warriors should fall in such a matter.
+Now hearken, you company of Ospakar Blacktooth! If there be any two among you
+who will dare to match their might against my single sword in holmgang, here I,
+Eric Brighteyes, stand and wait them. It is better that one man, or perchance
+three men, should fall, than that anon so many should roll in the dust. What
+say ye?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now all those who watched called out that this was a good offer and a manly
+one, though it might turn out ill for Eric; but Ospakar answered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Were I but well of my wound I alone would cut that golden comb of thine,
+thou braggart; as it is, be sure that two shall be found.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who is the braggart?&rdquo; answered Eric. &ldquo;He who twice has
+learned the weight of this arm and yet boasts his strength, or I who stand
+craving that two should come against me? Get thee hence, Ospakar; get thee home
+and bid Thorunna, thy leman, whom thou didst beguile from that Ounound who now
+is named Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark, nurse thee whole of the wound her
+husband gave thee. Be sure we shall yet stand face to face, and that combs
+shall be cut then, combs black or golden. Nurse thee! nurse thee! cease thy
+prating&mdash;get thee home, and bid Thorunna nurse thee; but first name thou
+the two who shall stand against me in holmgang in Oxarà&rsquo;s stream.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Folk laughed aloud while Eric mocked, but Ospakar gnashed his teeth with rage.
+Still, he named the two mightiest men in his company, bidding them take up
+their swords against Brighteyes. This, indeed, they were loth to do; still,
+because of the shame that they must get if they hung back, and for fear of the
+wrath of Ospakar, they made ready to obey his bidding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then all men passed down to the bank of Oxarà, and, on the other side, people
+came from their booths and sat upon the slope of All Man&rsquo;s Raft, for it
+was a new thing that one man should fight two in holmgang.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric crossed to the island where holmgangs are fought to this day, and
+after him came the two chosen, flourishing their swords bravely, and taking
+counsel how one should rush at his face, while the other passed behind his back
+and spitted him, as woodfolk spit a lamb. Eric drew Whitefire and leaned on it,
+waiting for the word, and all the women held him to be wondrous fair as, clad
+in his byrnie and his golden helm, he leaned thus on Whitefire. Presently the
+word was given, and Eric, standing not to defend himself as they deemed he
+surely would, whirled Whitefire round his helm and rushed headlong on his foes,
+shield aloft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The great carles saw the light that played on Whitefire&rsquo;s edge and the
+other light that burned in Eric&rsquo;s eyes, and terror got hold of them. Now
+he was almost come, and Whitefire sprang aloft like a tongue of flame. Then
+they stayed no more, but, running one this way and one that, cast themselves
+into the flood and swam for the river-edge. Now from either bank rose up a roar
+of laughter, that grew and grew, till it echoed against the lava rifts and
+scared the ravens from their nests.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric, too, stopped his charge and laughed aloud; then walked back to where
+Asmund stood, unarmed, to second him in the holmgang.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can get little honour from such champions as these,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Asmund, &ldquo;thou hast got the greatest honour,
+and they, and Ospakar, such shame as may not be wiped out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now when Blacktooth saw what had come to pass, he well-nigh choked, and fell
+from his horse in fury. Still, he could find no stomach for fighting, but,
+mustering his company, rode straightway from the Thing home again to Swinefell.
+But he caused those two whom he had put up to do battle with Eric to be set
+upon with staves and driven from his following, and the end of it was that they
+might stay no more in Iceland, but took ship and sailed south, and now they are
+out of the story.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the next day, Asmund, and with him Eric and all their men, rode back to
+Middalhof. Gudruda greeted Eric well, and for the first time since Swanhild
+went away she kissed him. Moreover, she wept bitterly when she learned that he
+must go into outlawry, while she must bide at home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How shall the days pass by, Eric?&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;when thou art
+far, and I know not where thou art, nor how it goes with thee, nor if thou
+livest or art already dead?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In sooth I cannot say, sweet,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;but of this I
+am sure that, wheresoever I am, yet more weary shall be my hours.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Three years,&rdquo; she went on&mdash;&ldquo;three long, cold years, and
+no sight of thee, and perchance no tidings from thee, till mayhap I learn that
+thou art in that land whence tidings cannot come. Oh, it would be better to die
+than to part thus.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well I wot that it is better to die than to live, and better never to
+have been born than to live and die,&rdquo; answered Eric sadly. &ldquo;Here,
+it would seem, is nothing but hate and strife, weariness and bitter envy to
+fret away our strength, and at last, if we come so far, sorrowful age and
+death, and thereafter we know not what. Little of good do we find to our hands,
+and much of evil; nor know I for what ill-doing these burdens are laid upon us.
+Yet must we needs breathe such an air as is blown about us, Gudruda, clasping
+at this happiness which is given, though we may not hold it. At the worst, the
+game will soon be played, and others will stand where we have stood, and strive
+as we have striven, and fail as we have failed, and so on, till man has worked
+out his doom, and the Gods cease from their wrath, or Ragnarrök come upon them,
+and they too are lost in the jaws of grey wolf Fenrir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Men may win one good thing, and that is fame, Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, Gudruda, what is it to win fame? Is it not to raise up foes, as it
+were, from the very soil, who, made with secret hate, seek to stab us in the
+back? Is it not to lose peace, and toil on from height to height only to be
+hurled down at last? Happy, then, is the man whom fame flies from, for hers is
+a deadly gift.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yet there is one thing left that thou hast not numbered, Eric, and it is
+love&mdash;for love is to our life what the sun is to the world, and, though it
+seems to set in death, yet it may rise again. We are happy, then, in our love,
+for there are many who live their lives and do not find it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So these two, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair, talked sadly, for their
+hearts were heavy, and on them lay the shadow of sorrows that were to come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, sweet,&rdquo; said Eric at length, &ldquo;wilt thou that I go not
+into banishment? Then I must fall into outlawry, and my life will be in the
+hands of him who may take it; yet I think that my foes will find it hard to
+come by while my strength remains, and at the worst I do but turn to meet the
+fate that dogs me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, that I will not suffer, Brighteyes. Now we will go to my father,
+and he shall give thee his dragon of war&mdash;she is a good vessel&mdash;and
+thou shalt man her with the briskest men of our quarter: for there are many who
+will be glad to fare abroad with thee, Eric. Soon she shall be bound and thou
+shalt sail at once, Eric: for the sooner thou art gone the sooner the three
+years will be sped, and thou shalt come back to me. But, oh! that I might go
+with thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda and Eric went to Asmund and spoke of this matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I desired,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;that thou, Eric, shouldst bide
+here in Iceland till after harvest, for it is then that I would take Unna,
+Thorod&rsquo;s daughter, to wife, and it was meet that thou shouldst sit at the
+wedding-feast and give her to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, father, let Eric go,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;for well begun is,
+surely, half done. He must remain three years in outlawry: add thou no day to
+them, for, if he stays here for long, I know this: that I shall find no heart
+to let him go, and, if go he must, then I shall go with him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That may never be,&rdquo; said Asmund; &ldquo;thou art too young and
+fair to sail a-viking down the sea-path. Hearken, Eric: I give thee the good
+ship, and now we will go about to find stout men to man her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is a good gift,&rdquo; said Eric; and afterwards they rode to the
+seashore and overhauled the vessel as she lay in her shed. She was a great
+dragon of war, long and slender, and standing high at stem and prow. She was
+fashioned of oak, all bolted together with iron, and at her prow was a gilded
+dragon most wonderfully carved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric looked on her and his eyes brightened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here rests a wave-horse that shall bear a viking well,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; answered Asmund, &ldquo;of all the things I own this ship is
+the very best. She is so swift that none may catch her, and she can almost go
+about in her own length. That gale must be heavy that shall fill her, with thee
+to steer; yet I give her to thee freely, Eric, and thou shalt do great deeds
+with this my gift, and, if things go well, she shall come back to this shore at
+last, and thou in her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I will name this war-gift with a new name,&rdquo; said Eric.
+&ldquo;&lsquo;Gudruda,&rsquo; I name her: for, as Gudruda here is the fairest
+of all women, so is this the fairest of all war-dragons.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So be it,&rdquo; said Asmund.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they rode back to Middalhof, and now Eric Brighteyes let it be known that
+he needed men to sail the seas with him. Nor did he ask in vain, for, when it
+was told that Eric went a-viking, so great was his fame grown, that many a
+stout yeoman and many a great-limbed carle reached down sword and shield and
+came up to Middalhof to put their hands in his. For mate, he took a certain man
+named Hall of Lithdale, and this because Björn asked it, for Hall was a friend
+to Björn, and he had, moreover, great skill in all manner of seamanship, and
+had often sailed the Northern Seas&mdash;ay, and round England to the coast of
+France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when Gudruda saw this man, she did not like him, because of his sharp face,
+uncanny eyes, and smooth tongue, and she prayed Eric to have nothing to do with
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is too late now to talk of that,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Hall is a
+well-skilled man, and, for the rest, fear not: I will watch him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then evil will come of it,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim also liked Hall little, nor did Hall love Skallagrim and his great
+axe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length all were gathered; they were fifty in number and it is said that no
+such band of men ever took ship from Iceland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the great dragon was bound and her faring goods were aboard of her, for
+Eric must sail on the morrow, if the wind should be fair. All day long he
+stalked to and fro among his men; he would trust nothing to others, and there
+was no sword or shield in his company but he himself had proved it. All day
+long he stalked, and at his back went Skallagrim Lambstail, axe on shoulder,
+for he would never leave Eric if he had his will, and they were a mighty pair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length all was ready and men sat down to the faring-feast in the hall at
+Middalhof, and that was a great feast. Eric&rsquo;s folk were gathered on the
+side-benches, and by the high seat at Asmund&rsquo;s side sat Brighteyes, and
+near to him were Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, Gudruda, Unna, Asmund&rsquo;s
+betrothed, and Saevuna, Eric&rsquo;s mother. For this had been settled between
+Asmund and Eric, that his mother Saevuna, who was now somewhat sunk in age,
+should flit from Coldback and come with Unna to dwell at Middalhof. But Eric
+set a trusty grieve to dwell at Coldback and mind the farm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the faring-toasts had been drunk, Eric spoke to Asmund and said: &ldquo;I
+fear one thing, lord, and it is that when I am gone Ospakar will trouble thee.
+Now, I pray you all to beware of Blacktooth, for, though the hound is whipped,
+he can still bite, and it seems that he has not yet put Gudruda from his
+mind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Björn had sat silently, thinking much and drinking more, for he loved Eric
+less than ever on this day when he saw how all men did him honour and mourned
+his going, and his father not the least of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Methinks it is thou, Eric,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;whom Ospakar hates,
+and thee on whom he would work his vengeance, and that for no light
+cause.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When bad fortune sits in thy neighbour&rsquo;s house, she knocks upon
+thy door, Björn. Gudruda, thy sister, is my betrothed, and thou art a party to
+this feud,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Therefore it becomes thee better to hold
+her honour and thy own against this Northlander, than to gird at me for that in
+which I have no blame.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Björn grew wroth at these words. &ldquo;Prate not to me,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;Thou art an upstart who wouldst teach their duty to thy
+betters&mdash;ay, puffed up with light-won fame, like a feather on the breeze.
+But I say this: the breeze shall fail, and thou shalt fall upon the
+goose&rsquo;s back once more. And I say this also, that, had I my will, Gudruda
+should wed Ospakar: for he is a mighty chief, and not a long-legged carle,
+outlawed for man-slaying.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric sprang from his seat and laid hand upon the hilt of Whitefire, while
+men murmured in the hall, for they held this an ill speech of Björn&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In thee, it seems, I have no friend,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and hadst
+thou been any other man than Gudruda&rsquo;s brother, forsooth thou shouldst
+answer for thy mocking words. This I tell thee, Björn, that, wert thou twice
+her brother, if thou plottest with Ospakar when I am gone, thou shalt pay
+dearly for it when I come back again. I know thy heart well: it is cunning and
+greedy of gain, and filled with envy as a cask with ale; yet, if thou lovest to
+feel it beating in thy breast, strive not to work me mischief and to put
+Gudruda from me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Björn sprang up also and drew his sword, for he was white with rage; but
+Asmund his father cried, &ldquo;Peace!&rdquo; in a great voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peace!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Be seated, Eric, and take no heed of this
+foolish talk. And for thee, Björn, art thou the Priest of Middalhof, and
+Gudruda&rsquo;s father, or am I? It has pleased me to betroth Brighteyes to
+Gudruda, and it pleased me not to betroth her to Ospakar, and that is enough
+for thee. For the rest, Ospakar would have slain Eric, not he Ospakar,
+therefore Eric&rsquo;s hands are clean. Though thou art my son, I say this,
+that, if thou workest ill to Eric when he is over sea, thou shalt rightly learn
+the weight of Whitefire: it is a niddering deed to plot against an absent
+man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric sat down, but Björn strode scowling from the hall, and, taking horse, rode
+south; nor did he and Eric meet again till three years had come and gone, and
+then they met but once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maggots shall be bred of that fly, nor shall they lack flesh to feed
+on,&rdquo; said Skallagrim in Eric&rsquo;s ears as he watched Björn pass. But
+Eric bade him be silent, and turned to Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look not so sad, sweet,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for hasty words rise like
+the foam on mead and pass as soon. It vexes Björn that thy father has given me
+the good ship: but his anger will soon pass, or, at the very worst, I fear him
+not while thou art true to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then thou hast little to fear, Eric,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Look
+now on thy hair: it grows long as a woman&rsquo;s, and that is ill, for at sea
+the salt will hang to it. Say, shall I cut it for thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So she cut his yellow locks, and one of them lay upon her heart for many a day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now thou shalt swear to me,&rdquo; she whispered in his ear, &ldquo;that
+no other man or woman shall cut thy hair till thou comest back to me and I clip
+it again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That I swear, and readily,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I will go
+long-haired like a girl for thy sake, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke low, but Koll the Half-witted, Groa&rsquo;s thrall, heard this oath
+and kept it in his mind.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Very early on the morrow all men rose, and, taking horse, rode once more to the
+seaside, till they came to that shed where the Gudruda lay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, when the tide was high, Eric&rsquo;s company took hold of the black
+ship&rsquo;s thwarts, and at his word dragged her with might and main. She ran
+down the greased blocks and sped on quivering to the sea, and as her
+dragon-prow dipped in the water people cheered aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric must bid farewell to all, and this he did with a brave heart till at
+the last he came to Saevuna, his mother, and Gudruda, his dear love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Farewell, son,&rdquo; said the old dame; &ldquo;I have little hope that
+these eyes shall look again upon that bonny face of thine, yet I am well paid
+for my birth-pains, for few have borne such a man as thou. Think of me at
+times, for without me thou hadst never been. Be not led astray of women, nor
+lead them astray, or ill shall overtake thee. Be not quarrelsome because of thy
+great might, for there is a stronger than the strongest. Spare a fallen foe,
+and take not a poor man&rsquo;s goods or a brave man&rsquo;s sword; but, when
+thou smitest, smite home. So shalt thou win honour, and, at the last, peace,
+that is more than honour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric thanked her for her counsel, and kissed her, then turned to Gudruda, who
+stood, white and still, plucking at her golden girdle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What can I say to thee?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say nothing, but go,&rdquo; she answered: &ldquo;go before I
+weep.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Weep not, Gudruda, or thou wilt unman me. Say, thou wilt think on
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Eric, by day and by night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And thou wilt be true to me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, till death and after, for so long as thou cleavest to me I will
+cleave to thee. I will first die rather than betray thee. But of thee I am not
+so sure. Perchance thou mayest find Swanhild in thy journeyings and crave more
+kisses of her?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Anger me not, Gudruda! thou knowest well that I hate Swanhild more than
+any other woman. When I kiss her again, then thou mayst wed Ospakar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak not so rashly, Eric,&rdquo; she said, and as she spoke Skallagrim
+drew near.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If thou lingerest here, lord, the tide will serve us little round
+Westmans,&rdquo; he said, eyeing Gudruda as it were with jealousy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I come,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Gudruda, fare thee well!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She kissed him and clung to him, but did not answer, for she could not speak.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap13"></a>CHAPTER XIII<br />
+HOW HALL THE MATE CUT THE GRAPNEL CHAIN</h2>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda bent her head like a drooping flower, and presently sank to earth, for
+her knees would bear her weight no more; but Eric marched to the lip of the
+sea, his head held high and laughing merrily to hide his pain of heart. Here
+stood Asmund, who gripped him by both hands, and kissed him on the brow,
+bidding him good luck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know not whether we shall meet again,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but, if
+my hours be sped before thou returnest, this I charge thee: that thou mindest
+Gudruda well, for she is the sweetest of all women that I have known, and I
+hold her the most dear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fear not for that, lord,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;and I pray thee this,
+that, if I come back no more, as well may happen, do not force Gudruda into
+marriage, if she wills it not, and I think she will have little leaning that
+way. And I say this also: do not count overmuch on Björn thy son, for he has no
+loyal heart; and beware of Groa, who was thy housekeeper, for she loves not
+that Unna should take her place and more. And now I thank thee for many good
+things, and farewell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Farewell, my son,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;for in this hour thou
+seemest as a son to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric turned to enter the sea and wade to the vessel, but Skallagrim caught him
+in his arms as though he were but a child, and, wading into the surf till the
+water covered his waistbelt, bore him to the vessel and lifted him up so that
+Eric reached the bulwarks with his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they loosed the cable and got out the oars and soon were dancing over the
+sea. Presently the breeze caught them, and they set the great sail and sped
+away like a gull towards the Westman Isles. But Gudruda sat on the shore
+watching till, at length, the light faded from Eric&rsquo;s golden helm as he
+stood upon the poop, and the world grew dark to her.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now Ospakar Blacktooth had news of this sailing and took counsel of Gizur his
+son, and the end of it was that they made ready two great ships, dragons of
+war, and, placing sixty fighting men in each of them, sailed round the Iceland
+coast to the Westmans and waited there to waylay Eric. They had spies on the
+land, and from them they learned of Brighteyes&rsquo; coming, and sailed out to
+meet him in the channel between the greater and the lesser islands, where they
+knew that he must pass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it drew towards evening when Eric rowed down this channel, for the wind had
+fallen and he desired to be clear at sea. Presently, as the Gudruda came near
+to the mouth of the channel, that had high cliffs on either hand, Eric saw two
+long dragons of war&mdash;for their bulwarks were shield-hung&mdash;glide from
+the cover of the island and take their station side by side between him and the
+open sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now here are vikings,&rdquo; said Eric to Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now here is Ospakar Blacktooth,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, &ldquo;for
+well I know that raven banner of his. This is a good voyage, for we must seek
+but a little while before we come to fighting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric bade the men lay on their oars, and spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Before us is Ospakar Blacktooth in two great dragons, and he is here to
+cut us off. Now two choices are left to us: one is to bout ship and run before
+him, and the other to row on and give him battle. What say ye, comrades?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hall of Lithdale, the mate, answered, saying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us go back, lest we die. The odds are too great, Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But a man among the crew cried out, &ldquo;When thou didst go on holmgang at
+Thingvalla, Eric, Ospakar&rsquo;s two chosen champions stood before thee, yet
+at Whitefire&rsquo;s flash they skurried through the water like startled ducks.
+It was an omen, for so shall his great ships fly when we swoop on them.&rdquo;
+Then the others shouted:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, ay! Never let it be said that we fled from Ospakar&mdash;fie on thy
+woman&rsquo;s talk, Hall!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then we are all of one mind, save Hall only,&rdquo; said Eric.
+&ldquo;Let us put Ospakar to the proof.&rdquo; And while men shouted
+&ldquo;Yea!&rdquo; he turned to speak with Skallagrim. The Baresark was gone,
+for, wasting no breath in words, already he was fixing the long shields on the
+bulwark rail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men busked on their harness and made them fit for fight, and, when all was
+ready, Eric mounted the poop, and with him Skallagrim, and bade the rowers give
+way. The Gudruda leapt forward and rushed on towards Ospakar&rsquo;s ships. Now
+they saw that these were bound together with a cable and yet they must go
+betwixt them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric ran forward to the prow, and with him Skallagrim, and called aloud to a
+great man who stood upon the ship to starboard, wearing a black helm with
+raven&rsquo;s wings:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who art thou that bars the sea against me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am named Ospakar Blacktooth,&rdquo; answered the great man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what must we lose at thy hands, Ospakar?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But one thing&mdash;your lives!&rdquo; answered Blacktooth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thrice have we stood face to face, Ospakar,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and
+it seems that hitherto thou hast won no great glory. Now it shall be proved if
+thy luck has bettered.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art yet healed, lord, of that prick in the shoulder which thou camest by
+on Horse-Head Heights?&rdquo; roared Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For answer, Ospakar seized a spear and hurled it straight at Eric, and it had
+been his death had he not caught it in his hand as it flew. Then he cast it
+back, and that so mightily that it sped right through the shield of Ospakar and
+was the bane of a man who stood beside him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A gift for a gift!&rdquo; laughed Eric. On rushed the Gudruda, but now
+the cable was strained six fathoms from her bow that held together the ships of
+Ospakar and it was too strong for breaking. Eric looked and saw. Then he drew
+Whitefire, and while all men wondered, leaped over the prow of the ship and,
+clasping the golden dragon&rsquo;s head with his arm, set his feet upon its
+claws and waited. On sped the ship and spears flew thick and fast about him,
+but there Brighteyes hung. Now the Gudruda&rsquo;s bow caught the great rope
+and strained it taut and, as it rose beneath her weight, Eric smote swift and
+strong with Whitefire and clove it in two, so that the severed ends fell with a
+splash into the quiet water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric sprang back to deck while stones and spears hissed about him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That was well done, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;now we shall be
+snugly berthed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In oars and out grappling-irons,&rdquo; shouted Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up rose the rowers, and their war-gear rattled as they rose. They drew in the
+long oars, and not before it was time, for now the Gudruda forced her way
+between the two dragons of Ospakar and lay with her bow to their sterns. Then
+with a shout Eric&rsquo;s men cast the irons and soon the ships were locked
+fast and the fight began. The spears flew thick, and on either side some got
+their death before them. Then the men of that vessel, named the Raven, which
+was to larboard of the Gudruda, made ready to board. On they came with a rush,
+and were driven back, though hardly, for they were many, and those who stood
+against them few. Again they came, scrambling over the bulwarks, and this time
+a score of them leapt aboard. Eric turned from the fight against the dragon of
+Ospakar and saw it. Then, with Skallagrim, he rushed to meet the boarders as
+they swarmed along the hold, and naught might they withstand the axe and sword.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Through and through them swept the mighty pair, now Whitefire flashed, and now
+the great axe fell, and at every stroke a man lay dead or wounded. Six of the
+boarders turned to fly, but just then the grappling-iron broke and their ship
+drifted out with the tide towards the open sea, and presently no man of that
+twenty was left alive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the men of the ship of Ospakar and of the Gudruda pressed each other hard.
+Thrice did Ospakar strive to come aboard and thrice he was pushed back. Eric
+was ever where he was most needed, and with him Skallagrim, for these two threw
+themselves from side to side, and were now here and now there, so that it
+seemed as though there were not one golden helm and one black, but rather four
+on board the Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric looked and saw that the other ship was drawing round, though somewhat
+slowly, to come alongside of them once more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now we must make an end of Ospakar, else our hands will be
+overfull,&rdquo; he said, and therewith sprang up upon the bulwarks and after
+him many men. Once they were driven back, but came on again, and now they
+thrust all Ospakar&rsquo;s men before them and passed up his ship on both
+boards. By the mast stood Ospakar and with him Gizur his son, and Eric strove
+to come to him. But many men were between them, and he could not do this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently, while the fight yet went on hotly and men fell fast, Brighteyes felt
+the dragon of Ospakar strike, and, looking, saw that they had drifted with the
+send of the tide on to the rocks of the island. There was a great hole in the
+hull amidships and the water rushed in fast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Back! men; back!&rdquo; he cried, and all his folk that were unhurt,
+ran, and leapt on board the Gudruda; but Ospakar and his men sprang into the
+sea and swam for the shore. Then Skallagrim cut loose the grappling-irons with
+his axe, and that not too soon, for, scarcely had they pushed clear with great
+toil when the long warship slipped from the rock and foundered, taking many
+dead and wounded men with her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar and some of his people stood safe upon the rocks, and Eric called
+to him in mockery, bidding him come aboard the Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ospakar made no answer, but stood gnawing his hand, while the water ran from
+him. Only Gizur his son cursed them aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric was greatly minded to follow them, and land and fight them there; but he
+might not do this, because of the rocks and of the other dragon, that hung
+about them, fearing to come on and yet not willing to go back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We will have her, at the least,&rdquo; said Eric, and bade the rowers
+get out their oars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, when the men on board the other ship saw the Gudruda drawing on, they took
+to their oars at once and rowed swiftly for the sea, and at this a great roar
+of laughter went down Eric&rsquo;s ship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They shall not slip from us so easily,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;give
+way, comrades, and after them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the men were much wearied with fighting, and the decks were all cumbered
+with dead and wounded, so that by the time that the Gudruda had put about, and
+come to the mouth of the waterway, Ospakar&rsquo;s vessel had shaken out her
+sails and caught the wind, that now blew strong off shore, and sped away six
+furlongs or more from Eric&rsquo;s prow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now we shall see how the Gudruda sails,&rdquo; said Eric, and they
+spread their canvas and gave chase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric bade men clear the decks of the dead, and tend the wounded. He had
+lost seven men slain outright, and three were wounded, one to death. But on
+board the ship there lay of Ospakar&rsquo;s force twenty and three dead men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When all were cast into the sea, men ate and rested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have not done so badly,&rdquo; said Eric to Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall do better yet,&rdquo; said Skallagrim to Eric; &ldquo;rather
+had I seen Ospakar&rsquo;s head lying in the scuppers than those of all his
+carles; for he may get more men, but never another head!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the wind freshened till by midnight it blew strongly. The mate Hall came to
+Eric and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Gudruda dips her nose deep in Ran&rsquo;s cup. Say, Eric, shall we
+shorten sail?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;keep her full and bail. Where yonder
+Raven flies, my Sea-stag must follow,&rdquo; and he pointed to the warship that
+rode the waves before them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After midnight clouds came up, with rain, and hid the face of the night-sun and
+the ship they sought. The wind blew ever harder, till at length, when the rain
+had passed and the clouds lifted, there was much water in the hold and the
+bailers could hardly stand at their work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Men murmured, and Hall the mate murmured most of all; but still Eric held on,
+for there, not two furlongs ahead of them, rode the dragon of Ospakar. But now,
+being afraid of the wind and sea, she had lowered her sail somewhat, and made
+as though she would put about and run for Iceland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That she may not do,&rdquo; called Eric to Skallagrim, &ldquo;if once
+she rolls side on to those seas Ran has her, for she must fill and sink.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So they hold, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim; &ldquo;see, once more
+she runs!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, but we run faster&mdash;she is outsailed. Up, men, up: for presently
+the fight begins.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is bad to join battle in such a sea,&rdquo; quoth Hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good or bad,&rdquo; growled Skallagrim, &ldquo;do thou thy lord&rsquo;s
+bidding,&rdquo; and he half lifted up his axe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mate said no more, for he misdoubted him of Skallagrim Lambstail and his
+axe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then men made ready for the fray as best they might, and stood, sword in hand
+and drenched with foam, clinging to the bulwarks of the Gudruda as she wallowed
+through the seas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric went aft to the helm and seized it. Now but a length ahead Ospakar&rsquo;s
+ship laboured on beneath her small sail, but the Gudruda rushed towards her
+with all canvas set and at every leap plunged her golden dragon beneath the
+surf and shook the water from her foredeck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Make ready the grapnel!&rdquo; shouted Eric through the storm.
+Skallagrim seized the iron and stood by. Now the Gudruda rushed alongside the
+Raven, and Eric steered so skilfully that there was a fathom space, and no
+more, between the ships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim cast the iron well and truly, so that it hooked and held. On sped
+the Gudruda and the cable tautened&mdash;now her stern kissed the bow of
+Ospakar&rsquo;s ship, as though she was towing her, and thus for a space they
+travelled through the seas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric&rsquo;s folk shouted and strove to cast spears; but they did this but ill,
+because of the rocking of the vessel. As for Ospakar&rsquo;s men, they clung to
+their bulwarks and did nothing, for all the heart was out of them between fear
+of Eric and terror of the sea. Eric called to a man to hold the helm, and
+Skallagrim crept aft to where he stood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What counsel shall we take now?&rdquo; said Eric, and as he spoke a sea
+broke over them&mdash;for the gale was strong.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Board them and make an end,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rough work; still, we will try it,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for we may
+not lie thus for long, and I am loath to leave them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric called for men to follow him, and many answered, creeping as best
+they might to where he stood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art mad, Eric,&rdquo; said Hall the mate; &ldquo;cut loose and let
+us drive, else we shall both founder, and that is a poor tale to tell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric took no heed, but, watching his chance, leapt on to the bows of the Raven,
+and after him leapt Skallagrim. Even as he did so, a great sea came and swept
+past and over them, so that half the ship was hid for foam. Now, Hall the mate
+stood near to the grapnel cable, and, fearing lest they should sink, out of the
+cowardice of his heart, he let his axe fall upon the chain, and severed it so
+swiftly that no man saw him, except Skallagrim only. Forward sprang the
+Gudruda, freed from her burden, and rushed away before the wind, leaving Eric
+and Skallagrim alone upon the Raven&rsquo;s prow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now we are in an evil plight,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;the cable has
+parted!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, &ldquo;and that losel Hall hath parted
+it! I saw his axe fall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap14"></a>CHAPTER XIV<br />
+HOW ERIC DREAMED A DREAM</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now, when the men of Ospakar, who were gathered on the poop of the Raven, saw
+what had come about, they shouted aloud and made ready to slay the pair. But
+Eric and Skallagrim clambered to the mast and got their backs against it, and
+swiftly made themselves fast with a rope, so that they might not fall with the
+rolling of the ship. Then the people of Ospakar came on to cut them down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this was no easy task, for they might scarcely stand, and they could not
+shoot with the bow. Moreover, Eric and Skallagrim, being bound to the mast, had
+the use of both hands and were minded to die hard. Therefore Ospakar&rsquo;s
+folks got but one thing by their onslaught, and that was death, for three of
+their number fell beneath the long sweep of Whitefire, and one bowed before the
+axe of Skallagrim. Then they drew back and strove to throw spears at these two,
+but they flew wide because of the rolling of the vessel. One spear struck the
+mast near the head of Skallagrim. He drew it out, and, waiting till the ship
+steadied herself in the trough of the sea, hurled it at a knot of
+Ospakar&rsquo;s thralls, and a man got his death from it. After that they threw
+no more spears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thence once more the crew came on with swords and axes, but faint-heartedly,
+and the end of it was that they lost some more men dead and wounded and fell
+back again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim mocked at them with bitter words, and one of them, made mad by his
+scoffing, cast a heavy ballast-stone at him. It fell upon his shoulder and
+numbed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I am unmeet for fight, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;for my
+right arm is dead and I can scarcely hold my axe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is ill, then,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for we have little help,
+except from each other, and I, too, am well-nigh spent. Well, we have done a
+great deed and now it is time to rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My left arm is yet whole, lord, and I can make shift for a while with
+it. Cut loose the cord before they bait us to death, and let us rush upon these
+wolves and fall fighting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A good counsel,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and a quick end; but stay a
+while: what plan have they now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the men of Ospakar, having little heart left in them for such work as this,
+had taken thought together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have got great hurt, and little honour,&rdquo; said the mate.
+&ldquo;There are but nineteen of us left alive, and that is scarcely enough to
+work the ship, and it seems that we shall be fewer before Eric Brighteyes and
+Skallagrim Lambstail lie quiet by yonder mast. They are mighty men, indeed, and
+it would be better, methinks, to deal with them by craft, rather than by
+force.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailors said that this was a good word, for they were weary of the sight of
+Whitefire as he flamed on high and the sound of the axe of Skallagrim as it
+crashed through helm and byrnie; and as fear crept in valour fled out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is my rede, then,&rdquo; said the mate: &ldquo;that we go to them
+and give them peace, and lay them in bonds, swearing that we will put them
+ashore when we are come back to Iceland. But when we have them fast, as they
+sleep at night, we will creep on them and hurl them into the sea, and
+afterwards we will say that we slew them fighting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A shameful deed!&rdquo; said a man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then go thou up against them,&rdquo; answered the mate. &ldquo;If we
+slay them not, then shall this tale be told against us throughout Iceland: that
+a ship&rsquo;s company were worsted by two men, and we may not live beneath
+that dishonour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man held his peace, and the mate, laying down his arms, crept forward
+alone, towards the mast, just as Eric and Skallagrim were about to cut
+themselves loose and rush on them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What wouldest thou?&rdquo; shouted Eric. &ldquo;Has it gone so well with
+you with arms that ye are minded to come up against us bearing none?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It has gone ill, Eric,&rdquo; said the mate, &ldquo;for ye twain are too
+mighty for us. We have lost many men, and we shall lose more ere ye are laid
+low. Therefore we make you this offer: that you lay down your weapons and
+suffer yourselves to be bound till such time as we touch land, where we will
+set you ashore, and give you your arms again. Meanwhile, we will deal with you
+in friendly fashion, giving you of the best we have; nor will we set foot any
+suit against you for those of our number whom ye two have slain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wherefore then should we be bound?&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For this reason only: that we dare not leave you free within our ship.
+Now choose, and, if ye will, take peace, which we swear by all the Gods we will
+keep towards you, and, if ye will not, then we will bear you down with beams
+and sails and stones, and slay you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What thinkest thou, Skallagrim?&rdquo; said Eric beneath his breath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think that I find little faith in yon carle&rsquo;s face,&rdquo;
+answered Skallagrim. &ldquo;Still, I am unfit to fight, and thy strength is
+spent, so it seems that we must lie low if we would rise again. They can
+scarcely be so base as to do murder having handselled peace to us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not so sure of that,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;still, starving
+beggars must eat bones. Hearken thou: we take the terms, trusting to your
+honour; and I say this: that ye shall get shame and death if ye depart from
+them to harm us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have no fear, lord,&rdquo; said the mate, &ldquo;we are true men.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That we shall look to your deeds to learn,&rdquo; said Eric, laying down
+his sword and shield.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim did likewise, though with no good grace. Then men came with strong
+cords and bound them fast hand and foot, handling them fearsomely as men handle
+a live bear in a net. Then they led them forward to the prow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they went Eric looked up. Yonder, twenty furlongs and more away, sailed the
+Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is good fellowship,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;thus to leave us
+in the trap.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Eric. &ldquo;They cannot put about in such a sea,
+and doubtless also they think us dead. Nevertheless, if ever it comes about
+that Hall and I stand face to face again, there will be need for me to think of
+gentleness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall think little thereon,&rdquo; growled Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they were come to the prow, and there was a half deck under which they were
+set, out of reach of the wind and water. In the deck was a stout iron ring, and
+the men made them fast with ropes to it, so that they might move but little,
+and they set their helms and weapons behind them in such fashion that they
+could not come at them. Then they flung cloaks about them, and brought them
+food and drink, of which they stood much in need, and treated them well in
+every way. But for all this Skallagrim trusted them no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are new-hooked, lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and they give us line.
+Presently they will haul us in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Evil comes soon enough,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;no need to run to
+greet it,&rdquo; and he fell to thinking of Gudruda, and of the day&rsquo;s
+deeds, till presently he dropped asleep, for he was very weary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it chanced that as Eric slept he dreamed a dream so strong and strange that
+it seemed to live within him. He dreamed that he slept there beneath the
+Raven&rsquo;s deck, and that a rat came and whispered spells into his ear. Then
+he dreamed that Swanhild glided towards him, walking on the stormy seas. He saw
+her afar, and she came swiftly, and ever the sea grew smooth before her feet,
+nor did the wind so much as stir her hair. Presently she stood by him in the
+ship, and, bending over him, touched him on the shoulder, saying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Awake, Eric Brighteyes! Awake! awake!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed to him that he awoke and said &ldquo;What tidings, Swanhild?&rdquo;
+and that she answered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ill tidings, Eric&mdash;so ill that I am come hither from Straumey[*] to
+tell of them&mdash;ay, come walking on the seas. Had Gudruda done so much,
+thinkest thou?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] Stroma, the southernmost of the Orkneys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gudruda is no witch,&rdquo; he said in his dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, but I am a witch, and it is well for thee, Eric. Ay, I am a witch.
+Now do I seem to sleep at Atli&rsquo;s side, and lo! here I stand by thine, and
+I must journey back again many a league before another day be born&mdash;ay,
+many a league, and all for love of thee, Eric! Hearken, for not long may the
+spell endure. I have seen this by my magic: that these men who bound thee come
+even now to take thee, sleeping, and cast thee and thy thrall into the deep,
+there to drown.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If it is fated it will befall,&rdquo; he said in his dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, it shall not befall. Put forth all thy might and burst thy bonds.
+Then fetch Whitefire; cut away the bonds of Skallagrim, and give him his axe
+and shield. This done, cover yourselves with your cloaks, and wait till ye hear
+the murderers come. Then rise and rush upon them, the two of you, and they
+shall melt before your might. I have journeyed over the great deep to tell thee
+this, Eric! Had Gudruda done as much, thinkest thou?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And it seemed to him that the wraith of Swanhild kissed him on the brow, sighed
+and vanished, bearing the rat in her bosom.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Eric awoke suddenly, just as though he had never slept, and looked around. He
+knew by the lowness of the sun that it was far into the night, and that he had
+slept for many hours. They were alone beneath the deck, and far aft, beyond the
+mast, as the vessel rose upon the waves&mdash;for the sea was still rough,
+though the wind had fallen&mdash;Eric saw the mate of the Raven talking
+earnestly with some men of his crew. Skallagrim snored beside him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Awake!&rdquo; Eric said in his ear, &ldquo;awake and listen!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He yawned and roused himself. &ldquo;What now, lord?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This,&rdquo; said Eric, and he told him the dream that he had dreamed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That was a fey dream,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and now we must do
+as the wraith bade thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Easy to say, but hard to do,&rdquo; quoth Eric; &ldquo;this is a great
+rope that holds us, and a strong.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, it is great and strong; still, we must burst it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric and Skallagrim were made fast in this fashion: their hands were bound
+behind them, and their legs were lashed above the feet and above the knee.
+Moreover, a thick cord was fixed about the waist of each, and this cord was
+passed through the iron ring and knotted there. But it chanced that beneath the
+hollows of their knees ran an oaken beam, which held the forepart of the dragon
+together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We may try this,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;to set our feet against the
+beam and strain with all our strength upon the rope; though I think that no two
+men can part it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall know that presently,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, gathering up his
+legs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they set their feet against the beam and pulled till it groaned; but,
+though the rope gave somewhat, it would not break. They rested a while, then
+strained again till the sweat burst out upon them and the rope cut into their
+flesh, but still it would not part.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have found our match,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is not altogether proved yet,&rdquo; answered the Baresark.
+&ldquo;Many a shield is riven at the third stroke.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So once again they set their feet against the beam, and put out all their
+strength.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The ring bends,&rdquo; gasped Eric. &ldquo;Now, when the roll of the
+ship throws our weight to leeward, in the name of Thor pull!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They waited, then put out their might, and lo! though the rope did not break,
+the iron ring burst asunder and they rolled upon the deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well pulled, truly,&rdquo; said Skallagrim as he struggled to his
+haunches: &ldquo;I am marked about the middle with rope-twists for many a day
+to come, that I will swear. What next, lord?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whitefire,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, their arms were piled a fathom or more from where they sat, and right in
+the prow of the ship. Hither, then, they must crawl upon their knees, and this
+was weary work, for ever as the ship rolled they fell, and could in no wise
+save themselves from hurt. Eric was bleeding at the brow, and bloody was the
+hooked nose of Skallagrim, before they came to where Whitefire was. At length
+they reached the sword, and pushed aside the bucklers that were over it with
+their heads. The great war-blade was sheathed, and Eric must needs lie upon his
+breast and draw the weapon somewhat with his teeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is an ill razor to shave with,&rdquo; he said, rising, for the keen
+blade had cut his chin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So some have thought and perchance more shall think,&rdquo; answered
+Skallagrim. &ldquo;Now set the rope on the edge and rub.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This they did, and presently the thick cord that bound them was in two. Then
+Eric knelt upon the deck and pressed the bonds that bound his legs upon the
+blade, and after him Skallagrim. They were free now, except for their hands,
+and it was no easy thing to cut away the bonds upon their wrists. It was done
+thus: Skallagrim sat upon the deck, and Eric pushed the sword between his
+fingers with his feet. Then the Baresark rose, holding the sword, and Eric,
+turning back to back with him, fretted the cords upon his wrists against the
+blade. Twice he cut himself, but the third time the cord parted and he was
+free. He stretched his arms, for they were stiff; then took Whitefire and cut
+away the bonds of Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How goes it with that hurt of thine?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Better than I had thought,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim; &ldquo;the
+soreness has come out with the bruise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is good news,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for methinks, unless
+Swanhild walked the seas for nothing, thou wilt soon need thine arms.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They have never failed me yet,&rdquo; said Skallagrim and took his axe
+and shield. &ldquo;What counsel now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This, Skallagrim: that we lie down as we were, and put the cloaks about
+us as though we were yet in bonds. Then, if these knaves come, we can take them
+unawares as they think to take us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they went again to where they had been bound, and lay down upon their
+shields and weapons, drawing cloaks over them. Scarcely had they done this and
+rested a while, when they saw the mate and all the crew coming along both
+boards towards them. They bore no weapons in their hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;None too soon did Swanhild walk,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;now we shall
+learn their purpose. Be thou ready to leap forth when I give the word.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim as he worked his stiff arms to and
+fro. &ldquo;In such matters few have thought me backward.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What news, friends?&rdquo; cried Eric as the men drew near.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bad news for thee, Brighteyes,&rdquo; answered the mate, &ldquo;and that
+Baresark thrall of thine, for we must loose your bands.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is good news, then,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for our limbs are numb
+and dead because of the nipping of the cords. Is land in sight?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, nor will be for thee, Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How now, friend? how now? Sure, having handselled peace to us, ye mean
+no harm towards two unarmed men?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We swore to do you no harm, nor will we, Eric; this only will we do:
+deliver you, bound, to Ran, and leave her to deal with you as she may.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bethink you, sirs,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;this is a cruel deed and
+most unmanly. We yielded to you in faith&mdash;will ye break your troth?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;War has no troth,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;ye are too great to let
+slip between our fingers. Shall it be said of us that two men overcame us
+all?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mayhap!&rdquo; murmured Skallagrim beneath his breath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, sirs, I beseech you,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;I am young, and there
+is a maid who waits me out in Iceland, and it is hard to die,&rdquo; and he
+made as though he wept, while Skallagrim laughed within his sleeve, for it was
+strange to see Eric feigning fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the men mocked aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the great man,&rdquo; they cried, &ldquo;this is that Eric of
+whose deeds folk sing! Look! he weeps like a child when he sees the water. Drag
+him forth and away with him into the sea!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Little need for that,&rdquo; cried Eric, and lo! the cloaks about him
+and Skallagrim flew aside. Out they came with a roar; they came out as a
+she-bear from her cave, and high above Brighteyes&rsquo; golden curls Whitefire
+shone in the pale light, and nigh to it shone the axe of Skallagrim. Whitefire
+flared aloft, then down he fell and sought the false heart of the mate. The
+great axe of Skallagrim shone and was lost in the breast of the carle who stood
+before him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Trolls!&rdquo; shrieked one. &ldquo;Here are trolls!&rdquo; and turned
+to fly. But again Whitefire was up and that man flew not far&mdash;one pace,
+and no more. Then they fled screaming and after them came axe and sword. They
+fled, they fell, they leaped into the sea, till none were left to fall and
+leap, for they had no time or heart to find or draw their weapons, and
+presently Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail stood alone upon the
+deck&mdash;alone with the dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Swanhild is a wise witch,&rdquo; gasped Eric, &ldquo;and, whatever ill
+she has done, I will remember this to her honour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Little good comes of witchcraft,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, wiping his
+brow: &ldquo;to-day it works for our hands, to-morrow it shall work against
+them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To the helm,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;the ship yaws and comes side on to
+the seas.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim sprang to the tiller and put his strength on it, and but just in
+time, for one big sea came aboard them and left much water in the hold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We owe this to thy Baresark ways,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Hadst thou
+not slain the steersman we had not filled with water.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;True, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim; &ldquo;but when once my axe is
+aloft, it seems to fly of itself, till nothing is left before it. What course
+now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The same on which the Gudruda was laid. Perhaps, if we may endure till
+we come to the Farey Isles,[*] we shall find her in harbour there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] The Faroes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is not much chance of that,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;still,
+the wind is fair, and we fly fast before it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they lashed the tiller and set to bailing. They bailed long, and it was
+heavy work, but they rid the ship of much water. After that they ate food, for
+it was now morning, and it came on to blow yet more strongly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For three days and three nights it blew thus, and the Raven sped along before
+the gale. All this time, turn and turn about, Eric and Skallagrim stood at the
+helm and tended the sails. They had little time to eat, and none to sleep. They
+were so hard pressed also, and must harbour their strength so closely, that the
+bodies of the dead men yet cumbered the hold. Thus they grew very weary and
+like to fall from faintness, but still they held the Raven on her course. In
+the beginning of the fourth night a great sea struck the good ship so that she
+quivered from stem to stern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Methinks I hear water bubbling up,&rdquo; said Skallagrim in a hoarse
+voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric climbed down into the well and lifted the bottom planks, and there beneath
+them was a leak through which the water spouted in a thin stream. He stopped up
+the rent as best he might with garments from the dead men, and placed ballast
+stones upon them, then clambered on to the deck again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Our hours are short now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the water rushes in
+apace.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it is time to rest,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;but see,
+lord!&rdquo; and he pointed ahead. &ldquo;What land is that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It must be the Fareys,&rdquo; answered Eric; &ldquo;now, if we can but
+keep afloat for three hours more, we may yet die ashore.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After this the wind began to fall, but still there was enough to drive the
+Raven on swiftly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And ever the water gained in the hold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they were not far from land, for ahead of them the bleak hills towered up,
+shining in the faint midnight light, and between the hills was a cleft that
+seemed to be a fjord. Another hour passed, and they were no more than ten
+furlongs from the mouth of the fjord, when suddenly the wind fell, and they
+were in calm water under shelter of the land. They went amidships and looked.
+The hold was half full of water, and in it floated the bodies of
+Ospakar&rsquo;s men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She has not long to live,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;but we may
+still be saved if the boat is not broken.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now aft, near the tiller, a small boat was bound on the half deck of the Raven.
+They went to it and looked; it was whole, with oars lashed in it, but half full
+of water, which they must bail out. This they did as swiftly as they might;
+then they cut the little boat loose, and, having made it fast with a rope,
+lifted it over the side-rail and let it fall into the sea, and that was no
+great way, for the Raven had sunk deep. It fell on an even keel, and Eric let
+himself down the rope into it and called to Skallagrim to follow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bide a while, lord,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;there is that which I
+would bring with me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a space Eric waited and then called aloud, &ldquo;Swift! thou fool; swift!
+the ship sinks!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as he called, Skallagrim came, and his arms were full of swords and
+byrnies, and red rings of gold that he had found time to gather from the dead
+and out of the cabin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Throw all aside and come,&rdquo; said Eric, laying on to the oars, for
+the Raven wallowed before she sank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is yet time, lord, and the gear is good,&rdquo; answered
+Skallagrim, and one by one he threw pieces down into the boat. As the last fell
+the Raven sank to her bulwarks. Then Skallagrim stepped from the sinking deck
+into the boat, and cut the cord, not too soon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric gave way with all his strength, and, as he pulled, when he was no more
+than five fathoms from her, the Raven vanished with a huge swirl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hold still,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;or we shall follow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Round spun the boat in the eddy, she was sucked down till the water trickled
+over her gunwale, and for a moment they knew not if they were lost or saved.
+Eric held his breath and watched, then slowly the boat lifted her nose, and
+they were safe from the whirlpool of the lost dragon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Greed is many a man&rsquo;s bane,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and it was
+nearly thine and mine, Skallagrim.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I had no heart to leave the good gear,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;and
+thou seest, lord, it is safe and we with it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they got the boat&rsquo;s head round slowly into the mouth of the fjord,
+pausing now and again to rest, for their strength was spent. For two hours they
+rowed down a gulf, as it were, and on either side of them were barren hills. At
+length the water-way opened out into a great basin, and there, on the further
+side of the basin, they saw green slopes running down to the water&rsquo;s
+edge, strewn with white stock-fish set to dry in the wind and sun, and above
+the slopes a large hall, and about it booths. Moreover, they saw a long dragon
+of war at anchor near the shore. For a while they rowed on, easing now and
+again. Then Eric spoke to Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What thinkest thou of yonder ship, Lambstail?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think this, lord: that she is fashioned wondrous like to the
+Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is in my mind also,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and our fortune is
+good if it is she.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They rowed on again, and presently a ray from the sun came over the
+hills&mdash;for now it was three hours past midnight&mdash;and, the ship having
+swung a little with the tide, lit upon her prow, and lo! there gleamed the
+golden dragon of the Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is a strange thing,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, lord, a strange and a merry, for now I shall talk with Hall the
+mate,&rdquo; and the Baresark smiled grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou shalt do no hurt to Hall,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;I am lord here,
+and I must judge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thy will is my will,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;but if my will were
+thine, he would hang on the mast till sea-birds nested amidst his bones.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they were close to the ship, but they could see no man. Skallagrim would
+have called aloud, but Eric bade him hold his peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Either they are dead, and thy calling cannot wake them, or perchance
+they sleep and will wake of themselves. We will row under the stern, and,
+having made fast, climb aboard and see with our own eyes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This, then, they did as silently as might be, and saw that the Gudruda had not
+been handled gently by the winds and waves, for her shield rail was washed
+away. This they found also, that all men lay deep in sleep. Now, amidships a
+fire still burned, and by it was food. They came there and ate of the food, of
+which they had great need. Then they took two cloaks that lay on the deck, and,
+throwing them about them, warmed themselves over the fire: for they were cold
+and wet, ay, and utterly outworn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they sat thus warming themselves, a man of the crew awoke and saw them, and
+being amazed, at once called to his fellows, saying that two giants were
+aboard, warming themselves at the fire. Now men sprang up, and, seizing their
+weapons, ran towards them, and among them was Hall the mate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then suddenly Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail threw aside the cloaks
+and stood up. They were gaunt and grim to see. Their cheeks were hollow and
+their eyes stared wide with want of sleep. Thick was their harness with brine,
+and open wounds gaped upon their faces and their hands. Men saw and fell back
+in fear, for they held them to be wizards risen from the sea in the shapes of
+Eric and the Baresark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric sang this song:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Swift and sure across the Swan&rsquo;s Bath<br />
+Sped Sea-stag on Raven&rsquo;s track,<br />
+Heav&rsquo;d Ran&rsquo;s breast in raging billows,<br />
+Stream&rsquo;d gale-banners through the sky!<br />
+Yet did Eric the war-eager<br />
+Leap with Baresark-mate aboard,<br />
+Fierce their onset on the foemen!<br />
+Wherefore brake the grapnel-chain?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hall heard and slunk back, for now he saw that these were indeed Eric and
+Skallagrim come up alive from the sea, and that they knew his baseness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric looked at him and sang again:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Swift away sped ship Gudruda,<br />
+Left her lord in foeman&rsquo;s ring;<br />
+Brighteyes back to back with Baresark<br />
+Held his head &lsquo;gainst mighty odds.<br />
+Down amidst the ballast tumbling,<br />
+Ospakar&rsquo;s shield-carles were rolled.<br />
+Holy peace at length they handselled,<br />
+Eric must in bonds be laid!<br />
+<br />
+&ldquo;Came the Grey Rat, came the Earl&rsquo;s wife,<br />
+Came the witch-word from afar;<br />
+Cag&rsquo;d wolves roused them, and with struggling<br />
+Tore their fetter from its hold.<br />
+Now they watch upon their weapons;<br />
+Now they weep and pray for life;<br />
+Now they leap forth like a torrent&mdash;<br />
+Swept away is foeman&rsquo;s strength!<br />
+<br />
+&ldquo;Then alone upon the Raven<br />
+Three long days they steer and sail,<br />
+Till the waters, welling upwards,<br />
+Wash dead men about their feet.<br />
+Fails the gale and sinks the dragon,<br />
+Barely may they win the boat:<br />
+Safe they stand on ship Gudruda&mdash;<br />
+Say, who cut the grapnel-chain?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap15"></a>CHAPTER XV<br />
+HOW ERIC DWELT IN LONDON TOWN</h2>
+
+<p>
+Men stood astonished, but Hall the mate slunk back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hold, comrade,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;I have something to say that
+songs cannot carry. Hearken, my shield-mates: we swore to be true to each
+other, even to death: is it not so? What then shall be said of that man who cut
+loose the Gudruda and left us two to die at the foeman&rsquo;s hand?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who was the man?&rdquo; asked a voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That man was Hall of Lithdale,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is false!&rdquo; said Hall, gathering up his courage; &ldquo;the
+cable parted beneath the straining of the ship, and afterwards we could not put
+about because of the great sea.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art false!&rdquo; roared Skallagrim. &ldquo;With my eyes I saw thee
+let thine axe fall upon the cable. Liar art thou and dastard! Thou art jealous
+also of Brighteyes thy lord, and this was in thy mind: to let him die upon the
+Raven and then to bind his shoes upon thy cowardly feet. Though none else saw,
+I saw; and I say this: that if I may have my will, I will string thee, living,
+to the prow in that same cable till gulls tear out thy fox-heart!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Hall grew very white and his knees trembled beneath him. &ldquo;It is
+true,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that I cut the chain, but not from any thought of
+evil. Had I not cut it the vessel must have sunk and all been lost.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did we not swear, Hall,&rdquo; said Eric sternly, &ldquo;together to
+fight and together to fall&mdash;together to fare and, if need be, together to
+cease from faring, and dost thou read the oath thus? Say, mates, what reward
+shall be paid to this man for his good fellowship to us and his tenderness for
+your lives?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As with one voice the men answered &ldquo;<i>Death!</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hearest, Hall?&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Yet I would deal more
+gently with one to whom I swore fellowship so lately. Get thee gone from our
+company, and let us see thy cur&rsquo;s face no more. Get thee gone, I say,
+before I repent of my mercy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then amidst a loud hooting, Hall took his weapons and without a word slunk into
+the boat of the Raven that lay astern, and rowed ashore; nor did Eric see his
+face for many months.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast done foolishly, lord, to let that weasel go,&rdquo; said
+Skallagrim, &ldquo;for he will live to nip thy hand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For good or evil, he is gone,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and now I am worn
+out and desire to sleep.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+After this Eric and Skallagrim rested three full days, and they were so weary
+that they were awake for little of this time. But on the third day they rose
+up, strong and well, except for their hurts and soreness. Then they told the
+men of that which had come to pass, and all wondered at their might and
+hardihood. To them indeed Eric seemed as a God, for few such deeds as his had
+been told of since the God-kind were on earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Brighteyes thought little of his deeds, and much of Gudruda. At times also
+he thought of Swanhild, and of that witch-dream she sent him: for it was
+wonderful to him that she should have saved him thus from Ran&rsquo;s net.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric was heartily welcomed by the Earl of the Farey Isles, for, when he heard
+his deeds, he made a feast in his honour, and set him in the high seat. It was
+a great feast, but Skallagrim became drunk at it and ran down the chamber, axe
+aloft, roaring for Hall of Lithdale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This angered Eric much and he would scarcely speak to Skallagrim for many days,
+though the great Baresark slunk about after him like his shadow, or a whipped
+hound at its master&rsquo;s heel, and at length humbled his pride so far as to
+ask pardon for his fault.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I grant it for thy deeds&rsquo; sake,&rdquo; said Eric shortly;
+&ldquo;but this is upon my mind: that thou wilt err thus again, and it shall be
+my cause of death&mdash;ay, and that of many more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;First may my bones be white,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They shall be white thereafter,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Fareys Eric shipped twelve good men and true, to take the seats of those who
+had been slain by Ospakar&rsquo;s folk. Afterwards, when the wounded were well
+of their hurts (except one man who died), and the Gudruda was made fit to take
+the sea again, Brighteyes bade farewell to the Earl of those Isles, who gave
+him a good cloak and a gold ring at parting, and sailed away.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now it were too long to tell of all the deeds that Eric and his men did. Never,
+so scalds sing, was there a viking like him for strength and skill and
+hardihood, and, in those days, no such war-dragon as the Gudruda had been known
+upon the sea. Wherever Eric joined battle, and that was in many places, he
+conquered, for none prevailed against him, till at last foes would fly before
+the terror of his name, and earls and kings would send from far craving the aid
+of his hands. Withal he was the best and gentlest of men. It is said of Eric
+that in all his days he did no base deed, nor hurt the weak, nor refused peace
+to him who prayed it, nor lifted sword against prisoner or wounded foe. From
+traders he would take a toll of their merchandise only and let them go, and
+whatever gains he won he would share equally, asking no larger part than the
+meanest of his band. All men loved Eric, and even his foes gave him honour and
+spoke well of him. Now that Hall of Lithdale was gone, there was no man among
+his mates who would not have passed to death for him, for they held him dearer
+than their lives. Women, too, loved him much; but his heart was set upon
+Gudruda, and he seldom turned to look on them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first summer of his outlawry Eric warred along the coast of Ireland, but in
+the winter he came to Dublin, and for a while served in the body-guard of the
+king of that town, who held him in honour, and would have had him stay there.
+But Eric would not bide there, and next spring, the Gudruda being ready for
+sea, he sailed for the shores of England. There he gave battle to two
+vikings&rsquo; ships of war, and took them after a hard fight. It was in this
+fight that Skallagrim Lambstail was wounded almost to death. For when, having
+taken one ship, Eric boarded the other with but few men, he was driven back and
+fell over a beam, and would have been slain, had not Skallagrim thrown himself
+across his body, taking on his own back that blow of a battle-axe which was
+aimed at Eric&rsquo;s head. This was a great wound, for the axe shore through
+the steel of the byrnie and sank into the flesh. But when Eric&rsquo;s men saw
+their lord down, and Skallagrim, as they deemed, dead athwart him, they made so
+fierce a rush that the foemen fell before them like leaves before a winter
+gale, and the end of it was that the vikings prayed peace of Eric. Skallagrim
+lay sick for many days, but he was hard to kill, and Eric nursed him back to
+life. After this these two loved each other as brother loves twin brother, and
+they could scarcely bear to be apart. But other people did not love Skallagrim,
+nor he them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric sailed on up the Thames to London, bringing the viking ships with him, and
+he delivered their captains bound to Edmund, Edward&rsquo;s son, the king who
+was called Edmund the Magnificent. These captains the King hung, for they had
+wrought damage to his ships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric found much favour with the King, and, indeed, his fame had gone before
+him. So when he came into the court, bravely clad, with Skallagrim at his back,
+who was now almost recovered of his wound, the King called out to him to draw
+near, saying that he desired to look on the bravest viking and most beauteous
+man who sailed the seas, and on that fierce Baresark whom men called
+&ldquo;Eric&rsquo;s Death-shadow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Eric came forward up the long hall that was adorned with things more
+splendid than ever his eyes had seen, and stood before the King. With him came
+Skallagrim, driving the two captive viking chiefs before him with his axe, as a
+flesher drives lambs. Now, during these many months Brighteyes had grown yet
+more great in girth and glorious to look on than he was before. Moreover, his
+hair was now so long that it flowed like a flood of gold down towards his
+girdle, for since Gudruda trimmed it no shears had come near his head, and his
+locks grew fast as a woman&rsquo;s. The King looked at him and was astonished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of a truth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;men have not lied about thee,
+Icelander, nor concerning that great wolf-hound of thine,&rdquo; and he pointed
+at Skallagrim with his sword of state. &ldquo;Never saw I such a man;&rdquo;
+and he bade all the mightiest men of his body-guard stand forward that he might
+measure them against Eric. But Brighteyes was an inch taller than the tallest,
+and measured half a span more round the chest than the biggest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What wouldest thou of me, Icelander?&rdquo; asked the King.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This, lord,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;to serve thee a while, and all my
+men with me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is an offer that few would turn from,&rdquo; answered the King.
+&ldquo;Thou shalt go into my body-guard, and, if I have my will, thou shalt be
+near me in battle, and thy wolf-dog also.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric said that he asked no better, and thereafter he went up with Edmund the
+King to make war on the Danes of Mercia, and he and Skallagrim did great deeds
+before the eyes of the Englishmen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That winter Eric and his company came back to London, and abode with the King
+in much state and honour. Now, there was a certain lady of the court named
+Elfrida. She was both fair and wealthy, the sweetest of women, and of royal
+blood by her mother&rsquo;s side. So soon as her eyes fell on Eric she loved
+him, and no one thing did she desire more than to be his wife. But Brighteyes
+kept aloof from her, for he loved Gudruda alone; and so the winter wore away,
+and in the spring he went away warring, nor did he come back till autumn was at
+hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Lady Elfrida sat at a window when Eric rode through London Town in the
+King&rsquo;s following, and as he passed she threw him a wreath of flowers. The
+King saw it and laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My cold kinswoman seems to melt before those bright eyes of thine,
+Icelander,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;as my foes melt before Whitefire&rsquo;s
+flame. Well, I could wish her a worse mate,&rdquo; and he looked on him
+strangely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric bowed, but made no answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night, as they sat at meat in the palace, the Lady Elfrida, being bidden
+in jest of Edmund the King to fill the cup of the bravest, passed down the
+board, and, before all men, poured wine into Eric&rsquo;s cup, and, as she did
+so, welcomed him back with short sweet words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric grew red as dawn, and thanked her graciously; but after the feast he spoke
+with Skallagrim, asking him of the Gudruda, and when she could be ready to take
+the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In ten days, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;but stay we not here
+with the King this winter? It is late to sail.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;we bide not here. I would winter this year
+in Fareys, for they are the nighest place to Iceland that I may reach. Next
+summer my three years of outlawry are over, and I would fare back
+homewards.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, I see the shadow of a woman&rsquo;s hand,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+&ldquo;It is very late to face the northern seas, and we may sail to Iceland
+from London in the spring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is my will that we should sail,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Past Orkneys runs the road to Fareys,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and
+in Orkneys sits a hawk to whom the Lady Elfrida is but a dove. In faring from
+ill we may hap on worse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is my will that we sail,&rdquo; said Eric stubbornly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As thou wilt, and as the King wills,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the morrow Eric went in before the King, and craved a boon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is little that thou canst ask, Brighteyes,&rdquo; said the King,
+&ldquo;that I will not give thee, for, by my troth, I hold thee dear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am come back to seek no great thing, lord,&rdquo; answered Eric,
+&ldquo;but this only: leave to bid thee farewell. I would wend homeward.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, Eric,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;have I not dealt well with
+thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, and overwell, lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, then, wouldst thou leave me? I have this in my mind&mdash;to bring
+thee to great honour. See, now, there is a fair lady in this court, and in her
+veins runs blood that even an Iceland viking might be proud to mate with. She
+has great lands, and, mayhap, she shall have more. Canst thou not find a home
+on them, thinkest thou, Brighteyes?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In Iceland only I am at home, lord,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the King was wroth, and bade him begone when it pleased him, and Eric
+bowed before him and went out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two days afterwards, while Eric was walking in the Palace gardens he met the
+Lady Elfrida face to face. She held white flowers in her hand, and she was fair
+to see and pale as the flowers she bore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He greeted her, and, after a while, she spoke to him in a gentle voice:
+&ldquo;They say that thou goest from England, Brighteyes?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, lady; I go,&rdquo; he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked on him once and twice and then burst out weeping. &ldquo;Why goest
+thou hence to that cold land of thine?&rdquo; she sobbed&mdash;&ldquo;that
+hateful land of snow and ice! Is not England good enough for thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am at home there, lady, and there my mother waits me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;There thy mother waits thee,&rsquo; Eric?&mdash;say, does a maid
+called Gudruda the Fair wait thee there also?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is such a maid in Iceland,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; I know it&mdash;I know it all,&rdquo; she answered, drying her
+tears, and of a sudden growing cold and proud; &ldquo;Eric, thou art betrothed
+to this Gudruda; and, for thy welfare, somewhat overfaithful to thy troth. For
+hearken, Eric Brighteyes. I know this: that little luck shall come to thee from
+the maid Gudruda. It would become me ill to say more; nevertheless, this is
+true&mdash;that here, in England, good fortune waits thy hand, and there in
+Iceland such fortune as men mete to their foes. Knowest thou this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric looked at her and answered: &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;men are
+not born of their own will, they live and do little that they will, they do and
+go, perchance, whither they would not. Yet it may happen to a man that one
+meets him whose hand he fain would hold, if it be but for an hour&rsquo;s
+travel over icy ways; and it is better to hold that hand for this short hour
+than to wend his life through at a stranger&rsquo;s side.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps there is wisdom in thy folly,&rdquo; said the Lady Elfrida.
+&ldquo;Still, I tell thee this: that no good luck waits thee there in
+Iceland.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It well may be,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;my days have been stormy, and
+the gale is still brewing. But it is a poor heart that fears the storm. Better
+to sink; for, coward or hero, all must sink at last.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, Eric,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;if that hand thou dost desire to
+hold is lost to thee, what then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If that hand is cold in death, then henceforth I wend my ways
+alone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if it be held of another hand than thine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I will journey back to England, lady, and here in this fair garden
+I may crave speech of thee again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They looked one on another. &ldquo;Fare thee well, Eric!&rdquo; said the Lady
+Elfrida. &ldquo;Here in this garden we may talk again; and, if we talk no
+more&mdash;why, fare thee well! Days come and go; the swallow takes flight at
+winter, and lo! at spring it twitters round the eaves. And if it come not
+again, then farewell to that swallow. The world is a great house, Eric, and
+there is room for many swallows. But alas! for her who is left
+desolate&mdash;alas, alas!&rdquo; And she turned and went.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is told of this lady Elfrida that she became very wealthy and was much
+honoured for her gentleness and wisdom, and that, when she was old, she built a
+great church and named it Ericskirk. It is also told that, though many sought
+her in marriage, she wedded none.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap16"></a>CHAPTER XVI<br />
+HOW SWANHILD WALKED THE SEAS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Within two days afterwards, the Gudruda being bound for sea, Eric went up to
+bid farewell to the King. But Edmund was so angry with him because of his going
+that he would not see him. Thereon Eric took horse and rode down sadly from the
+Palace to the river-bank where the Gudruda lay. But when he was about to give
+the word to get out the oars, the King himself rode up, and with him men
+bearing costly gifts. Eric went ashore to speak with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am angry with thee, Brighteyes,&rdquo; said Edmund, &ldquo;yet it is
+not in my heart to let thee go without words and gifts of farewell. This only I
+ask of thee now, that, if things go not well with thee there, out in Iceland,
+thou wilt come back to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will&mdash;that I promise thee, King,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for I
+shall never find a better lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nor I a braver servant,&rdquo; said the King. Then he gave him the gifts
+and kissed him before all men. To Skallagrim also he gave a good byrnie of
+Welsh steel coloured black.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric went aboard again and dropped down the river with the tide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For five days all went well with them, the sea being calm and the winds light
+and favourable. But on the fifth night, as they sailed slowly along the coasts
+of East Anglia over against Yarmouth sands, the moon rose red and ringed and
+the sea fell dead calm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yonder hangs a storm-lamp, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, pointing to the
+angry moon. &ldquo;We shall soon be bailing, for the autumn gales draw
+near.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wait till they come, then speak,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Thou croakest
+ever like a raven.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And ravens croak before foul weather,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, and
+just as he spoke a sudden gust of wind came up from the south-east and laid the
+Gudruda over. After this it came on to blow, and so fiercely that for whole
+days and nights their clothes were scarcely dry. They ran northwards before the
+storm and still northward, sighting no land and seeing no stars. And ever as
+they scudded on the gale grew fiercer, till at length the men were worn out
+with bailing and starved with wet and cold. Three of their number also were
+washed away by the seas, and all were in sorry plight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the fourth night of the gale. Eric stood at the helm, and by him
+Skallagrim. They were alone, for their comrades were spent and lay beneath
+decks, waiting for death. The ship was half full of water, but they had no more
+strength to bail. Eric seemed grim and gaunt in the white light of the moon,
+and his long hair streamed about him wildly. Grimmer yet was Skallagrim as he
+clung to the shield-rail and stared across the deep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She rolls heavily, lord,&rdquo; he shouted, &ldquo;and the water gains
+fast.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can the men bail no more?&rdquo; asked Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, they are outworn and wait for death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They need not wait long,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;What do they say of
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric groaned aloud. &ldquo;It was my stubbornness that brought us to this
+pass,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I care little for myself, but it is ill that all
+should die for one man&rsquo;s folly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Grieve not, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, &ldquo;that is the
+world&rsquo;s way, and there are worse things than to drown. Listen! methinks I
+hear the roar of breakers yonder,&rdquo; and he pointed to the left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Breakers they surely are,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Now the end is near.
+But see, is not that land looming up on the right, or is it cloud?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is land,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and I am sure of this, that
+we run into a firth. Look, the seas boil like a hot spring. Hold on thy course,
+lord, perchance we may yet steer between rocks and land. Already the wind falls
+and the current lessens the seas.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;already the fog and rain come up,&rdquo;
+and he pointed ahead where dense clouds gathered in the shape of a giant, whose
+head reached to the skies and moved towards them, hiding the moon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim looked, then spoke: &ldquo;Now here, it seems, is witchwork. Say,
+lord, hast thou ever seen mist travel against wind as it travels now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never before,&rdquo; said Eric, and as he spoke the light of the moon
+went out.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s wife, sat in beauty in her bower on Straumey Isle and
+looked with wide eyes towards the sea. It was midnight. None stirred in
+Atli&rsquo;s hall, but still Swanhild looked out towards the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now she turned and spoke into the darkness, for there was no light in the bower
+save the light of her great eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art thou there?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I have summoned thee thrice in
+the words thou knowest. Say, Toad, art there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Swanhild the Fatherless! Swanhild, Groa&rsquo;s daughter!
+Witch-mother&rsquo;s witch-child! I am here. What is thy will with me?&rdquo;
+piped a thin voice like the voice of a dying babe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild shuddered a little and her eyes grew brighter&mdash;as bright as the
+eyes of a cat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This first,&rdquo; she said: &ldquo;that thou show thyself. Hideous as
+thou art, I had rather see thee, than speak with thee seeing thee not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mock not my form, lady,&rdquo; answered the thin voice, &ldquo;for it is
+as thou dost fashion it in thy thought. To the good I am fair as day; to the
+evil, foul as their heart. <i>Toad</i> thou didst call me: look, now I come as
+a toad!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild looked, and behold! a ring of the darkness grew white with light, and
+in it crouched a thing hideous to see. It was shaped as a great spotted toad,
+and on it was set a hag&rsquo;s face, with white locks hanging down on either
+side. Its eyes were blood-red and sunken, black were its fangs, and its skin
+was dead yellow. It grinned horribly as Swanhild shrank from it, then spoke
+again:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Grey Wolf</i> thou didst call me once, Swanhild, when thou wouldst
+have thrust Gudruda down Goldfoss gulf, and as a grey wolf I came, and gave
+thee counsel that thou tookest but ill. <i>Rat</i> didst thou call me once,
+when thou wouldst save Brighteyes from the carles of Ospakar, and as a rat I
+came and in thy shape I walked the seas. <i>Toad</i> thou callest me now, and
+as a toad I creep about thy feet. Name thy will, Swanhild, and I will name my
+price. But be swift, for there are other fair ladies whose wish I must do ere
+dawn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art hideous to look on!&rdquo; said Swanhild, placing her hand
+before her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say not so, lady; say not so. Look at this face of mine. Knowest thou it
+not? It is thy mother&rsquo;s&mdash;dead Groa lent it me. I took it from where
+she lies; and my toad&rsquo;s skin I drew from thy spotted heart, Swanhild, and
+more hideous than I am shalt thou be in a day to come, as once I was more fair
+than thou art to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild opened her lips to shriek, but no sound came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Troll,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;mock me not with lies, but hearken
+to my bidding: where sails Eric now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look out into the night, lady, and thou shalt see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild looked, and the ways of the darkness opened before her witch-sight.
+There at the mouth of Pentland Firth the Gudruda laboured heavily in the great
+seas, and by the tiller stood Eric, and with him Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Seest thou thy love?&rdquo; asked the Familiar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yea,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;full clearly; he is worn with wind and
+sea, but more glorious than aforetime, and his hair is long. Say, what shall
+befall him if thou aidest not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This, that he shall safely pass the Firth, for the gale falls, and come
+safely to Fareys, and from Fareys isles to Gudruda&rsquo;s arms.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what canst thou do, Goblin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This: I can lure Eric&rsquo;s ship to wreck, and give his comrades, all
+save Skallagrim, to Ran&rsquo;s net, and bring him to thy arms, Swanhild,
+witch-mother&rsquo;s witch-child!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She hearkened. Her breast heaved and her eyes flashed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And thy price, Toad?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Thou</i> art the price, lady,&rdquo; piped the goblin. &ldquo;Thou
+shalt give thyself to me when thy day is done, and merrily will we sisters
+dwell in Hela&rsquo;s halls, and merrily for ever will we fare about the earth
+o&rsquo; nights, doing such tasks as this task of thine, Swanhild, and working
+wicked woe till the last woe is worked on us. Art thou content?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild thought. Twice her breath went from her lips in great sighs. Then she
+stood, pale and silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Safely shall he sail the Firth,&rdquo; piped the thin voice.
+&ldquo;Safely shall he sit in Fareys. Safely shall he lie in white
+Gudruda&rsquo;s arms&mdash;<i>hee! hee!</i> Think of it, lady!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Swanhild shook like a birth-tree in the gale, and her face grew ashen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am content,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Hee! hee!</i> Brave lady! She is content! Ah, we sisters shall be
+merry. Hearken: if I aid thee thus I may do no more. Thrice has the night-owl
+come at thy call&mdash;now it must wing away. Yet things will be as I have
+said; thine own wisdom shall guide the rest. Ere morn Brighteyes shall stand in
+Atli&rsquo;s hall, ere spring he will be thy love, and ere autumn Gudruda shall
+sit on the high seat in the hall of Middalhof the bride of Ospakar. Draw nigh,
+give me thine arm, sister, that blood may seal our bargain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild drew near the toad, and, shuddering, stretched out her arm, and then
+and there the red blood ran, and there they sealed their sisterhood. And as the
+nameless deed was wrought, it seemed to Swanhild as though fire shot through
+her veins, and fire surged before her eyes, and in the fire a shape passed up
+weeping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is done, Blood-sister,&rdquo; piped the voice; &ldquo;now I must away
+in thy form to be about thy tasks. Seat thee here before me&mdash;so. Now lay
+thy brow upon my brow&mdash;fear not, it was thy mother&rsquo;s&mdash;life on
+death! curling locks on corpse hair! See, so we change&mdash;we change. Now
+thou art the Death-toad and I am Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s wife, who shall be
+Eric&rsquo;s love.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Swanhild knew that her beauty had entered into the foulness of the toad,
+and the foulness of the toad into her beauty, for there before her stood her
+own shape and here she crouched a toad upon the floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Away to work, away!&rdquo; said a soft low voice, her own voice speaking
+from her own body that stood before her, and lo! it was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Swanhild crouched, in the shape of a hag-headed toad, upon the ground in
+her bower of Atli&rsquo;s hall, and felt wickedness and evil longings and hate
+boil and seethe within her heart. She looked out through her sunken horny eyes
+and she seemed to see strange sights. She saw Atli, her lord, dead upon the
+grass. She saw a woman asleep, and above her flashed a sword. She saw the hall
+of Middalhof red with blood. She saw a great gulf in a mountain&rsquo;s heart,
+and men fell down it. And, last, she saw a war-ship sailing fast out on the
+sea, afire, and vanish there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the witch-hag who wore Swanhild&rsquo;s loveliness stood upon the cliffs of
+Straumey and tossed her white arms towards the north.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, fog! come, sleet!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Come, fog! come, sleet!
+Put out the moon and blind the eyes of Eric!&rdquo; And as she called, the fog
+rose up like a giant and stretched his arms from shore to shore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Move, fog! beat, rain!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Move and beat against
+the gale, and blind the eyes of Eric!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the fog moved on against the wind, and with it sleet and rain.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+&ldquo;Now I am afeared,&rdquo; said Eric to Skallagrim, as they stood in
+darkness upon the ship: &ldquo;the gale blows from behind us, and yet the mist
+drives fast in our faces. What comes now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is witch-work, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, &ldquo;and in such
+things no counsel can avail. Hold the tiller straight and drive on, say I.
+Methinks the gale lessens more and more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they did for a little while, and all around them sounded the roar of
+breakers. Darker grew the sky and darker yet, till at the last, though they
+stood side by side, they could not see each other&rsquo;s shapes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is strange sailing,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;I hear the roar of
+breakers as it were beneath the prow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lash the helm, lord, and let us go forward. If there are breakers,
+perhaps we shall see their foam through the blackness,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric did so, and they crept forward on the starboard board right to the prow of
+the ship, and there Skallagrim peered into the fog and sleet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; he whispered presently, and his voice shook strangely,
+&ldquo;what is that yonder on the waters? Seest thou aught?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric stared and said, &ldquo;By Odin! I see a shape of light like to the shape
+of a woman; it walks upon the waters towards us and the mist melts before it,
+and the sea grows calm beneath its feet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see that also!&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She comes nigh!&rdquo; gasped Eric. &ldquo;See how swift she comes! By
+the dead, it is Swanhild&rsquo;s shape! Look, Skallagrim! look how her eyes
+flame!&mdash;look how her hair streams upon the wind!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is Swanhild, and we are fey!&rdquo; quoth Skallagrim, and they ran
+back to the helm, where Skallagrim sank upon the deck in fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;See, Skallagrim, she glides before the Gudruda&rsquo;s beak! she glides
+backwards and she points yonder&mdash;there to the right! Shall I put the helm
+down and follow her?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, lord, nay; set no faith in witchcraft or evil will befall
+us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he spoke a great gust of wind shook the ship, the music of the breakers
+roared in their ears, and the gleaming shape upon the waters tossed its arms
+wildly and pointed to the right.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The breakers call ahead,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;The shape points
+yonder, where I hear no sound of sea. Once before, thou mindest, Swanhild
+walked the waves to warn us and thereby saved us from the men of Ospakar. Ever
+she swore she loved me; now she is surely come in love to save us and all our
+comrades. Say, shall I put about? Look: once more she waves her arms and
+points,&rdquo; and as he spoke he gripped the helm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no rede, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and I love not
+witch-work. We can die but once, and death is all around; be it as thou
+wilt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric put down the helm with all his might. The good ship answered, and her
+timbers groaned loudly, as though in woe, when the strain of the sea struck her
+abeam. Then once more she flew fast across the waters, and fast before her
+glided the wraith of Swanhild. Now it pointed here and now there, and as it
+pointed so Eric shaped his course. For a while the noise of breakers lessened,
+but now again came a thunder, like the thunder of waves smiting on a cliff, and
+about the sides of the Gudruda the waves hissed like snakes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly the Shape threw up its arms and seemed to sink beneath the waves,
+while a sound like the sound of a great laugh went up from sea to sky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now here is the end,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and we are lured to
+doom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ere ever the words had passed his lips the ship struck, and so fiercely that
+they were rolled upon the deck. Suddenly the sky grew clear, the moon shone
+out, and before them were cliffs and rocks, and behind them a great wave rushed
+on. From the hold of the ship there came a cry, for now their comrades were
+awake and they knew that death was here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric gripped Skallagrim round the middle and looked aft. On rushed the wave, no
+such wave had he ever seen. Now it struck and the Gudruda burst asunder beneath
+the blow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail were lifted on its crest and knew
+no more.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Swanhild, crouching in hideous guise upon the ground in the bower of
+Atli&rsquo;s hall, looked upon the visions that passed before her. Suddenly a
+woman&rsquo;s shape, her own shape, was there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is done, Blood-sister,&rdquo; said a voice, her own voice.
+&ldquo;Merrily I walked the waves, and oh, merry was the cry of Eric&rsquo;s
+folk when Ran caught them in her net! Be thyself, again, Blood-sister&mdash;be
+fair as thou art foul; then arise, wake Atli thy lord, and go down to the
+sea&rsquo;s lip by the southern cliffs and see what thou shalt find. We shall
+meet no more till all this game is played and another game is set,&rdquo; and
+the shape of Swanhild crouched upon the floor before the hag-headed toad
+muttering &ldquo;Pass! pass!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Swanhild felt her flesh come back to her, and as it grew upon her so the
+shape of the Death-headed toad faded away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Farewell, Blood-sister!&rdquo; piped a voice; &ldquo;make merry as thou
+mayest, but merrier shall be our nights when thou hast gone a-sailing with Eric
+on the sea. Farewell! farewell! <i>Were-wolf</i> thou didst call me once, and
+as a wolf I came. <i>Rat</i> thou didst call me once, and as a rat I came.
+<i>Toad</i> didst thou call me once, and as a toad I came. Say, at the last,
+what wilt thou call me and in what shape shall I come, Blood-sister? Till then
+farewell!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+And all was gone and all was still.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap17"></a>CHAPTER XVII<br />
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WEDDED UNNA, THOROD&rsquo;S DAUGHTER</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now the story goes back to Iceland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Brighteyes was gone, for a while Gudruda the Fair moved sadly about the
+stead, like one new-widowed. Then came tidings. Men told how Ospakar Blacktooth
+had waylaid Eric on the seas with two long ships, dragons of war, and how Eric
+had given him battle and sunk one dragon with great loss to Ospakar. They told
+also how Blacktooth&rsquo;s other dragon, the Raven, had sailed away before the
+wind, and Eric had sailed after it in a rising gale. But of what befell these
+ships no news came for many a month, and it was rumoured that this had befallen
+them&mdash;that both had sunk in the gale, and that Eric was dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Gudruda would not believe this. When Asmund the Priest, her father, asked
+her why she did not believe it, she answered that, had Eric been dead, her
+heart would surely have spoken to her of it. To this Asmund said that it might
+be so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hay-harvest being done, Asmund made ready for his wedding with Unna,
+Thorod&rsquo;s daughter and Eric&rsquo;s cousin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it was agreed that the marriage-feast should be held at Middalhof; for
+Asmund wished to ask a great company to the wedding, and there was no place at
+Coldback to hold so many. Also some of the kin of Thorod, Unna&rsquo;s father,
+were bidden to the feast from the east and north. At length all was prepared
+and the guests came in great companies, for no such feast had been made in this
+quarter for many years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the eve of the marriage Asmund spoke with Groa. The witch-wife had borne
+herself humbly since she was recovered from her sickness. She passed about the
+stead like a rat at night, speaking few words and with downcast eyes. She was
+busy also making all things ready for the feasting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now as Asmund went up the hall seeing that everything was in order, Groa drew
+near to him and touched him gently on the shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are things to thy mind, lord?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, Groa,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;more to my mind than to thine I
+fear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fear not, lord; thy will is my will.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, Groa, is it thy wish to bide here in Middalhof when Unna is my
+housewife?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is my wish to serve thee as aforetime,&rdquo; she answered softly,
+&ldquo;if so be that Unna wills it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is her desire,&rdquo; said Asmund and went his ways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Groa stood looking after him and her face was fierce and evil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;While bane has virtue, while runes have power, and while hand has
+cunning, never, Unna, shalt thou take my place at Asmund&rsquo;s side! Out of
+the water I came to thee, Asmund; into the water I go again. Unquiet shall I
+lie there&mdash;unquiet shall I wend through Hela&rsquo;s halls; but Unna shall
+rest at Asmund&rsquo;s side&mdash;in Asmund&rsquo;s cairn!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then again she moved about the hall, making all things ready for the feast. But
+at midnight, when the light was low and folk slept, Groa rose, and, veiled in a
+black robe, with a basket in her hand, passed like a shadow through the hall
+out upon the meads. Thence she glided into the mists that hang about the
+river&rsquo;s edge, and in silence, always looking behind her, like one who
+fears a hidden foe, culled flowers of noisome plants that grow in the marsh.
+Her basket being filled, she passed round the stead to a hidden dell upon the
+mountain side. Here a man stood waiting, and near him burned a fire of turf. In
+his hand he held an iron-pot. It was Koll the Half-witted, Groa&rsquo;s thrall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are all things ready, Koll?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;but I like not these tasks of thine,
+mistress. Say now, what wouldst thou do with the fire and the pot?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This, then, Koll. I would brew a love-potion for Asmund the Priest as he
+has bidden me to do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have done many an ill deed for thee, mistress, but of all of them I
+love this the least,&rdquo; said the thrall, doubtfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have done many a good deed for thee, Koll. It was I who saved thee
+from the Doom-stone, seeming to prove thee innocent&mdash;ay, even when thy
+back was stretched on it, because thou hadst slain a man in his sleep. Is it
+not so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yea, mistress.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet thou wast guilty, Koll. And I have given thee many good gifts,
+is it not so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, it is so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen then: serve me this once and I will give thee one last
+gift&mdash;thy freedom, and with it two hundred in silver.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Koll&rsquo;s eyes glistened. &ldquo;What must I do, mistress?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To-day at the wedding-feast it will be thy part to pour the cups while
+Asmund calls the toasts. Last of all, when men are merry, thou wilt mix that
+cup in which Asmund shall pledge Unna his wife and Unna must pledge Asmund.
+Now, when thou hast poured, thou shalt pass the cup to me, as I stand at the
+foot of the high seat, waiting to give the bride greeting on behalf of the
+serving-women of the household. Thou shalt hand the cup to me as though in
+error, and that is but a little thing to ask of thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A little thing indeed,&rdquo; said Koll, staring at her, and pulling
+with his hand at his red hair, &ldquo;yet I like it not. What if I say no,
+mistress?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say no or speak of this and I will promise thee one thing only, thou
+knave, and it is, before winter comes, that the crows shall pick thy bones!
+Now, brave me, if thou darest,&rdquo; and straightway Groa began to mutter some
+witch-words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Koll, holding up his hand as though to ward away a
+blow. &ldquo;Curse me not: I will do as thou wilt. But when shall I touch the
+two hundred in silver?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will give thee half before the feast begins, and half when it is
+ended, and with it freedom to go where thou wilt. And now leave me, and on thy
+life see that thou fail me not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have never failed thee yet,&rdquo; said Koll, and went his ways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Groa set the pot upon the fire, and, placing in it the herbs that she had
+gathered, poured water on them. Presently they began to boil and as they boiled
+she stirred them with a peeled stick and muttered spells over them. For long
+she sat in that dim and lonely place stirring the pot and muttering spells,
+till at length the brew was done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She lifted the pot from the fire and smelt at it. Then drawing a phial from her
+robe she poured out the liquor and held it to the sky. The witch-water was
+white as milk, but presently it grew clear. She looked at it, then smiled
+evilly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here is a love-draught for a queen&mdash;ah, a love-draught for a
+queen!&rdquo; she said, and, still smiling, she placed the phial in her breast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, having scattered the fire with her foot, Groa took the pot and threw it
+into a deep pool of water, where it could not be found readily, and crept back
+to the stead before men were awake.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now the day wore on and all the company were gathered at the marriage-feast to
+the number of nearly two hundred. Unna sat in the high seat, and men thought
+her a bonny bride, and by her side sat Asmund the Priest. He was a hale, strong
+man to look on, though he had seen some three-score winters; but his mien was
+sad, and his heart heavy. He drank cup after cup to cheer him, but all without
+avail. For his thought sped back across the years and once more he seemed to
+see the face of Gudruda the Gentle as she lay dying, and to hear her voice when
+she foretold evil to him if he had aught to do with Groa the Witch-wife. And
+now it seemed to him that the evil was at hand, though whence it should come he
+knew not. He looked up. There Groa moved along the hall, ministering to the
+guests; but he saw as she moved that her eyes were always fixed, now on him and
+now on Unna. He remembered that curse also which Groa had called down upon him
+when he had told her that he was betrothed to Unna, and his heart grew cold
+with fear. &ldquo;Now I will change my counsel,&rdquo; Asmund said to himself:
+&ldquo;Groa shall not stay here in this stead, for I will look no longer on
+that dark face of hers. She goes hence to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not far from Asmund sat Björn, his son. As Gudruda the Fair, his sister,
+brought him mead he caught her by the sleeve, whispering in her ear.
+&ldquo;Methinks our father is sad. What weighs upon his heart?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know not,&rdquo; said Gudruda, but as she spoke she looked first on
+Asmund, then at Groa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is ill that Groa should stop here,&rdquo; whispered Björn again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is ill,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, and glided away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asmund saw their talk and guessed its purport. Rousing himself he laughed aloud
+and called to Koll the Half-witted to pour the cups that he might name the
+toasts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Koll filled, and, as Asmund called the toasts one by one, Koll handed the cups
+to him. Asmund drank deep of each, till at length his sorrow passed from him,
+and, together with all who sat there, he grew merry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Last of all came the toast of the bride&rsquo;s cup. But before Asmund called
+it, the women of the household drew near the high seat to welcome Unna, when
+she should have drunk. Gudruda stood foremost, and Groa was next to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Koll filled as before, and it was a great cup of gold that he filled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asmund rose to call the toast, and with him all who were in the hall. Koll
+brought up the cup, and handed it, not to Asmund, but to Groa; but there were
+few who noted this, for all were listening to Asmund&rsquo;s toast and most of
+the guests were somewhat drunken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The cup,&rdquo; cried Asmund&mdash;&ldquo;give me the cup that I may
+drink.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Groa started forward, and as she did so she seemed to stumble, so that for
+a moment her robe covered up the great bride-cup. Then she gathered herself
+together slowly, and, smiling, passed up the cup.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asmund lifted it to his lips and drank deep. Then he turned and gave it to Unna
+his wife, but before she drank he kissed her on the lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now while all men shouted such a welcome that the hall shook, and as Unna,
+smiling, drank from the cup, the eyes of Asmund fell upon Groa who stood
+beneath him, and lo! her eyes seemed to flame and her face was hideous as the
+face of a troll.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Asmund grew white and put his hand to his head, as though to think, then cried
+aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Drink not, Unna! the draught is drugged!&rdquo; and he struck at the
+vessel with his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He smote it indeed, and so hard that it flew from her hand far down the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Unna had already drunk deep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The draught is drugged!&rdquo; Asmund cried, and pointed to Groa, while
+all men stood silent, not knowing what to do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The draught is drugged!&rdquo; he cried a third time, &ldquo;and that
+witch has drugged it!&rdquo; And he began to tear at his breast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Groa laughed so shrilly that men trembled to hear her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, lord,&rdquo; she screamed, &ldquo;the draught is drugged, and Groa
+the Witch-wife hath drugged it! Ay, tear thy heart out, Asmund, and Unna, grow
+thou white as snow&mdash;soon, if my medicine has virtue, thou shalt be whiter
+yet! Hearken all men. Asmund the Priest is Swanhild&rsquo;s father, and for
+many a year I have been Asmund&rsquo;s mate. What did I tell thee,
+lord?&mdash;that I would see the two of you dead ere Unna should take my
+place!&mdash;ay, and on Gudruda the Fair, thy daughter, and Björn thy son, and
+Eric Brighteyes, Gudruda&rsquo;s love, and many another man&mdash;on them too
+shall my curse fall! Tear thy heart out, Asmund! Unna, grow thou white as snow!
+The draught is drugged and Groa, Ran&rsquo;s gift! Groa the Witch-Wife! Groa,
+Asmund&rsquo;s love! hath drugged it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And ere ever a man might lift a hand to stay her Groa glided past the high seat
+and was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a space all stood silent. Asmund ceased clutching at his breast. Rising he
+spoke heavily:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I learn that sin is a stone to smite him who hurled it. Gudruda the
+Gentle spoke sooth when she warned me against this woman. <i>New wed, new
+dead!</i> Unna, fare thee well!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And straightway Asmund fell down and died there by the high seat in his own
+hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unna gazed at him with ashen face. Then, plucking at her bosom she sprang from
+the dais and rushed along the hall, screaming. Men made way for her, and at the
+door she also fell dead.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+This then was the end of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, and Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s
+daughter, Eric&rsquo;s cousin, his new-made wife.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+For a moment there was silence in the hall. But before the echoes of
+Unna&rsquo;s screams had died away, Björn cried aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The witch! where is the witch?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then with a yell of rage, men leaped to their feet, seizing their weapons, and
+rushed from the stead. Out they ran. There, on the hill-side far above them, a
+black shape climbed and leapt swiftly. They gave tongue like dogs set upon a
+wolf and sped up the hill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They gained the crest of the hill, and now they were at Goldfoss brink. Lo! the
+witch-wife had crossed the bed of the torrent, for little rain had fallen and
+the river was low. She stood on Sheep-saddle, the water running from her robes.
+On Sheep-saddle she stood and cursed them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Björn took a bow and set a shaft upon the string. He drew it and the arrow sung
+through the air and smote her, speeding through her heart. With a cry Groa
+threw up her arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then down she plunged. She fell on Wolf&rsquo;s Fang, where Eric once had stood
+and, bouncing thence, rushed to the boiling deeps below and was no more seen
+for ever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus, then, did Asmund the Priest wed Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s daughter, and this
+was the end of the feasting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereafter Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, ruled at Middalhof, and was Priest in his
+place. He sought for Koll the Half-witted to kill him, but Koll took the fells,
+and after many months he found passage in a ship that was bound for Scotland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Björn was a hard man and a greedy. He was no friend to Eric Brighteyes, and
+always pressed it on Gudruda that she should wed Ospakar Blacktooth. But to
+this counsel Gudruda would not listen, for day and night she thought upon her
+love. Next summer there came tidings that Eric was safe in Ireland, and men
+spoke of his deeds, and of how he and Skallagrim had swept the ship of Ospakar
+single-handed. Now after these tidings, for a while Gudruda walked singing
+through the meads, and no flower that grew in them was half so fair as she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That summer also Ospakar Blacktooth met Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, at the
+Thing, and they talked much together in secret.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap18"></a>CHAPTER XVIII<br />
+HOW EARL ATLI FOUND ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM ON THE SOUTHERN ROCKS OF STRAUMEY
+ISLE</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+Swanhild, robed in white, as though new risen from sleep, stood, candle in
+hand, by the bed of Atli the Earl, her lord, crying &ldquo;Awake!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What passes now?&rdquo; said Atli, lifting himself upon his arm.
+&ldquo;What passes, Swanhild, and why dost thou ever wander alone at nights,
+looking so strangely? I love not thy dark witch-ways, Swanhild, and I was wed
+to thee in an ill hour, wife who art no wife.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In an ill hour indeed, Earl Atli,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;an ill
+hour for thee and me, for, as thou hast said, eld and youth are strange
+yokefellows and pull different paths. Arise now, Earl, for I have dreamed a
+dream.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell it to me on the morrow, then,&rdquo; quoth Atli; &ldquo;there is
+small joyousness in thy dreams, that always point to evil, and I must bear
+enough evil of late.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, lord, my rede may not be put aside so. Listen now: I have dreamed
+that a great dragon of war has been cast away upon Straumey&rsquo;s
+south-western rocks. The cries of those who drowned rang in my ears. But I
+thought that some came living to the shore, and lie there senseless, to perish
+of the cold. Arise, therefore, take men and go down to the rocks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will go at daybreak,&rdquo; said Atli, letting his head fall upon the
+pillow. &ldquo;I have little faith in such visions, and it is too late for
+ships of war to try the passage of the Firth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Arise, I say,&rdquo; answered Swanhild sternly, &ldquo;and do my
+bidding, else I will myself go to search the rocks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Atli rose grumbling, and shook the heavy sleep from his eyes: for of all
+living folk he most feared Swanhild his wife. He donned his garments, threw a
+thick cloak about him, and, going to the hall where men snored around the dying
+fires, for the night was bitter, he awoke some of them. Now among those men
+whom he called was Hall of Lithdale, Hall the mate who had cut the
+grapnel-chain. For this Hall, fearing to return to Iceland, had come hither
+saying that he had been wounded off Fareys, in the great fight between Eric and
+Ospakar&rsquo;s men, and left there to grow well of his hurt or die. Then Atli,
+not knowing that the carle lied, had bid him welcome for Eric&rsquo;s sake, for
+he still loved Eric above all men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Hall loved not labour and nightfarings to search for shipwrecked men of
+whom the Lady Swanhild had chanced to dream. So he turned himself upon his side
+and slept again. Still, certain of Atli&rsquo;s folk rose at his bidding, and
+they went together down to the south-western rocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Swanhild, a cloak thrown over her night-gear, sat herself in the high seat
+of the hall and fixing her eyes, now upon the dying fires and now upon the
+blood-marks in her arm, waited in silence. The night was cold and windy, but
+the moon shone bright, and by its light Atli and his people made their way to
+the south-western rocks, on which the sea beat madly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What lies yonder?&rdquo; said Atli, pointing to some black things that
+lay beneath them upon the rock, cast there by the waves. A man climbed down the
+cliff&rsquo;s side that is here as though it were cut in steps, and then cried
+aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A ship&rsquo;s mast, new broken, lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems that Swanhild dreams true,&rdquo; muttered Atli; &ldquo;but I
+am sure of this: that none have come ashore alive in such a sea.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the man who searched the rocks below cried aloud again:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here lie two great men, locked in each other&rsquo;s arms. They seem to
+be dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now all the men climb down the slippery rocks as best they may, though the
+spray wets them, and with them goes Atli. The Earl is a brisk man, though old
+in years, and he comes first to where the two lie. He who was undermost lay
+upon his back, but his face is hid by the thick golden hair that flowed across
+it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Man&rsquo;s body indeed, but woman&rsquo;s locks,&rdquo; said Atli as he
+put out his hand and drew the hair away, so that the light of the moon fell on
+the face beneath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked, then staggered back against the rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By Thor!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;here lies the corpse of Eric
+Brighteyes!&rdquo; and Atli wrung his hands and wept, for he loved Eric much.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be not so sure that the men are dead, Earl,&rdquo; said one, &ldquo;I
+thought I saw yon great carle move but now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric&rsquo;s Death-shadow,&rdquo; said Atli
+again. &ldquo;Up with them, lads&mdash;see, yonder lies a plank&mdash;and away
+to the hall. I will give twenty in silver to each of you if Eric lives,&rdquo;
+and he unclasped his cloak and threw it over both of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then with much labour they loosed the grip of the two men one from the other,
+and they set Skallagrim on the plank. But eight men bore Eric up the cliff
+between them, and the task was not light, though the Earl held his head, from
+which the golden hair hung like seaweed from a rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length they came to the hall and carried them in. Swanhild, seeing them
+come, moved down from the high seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bring lamps, and pile up the fires,&rdquo; cried Atli. &ldquo;A strange
+thing has come to pass, Swanhild, and thou dost dream wisely, indeed, for here
+we have Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail. They were locked like lovers
+in each other&rsquo;s arms, but I know not if they are dead or living.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild started and came on swiftly. Had the Familiar tricked her and had
+she paid the price for nothing? Was Eric taken from Gudruda and given to her
+indeed&mdash;but given dead? She bent over him, gazing keenly on his face. Then
+she spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is not dead but senseless. Bring dry clothes, and make water
+hot,&rdquo; and, kneeling down, she loosed Eric&rsquo;s helm and harness and
+ungirded Whitefire from his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For long Swanhild and Atli tended Eric at one fire, and the serving women
+tended Skallagrim at the other. Presently there came a cry that Skallagrim
+stirred, and Atli with others ran to see. At this moment also the eyes of Eric
+were unsealed, and Swanhild saw them looking at her dimly from beneath. Moved
+to it by her passion and her joy that he yet lived, Swanhild let her face fall
+till his was hidden in her unbound hair, and kissed him upon the lips. Eric
+shut his eyes again, sighing heavily, and presently he was asleep. They bore
+him to a bed and heaped warm wrappings upon him. At daybreak he woke, and Atli,
+who sat watching at his side, gave him hot mead to drink.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do I dream?&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;or is it Earl Atli who tends me,
+and did I but now see the face of Swanhild bending over me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is no dream, Eric, but the truth. Thou hast been cast away here on my
+isle of Straumey.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Skallagrim&mdash;where is Skallagrim?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Skallagrim lives&mdash;fear not!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And my comrades, how went it with them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But ill, Eric. Ran has them all. Now sleep!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric groaned aloud. &ldquo;I had rather died also than live to hear such heavy
+tidings,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Witch-work! witch-work! and that fair
+witch-face wrought it.&rdquo; And once again he slept, nor did he wake till the
+sun was high. But Atli could make nothing of his words.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+When Swanhild left the side of Eric she met Hall of Lithdale face to face and
+his looks were troubled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, lady,&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;will Brighteyes live?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Grieve not, Hall,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;Eric will surely live and
+he will be glad to find a messmate here to greet him, having left so many
+yonder,&rdquo; and she pointed to the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall not be glad,&rdquo; said Hall, letting his eyes fall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not, Hall? Fearest thou Skallagrim? or hast thou done ill by
+Eric?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, lady, I fear Skallagrim, for he swore to slay me, and that kind of
+promise he ever keeps. Also, if the truth must out, I have not dealt altogether
+well with Eric, and of all men I least wish to talk with him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak on,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, being forced to it, Hall told her something of the tale of the cutting of
+the cable, being careful to put another colour on it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now it seems that thou art a coward, Hall,&rdquo; Swanhild said when he
+had done, &ldquo;and I scarcely looked for that in thee,&rdquo; for she had not
+been deceived by the glozing of his speech. &ldquo;It will be bad for thee to
+meet Eric and Skallagrim, and this is my counsel: that thou goest hence before
+they wake, for they will sit this winter here in Atli&rsquo;s hall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And whither shall I go, lady?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild gazed on him, and as she did so a dark thought came into her heart:
+here was a knave who might serve her ends.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hall,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;thou art an Icelander, and I have known of
+thee from a child, and therefore I wish to serve thee in thy strait, though
+thou deservest it little. See now, Atli the Earl has a farm on the mainland not
+two hours&rsquo; ride from the sea. Thither thou shalt go, if thou art wise,
+and thou shalt sit there this winter and be hidden from Eric and Skallagrim.
+Nay, thank me not, but listen: it may chance that I shall have a service for
+thee to do before spring is come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lady, I shall wait upon thy word,&rdquo; said Hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good. Now, so soon as it is light, I will find a man to sail with thee
+across the Firth, for the sea falls, and bear my message to the steward at
+Atli&rsquo;s farm. Also if thou needest faring-money thou shalt have it.
+Farewell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus then did Hall fly before Eric and Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+On the morrow Eric and Skallagrim arose, sick and bruised indeed, but not at
+all harmed, and went down to the shore. There they found many dead men of their
+company, but never a one in whom the breath of life remained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim looked at Eric and spoke: &ldquo;Last night the mist came up against
+the wind: last night we saw Swanhild&rsquo;s wraith upon the waves, and there
+is the path it showed, and there&rdquo;&mdash;and he pointed to the dead
+men&mdash;&ldquo;is the witch-seed&rsquo;s flower. Now to-day we sit in
+Atli&rsquo;s hall and here we must stay this winter at Swanhild&rsquo;s side,
+and in all this there lies a riddle that I cannot read.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric shook his head, making no answer. Then, leaving Skallagrim with the
+dead, he turned, and striding back alone towards the hall, sat down on a rock
+in the home meadows and, covering his face with his hands, wept for his
+comrades.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he wept Swanhild came to him, for she had seen him from afar, and touched
+him gently on the arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why weepest thou, Eric?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I weep for the dead, Swanhild,&rdquo; he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Weep not for the dead&mdash;they are at peace; if thou must weep, weep
+for the living. Nay, weep not at all; rejoice rather that thou art here to
+mourn. Hast thou no word of greeting for me who have not heard thy voice these
+many months?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who would never have seen thy face
+again if I might have had my will? Knowest thou that yesternight, as we
+laboured in yonder Firth, we saw a shape walking the waters to lead us to our
+doom? How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who art a witch and evil?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And knowest thou, Eric, that yesternight I woke from sleep, having
+dreamed that thou didst lie upon the shore, and thus I saved thee alive, as
+perchance I have saved thee aforetime? If thou didst see a shape walking the
+waters it was that shape which led thee here. Hadst thou sailed on, not only
+those thou mournest, but Skallagrim and thou thyself had now been numbered with
+the lost.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Better so than thus,&rdquo; said Brighteyes. &ldquo;Knowest thou also,
+Swanhild, that when last night my life came back again in Atli&rsquo;s hall,
+methought that Atli&rsquo;s wife leaned over me and kissed me on the lips? That
+was an ill dream, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Some had found it none so ill, Eric,&rdquo; she made answer, looking on
+him strangely. &ldquo;Still, it was but a dream. Thou didst dream that
+Atli&rsquo;s wife breathed back the breath of life into thy pale lips&mdash;be
+sure of it thou didst but dream. Ah, Eric, fear me no more; forget the evil
+that I have wrought in the blindness and folly of my youth. Now things are
+otherwise with me. Now I am a wedded wife and faithful hearted to my lord. Now,
+if I still love thee, it is with a sister&rsquo;s love. Therefore forget my
+sins, remember only that as children we played upon the Iceland fells. Remember
+that, as boy and girl, we rode along the marshes, while the sea-mews clamoured
+round our heads. The world is cold, Eric, and few are the friends we find in
+it; many are already gone, and soon the friendless dark draws near. So put me
+not away, my brother and my friend; but, for a little space, whilst thou art
+here in Atli&rsquo;s hall, let us walk hand in hand as we walked long years ago
+in Iceland, gathering up the fifa-bloom, and watching the midnight shadows
+creep up the icy jökul&rsquo;s crest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus Swanhild spoke to him most sweetly, in a low voice of music, while the
+tears gathered in her eyes, talking ever of Iceland that he loved, and of days
+long dead, till Eric&rsquo;s heart softened in him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Almost do I believe thee, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said, stretching out his
+hand; &ldquo;but I know thus: that thou art never twice in the same mood, and
+that is beyond my measuring. Thou hast done much evil and thou hast striven to
+do more; also I love not those who seem to walk the seas o&rsquo; nights.
+Still, hold thou to this last saying of thine and there shall be peace between
+us while I bide here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She touched his hand humbly and turned to go. But as she went Eric spoke again:
+&ldquo;Say, Swanhild, hast thou tidings from Iceland yonder? I have heard no
+word of Asmund or of Gudruda for two long years and more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood still, and a dark shadow that he could not see flitted across her
+face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have few tidings, Eric,&rdquo; she said, turning, &ldquo;and those
+few, if I may trust them, bad enough. For this is the rumour that I have heard:
+that Asmund the Priest, my father, is dead; that Groa, my mother, is
+dead&mdash;how, I know not; and, lastly, that Gudruda the Fair, thy love, is
+betrothed to Ospakar Blacktooth and weds him in the spring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric sprang up with an oath and grasped the hilt of Whitefire. Then he sat
+down again upon the stone and covered his face with his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Grieve not, Eric,&rdquo; she said gently; &ldquo;I put no faith in this
+news, for rumour, like the black-backed gull, often changes colour in its
+flight across the seas. Also I had it but at fifth hand. I am sure of this, at
+least, that Gudruda will never forsake thee without a cause.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It shall go ill with Ospakar if this be true,&rdquo; said Eric, smiling
+grimly, &ldquo;for Whitefire is yet left me and with it one true friend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Run not to meet the evil, Eric. Thou shalt come to Iceland with the
+summer flowers and find Gudruda faithful and yet fairer than of yore. Knowest
+thou that Hall of Lithdale, who was thy mate, has sat here these two months? He
+is gone but this morning, I know not whither, leaving a message that he returns
+no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He did well to go,&rdquo; said Eric, and he told her how Hall had cut
+the cable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, well indeed,&rdquo; answered Swanhild. &ldquo;Had Atli known this he
+would have scourged Hall hence with rods of seaweed. And now, Eric, I desire to
+ask thee one more thing: why wearest thou thy hair long like a woman&rsquo;s?
+Indeed, few women have such hair as thine is now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For this cause, Swanhild: I swore to Gudruda that none should cut my
+hair till she cut it once more. It is a great burden to me surely, for never
+did hair grow so fast and strong as mine, and once in a fray I was held fast by
+it and went near to the losing of my life. Still, I will keep the oath even if
+it grows on to my feet,&rdquo; and he laughed a little and shook back his
+golden locks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild smiled also and, turning, went. But when her face was hidden from him
+she smiled no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As I live,&rdquo; she said in her heart, &ldquo;before spring rains fall
+I again will cause thee to break this oath, Eric. Ay, I will cut a lock of that
+bright hair of thine and send it for a love-token to Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric still sat upon the rock thinking. Swanhild had set an evil seed of
+doubt in his heart, and already it put forth roots. What if the tale were true?
+What if Gudruda had given herself to Ospakar? Well, if so&mdash;she should soon
+be a widow, that he swore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he rose, and stalked grimly towards the hall.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap19"></a>CHAPTER XIX<br />
+HOW KOLL THE HALF-WITTED BROUGHT TIDINGS FROM ICELAND</h2>
+
+<p>
+Presently as Eric walked he met Atli the Earl seeking him. Atli greeted him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have seen strange things, Eric,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but none more
+strange than this coming of thine and the manner of it. Swanhild is
+foresighted, and that was a doom-dream of hers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think her foresighted also,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;And now, Earl,
+knowest thou this: that little good can come to thee at the hands of one whom
+thou hast saved from the sea.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I set no faith in such old wives&rsquo; tales,&rdquo; answered Atli.
+&ldquo;Here thou art come, and it is my will that thou shouldest sit here. At
+the least, I will give thee no help to go hence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then we must bide in Straumey, it seems,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;for of
+all my goods and gear this alone is left me,&rdquo; and he looked at Whitefire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast still a gold ring or two upon thy arm,&rdquo; answered the
+Earl, laughing. &ldquo;But surely, Eric, thou wouldst not begone?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know not, Earl. Listen: it is well that I should be plain with thee.
+Once, before thou didst wed Swanhild, she had another mind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have heard something of that, and I have guessed more, Brighteyes; but
+methinks Swanhild is little given to gadding now. She is as cold as ice, and no
+good wife for any man,&rdquo; and Atli sighed, &ldquo;&lsquo;Snow melts not if
+sun shines not,&rsquo; so runs the saw. Thou art an honest man, Eric, and no
+whisperer in the ears of others&rsquo; wives.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not minded indeed to do thee such harm, Earl, but this thou
+knowest: that woman&rsquo;s guile and beauty are swords few shields can brook.
+Now I have spoken&mdash;and they are hard words to speak&mdash;be it as thou
+wilt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is my will that thou shouldest sit here this winter, Eric. Had I my
+way, indeed, never wouldest thou sit elsewhere. Listen: things have not gone
+well with me of late. Age hath a grip of me, and foes rise up against one who
+has no sons. That was an ill marriage, too, which I made with Swanhild yonder:
+for she loves me not, and I have found no luck since first I saw her face.
+Moreover, it is in my mind that my days are almost sped. Swanhild has already
+foretold my death, and, as thou knowest well, she is foresighted. So I pray
+thee, Eric, bide thou here while thou mayest, for I would have thee at my
+side.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It shall be as thou wilt, Earl,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+So Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail sat that winter in the hall of Atli
+the Earl at Straumey. For many weeks all things went well and Eric forgot his
+fears. Swanhild was gentle to him and kindly. She loved much to talk with him,
+even of Gudruda her rival; but no word of love passed her lips. Nevertheless,
+she did but bide her time, for when she struck she determined to strike home.
+Atli and Eric were ever side by side, and Eric gave the Earl much good counsel.
+He promised to do this also, for now, being simple-minded, his doubts had
+passed and he had no more fear of Swanhild. On the mainland lived a certain
+chief who had seized large lands of Atli&rsquo;s, and held them for a year or
+more. Now Eric gave his word that, before he sailed for Iceland in the early
+summer, he would go up against this man and drive him from the lands, if he
+could. For Brighteyes might not come to Iceland till hard upon midsummer, when
+his three years of outlawry were spent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The winter wore away and the spring came. Then Atli gathered his men and went
+with Eric in boats to where the chief dwelt who held his lands. There they fell
+on him and there was a fierce fight. But in the end the man was slain by
+Skallagrim, and Eric did great deeds, as was his wont. Now in this fray Eric
+was wounded in the foot by a spear, so that he must be borne back to Straumey,
+and he lay there in the hall for many days. Swanhild nursed him, and most days
+he sat talking with her in her bower.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Eric was nearly healed of his hurt, the Earl went with all his people to a
+certain island of the Orkneys to gather scat[*] that was unpaid, and Skallagrim
+went with him. But Eric did not go, because of his hurt, fearing lest the wound
+should open if he walked overmuch. Thus it came to pass that, except for some
+women, he was left almost alone with Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] Tribute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, when Atli had been gone three days, it chanced on an afternoon that
+Swanhild heard how a man from Iceland sought speech with her. She bade them
+bring him in to where she was alone in her bower, for Eric was not there,
+having gone down to the sea to fish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man came and she knew him at once for Koll the Half-witted, who had been
+her mother Groa&rsquo;s thrall. On his shoulders was the cloak that Ospakar
+Blacktooth had given him; it was much torn now, and he had a worn and hungry
+look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whence comest thou, Koll?&rdquo; she asked, &ldquo;and what are thy
+tidings?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;From Scotland last, lady, where I sat this winter; before that, from
+Iceland. As for my tidings, they are heavy, if thou hast not heard them. Asmund
+the Priest is dead, and dead is Unna his wife, poisoned by thy mother, Groa, at
+their marriage-feast. Dead, too, is thy mother, Groa. Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s
+son, shot her with an arrow, and she lies in Goldfoss pool.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild hid her face for a while in her hands. Then she lifted it and it
+was white to see. &ldquo;Speakest thou truth, fox? If thou liest, this I swear
+to thee&mdash;thy tongue shall be dragged from thee by the roots!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I speak the truth, lady,&rdquo; he answered. But still he spoke not all
+the truth, for he said nothing of the part which he had played in the deaths of
+Asmund and Unna. Then he told her of the manner of their end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild listened silently&mdash;then said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What news of Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter? Is she wed?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, lady. Folk spoke of her and Ospakar, that was all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken, Koll,&rdquo; said Swanhild, &ldquo;bearing such heavy tidings,
+canst thou not weight the ship a little more? Eric Brighteyes is here. Canst
+thou not swear to him that, when thou didst leave Iceland it was said without
+question that Gudruda had betrothed herself to Ospakar, and that the
+wedding-feast was set for this last Yule? Thou hast a hungry look, Koll, and
+methinks that things have not gone altogether well with thee of late. Now, if
+thou canst so charge thy memory, thou shalt lose little by it. But, if thou
+canst not, then thou goest hence from Straumey with never a luck-penny in thy
+purse, and never a sup to stay thy stomach with.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now of all things Koll least desired to be sent from Straumey; for, though
+Swanhild did not know it, he was sought for on the mainland as a thief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That I may do, lady,&rdquo; he said, looking at her cunningly.
+&ldquo;Now I remember that Gudruda the Fair charged me with a certain message
+for Eric Brighteyes, if I should chance to see him as I journeyed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s wife, and Koll the Half-witted talked long and
+earnestly together.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+At nightfall Eric came in from his fishing. His heart was light, for the time
+drew near when he should sail for home, and he did not think on evil. For now
+he feared Swanhild no longer, and, no fresh tidings having come from Iceland
+about Ospakar and Gudruda, he had almost put the matter from his mind. On he
+walked to the hall, limping somewhat from his wound, but singing as he came,
+and bearing his fish slung upon a pole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the men&rsquo;s door of the hall a woman stood waiting. She told Eric that
+the lady Swanhild would speak with him in her bower. Thither he went and
+knocked. Getting no answer he knocked again, then entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild sat on a couch. She was weeping, and her hair fell about her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What now, Swanhild?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked up heavily. &ldquo;Ill news for thee and me, Eric. Koll, who was my
+mother&rsquo;s thrall, has come hither from Iceland, and these are his tidings:
+that Asmund is dead, and Unna, thy cousin, Thorod of Greenfell&rsquo;s
+daughter, is dead, and my mother Groa is dead also.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Heavy tidings, truly!&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;and what of Gudruda, is
+she also dead?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, Eric she is wed&mdash;wed to Ospakar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric reeled against the wall, clutching it, and for a space all things swam
+round him. &ldquo;Where is this Koll?&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Send me Koll
+hither.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently he came, and Eric questioned him coldly and calmly. But Koll could
+lie full well. It is said that in his day there was no one in Iceland who could
+lie so well as Koll the Half-witted. He told Eric how it was said that Gudruda
+was plighted to Ospakar, and how the match had been agreed on at the Althing in
+the summer that was gone (and indeed there had been some such talk), and how
+that the feast was to be at Middalhof on last Yule Day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that all thy tidings?&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;If so, I give no heed
+to them: for ever, Koll, I have known thee for a liar!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, Eric, it is not all,&rdquo; answered Koll. &ldquo;As it chanced,
+two days before the ship in which I sailed was bound, I saw Gudruda the Fair.
+Then she asked me whither I was going, and I told her that I would journey to
+London, where men said thou wert, and asked her if she would send a message.
+Then she alighted from her horse, Blackmane, and spoke with me apart.
+&lsquo;Koll,&rsquo; she said, &lsquo;it well may happen that thou wilt see Eric
+Brighteyes in London town. Now, if thou seest him, I charge thee straightly
+tell him this. Tell him that my father is dead, and my brother Björn, who rules
+in his place, is a hard man, and has ever urged me on to wed Ospakar, till at
+last, having no choice, I have consented to it. And say to Eric that I grieve
+much and sorely, and that, though we twain should never meet more, yet I shall
+always hold his memory dear.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not like Gudruda to speak thus,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;she had
+ever a stout heart and these are craven words. Koll, I hold that thou liest;
+and, if indeed I find it so, I&rsquo;ll wring the head from off thee!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, Eric, I lie not. Wherefore should I lie? Hearken: thou hast not
+heard all my tale. When the lady Gudruda had made an end of speaking she drew
+something from her breast and gave it me, saying: &lsquo;Give this to Eric, in
+witness of my words.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Show me the token,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, many years ago, when they were yet boy and girl, it chanced that Eric had
+given to Gudruda the half of an ancient gold piece that he had found upon the
+shore. He had given her half, and half he had kept, wearing it next his heart.
+But he knew not this, for she feared to tell him, that Gudruda had lost her
+half. Nor indeed had she lost it, for Swanhild had taken the love-token and
+hidden it away. Now she brought it forth for Koll to build his lies upon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Koll drew out the half-piece from a leather purse and passed it to him.
+Eric plunged his hand into his breast and found his half. He placed the two
+side by side, while Swanhild watched him. Lo! they fitted well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric laughed aloud, a hard and bitter laugh. &ldquo;There will be
+slaying,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;before all this tale is told. Take thy fee and
+begone, thou messenger of ill,&rdquo; and he cast the broken piece at Koll.
+&ldquo;For once thou hast spoken the truth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Koll stooped, found the gold and went, leaving Brighteyes and Swanhild face to
+face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hid his brow in his arms and groaned aloud. Softly Swanhild crept up to
+him&mdash;softly she drew his hands away, holding them between her own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Heavy tidings, Eric,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;heavy tidings for thee and
+me! She is a murderess who gave me birth and she has slain my own
+father&mdash;my father and thy cousin Unna also. Gudruda is a traitress, a
+traitress fair and false. I did ill to be born of such a woman; thou didst ill
+to put thy faith in such a woman. Together let us weep, for our woe is
+equal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, let us weep together,&rdquo; Eric answered. &ldquo;Nay, why should
+we weep? Together let us be merry, for we know the worst. All words are
+said&mdash;all hopes are sped! Let us be merry, then, for now we have no more
+tidings to fear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; Swanhild answered, looking on him darkly, &ldquo;we will be
+merry and laugh our sorrows down. Ah! thou foolish Eric, under what unlucky
+star wast thou born that thou knewest not true from false?&rdquo; and she
+called the serving-women, bidding them bring food and wine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric sat alone with Swanhild in her bower and made pretence to eat. But he
+could eat little, though he drank deep of the southern wine. Close beside him
+sat Swanhild, filling his cup. She was wondrous fair that night, and it seemed
+to Eric that her eyes gleamed like stars. Sweetly she spoke also and wisely.
+She told strange tales and she sang strange songs, and ever her eyes shone more
+and more, and ever she crept closer to him. Eric&rsquo;s brain was afire,
+though his heart was cold and dead. He laughed loud and mightily, he told great
+tales of deeds that he had done, growing boastful in his folly, and still
+Swanhild&rsquo;s eyes shone more and more, and still she crept closer, wooing
+him in many ways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now of a sudden Eric thought of his friend, Earl Atli, and his mind grew clear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This may not be, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Yet I would that I had
+loved thee from the first, and not the false Gudruda: for, with all thy dark
+ways, at least thou art better than she.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou speakest wisely, Eric,&rdquo; Swanhild answered, though she meant
+not that he should go. &ldquo;The Norns have appointed us an evil fate, giving
+me as wife to an old man whom I do not love, and thee for a lover to a woman
+who has betrayed thee. Ah, Eric Brighteyes, thou foolish Eric! why knewest thou
+not the false from the true while yet there was time? Now are all words said
+and all things done&mdash;nor can they be undone. Go hence, Eric, ere ill come
+of it; but, before thou goest, drink one cup of parting, and then
+farewell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And she slipped from him and filled the cup, mixing in it a certain
+love-portion that she had made ready.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give it me that I may swear an oath on it,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild gave him the cup and stood before him, watching him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken,&rdquo; he said: &ldquo;I swear this, that before snow falls
+again in Iceland I will see Ospakar dead at my feet or lie dead at the feet of
+Ospakar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well spoken, Eric,&rdquo; Swanhild answered. &ldquo;Now, before thou
+drinkest, grant me one little boon. It is but a woman&rsquo;s fancy, and thou
+canst scarce deny me. The years will be long when thou art gone, for from this
+night it is best that we should meet no more, and I would keep something of
+thee to call back thy memory and the memories of our youth when thou hast
+passed away and I grow old.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What wouldst have then, Swanhild? I have nothing left to give, except
+Whitefire alone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not ask Whitefire, Eric, though Whitefire shall kiss the gift. I
+ask nothing but one tress of that golden hair of thine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Once I swore that none should touch my hair again except Gudruda&rsquo;s
+self.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will grow long, then, Eric, for now Gudruda tends black locks and
+thinks little on golden. Broken are all oaths.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric groaned. &ldquo;All oaths are broken in sooth,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Have
+then thy will;&rdquo; and, loosing the peace-strings, he drew Whitefire from
+its sheath and gave her the great war-sword.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild took it by the hilt, and, lifting a tress of Eric&rsquo;s yellow hair,
+she shore through it deftly with Whitefire&rsquo;s razor-edge, smiling as she
+shore. With the same war-blade on which Eric and Gudruda had pledged their
+troth, did Swanhild cut the locks that Eric had sworn no hand should clip
+except Gudruda&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took back the sword and sheathed it, and, knotting the long tress, Swanhild
+hid it in her bosom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now drink the cup, Eric,&rdquo; she said&mdash;&ldquo;pledge me and
+go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric drank to the dregs and cast the cup down, and lo! all things changed to
+him, for his blood was afire, and seas seemed to roll within his brain. Only
+before him stood Swanhild like a shape of light and glory, and he thought that
+she sang softly over him, always drawing nearer, and that with her came a scent
+of flowers like the scent of the Iceland meads in May.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All oaths are broken, Eric,&rdquo; she murmured, &ldquo;all oaths are
+broken indeed, and now must new oaths be sworn. For cut is thy golden hair,
+Brighteyes, and not by Gudruda&rsquo;s hand!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap20"></a>CHAPTER XX<br />
+HOW ERIC WAS NAMED ANEW</h2>
+
+<p>
+Eric dreamed. He dreamed that Gudruda stood by him looking at him with soft,
+sad eyes, while with her hand she pointed to his hair, and spake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast done ill, Eric,&rdquo; she seemed to say. &ldquo;Thou hast
+done ill to doubt me; and now thou art for ever shamed, for thou hast betrayed
+Atli, thy friend. Thou hast broken thy oath, and therefore hast thou fallen
+into this pit; for when Swanhild shore that lock of thine, my watching Spirit
+passed, leaving thee to Swanhild and thy fate. Now, I tell thee this: that
+shame shall lead to shame, and many lives shall pay forfeit for thy sin,
+Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric awoke, thinking that this was indeed an evil dream which he had dreamed.
+He woke, and lo! by him was Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s wife. He looked upon her
+beauty, and fear and shame crept into his heart, for now he knew that it was no
+dream, but he was lost indeed. He looked again at Swanhild, and hatred and
+loathing of her shook him. She had overcome him by her arts; that cup was
+drugged which he had drunk, and he was mad with grief. Yes, she had played upon
+his woe like a harper on a harp, and now he was ashamed&mdash;now he had
+betrayed his friend who loved him! Had Whitefire been to his hand at that
+moment, Eric had surely slain himself. But the great sword was not there, for
+it hung in Swanhild&rsquo;s bower. Eric groaned aloud, and Swanhild turned at
+the sound. But he sprang away and stood over her, cursing her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou witch!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;what hast thou done? What didst thou
+mix in that cup yestre&rsquo;en? Thou hast brought me to this that I have
+betrayed Atli, my friend&mdash;Atli, thy lord, who left thee in my
+keeping!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He seemed so terrible in his woe and rage that Swanhild shrank from him, and,
+throwing her hair about her face, peeped at him through its meshes as once she
+had peeped at Asmund.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is like a man,&rdquo; she said, gathering up her courage and her wit;
+&ldquo;&lsquo;tis like a man, having won my love, now to turn upon me and
+upbraid me. Fie upon thee, Eric! thou hast dealt ill with me to bring me to
+this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric ceased his raving, and spoke more calmly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well thou knowest the truth, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken, Eric,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Let this be secret between
+us. Atli is old, and methinks that not for long shall he bide here in Straumey.
+Soon he will die; it is upon my mind that he soon will die, and, being
+childless, his lands and goods pass to me. Then, Eric, thou shalt sit in
+Atli&rsquo;s hall, and in all honour shall Atli&rsquo;s wife become thy
+bride.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric listened coldly. &ldquo;I can well believe,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that
+thou hast it in mind to slay thy lord, for all evil is in thy heart, Swanhild.
+Now know this: that if in honour or dishonour my lips touch that fair face of
+thine again, may the limbs rot from my trunk, and may I lie a log for ever in
+the halls of Hela! If ever my eyes of their own will look again upon thy
+beauty, may I go blind and beg my meat from homestead to homestead! If ever my
+tongue whisper word of love into thy ears, may dumbness seize it, and may it
+wither to the root!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild heard and sank upon the ground before him, her head bowed almost to
+her feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, Swanhild, fare thee well,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Living or dead,
+may I never see thy face again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She gazed up through her falling hair; her face was wild and white, and her
+eyes glowed in it as live embers glow in the ashes of burnt wood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are not so easily parted, Eric,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Not for this
+came I to witchcraft and to sin. Thou fool! hast thou never heard that, of all
+the foes a man may have, none is so terrible as the woman he has scorned? Thou
+shalt learn this lesson, Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur&rsquo;s son: for here we
+have but the beginning of the tale. For its end, I will write it in runes of
+blood.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Write on,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Thou canst do no worse than thou hast
+done,&rdquo; and he passed thence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a while Swanhild crouched upon the ground, brooding in silence. Then she
+rose, and, throwing up her arms, wept aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it for this that I have sold my soul to the Hell-hag?&rdquo; she
+cried. &ldquo;Is it for this that I have become a witch, and sunk so low as I
+sank last night&mdash;to be scorned, to be hated, to be betrayed? Now Eric will
+go to Atli and tell this tale. Nay, there I will be beforehand with him, and
+with another story&mdash;an ancient wile of women truly, but one that never yet
+has failed them, nor ever will. And then for vengeance! I will see thee dead,
+Eric, and dead will I see Gudruda at thy side! Afterwards let darkness
+come&mdash;ay, though the horror rides it! Swift!&mdash;I must be swift!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Eric passed into Swanhild&rsquo;s bower, and, finding Whitefire, bore it
+thence. On the table was food. He took it. Then, going to the place where he
+was wont to sleep, he armed himself, girding his byrnie on his breast and his
+golden helm upon his head, and taking shield and spear in his hand. Then he
+passed out. By the men&rsquo;s door he found some women spreading fish in the
+sun. Eric greeted them, saying that when the Earl came back, for he was to come
+on that morning, he would find him on the south-western rocks nigh to where the
+Gudruda sank. This he begged of them to tell Atli, for he desired speech with
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The women wondered that Brighteyes should go forth thus and fully armed, but,
+holding that he had some deed to do, they said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric came to the rocks, and there he sat all day long looking on the sea, and
+grieving so bitterly that he thought his heart would burst within him. For of
+all the days of Eric&rsquo;s life this was the heaviest, except one other only.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Swanhild, going to her bower, caused Koll the Half-witted to be summoned.
+To him she spoke long and earnestly, and they made a shameful plot together.
+Then she bade Koll watch for Atli&rsquo;s coming and, when he saw the Earl
+leave his boats, to run to him and say that she would speak with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After this Swanhild sent a man across the firth to the stead where Hall of
+Lithdale sat, bidding him to come to her at speed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the afternoon grew towards the evening, Koll, watching, saw the boats of
+Atli draw to the landing-place. Then he went down, and, going to the Earl,
+bowed before him:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What wouldst thou, fellow, and who art thou?&rdquo; asked Atli.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am a man from Iceland; perchance, lord, thou sawest me in
+Asmund&rsquo;s hall at Middalhof. I am sent here by the Lady Swanhild to say
+that she desires speech with thee, and that at once.&rdquo; Then, seeing
+Skallagrim, Koll fled back to the house, for he feared Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Atli was uneasy in his mind, and, saying nothing, he hurried up to the
+hall, and through it into Swanhild&rsquo;s bower.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There she sat on a couch, her eyes red with weeping, and her curling hair
+unbound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What now, Swanhild?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Why lookest thou
+thus?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why look I thus, my lord?&rdquo; she answered heavily. &ldquo;Because I
+have to tell thee that which I cannot find words to fit,&rdquo; and she ceased.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak on,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Is aught wrong with Eric?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Swanhild drew near and told him a false tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When it was done for a moment or so Atli stood still, and grew white beneath
+his ruddy skin, white as his beard. Then he staggered back against the
+wainscoting of the bower.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Woman, thou liest!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Never will I believe so vile a
+thing of Eric Brighteyes, whom I have loved.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would that I could not believe it!&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Would
+that I could think it was but an evil dream! But alas! Nay, I will prove it.
+Suffer that I summon Koll, the Icelander, who was my mother&rsquo;s
+thrall&mdash;Groa who now is dead, for I have that tidings also. He saw
+something of this thing, and he will bear me witness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Call the man,&rdquo; said Atli sternly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Koll was summoned, and told his lies with a bold face. He was so well
+taught, and so closely did his story tally with that of Swanhild, that Atli
+could find no flaw in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I am sure, Swanhild, that thou speakest truth,&rdquo; said the Earl
+when Koll had gone. &ldquo;And now also I have somewhat to say to this Eric.
+For thee, rest thyself; that which cannot be mended must be borne,&rdquo; and
+he went out.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now, when Skallagrim came to the house he asked for Eric. The women told him
+that Brighteyes had gone down to the sea, fully armed, in the morning, and had
+not returned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then there must be fighting toward, and that I am loth to miss,&rdquo;
+said Skallagrim, and, axe aloft, he started for the south-western rocks at a
+run. Skallagrim came to the rocks. There he found Eric, sitting in his harness,
+looking out across the sea. The evening was wet and windy; the rain beat upon
+him as he sat, but Eric took no heed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What seekest thou, lord?&rdquo; asked the Baresark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rest,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and I find none.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou seekest rest helm on head and sword in hand? This is a strange
+thing, truly!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stranger things have been, Skallagrim. Wouldst thou hear a tale?&rdquo;
+and he told him all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What said I?&rdquo; asked Skallagrim. &ldquo;We had fared better in
+London town. Flying from the dove thou hast found the falcon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have found the falcon, comrade, and she has pecked out my eyes. Now I
+would speak with Atli, and then I go hence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hence go the twain of us, lord. The Earl will be here presently and
+rough words will fly in this rough weather. Is Whitefire sharp,
+Brighteyes?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whitefire was sharp enough to shear my hair, Skallagrim; but if Atli
+would strike let him lay on. Whitefire will not be aloft for him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That we shall see,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;At least, if thou art
+harmed because of this loose quean, my axe will be aloft.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Keep thou thine axe in its place,&rdquo; said Eric, and as he spoke Atli
+came, and with him many men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric rose and turned to meet the Earl, looking on him with sad eyes. For Atli,
+his face was as the face of a trapped wolf, for he was mad with rage at the
+shame that had been put upon him and the ill tale that Swanhild had told of
+Eric&rsquo;s dealings with her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems that the Earl has heard of these tidings,&rdquo; said
+Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I shall be spared the telling of them,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they stood face to face; Atli leaned upon his drawn sword, and his wrath
+was so fierce that for a while he could not speak. At length he found words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;See ye that man, comrades?&rdquo; he said, pointing at Eric with the
+sword. &ldquo;He has been my guest these many months. He has sat in my hall and
+eaten of my bread, and I have loved him as a son. And wot ye how he has repaid
+me? He has put me to the greatest shame, me and my wife the Lady Swanhild, whom
+I left in his guard&mdash;to such shame, indeed, that I cannot speak it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;True words, Earl,&rdquo; said Eric, while folk murmured and handled
+their swords.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;True, but not all the truth,&rdquo; growled Skallagrim. &ldquo;Methinks
+the Earl has heard a garbled tale.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;True words, thyself thou sayest it,&rdquo; went on Atli, &ldquo;thou
+hound that I saved from the sea! &lsquo;Ran&rsquo;s gift, Hela&rsquo;s
+gift,&rsquo; so runs the saw, and now from Ran to Hela thou shalt go, thou
+mishandler of defenceless women!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here is somewhat of which I know nothing,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And here is something of which thou shalt know,&rdquo; answered Atli,
+and he shook his sword before Eric&rsquo;s eyes. &ldquo;Guard thyself!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, Earl; thou art old, and I have done the wrong&mdash;I may not fight
+with thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art thou a coward also?&rdquo; said the Earl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Some have deemed otherwise,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;but it is true that
+heavy heart makes weak hand. Nevertheless this is my rede. With thee are ten
+men. Stand thou aside and let them fall on me till I am slain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The odds are too heavy even for thee,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+&ldquo;Back to back, lord, as we have stood aforetime, and let us play this
+game together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; cried Atli, &ldquo;this shame is mine, and I have sworn
+to Swanhild that I will wipe it out in Eric&rsquo;s blood. Stand thou before me
+and draw!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric drew Whitefire and raised his shield. Atli the Earl rushed at him and
+smote a great two-handed blow. Eric caught it on his shield and suffered no
+harm; but he would not smite back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Atli dropped his point. &ldquo;Niddering art thou, and coward to the
+last!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;See, men, Eric Brighteyes fears to fight. I am
+not come to this that I will cut down a man who is too faint-hearted to give
+blow for blow. This is my word: take ye your spear-shafts and push this coward
+to the shore. Then put him in a boat and drive him hence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric grew red as the red light of sunset, for his manhood might not bear
+this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take shield,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and, Earl, on thine own head be thy
+blood, for none shall live to call Eric niddering and coward.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Atli laughed in his folly and his rage. He took a shield, and, once more
+springing on Brighteyes, struck a great blow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric parried, then whirled Whitefire on high and smote&mdash;once and once
+only! Down rushed the bright blade like a star through the night. Sword and
+shield did Atli lift to catch the blow. Through shield it sheared, and arm that
+held the shield, through byrnie mail and deep into Earl Atli&rsquo;s side. He
+fell prone to earth, while men held their breath, wondering at the greatness of
+that stroke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric leaned on Whitefire and looked at the old Earl upon the rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, Atli, thou hast had thy way,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and methinks
+things are worse than they were before. But I will say this: would that I lay
+there and thou stoodest to watch me die, for as lief would I have slain my
+father as thee, Earl Atli. There lies Swanhild&rsquo;s work!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Atli gazed upwards into Eric&rsquo;s sad eyes and, while he gazed so, his rage
+left him, and of a sudden a light brake upon his mind, as even then the light
+of the setting sun brake through the driving mist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;draw near and speak with me ere I am sped.
+Methinks that I have been beguiled and that thou didst not do this thing that
+Swanhild said and Koll bore witness to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What did Swanhild say, then, Earl Atli?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Earl told him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was to be looked for from her,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;though I
+never thought of it. Now hearken!&rdquo; and he told him all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Atli groaned aloud. &ldquo;I know this now, Eric,&rdquo; he said: &ldquo;that
+thou speakest truth, and once more I have been deceived. Eric, I forgive thee
+all, for no man may fight against woman&rsquo;s witchcraft, and witch&rsquo;s
+wine. Swanhild is evil to the heart. Yet, Eric, I lay this doom upon
+thee&mdash;I do not lay it of my own will, for I would not harm thee, whom I
+love, but because of the words that the Norns put in my mouth, for now I am fey
+in this the hour of my death. Thou hast sinned, and that thou didst sin against
+thy will shall avail thee nothing, for of thy sin fate shall fashion a handle
+to the spear which pierces thee. Henceforth thou art accursed. For I tell thee
+that this wicked woman Swanhild shall drag thee down to death, and worse than
+death, and with thee those thou lovest. By witchcraft she brought thee to
+Straumey, by lies she laid me here before thee. Now by hate and might and cruel
+deeds shall she bring thee to lie more low than I do. For, Eric, thou art bound
+to her, and thou shalt never loose the bond!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Atli ceased a while, then spoke again more faintly:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken, comrades,&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;my strength is well-nigh
+spent. Ye shall swear four things to me&mdash;that ye will give Eric Brighteyes
+and Skallagrim Lambstail safe passage from Straumey. That ye will tell Swanhild
+the Fatherless, Groa&rsquo;s daughter and Atli&rsquo;s wife, that, at last, I
+know her for what she is&mdash;a murderess, a harlot, a witch and a liar; and
+that I forgive Eric whom she tricked, but that her I hate and spit upon. That
+ye will slay Koll the Half-witted, Groa&rsquo;s thrall, who came hither about
+two days gone, since by his lies he hath set an edge upon this sword of
+falsehood. That ye will raise no blood-feud against Eric for this my slaying,
+for I goaded him to the deed. Do ye swear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We swear,&rdquo; said the men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then farewell! And to thee farewell, also, Eric Brighteyes! Now take my
+hand and hold it while I die. Behold! I give thee a new name, and by that name
+thou shalt be called in story. I name thee <i>Eric the Unlucky</i>. Of all
+tales that are told, thine shall be the greatest. A mighty stroke that was of
+thine&mdash;a mighty stroke! Farewell!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then his head fell back upon the rock and Earl Atli died. And as he died the
+last rays of light went out of the sky.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap21"></a>CHAPTER XXI<br />
+HOW HALL OF LITHDALE TOOK TIDINGS TO ICELAND</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now on the same night that Atli died at the hand of Eric, Swanhild spake with
+Hall of Lithdale, whom she had summoned from the mainland. She bade him do
+this: take passage in a certain ship that should sail for Iceland on the morrow
+from the island that is called Westra, and there tell all these tidings of the
+ill-doings of Eric and of the slaying of Atli by his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou shalt say this,&rdquo; she went on, &ldquo;that Eric had been my
+love for long, but that at length the matter came to the ears of Atli, the
+Earl. Then, holding this the greatest shame, he went on holmgang with Eric and
+was slain by him. This shalt thou add to thy tale also, that presently Eric and
+I will wed, and that Eric shall rule as Earl in Orkneys. Now these tidings must
+soon come to the ears of Gudruda the Fair, and she will send for thee, and
+question thee straightly concerning them, and thou shalt tell her the tale as
+thou toldest it at first. Then thou shalt give Gudruda this packet, which I
+send her as a gift, saying, that I bade her remember a certain oath which Eric
+took as to the cutting of his hair. And when she sees that which is within the
+packet is somewhat stained, tell her that is but the blood of Atli that is upon
+it, as his blood is upon Eric&rsquo;s hands. Now remember thou this, Hall, that
+if thou fail in the errand thy life shall pay forfeit, for presently I will
+also come to Iceland and hear how thou hast sped.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Swanhild gave him faring-money and gifts of wadmal and gold rings,
+promising that he should have so much again when she came to Iceland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hall said that he would do all these things, and went at once; nor did he fail
+in his tasks.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Atli being dead, Eric loosed his hand and called to the men to take up his body
+and bear it to the hall. This they did. Eric stood and watched them till they
+were lost in the darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whither now, lord?&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It matters little,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;What is thy counsel?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is my counsel. That we take ship and sail back to the King in
+London. There we will tell all this tale. It is a far cry from Straumey to
+London town, and there we shall sit in peace, for the King will think little of
+the slaying of an Orkney Earl in a brawl about a woman. Mayhap, too, the Lady
+Elfrida will not set great store by it. Therefore, I say, let us fare back to
+London.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In but one place am I at home, and that is Iceland,&rdquo; said Eric.
+&ldquo;Thither I will go, Skallagrim, though it be but to miss friend from
+stead and bride from bed. At the least I shall find Ospakar there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen, lord!&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;Was it not my rede that we
+should bide this winter through in London? Thou wouldst none of it, and what
+came about? Our ship is sunk, gone are our comrades, thine honour is tarnished,
+and dead is thy host at thine own hand. Yet I say all is not lost. Let us hence
+south, and see no more of Swanhild, of Gudruda, of Björn and Ospakar. So shall
+we break the spell. But if thou goest to Iceland, I am sure of this: that the
+evil fate which Atli foretold will fall on thee, and the days to come shall be
+even more unlucky than the days that have been.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It may be so,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Methinks, indeed, it will be so.
+Henceforth I am Eric the Unlucky. I will go back to Iceland and there play out
+the game. I care little if I live or am slain&mdash;I have no more joy in my
+life. I stand alone, like a fir upon a mountain-top, and every wind from heaven
+and every storm of hail and snow beats upon my head. But I say to thee,
+Skallagrim: go thy road, and leave a luckless man to his ill fate. Otherwise it
+shall be thine also. Good friend hast thou been to me; now let us part and wend
+south and north. The King will be glad to greet thee yonder in London,
+Lambstail.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But one severing shall we know, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and
+that shall be sword&rsquo;s work, nor will it be for long. It is ill to speak
+such words as these of the parting of lord and thrall. Bethink thee of the oath
+I swore on Mosfell. Let us go north, since it is thy will: in fifty years it
+will count for little which way we wended from the Isles.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they went together down to the shore, and, finding a boat and men who as yet
+knew nothing of what had chanced to Atli, they sailed across the firth at the
+rising of the moon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two days afterwards they found a ship at Wick that was bound for Fareys, and
+sailed in her, Eric buying a passage with the half of a gold ring that the King
+had given him in London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here at Fareys they sat a month or more; but not in the Earl&rsquo;s hall as
+when Eric came with honour in the Gudruda, but in a farmer&rsquo;s stead. For
+the tale of Eric&rsquo;s dealings with Atli and Atli&rsquo;s wife had reached
+Fareys, and the Earl there had been a friend of Atli&rsquo;s. Moreover, Eric
+was now a poor man, having neither ship nor goods, nor friends. Therefore all
+looked coldly on him, though they wondered at his beauty and his might. Still,
+they dared not to speak ill or make a mock of him; for, two men having done so,
+were nearly slain of Skallagrim, who seized the twain by the throat, one in
+either hand, and dashed their heads together. After that men said little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They sat there a month, till at length a chapman put in at Fareys, bound for
+Iceland, and they took passage with him, Eric paying the other half of his gold
+ring for ship-room. The chapman was not willing to give them place at first,
+for he, too, had heard the tale; but Skallagrim offered him choice, either to
+do so or to go on holmgang with him. Then the chapman gave them passage.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now it is told that when his thralls and house-carles bore the corpse of Atli
+the Earl to his hall in Straumey, Swanhild met it and wept over it. And when
+the spokesman among them stood forward and told her those words that Atli had
+bidden them to say to her, sparing none, she spoke thus:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord was distraught and weak with loss of blood when he spoke thus.
+The tale I told him was true, and now Eric has added to his sin by shedding the
+blood of him whom he wronged so sorely.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thereafter she spoke so sweetly and with so much gentleness, craft, and
+wisdom that, though they still doubted them, all men held her words weighty.
+For Swanhild had this art, that she could make the false sound true in the ears
+of men and the true sound false.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still, being mindful of their oath, they hunted for Koll and found him. And
+when the thrall knew that they would slay him he ran thence screaming. Nor did
+Swanhild lift a hand to save his life, for she desired that Koll should die,
+lest he should bear witness against her. Away he ran towards the cliffs, and
+after him sped Atli&rsquo;s house-carles, till he came to the great cliffs that
+edge in the sea. Now they were close upon him and their swords were aloft.
+Then, sooner than know the kiss of steel, the liar leapt from the cliffs and
+was crushed, dying miserably on the rocks below. This was the end of Koll the
+Half-witted, Groa&rsquo;s thrall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild sat in Straumey for a while, and took all Atli&rsquo;s heritage into
+her keeping, for he had no male kin; nor did any say her nay. Also she called
+in the moneys that he had out at interest, and that was a great sum, for Atli
+was a careful and a wealthy man. Then Swanhild made ready to go to Iceland.
+Atli had a great dragon of war, and she manned that ship and filled it with
+stores and all things needful. This done, she set stewards and grieves over the
+Orkney lands and farms, and, when the Earl was six weeks dead, she sailed for
+Iceland, giving out that she went thither to set a blood-suit on foot against
+Eric for the death of Atli, her lord. There she came in safety just as folk
+rode to the Thing.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now Hall of Lithdale came to Iceland and told his tale of the doings of Eric
+and the death of Atli. Oft and loud he told it, and soon people gossiped of it
+in field and fair and stead. Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, heard this talk and
+sent for Hall. To him also Hall told the tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Björn, &ldquo;we will go to my sister Gudruda the Fair,
+and learn how she takes these tidings.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they went in to where Gudruda sat spinning in the hall, singing as she span.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Greeting, Gudruda,&rdquo; said Björn; &ldquo;say, hast thou tidings of
+Eric Brighteyes, thy betrothed?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no tidings,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then here is one who brings them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now for the first time Gudruda the Fair saw Hall of Lithdale. Up she sprang.
+&ldquo;Thou hast tidings of Eric, Hall? Ah! thou art welcome, for no tidings
+have come of him for many a month. Speak on,&rdquo; and she pressed her hand
+against her heart and leaned towards him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My tidings are ill, lady.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is Eric dead? Say not that my love is dead!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is worse than dead,&rdquo; said Hall. &ldquo;He is shamed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There thou liest, Hall,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Shame and Eric are
+things apart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mayst thou think so when thou hast heard my tale, lady,&rdquo; said
+Hall, &ldquo;for I am sad at heart to speak it of one who was my mate.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak on, I say,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, in such a voice that Hall
+shrank from her. &ldquo;Speak on; but of this I warn thee: that if in one word
+thou liest, that shall be thy death when Eric comes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Hall was afraid, thinking of the axe of Skallagrim. Still, he might not go
+back upon his word. So he began at the beginning, telling the story of how he
+was wounded in the fight with Ospakar&rsquo;s ships and left Farey isles, and
+how he came thence to Scotland and sat in Atli&rsquo;s hall on Orkneys. Then he
+told how the Gudruda was wrecked on Straumey, and, of all aboard, Eric and
+Skallagrim alone were saved because of Swanhild&rsquo;s dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Herein I see witch-work,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Hall told that Eric became Swanhild&rsquo;s love, but of the other tale
+which Swanhild had whispered to Atli he said nothing. For he knew that Gudruda
+would not believe this, and, moreover, if it were so, Swanhild had not sent the
+token which he should give.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It may well be,&rdquo; said Gudruda, proudly; &ldquo;Swanhild is fair
+and light of mind. Perchance she led Brighteyes into this snare.&rdquo; But,
+though she spoke thus, bitter jealousy and anger burned in her breast and she
+remembered the sight which she had seen when Eric and Swanhild met on the morn
+of Atli&rsquo;s wedding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Hall told of the slaying of Atli the Good by Eric, but he said nothing of
+the Earl&rsquo;s dying words, nor of how he goaded Brighteyes with his bitter
+words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was an ill deed in sooth,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;for Eric to
+slay an old man whom he had wronged. Still, it may chance that he was driven to
+it for his own life&rsquo;s sake.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Hall said that he had seen Swanhild after Atli&rsquo;s slaying, and that
+she had told him that she and Eric should wed shortly, and that Eric would rule
+in Orkneys by her side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda asked if that was all his tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, lady,&rdquo; answered Hall, &ldquo;that is all my tale, for after
+that I sailed and know not what happened. But I am charged to give something to
+thee, and that by the Lady Swanhild. She bade me say this also: that, when thou
+lookest on the gift, thou shouldst think on a certain oath which Eric took as
+to the cutting of his hair.&rdquo; And he drew a linen packet from his breast
+and gave it to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thrice Gudruda looked on it, fearing to open it. Then, seeing the smile of
+mockery on Björn&rsquo;s cold face, she took the shears that hung at her side
+and cut the thread with them. And as she cut, a lock of golden hair rose from
+the packet, untwisting itself like a living snake. The lock was long, and its
+end was caked with gore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whose hair is this?&rdquo; said Gudruda, though she knew the hair well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric&rsquo;s hair,&rdquo; said Hall, &ldquo;that Swanhild cut from his
+head with Eric&rsquo;s sword.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda put her hand to her bosom. She drew out a satchel, and from the
+satchel a lock of yellow hair. Side by side she placed the locks, looking first
+at one and then at the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is Eric&rsquo;s hair in sooth,&rdquo; she
+said&mdash;&ldquo;Eric&rsquo;s hair that he swore none but I should cut!
+Eric&rsquo;s hair that Swanhild shore with Whitefire from Eric&rsquo;s
+head&mdash;Whitefire whereon we plighted troth! Say now, whose blood is this
+that stains the hair of Eric?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is Atli&rsquo;s blood, whom Eric first dishonoured and then slew with
+his own hand,&rdquo; answered Hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now there burned a fire on the hearth, for the day was cold. Gudruda the Fair
+stood over the fire and with either hand she let the two locks of Eric&rsquo;s
+hair fall upon the embers. Slowly they twisted up and burned. She watched them
+burn, then she threw up her hands and with a great cry fled from the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Björn and Hall of Lithdale looked on each other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hadst best go hence!&rdquo; said Björn; &ldquo;and of this I warn
+thee, Hall, though I hold thy tidings good, that, if thou hast spoken one false
+word, that will be thy death. For then it would be better for thee to face all
+the wolves in Iceland than to stand before Eric in his rage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again Hall bethought himself of the axe of Skallagrim, and he went out heavily.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+That day a messenger came from Gudruda to Björn, saying that she would speak
+with him. He went to where she sat alone upon her bed. Her face was white as
+death, and her dark eyes glowed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric has dealt badly with thee, sister, to bring thee to this
+sorrow,&rdquo; said Björn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak no evil of Eric to me,&rdquo; Gudruda answered. &ldquo;The evil
+that he has done will be paid back to him; there is little need for thee to
+heap words upon his head. Hearken, Björn my brother: is it yet thy will that I
+should wed Ospakar Blacktooth?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is my will, surely. There is no match in Iceland as this Ospakar,
+and I should win many friends by it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do this then, Björn. Send messengers to Swinefell and say to Ospakar
+that if he would still wed Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, let him
+come to Middalhof when folk ride from the Thing and he shall not go hence
+alone. Nay, I have done. Now, I pray thee speak no more to me of Eric or of
+Ospakar. Of the one I have seen and heard enough, and of the other I shall hear
+and see enough in the years that are to come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap22"></a>CHAPTER XXII<br />
+HOW ERIC CAME HOME AGAIN</h2>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild made a good passage from the Orkneys, and was in Iceland thirty-five
+days before Eric and Skallagrim set foot there. But she did not land by Westman
+Isles, for she had no wish to face Gudruda at that time, but by Reyjaness. Now
+she rode thence with her company to Thingvalla, for here all men were gathered
+for the Thing. At first people hung aloof from her, notwithstanding her wealth
+and beauty; but Swanhild knew well how to win the hearts of men. For now she
+told the same story of Eric that she had told to Atli, and there were none to
+say her nay. So it came to pass that she was believed, and Eric Brighteyes held
+to be shamed indeed. Now, too, she set a suit on foot against Eric for the
+death of Atli at his hand, claiming that sentence of the greater outlawry
+should be passed against him, and that his lands at Coldback in the Marsh on
+Ran River should be given, half to her in atonement for the Earl&rsquo;s death,
+and half to the men of Eric&rsquo;s quarter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the day of the opening of the Thing Ospakar Blacktooth came from the north,
+and with him his son Gizur and a great company of men. Ospakar was blithe, for
+from the Thing he should ride to Middalhof, there to wed Gudruda the Fair. Then
+Swanhild clad herself in beautiful attire, and, taking men with her, went to
+the booth of Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blacktooth sat in his booth and by him sat Gizur his son the Lawman. When he
+saw a beauteous lady, very richly clad, enter the booth he did not know who it
+might be. But Gizur knew her well, for he could never put Swanhild from his
+mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lo! here comes Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli&rsquo;s widow,&rdquo; said
+Gizur, flushing red with joy at the sight of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Ospakar greeted her heartily, and made place for her by him at the top of
+the booth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ospakar Blacktooth,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I am come to ask this of
+thee: that thou shalt befriend me in the suit which I have against Eric
+Brighteyes for the slaying of Earl Atli, my husband.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou couldst have come to no man who is more willing,&rdquo; said
+Ospakar, &ldquo;for, if thou hast something against Eric, I have yet
+more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would ask this, too, Ospakar: that thy son Gizur should take up my
+suit and plead it; for I know well that he is the most skilful of all
+lawmen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will do that,&rdquo; said Gizur, his eyes yet fixed upon her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I looked for no less from thee,&rdquo; said Swanhild, &ldquo;and be sure
+of this, that thou shalt not plead for nothing,&rdquo; and she glanced at him
+meaningly. Then she set out her case with a lying tongue, and afterwards went
+back to her booth, glad at heart. For now she learned that Hall had not failed
+in his errand, seeing that Gudruda was about to wed Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gizur gave warning of the blood-suit, and the end of it was that, though he had
+no notice and was not there to answer to the charge, against all right and
+custom Eric was declared outlaw and his lands were given, half to Swanhild and
+half to the men of his quarter. For now all held that Swanhild&rsquo;s was a
+true tale, and Eric the most shameful of men, and therefore they were willing
+to stretch the law against him. Also, being absent, he had few friends, and
+those men of small account; whereas Ospakar, who backed Swanhild&rsquo;s suit,
+was the most powerful of the northern chiefs, as Gizur was the most skilled
+lawman in Iceland. Moreover, Björn the Priest, Asmund&rsquo;s son, was among
+the judges, and, though Swanhild&rsquo;s tale seemed strange to him after that
+which he had heard from Hall of Lithdale, he loved Eric little. He feared also
+that if Eric came a free man to Iceland before Gudruda was wed to Ospakar, her
+love would conquer her anger, for he could see well that she still loved
+Brighteyes. Therefore he strove with might and main that Eric should be brought
+in guilty, nor did he fail in this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the end of it was that Eric Brighteyes was outlawed, his lands declared
+forfeit, and his head a wolf&rsquo;s head, to be taken by him who might, should
+he set foot in Iceland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereafter, the Althing being ended, Björn, Gizur, and Ospakar, with all their
+company, rode away to Middalhof to sit at the marriage-feast. But Swanhild and
+her folk went by sea in the long war-ship to Westmans. For this was her plan:
+to seize on Coldback and to sit there for a while, till she saw if Eric came
+out to Iceland. Also she desired to see the wedding of Ospakar and Gudruda, for
+she had been bidden to it by Björn, her half-brother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar came to Middalhof, and found Gudruda waiting his coming.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood in the great hall, pale and cold as April snow, and greeted him
+courteously. But when he would have kissed her, she shrank from him, for now he
+was more hideous in her sight than he had ever been, and she loathed him in her
+heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night there was feasting in the hall, and at the feast Gudruda heard that
+Eric had been made outlaw. Then she spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is an ill deed, thus to judge an absent man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, Gudruda,&rdquo; said Björn in her ear, &ldquo;hast thou not also
+judged Eric who is absent?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned her head and spoke no more of Eric; but Björn&rsquo;s words fixed
+themselves in her heart like arrows. The tale was strange to her, for it seemed
+that Eric had been made outlaw at Swanhild&rsquo;s suit, and yet Eric was
+Swanhild&rsquo;s love: for Swanhild&rsquo;s self had sent the lock of
+Brighteyes&rsquo; hair by Hall, saying that he was her love and soon would wed
+her. How, then, did Swanhild bring a suit against him who should be her
+husband? Moreover, she heard that Swanhild sailed down to Coldback, and was
+bidden to the marriage-feast, that should be on the third day from now. Could
+it be, then, when all was said and done, that Eric was less faithless than she
+deemed? Gudruda&rsquo;s heart stood still and the blood rushed to her brow when
+she thought on it. Also, even if it were so, it was now too late. And surely it
+was not so, for had not Eric been made outlaw? Men were not made outlaw for a
+little thing. Nay, she would meet her fate, and ask no more of Eric and his
+doings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the morrow, as Gudruda sat in her chamber, it was told her that Saevuna,
+Thorgrimur&rsquo;s widow and Eric&rsquo;s mother, had come from Coldback to
+speak with her. For, after the death of Asmund and of Unna, Saevuna had moved
+back to Coldback on the Marsh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, how can this be?&rdquo; said Gudruda astonished, for she knew well
+that Saevuna was now both blind and bed-ridden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She has been borne here in a chair,&rdquo; said the woman who told her,
+&ldquo;and that is a strange sight to see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At first Gudruda was minded to say her nay; but her heart softened, and she
+bade them bring Saevuna in. Presently she came, being set in a chair upon the
+shoulders of four men. She was white to see, for sickness had aged her much,
+and she stared about her with sightless eyes. But she was still tall and
+straight, and her face was stern to look on. To Gudruda it seemed like that of
+Eric when he was angered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Am I nigh to Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter?&rdquo; asked
+Saevuna. &ldquo;Methinks I hear her breathe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am here, mother,&rdquo; said Gudruda. &ldquo;What is thy will with
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Set down, carles, and begone!&rdquo; quoth Saevuna; &ldquo;that which I
+have to say I would say alone. When I summon you, come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The carles set down the chair upon the floor and went.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gudruda,&rdquo; said the dame, &ldquo;I am risen from my deathbed, and I
+have caused myself to be borne on my last journey here across the meads, that I
+may speak with thee and warn thee. I hear that thou hast put away my son, Eric
+Brighteyes, to whom thou art sworn in marriage, and art about to give thyself
+to Ospakar Blacktooth. I hear also that thou hast done this deed because a
+certain man, Hall of Lithdale&mdash;whom from his youth up I have known for a
+liar and a knave, and whom thou thyself didst mistrust in years gone
+by&mdash;has come hither to Iceland from Orkneys, bearing a tale of
+Eric&rsquo;s dealings with thy half-sister Swanhild. This I hear, further: that
+Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s widow, hath come out to Iceland and laid a suit against
+Eric for the slaying of Atli the Earl, her husband, and that Eric has been
+outlawed and his lands at Coldback are forfeit. Tell me now, Gudruda,
+Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, if these tales be true?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The tales are true, mother,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then hearken to me, girl. Eric sprang from my womb, who of all living
+men is the best and first, as he is the bravest and most strong. I have reared
+this Eric from a babe and I know his heart well. Now I tell thee this, that,
+whatever Eric has done or left undone, naught of dishonour is on his hands.
+Mayhap Swanhild has deceived him&mdash;thou art a woman, and thou knowest well
+the arts which women have, and the strength that Freya gives them. Well thou
+knowest, also, of what breed this Swanhild came; and perchance thou canst
+remember how she dealt with thee, and with what mind she looked on Eric.
+Perchance thou canst remember how she plotted against thee and Eric&mdash;ay,
+how she thrust thee from Goldfoss brink. Say, then, wilt thou take her word?
+Wilt thou take the word of this witch-daughter of a witch? Wilt thou not think
+on Groa, her mother, and of Groa&rsquo;s dealings with thy father, and with
+Unna my kinswoman? As the mother is, so shall the daughter be. Wilt thou cast
+Eric aside, and that unheard?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no more room for doubt, mother,&rdquo; said Gudruda. &ldquo;I
+have proof of this: that Eric has forsaken me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So thou thinkest, child; but I tell thee that thou art wrong! Eric loves
+thee now as he loved thee aforetime, and will love thee always.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would that I could believe it!&rdquo; said Gudruda. &ldquo;If I could
+believe that Eric still loved me&mdash;ay, even though he had been faithless to
+me&mdash;I would die ere I wed Ospakar!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art foolish, Gudruda, and thou shalt rue thy folly bitterly. I am
+outworn, and death draws near to me&mdash;far from me now are hates and loves,
+hopes and fears; but I know this: that woman is mad who, loving a man, weds
+where she loves not. Shame shall be her portion and bitterness her bread.
+Unhappy shall she live, and when she comes to die, but as a
+wilderness&mdash;but as the desolate winter snow, shall be the record of her
+days!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda wept aloud. &ldquo;What is done is done,&rdquo; she cried;
+&ldquo;the bridegroom sits within the hall&mdash;the bride awaits him in the
+bower. What is done is done&mdash;I may hope no more to be saved from
+Ospakar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is done is done, yet it can be brought to nothing; but soon that
+shall be done which may never be undone! Gudruda, fare thee well! Never shall I
+listen to thy voice again. I hold thee shameless, thou unfaithful woman, who in
+thy foolish jealousy art ready to sell thyself to the arms of one thou hatest!
+Ho! carles; come hither. Bear me hence!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the men came in and took up Saevuna&rsquo;s chair. Gudruda watched them
+bear her forth. Then suddenly she sprang from her seat and ran after her into
+the hall, weeping bitterly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now as Saevuna, Eric&rsquo;s mother, was carried out she was met by Ospakar and
+Björn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stay,&rdquo; said Björn. &ldquo;What does this carline here?&mdash;and
+why weeps Gudruda, my sister?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men halted. &ldquo;Who calls me &lsquo;carline&rsquo;?&rdquo; said Saevuna.
+&ldquo;Is the voice I hear the voice of Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is my voice, truly,&rdquo; said Björn, &ldquo;and I would know
+this&mdash;and this would Ospakar, who stands at my side, know also&mdash;why
+thou comest here, carline? and why Gudruda weeps?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gudruda weeps because she has good cause to weep, Björn. She weeps
+because she has betrayed her love, Eric Brighteyes, my son, and is about to be
+sold in marriage&mdash;to be sold to thee, Ospakar Blacktooth, like a heifer at
+a fair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Björn grew angry and cursed Saevuna, nor did Ospakar spare to add his ill
+words. But the old dame sat in her chair, listening silently till all their
+curses were spent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ye are evil, the twain of you,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and ye have told
+lies of Eric, my son; and ye have taken his bride for lust and greed, playing
+on the jealous folly of a maid like harpers on a harp. Now I tell you this,
+Björn and Ospakar! My blind eyes are opened and I see this hall of Middalhof,
+and lo! it is but a gore of blood! Blood flows upon the board&mdash;blood
+streams along the floor, and ye&mdash;ye twain!&mdash;lie dead thereon, and
+about your shapes are shrouds, and on her feet are Hell-shoon! Eric comes and
+Whitefire is aloft, and no more shall ye stand before him whom ye have
+slandered than stands the birch before the lightning stroke! Eric comes! I see
+his angry eyes&mdash;I see his helm flash in the door-place! Red was that
+marriage-feast at which sat Unna, my kinswoman, and Asmund, thy
+father&mdash;redder shall be the feast where sit Gudruda, thy sister, and
+Ospakar! The wolf howls at thy door, Björn! the grave-worm opens his mouth!
+trolls run to and fro upon thy threshold, and the ghosts of men speed
+Hellwards! Ill were the deeds of Groa&mdash;worse shall be the deeds of
+Groa&rsquo;s daughter! Red is thy hall with blood, Björn!&mdash;for Whitefire
+is aloft and&mdash;<i>I tell thee Eric comes!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;and with one
+great cry she fell back&mdash;dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they stood amazed, and trembling in their fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Saevuna hath spoken strange words,&rdquo; said Björn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall we be frightened by a dead hag?&rdquo; quoth Ospakar, drawing his
+breath again. &ldquo;Fellows, bear this carrion forth, or we fling it to the
+dogs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the men tied the body of Saevuna, Thorgrimur&rsquo;s widow, Eric&rsquo;s
+mother, fast in the chair, and bore it thence. But when at length they came to
+Coldback, they found that Swanhild was there with all her following, and had
+driven Eric&rsquo;s grieve and his folk to the fells. But one old carline, who
+had been nurse to Eric, was left there, and she sat wailing in an outhouse,
+being too weak to move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the men set down the corpse of Saevuna in the outhouse, and, having told
+all their tale to the carline, they fled also.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night passed, and passed the morrow; but on the next day at dawn Eric
+Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail landed near Westman Isles. They had made a
+bad passage from Fareys, having been beat about by contrary winds; but at
+length they came safe and well to land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now this was the day of the marriage-feast of Gudruda the Fair and Ospakar; but
+Eric knew nothing of these tidings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where to now, lord?&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To Coldback first, to see my mother, if she yet lives, and to learn
+tidings of Gudruda. Then as it may chance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Near to the beach was a yeoman&rsquo;s house. Thither they went to hire horses;
+but none were in the house, for all had gone to Gudruda&rsquo;s marriage-feast.
+In the home meadow ran two good horses, and in the outhouses were saddles and
+bridles. They caught the horses, saddled them and rode for Coldback. When they
+had ridden for something over an hour they came to the crest of a height whence
+they could see Coldback in the Marsh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric drew rein and looked, and his heart swelled within him at the sight of the
+place where he was born. But as he looked he saw a great train of people ride
+away from Coldback towards Middalhof&mdash;and in the company a woman wearing a
+purple cloak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now what may this mean?&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ride on and we shall learn,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they rode on, and as they rode Eric&rsquo;s breast grew heavy with fear. Now
+they passed up the banked way through the home meadows of the house, but they
+could see no one; and now they were at the door. Down sprang Eric and walked
+into the hall. But none were there to greet him, though a fire yet burned upon
+the earth. Only a gaunt hound wandered about the hall, and, seeing him, sprang
+towards him, growling. Eric knew him for his old wolf-hound, and called him by
+his name. The dog listened, then ran up and smelt his hands, and straightway
+howled with joy and leapt upon him. For a while he leapt thus, while Eric
+stared around him wondering and sad at heart. Then the dog ran to the door and
+stopped, whining. Eric followed after him. The hound passed through the
+entrance, and across the yard till he came to an outhouse. Here the dog stopped
+and scratched at the door, still whining. Eric thrust it open. Lo! there before
+him sat Saevuna, his mother, dead in a chair, and at her feet crouched the
+carline&mdash;she who had been Eric&rsquo;s nurse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now he grasped the door-posts to steady himself, and his shadow fell upon the
+white face of his mother and the old carline at her feet.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap23"></a>CHAPTER XXIII<br />
+HOW ERIC WAS A GUEST AT THE WEDDING-FEAST OF GUDRUDA THE FAIR</h2>
+
+<p>
+Eric looked, but said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who art thou?&rdquo; whined the carline, gazing up at him with
+tear-blinded eyes. But Eric&rsquo;s face was in the shadow, and she only saw
+the glint of his golden hair and the flash of the golden helm. For Eric could
+not speak yet a while.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art thou one of the Swanhild&rsquo;s folk, come to drive me hence with
+the rest? Good sir, I cannot go to the fells, my limbs are too weak. Slay me,
+if thou wilt, but drive me not from this,&rdquo; and she pointed to the corpse.
+&ldquo;Say now, will thou not help me to give it burial? It is unmeet that she
+who in her time had husband, and goods, and son, should lie unburied like a
+dead cow on the fells. I have still a hundred in silver, if I might but come at
+it. It is hidden, sir, and I will pay thee if thou wilt help me to bury her.
+These old hands are too feeble to dig a grave, nor could I bear her there alone
+if it were dug. Thou wilt not help me?&mdash;then may thine own mother&rsquo;s
+bones lie uncovered, and be picked of gulls and ravens. Oh, that Eric
+Brighteyes would come home again! Oh, that Eric was here! there is work to do
+and never a man to do it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric gave a great sob and cried, &ldquo;Nurse, nurse! knowest thou me not!
+<i>I</i> am Eric Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She uttered a loud cry, and, clasping him by the knees, looked up into his
+face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thanks be to Odin! Thou art Eric&mdash;Eric come home again! But alas,
+thou hast come too late!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What has happened, then?&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What has happened? All evil things. Thou art outlawed, Eric, at the suit
+of Swanhild for the slaying of Atli the Earl. Swanhild sits here in Coldback,
+for she hath seized thy lands. Saevuna, thy mother, died two days ago in the
+hall of Middalhof, whither she went to speak with Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gudruda! what of Gudruda?&rdquo; cried Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This, Brighteyes: to-day she weds Ospakar Blacktooth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric covered his face with his hand. Presently he lifted it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art rich in evil tidings, nurse, though, it would seem, poor in all
+besides. Tell me at what hour is the wedding-feast?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;An hour after noon, Eric; but now Swanhild has ridden thither with her
+company.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then room must be found at Middalhof for one more guest,&rdquo; said
+Eric, and laughed aloud. &ldquo;Go on!&mdash;pour out thy evil news and spare
+me not!&mdash;for nothing has any more power to harm me now! Come hither,
+Skallagrim, and see and hearken.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim came and looked on the face of dead Saevuna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am outlawed at Swanhild&rsquo;s suit, Lambstail. My life lies in thy
+hand, if so be thou wouldst take it! Hew off my head, if thou wilt, and bear it
+to Gudruda the Fair&mdash;she will thank thee for the gift. Lay on, Lambstail;
+lay on with that axe of thine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Child&rsquo;s talk!&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Child&rsquo;s talk, but man&rsquo;s work! Thou hast not heard the tale
+out. Swanhild hath seized my lands and sits here at Coldback! And&mdash;what
+thinkest thou, Skallagrim?&mdash;but now she has ridden a-guesting to the
+marriage-feast of Ospakar Blacktooth with Gudruda the Fair! Swanhild at
+Gudruda&rsquo;s wedding!&mdash;the eagle in the wild swan&rsquo;s nest! But
+there will be another guest,&rdquo; and again he laughed aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Two</i> other guests,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;More of thy tale, old nurse!&mdash;more of thy tale!&rdquo; quoth Eric.
+&ldquo;No better didst thou ever tell me when, as a lad, I sat by thee, in the
+ingle o&rsquo; winter nights&mdash;and the company is fitting to the
+tale!&rdquo; and he pointed to dead Saevuna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the carline told on. She told how Hall of Lithdale had come out to
+Iceland, and of the story that he bore to Gudruda, and of the giving of the
+lock of hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What did I say, lord?&rdquo; broke in Skallagrim&mdash;&ldquo;that in
+Hall thou hadst let a weasel go who would live to nip thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Him I will surely live to shorten by a head,&rdquo; quoth Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, lord, this one for me&mdash;Ospakar for thee, Hall for me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As thou wilt, Baresark. Among so many there is room to pick and choose.
+Tell on, nurse!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she told how Swanhild came out to Iceland, and, having won Ospakar
+Blacktooth and Gizur to her side, had laid a suit against Eric at the Thing,
+and there bore false witness against him, so that Brighteyes was declared
+outlaw, being absent. She told, too, how Gudruda had betrothed herself to
+Ospakar, and how Swanhild had moved down to Coldback and seized the lands.
+Lastly she told of the rising of Saevuna from her deathbed, of her going to
+Middalhof, of the words she spoke to Björn and Ospakar, and of her death in the
+hall at Middalhof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When all was told, Eric stooped and kissed the cold brow of his mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is little time to bury thee now, my mother,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;and perchance before six hours are sped there will be one to bury at thy
+side. Nevertheless, thou shalt sit in a better place than this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he cut loose the cords that bound the body of Saevuna to the chair, and,
+lifting it in his arms, bore it to the hall. There he set the corpse in the
+high seat of the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We need not start yet a while, Skallagrim,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;if
+indeed thou wouldst go a-guesting with me to Middalhof. Therefore let us eat
+and drink, for there are deeds to do this day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they found meat and mead and ate and drank. Then Eric washed himself, combed
+out his golden locks, and looked well to his harness and to Whitefire&rsquo;s
+edge. Skallagrim also ground his great axe upon the whetstone in the yard,
+singing as he ground. When all was ready, the horses were caught, and Eric
+spoke to the carline:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken, nurse. If it may be that thou canst find any of our
+folk&mdash;and perchance now that they see that Swanhild has ridden to
+Middalhof some one of them will come down to spy&mdash;thou shalt say this to
+them. Thou shalt say that, if Eric Brighteyes yet lives, he will be at the foot
+of Mosfell to-morrow before midday, and if, for the sake of old days and
+fellowship, they are minded to befriend a friendless man, let them come thither
+with food, for by then food will be needed, and I will speak with them. And now
+farewell,&rdquo; and Eric kissed her and went, leaving her weeping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As it chanced, before another hour was sped, Jon, Eric&rsquo;s thrall, who had
+stayed at home in Iceland, seeing Coldback empty, crept down from the fells and
+looked in. The carline saw him, and told him these tidings. Then he went thence
+to find the other men. Having found them he told them Eric&rsquo;s words, and a
+great gladness came upon them when they learned that Brighteyes still lived,
+and was in Iceland. Then they gathered food and gear, and rode away to the foot
+of Mosfell that is now called Ericsfell.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Ospakar sat in the hall at Middalhof, near to the high seat. He was fully
+armed, and a black helm with a raven&rsquo;s crest was on his head. For, though
+he said nothing of it, not a little did he fear that Saevuna spoke
+sooth&mdash;that her words would come true, and, before this day was done, he
+and Eric should once more stand face to face. At his side sat Gudruda the Fair,
+robed in white, a worked head-dress on her head, golden clasps upon her breast
+and golden rings about her arms. Never had she been more beautiful to see; but
+her face was whiter than her robes. She looked with loathing on Blacktooth at
+her side, rough like a bear, and hideous as a troll. But he looked on her with
+longing, and laughed from side to side of his great mouth when he thought that
+at last he had got her for his own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, if Eric would but come, faithless though he be!&mdash;if Eric would
+but come!&rdquo; thought Gudruda; but no Eric came to save her. The guests
+gathered fast, and presently Swanhild swept in with all her company, wrapped
+about in her purple cloak. She came up to the high seat where Gudruda sat, and
+bent the knee before her, looking on her with lovely mocking face and hate in
+her blue eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Greeting, Gudruda, my sister!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;When last we met I
+sat, Atli&rsquo;s bride, where to-day thou sittest the bride of Ospakar. Then
+Eric Brighteyes held thy hand, and little thou didst think of wedding Ospakar.
+Now Eric is afar&mdash;so strangely do things come about&mdash;and Blacktooth,
+Brighteyes&rsquo; foe, holds that fair hand of thine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda looked on her and turned whiter yet in her pain, but she answered never
+a word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What! no word for me, sister?&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;And yet it is
+through me that thou comest to this glad hour. It is through me that thou art
+rid of Eric, and it is I who have given thee to the arms of mighty Ospakar. No
+word of thanks for so great a service!&mdash;fie on thee, Gudruda! fie!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Gudruda spoke: &ldquo;Strange tales are told of thee and Eric,
+Groa&rsquo;s daughter! I have done with Eric, but I have done with thee also.
+Thou hast thrust thyself here against my will and, if I may, I would see thy
+face no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wouldst thou see Eric&rsquo;s face, Gudruda?&mdash;say, wouldst see
+Eric&rsquo;s face? I tell thee it is fair!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Gudruda answered nothing, and Swanhild fell back, laughing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the feast began, and men waxed merry. But ever Gudruda&rsquo;s heart grew
+heavier, for in it echoed those words that Saevuna had spoken. Her eyes were
+dim, and she seemed to see naught but the face of Eric as it had looked when he
+came back to her that day on the brink of Goldfoss Falls and she had thought
+him dead. Oh! what if he still loved her and were yet true at heart? Swanhild
+mocked her!&mdash;what if this was a plot of Swanhild&rsquo;s? Had not Swanhild
+plotted aforetime, and could a wolf cease from ravening or a witch from
+witch-work? Nay, she had seen Eric&rsquo;s hair&mdash;that he had sworn none
+save she should touch! Perchance he had been drugged, and the hair shorn from
+him in his sleep? Too late to think! Of what use was thought?&mdash;beside her
+sat Ospakar, in one short hour she would be his. Ah! that she could see him
+dead&mdash;the troll who had trafficked her to shame, the foe she had summoned
+in her wrath and jealousy! She had done ill&mdash;she had fallen into
+Swanhild&rsquo;s snare, and now Swanhild came to mock her!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The feast went on&mdash;cup followed cup. Now they poured the bride-cup! Before
+her heart beat two hundred times she would be the wife of Ospakar!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blacktooth took the cup&mdash;pledged her in it, and drank deep. Then he turned
+and strove to kiss her. But Gudruda shrank from him with horror in her eyes,
+and all men wondered. Still she must drink the bridal cup. She took it. Dimly
+she saw the upturned faces, faintly she heard the murmur of a hundred voices.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What was that voice she caught above them all&mdash;there&mdash;without the
+hall?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Holding the cup in her hand, Gudruda bent forward, staring down the skali. Then
+she cried aloud, pointing to the door, and the cup fell clattering from her
+hand and rolled along the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Men turned and looked. They saw this: there on the threshold stood a man,
+glorious to look at, and from his winged helm of gold the rays of light flashed
+through the dusky hall. The man was great and beautiful to see. He had long
+yellow hair bound in about his girdle, and in his left hand he held a pointed
+shield, in his right a spear, and at his thigh there hung a mighty sword. Nor
+was he alone, for by his side, a broad axe on his shoulder and shield in hand,
+stood another man, clad in black-hued mail&mdash;a man well-nigh as broad and
+big, with hawk&rsquo;s eyes, eagle beak, and black hair streaked with grey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment there was silence. Then a voice spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lo! here be the Gods Baldur and Thor!&mdash;come from Valhalla to grace
+the marriage-feast!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the man with golden hair cried aloud in a voice that made the rafters
+ring:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here are Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail, his thrall, come from
+over sea to grace the feast, indeed!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I could have looked for no worse guests,&rdquo; said Björn, beneath his
+breath, and rose to bid men thrust them out. But before he could speak, lo!
+gold-helmed Eric and black-helmed Skallagrim were stalking up the length of
+that great hall. Side by side they stalked, with faces fierce and cold; nor
+stayed they till they stood before the high seat. Eric looked up and round, and
+the light of his eyes was as the light of a sword. Men marvelled at his
+greatness and his wonderful beauty, and to Gudruda he seemed like a God.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here I see faces that are known to me,&rdquo; said Eric.
+&ldquo;Greetings, comrades!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Greetings, Brighteyes!&rdquo; shouted the Middalhof folk and the company
+of Swanhild; but the carles of Ospakar laid hand on sword&mdash;they too knew
+Eric. For still all men loved Eric, and the people of his quarter were proud of
+the deeds he had done oversea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Greeting, Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son!&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;Greeting,
+Ospakar Blacktooth! Greeting, Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli&rsquo;s
+witch-wife&mdash;Groa&rsquo;s witch-bairn! Greeting, Hall of Lithdale, Hall the
+liar&mdash;Hall who cut the grapnel-chain! And to thee, sweet Bride, to thee
+Gudruda the Fair, greeting!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Björn spoke: &ldquo;I will take no greeting from a shamed and outlawed man.
+Get thee gone, Eric Brighteyes, and take thy wolf-hound with thee, lest thou
+bidest here stiff and cold.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak not so loud, rat, lest hound&rsquo;s fang worry thee!&rdquo;
+growled Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric laughed aloud and cried&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Words must be said, and perchance men shall die, ere ever I leave this
+hall, Björn!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap24"></a>CHAPTER XXIV<br />
+HOW THE FEAST WENT</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken all men!&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thrust him out!&rdquo; quoth Björn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, cut him down!&rdquo; said Ospakar, &ldquo;he is an outlawed
+man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Words first, then deeds,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim. &ldquo;Thou shalt
+have thy fill of both, Blacktooth, before day is done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let Eric say his say,&rdquo; said Gudruda, lifting her head. &ldquo;He
+has been doomed unheard, and it is my will that he shall say his say.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What hast thou to do with Eric?&rdquo; snarled Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The bride-cup is not yet drunk, lord,&rdquo; she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To thee, then, I will speak, lady,&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;How comes
+it that, being betrothed to me, thou dost sit there the bride of
+Ospakar?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask of Swanhild,&rdquo; said Gudruda in a low voice. &ldquo;Ask also of
+Hall of Lithdale yonder, who brought me Swanhild&rsquo;s gift from
+Straumey.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must ask much of Hall and he must answer much,&rdquo; said Eric.
+&ldquo;What tale, then, did he bring thee from Straumey?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He said this, Eric,&rdquo; Gudruda answered: &ldquo;that thou wast
+Swanhild&rsquo;s love; that for Swanhild&rsquo;s sake thou hadst basely killed
+Atli the Good, and that thou wast about to wed Swanhild&rsquo;s self and take
+the Earl&rsquo;s seat in Orkneys.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And for what cause was I made outlaw at the Althing?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For this cause, Eric,&rdquo; said Björn, &ldquo;that thou hadst dealt
+evilly with Swanhild, bringing her to shame against her will, and thereafter
+that thou hadst slain the Earl, her husband.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Which, then, of these tales is true? for both cannot be true,&rdquo;
+said Brighteyes. &ldquo;Speak, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou knowest well that the last is true,&rdquo; said Swanhild boldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How then comes it that thou didst charge Hall with that message to
+Gudruda? How then comes it that thou didst send her the lock of hair which thou
+didst cozen me to give thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I charged Hall with no message, and I sent no lock of hair,&rdquo;
+Swanhild answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stand thou forward, Hall!&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and liar and coward
+though thou art, dare not to speak other than the truth! Nay, look not at the
+door: for, if thou stirrest, this spear shall find thee before thou hast gone a
+pace!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Hall stood forward, trembling with fear, for he saw the eye of Skallagrim
+watching him close, and while Lambstail watched, his fingers toyed with the
+handle of his axe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is true, lord, that Swanhild charged me with that message which I
+gave to the Lady Gudruda. Also she bade me give the lock of hair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And for this service thou didst take money, Hall?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, lord, she gave me money for my faring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And all the while thou knewest the tidings false?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hall made no reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Answer!&rdquo; thundered Eric&mdash;&ldquo;answer the truth, knave, or
+by every God that passes the hundred gates I will not spare thee twice!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is so, lord,&rdquo; said Hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou liest, fox!&rdquo; cried Swanhild, white with wrath and casting a
+fierce look upon Hall. But men took no heed of Swanhild&rsquo;s words, for all
+eyes were bent on Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it now your pleasure, comrades, that I should tell you the
+truth?&rdquo; said Brighteyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The most part of the company shouted &ldquo;Yea!&rdquo; but the men of Ospakar
+stood silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak on, Eric,&rdquo; quoth Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the truth, then: Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli&rsquo;s wife, has
+always sought my love, and she has ever hated Gudruda whom I loved. From a
+child she has striven to work mischief between us. Ay, and she did this, though
+till now it has been hidden: she strove to murder Gudruda; it was on the day
+that Skallagrim and I overcame Ospakar and his band on Horse-Head Heights. She
+thrust Gudruda from the brink of Golden Falls while she sat looking on the
+waters, and as she hung there I dragged her back. Is it not so, Gudruda?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is so,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now men murmured and looked at Swanhild. But she shrank back, plucking at her
+purple cloak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was for this cause,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;that Asmund,
+Swanhild&rsquo;s father, gave her choice to wed Atli the Earl and pass over sea
+or to take her trial in the Doom-Ring. She wedded Atli and went away.
+Afterwards, by witchcraft, she brought my ship to wreck on Straumey&rsquo;s
+Isle&mdash;ay, she walked the waters like a shape of light and lured us on to
+ruin, so that all were drowned except Skallagrim and myself. Is it not so,
+Skallagrim?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is so, lord. I saw her with my eyes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again folk murmured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then we must sit in Atli&rsquo;s hall,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and
+there we dwelt last winter. For a while Swanhild did no harm, till I feared her
+no more. But some three months ago, I was left with her: and a man called Koll,
+Groa&rsquo;s thrall, of whom ye know, came out from Iceland, bringing news of
+the death of Asmund the priest, of Unna my cousin, and of Groa the witch. To
+these ill-tidings Swanhild bribed him to add something. She bribed him to add
+this: that thou, Gudruda, wast betrothed to Ospakar, and wouldst wed him on
+last Yule Day. Moreover, he gave me a certain message from thee, Gudruda, and,
+in token of its truth, the half of that coin which I broke with thee long years
+ago. Say now, lady, didst thou send the coin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, never!&rdquo; cried Gudruda; &ldquo;many years ago I lost the half
+thou gavest me, though I feared to tell thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perchance one stands there who found it,&rdquo; said Eric, pointing with
+his spear at Swanhild. &ldquo;At the least I was deceived by it. Now the tale
+is short. Swanhild mourned with me, and in my sorrow I mourned bitterly. Then
+it was she asked a boon, that lock of mine, Gudruda, and, thinking thee
+faithless, I gave it, holding all oaths broken. Then too, when I would have
+left her, she drugged me with a witch-draught&mdash;ay, she drugged me, and I
+woke to find myself false to my oath, false to Atli, and false to thee,
+Gudruda. I cursed her and I left her, waiting for the Earl, to tell him all.
+But Swanhild outwitted me. She told him that other tale of shame that ye have
+heard, and brought Koll to him as witness of the tale. Atli was deceived by
+her, and not until I had cut him down in anger at the bitter words he spoke,
+calling me coward and niddering, did he know the truth. But before he died he
+knew it; and he died, holding my hand and bidding those about him find Koll and
+slay him. Is it not so, ye who were Atli&rsquo;s men?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is so, Eric!&rdquo; they cried; &ldquo;we heard it with our own ears,
+and we slew Koll. But afterwards Swanhild brought us to believe that Earl Atli
+was distraught when he spoke thus, and that things were indeed as she had
+said.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again men murmured, and a strange light shone in Gudruda&rsquo;s eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, Gudruda, thou hast heard all my story,&rdquo; said Eric.
+&ldquo;Say, dost thou believe me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe thee, Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say then, wilt thou still wed yon Ospakar?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda looked on Blacktooth, then she looked at golden Eric and opened her
+lips to speak. But before a word could pass them Ospakar rose in wrath, laying
+his hand upon his sword.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thinkest thou thus to lure away my dove, outlaw? First I will see thee
+food for crows.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well spoken, Blacktooth,&rdquo; laughed Eric. &ldquo;I waited for such
+words from thee. Thrice have we striven together&mdash;once out yonder in the
+snow, once on Horse-Head Heights, and once by Westman Isles&mdash;and still we
+live to tell the tale. Come down, Ospakar: come down from that soft seat of
+thine and here and now let us put it to the proof who is the better man. When
+we met before, the stake was Whitefire set against my eye. Now the stake is our
+lives and fair Gudruda&rsquo;s hand. Talk no more, Ospakar, but fall to
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gudruda shall never wed thee, while I live!&rdquo; said Björn;
+&ldquo;thou art a landless loon, a brawler, and an outlaw. Get thee gone, Eric,
+with thy wolf-hound!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Squeak not so loud, rat&mdash;squeak not so loud, lest hound&rsquo;s
+fang worry thee!&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whether I wed Gudruda or whether I wed her not is a matter that shall be
+known in its season,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;For thy words, I say this: that
+it is risky to hurl names at such as I am, Björn, lest perchance I answer them
+with spear-thrusts. Thy answer, Ospakar! What need to wait? Thy answer!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Ospakar looked at Brighteyes and grew afraid. He was a mighty man, but he
+knew the weight of Eric&rsquo;s arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not fight with thee, carle,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;who hast
+naught to lose.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then thou art coward and niddering!&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Ospakar
+<i>Niddering</i> I name thee here before all men! What! thou couldst plot
+against me&mdash;thou couldst waylay me, ten to one and two ships to one, but
+face to face with me alone thou dost not dare to stand? Comrades, look on your
+lord!&mdash;look at Ospakar the <i>Niddering!</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the swarthy brow of Blacktooth grew red with rage, and his breath came in
+great gasps. &ldquo;Ho, men!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;drive this knave away.
+Strip his harness off him and whip him hence with rods.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let but a man stir towards me and this spear flies through thy heart,
+Niddering,&rdquo; cried Eric. &ldquo;Gudruda, what thinkest thou of thy
+lord?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know this,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;that I will not wed a man who
+is named &lsquo;Niddering&rsquo; in the face of all and lifts no sword.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda spoke thus, because she was mad with love and fear and shame, and she
+desired that Eric should stand face to face with Ospakar Blacktooth, for thus,
+alone, she might perhaps be rid of Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Such words do not come well from gentle lips,&rdquo; said Björn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it to be borne, brother,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, &ldquo;that the man
+who would call me wife should be named Ospakar the Niddering? When that shame
+is washed away, and then only, can I think on marriage. I will never be
+Niddering&rsquo;s bride!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hearest, Ospakar Niddering?&rdquo; said Eric. Then he gave the
+spear in his hand to Skallagrim, and, gripping Whitefire&rsquo;s hilt, he burst
+the peace-strings, and tore it from the scabbard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the great sword shone on high like lightning leaping from a cloud, and as
+it shone men shouted, &ldquo;<i>Ospakar! Ospakar Niddering!</i> Come, win back
+Whitefire from Eric&rsquo;s hand, or be for ever shamed!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blacktooth could endure this no more. He snatched sword and shield, and, like a
+bear from a cave, like a wolf from his lair, rushed roaring from his seat. On
+he came, and the ground shook beneath his bulk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At last, Niddering!&rdquo; cried Eric, and sprang to meet him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Back! all men, back!&rdquo; shouted Skallagrim, &ldquo;now we shall see
+blows.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he spoke the great swords flashed aloft and clanged upon the iron shields.
+So heavy were the blows that fire leapt out from them. Ospakar reeled back
+beneath the shock, and Eric was beaten to his knee. Now he was up, but as he
+rushed, Ospakar struck again and swept away half of Brighteyen&rsquo;s pointed
+shield so that it fell upon the floor. Eric smote also, but Ospakar dropped his
+knee to earth and the sword hissed over him. Blacktooth cut at Eric&rsquo;s
+legs; but Brighteyes sprang from the ground and took no harm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now some cried, &ldquo;<i>Eric! Eric!</i>&rdquo; and some cried
+&ldquo;<i>Ospakar! Ospakar!</i>&rdquo; for no one knew how the fight would go.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda sat watching in the high seat, and as blows fell her colour came and
+went.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild drew near, watching also, and she desired in her fierce heart to see
+Eric brought to shame and death, for, should he win, then Gudruda would be rid
+of Ospakar. Now by her side stood Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, and near to her
+was Björn. These two held their breath, for, if Eric conquered, all their plans
+were brought to nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even as he sprang into the air, Eric smote down with all his strength. The blow
+fell on Ospakar&rsquo;s shield. It shore through the shield and struck on the
+shoulder beneath. But Blacktooth&rsquo;s byrnie was good, nor did the sword
+bite into it. Still the stroke was so heavy that Ospakar staggered back four
+paces beneath it, then fell upon the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now folk raised a shout of &ldquo;<i>Eric! Eric!</i>&rdquo; for it seemed that
+Ospakar was sped. Brighteyes, too, cried aloud, then rushed forward. Now, as he
+came, Swanhild whispered an eager word into the ear of Björn. By Björn&rsquo;s
+foot lay that half of Eric&rsquo;s shield which had been shorn away by the
+sword of Ospakar. Gudruda, watching, saw Björn push it with his shoe so that it
+slid before the feet of Brighteyes. His right foot caught on it, he stumbled
+heavily&mdash;stumbled again, then fell prone on his face, and, as he fell,
+stretched out his sword hand to save himself, so that Whitefire flew from his
+grasp. The blade struck its hilt against the ground, then circled in the air
+and fixed itself, point downwards, in the clay of the flooring. The hand of
+Ospakar rising from the ground smote against the hilt of Whitefire. He saw it,
+with a shout he cast his own sword away and clasped Whitefire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Away circled the sword of Ospakar; and of that cast this strange thing is told,
+false or true. Far in the corner of the hall lurked Thorunna, she who had
+betrayed Skallagrim when he was named Ounound. She had come with a heavy heart
+to Middalhof in the company of Ospakar; but when she saw Skallagrim, her
+husband&mdash;whom she had betrayed, and who had turned Baresark because of her
+wickedness&mdash;shame smote her, and she crept away and hid herself behind the
+hangings of the hall. The sword sped along point first, it rushed like a spear
+through the air. It fell on the hangings, piercing them, piercing the heart of
+Thorunna, who cowered behind them, so that with one cry she sank dead to earth,
+slain by her lover&rsquo;s hand.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now when men saw that Ospakar once more held Whitefire in his
+hand&mdash;Whitefire that Brighteyes had won from him&mdash;they called aloud
+that it was an omen. The sword of Blacktooth had come back to Blacktooth and
+now Eric would surely be slain of it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric sprang from the ground. He heard the shouts and saw Whitefire blazing in
+Ospakar&rsquo;s hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now thou art weaponless, fly! Brighteyes; fly!&rdquo; cried some.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda&rsquo;s cheek grew white with fear, and for a moment Eric&rsquo;s heart
+failed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fly not!&rdquo; roared Skallagrim. &ldquo;Björn tripped thee. Yet hast
+thou half a shield!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ospakar rushed on, and Whitefire flickered over Eric&rsquo;s helm. Down it came
+and shore one wing from the helm. Again it shone and fell, but Brighteyes
+caught the blow on his broken shield.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, while men waited to see him slain, Eric gave a great war-shout and sprang
+forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art mad!&rdquo; shouted the folk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ye shall see! Ye shall see!&rdquo; screamed Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again Ospakar smote and again Eric caught the blow; and behold! he struck back,
+thrusting with the point of the shorn shield straight at the face of Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Peck! Eagle; peck!</i>&rdquo; cried Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once more Whitefire shone above him. Eric rushed in beneath the sword, and with
+all his mighty strength thrust the buckler-point at Blacktooth&rsquo;s face. It
+struck fair and full, and lo! the helm of Ospakar burst asunder. He threw wide
+his giant arms, then fell as a pine falls upon the mountain edge. He fell back,
+and he lay still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric, stooping over him, took Whitefire from his hand.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap25"></a>CHAPTER XXV<br />
+HOW THE FEAST ENDED</h2>
+
+<p>
+For a moment there was silence in the hall, for men had known no such fight as
+this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, then, do ye gape?&rdquo; laughed Skallagrim, pointing with the
+spear. &ldquo;Dead is Ospakar!&mdash;slain by the swordless man! Eric
+Brighteyes hath slain Ospakar Blacktooth!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then there went up such a shout as never was heard in the hall of Middalhof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now when Gudruda knew that Ospakar was sped, she looked at Eric as he rested,
+leaning on his sword, and her heart was filled with awe and love. She sprang
+from her seat, and, coming to where Brighteyes stood, she greeted him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Welcome to Iceland, Eric!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Welcome, thou glory of
+the south!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild grew wild, for she saw that Eric was about to take Gudruda in his
+arms and kiss her before all men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, Björn,&rdquo; she cried; &ldquo;wilt thou suffer that this outlaw,
+having slain Ospakar, should lead Gudruda hence as wife?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He shall never do so while I live,&rdquo; cried Björn, nearly mad with
+rage. &ldquo;This is my command, sister: that thou dost see Eric no
+more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, Björn,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, &ldquo;did I dream, or did I indeed
+see thee thrust the broken buckler before Eric&rsquo;s feet, so that he
+stumbled on it and fell?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That thou sawest, lady,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;for I saw it
+also.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Björn grew white in his anger. He did not answer Gudruda, but called aloud
+to his men to slay Eric and Skallagrim. Gizur called also to the folk of
+Ospakar, and Swanhild to those who came with her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Gudruda fled back to her seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric cried aloud also: &ldquo;Ye who love me, cleave to me. Suffer it not
+that Brighteyes be cut down of northerners and outland men. Hear me,
+Atli&rsquo;s folk; hear me, carles of Coldback and of Middalhof!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so greatly did many love Eric that half of the thralls of Björn, and almost
+all of the company of Swanhild who had been Atli&rsquo;s shield-men and
+Brighteyes&rsquo; comrades, drew swords, shouting &ldquo;Eric! Eric!&rdquo; But
+the carles of Ospakar came on to make an end of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Björn saw, and, drawing sword, smote at Brighteyes, taking him unawares. But
+Skallagrim caught the blow upon his axe, and before Björn could smite again
+Whitefire was aloft and down fell Björn, dead!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was the end of Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast squeaked thy last, rat! What did I tell thee?&rdquo; cried
+Skallagrim. &ldquo;Take Björn&rsquo;s shield and back to back, lord, for here
+come foes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There goes one,&rdquo; answered Eric, pointing to the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Hall of Lithdale slunk through the doorway&mdash;Hall, the liar, who cut
+the grapnel-chain&mdash;for he wished to see the last of Skallagrim. But the
+Baresark still held Eric&rsquo;s spear in his hand. He whirled it aloft, and it
+hissed through the air. The aim was good, for, as he crept away, the spear
+struck Hall between neck and shoulder, pinning him to the doorpost, and there
+the liar died.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now the weasel is nailed to the beam,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+&ldquo;Hall of Lithdale, what did I promise thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Guard thy head and my back,&rdquo; quoth Eric; &ldquo;blows fall!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now men smote at Eric and Skallagrim, nor did they spare to smite in turn. And
+as foes fell before him, Eric stepped one pace forward towards the door, and
+Skallagrim, who, back to back with him, held off those who pressed behind, took
+one step rearwards. Thus, a foe for every step, they won their way down the
+long hall. Fierce raged the fray around them, for, mad with hate and drink and
+the lust of fight, Swanhild&rsquo;s folk&mdash;Eric&rsquo;s
+friends&mdash;remembering the words of Atli, fell on Ospakar&rsquo;s; and the
+people of Björn fell on each other, brother on brother, and father on
+son&mdash;nor might the fray be stayed. The boards were overthrown, dead men
+lay among the meats and mead, and the blood of freeman, lord and thrall ran
+adown the floor. Everywhere through the dusky hall glittered the sheen of
+flashing swords and rose the clang of war. Darts clove the air like tongues of
+flame, and the clamour of battle beat against the roof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blinded of the Norns who brought these things to pass, men sought no mercy and
+they gave none, but smote and slew till few were left to slay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And still Gudruda sat in her bride-seat, and, with eyes fixed in horror,
+watched the waxing of the war. Near to her stood Swanhild, marking all things
+with a fierce-set face, and calling down curses on her folk, who one and all
+cried &ldquo;Eric! Eric!&rdquo; and swept the thralls of Ospakar as corn is
+swept of the sickle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there, nigh to the door, pale of face and beautiful to see, golden Eric
+clove his way, and with him went black Skallagrim. Terrible was the flare of
+Whitefire as he flicked aloft like the levin in the cloud. Terrible was the
+flare of Whitefire; but more terrible was the light of Eric&rsquo;s eyes, for
+they seemed to flame in his head, and wherever that fire fell it lighted men
+the way to death. Whitefire sung and flickered, and crashed the axe of
+Skallagrim, and still through the press of war they won their way. Now Gizur
+stands before them, spear aloft, and Whitefire leaps up to meet him. Lo! he
+turns and flies. The coward son of Ospakar does not seek the fate of Ospakar!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The door is won. They stand without but little harmed, while women wail aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To horse!&rdquo; cried Skallagrim; &ldquo;to horse, ere our luck fail
+us!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no luck in this,&rdquo; gasped Eric; &ldquo;for I have slain
+many men, and among them is Björn, the brother of her whom I would make my
+bride.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Better one such fight than many brides,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, shaking
+his red axe. &ldquo;We have won great glory this day, Brighteyes, and Ospakar
+is dead&mdash;slain by a swordless man!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now Eric and Skallagrim ran to their horses, none hindering them, and,
+mounting, rode towards Mosfell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All that evening and all the night they rode, and at morning they came across
+the black sand to Mosfell slopes that are by the Hecla. Here they rested, and,
+taking off their armour, washed themselves in the stream: for they were very
+weary and foul with blood and wounds. When they had finished washing and had
+buckled on their harness again, Skallagrim, peering across the plain with his
+hawk&rsquo;s eyes, saw men riding fast towards them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Foes are soon afoot, lord,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I thought we had
+stayed their hunger for a while.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would that I might stay mine,&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;I am weary, and
+unfit for fight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have still strength for one or two,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and
+then good-night! But these are no foes. They are of the Coldback folk. The
+carline has kept her word.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric was glad, and presently six men, headed by Jon his thrall, the same
+man who had watched on Mosfell when Eric went up to slay the Baresark, rode to
+them and greeted them. &ldquo;Beggar women,&rdquo; said Jon, &ldquo;whom they
+met at Ran River, had told them of the death of Ospakar, and of the great
+slaying at Middalhof, and they would know if the tidings were true.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is true, Jon,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but first give us food, if ye
+have it, for we are hungered and spent. When we have eaten we will
+speak.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they led up a pack-horse and from it took stockfish and smoked meat, of
+which Eric and Skallagrim ate heartily, till their strength came back to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric spoke. &ldquo;Comrades,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am an outlawed man,
+and, though I have not sought it, much blood is on my head. Atli is dead at my
+hand; Ospakar is dead at my hand; Björn the Priest, Asmund&rsquo;s son, is dead
+at my hand, and with them many another man. Nor may the matter stay here, for
+Gizur, Blacktooth&rsquo;s son, yet lives, and Björn has kin in the south, and
+Swanhild will buy friends with gold, and all of these will set on me to slay
+me, so that at the last I die by the sword.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No need for that,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;Our vengeance is
+wrought, and now, as before, the sea is open, and I think that a welcome awaits
+us in London.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now Gudruda is widowed before she was fully wed,&rdquo; said Eric,
+&ldquo;therefore I bide an outlawed man here in Iceland. I go hence no more,
+though it be death to stay, unless indeed Gudruda the Fair goes with me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will be death, then,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and the swords
+are forged that we shall feel. The odds are too heavy, lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mayhap,&rdquo; answered Eric. &ldquo;No man may flee his fate, and I
+shall not altogether grieve when mine finds me. Hearken, comrades: I go up to
+Mosfell height, and there I stay, till those be found who can drag me from my
+hole. But this is my counsel to you: that ye leave me to my doom, for I am an
+unlucky man who always chooses the wrong road.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That will not I,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nor we,&rdquo; said Eric&rsquo;s folk; &ldquo;Swanhild holds Coldback,
+and we are driven to the fells. To the fells then we will go with thee, Eric
+Brighteyes, and become cave-dwellers and outlaws for thy sake. Fear not, thou
+shalt still find many friends.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did not look for such a thing at your hands,&rdquo; said Eric;
+&ldquo;but stormy waters show how the boat is built. May no bad luck come to
+you from your good fellowship. And now let us to our nest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they caught the horses, and rode with Brighteyes up the steep side of
+Mosfell, till at length they came to that secret dell which Skallagrim had once
+shown to Eric. Here they turned the horses loose to feed, and, going forward on
+foot, reached the dark and narrow pass that Brighteyes had trod when he sought
+for the Baresark foe. Skallagrim led the way along it, then came Eric and the
+rest. One by one they stepped on to the giddy point of rock, and, catching at
+the birch-bush, entered the hole. So they gained the platform and the great
+cave beyond; and they found that no man had set foot there since the day when
+Eric had striven with Skallagrim. For there on the rock, rotten with the
+weather, lay that haft of wood which Brighteyes had hewed from the axe of
+Skallagrim, and in the cave were many things beside as the Baresark had left
+them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they took up their dwelling in the cave, Eric, Skallagrim, and the six
+Coldback men, and there they dwelt many months. But Eric sent out his men, one
+at a time, and got together food and a store of sheepskins, and other needful
+things. For he knew this well: that Gizur and Swanhild would before long come
+up against them, and, if they could not take them by force, would set
+themselves to watch the mountain-path and starve them out.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+When Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Middalhof the fight still raged
+fiercely in the hall, and nothing but death might stay it. The minds of men
+were mad, and they smote one another, and slew each other, till at length of
+all that marriage company few were left unharmed, except Gizur, Swanhild, and
+Gudruda. For the serving thralls and womenfolk had fled the hall, and with them
+some peaceful men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Gudruda spoke as one in a dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Saevuna&rsquo;s prophecy was true,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;red was the
+marriage-feast of Asmund my father, redder has been the marriage-feast of
+Ospakar! She saw the hall of Middalhof one gore of blood, and lo! it is so;
+look upon thy work, Swanhild,&rdquo; and she pointed to the piled-up
+dead&mdash;&ldquo;look upon thy work, witch-sister, and grow fearful: for all
+this death is on thy head!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild laughed aloud. &ldquo;I think it a merry sight,&rdquo; she cried.
+&ldquo;The marriage-feast of Asmund our father was red, and thy marriage-feast,
+Gudruda, has been redder. Would that thy blood and the blood of Eric ran with
+the blood of Björn and Ospakar! That tale must yet be told, Gudruda. There
+shall be binding on of Hell-shoes at Middalhof, but I bind them not. My task is
+still to come: for I will live to fasten the Hell-shoes on the feet of Eric,
+and on thy feet, Gudruda! At the least, I have brought about this much, that
+thou canst scarcely wed Eric the outlaw: for with his own hand he slew Björn
+our brother, and because of this I count all that death as nothing. Thou canst
+not mate with Brighteyes, lest the wide wounds of Björn thy brother should take
+tongues and cry thy shame from sea to sea!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda made no answer, but sat as one carved in stone. Then Swanhild spoke
+again:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us away to the north, Gizur; there to gather strength to make an end
+of Eric. Say, wilt thou help us, Gudruda? The blood-feud for the death of Björn
+is thine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ye are enough to bring about the fall of one unfriended man,&rdquo;
+Gudruda said. &ldquo;Go, and leave me with my sorrow and the dead. Nay! before
+thou goest, listen, Swanhild, for there is that in my heart which tells me I
+shall never look again upon thy face. From evil to evil thou hast ever gone,
+Swanhild, and from evil to evil thou wilt go. It may well chance that thy
+wickedness will win. It may well chance that thou wilt crown thy crimes with my
+slaying and the slaying of the man who loves me. But I tell thee this,
+traitress&mdash;murderess, as thou art&mdash;that here the tale ends not. Not
+by death, Swanhild, shalt thou escape the deeds of life! <i>There</i> they
+shall rise up against thee, and <i>there</i> every shame that thou hast worked,
+every sin that thou hast sinned, and every soul that thou hast brought to
+Hela&rsquo;s halls, shall come to haunt thee and to drive thee on from age to
+age! That witchcraft which thou lovest shall mesh thee. Shadows shall bewilder
+thee; from the bowl of empty longings thou shalt drink and drink, and not be
+satisfied. Yea! lusts shall mock and madden thee. Thou shalt ride the winds,
+thou shalt sail the seas, but thou shalt find no harbour, and never shalt thou
+set foot upon a shore of peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go on, Swanhild&mdash;dye those hands in blood&mdash;wade through the
+river of shame! Seek thy desire, and finding, lose! Work thy evil, and winning,
+fail! I yet shall triumph&mdash;I yet shall trample thee; and, in a place to
+come, with Eric at my side, I shall make a mock of Swanhild the murderess!
+Swanhild the liar, and the wanton, and the witch! Now get thee gone!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild heard. She looked up at Gudruda&rsquo;s face and it was alight as with
+a fire. She strove to answer, but no words came. Then Groa&rsquo;s daughter
+turned and went, and with her went Gizur.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now women and thralls came in and drew out the wounded and those who still
+breathed from among the dead, taking them to the temple. They bore away the
+body of Ospakar also, but they left the rest.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+All night long Gudruda sat in the bride&rsquo;s seat. There she sat in the
+silver summer midnight, looking on the slain who were strewn about the great
+hall. All night she sat alone in the bride&rsquo;s seat thinking&mdash;ever
+thinking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How, then, would it end? There her brother Björn lay a-cold&mdash;Björn the
+justly slain of Brighteyes; yet how could she wed the man who slew her brother?
+From Ospakar she was divorced by death; from Eric she was divorced by the blood
+of Björn her brother! How might she unravel this tangled skein and float to
+weal upon this sea of death? All things went amiss! The doom was on her! She
+had lived to an ill purpose&mdash;her love had wrought evil! What availed it to
+have been born to be fair among women and to have desired that which might not
+be? And she herself had brought these things to pass&mdash;she had loosed the
+rock which crushed her! Why had she hearkened to that false tale?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda sat on high in the bride&rsquo;s seat, asking wisdom of the piled-up
+dead, while the cold blue shadows of the nightless night gathered over her and
+them&mdash;gathered, and waned, and grew at last to the glare of day.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap26"></a>CHAPTER XXVI<br />
+HOW ERIC VENTURED DOWN TO MIDDALHOF AND WHAT HE FOUND</h2>
+
+<p>
+Gizur went north to Swinefell, and Swanhild went with him. For now that Ospakar
+was dead at Eric&rsquo;s hand, Gizur ruled in his place at Swinefell, and was
+the greatest lord in all the north. He loved Swanhild, and desired to make her
+his wife; but she played with him, talking darkly of what might be. Swanhild
+was not minded to be the wife of any man, except of Eric; to all others she was
+cold as the winter earth. Still, she fooled Gizur as she had fooled Atli the
+Good, and he grew blind with love of her. For still the beauty of Swanhild
+waxed as the moon waxes in the sky, and her wicked eyes shone as the stars
+shine when the moon has set.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they came to Swinefell, and there Gizur buried Ospakar Blacktooth, his
+father, with much state. He set him in a chamber of rock and timbers on a
+mountain-top, whence he might see all the lands that once were his, and built
+up a great mound of earth above him. To this day people tell that here on Yule
+night black Ospakar bursts out, and golden Eric rides down the blast to meet
+him. Then come the clang of swords, and groans, and the sound of riven helms,
+till presently Brighteyes passes southward on the wind, bearing in his hand the
+half of a cloven shield.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Gizur bound the Hell-shoes on his father, and swore that he would neither
+rest nor stay till Eric Brighteyes was dead and dead was Skallagrim Lambstail.
+Then he gathered a great force of men and rode south to Coldback, to the
+slaying of Eric, and with him went Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Gudruda sat alone in the haunted hall of Middalhof and brooded on her love and
+on her fate. Eric, too, sat in Mosfell cave and brooded on his evil chance. His
+heart was sick with sorrow, and there was little that he could do except think
+about the past. He would not go to foray, after the fashion of outlaws, and
+there was no need of this. For the talk of his mighty deeds spread through the
+land, so that the people spoke of little else. And the men of his quarter were
+so proud of these deeds of Eric&rsquo;s that, though some of their kind had
+fallen at his hands in the great fight of Middalhof and some at the hands of
+Skallagrim, yet they spoke of him as men speak of a God. Moreover they brought
+him gifts of food and clothing and arms, as many as his people could carry
+away, and laid them in a booth that is on the plain near the foot of Mosfell,
+which thenceforth was named Ericsfell. Further, they bade his thralls tell him
+that, if he wished it, they would find him a good ship of war to take him from
+Iceland&mdash;ay, and man it with loyal men and true.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric thanked them through Jon his thrall, but answered that he wished to die
+here in Iceland.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now, when Eric had sat two months and more in Mosfell cave and autumn was
+coming, he learned that Gizur and Swanhild had moved down to Coldback, and with
+them a great company of men who were sworn to slay him. He asked if Gudruda the
+Fair had also gathered men for his slaying. They told him no; that Gudruda
+stayed with her thralls and women at Middalhof, mourning for Björn her brother.
+From these tidings Eric took some heart of hope: at the least Gudruda laid no
+blood-feud against him. For he waited, thinking, if indeed she yet loved him,
+that Gudruda would send him some word or token of her love. But no word came,
+since between them ran the blood of Björn. On the morrow of these tidings
+Skallagrim spoke to Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is my counsel, lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that we ride out by
+night and fall on the folk of Gizur at Coldback, and burn the stead over them,
+putting them to the sword. I am weary of sitting here like an eagle in a
+cage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Such is no counsel of mine, Skallagrim,&rdquo; answered Brighteyes.
+&ldquo;I am weary of sitting here, indeed; but I am yet more weary of bringing
+men to their death. I will shed no more blood, unless it is to save my own
+head. When the people of Gizur come to seek me on Mosfell, they shall find me
+here; but I will not go to them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thy heart is out of thee, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;thou wast
+not wont to speak thus.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Skallagrim,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;the heart is out of me. Yet I
+ride from Mosfell to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whither, lord?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To Middalhof, to have speech with Gudruda the Fair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Like enough, then, thou wilt be silent thereafter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It well may be,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Yet I will ride. I can bear
+this doubt no longer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I shall come with thee,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As thou wilt,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So at midday Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Mosfell in a storm of rain. The
+rain was so heavy that those of Gizur&rsquo;s spies who watched the mountain
+did not see them. All that day they rode and all the night, till by morning
+they came to Middalhof. Eric told Skallagrim to stay with the horses and let
+them feed, while he went on foot to see if by chance he might get speech with
+Gudruda. This the Baresark did, though he grumbled at the task, fearing lest
+Eric should be done to death, and he not there to die with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric walked to within two bowshots of the house, then sat down in a dell by
+the river, from the edge of which he could see those who passed in and out.
+Presently his heart gave a leap, for there came out from the woman&rsquo;s door
+a lady tall and beautiful to see, and with golden hair that flowed about her
+breast. It was Gudruda, and he saw that she bore a napkin in her hand. Then
+Eric knew, according to her custom on the warm mornings, that she came alone to
+bathe in the river, as she had always done from a child. It was her habit to
+bathe here in this place: for at the bottom of the dell was a spot where reeds
+and bushes grew thick, and the water lay in a basin of rock and was clear and
+still. For at this spot a hot spring ran into the river.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric went down the dell, hid himself close in the bushes and waited, for he
+feared to speak with Gudruda in the open field. A while passed, and presently
+the shadow of the lady crept over the edge of the dell, then she came herself
+in that beauty which since her day has not been known in Iceland. Her face was
+sad and sweet, her dark and lovely eyes were sad. On she came, till she stood
+within a spear&rsquo;s length of where Eric lay, crouched in the bush, and
+looking at her through the hedge of reeds. Here a flat rock overhung the water,
+and Gudruda sat herself on this rock, and, shaking off her shoes, dipped her
+white feet in the water. Then suddenly she threw aside her cloak, baring her
+arms, and, gazing upon the shadow of her beauty in the mirror of the water,
+sighed and sighed again, while Eric looked at her with a bursting heart, for as
+yet he could find no words to say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now she spoke aloud. &ldquo;Of what use to be so fair?&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;Oh, wherefore was I born so fair to bring death to many and sorrow on
+myself and him I love?&rdquo; And she shook her golden hair about her arms of
+snow, and, holding the napkin to her eyes, wept softly. But it seemed to Eric
+that between her sobs she called upon his name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric could no longer bear the sight of Gudruda weeping. While she wept,
+hiding her eyes, he rose from behind the screen of reeds and stood beside her
+in such fashion that his shadow fell upon her. She felt the sunlight pass and
+looked up. Lo! it was no cloud, but the shape of Eric, and the sun glittered on
+his golden helm and hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric!&rdquo; Gudruda cried; &ldquo;Eric!&rdquo; Then, remembering how
+she was attired, snatching her cloak, she threw it about her arms and thrust
+her wet feet into her shoes. &ldquo;Out upon thee!&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;is
+it not enough, then, that thou shouldst break thy troth for Swanhild&rsquo;s
+sake, that thou shouldst slay my brother and turn my hall to shambles? Wouldst
+now steal upon me thus!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Methought that thou didst weep and call upon my name, Gudruda,&rdquo; he
+said humbly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By what right art thou here to hearken to my words?&rdquo; she answered.
+&ldquo;Is it, then, strange that I should speak the name of him who slew my
+brother? Is it strange that I should weep over that brother whom thou didst
+slay? Get thee gone, Brighteyes, before I call my folk to kill thee!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Call on, Gudruda. I set little price upon my life. I laid it in the
+hands of chance when I came from Mosfell to speak with thee, and now I will pay
+it down if so it pleases thee. Fear not, thy thralls shall have an easy task:
+for I shall scarcely care to hold my own. Say, shall I call for thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hush! Speak not so loud! Folk may hear thee, Eric, and then thou wilt be
+in danger&mdash;I would say that, then shall ill things be told of me, because
+I am found with him who slew my brother?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I slew Ospakar too, Gudruda. Surely the death of him by whose side thou
+didst sit as wife is more to thee than the death of Björn?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The bride-cup was not yet drunk, Eric; therefore I have no blood-feud
+for Ospakar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it, then, thy will that I should go, lady?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, go!&mdash;go! Never let me see thy face again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brighteyes turned without a word. He took three paces and Gudruda watched him
+as he went.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric!&rdquo; she called. &ldquo;Eric! thou mayest not go yet: for at
+this hour the thralls bring down the kine to milk, and they will see thee.
+Liest thou hid here. I&mdash;I will go. For though, indeed, thou dost deserve
+to die, I am not willing to bring thee to thy end&mdash;because of old
+friendship I am not willing!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If thou goest, I will go also,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Thralls or no
+thralls, I will go, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art cruel to drive me to such a choice, and I have a mind to give
+thee to thy fate.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As thou wilt,&rdquo; said Eric; but she made as though she did not hear
+his words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;if we must stay here, it is better that we
+hide where thou didst hide, lest some come upon thee.&rdquo; And she passed
+through the screen of rushes and sat down in a grassy place beyond, and spoke
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, sit not near me; sit yonder. I would not touch thee, nor look upon
+thee, who wast Swanhild&rsquo;s love, and didst slay Björn my brother.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say, Gudruda,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;did I not tell thee of the magic
+arts of Swanhild? Did I not tell thee before all men yonder in the hall, and
+didst thou not say that thou didst believe my words? Speak.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is true,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wherefore, then, dost thou taunt me with being Swanhild&rsquo;s
+love&mdash;with being the love of her whom of all alive I hate the
+most&mdash;and whose wicked guile has brought these sorrows on us?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Gudruda did not answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And for this matter of the death of Björn at my hands, think, Gudruda:
+was I to blame in it? Did not Björn thrust the cloven shield before my feet,
+and thus give me into the hand of Ospakar? Did he not afterwards smite at me
+from behind, and would he not have slain me if Skallagrim had not caught the
+blow? Was I, then, to blame if I smote back and if the sword flew home? Wilt
+thou let the needful deed rise up against our love? Speak, Gudruda!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Talk no more of love to me, Eric,&rdquo; she answered; &ldquo;the blood
+of Björn has blotted out our love: it cries to me for vengeance. How may I
+speak of love with him who slew my brother? Listen!&rdquo; she went on, looking
+on him sidelong, as one who wished to look and yet not seem to see: &ldquo;here
+thou must hide an hour, and, since thou wilt not sit in silence, speak no
+tender words to me, for it is not fitting; but tell me of those deeds thou
+didst in the south lands over sea, before thou wentest to woo Swanhild and
+camest hither to kill my brother. For till then thou wast mine&mdash;till then
+I loved thee&mdash;who now love thee not. Therefore I would hear of the deeds
+of that Eric whom once I loved, before he became as one dead to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Heavy words, lady,&rdquo; said Eric&mdash;&ldquo;words to make death
+easy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak not so,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;it is unmanly thus to work upon my
+fears. Tell me those tidings of which I ask.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Eric told her all his deeds, though he showed small boastfulness about them.
+He told her how he had smitten the war-dragons of Ospakar, how he had boarded
+the Raven and with Skallagrim slain those who sailed in her. He told her also
+of his deeds in Ireland, and of how he took the viking ships and came to London
+town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as he told, Gudruda listened as one who hung upon her lover&rsquo;s dying
+words, and there was but one light in the world for her, the light of
+Eric&rsquo;s eyes, and there was but one music, the music of his voice. Now she
+looked upon him sidelong no longer, but with open eyes and parted lips she
+drank in his words, and always, though she knew it not herself, she crept
+closer to his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he told her how he had been greatly honoured of the King of England, and
+of the battles he had fought in at his side. Lastly, Eric told her how the King
+would have given him a certain great lady of royal blood in marriage, and how
+Edmund had been angered because he would not stay in England.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell me of this lady,&rdquo; said Gudruda, quickly. &ldquo;Is she fair,
+and how is she named?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She is fair, and her name is Elfrida,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And didst thou have speech with her on this matter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Somewhat.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda drew herself away from Eric&rsquo;s side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What was the purport of thy speech?&rdquo; she said, looking down.
+&ldquo;Speak truly, Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It came to little,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I told her that there was
+one in Iceland to whom I was betrothed, and to Iceland I must go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what said this Elfrida, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She said that I should get little luck at the hands of Gudruda the Fair.
+Moreover, she asked, should my betrothed be faithless to me, or put me from
+her, if I should come again to England.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda looked him in the face and spoke. &ldquo;Say, Eric, is it in thy
+mind to sail for England in the spring, if thou canst escape thy foes so
+long?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric took counsel with himself, and in his love and doubt grew guileful as
+he had never been before. For he knew well that Gudruda had this
+weakness&mdash;she was a jealous woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Since thou dost put me from thee, that is in my mind, lady,&rdquo; he
+answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda heard. She thought on the great and beauteous Lady Elfrida, far away in
+England, and of Eric walking at her side, and sorrow took hold of her. She said
+no word, but fixed her dark eyes on Brighteyes&rsquo; face, and lo! they filled
+with tears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric might not bear this sight, for his heart beat within him as though it
+would burst the byrnie over it. Suddenly he stretched out his arms and swept
+her to his breast. Soft and sweet he kissed her, again and yet again, and she
+struggled not, though she wept a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is small blame to me,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;if thou dost hold
+me on thy breast and kiss me, for thou art more strong than I. Björn must know
+this if his dead eyes see aught. Yet for thee, Eric, it is the greatest shame
+of all thy shames.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Talk not, my sweet; talk not,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;but kiss thou me:
+for thou knowest well that thou lovest me yet as I love thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the end of it was that Gudruda yielded and kissed him whom she had not
+kissed for many years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Loose me, Eric,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;I would speak with thee,&rdquo;
+and he loosed her, though unwillingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken,&rdquo; she went on, hiding her fair face in her hands:
+&ldquo;it is true that for life and death I love thee now as ever&mdash;how
+much thou mayest never know. Though Björn be dead at thy hands, yet I love
+thee; but how I may wed thee and not win the greatest shame, that I know not. I
+am sure of one thing, that we may not bide here in Iceland. Now if, indeed,
+thou lovest me, listen to my rede. Get thee back to Mosfell, Eric, and sit
+there in safety through this winter, for they may not come at thee yonder on
+Mosfell. Then, if thou art willing, in the spring I will make ready a ship, for
+I have no ship now, and, moreover, it is too late to sail. Then, perchance,
+leaving all my lands and goods, I will take thy hand, Eric, and we will fare
+together to England, seeking such fortune as the Norns may give us. What sayest
+thou?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I say it is a good rede, and would that the spring were come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Eric, would that the spring were come. Our lot has been hard, and I
+doubt much if things will go well with us at the last. And now thou must hence,
+for presently the serving-women will come to seek me. Guard thyself, Eric, as
+thou lovest me&mdash;guard thyself, and beware of Swanhild!&rdquo; Then once
+more they kissed soft and long, and Eric went.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Gudruda sat a while behind the screen of reeds, and was very happy for a
+space. For it was as though the winter were past and summer shone upon her
+heart again.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap27"></a>CHAPTER XXVII<br />
+HOW GUDRUDA WENT UP TO MOSFELL</h2>
+
+<p>
+Eric walked warily till he came to the dell where he had left Skallagrim and
+the horses. It was the same dell in which Groa had brewed the poison-draught
+for Asmund the Priest and Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s daughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What news, lord?&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;Thou wast gone so long
+that I thought of seeking thee. Hast thou seen Gudruda?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and this is the upshot of it, that in the
+spring we sail for England and bid farewell to Iceland and our ill luck.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would, then, that it were spring,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, speaking
+Brighteyes&rsquo; own words. &ldquo;Why not sail now and make an end?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gudruda has no ship and it is late to take the sea. Also I think that
+she would let a time go by because of the blood-feud which she has against me
+for the death of Björn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would rather risk these things than stay the winter through in
+Iceland,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;it is long from now to spring, and yon
+wolf&rsquo;s den is cold-lying in the dark months, as I know well.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is light beyond the darkness,&rdquo; said Eric, and they rode
+away. Everything went well with them till late at night they came to the slopes
+of Mosfell. They were half asleep on their horses, being weary with much
+riding, and the horses were weary also. Suddenly, Skallagrim, looking up,
+caught the faint gleam of light from swords hidden behind some stones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Awake, lord!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;here are foes ahead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gizur&rsquo;s folk behind the stones heard his voice and came out from their
+ambush. There were six of them, and they formed in line before the pair. They
+were watching the mountain, for a rumour had reached them that Eric was abroad,
+and, seeing him, they had hidden hastily behind the stones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now what counsel shall we take?&rdquo; said Eric, drawing Whitefire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have often stood against men more than six, and sometimes we have
+left more men than six to mark where we stood,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+&ldquo;It is my counsel that we ride at them!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So be it,&rdquo; said Eric, and he spurred his weary horse with his
+heels. Now when the six saw Eric and Skallagrim charge on them boldly, they
+wavered, and the end of it was that they broke and fled to either side before a
+blow was struck. For it had come to this pass, so great was the terror of the
+names of Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail, that no six men dared to
+stand before them in open fight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the path being clear they rode on up the slope. But when they had gone a
+little way, Skallagrim turned his horse, and mocked those who had lain in
+ambush, saying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ye fight well, ye carles of Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son! Ye are heroes,
+surely! Say now, mighty men, will ye stand there if I come down alone against
+you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At these words the men grew mad with wrath, and flung their spears. Skallagrim
+caught one on his shield and it fell to the earth, but another passed over his
+head and struck Eric on the left shoulder, near the neck, making a deep wound.
+Feeling the spear fast in him, Eric grasped it with his right hand, drew it
+forth, and turning, hurled it so hard, that the man before it got his death
+from the blow, for his shield did not serve to stay it. Then the rest fled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim bound up Eric&rsquo;s wound as well as he could, and they went on to
+the cave. But when Eric&rsquo;s folk, watching above, saw the fight they ran
+down and met him. Now the hurt was bad and Eric bled much; still, within ten
+days it healed up for the time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But a little while after Eric&rsquo;s wound was skinned over, the snows set in
+on Mosfell, and the days grew short and the nights long. Once Gizur&rsquo;s men
+to the number of fifty came half way up the mountain to take it; but, when they
+saw how strong the place was, they feared, and went back, and after that
+returned no more, though they always watched the fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was very dark and lonesome there upon the fell. For a while Eric kept in
+good heart, but as the days went by he grew troubled. For since he was wounded
+this had come upon him, that he feared the dark, and the death of Atli at his
+hand and Atli&rsquo;s words weighed more and more upon his mind. They had no
+candles on the fell, yet, rather than stay in the blackness of the cave, Eric
+would wrap sheepskins about him and sit by the edge of that gulf down which the
+head of the Baresark had foretold his fall, and look out at the wide plains and
+fells and ice-mountains, gleaming in the silver shine of the Northern lights or
+in the white beams of the stars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It chanced that Eric had bidden the men who stayed with him to build a stone
+hut upon the flat space of rock before the cave, and to roof it with turves. He
+had done this that work might keep them in heart, also that they might have a
+place to store such goods as they had gathered. Now there was one stone lying
+near that no two men of their number could move, except Skallagrim and one
+other. One day, while it was light, Eric watched these two rolling the stone
+along to where it must stand, and it was slow work. Presently they stayed to
+rest. Then Eric came and putting his hands beneath the stone, lifted, and while
+men wondered, he rolled the mass alone, to where it should be set as the corner
+stone of the hut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ye are all children,&rdquo; he said, and laughed merrily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, when we set our strength against thine, lord,&rdquo; answered
+Skallagrim; &ldquo;but look: the blood runs from thy neck&mdash;the spear-wound
+has broken out afresh.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So it is, surely,&rdquo; said Eric. Then he washed the wound and bound
+it up, thinking little of the matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But that night, according to his custom, Eric sat on the edge of the gulf and
+looked at the winter lights as they played over Hecla&rsquo;s snows. He was sad
+and heavy at heart, for he thought of Gudruda and wondered much if they should
+live to wed. Remembering Atli&rsquo;s words, he had little faith in his good
+luck. Now as Eric sat and thought, the bandage on his neck slipped, so that the
+hurt bled, and the frost got hold of the wound and froze it, and froze his long
+hair to it also, in such fashion that when he went to the cave where all men
+slept, he could not loose his hair from the sore, but lay down with it frozen
+to him. On the morrow the hair was caked so fast about his neck that it could
+only be freed by shearing it. But this Eric would not suffer. None, he said,
+should shear his hair, except Gudruda. Thus he had sworn, and when he broke the
+oath misfortune had come of it. He would break that vow no more, if it cost him
+his life. For sorrow and his ill luck had taken so great a hold of Eric&rsquo;s
+mind that in some ways he was scarcely himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So it came to pass that he fell more and more sick, till at length he could not
+rise from his bed in the cave, but lay there all day and night, staring at the
+little light which pierced the gloom. Still, he would not suffer that anyone
+should touch his hair. And when one stole upon him sleeping, thinking so to cut
+it before he woke, and come at the wound, suddenly he sat up and dealt the man
+such a buffet on the head that he went near to death from it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Skallagrim spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;On this matter,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it seems that Brighteyes is mad.
+He will not suffer that any touch his hair, except Gudruda, and yet, if his
+hair is not shorn, he must die, for the wound will fester under it. Nor may we
+cut it by strength, for then he will kill himself in struggling. It is come to
+this then: either Gudruda must be brought hither or Eric will shortly
+die.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That may not be,&rdquo; they answered. &ldquo;How can the lady Gudruda
+come here across the snows, even if she will come?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come she can, if she has the heart,&rdquo; said Skallagrim,
+&ldquo;though I put little trust in women&rsquo;s hearts. Still, I ride down to
+Middalhof, and thou, Jon, shalt go with me. For the rest, I charge you watch
+your lord; for, if I come back and find anything amiss, that shall be the death
+of some, and if I do not come back but perish on the road, yet I will haunt
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Jon liked not this task; still, for love of Eric and fear of Skallagrim, he
+set out with the Baresark. They had a hard journey through the snow-drifts and
+the dark, but on the third day they came to Middalhof, knocked upon the door
+and entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it was supper-time, and people, sitting at meat, saw a great black man,
+covered with snow and rime, stalk up the hall, and after him another smaller
+man, who groaned with the cold, and they wondered at the sight. Gudruda sat on
+the high seat and the firelight beat upon her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who comes here?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One who would speak with thee, lady,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here is Skallagrim the Baresark,&rdquo; said a man. &ldquo;He is an
+outlaw, let us kill him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, it is Skallagrim,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;and if there is killing
+to be done, why here&rsquo;s that which shall do it,&rdquo; and he drew out his
+axe and smiled grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then all held their peace, for they feared the axe of Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I do not come for slaying or such
+child&rsquo;s play, I come to speak a word in thine ear&mdash;but first I ask a
+cup of mead and a morsel of food, for we have spent three days in the
+snows.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they ate and drank. Then Gudruda bade the Baresark draw near and tell her
+his tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;Eric, my lord, lies dying on
+Mosfell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda turned white as the snow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dying?&mdash;Eric lies dying?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Why, then, art
+thou here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For this cause, lady: I think that thou canst save him, if he is not
+already sped.&rdquo; And he told her all the tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda thought a while.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is a hard journey,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and it does not become a
+maid to visit outlaws in their caves. Yet I am come to this, that I will die
+before I shrink from anything that may save the life of Eric. When must we
+ride, Skallagrim?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This night,&rdquo; said the Baresark. &ldquo;This night while the men
+sleep, for now night and day are almost the same. The snow is deep and we have
+no time to lose if we would find Brighteyes living.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then we will ride to-night,&rdquo; answered Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Afterwards, when people slept, Gudruda the Fair summoned her women, and bade
+them say to all who asked for her that she lay sick in bed. But she called
+three trusty thralls, bidding them bring two pack-horses laden with hay, food,
+drugs, candles made of sheep&rsquo;s fat, and other goods, and ride with her.
+Then, all being ready, they rode away secretly up Stonefell, Gudruda on her
+horse Blackmane, and the others on good geldings that had been hay-fed in the
+yard, and by daylight they passed up Horse-Head Heights. They slept two nights
+in the snow, and on the second night almost perished there, for much soft snow
+fell. But afterwards came frost and a bitter northerly wind and they passed on.
+Gudruda was a strong woman and great of heart and will, and so it came about
+that on the third day she reached Mosfell, weary but little harmed, though the
+fingers of her left hand were frostbitten. They climbed the mountain, and when
+they came to the dell where the horses were kept, certain of Eric&rsquo;s men
+met them and their faces were sad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How goes it now with Brighteyes?&rdquo; said Skallagrim, for Gudruda
+could scarcely speak because of doubt and cold. &ldquo;Is he dead, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; they answered, &ldquo;but like to die, for he is beside
+himself and raves wildly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Push on,&rdquo; quoth Gudruda; &ldquo;push on, lest it be too
+late.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they climbed the mountain on foot, won the pass and came to that giddy point
+of rock where he must tread who would reach the platform that is before the
+cave. Now since she had hung by her hands over Goldfoss gulf, Gudruda had
+feared to tread upon a height with nothing to hold to. Skallagrim went first,
+then called to her to follow. Thrice she looked, and turned away, trembling,
+for the place was awful and the fall bottomless. Then she spoke aloud to
+herself:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric did not fear to risk his life to save me when I hung over Golden
+Falls; less, then, should I fear to risk mine to save him,&rdquo; and she
+stepped boldly down upon the point. But when she stood there, over the giddy
+height, shivers ran along her body, and her mind grew dark. She clutched at the
+rock, gave one low cry and began to fall. Indeed she would have fallen and been
+lost, had not Skallagrim, lying on his breast in the narrow hole, stretched out
+his arms, caught her by the cloak and kirtle and dragged her to him. Presently
+her senses came back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am safe!&rdquo; she gasped, &ldquo;but by a very little. Methinks that
+here in this place I must live and die, for I can never tread yonder rock
+again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou shalt pass it safe enough, lady, with a rope round thee,&rdquo;
+said Skallagrim, and led the way to the cave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gudruda entered, forgetting all things in her love of Eric. A great fire of
+turf burned in the mouth of the cave to temper the bitter wind and frost, and
+by its light Gudruda saw her love through the smoke-reek. He lay upon a bed of
+skins at the far end of the cave and his bright grey eyes were wild, his wan
+face was white, and now of a sudden it grew red with fever, and then was white
+again. He had thrown the sheepskins from his mighty chest, the bones of which
+stood out grimly. His long arms were thrust through the locks of his golden
+hair, and on one side of his neck the hair clung to him and it was but a black
+mass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He raved loudly in his madness. &ldquo;Touch me not, carles, touch me not; ye
+think me spent and weak, but, by Thor! if ye touch my hair, I will loosen the
+knees of some. Gudruda alone shall shear my hair: I have sworn and I will keep
+the oath that I once broke. Give me snow! snow! my throat burns! Heap snow on
+my head, I bid you. Ye will not? Ye mock me, thinking me weak! Where, then, is
+Whitefire?&mdash;I have yet a deed to do! Who comes yonder? Is it a
+woman&rsquo;s shape or is it but a smoke-wraith? &lsquo;Tis Swanhild the
+Fatherless who walks the waters. Begone, Swanhild, thou witch! thou hast worked
+evil enough upon me. Nay, it is not Swanhild, it is Elfrida; lady, here in
+England I may not stay. In Iceland I am at home. Yea, yea, things go crossly;
+perchance in this garden we may speak again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda could bear his words no longer, bur ran to him and knelt beside
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peace, Eric!&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Peace! It is I, thy love. It
+is Gudruda, who am come to thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned his head and looked upon her strangely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it is not Gudruda the Fair. She will have
+little to do with outlaws, and this is too rough a place for her to come to. It
+is dark also and Atli speaks in the darkness. If thou art Gudruda, give me a
+sign. Why comest thou here and where is Skallagrim? Ah! that was a good
+fight&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Down among the ballast tumbling<br />
+Ospakar&rsquo;s shield-carles were rolled.
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+But he should never have slain the steersman. The axe goes first and Skallagrim
+follows after. Ha, ha! Ay, Swanhild, we&rsquo;ll mingle tears. Give me the cup.
+Why, what is this? Thou art afire, a glory glows about thee, and from thee
+floats a scent like the scent of the Iceland meads in May.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric! Eric!&rdquo; cried Gudruda, &ldquo;I am come to shear thy hair, as
+thou didst swear that I alone should do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I know that thou art Gudruda,&rdquo; said the crazed man.
+&ldquo;Cut, cut; but let not those knaves touch my head, lest I should slay
+them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Gudruda drew out her shears, and without more ado shore off
+Brighteyes&rsquo; golden locks. It was no easy task, for they were thick as a
+horse&rsquo;s mane, and glued to the wound. Yet when she had cut them, she
+loosened the hair from the flesh with water which she heated upon the fire. The
+wound was in a bad state and blue, still Eric never winced while she dragged
+the hair from it. Then she washed the sore clean, and put sweet ointment on it
+and covered it with napkins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This done, she gave Eric broth and he drank. Then, laying her hand upon his
+head, she looked into his eyes and bade him sleep. And presently he
+slept&mdash;which he had scarcely done for many days&mdash;slept like a little
+child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric slept for a day and a night. But at that same hour of the evening, when he
+had fallen asleep, Gudruda, watching him by the light of a taper that was set
+upon a rock, saw him smile in his dreams. Presently he opened his eyes and
+stared at the fire which glowed in the mouth of the cave, and the great shadows
+that fell upon the rocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Strange!&rdquo; she heard him murmur, &ldquo;it is very strange! but I
+dreamed I slept, and that Gudruda the Fair leaned over me as I slept. Where,
+then, is Skallagrim? Perhaps I am dead and that is Hela&rsquo;s fire,&rdquo;
+and he tried to lift himself upon his arm, but fell back from faintness, for he
+was very weak. Then Gudruda took his hand, and, leaning over him, spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hush, Eric!&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;that was no dream, for I am here.
+Thou hast been sick to death, Eric; but now, if thou wilt rest, things shall go
+well with thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Thou</i> art here?&rdquo; said Eric, turning his white face towards
+her. &ldquo;Do I still dream, or how comest thou here to Mosfell,
+Gudruda?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I came through the snows, Eric, to cut thy hair, which clung to the
+festering wound, for in thy madness thou wouldst not suffer anyone to touch
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou camest through the snows&mdash;over the snows&mdash;to nurse me,
+Gudruda? Thou must love me much then,&rdquo; and he was so weak that, as he
+spoke, the tears rolled down Eric&rsquo;s cheeks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Gudruda kissed him, weeping also, and, laying her face by his, bade him be
+at peace, for she was there to watch him.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap28"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII<br />
+HOW SWANHILD WON TIDINGS OF ERIC</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric&rsquo;s strength came back to him and his heart opened in the light of
+Gudruda&rsquo;s eyes like a flower in the sunshine. For all day long she sat at
+his side, holding his hand and talking to him, and they found much to say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But on the fifth day from the day of his awakening she spoke thus:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric, now I must go back to Middalhof. Thou art safe and it is not well
+that I should stay here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not yet, Gudruda,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;leave me not yet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, love, I must leave thee. The moon is bright, the sky has cleared,
+and the snow is hard with frost and fit for the hoofs of horses. I must go
+before more storms come. Listen now: in the second week of spring, if all is
+well, I will send thee a messenger with words of token, then shalt thou come
+down secretly to Middalhof, and there, Eric, we will be wed. Then, on the next
+day, we will sail for England in a trading-ship that I shall get ready, to seek
+our fortune there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will be a good fortune if thou art by my side,&rdquo; said Eric,
+&ldquo;so good that I doubt greatly if I may find it, for I am Eric the
+Unlucky. Swanhild must yet be reckoned with, Gudruda. Yes, thou art right: thou
+must go hence, Gudruda, and swiftly, though it grieves me much to part with
+thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric called Skallagrim and bade him make things ready to ride down to
+Middalhof with the Lady Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Skallagrim did swiftly, and afterwards Eric and Gudruda kissed and parted,
+and they were sad at heart to part.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now on the fifth day after the going of Gudruda, Skallagrim came back to
+Mosfell somewhat cold and weary. And he told Eric, who could now walk and grew
+strong again, that he and Jon had ridden with Gudruda the Fair to Horse-Head
+Heights, seeing no man, and had left her there to go on with her thralls. He
+had come back also seeing no one, for the weather was too cold for the men of
+Gizur to watch the fell in the snows.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now Gudruda came safely to Middalhof, having been eleven days gone, and found
+that few had visited the house, and that these had been told that she lay sick
+abed. Her secret had been well kept, and, though Swanhild had no lack of spies,
+many days went by before she learned that Gudruda had gone up to Mosfell to
+nurse Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After this Gudruda began to make ready for her flight from Iceland. She called
+in the moneys that she had out at interest, and with them bought from a certain
+chapman a good trading-ship which lay in its shed under the shelter of Westman
+Isles. This ship she began to make ready for sea so soon as the heart of the
+winter was broken, putting it about that she intended to send her on a trading
+voyage to Scotland in the spring. And also to give colour to this tale she
+bought many pelts and other goods, such as chapmen deal in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus the days passed on&mdash;not so badly for Gudruda, who strove to fill
+their emptiness in making ready for the full and happy time; but for Eric in
+his cave they were very heavy, for he could find nothing to do except to sleep
+and eat, and think of Gudruda, whom he might not see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Swanhild also, sitting at Coldback, the days did not go well. She was weary
+of the courting of Gizur, whom she played with as a cat plays with a rat, and
+her heart was sick with love, hate, and jealousy. For she well knew that
+Gudruda and Eric still clung to each other and found means of greeting, if not
+of speech. At that time she wished to kill Eric if she could, though she would
+rather kill Gudruda if she dared. Still, she could not come at Eric, for her
+men feared to try the narrow way of Mosfell, and when they met him in the open
+they fled before him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently it came to her ears that Gudruda made a ship ready to sail to
+Scotland on a trading voyage, and she was perplexed by this tale, for she knew
+that Gudruda had no love of trading and never thought of gain. So she set spies
+to watch the ship. Still, the slow days drew on, and at length the air grew
+soft with spring, and flowers showed through the snow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric sat in his mountain nest waiting for tidings, and watched the nesting
+eagles wheel about the cliffs. At length news came. For one morning, as he
+rose, Skallagrim told him that a man wanted to speak with him. He had come to
+the mountain in the darkness, and had lain in a dell till the breaking of the
+light, for, now that the snows were melting, the men of Gizur and Swanhild
+watched the ways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric bade them bring the man to him. When he saw him he knew that he was a
+thrall of Gudruda&rsquo;s and welcomed him heartily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What tidings?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This, lord,&rdquo; said the thrall: &ldquo;Gudruda the Fair bids me say
+that she is well and that the snows melt on the roof of Middalhof.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now this was the signal word that had been agreed upon between Eric and
+Gudruda, that she should send him when all was ready.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;ride back to Gudruda the Fair and say
+that Eric Brighteyes is well, but on Hecla the snows melt not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By this answer he meant that he would be with her presently, though the thrall
+could make nothing of it. Then Skallagrim asked tidings of the man, and learned
+that Swanhild was still at Middalhof, and with her Gizur, and that they gave
+out that they wished to make an end of waiting and slay Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;First snare your bird, then wring his neck,&rdquo; laughed Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric did this: among his men were some who he knew were not willing to
+sail from Iceland, and Jon, his thrall, was of them, for Jon did not love the
+angry sea. He bade these bide a while on Mosfell and make fires nightly on the
+platform of rock which is in front of the cave, that the spies of Gizur and
+Swanhild might be deceived by them, and think that Eric was still on the fell.
+Then, when they heard that he had sailed, they were to come down and hide
+themselves with friends till Gizur and his following rode north. But he told
+two of the men who would sail with him to make ready.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night before the moon rose Eric said farewell to Jon and the others who
+stayed on Mosfell, and rode away with Skallagrim and the two who went with him.
+They passed the plain of black sand in safety, and so on to Horse-Head Heights.
+Now at length, as the afternoon drew on to evening, from Stonefell&rsquo;s
+crest they saw the Hall of Middalhof before them, and Eric&rsquo;s heart
+swelled in his breast. Yet they must wait till darkness fell before they dared
+enter the place, lest they should be seen and notice of their coming should be
+carried to Gizur and Swanhild. And this came into the mind of Eric, that of all
+the hours of his life that hour of waiting was the longest. Scarcely, indeed,
+could Skallagrim hold him back from going down the mountain side, he was so set
+on coming to Gudruda whom he should wed that night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length the darkness fell, and they went on. Eric rode swiftly down the rough
+mountain path, while Skallagrim and the two men followed grumbling, for they
+feared that their horses would fall. At length they came to the place, and
+riding into the yard, Eric sprang from his horse and strode to the
+women&rsquo;s door. Now Gudruda stood in the porch, listening; and while he was
+yet some way off, she heard the clang of Brighteyen&rsquo;s harness, and the
+colour came and went upon her cheek. Then she turned and fled to the high seat
+of the hall, and sat down there. Only two women were left in Middalhof with
+her, and some thralls who tended the kine and horses. But these slept, not in
+the hall, but in an outhouse. Gudruda had sent the rest of her people down to
+the ship to help in the lading, for it was given out that the vessel sailed on
+the morrow. She had done this that there might be no talk of the coming of Eric
+to Middalhof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Brighteyes came to the porch, and, finding the door wide, walked in. But
+Skallagrim and the men stayed without a while, and tended the horses. A fire
+burned upon the centre hearth in the hall, and threw shadows on the panelling.
+Eric walked on by its light, looking to left and right, but seeing neither man
+nor woman. Then a great fear took him lest Gudruda should be gone, or perhaps
+slain of Swanhild, Groa&rsquo;s daughter, and he trembled at the thought. He
+stood by the fire, and Gudruda, watching from the shadow of the high seat, saw
+the dull light glow upon his golden helm, and a sigh of joy broke from her
+lips. Eric heard the sigh and looked, and as he looked a stick of pitchy
+driftwood fell into the fire and flared up fiercely. Then he saw. There, in the
+carved high seat, robed all in bridal white, sat Gudruda the Fair, his love.
+Her golden hair flowed about her breast, her white arms were stretched towards
+him, and on her sweet face shone such a look of love as he had never seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Eric!</i>&rdquo; she whispered softly, and the breath of her voice
+ran down the empty panelled hall, that from all sides seemed to answer,
+&ldquo;<i>Eric.</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slowly he drew near to her. He saw nothing but the glory of Gudruda&rsquo;s
+face and the light shining on Gudruda&rsquo;s hair; he heard nothing save the
+sighing of her breath; he knew nothing except that before him sat his fair
+bride, won after many years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now he had climbed the high seat, and now, wrapped in each other&rsquo;s arms,
+they sat and gazed into each other&rsquo;s eyes, and lo! the air of the great
+hall rolled round them a sea of glory, and sweet voices whispered in their
+ears. Now Freya smiled upon them and led them through her gates of love, and
+they were glad that they had been born.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus then they were wed.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now the story tells that Swanhild spoke with Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, in the
+house at Coldback.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tire of this slow play,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We have tarried here
+for many weeks, and Atli&rsquo;s blood yet cries out for vengeance, and cries
+for vengeance the blood of black Ospakar, thy father, and the blood of many
+another, dead at great Eric&rsquo;s hand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tire also,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;and I am much needed in the
+north. I say this to thee, Swanhild, that, hadst thou not so strictly laid it
+on me that Eric must die ere thou weddest me, I had flitted back to Swinefell
+before now, and there bided my time to bring Brighteyes to his end.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will never wed thee, Gizur, till Eric is dead,&rdquo; said Swanhild
+fiercely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How shall we come at him then?&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;We may not go
+up that mountain path, for two men can hold it against all our strength, and
+folk do not love to meet Eric and Skallagrim in a narrow way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The place has been badly watched,&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;I am sure
+of this, that Eric has been down to Middalhof and seen Gudruda, my half-sister.
+She is shameless, who still holds commune with him who slew her brother and my
+husband. Death should be her reward, and I am minded to slay her because of the
+shame that she has brought upon our blood.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is a deed which thou wilt do alone, then,&rdquo; said Gizur,
+&ldquo;for I will have no hand in the murder of that fair maid&mdash;no, nor
+will any who live in Iceland!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild glanced at him strangely. &ldquo;Hearken, Gizur!&rdquo; she said:
+&ldquo;Gudruda makes a ship ready to sail with goods to Scotland and bring a
+cargo thence before winter comes again. Now I find this strange, for never
+before did I know Gudruda turn her thoughts to trading. I think that she has it
+in her mind to sail from Iceland with this outlaw Eric, and seek a home over
+seas, and that I will not bear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It may be,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;and I should not be sorry to see
+the last of Brighteyes, for I think that more men will die at his hand before
+he stiffens in his barrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art cowardly-hearted, thou son of Ospakar!&rdquo; Swanhild said.
+&ldquo;Thou sayest thou lovest me and wouldest win me to wife: I tell thee that
+there is but one road to my arms, and it leads over the corpse of Eric. Now
+this is my counsel: that we send the most of our men to watch that ship of
+Gudruda&rsquo;s, and, when she lifts anchor, to board her and search, for she
+is already bound for sea. Also among the people here I have a carle who was
+born near Hecla, and he swears this to me, that, when he was a lad, searching
+for an eagle&rsquo;s eyrie, he found a path by which Mosfell might be climbed
+from the north, and that in the end he came to a large flat place, and, looking
+over, saw that platform where Eric dwells with his thralls. But he could not
+see the cave, because of the overhanging brow of the rock. Now we will do this:
+thou and I, and the carle alone&mdash;no more, for I do not wish that our
+search should be noised abroad&mdash;to-morrow at the dawn we will ride away
+for Mosfell, and, passing under Hecla, come round the mountain and see if this
+path may still be scaled. For, if so, we will return with men and make an end
+of Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This plan pleased Gizur, and he said that it should be so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So very early on the following morning Swanhild, having sent many men to watch
+Gudruda&rsquo;s ship, rode away secretly with Gizur and the thrall, and before
+it was again dawn they were on the northern slopes of Mosfell. It was on this
+same night that Eric went down from the mountain to wed Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a while the climbing was easy, but at length they came to a great wall of
+rock, a hundred fathoms high, on which no fox might find a foothold, nor
+anything that had not wings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here now is an end of our journey,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;and I only
+pray this, that Eric may not ride round the mountain before we are down
+again.&rdquo; For he did not know that Brighteyes already rode hard for
+Middalhof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; said the thrall, &ldquo;if only I can find the place by
+which, some thirty summers ago, I won yonder rift, and through it the crest of
+the fell,&rdquo; and he pointed to a narrow cleft in the face of the rock high
+above their heads, that was clothed with grey moss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he moved to the right and searched, peering behind stones and
+birch-bushes, till presently he held up his hand and whistled. They passed
+along the slope and found him standing by a little stream of water which welled
+from beneath a great rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here is the place,&rdquo; the man said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see no place,&rdquo; answered Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Still, it is there, lady,&rdquo; and he climbed on to the rock, drawing
+her after him. At the back of it was a hole, almost overgrown with moss.
+&ldquo;Here is the path,&rdquo; he said again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then it is one that I have no mind to follow,&rdquo; answered Swanhild.
+&ldquo;Gizur, go thou with the man and see if his tale is true. I will stay
+here till ye come back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the thrall let himself down into the hole and Gizur went after him. But
+Swanhild sat there in the shadow of the rock, her chin resting on her hand, and
+waited. Presently, as she sat, she saw two men ride round the base of the fell,
+and strike off to the right towards a turf-booth which stood the half of an
+hour&rsquo;s ride away. Now Swanhild was the keenest-sighted of all women of
+her day in Iceland, and when she looked at these two men she knew one of them
+for Jon, Eric&rsquo;s thrall, and she knew the horse also&mdash;it was a white
+horse with black patches, that Jon had ridden for many years. She watched them
+go till they came to the booth, and it seemed to her that they left their
+horses and entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild waited upon the side of the fell for nearly two hours in all. Then,
+hearing a noise above her, she looked up, and there, black with dirt and wet
+with water, was Gizur, and with him was the thrall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What luck, Gizur?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This, Swanhild: Eric may hold Mosfell no more, for we have found a way
+to bolt the fox.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is good news, then,&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;Say on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yonder hole, Swanhild, leads to the cleft above, having been cut through
+the cliff by fire, or perhaps by water. Now up that cleft a man may climb,
+though hardly, as by a difficult stair, till he comes to the flat crest of the
+fell. Then, crossing the crest, on the further side, perhaps six fathoms below
+him, he sees that space of rock where is Eric&rsquo;s cave; but he cannot see
+the cave itself, because the brow of the cliff hangs over. And so it is that,
+if any come from the cave on to the space of rock, it will be an easy matter to
+roll stones upon them from above and crush them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now when Swanhild heard this she laughed aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric shall mock us no more,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and his might can
+avail nothing against rocks rolled on him from above. Let us go back to
+Coldback and summon men to make an end of Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they went on down the mountain till they came to the place where they had
+hidden their horses. Then Swanhild remembered Jon and the other man whom she
+had seen riding to the booth, and she told Gizur of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;we will snare these birds, and perchance
+they will twitter tidings when we squeeze them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they turned and rode for the booth, and drawing near, they saw two horses
+grazing without. Now they got off their horses, and creeping up to the booth,
+looked in through the door which was ajar. And they saw this, that one man sat
+on the ground with his back to the door, eating stock-fish, while Jon made
+bundles of fish and meal ready to tie on the horses. For it was here that those
+of his quarter who loved Eric brought food to be carried by his men to the cave
+on Mosfell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild touched Gizur on the arm, pointing first to the man who sat eating
+the fish and then to the spear in Gizur&rsquo;s hand. Gizur thought a while,
+for he shrank from this deed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Swanhild whispered in his ear, &ldquo;Slay the man and seize the other; I
+would learn tidings from him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Gizur cast the spear, and it passed through the man&rsquo;s heart, and he
+was dead at once. Then he and the thrall leapt into the booth and threw
+themselves on Jon, hurling him to the ground, and holding swords over him. Now
+Jon was a man of small heart, and when he saw his plight and his fellow dead he
+was afraid, and prayed for mercy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I spare thee, knave,&rdquo; said Swanhild, &ldquo;thou shalt do this:
+thou shalt lead me up Mosfell to speak with Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may not do that, lady,&rdquo; groaned Jon; &ldquo;for Eric is not on
+Mosfell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where is he, then?&rdquo; asked Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Jon saw that he had said an unlucky thing, and answered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, I know not. Last night he rode from Mosfell with Skallagrim
+Lambstail.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou liest, knave,&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;Speak, or thou shalt be
+slain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Slay on,&rdquo; groaned Jon, glancing at the swords above him, and
+shutting his eyes. For, though he feared much to die, he had no will to make
+known Eric&rsquo;s plans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look not at the swords; thou shalt not die so easily. Hearken: speak,
+and speak truly, or thou shalt seek Hela&rsquo;s lap after this fashion,&rdquo;
+and, bending down, she whispered in his ear, then laughed aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Jon grew faint with fear; his lips turned blue, and his teeth chattered at
+the thought of how he should be made to die. Still, he would say nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Swanhild spoke to Gizur and the thrall, and bade them bind him with a
+rope, tear the garments from him, and bring snow. They did this, and pushed the
+matter to the drawing of knives. But when he saw the steel Jon cried aloud that
+he would tell all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now thou takest good counsel,&rdquo; said Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then in his fear Jon told how Eric had gone down to Middalhof to wed Gudruda,
+and thence to fly with her to England.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild was mad with wrath, for she had sooner died than that this should
+come about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us away,&rdquo; she said to Gizur. &ldquo;But first kill this
+man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;I will not do that. He has told his
+tidings; let him go free.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art chicken-hearted,&rdquo; said Swanhild, who, after the fashion
+of witches, had no mercy in her. &ldquo;At the least, he shall not go hence to
+warn Eric and Gudruda of our coming. If thou wilt not kill him, then bind him
+and leave him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Jon was bound, and there in the booth he sat two days before anyone came to
+loose him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whither away?&rdquo; said Gizur to Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To Middalhof first,&rdquo; Swanhild answered.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap29"></a>CHAPTER XXIX<br />
+HOW WENT THE BRIDAL NIGHT</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric and Gudruda sat silent in the high seat of the hall at Middalhof till
+they heard Skallagrim enter by the women&rsquo;s door. Then they came down from
+the high seat, and stood hand in hand by the fire on the hearth. Skallagrim
+greeted Gudruda, looking at her askance, for Skallagrim stood in fear of women
+alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What counsel now, lord?&rdquo; said the Baresark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell us thy plans, Gudruda,&rdquo; said Eric, for as yet no word had
+passed between them of what they should do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is my plan, Eric,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;First, that we eat;
+then that thy men take horse and ride hence through the night to where the ship
+lies, bearing word that we will be there at dawn when the tide serves, and
+bidding the mate make everything ready for sailing. But thou and I and
+Skallagrim will stay here till to-morrow is three hours old, and this because I
+have tidings that Gizur&rsquo;s folk will search the ship to-night. Now, when
+they search and do not find us, they will go away. Then, at the dawning, thou
+and I and Skallagrim will row on board the ship as she lies at anchor, and,
+slipping the cable, put to sea before they know we are there, and so bid
+farewell to Swanhild and our woes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yet it is a risk for us to sleep here alone,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is little danger,&rdquo; said Gudruda. &ldquo;Nearly all of
+Gizur&rsquo;s men watch the ship; and I have learned this from a spy, that, two
+days ago, Gizur, Swanhild, and one thrall rode from Coldback towards Mosfell,
+and they have not come back yet. Moreover, the place is strong, and thou and
+Skallagrim are here to guard it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So be it, then,&rdquo; answered Eric, for indeed he had little thought
+left for anything, except Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After this the women came in and set meat on the board, and all ate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, when they had eaten, Eric bade Skallagrim fill a cup, and bring it to him
+as he sat on the high seat with Gudruda. Skallagrim did so; and then, looking
+deep into each other&rsquo;s eyes, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair,
+Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, drank the bride&rsquo;s cup.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There are few guests to grace our marriage-feast, husband,&rdquo; said
+Gudruda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yet shall our vows hold true, wife,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Brighteyes,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;in life and in death, now
+and for ever!&rdquo; and they kissed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is time for us to be going, methinks,&rdquo; growled Skallagrim to
+those about him. &ldquo;We are not wanted here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the men who were to go on to the ship rose, fetched their horses, and rode
+away. Also they caught the horses of Skallagrim, Eric, and Gudruda, saddled
+them and, slipping their bridles, made them fast in a shed in the yard, giving
+them hay to eat. Afterwards Skallagrim barred the men&rsquo;s door and the
+women&rsquo;s door, and, going to Gudruda, asked where he should stay the night
+till it was time to ride for the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the store-chamber,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;for there is a shutter
+of which the latch has gone. See that thou watch it well, Skallagrim; though I
+think none will come to trouble thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know the place. It shall go badly with the head that looks through
+yonder hole,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, glancing at his axe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda forgot this, that in the store-chamber were casks of strong ale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Gudruda told him to wake them when the morrow was two hours old, for Eric
+had neither eyes nor words except for Gudruda alone, and Skallagrim went.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The women went also to their shut bed at the end of the hall, leaving
+Brighteyes and Gudruda alone. Eric looked at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where do I sleep to-night?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou sleepest with me, husband,&rdquo; she answered soft, &ldquo;for
+nothing, except Death, shall come between us any more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now Skallagrim went to the store-room, and sat down with his back against a
+cask. His heart was heavy in him, for he boded no good of this marriage.
+Moreover, he was jealous. Skallagrim loved but one thing in the world truly,
+and that was Eric Brighteyes, his lord. Now he knew that henceforth he must
+take a second place, and that for one thought which Eric gave to him, he would
+give ten to Gudruda. Therefore Skallagrim was very sad at heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A pest upon the women!&rdquo; he said to himself, &ldquo;for from them
+comes all evil. Brighteyes owes his ill luck to Swanhild and this fair wife of
+his, and that is scarcely done with yet. Well, well, &lsquo;tis nature; but
+would that we were safe at sea! Had I my will, we had not slept here to-night.
+But they are newly wed, and&mdash;well, &lsquo;tis nature! Better the bride
+loves to lie abed than to ride the cold wolds and seek the common deck.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, as Skallagrim grumbled, fear gathered in his heart, he knew not of what.
+He began to think on trolls and goblins. It was dark in the store-room, except
+for a little line of light that crept through the crack of the shutter. At
+length he could bear the darkness and his thoughts no longer, but, rising,
+threw the shutter wide and let the bright moonlight pour into the chamber,
+whence he could see the hillside behind, and watch the shadows of the clouds as
+they floated across it. Again Skallagrim sat down against his cask, and as he
+sat it moved, and he heard the wash of ale inside it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is a good sound,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, and he turned and smelt at
+the cask; &ldquo;aye, and a good smell, too! We tasted little ale yonder on
+Mosfell, and we shall find less at sea.&rdquo; Again he looked at the cask.
+There was a spigot in it, and lo! on the shelf stood horn cups.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It surely is on draught,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and now it will stand
+till it goes sour. &lsquo;Tis a pity; but I will not drink. I fear
+ale&mdash;ale is another man! No, I will not drink,&rdquo; and all the while
+his hand went up to the cups upon the shelf. &ldquo;Eric is better lain yonder
+in Gudruda&rsquo;s chamber than I am here alone with evil thoughts and
+trolls,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Why, what fish was that we ate at supper? My
+throat is cracked with thirst! If there were water now I&rsquo;d drink it, but
+I see none. Well, one cup to wish them joy! There is no harm in a cup of
+ale,&rdquo; and he drew the spigot from the cask and watched the brown drink
+flow into the cup. Then he lifted it to his lips and drank, saying
+&ldquo;Skoll! skoll!&rdquo;[*] nor did he cease till the horn was drained.
+&ldquo;This is wondrous good ale,&rdquo; said Skallagrim as he wiped his
+grizzled beard. &ldquo;One more cup, and evil thoughts shall cease to haunt
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[*] &ldquo;Health! health!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again he filled, drank, sat down, and for a while was merry. But presently the
+black thoughts came back into his mind. He rose, looked through the
+shutter-hole to the hillside. He could see nothing on it except the shadows of
+the clouds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Trolls walk the winds to-night,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I feel them
+pulling at my beard. One more cup to frighten them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He drank another draught of ale and grew merry. Then ale called for ale, and
+Skallagrim drained cup on cup, singing as he drained, till at last heavy sleep
+overcame him, and he sank drunken on the ground there by the barrel, while the
+brown ale trickled round him.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair slept side by side, locked in each
+other&rsquo;s arms. Presently Gudruda was wide awake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rouse thee, Eric,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I have dreamed an evil
+dream.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He awoke and kissed her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What, then, was thy dream, sweet?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;This is no hour
+for bad dreams.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No hour for bad dreams, truly, husband; yet dreams do not weigh the hour
+of their coming. I dreamed this: that I lay dead beside thee and thou knewest
+it not, while Swanhild looked at thee and mocked.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;An evil dream, truly,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but see, thou art not
+dead. Thou hast thought too much on Swanhild of late.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they slept once more, till presently Eric was wide awake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rouse thee, Gudruda,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I too have dreamed a dream,
+and it is full of evil.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What, then, was thy dream, husband?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I dreamed that Atli the Earl, whom I slew, stood by the bed. His face
+was white, and white as snow was his beard, and blood from his great wound ran
+down his byrnie. &lsquo;Eric Brighteyes,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;I am he whom
+thou didst slay, and I come to tell thee this: that before the moon is young
+again thou shalt lie stiff, with Hell-shoes on thy feet. Thou art Eric the
+Unlucky! Take thy joy and say thy say to her who lies at thy side, for wet and
+cold is the bed that waits thee and soon shall thy white lips be dumb.&rsquo;
+Then he was gone, and lo! in his place stood Asmund, thy father, and he also
+spoke to me, saying, &lsquo;Thou who dost lie in my bed and at my
+daughter&rsquo;s side, know this: the words of Atli are true; but I add these
+to them: ye shall die, yet is death but the gate of life and love and
+rest,&rsquo; and he was gone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gudruda shivered with fear, and crept closer to Eric&rsquo;s side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are surely fey, for the Norns speak with the voices of Atli and of
+Asmund,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Oh, Eric! Eric! whither go we when we die? Will
+Valhalla take thee, being so mighty a man, and must I away to Hela&rsquo;s
+halls, where thou art not? Oh! that would be death indeed! Say, Eric, whither
+do we go?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What said the voice of Asmund?&rdquo; answered Brighteyes. &ldquo;That
+death is but the gate of life and love and rest. Hearken, Gudruda, my May! Odin
+does not reign over all the world, for when I sat out yonder in England, a
+certain holy man taught me of another God&mdash;a God who loves not slaughter,
+a God who died that men might live for ever in peace with those they
+love.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How is this God named, Eric?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They name Him the White Christ, and there are many who cling to
+Him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would that I knew this Christ, Eric. I am weary of death and blood and
+evil deeds, such as are pleasing to our Gods. Oh, Eric, if I am taken from
+thee, swear this to me: that thou wilt slay no more, save for thy life&rsquo;s
+sake only.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I swear that, sweet,&rdquo; he made answer. &ldquo;For I too am weary of
+death and blood, and desire peace most of all things. The world is sad, and sad
+have been our days. Yet it is well to have lived, for through many heavy days
+we have wandered to this happy night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yea, Eric, it is well to have lived; though I think that death draws on.
+Now this is my counsel: that we rise, and that thou dost put on thy harness and
+summon Skallagrim, so that, if evil comes, thou mayst meet it armed. Surely I
+thought I heard a sound&mdash;yonder in the hall!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is little use in that,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for things will
+befall as they are fated. We may do nothing of our own will, I am sure of this,
+and it is no good to struggle with the Norns. Yet I will rise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he kissed her, and made ready to leave the bed, when suddenly, as he
+lingered, a great heaviness seized him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gudruda,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am pressed down with sleep.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That I am also, Eric,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;My eyes shut of themselves
+and I can scarcely stir my limbs. Ah, Eric, we are fey indeed, and this
+is&mdash;death that comes!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perchance!&rdquo; he said, speaking heavily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric!&mdash;wake, Eric! Thou canst not move? Yet hearken to me&mdash;ah!
+this weight of sleep! Thou lovest me, Eric!&mdash;is it not so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yea,&rdquo; he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now and for ever thou lovest me&mdash;and wilt cleave to me always
+wherever we go?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Surely, sweet. Oh, sweet, farewell!&rdquo; he said, and his voice
+sounded like the voice of one who speaks across the water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!&mdash;my love&mdash;my love, farewell!&rdquo;
+she answered very slowly, and together they sank into a sleep that was heavy as
+death.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, and Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s widow, rode fast and
+hard from Mosfell, giving no rest to their horses, and with them rode that
+thrall who had showed the secret path to Gizur. They stayed a while on
+Horse-Head Heights till the moon rose. Now one path led hence to the shore that
+is against the Westmans, where Gudruda&rsquo;s ship lay bound. Then Swanhild
+turned to the thrall. Her beautiful face was fierce and she had said few words
+all this while, but in her heart raged a fire of hate and jealousy which shone
+through her blue eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; she said to the thrall. &ldquo;Thou shalt ride hence to
+the bay where the ship of Gudruda the Fair lies at anchor. Thou knowest where
+our folk are in hiding. Thou shalt speak thus to them. Before it is dawn they
+must take boats and board Gudruda&rsquo;s ship and search her. And, if they
+find Eric, the outlaw, aboard, they shall slay him, if they may.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That will be no easy task,&rdquo; said the thrall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if they find Gudruda they shall keep her prisoner. But if they find
+neither the one nor the other, they shall do this: they shall drive the crew
+ashore, killing as few as may be, and burn the ship.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is an ill deed thus to burn another&rsquo;s ship,&rdquo; said Gizur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good or ill, it shall be done,&rdquo; answered Swanhild fiercely.
+&ldquo;Thou art a lawman, and well canst thou meet the suit; moreover Gudruda
+has wedded an outlaw and shall suffer for her sin. Now go, and see thou tarry
+not, or thy back shall pay the price.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man rode away swiftly. Then Gizur turned to Swanhild, asking:
+&ldquo;Whither, then, go we?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have said to Middalhof.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is into the wolf&rsquo;s den, if Eric and Skallagrim are
+there,&rdquo; he answered: &ldquo;I have little chance against the two of
+them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, nor against the one, Gizur. Why, if Eric&rsquo;s right hand were
+hewn from him, and he stood unarmed, he would still slay thee with his left,
+as, swordless, he slew Ospakar thy father. Yet I shall find a way to come at
+him, if he is there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they rode on, and Gizur&rsquo;s heart was heavy for fear of Eric and
+Skallagrim the Baresark. So fiercely did they ride that, within one hour after
+midnight, they were at the stead of Middalhof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We will leave the horses here in the field,&rdquo; said Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they leaped to earth and, tying the reins of the horses together, left them
+to feed on the growing grass. Then they crept into the yard and listened.
+Presently there came a sound of horses stamping in the far corner of the yard.
+They went thither, and there they found a horse and two geldings saddled, but
+with the bits slipped, and on the horse was such a saddle as women use.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda the Fair,&rdquo;
+whispered Swanhild, naming the horses and laughing evilly&mdash;&ldquo;the
+birds are within! Now to snare them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Were it not best to meet them by the ship?&rdquo; asked Gizur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, thou fool; if once Eric and Skallagrim are back to back, and
+Whitefire is aloft, how many shall be dead before they are down, thinkest thou?
+We shall not find them sleeping twice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is shameful to slay sleeping men,&rdquo; said Gizur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are outlaws,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Hearken, Ospakar&rsquo;s
+son. Thou sayest thou dost love me and wouldst wed me: know this, that if thou
+dost fail me now, I will never look upon thy face again, but will name thee
+Niddering in all men&rsquo;s ears.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gizur loved Swanhild much, for she had thrown her glamour on him as once
+she did on Atli, and he thought of her day and night. For there was this
+strange thing about Swanhild that, though she was a witch and wicked, being
+both fair and gentle she could lead all men, except Eric, to love her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But of men she loved Eric alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Gizur held his peace; but Swanhild spoke again:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will be of no use to try the doors, for they are strong. Yet when I
+was a child before now I have passed in and out the house at night by the
+store-room casement. Follow me, Gizur.&rdquo; Then she crept along the shadow
+of the wall, for she knew it every stone, till she came to the store-room, and
+lo! the shutter stood open, and through it the moonlight poured into the
+chamber. Swanhild lifted her head above the sill and looked, then started back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Skallagrim lies asleep within.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pray the Gods he wake not!&rdquo; said Gizur beneath his breath, and
+turned to go. But Swanhild caught him by the arm; then gently raised her head
+and looked again, long and steadily. Presently she turned and laughed softly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Things go well for us,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;the sot lies drunk. We
+have nothing to fear from him. He lies drunk in a pool of ale.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Gizur looked. The moonlight poured into the little room, and by it he saw
+the great shape of Skallagrim. His head was thrown back, his mouth was wide. He
+snored loudly in his drunken sleep, and all about him ran the brown ale, for
+the spigot of the cask lay upon the floor. In his left hand was a horn cup, but
+in his right he still grasped his axe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now we must enter,&rdquo; said Swanhild. Gizur hung back, but she sprang
+upon the sill lightly as a fox, and slid thence into the store-room. Then Gizur
+must follow, and presently he stood beside her in the room, and at their feet
+lay drunken Skallagrim. Gizur looked first at his sword, then on the Baresark,
+and lastly at Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;touch him not. Perchance he would cry
+out&mdash;and we seek higher game. He has that within him which will hold him
+fast for a while. Follow where I shall lead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took his hand and, gliding through the doorway, passed along the passage
+till she came to the great hall. Swanhild could see well in the dark, and
+moreover she knew the road. Presently they stood in the empty hall. The fire
+had burnt down, but two embers yet glowed upon the hearth, like red and angry
+eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a while Swanhild stood still listening, but there was nothing to hear. Then
+she drew near to the shut bed where Gudruda slept, and, with her ear to the
+curtain, listened once more. Gizur came with her, and as he came his foot
+struck against a bench and stirred it. Now Swanhild heard murmured words and
+the sound of kisses. She started back, and fury filled her heart. Gizur also
+heard the voice of Eric, saying: &ldquo;I will rise.&rdquo; Then he would have
+fled, but Swanhild caught him by the arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fear not,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;they shall soon sleep
+sound.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He felt her stretch out her arms and presently he saw this wonderful thing: the
+eyes of Swanhild glowing in the darkness as the embers glowed upon the hearth.
+Now they glowed brightly, so brightly that he could see the outstretched arms
+and the hard white face beneath them, and now they grew dim, of a sudden to
+shine bright again. And all the while she hissed words through her clenched
+teeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus she hissed, fierce and low:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Gudruda, Sister mine, hearken and sleep!<br />
+By the bond of blood I bid thee sleep!&mdash;<br />
+By the strength that is in me I bid thee sleep!&mdash;<br />
+    Sleep! sleep sound!<br />
+<br />
+&ldquo;Eric Brighteyes, hearken and sleep!<br />
+By the bond of sin I charge thee sleep!&mdash;<br />
+By the blood of Atli I charge thee, sleep!&mdash;<br />
+    Sleep! sleep sound!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then thrice she tossed her hands aloft, saying:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;From love to sleep!<br />
+From sleep to death!<br />
+From death to Hela!<br />
+Say, lovers, where shall ye kiss again?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the light went out of her eyes and she laughed low. And ever as she
+whispered, the spoken words of the two in the shut bed grew fainter and more
+faint, till at length they died away, and a silence fell upon the place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast no cause to fear the sword of Eric, Gizur,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;Nothing will wake him now till daylight comes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art awesome!&rdquo; answered Gizur, for he shook with fear.
+&ldquo;Look not on me with those flaming eyes, I pray thee!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fear not,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;the fire is out. Now to the
+work.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What must we do, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Thou</i> must do this. Thou must enter and slay Eric.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That I can not&mdash;that I will not!&rdquo; said Gizur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned and looked at him, and lo! her eyes began to flame again&mdash;upon
+his eyes they seemed to burn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou wilt do as I bid thee,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;With Eric&rsquo;s
+sword thou shalt slay Eric, else I will curse thee where thou art, and bring
+such evil on thee as thou knowest not of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look not so, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Lead on&mdash;I
+come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they creep into the shut chamber of Gudruda. It is so dark that they can
+see nothing, and nothing can they hear except the heavy breathing of the
+sleepers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is to be told, that at this time Swanhild had it in her mind to kill, not
+Eric but Gudruda, for thus she would smite the heart of Brighteyes. Moreover,
+she loved Eric, and while he lived she might yet win him; but Eric dead must be
+Eric lost. But on Gudruda she would be bitterly avenged&mdash;Gudruda, who, for
+all her scheming, had yet been a wife to Eric!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now they stand by the bed. Swanhild puts out her hand, draws down the clothes,
+and feels the breast of Gudruda beneath, for Gudruda slept on the outside of
+the bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she searches by the head of the bed and finds Whitefire which hung there,
+and draws the sword.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here lies Eric, on the outside,&rdquo; she says to Gizur, &ldquo;and
+here is Whitefire. Strike and strike home, leaving Whitefire in the
+wound.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gizur takes the sword and lifts it. He is sore at heart that he must do such a
+coward deed; but the spell of Swanhild is upon him, and he may not flinch from
+it. Then a thought takes him and he also puts down his hand to feel. It lights
+upon Gudruda&rsquo;s golden hair, that hangs about her breast and falls from
+the bed to the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here is woman&rsquo;s hair,&rdquo; he whispers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Swanhild answers, &ldquo;it is Eric&rsquo;s hair. The hair of
+Eric is long, as thou hast seen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now neither of them knows that Gudruda cut Eric&rsquo;s locks when he lay sick
+on Mosfell, though Swanhild knows well that it is not Brighteyes whom she bids
+Gizur slay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, lifts the sword, and the faint starlight
+struggling into the chamber gathers and gleams upon the blade. Thrice he lifts
+it, and thrice he draws it back. Then with an oath he strikes&mdash;and drives
+it home with all his strength!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the bed beneath there comes one long sigh and a sound as of limbs
+trembling against the bed-gear. Then all is still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is done!&rdquo; he says faintly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild puts down her hand once more. Lo! it is wet and warm. Then she bends
+herself and looks, and behold! the dead eyes of Gudruda glare up into her eyes.
+She can see them plainly, but none know what she read there. At the least it
+was something that she loved not, for she reels back against the panelling,
+then falls upon the floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently, while Gizur stands as one in a dream, she rises, saying: &ldquo;I am
+avenged of the death of Atli. Let us hence!&mdash;ah! let us hence swiftly!
+Give me thy hand, Gizur, for I am faint!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Gizur gives her his hand and they pass thence. Presently they stand in the
+store-room, and there lies Skallagrim, still plunged in his drunken sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Must I do more murder?&rdquo; asks Gizur hoarsely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; Swanhild says. &ldquo;I am sick with blood. Leave the
+knave.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They pass out by the casement into the yard and so on till they find their
+horses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lift me, Gizur; I can no more,&rdquo; says Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He lifts her to the saddle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whither away?&rdquo; he asks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To Coldback, Gizur, and thence to cold Death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Thus did Gudruda, Eric&rsquo;s bride and Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, the fairest
+woman who ever lived in Iceland, die on her marriage night by the hand of
+Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, and through the hate and witchcraft of Swanhild the
+Fatherless, her half-sister.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap30"></a>CHAPTER XXX<br />
+HOW THE DAWN CAME</h2>
+
+<p>
+The dawn broke over Middalhof. Slowly the light gathered in the empty hall, it
+crept slowly into the little chamber where Eric slept, and Gudruda slept also
+with a deeper sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the two women came from their chamber at the far end of the hall, and drew
+near the hearth, shivering, for the air was cold. They knelt by the fire,
+blowing at the embers till the sticks they cast upon them crackled to a blaze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems that Gudruda is not yet gone,&rdquo; said one to the other.
+&ldquo;I thought she should ride away with Eric before the dawn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Newly wed lie long abed!&rdquo; laughed the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am glad to see the blessed light,&rdquo; said the first woman,
+&ldquo;for last night I dreamed that once again this hall ran red with blood,
+as at the marriage-feast of Ospakar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; answered the other, &ldquo;it will be well for the south when
+Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda are gone over sea, for their loves have brought
+much bloodshed upon the land.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, indeed!&rdquo; sighed the first. &ldquo;Had Asmund the Priest
+never found Groa, Ran&rsquo;s gift, singing by the sea, Valhalla had not been
+so full to-day. Mindest thou the day he brought her here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I remember it well,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;though I was but a girl
+at the time. Still, when I saw those dark eyes of hers&mdash;just such eyes as
+Swanhild&rsquo;s!&mdash;I knew her for a witch, as all Finn women are. It is an
+evil world: my husband is dead by the sword; dead are both my sons, fighting
+for Eric; dead is Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s daughter; Asmund, my lord, is dead, and
+dead is Björn; and now Gudruda the Fair, whom I have rocked to sleep, leaves us
+to go over sea. I may not go with her, for my daughter&rsquo;s sake; yet I
+almost wish that I too were dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That will come soon enough,&rdquo; said the other, who was young and
+fair.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now the witch-sleep began to roll from Eric&rsquo;s heart, though his eyes were
+not yet open. But the talk of the women echoed in his ears, and the words
+&ldquo;<i>dead!</i>&rdquo; &ldquo;<i>dead!</i>&rdquo;
+&ldquo;<i>dead!</i>&rdquo; fell heavily on his slumbering sense. At length he
+opened his eyes, only to shut them again, because of a bright gleam of light
+that ran up and down something at his side. Heavily he wondered what this might
+be, that shone so keen and bright&mdash;that shone like a naked sword.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now he looked again. Yes, it was a sword which stood by him upon the bed, and
+the golden hilt was like the hilt of Whitefire. He lifted up his hand to touch
+it, thinking that he dreamed. Lo! his hand and arm were red!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he remembered, and the thought of Gudruda flashed through his heart. He
+sat up, gazing down into the shadow at his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the women at the fire heard a sound as of a great man falling to
+earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is that noise?&rdquo; said one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric leaping from his bed,&rdquo; answered the other. &ldquo;He has
+slept too long, as we have also.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they spoke the curtain of the shut bed was pushed away, and through it
+staggered Eric in his night-gear, and lo! the left side of it was red. His eyes
+were wide with horror, his mouth was open, and his face was white as ice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stopped, looking at them, made as though to speak, and could not. Then,
+while they shrank from him in terror, he turned, and, walking like a drunken
+man, staggered from the hall down that passage which led to the store-chamber.
+The door stood wide, the shutter was wide, and on the floor, soaked in the
+dregs of ale, Skallagrim yet lay snoring, his axe in one hand and a cup in the
+other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric looked and understood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Awake, drunkard!&rdquo; he cried, in so terrible a voice that the room
+shook. &ldquo;Awake, and look upon thy work!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim sat up, yawning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Forsooth, my head swims,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Give me ale, I am
+thirsty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never wilt thou look on ale again, Skallagrim, when thou hast seen that
+which I have to show!&rdquo; said Eric, in the same dread voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Skallagrim rose to his feet and gaped upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What means this, lord? Is it time to ride? and say! why is thy shirt red
+with blood?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Follow me, drunkard, and look upon thy work!&rdquo; Eric said again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Skallagrim grew altogether sober, and grasping his axe, followed after
+Brighteyes, sore afraid of what he might see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went down the passage, past the high seat of the hall, till they came to
+the curtain of the shut bed; and after them followed the women. Eric seized the
+curtain in his hand, rent it from its fastenings, and cast it on the ground.
+Now the light flowed in and struck upon the bed. It fell upon the bed, it fell
+upon Whitefire&rsquo;s hilt and ran along the blade, it gleamed on a
+woman&rsquo;s snowy breast and golden hair, and shone in her staring
+eyes&mdash;a woman who lay stiff and cold upon the bed, the great sword fixed
+within her heart!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look upon thy work, drunkard!&rdquo; Eric cried again, while the women
+who peeped behind sent their long wail of woe echoing down the panelled hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken!&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;while thou didst lie wallowing in thy
+swine&rsquo;s sleep, foes crept across thy carcase, and this is their
+handiwork:&mdash;yonder she lies who was my bride!&mdash;now is Gudruda the
+Fair a death-wife who last night was my bride! This is thy work, drunkard! and
+now what meed for thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim looked. Then he spoke in a hoarse slow voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What meed, lord? But one&mdash;death!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then with one hand he covered his eyes and with the other held out his axe to
+Eric Brighteyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric took the axe, and while the women ran thence screaming, he whirled it
+thrice about his head. Then he smote down towards the skull of Skallagrim, but
+as he smote it seemed to him that a voice whispered in his ear: &ldquo;<i>Thy
+oath!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;and he remembered that he had sworn to slay no more,
+save for his own life&rsquo;s sake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mighty blow was falling and he might only do this&mdash;loose the axe
+before it clove Skallagrim in twain. He loosed and away the great axe flew. It
+passed over the head of Skallagrim, and sped like light across the wide hall,
+till it crashed through the panelling on the further side, and buried itself to
+the haft in the wall beyond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not for me to kill thee, drunkard! Go, die in thy drink!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I will kill myself!&rdquo; cried the Baresark, and, rushing across
+the hall he tore the great axe from its bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;perhaps there is yet a deed for thee to
+do. Then thou mayest die, if it pleases thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Skallagrim coming back, &ldquo;perchance there is still
+a deed to do!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, flinging down the axe, Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark fell upon the
+floor and wept.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric did not weep. Only he drew Whitefire from the heart of Gudruda and
+looked at it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art a strange sword, Whitefire,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;who slayest
+both friend and foe! Shame on thee, Whitefire! We swore our oath on thee,
+Whitefire, and thou hast cut its chain! Now I am minded to shatter thee.&rdquo;
+And as Eric looked on the great blade, lo! it hummed strangely in answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;First must thou be the death of some,&rsquo; thou sayest? Well,
+maybe, Whitefire! But never yet didst thou drink so sweet a life as hers who
+now lies dead, nor ever shalt again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he sheathed the sword, but neither then nor afterwards did he wipe the
+blood of Gudruda from its blade.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Last night a-marrying&mdash;to-day a-burying,&rdquo; said Eric, and he
+called to the women to bring spades. Then, having clothed himself, he went to
+the centre of the hall, and, brushing away the sand, broke the hard
+clay-flooring, dealing great blows on it with an axe. Now Skallagrim, seeing
+his purpose, came to him and took one of the spades, and together they laboured
+in silence till they had dug a grave a fathom deep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;here, in thine own hall where thou wast
+born and lived, Gudruda the Fair, thou shalt sleep at the last. And of
+Middalhof I say this: that none shall live there henceforth. It shall be
+haunted and accursed till the rafters rot and the walls fall in, making thy
+barrow, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now this indeed came to pass, for none have lived in Middalhof since the days
+of Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter. It has been ruined these many
+years, and now it is but a pile of stones.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+When the grave was dug, Eric washed himself and ate some food. Then he went in
+to where Gudruda lay dead, and bade the women make her ready for burial. This
+they did. When she was washed and clad in a clean white robe, Eric came to her,
+and with his own hand bound the Hell-shoes on her feet and closed her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was just then that a man came who said that the people of Gizur and of
+Swanhild had burned Gudruda&rsquo;s ship, driving the crew ashore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is well,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;We need the ship no more; now hath
+she whom it should bear wings with which to fly.&rdquo; Then he went in and sat
+down on the bed by the body of Gudruda, while Skallagrim crouched on the ground
+without, tearing at his beard and muttering. For the fierce heart of Skallagrim
+was broken because of that evil which his drunkenness had brought about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All day Eric sat thus, looking on his dead love&rsquo;s face, till the hour
+came round when he and Gudruda had drunk the bride-cup. Then he rose and kissed
+dead Gudruda on the lips, saying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did not look to part with thee thus, sweet! It is sad that thou
+shouldst have gone and left me here. Natheless, I shall soon follow on thy
+path.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he called aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art sober, drunkard?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim came and stood before him, saying nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take thou the feet of her whom thou didst bring to death, and I will
+take her head.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they lifted up Gudruda and bore her to the grave. Then Eric stood near the
+grave, and, taking dead Gudruda in his arms, looked upon her face by the light
+of the fire and of the candles that were set about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked thrice, then sang aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Long ago, when swept the snow-blast,<br />
+Close we clung and plighted troth.<br />
+Many a year, through storm and sword-song,<br />
+Sore I strove to win thee, sweet!<br />
+But last night I held thee, Fairest,<br />
+Lock&rsquo;d, a wife, in lover&rsquo;s arms.<br />
+Now, Gudruda, in thy death-rest,<br />
+Sleep thou soft till Eric come!<br />
+<br />
+&ldquo;Hence I go to wreak thy murder.<br />
+Hissing fire of flaming stead,<br />
+Groan of spear-carles, wail of women,<br />
+Soon shall startle through the night.<br />
+Then on Mosfell, Kirtle-Wearer,<br />
+Eric waits the face of Death.<br />
+Freed from weary life and sorrow,<br />
+Soon we&rsquo;ll kiss in Hela&rsquo;s halls!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he laid her in the grave, and, having shrouded a sheet over her, they
+filled it in together, hiding Gudruda the Fair from the sight of men for ever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Afterwards Eric armed himself, and this Skallagrim did also. Then he strode
+from the hall, and Skallagrim followed him. In the yard those horses were still
+tied that should have carried them to the ship, and on one was the saddle of
+Gudruda. She had ridden on this horse for many years, and loved it much, for it
+would follow her like a dog. Eric looked at him, then said aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gudruda may need thee where she is, Blackmane,&rdquo; for so the horse
+was named. &ldquo;At the least, none shall ride thee more!&rdquo; And he
+snatched the axe from the hand of Skallagrim and slew the horse at a blow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they rode away, heading for Coldback. The night was wild and windy, and
+the sky dark with scudding clouds, through which the moon peeped out at times.
+Eric looked up, then spoke to Skallagrim:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A good night for burning, drunkard!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, lord; the flames will fly briskly,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How many, thinkest thou, walked over thee, drunkard, when thou didst lie
+yonder in the ale?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know not,&rdquo; groaned Skallagrim; &ldquo;but I found this in the
+soft earth without: the print of a man&rsquo;s and a woman&rsquo;s feet; and
+this on the hill side: the track of two horses ridden hard.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gizur and Swanhild, drunkard,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Swanhild cast us
+into deep sleep by witchcraft, and Gizur dealt the blow. Better for him that he
+had never been born than that he has lived to deal that coward&rsquo;s
+blow!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Then they rode on, and when midnight was a little while gone they came to the
+stead at Coldback. Now this house was roofed with turves, and the windows were
+barred so that none could pass through them. Also in the yard were faggots of
+birch and a stack of hay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric and Skallagrim tied their horses in a dell that is to the north of the
+stead and crept up to the house. All was still; but a fire burnt in the hall,
+and, looking through a crack, Eric could see many men sleeping about it. Then
+he made signs to Skallagrim and together, very silently, they fetched hay and
+faggots, piling them against the north door of the house, for the wind blew
+from the north. Now Eric spoke to Skallagrim, bidding him stand, axe in hand,
+by the south door, and slay those who came out when the reek began to smart
+them: but he went himself to fire the pile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Brighteyes had made all things ready for the burning, it came into his
+mind that, perhaps, Gizur and Swanhild were not in the house. But he would not
+hold his hand for this, for he was mad with grief and rage. So once more he
+prepared for the deed, when again he heard a voice in his ear&mdash;the voice
+of Gudruda, and it seemed to say:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Thine oath, Eric! remember thine oath!</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he turned and the rage went out of his heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let them seek me on Mosfell,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I will not slay them
+secretly and by reek, the innocent and the guilty together.&rdquo; And he
+strode round the house to where Skallagrim stood at the south door, axe aloft
+and watching.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Does the fire burn, lord? I see no smoke,&rdquo; whispered Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, I have made none. I will shed no more blood, except to save my
+life. I leave vengeance to the Norns.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Skallagrim thought that Brighteyes was mad, but he dared say nothing. So
+they went to their horses, and when they found them, Eric rode back to the
+house. Presently they drew near, and Eric told Skallagrim to stay where he was,
+and riding on to the house, smote heavy blows upon the door, just as Skallagrim
+once had smitten, before Eric went up to Mosfell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild lay in her shut bed; but she could not sleep, because of what she
+saw in the eyes of Gudruda. Little may she ever sleep again, for when she shuts
+her eyes once more she sees that which was written in the dead eyes of Gudruda.
+So, as she lay, she heard the blows upon the door, and sprang frightened from
+her bed. Now there was tumult in the hall, for every man rose to his feet in
+fear, searching for his weapons. Again the loud knocks came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is the ghost of Eric!&rdquo; cried one, for Gizur had given out that
+Eric was dead at his hand in fair fight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Open!&rdquo; said Gizur, and they opened, and there, a little way from
+the door, sat Brighteyes on a horse, great and shadowy to see, and behind him
+was Skallagrim the Baresark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is the ghost of Eric!&rdquo; they cried again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am no ghost,&rdquo; said Brighteyes. &ldquo;I am no ghost, ye men of
+Swanhild. Tell me: is Gizur, the son of Ospakar, among you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gizur is here,&rdquo; said a voice; &ldquo;but he swore he slew thee
+last night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then he lied,&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;Gizur did not slay me&mdash;he
+murdered Gudruda the Fair as she lay asleep at my side. See!&rdquo; and he drew
+Whitefire from its scabbard and held it in the rays of the moon that now shone
+out between the cloud rifts. &ldquo;Whitefire is red with Gudruda&rsquo;s
+blood&mdash;Gudruda slaughtered in her sleep by Gizur&rsquo;s coward
+hand!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now men murmured, for this seemed to them the most shameful of all deeds. But
+Gizur, hearing, shrank back aghast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Listen again!&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;I was minded but now to burn you
+all as ye slept&mdash;ay, the firing is piled against the door. Still, I held
+my hand, for I have sworn to slay no more, except to save my life. Now I ride
+hence to Mosfell. Thither let Gizur come, Gizur the murderer, and Swanhild the
+witch, and with them all who will. There I will give them greeting, and wipe
+away the blood of Gudruda from Whitefire&rsquo;s blade.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fear not, Eric,&rdquo; cried Swanhild, &ldquo;I will come, and there
+thou mayst kill me, if thou canst.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Against thee, Swanhild,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;I lift no hand. Do thy
+worst, I leave thee to thy fate and the vengeance of the Norns. I am no
+woman-slayer. But to Gizur the murderer I say, come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he turned and went, and Skallagrim went with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Up, men, and cut Eric down!&rdquo; cried Gizur, seeking to cover his
+shame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But no man stirred.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap31"></a>CHAPTER XXXI<br />
+HOW ERIC SENT AWAY HIS MEN FROM MOSFELL</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric and Skallagrim came to Mosfell in safety, and during all that ride
+Brighteyes spoke no word. He rode in silence, and in silence Skallagrim rode
+after him. The heart of Skallagrim was broken because of the sorrow which his
+drunkenness had brought about, and the heart of Eric was buried in
+Gudruda&rsquo;s grave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Mosfell Eric found four of his own men, two of whom had been among those
+that the people of Gizur and Swanhild had driven from Gudruda&rsquo;s ship
+before they fired her. For no fight had been made on the ship. There also he
+found Jon, who had been loosed from his bands in the booth by one who heard his
+cries as he rode past. Now when Jon saw Brighteyes, he told him all, and fell
+at Eric&rsquo;s feet and wept because he had betrayed him in his fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric spoke no angry word to him. Stooping down he raised him, saying,
+&ldquo;Thou wast never overstout of heart, Jon, and thou art scarcely to be
+blamed because thou didst speak rather than die in torment, though perhaps some
+had chosen so to die and not to speak. Now I am a luckless man, and all things
+happen as they are fated, and the words of Atli come true, as was to be looked
+for. The Norns, against whom none may stand, did but work their will through
+thy mouth, Jon; so grieve no more for that which cannot be undone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he turned away, but Jon wept long and loudly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night Eric slept well and dreamed no dreams. But on the morrow he woke at
+dawn, and clothed himself and ate. Then he called his men together, and with
+them Skallagrim. They came and stood before him, and Eric, drawing Whitefire,
+leaned upon it and spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken, mates,&rdquo; he said: &ldquo;I know this, that my hours are
+short and death draws on. My years have been few and evil, and I cannot read
+the purpose of my life. She whom I loved has been slain by the witchcraft of
+Swanhild and the coward hand of Gizur the murderer, and I go to seek her where
+she waits. I am very glad to go, for now I have no more joy in life, being but
+a luckless man; it is an ill world, friends, and all the ways are red with
+blood. I have shed much blood, though but one life haunts me now at the last,
+and that is the life of Atli the Earl, for he was no match for my might and he
+is dead because of my sin. With my own blood I will wash away the blood of
+Atli, and then I seek another place, leaving nothing but a tale to be told in
+the ingle when fall the winter snows. For to this end we all come at the last,
+and it matters little if it find us at midday or at nightfall. We live in
+sorrow, we die in pain and darkness: for this is the curse that the Gods have
+laid upon men and each must taste it in his season. But I have sworn that no
+more men shall die for me. I will fight the last great fight alone; for I know
+this: I shall not easily be overcome, and with my fallen foes I will tread on
+Bifrost Bridge. Therefore, farewell! When the bones of Eric Brighteyes lie in
+their barrow, or are picked by ravens on the mountain side, Gizur will not
+trouble to hunt out those who clung to him, if indeed Gizur shall live to tell
+the tale. Nor need ye fear the hate of Swanhild, for she aims her spears at me
+alone. Go, therefore, and when I am dead, do not forget me, and do not seek to
+avenge me, for Death the avenger of all will find them also.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric&rsquo;s men heard and groaned aloud, saying that they would die with
+him, for they loved Eric one and all. Only Skallagrim said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Brighteyes spoke again: &ldquo;Hear me, comrades. If ye will not go, my
+blood will be on your heads, for I will ride out alone, and meet the men of
+Gizur in the plain and fall there fighting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then one by one they crept away to seek their horses in the dell. And each man
+as he went came to Eric and kissed his hand, then passed thence weeping. Jon
+was the last to go, except Skallagrim only, and he was so moved that he could
+not speak at all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was this Jon who, in after years, when he was grown very old, wandered from
+stead to stead telling the deeds of Eric Brighteyes, and always finding a
+welcome because of his tale, till at length, as he journeyed, he was overtaken
+by a snowstorm and buried in a drift. For Jon, who lacked much, had this gift:
+he had a skald&rsquo;s tongue. Men have always held that it was to the honour
+of Jon that he told the tale thus, hiding nothing, seeing that some of it is
+against himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now when all had gone, Eric looked at Skallagrim, who still stood near him, axe
+in hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wherefore goest thou not, drunkard?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Surely thou
+wilt find ale and mead in the vales or oversea. Here there is none. Hasten! I
+would be alone!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the great body of Skallagrim shook with grief and shame, and the red blood
+poured up beneath his dark sin. Then he spoke in a thick voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did not think to live to hear such words from the lips of Eric
+Brighteyes. They are well earned, yet it is unmanly of thee, lord, thus to
+taunt one who loves thee. I would sooner die as Swanhild said yonder thrall
+should die than live to listen to such words. I have sinned against thee,
+indeed, and because of my sin my heart is broken. Hast thou, then, never sinned
+that thou wouldst tear it living from my breast as eagles tear a foundered
+horse? Think on thine own sins, Eric, and pity mine! Taunt me thus once more or
+bid me go once more and I will go indeed! I will go thus&mdash;on the edge of
+yonder gulf thou didst overcome me by thy naked might, and there I swore fealty
+to thee, Eric Brighteyes. Many a year have we wandered side by side, and,
+standing back to back, have struck many a blow. I am minded to do this: to
+stand by thee in the last great fight that draws on and to die there with thee.
+I have loved no other man save thee, and I am too old to seek new lords. Yet,
+if still thou biddest me, I will go thus. Where I swore my oath to thee, there
+I will end it. For I will lay me down on the brink of yonder gulf, as once I
+lay when thy hand was at my throat, and call out that thou art no more my lord
+and I am no more thy thrall. Then I will roll into the depths beneath, and by
+this death of shame thou shalt be freed of me, Eric Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric looked at the great man&mdash;he looked long and sadly. Then he spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Skallagrim Lambstail, thou hast a true heart. I too have sinned, and now
+I put away thy sin, although Gudruda is dead through thee and I must die
+because of thee. Stay by me if thou wilt and let us fall together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Skallagrim came to Eric, and, kneeling before him, took his hands and
+kissed them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I am once more a man,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and I know this: we two
+shall die such a great death that it will be well to have lived to die
+it!&rdquo; and he arose and shouted:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;A! hai! A! hai! I see foes pass in pride!<br />
+A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!<br />
+Hear the song of the sword!<br />
+Whitefire is aloft&mdash;aloft!<br />
+Bare is the axe of the Baresark!<br />
+Croak, ye nesting ravens;<br />
+Flap your wings, ye eagles,<br />
+For bright is Mosfell&rsquo;s cave with blood!<br />
+Lap! lap! thou Grey Wolf,<br />
+Laugh aloud, Odin!<br />
+<br />
+&ldquo;Laugh till shake the golden doors;<br />
+Heroes&rsquo; feet are set on Bifrost,<br />
+Open, ye hundred gates!<br />
+A! hai! A! hai! red runs the fray!<br />
+A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Skallagrim turned and went to clean his harness and the golden helm of
+Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now at Coldback Gizur spoke with Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast brought the greatest shame upon me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for
+thou hast caused me to slay a sleeping woman. Knowest thou that my own men will
+scarcely speak with me? I have come to this evil pass, through love of thee,
+that I have slain a sleeping woman!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was not my fault that thou didst kill Gudruda,&rdquo; answered
+Swanhild; &ldquo;surely I thought it was Eric whom thy sword pierced! I have
+not sought thy love, Gizur, and I say this to thee: go, if thou wilt, and leave
+me alone!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gizur looked at her, and was minded to go; but, as Swanhild knew well, she
+held him too fast in the net of her witcheries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would go, if I might go!&rdquo; answered Gizur; &ldquo;but I am bound
+to thee for good or evil, since it is fated that I shall wed thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou wilt never wed me while Eric lives,&rdquo; said Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now she spoke thus truthfully, and by chance, as it were, not as driving Gizur
+on to slay Eric&mdash;for, now that Gudruda was dead, she was in two minds as
+to this matter, since, if she might, she still desired to take Eric to
+herself&mdash;but meaning that while Eric lived she would wed no other man. But
+Gizur took it otherwise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eric shall certainly die if I may bring it about,&rdquo; he answered,
+and went to speak with his men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now all were gathered in the yard at Coldback, and that was a great company.
+But their looks were heavy because of the shame that Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s
+son, had brought upon them by the murder of Gudruda in her sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hearken, comrades!&rdquo; said Gizur: &ldquo;great shame is come upon me
+because of a deed that I have done unwittingly, for I aimed at the eagle Eric
+and I have slain the swan Gudruda.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then a certain old viking in the company, named Ketel, whom Gizur had hired for
+the slaying of Eric, spoke:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Man or woman, it is a niddering deed to kill folk in their sleep, Gizur!
+It is murder, and no less, and small luck can be hoped for from the
+stroke.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gizur felt that his people looked on him askance and heavily, and knew that
+it would be hard to show them that he was driven to this deed against his will,
+and by the witchcraft of Swanhild. So, as was his nature, he turned to guile
+for shelter, like a fox to his hole, and spoke to them with the tongue of a
+lawman; for Gizur had great skill in speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That tale was not all true which Eric Brighteyes told you,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;He was mad with grief, and moreover it seems that he slept, and
+only woke to find Gudruda dead. It came about thus: I stood with the lady
+Swanhild, and was about to call aloud on Eric to arm himself and come forth and
+meet me face to face&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, lord, methinks thou hadst never met another foe,&rdquo; quoth the
+viking Ketel who had spoken first.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When of a sudden,&rdquo; went on Gizur, taking no note of Ketel&rsquo;s
+words, &ldquo;one clothed in white sprang from the bed and rushed on me. Then
+I, thinking that it was Eric, lifted sword, not to smite, but to ward him away;
+but the linen-wearer met the sword and fell down dead. Then I fled, fearing
+lest men should wake and trap us, and that is all the tale. It was no fault of
+mine if Gudruda died upon the sword.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus he spoke, but still men looked doubtfully upon him, for his eye was the
+eye of a liar&mdash;and Eric, as they knew, did not lie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is hard to find the truth between lawman&rsquo;s brain and
+tongue,&rdquo; said the old viking Ketel. &ldquo;Eric is no lawman, but a true
+man, and he sang another song. I would slay Eric indeed, for between him and me
+there is a blood-feud, since my brother died at his hand when, with Whitefire
+for a crook, Brighteyes drove armed men like sheep down the hall of
+Middalhof&mdash;ay and swordless, slew Ospakar. Yet I say that Eric is a true
+man, and, whether or no thou art true, Gizur the Lawman, that thou knowest
+best&mdash;thou and Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa&rsquo;s daughter. If thou
+didst slay Gudruda as thou tellest, say, how came Gudruda&rsquo;s blood on
+Whitefire&rsquo;s blade? How did it chance, Gizur, that thou heldest Whitefire
+in thy hand and not thine own sword? Now I tell thee this: either thou shalt go
+up against Eric and clear thyself by blows, or I leave thee; and methinks there
+are others among this company who will do the same, for we have no wish to be
+partners with murderers and their wickedness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, a good word!&rdquo; said many who stood by. &ldquo;Let Gizur go up
+with us to Mosfell, and there stand face to face with Eric and clear himself by
+blows.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I ask no more,&rdquo; said Gizur; &ldquo;we will ride to-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But much more shalt thou get, liar,&rdquo; quoth Ketel to himself,
+&ldquo;for that hour when thou lookest once again on Whitefire shall be thy
+last!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+So Gizur and Swanhild made ready to go up against Eric. That day they rode away
+with a great company, a hundred and one in all, and this was their plan. They
+sent six men with that thrall who had shown them the secret path, bidding him
+guide them to the mountain-top. Then, when they were come thither, and heard
+the shouts of those who sought to gain the platform from the south, they were
+to watch till Eric and his folk came out from the cave, and shoot them with
+arrows from above or crush them with stones. But if perchance Eric left the
+platform and came to meet his foes in the narrow pass, then they must let
+themselves down with ropes from the height above, and, creeping after him round
+the rock, must smite him in the back. Moreover, in secret, Gizur promised a
+great reward of ten hundreds in silver to him who should kill Eric, for he did
+not long to stand face to face with him alone. Swanhild also in secret made
+promise of reward to those who should bring Eric to her, bound, but living; and
+she bade them do this&mdash;to bear him down with shields and tie him with
+ropes.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+So they rode away, the seven who should climb the mountain from behind going
+first, and on the morrow morning they crossed the sand and came to Mosfell.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap32"></a>CHAPTER XXXII<br />
+HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM GREW FEY</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now the night came down upon Mosfell, and of all nights this was the strangest.
+The air was quiet and heavy, yet no rain fell. It was so silent, moreover,
+that, did a stone slip upon the mountain side or a horse neigh far off on the
+plains, the sound of it crept up the fell and was echoed from the crags.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric and Skallagrim sat together on the open space of rock that is before the
+cave, and great heaviness and fear came into their hearts, so that they had no
+desire to sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Methinks the night is ghost-ridden,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and I am
+fey, for I grow cold, and it seems to me that one strokes my hair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is ghost-ridden, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim. &ldquo;Trolls are
+abroad, and the God-kind gather to see Eric die.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a while they sat in silence, then suddenly the mountain heaved up gently
+beneath them. Thrice it seemed to heave like a woman&rsquo;s breast, and left
+them frightened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now the dwarf-folk come from their caves,&rdquo; quoth Skallagrim,
+&ldquo;and great deeds may be looked for, since they are not drawn to the upper
+earth by a little thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then once more they sat silent; and thick darkness came down upon the mountain,
+hiding the stars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look,&rdquo; said Eric of a sudden, and he pointed to Hecla.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim looked, and lo! the snowy dome of Hecla was aglow with a rosy flame
+like the light of dawn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Winter lights,&rdquo; said Lambstail, shuddering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Death lights!&rdquo; answered Eric. &ldquo;Look again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They looked, and behold! in the rosy glow there sat three giant forms of fire,
+and their shapes were the shapes of women. Before them was a loom of blackness
+that stretched from earth to sky, and they wove at it with threads of flame.
+They were splendid and terrible to see. Their hair streamed behind them like
+meteor flames, their eyes shone like lightning, and their breasts gleamed like
+the polished bucklers of the gods. They wove fiercely at the loom of blackness,
+and as they wove they sang. The voice of the one was as the wind whistling
+through the pines; the voice of the other was as the sound of rain hissing on
+deep waters; and the voice of the third was as the moan of the sea. They wove
+fearfully and they sang loudly, but what they sang might not be known. Now the
+web grew and the woof grew, and a picture came upon the loom&mdash;a great
+picture written in fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Behold! it was the semblance of a storm-awakened sea, and a giant ship fled
+before the gale&mdash;a dragon of war, and in the ship were piled the corses of
+men, and on these lay another corse, as one lies upon a bed. They looked, and
+the face of the corse grew bright. It was the face of Eric, and his head rested
+upon the dead heart of Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Clinging to each other, Eric and Skallagrim saw the sight of fear that was
+written on the loom of the Norns. They saw it for a breath. Then, with a laugh
+like the wail of wolves, the shapes of fire sprang up and rent the web asunder.
+Then the first passed upward to the sky, the second southward towards
+Middalhof, but the third swept over Mosfell, so that the brightness of her
+flaming form shone on the rock where they sat by the cave, and the lightning of
+her eyes was mirrored in the byrnie of Skallagrim and on Eric&rsquo;s golden
+helm. She swept past, pointing downwards as she went, and lo! she was gone, and
+once more darkness and silence lay upon the earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now this sight was seen of Jon the thrall also, and he told it in his story of
+the deeds of Eric. For Jon lay hid in a secret place on Mosfell, waiting for
+tidings of what came to pass.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+For a while Eric and Skallagrim clung to each other. Then Skallagrim spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have seen the Valkyries,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;we have seen the Norns&mdash;who are
+come to warn us of our doom! We shall die to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At the least,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;we shall not die alone: we
+had a goodly bed on yonder goblin ship, and all of our own slaying methinks. It
+is not so ill to die thus, lord!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not so ill!&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;and yet I am weary of blood and
+war, of glory and of my strength. Now I desire rest alone. Light fire&mdash;I
+can bear this darkness no longer; the marrow freezes in my bones.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fire can be seen of foes,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It matters little now,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;we are feyfolk.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Skallagrim lighted the fire, piling much brushwood and dry turf over it,
+till presently it burnt up brightly, throwing light on all the space of rock,
+and heavy shadows against the cliff behind. They sat thus a while in the light
+of the flames, looking towards the deep gulf, till suddenly there came a sound
+as of one who climbed the gulf.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who comes now, climbing where no man may pass?&rdquo; cried Eric,
+seizing Whitefire and springing to his feet. Presently he sank down again with
+white face and staring eyes, and pointed at the edge of the cliff. And as he
+pointed, the neck of a man rose in the shadow above the brink, and the hands of
+a man grasped the rock. But there was no head on the neck. The shape of the
+headless man drew itself slowly over the brink, it walked slowly into the light
+towards the fire, then sat itself down in the glare of the flames, which shrank
+away from it as from a draught of wind. Pale with terror, Eric and Skallagrim
+looked on the headless thing and knew it. It was the wraith of the Baresark
+that Brighteyes had slain&mdash;the first of all the men he slew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is my mate, Eric, whom thou didst kill years ago and whose severed
+head spoke with thee!&rdquo; gasped Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is he, sure enough!&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but where may his head
+be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perchance the head will come,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim. &ldquo;He is
+an evil sight to see, surely. Say, lord, shall I fall upon him, though I love
+not the task?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, Skallagrim, let him bide; he does but come to warn us of our fate.
+Moreover, ghosts can only be laid in one way&mdash;by the hewing off of the
+head and the laying of it at the thigh. But this one has no head to hew.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now as he spoke the headless man turned his neck as though to look. Once more
+there came the sound of feet and lo! men marched in from the darkness on either
+side. Eric and Skallagrim looked up and knew them. They were those of
+Ospakar&rsquo;s folk whom they had slain on Horse-Head Heights; all their
+wounds were on them and in front of them marched Mord, Ospakar&rsquo;s son. The
+ghosts gazed upon Eric and Skallagrim with cold dead eyes, then they too sat
+down by the fire. Now once more there came the sound of feet, and from every
+side men poured in who had died at the hands of Eric and Skallagrim. First came
+those who fell on that ship of Ospakar&rsquo;s which Eric sank by Westmans;
+then the crew of the Raven who had perished upon the sea-path. Even as the man
+died, so did each ghost come. Some had been drowned and their harness dripped
+water! Some had died of spear-thrusts and the spears were yet fixed in their
+breasts! Some had fallen beneath the flash of Whitefire and the weight of the
+axe of Skallagrim, and there they sat, looking on their wide wounds!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then came more and more. There were those whom Eric and Skallagrim had slain
+upon the seas, those who had fallen before them in the English wars, and all
+that company who had been drowned in the waters of the Pentland Firth when the
+witchcraft of Swanhild had brought the Gudruda to her wreck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now here we have a goodly crew,&rdquo; said Eric at length. &ldquo;Is it
+done, thinkest thou, or will Mosfell send forth more dead?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he spoke the wraith of a grey-headed man drew near. He had but one arm, for
+the other was hewn from him, and the byrnie on his left side was red with
+blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Welcome, Earl Atli!&rdquo; cried Eric. &ldquo;Sit thou over against me,
+who to-morrow shall be with thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ghost of the Earl seated itself and looked on Eric with sad eyes, but it
+spake never a word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then came another company, and at their head stalked black Ospakar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;These be they who died at Middalhof,&rdquo; cried Eric. &ldquo;Welcome,
+Ospakar! that marriage-feast of thine went ill!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now methinks we are overdone with trolls,&rdquo; said Skallagrim;
+&ldquo;but see! here come more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he spoke, Hall of Lithdale came, and with him Koll the Half-witted, and
+others. And so it went on till all the men whom Eric and Skallagrim had slain,
+or who had died because of them, or at their side, were gathered in deep ranks
+before them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now it is surely done,&rdquo; said Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is yet a space,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, pointing to the other side
+of the fire, &ldquo;and Hell holds many dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even as the words left his lips there came a noise of the galloping of
+horse&rsquo;s hoofs, and one clad in white rode up. It was a woman, for her
+golden hair flowed down about her white arms. Then she slid from the horse and
+stood in the light of the fire, and behold! her white robe was red with blood,
+a great sword was set in her heart, and the face and eyes were the face and
+eyes of Gudruda the Fair, and the horse she rode was Blackmane, that Eric had
+slain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now when Brighteyes saw her he gave a great cry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Greeting, sweet!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I am no longer afraid, since
+thou comest to bear me company. Thou art dear to my sight&mdash;ay even in yon
+death-sheet. Greeting, sweet, my May! I laid thee stiff and cold in the earth
+at Middalhof, but, like a loving wife, thou hast burst thy bonds, and art come
+to save me from the grip of trolls. Thou art welcome, Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s
+daughter! Come, wife, sit thou at my side.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ghost of Gudruda spake no word. She walked through the fire towards him,
+and the flames went out beneath her feet, to burn up again when she had passed.
+Then she sat down over against Eric and looked on him with wide and tender
+eyes. Thrice he stretched out his arms to clasp her, but thrice their strength
+left them and they fell back to his side. It was as though they struck a wall
+of ice and were numbed by the bitter cold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look, here are more,&rdquo; groaned Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric looked, and lo! the empty space to the left of the fire was filled
+with shadowy shapes like shapes of mist. Amongst them was Gizur,
+Ospakar&rsquo;s son, and many a man of his company. There, too, was Swanhild,
+Groa&rsquo;s daughter, and a toad nestled in her breast. She looked with wide
+eyes upon the eyes of dead Gudruda&rsquo;s ghost, that seemed not to see her,
+and a stare of fear was set on her lovely face. Nor was this all; for there,
+before that shadowy throng, stood two great shapes clad in their harness, and
+one was the shape of Eric and one the shape of Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus, being yet alive, did these two look upon their own wraiths!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Eric and Skallagrim cried out aloud and their brains swam and their senses
+left them, so that they swooned.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+When they opened their eyes and life came back to them the fire was dead, and
+it was day. Nor was there any sign of that company which had been gathered on
+the rock before them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Skallagrim,&rdquo; quoth Eric, &ldquo;it seems that I have dreamed a
+strange dream&mdash;a most strange dream of Norns and trolls!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell me thy dream, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Eric told all the vision, and the Baresark listened in silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was no dream, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;for I myself have
+seen the same things. Now this is in my mind, that yonder sun is the last that
+we shall see, for we have beheld the death-shadows. All those who were gathered
+here last night wait to welcome us on Bifrost Bridge. And the mist-shapes who
+sat there, amongst whom our wraiths were numbered, are the shapes of those who
+shall die in the great fight to-day. For days are fled and we are sped!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would not have it otherwise,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;We have been
+greatly honoured of the Gods, and of the ghost-kind that are around us and
+above us. Now let us make ready to die as becomes men who have never turned
+back to blow, for the end of the story should fit the beginning, and of us
+there is a tale to tell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A good word, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim: &ldquo;I have struck few
+strokes to be shamed of, and I do not fear to tread Bifrost Bridge in thy
+company. Now we will wash ourselves and eat, so that our strength may be whole
+in us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they washed themselves with water, and ate merrily, and for the first time
+for many months Eric was merry. For now that the end was at hand his heart grew
+light within him. And when they had put the desire of food from them, and
+buckled on their harness, they looked out from their mountain height, and saw a
+cloud of dust rise in the desert plain of black sand beneath, and through it
+the sheen of spears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here come those of whom, if there is truth in visions, some few shall
+never go back again,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Now, what counsel hast thou,
+Skallagrim? Where shall we meet them? Here on the space of rock, or yonder in
+the deep way of the cliff?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My counsel is that we meet them here,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and
+cut them down one by one as they try to turn the rock. They can scarcely come
+at us to slay us here so long as our arms have strength to smite.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yet they will come, though I know not how,&rdquo; answered Eric,
+&ldquo;for I am sure of this, that our death lies before us. Here, then, we
+will meet them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the cloud of dust drew nearer, and they saw that this was a great company
+which came up against them. At the foot of the fell the men stayed and rested a
+while, and it was not till afternoon that they began to climb the mountain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Night will be at hand before the game is played,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+&ldquo;See, they climb slowly, saving their strength, and yonder among them is
+Swanhild in a purple cloak.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, night will be at hand, Skallagrim&mdash;a last long night! A hundred
+to two&mdash;the odds are heavy; yet some shall wish them heavier. Now let us
+bind on our helms.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Meanwhile Gizur and his folk crept up the paths from below. Now that thrall who
+knew the secret way had gone on with six chosen men, and already they climbed
+the watercourse and drew near to the flat crest of the fell. But Eric and
+Skallagrim knew nothing of this. So they sat down by the turning place that is
+over the gulf and waited, singing of the taking of the Raven and of the slaying
+in the stead at Middalhof, and telling tales of deeds that they had done. And
+the thrall and his six men climbed on till at length they gained the crest of
+the fell, and, looking over, saw Eric and Skallagrim beneath them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The birds are in the snare, and hark! they sing,&rdquo; said the thrall;
+&ldquo;now bring rocks and be silent.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Gizur and his people, having learned that Eric and Skallagrim were alone
+upon the mountain, pushed on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have not much to fear from two men,&rdquo; said Gizur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That we shall learn presently,&rdquo; answered Swanhild. &ldquo;I tell
+thee this, that I saw strange sights last night, though I did not sleep. I may
+sleep little now that Gudruda is dead, for that which I saw in her eyes haunts
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they went on, and the face of Gizur grew white with fear.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap33"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII<br />
+HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM FOUGHT THEIR LAST GREAT FIGHT</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now the thrall and those with him on the crest of the fell heard the murmur of
+the company of Gizur and Swanhild as they won the mountain side, though they
+could not see them because of the rocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now it is time to begin and knock these birds from their perch,&rdquo;
+said the thrall, &ldquo;for that is an awkward corner for our folk to turn with
+Whitefire and the axe of Skallagrim waiting on the farther side.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he balanced a great stone, as heavy as three men could lift, on the brow of
+the rock, and aimed it. Then he pushed and let it go. It smote the platform
+beneath with a crash, two fathoms behind the spot where Eric and Skallagrim
+sat. Then it flew into the air, and, just as Brighteyes turned at the sound, it
+struck the wings of his helm, and, bursting the straps, tore the golden
+helm-piece from his head and carried it away into the gulf beneath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Skallagrim looked up and saw what had come about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They have gained the crest of the fell,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Now we
+must fly into the cave or down the narrow way and hold it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Down the narrow way, then,&rdquo; said Eric, and while rocks, spears and
+arrows rushed between and around them, they stepped on to the stone and won the
+path beyond. It was clear, for Gizur&rsquo;s folk had not yet come, and they
+ran nearly to the mouth of it, where there was a bend in the way, and stood
+there side by side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou wast at death&rsquo;s door then, lord!&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Head-piece is not head,&rdquo; answered Eric; &ldquo;but I wonder how
+they won the crest of the fell. I have never heard tell of any path by which it
+might be gained.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There they are at the least,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;Now this is
+my will, that thou shouldst take my helm. I am Baresark and put little trust in
+harness, but rather in my axe and strength alone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not do that,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Listen: I hear them
+come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the tumult of voices and the tramp of feet grew clearer, and after a
+while Gizur, Swanhild, and the men of their following turned the corner of the
+narrow way, and lo! there before them&mdash;ay within three paces of
+them&mdash;stood Eric and Skallagrim shoulder to shoulder, and the light poured
+down upon them from above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were terrible to see, and the light shone brightly on Eric&rsquo;s golden
+hair and Whitefire&rsquo;s flashing blade, and the shadows lay dark on the
+black helm of Skallagrim and in the fierce black eyes beneath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Back surged Gizur and those with him. Skallagrim would have sprung upon them,
+but Eric caught him by the arm, saying: &ldquo;A truce to thy Baresark ways.
+Rush not and move not! Let us stand here till they overwhelm us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now those behind Gizur cried out to know what ailed them that they pushed back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only this,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;that Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim
+Lambstail stand like two grey wolves and hold the narrow way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now we shall have fighting worth the telling of,&rdquo; quoth Ketel the
+viking. &ldquo;On, Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, and cut them down!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; said Swanhild; &ldquo;I will speak with Eric first,&rdquo;
+and, together with Gizur and Ketel, she passed round the corner of the path and
+came face to face with those who stood at bay there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now yield, Eric,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Foes are behind and before
+thee. Thou art trapped, and hast little chance of life. Yield thee, I say, with
+thy black wolf-hound, so perchance thou mayest find mercy even at the hands of
+her whose husband thou didst wrong and slay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not my way to yield, lady,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;and still
+less perchance is it the way of Skallagrim. Least of all will we yield to thee
+who, after working many ills, didst throw me in a witch-sleep, and to him who
+slew the wife sleeping at my side. Hearken, Swanhild: here we stand, awaiting
+death, nor will we take mercy from thy hand. For know this, we shall not die
+alone. Last night as we sat on Mosfell we saw the Norns weave our web of fate
+upon their loom of darkness. They sat on Helca&rsquo;s dome and wove their
+pictures in living flame, then rent the web and flew upward and southward and
+westward, crying our doom to sky and earth and sea. Last night as we sat by the
+fire on Mosfell all the company of the dead were gathered round us&mdash;ay!
+and all the company of those who shall die to-day. Thou wast there, Gizur the
+murderer, Ospakar&rsquo;s son! thou wast there, Swanhild the witch,
+Groa&rsquo;s daughter! thou wast there, Ketel Viking! with many another man;
+and there were we two also. Valkyries have kissed us and death draws near.
+Therefore, talk no more, but come and make an end. Greeting, Gizur, thou
+woman-murderer! Draw nigh! draw nigh! Out sword! up shield! and on, thou son of
+Ospakar!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Swanhild spoke no more, and Gizur had no word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;On, Gizur! Eric calls thee,&rdquo; quoth Ketel Viking; but Gizur slunk
+back, not forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Ketel grew mad with rage and shame. He called to the men, and they drew
+near, as many as might, and looked doubtfully at the pair who stood before them
+like rocks upon a plain. Eric laughed aloud and Skallagrim gnawed the edge of
+his shield. Eric laughed aloud and the sound of his laughter ran up the rocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are but two,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;and ye are many! Is there never
+a pair among you will stand face to face with a Baresark and a helmless
+man?&rdquo; and he tossed Whitefire high into the air and caught it by the
+hilt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Ketel and another man of his following sprang forward with an oath, and
+their axes thundered loud on the shields of Eric and of Skallagrim. But
+Whitefire flickered up and the axe of Skallagrim crashed, and at once their
+knees were loosened, so that they sank down dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;More men! more men!&rdquo; cried Eric. &ldquo;These were brave, but
+their might was little. More men for the Grey Wolf&rsquo;s maw!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Swanhild lashed the folk with bitter words, and two of them sprang on.
+They sprang on like hounds upon a deer at bay, and they rolled back as gored
+hounds roll from the deer&rsquo;s horns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;More men! more men!&rdquo; cried Eric. &ldquo;Here lie but four and a
+hundred press behind. Now he shall win great honour who lays Brighteyes low and
+brings down the helm of Skallagrim.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again two came on, but they found no luck, for presently they also were down
+upon the bodies of those who went before. Now none could be found to come up
+against the pair, for they fought like Baldur and Thor, and none could touch
+them, and no harness might withstand the weight of their blows that shore
+through shield and helm and byrnie, deep to the bone beneath. Then Eric and
+Skallagrim leaned upon their weapons and mocked their foes, while these cursed
+and tore their beards with rage and shame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it is to be told that when the thrall and those with him saw Eric and
+Skallagrim had escaped their rocks and spears, they took counsel, and the end
+of it was that they slid down a rope to the platform that is under the crest of
+the fell. Thence, though they could see nothing, they could hear the clang of
+blows and the shouts of those who fought and fell&mdash;ay! and the mocking of
+Eric and of Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now it goes thus,&rdquo; said the thrall, who was a cunning man:
+&ldquo;Eric and Skallagrim hold the narrow way and none can stand against them.
+This, then, is my rede: that we turn the rock and take them in the back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His fellows thought this a good saying, and one by one they stood upon the
+little rock and won the narrow way. They crept along this till they were near
+to Eric and Skallagrim. Now Swanhild, looking up, saw them and started.
+Skallagrim noted this and glanced over his shoulder, and that not too soon,
+for, as he looked, the thrall lifted sword to smite the head of Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a shout of &ldquo;Back to back!&rdquo; the Baresark swung round and ere
+ever the sword might fall his axe was buried deep in the thrall&rsquo;s breast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now we must cut our path through them,&rdquo; said Skallagrim,
+&ldquo;and, if it may be, win the space that is before the cave. Keep them off
+in front, and I will mind these mannikins.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Gizur&rsquo;s folk, seeing what had come about, took heart and fell upon
+Eric with a rush, and those who were with the dead thrall rushed at Skallagrim,
+and there began such a fight as has not been known in Iceland. But the way was
+so narrow that scarce more than one man could come to each of them at a time.
+And so fierce and true were the blows of Eric and Skallagrim that of those who
+came on few went back. Down they fell, and where they fell they died, and for
+every man who died Eric and Skallagrim won a pace towards the point of rock.
+Whitefire flamed so swift and swept so wide that it seemed to Swanhild,
+watching, as though three swords were aloft at once, and the axe of Skallagrim
+thundered down like the axe of a woodman against a tree, and those groaned on
+whom it fell as groans a falling tree. Now the shields of these twain were hewn
+through and through, and cast away, and their blood ran from many wounds.
+Still, their life was whole in them and they plied axe and sword with both
+hands. And ever men fell, and ever, fighting hard, they drew nearer to the
+point of rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it was won, and now all the company that came with the thrall from over the
+mountain brow were dead or sorely wounded at the hands of black Skallagrim. Lo!
+one springs on Eric, and Gizur creeps behind him. Whitefire leaps to meet the
+man and does not leap in vain; but Gizur smites a coward blow at Eric&rsquo;s
+uncovered head, and wounds him sorely, so that he falls to his knee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now I am smitten to the death, Skallagrim,&rdquo; cries Eric. &ldquo;Win
+the rock and leave me.&rdquo; Yet he rises from his knee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Skallagrim turns, red with blood and terrible to see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;Tis but a scratch. Climb thou the rock&mdash;I follow,&rdquo; he
+says, and, screaming like a horse, with weapon aloft he leaps alone upon the
+foe. They break before the Baresark rush; they break, they fall&mdash;they are
+cloven by Baresark axe and trodden of Baresark feet! They roll back, leaving
+the way clear&mdash;save for the dead. Then Skallagrim follows Brighteyes to
+the rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Eric wipes the gore from his eyes and sees. Then, slowly, and with a
+reeling brain, he steps down upon the giddy point. He goes near to falling, yet
+does not fall, for now he lies upon the open space, and creeps on hands and
+knees to the rock-wall that is by the cave, and sits resting his back against
+it, Whitefire on his knee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before he is there, Skallagrim staggers to his side with a rush.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now we have time to breathe, lord,&rdquo; he gasps. &ldquo;See, here is
+water,&rdquo; and he takes a pitcher that stands by, and gives Eric to drink
+from the pool, then drinks himself and pours the rest of the water on
+Eric&rsquo;s wound. Then new life comes to them, and they both stand on their
+feet and win back their breath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have not done so badly!&rdquo; says Skallagrim, &ldquo;and we are
+still a match for one or two. See, they come! Say, where shall we meet them,
+lord?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here,&rdquo; quoth Eric; &ldquo;I cannot stand well upon my legs without
+the help of the rock. Now I am all unmeet for fight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yet shall this last stand of thine be sung of!&rdquo; says Skallagrim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now finding none to stay them, the men of Gizur climb one by one upon the rock
+and win the space that is beyond. Swanhild goes first of all, because she knows
+well that Eric will not harm her, and after her come Gizur and the others. But
+many do not come, for they will lift sword no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild draws near and looks on Eric and mocks him in the fierceness of
+her heart and the rage of her wolf-love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; she says, &ldquo;now are Brighteyes dim eyes! What! weepest
+thou, Eric?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Swanhild,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;I weep tears of blood for those
+whom thou hast brought to doom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She draws nearer and speaks low to him: &ldquo;Hearken, Eric. Yield thee! Thou
+hast done enough for honour, and thou art not smitten to the death of yonder
+cowardly hound. Yield and I will nurse thee back to health and bear thee hence,
+and together we will forget our hates and woes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not twice may a man lie in a witch&rsquo;s bed,&rdquo; said Eric,
+&ldquo;and my troth is plighted to other than thee, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She is dead,&rdquo; says Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, she is dead, Swanhild; and I go to seek her amongst the
+dead&mdash;I go to seek her and to find her!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the face of Swanhild grew fierce as the winter sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast put me away for the last time, Eric! Now thou shalt die, as I
+have promised thee and as I promised Gudruda the Fair!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So shall I the more quickly find Gudruda and lose sight of thy evil
+face, Swanhild the harlot! Swanhild the murderess! Swanhild the witch! For I
+know this: thou shalt not escape!&mdash;thy doom draws on also!&mdash;and
+haunted and accursed shalt thou be for ever! Fare thee well, Swanhild; we shall
+meet no more, and the hour comes when thou shalt grieve that thou wast ever
+born!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Swanhild turned and called to the folk: &ldquo;Come, cut down these outlaw
+rogues and make an end. Come, cut them down, for night draws on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then once more the men of Gizur closed in upon them. Eric smote thrice and
+thrice the blow went home, then he could smite no more, for his strength was
+spent with toil and wounds, and he sank upon the ground. For a while Skallagrim
+stood over him like a she-bear o&rsquo;er her young and held the mob at bay.
+Then Gizur, watching, cast a spear at Eric. It entered his side through a cleft
+in his byrnie and pierced him deep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am sped, Skallagrim Lambstail,&rdquo; cried Eric in a loud voice, and
+all men drew back to see giant Brighteyes die. Now his head fell against the
+rock and his eyes closed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Skallagrim, stooping, drew out the spear and kissed Eric on the forehead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Iceland shall never
+see such another man, and few have died so great a death. Tarry a while, lord;
+tarry a while&mdash;I come&mdash;I come!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then crying &ldquo;<i>Eric! Eric!</i>&rdquo; the Baresark fit took him, and
+once more and for the last time Skallagrim rushed screaming upon the foe, and
+once more they rolled to earth before him. To and fro he rushed, dealing great
+blows, and ever as he went they stabbed and cut and thrust at his side and
+back, for they dared not stand before him, till he bled from a hundred wounds.
+Now, having slain three more men, and wounded two others, Skallagrim might no
+more. He stood a moment swaying to and fro, then let his axe drop, threw his
+arms high above him, and with one loud cry of &ldquo;<i>Eric!</i>&rdquo; fell
+as a rock falls&mdash;dead upon the dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Eric was not yet gone. He opened his eyes and saw the death of Skallagrim
+and smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well ended, Lambstail!&rdquo; he said in a faint voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lo!&rdquo; cried Gizur, &ldquo;yon outlawed hound still lives! Now I
+will do a needful task and make an end of him, and so shall Ospakar&rsquo;s
+sword come back to Ospakar&rsquo;s son.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art wondrous brave now that the bear lies dying!&rdquo; said
+Swanhild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it seemed that Eric heard the words, for suddenly his might came back to
+him, and he staggered to his knees and thence to his feet. Then, as folk fall
+from him, with all his strength he whirls Whitefire round his head till it
+shines like a wheel of fire. &ldquo;Thy service is done and thou art clean of
+Gudruda&rsquo;s blood&mdash;go back to those who forged thee!&rdquo; Brighteyes
+cries, and casts Whitefire from him towards the gulf.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Away speeds the great blade, flashing like lightning through the rays of the
+setting sun, and behold! as men watch it is gone&mdash;gone in mid-air!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since that day no such sword as Whitefire has been known in Iceland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now slay thou me, Gizur,&rdquo; says the dying Eric.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gizur comes on with little eagerness, and Eric cries aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Swordless I slew thy father!&mdash;swordless, shieldless, and wounded to
+the death I will yet slay <i>thee</i>, Gizur the Murderer!&rdquo; and with a
+loud cry he staggered towards him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gizur smites him with his sword, but Eric does not stay, and while men wait and
+wonder, Brighteyes sweeps him into his great arms&mdash;ay, sweeps him up,
+lifts him from the ground and reels on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eric reels on to the brink of the gulf. Gizur sees his purpose, struggles and
+shrieks aloud. But the strength of the dying Eric is more than the strength of
+Gizur. Now Brighteyes stands on the dizzy edge and the light of the passing sun
+flames about his head. And now, bearing Gizur with him, he hurls himself out
+into the gulf, and lo! the sun sinks!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Men stand wondering, but Swanhild cries aloud:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nobly done, Eric! nobly done! So I would have seen thee die who of all
+men wast the first!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+This then was the end of Eric Brighteyes the Unlucky, who of all warriors that
+have lived in Iceland was the mightiest, the goodliest, and the best beloved of
+women and of those who clung to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, on the morrow, Swanhild caused the body of Eric to be searched for in the
+cleft, and there they found it, floating in water and with the dead Gizur yet
+clasped in its bear-grip. Then she cleansed it and clothed it again in its rent
+armour, and bound on the Hell-shoes, and it was carried on horses to the
+sea-side, and with it were borne the bodies of Skallagrim Lambstail the
+Baresark, Eric&rsquo;s thrall, and of all those men whom they had slain in the
+last great fight on Mosfell, that is now named Ericsfell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Swanhild drew her long dragon of war, in which she had come from Orkneys,
+from its shed over against Westman Isles, and in the centre of the ship, she
+piled the bodies of the slain in the shape of a bed, and lashed them fast. And
+on this bed she laid the corpse of Eric Brighteyes, and the breast of black
+Skallagrim the Baresark was his pillow, and the breast of Gizur,
+Ospakar&rsquo;s son, was his foot-rest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she caused the sails to be hoisted, and went alone aboard the long ship,
+the rails of which were hung with the shields of the dead men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when at evening the breeze freshened to a gale that blew from the land, she
+cut the cable with her own hand, and the ship leapt forward like a thing alive,
+and rushed out in the red light of the sunset towards the open sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now ever the gale freshened and folk, standing on Westman Heights, saw the long
+ship plunge past, dipping her prow beneath the waves and sending the water in a
+rain of spray over the living Swanhild, over the dead Eric and those he lay
+upon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And by the head of Eric Brighteyes, her hair streaming on the wind, stood
+Swanhild the Witch, clad in her purple cloak, and with rings of gold about her
+throat and arms. She stood by Eric&rsquo;s head, swaying with the rush of the
+ship, and singing so sweet and wild a song that men grew weak who heard it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, as the people watched, two white swans came down from the clouds and sped
+on wide wings side by side over the vessel&rsquo;s mast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ship rushed on through the glow of sunset into the gathering night. On sped
+the ship, but still Swanhild sung, and still the swans flew over her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gale grew fierce, and fiercer yet. The darkness gathered deep upon the
+raging sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now that ship was seen no more, and the death-song of Swanhild as she passed to
+doom was never heard again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For swans and ship, and Swanhild, and dead Eric and his dead foes, were lost in
+the wind and the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But far out on the sea a great flame of fire leapt up towards the sky.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Now this is the tale of Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur&rsquo;s son; of Gudruda the
+Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter; of Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli&rsquo;s wife,
+and of Ounound, named Skallagrim Lambstail, the Baresark, Eric&rsquo;s thrall,
+all of whom lived and died before Thangbrand, Wilibald&rsquo;s son, preached
+the White Christ in Iceland.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div style='display:block;margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERIC BRIGHTEYES ***</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0;'>This file should be named 2721-h.htm or 2721-h.zip</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0;'>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in https://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/2/2721/</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
+be renamed.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
+States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
+the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
+of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
+copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
+easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
+of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
+Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
+do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
+by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
+license, especially commercial redistribution.
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin:0.83em 0; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE<br />
+<span style='font-size:smaller'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE<br />
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</span>
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
+Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
+or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
+Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country other than the United States.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
+on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
+phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+</div>
+
+<blockquote>
+ <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+ This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+ other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+ whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+ of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+ at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+ are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws
+ of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
+ </div>
+</blockquote>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
+Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; License.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
+other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
+Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+provided that:
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+ works.
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
+the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
+forth in Section 3 below.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
+of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
+Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
+to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
+and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
+public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
+visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
+facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+</div>
+
+</body>
+
+</html>
+
+
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c2e88fb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #2721 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2721)
diff --git a/old/2721-8.txt b/old/2721-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8c04b1a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/2721-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,12616 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Eric Brighteyes
+
+Author: H. Rider Haggard
+
+Release Date: March 31, 2006 [EBook #2721]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERIC BRIGHTEYES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Bickers; Dagny; Emma Dudding; David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+ERIC BRIGHTEYES
+
+by H. Rider Haggard
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+Madam,
+
+You have graciously conveyed to me the intelligence that during the
+weary weeks spent far from his home--in alternate hope and fear,
+in suffering and mortal trial--a Prince whose memory all men must
+reverence, the Emperor Frederick, found pleasure in the reading of my
+stories: that "they interested and fascinated him."
+
+While the world was watching daily at the bedside of your Majesty's
+Imperial husband, while many were endeavouring to learn courage in our
+supremest need from the spectacle of that heroic patience, a distant
+writer little knew that it had been his fortune to bring to such a
+sufferer an hour's forgetfulness of sorrow and pain.
+
+This knowledge, to an author, is far dearer than any praise, and it is
+in gratitude that, with your Majesty's permission, I venture to dedicate
+to you the tale of Eric Brighteyes.
+
+The late Emperor, at heart a lover of peace, though by duty a soldier of
+soldiers, might perhaps have cared to interest himself in a warrior of
+long ago, a hero of our Northern stock, whose days were spent in strife,
+and whose latest desire was Rest. But it may not be; like the Golden
+Eric of this Saga, and after a nobler fashion, he has passed through the
+Hundred Gates into the Valhalla of Renown.
+
+To you, then, Madam, I dedicate this book, a token, however slight and
+unworthy, of profound respect and sympathy.
+
+I am, Madam,
+
+Your Majesty's most obedient servant,
+
+H. Rider Haggard.
+
+November 17, 1889.
+
+To H.I.M. Victoria, Empress Frederick of Germany.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+"Eric Brighteyes" is a romance founded on the Icelandic Sagas. "What is
+a saga?" "Is it a fable or a true story?" The answer is not altogether
+simple. For such sagas as those of Burnt Njal and Grettir the Strong
+partake both of truth and fiction: historians dispute as to the
+proportions. This was the manner of the saga's growth: In the early days
+of the Iceland community--that republic of aristocrats--say, between the
+dates 900 and 1100 of our era, a quarrel would arise between two great
+families. As in the case of the Njal Saga, its cause, probably, was the
+ill doings of some noble woman. This quarrel would lead to manslaughter.
+Then blood called for blood, and a vendetta was set on foot that ended
+only with the death by violence of a majority of the actors in the drama
+and of large numbers of their adherents. In the course of the feud, men
+of heroic strength and mould would come to the front and perform deeds
+worthy of the iron age which bore them. Women also would help to
+fashion the tale, for good or ill, according to their natural gifts
+and characters. At last the tragedy was covered up by death and time,
+leaving only a few dinted shields and haunted cairns to tell of those
+who had played its leading parts.
+
+But its fame lived on in the minds of men. From generation to generation
+skalds wandered through the winter snows, much as Homer may have
+wandered in his day across the Grecian vales and mountains, to find a
+welcome at every stead, because of the old-time story they had to tell.
+Here, night after night, they would sit in the ingle and while away
+the weariness of the dayless dark with histories of the times when men
+carried their lives in their hands, and thought them well lost if there
+might be a song in the ears of folk to come. To alter the tale was one
+of the greatest of crimes: the skald must repeat it as it came to him;
+but by degrees undoubtedly the sagas did suffer alteration. The facts
+remained the same indeed, but around them gathered a mist of miraculous
+occurrences and legends. To take a single instance: the account of
+the burning of Bergthorsknoll in the Njal Saga is not only a piece of
+descriptive writing that for vivid, simple force and insight is scarcely
+to be matched out of Homer and the Bible, it is also obviously true. We
+feel as we read, that no man could have invented that story, though some
+great skald threw it into shape. That the tale is true, the writer of
+"Eric" can testify, for, saga in hand, he has followed every act of the
+drama on its very site. There he who digs beneath the surface of the
+lonely mound that looks across plain and sea to Westman Isles may still
+find traces of the burning, and see what appears to be the black sand
+with which the hands of Bergthora and her women strewed the earthen
+floor some nine hundred years ago, and even the greasy and clotted
+remains of the whey that they threw upon the flame to quench it. He may
+discover the places where Fosi drew up his men, where Skarphedinn died,
+singing while his legs were burnt from off him, where Kari leapt from
+the flaming ruin, and the dell in which he laid down to rest--at every
+step, in short, the truth of the narrative becomes more obvious. And yet
+the tale has been added to, for, unless we may believe that some human
+beings are gifted with second sight, we cannot accept as true the
+prophetic vision that came to Runolf, Thorstein's son; or that of Njal
+who, on the evening of the onslaught, like Theoclymenus in the Odyssey,
+saw the whole board and the meats upon it "one gore of blood."
+
+Thus, in the Norse romance now offered to the reader, the tale of Eric
+and his deeds would be true; but the dream of Asmund, the witchcraft of
+Swanhild, the incident of the speaking head, and the visions of Eric
+and Skallagrim, would owe their origin to the imagination of successive
+generations of skalds; and, finally, in the fifteenth or sixteenth
+century, the story would have been written down with all its
+supernatural additions.
+
+The tendency of the human mind--and more especially of the Norse
+mind--is to supply uncommon and extraordinary reasons for actions and
+facts that are to be amply accounted for by the working of natural
+forces. Swanhild would have needed no "familiar" to instruct her in her
+evil schemes; Eric would have wanted no love-draught to bring about his
+overthrow. Our common experience of mankind as it is, in opposition to
+mankind as we fable it to be, is sufficient to teach us that the passion
+of one and the human weakness of the other would suffice to these ends.
+The natural magic, the beauty and inherent power of such a woman
+as Swanhild, are things more forceful than any spell magicians have
+invented, or any demon they are supposed to have summoned to their
+aid. But no saga would be complete without the intervention of such
+extraneous forces: the need of them was always felt, in order to throw
+up the acts of heroes and heroines, and to invest their persons with
+an added importance. Even Homer felt this need, and did not scruple to
+introduce not only second sight, but gods and goddesses, and to bring
+their supernatural agency to bear directly on the personages of his
+chant, and that far more freely than any Norse sagaman. A word may be
+added in explanation of the appearances of "familiars" in the shapes
+of animals, an instance of which will be found in this story. It was
+believed in Iceland, as now by the Finns and Eskimo, that the passions
+and desires of sorcerers took visible form in such creatures as wolves
+or rats. These were called "sendings," and there are many allusions to
+them in the Sagas.
+
+Another peculiarity that may be briefly alluded to as eminently
+characteristic of the Sagas is their fatefulness. As we read we seem
+to hear the voice of Doom speaking continually. "_Things will happen as
+they are fated_": that is the keynote of them all. The Norse mind had
+little belief in free will, less even than we have to-day. Men and women
+were born with certain characters and tendencies, given to them in order
+that their lives should run in appointed channels, and their acts bring
+about an appointed end. They do not these things of their own desire,
+though their desires prompt them to the deeds: they do them because they
+must. The Norns, as they name Fate, have mapped out their path long and
+long ago; their feet are set therein, and they must tread it to the end.
+Such was the conclusion of our Scandinavian ancestors--a belief forced
+upon them by their intense realisation of the futility of human hopes
+and schemings, of the terror and the tragedy of life, the vanity of its
+desires, and the untravelled gloom or sleep, dreamless or dreamfull,
+which lies beyond its end.
+
+Though the Sagas are entrancing, both as examples of literature of which
+there is but little in the world and because of their living interest,
+they are scarcely known to the English-speaking public. This is easy
+to account for: it is hard to persuade the nineteenth century world to
+interest itself in people who lived and events that happened a thousand
+years ago. Moreover, the Sagas are undoubtedly difficult reading. The
+archaic nature of the work, even in a translation; the multitude of its
+actors; the Norse sagaman's habit of interweaving endless side-plots,
+and the persistence with which he introduces the genealogy and
+adventures of the ancestors of every unimportant character, are none of
+them to the taste of the modern reader.
+
+"Eric Brighteyes" therefore, is clipped of these peculiarities, and,
+to some extent, is cast in the form of the romance of our own day,
+archaisms being avoided as much as possible. The author will be
+gratified should he succeed in exciting interest in the troubled lives
+of our Norse forefathers, and still more so if his difficult experiment
+brings readers to the Sagas--to the prose epics of our own race. Too
+ample, too prolix, too crowded with detail, they cannot indeed vie in
+art with the epics of Greece; but in their pictures of life, simple and
+heroic, they fall beneath no literature in the world, save the Iliad and
+the Odyssey alone.
+
+
+
+
+
+ERIC BRIGHTEYES
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST FOUND GROA THE WITCH
+
+There lived a man in the south, before Thangbrand, Wilibald's son,
+preached the White Christ in Iceland. He was named Eric Brighteyes,
+Thorgrimur's son, and in those days there was no man like him for
+strength, beauty and daring, for in all these things he was the first.
+But he was not the first in good-luck.
+
+Two women lived in the south, not far from where the Westman Islands
+stand above the sea. Gudruda the Fair was the name of the one, and
+Swanhild, called the Fatherless, Groa's daughter, was the other. They
+were half-sisters, and there were none like them in those days, for they
+were the fairest of all women, though they had nothing in common except
+their blood and hate.
+
+Now of Eric Brighteyes, of Gudruda the Fair and of Swanhild the
+Fatherless, there is a tale to tell.
+
+These two fair women saw the light in the self-same hour. But Eric
+Brighteyes was their elder by five years. The father of Eric was
+Thorgrimur Iron-Toe. He had been a mighty man; but in fighting with a
+Baresark,[*] who fell upon him as he came up from sowing his wheat, his
+foot was hewn from him, so that afterwards he went upon a wooden leg
+shod with iron. Still, he slew the Baresark, standing on one leg and
+leaning against a rock, and for that deed people honoured him much.
+Thorgrimur was a wealthy yeoman, slow to wrath, just, and rich in
+friends. Somewhat late in life he took to wife Saevuna, Thorod's
+daughter. She was the best of women, strong in mind and second-sighted,
+and she could cover herself in her hair. But these two never loved each
+other overmuch, and they had but one child, Eric, who was born when
+Saevuna was well on in years.
+
+ [*] The Baresarks were men on whom a passing fury of battle
+ came; they were usually outlawed.
+
+The father of Gudruda was Asmund Asmundson, the Priest of Middalhof. He
+was the wisest and the wealthiest of all men who lived in the south
+of Iceland in those days, owning many farms and, also, two ships of
+merchandise and one long ship of war, and having much money out at
+interest. He had won his wealth by viking's work, robbing the English
+coasts, and black tales were told of his doings in his youth on the sea,
+for he was a "red-hand" viking. Asmund was a handsome man, with blue
+eyes and a large beard, and, moreover, was very skilled in matters of
+law. He loved money much, and was feared of all. Still, he had many
+friends, for as he aged he grew more kindly. He had in marriage Gudruda,
+the daughter of Bjrn, who was very sweet and kindly of nature, so that
+they called her Gudruda the Gentle. Of this marriage there were two
+children, Bjrn and Gudruda the Fair; but Bjrn grew up like his father
+in youth, strong and hard, and greedy of gain, while, except for her
+wonderful beauty, Gudruda was her mother's child alone.
+
+The mother of Swanhild the Fatherless was Groa the Witch. She was a
+Finn, and it is told of her that the ship on which she sailed, trying
+to run under the lee of the Westman Isles in a great gale from the
+north-east, was dashed to pieces on a rock, and all those on board of
+her were caught in the net of Ran[*] and drowned, except Groa herself,
+who was saved by her magic art. This at the least is true, that, as
+Asmund the Priest rode down by the sea-shore on the morning after the
+gale, seeking for some strayed horses, he found a beautiful woman,
+who wore a purple cloak and a great girdle of gold, seated on a rock,
+combing her black hair and singing the while; and, at her feet, washing
+to and fro in a pool, was a dead man. He asked whence she came, and she
+answered:
+
+"Out of the Swan's Bath."
+
+[*] The Norse goddess of the sea.
+
+Next, he asked her where were her kin. But, pointing to the dead man,
+she said that this alone was left of them.
+
+"Who was the man, then?" said Asmund the Priest.
+
+She laughed again and sang this song:--
+
+ Groa sails up from the Swan's Bath,
+ Death Gods grip the Dead Man's hand.
+ Look where lies her luckless husband,
+ Bolder sea-king ne'er swung sword!
+ Asmund, keep the kirtle-wearer,
+ For last night the Norns were crying,
+ And Groa thought they told of thee:
+ Yea, told of thee and babes unborn.
+
+"How knowest thou my name?" asked Asmund.
+
+"The sea-mews cried it as the ship sank, thine and others--and they
+shall be heard in story."
+
+"Then that is the best of luck," quoth Asmund; "but I think that thou
+art fey."[*]
+
+ [*] I.e. subject to supernatural presentiments, generally
+ connected with approaching doom.
+
+"Ay," she answered, "fey and fair."
+
+"True enough thou art fair. What shall we do with this dead man?"
+
+"Leave him in the arms of Ran. So may all husbands lie."
+
+They spoke no more with her at that time, seeing that she was a
+witchwoman. But Asmund took her up to Middalhof, and gave her a farm,
+and she lived there alone, and he profited much by her wisdom.
+
+
+Now it chanced that Gudruda the Gentle was with child, and when her time
+came she gave a daughter birth--a very fair girl, with dark eyes. On
+the same day, Groa the witchwoman brought forth a girl-child, and men
+wondered who was its father, for Groa was no man's wife. It was women's
+talk that Asmund the Priest was the father of this child also; but when
+he heard it he was angry, and said that no witchwoman should bear a
+bairn of his, howsoever fair she was. Nevertheless, it was still said
+that the child was his, and it is certain that he loved it as a man
+loves his own; but of all things, this is the hardest to know. When Groa
+was questioned she laughed darkly, as was her fashion, and said that she
+knew nothing of it, never having seen the face of the child's father,
+who rose out of the sea at night. And for this cause some thought him
+to have been a wizard or the wraith of her dead husband; but others said
+that Groa lied, as many women have done on such matters. But of all this
+talk the child alone remained and she was named Swanhild.
+
+Now, but an hour before the child of Gudruda the Gentle was born, Asmund
+went up from his house to the Temple, to tend the holy fire that burned
+night and day upon the altar. When he had tended the fire, he sat down
+upon the cross-benches before the shrine, and, gazing on the image of
+the Goddess Freya, he fell asleep and dreamed a very evil dream.
+
+He dreamed that Gudruda the Gentle bore a dove most beautiful to see,
+for all its feathers were of silver; but that Groa the Witch bore a
+golden snake. And the snake and the dove dwelt together, and ever the
+snake sought to slay the dove. At length there came a great white swan
+flying over Coldback Fell, and its tongue was a sharp sword. Now the
+swan saw the dove and loved it, and the dove loved the swan; but the
+snake reared itself, and hissed, and sought to kill the dove. But the
+swan covered her with his wings, and beat the snake away. Then he,
+Asmund, came out and drove away the swan, as the swan had driven the
+snake, and it wheeled high into the air and flew south, and the snake
+swam away also through the sea. But the dove drooped and now it was
+blind. Then an eagle came from the north, and would have taken the dove,
+but it fled round and round, crying, and always the eagle drew nearer
+to it. At length, from the south the swan came back, flying heavily, and
+about its neck was twined the golden snake, and with it came a raven.
+And it saw the eagle and loud it trumpeted, and shook the snake from it
+so that it fell like a gleam of gold into the sea. Then the eagle and
+the swan met in battle, and the swan drove the eagle down and broke it
+with his wings, and, flying to the dove, comforted it. But those in the
+house ran out and shot at the swan with bows and drove it away, but now
+he, Asmund, was not with them. And once more the dove drooped. Again the
+swan came back, and with it the raven, and a great host were gathered
+against them, and, among them, all of Asmund's kith and kin, and the men
+of his quarter and some of his priesthood, and many whom he did not know
+by face. And the swan flew at Bjrn his son, and shot out the sword of
+its tongue and slew him, and many a man it slew thus. And the raven,
+with a beak and claws of steel, slew also many a man, so that Asmund's
+kindred fled and the swan slept by the dove. But as it slept the golden
+snake crawled out of the sea, and hissed in the ears of men, and they
+rose up to follow it. It came to the swan and twined itself about its
+neck. It struck at the dove and slew it. Then the swan awoke and the
+raven awoke, and they did battle till all who remained of Asmund's
+kindred and people were dead. But still the snake clung about the swan's
+neck, and presently snake and swan fell into the sea, and far out on the
+sea there burned a flame of fire. And Asmund awoke trembling and left
+the Temple.
+
+Now as he went, a woman came running, and weeping as she ran.
+
+"Haste, haste!" she cried; "a daughter is born to thee, and Gudruda thy
+wife is dying!"
+
+"Is it so?" said Asmund; "after ill dreams ill tidings."
+
+Now in the bed-closet off the great hall of Middalhof lay Gudruda the
+Gentle and she was dying.
+
+"Art thou there, husband?" she said.
+
+"Even so, wife."
+
+"Thou comest in an evil hour, for it is my last. Now hearken. Take thou
+the new-born babe within thine arms and kiss it, and pour water over it,
+and name it with my name."
+
+This Asmund did.
+
+"Hearken, my husband. I have been a good wife to thee, though thou hast
+not been all good to me. But thus shalt thou atone: thou shalt swear
+that, though she is a girl, thou wilt not cast this bairn forth to
+perish, but wilt cherish and nurture her."
+
+"I swear it," he said.
+
+"And thou shalt swear that thou wilt not take the witchwoman Groa to
+wife, nor have anything to do with her, and this for thine own sake:
+for, if thou dost, she will be thy death. Dost thou swear?"
+
+"I swear it," he said.
+
+"It is well; but, husband, if thou dost break thine oath, either in the
+words or in the spirit of the words, evil shall overtake thee and all
+thy house. Now bid me farewell, for I die."
+
+He bent over her and kissed her, and it is said that Asmund wept in that
+hour, for after his fashion he loved his wife.
+
+"Give me the babe," she said, "that it may lie once upon my breast."
+
+They gave her the babe and she looked upon its dark eyes and said:
+
+"Fairest of women shalt thou be, Gudruda--fair as no woman in Iceland
+ever was before thee; and thou shalt love with a mighty love--and thou
+shalt lose--and, losing, thou shalt find again."
+
+Now, it is said that, as she spoke these words, her face grew bright as
+a spirit's, and, having spoken them, she fell back dead. And they laid
+her in earth, but Asmund mourned her much.
+
+But, when all was over and done, the dream that he had dreamed lay heavy
+on him. Now of all diviners of dreams Groa was the most skilled, and
+when Gudruda had been in earth seven full days, Asmund went to Groa,
+though doubtfully, because of his oath.
+
+He came to the house and entered. On a couch in the chamber lay Groa,
+and her babe was on her breast and she was very fair to see.
+
+"Greeting, lord!" she said. "What wouldest thou here?"
+
+"I have dreamed a dream, and thou alone canst read it."
+
+"That is as it may be," she answered. "It is true that I have some skill
+in dreams. At the least I will hear it."
+
+Then he unfolded it to her every word.
+
+"What wilt thou give me if I read thy dream?" she said.
+
+"What dost thou ask? Methinks I have given thee much."
+
+"Yea, lord," and she looked at the babe upon her breast. "I ask but a
+little thing: that thou shalt take this bairn in thy arms, pour water
+over it and name it."
+
+"Men will talk if I do this, for it is the father's part."
+
+"It is a little thing what men say: talk goes by as the wind. Moreover,
+thou shalt give them the lie in the child's name, for it shall be
+Swanhild the Fatherless. Nevertheless that is my price. Pay it if thou
+wilt."
+
+"Read me the dream and I will name the child."
+
+"Nay, first name thou the babe: for then no harm shall come to her at
+thy hands."
+
+So Asmund took the child, poured water over her, and named her.
+
+Then Groa spoke: "This lord, is the reading of thy dream, else my wisdom
+is at fault: The silver dove is thy daughter Gudruda, the golden snake
+is my daughter Swanhild, and these two shall hate one the other and
+strive against each other. But the swan is a mighty man whom both shall
+love, and, if he love not both, yet shall belong to both. And thou shalt
+send him away; but he shall return and bring bad luck to thee and thy
+house, and thy daughter shall be blind with love of him. And in the end
+he shall slay the eagle, a great lord from the north who shall seek to
+wed thy daughter, and many another shall he slay, by the help of that
+raven with the bill of steel who shall be with him. But Swanhild shall
+triumph over thy daughter Gudruda, and this man, and the two of them,
+shall die at her hands, and, for the rest, who can say? But this is
+true--that the mighty man shall bring all thy race to an end. See now, I
+have read thy rede."
+
+Then Asmund was very wroth. "Thou wast wise to beguile me to name thy
+bastard brat," he said; "else had I been its death within this hour."
+
+"This thou canst not do, lord, seeing that thou hast held it in thy
+arms," Groa answered, laughing. "Go rather and lay out Gudruda the Fair
+on Coldback Hill; so shalt thou make an end of the evil, for Gudruda
+shall be its very root. Learn this, moreover: that thy dream does not
+tell all, seeing that thou thyself must play a part in the fate. Go,
+send forth the babe Gudruda, and be at rest."
+
+"That cannot be, for I have sworn to cherish it, and with an oath that
+may not be broken."
+
+"It is well," laughed Groa. "Things will befall as they are fated; let
+them befall in their season. There is space for cairns on Coldback and
+the sea can shroud its dead!"
+
+And Asmund went thence, angered at heart.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+HOW ERIC TOLD HIS LOVE TO GUDRUDA IN THE SNOW ON COLDBACK
+
+Now, it must be told that, five years before the day of the death of
+Gudruda the Gentle, Saevuna, the wife of Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, gave birth
+to a son, at Coldback in the Marsh, on Ran River, and when his father
+came to look upon the child he called out aloud:
+
+"Here we have a wondrous bairn, for his hair is yellow like gold and his
+eyes shine bright as stars." And Thorgrimur named him Eric Brighteyes.
+
+Now, Coldback is but an hour's ride from Middalhof, and it chanced,
+in after years, that Thorgrimur went up to Middalhof, to keep the Yule
+feast and worship in the Temple, for he was in the priesthood of Asmund
+Asmundson, bringing the boy Eric with him. There also was Groa with
+Swanhild, for now she dwelt at Middalhof; and the three fair children
+were set together in the hall to play, and men thought it great sport to
+see them. Now, Gudruda had a horse of wood and would ride it while Eric
+pushed the horse along. But Swanhild smote her from the horse and called
+to Eric to make it move; but he comforted Gudruda and would not, and at
+that Swanhild was angry and lisped out:
+
+"Push thou must, if I will it, Eric."
+
+Then he pushed sideways and with such good will that Swanhild fell
+almost into the fire of the hearth, and, leaping up, she snatched a
+brand and threw it at Gudruda, firing her clothes. Men laughed at this;
+but Groa, standing apart, frowned and muttered witch-words.
+
+"Why lookest thou so darkly, housekeeper?" said Asmund; "the boy is
+bonny and high of heart."
+
+"Ah, he is bonny as no child is, and he shall be bonny all his
+life-days. Nevertheless, she shall not stand against his ill luck. This
+I prophesy of him: that women shall bring him to his end, and he shall
+die a hero's death, but not at the hand of his foes."
+
+
+And now the years went by peacefully. Groa dwelt with her daughter
+Swanhild up at Middalhof and was the love of Asmund Asmundson. But,
+though he forgot his oath thus far, yet he would never take her to wife.
+The witchwife was angered at this, and she schemed and plotted much
+to bring it about that Asmund should wed her. But still he would not,
+though in all things else she led him as it were by a halter.
+
+
+Twenty full years had gone by since Gudruda the Gentle was laid in
+earth; and now Gudruda the Fair and Swanhild the Fatherless were women
+too. Eric, too, was a man of five-and-twenty years, and no such man had
+lived in Iceland. For he was strong and great of stature, his hair was
+yellow as gold, and his grey eyes shone with the light of swords. He
+was gentle and loving as a woman, and even as a lad his strength was the
+strength of two men; and there were none in all the quarter who could
+leap or swim or wrestle against Eric Brighteyes. Men held him in honour
+and spoke well of him, though as yet he had done no deeds, but lived at
+home on Coldback, managing the farm, for now Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, his
+father, was dead. But women loved him much, and that was his bane--for
+of all women he loved but one, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter. He
+loved her from a child, and her alone till his day of death, and she,
+too, loved him and him only. For now Gudruda was a maid of maids, most
+beautiful to see and sweet to hear. Her hair, like the hair of Eric, was
+golden, and she was white as the snow on Hecla; but her eyes were large
+and dark, and black lashes drooped above them. For the rest she was tall
+and strong and comely, merry of face, yet tender, and the most witty of
+women.
+
+Swanhild also was very fair; she was slender, small of limb, and dark of
+hue, having eyes blue as the deep sea, and brown curling hair, enough
+to veil her to the knees, and a mind of which none knew the end, for,
+though she was open in her talk, her thoughts were dark and secret. This
+was her joy: to draw the hearts of men to her and then to mock them.
+She beguiled many in this fashion, for she was the cunningest girl in
+matters of love, and she knew well the arts of women, with which they
+bring men to nothing. Nevertheless she was cold at heart, and desired
+power and wealth greatly, and she studied magic much, of which her
+mother Groa also had a store. But Swanhild, too, loved a man, and that
+was the joint in her harness by which the shaft of Fate entered her
+heart, for that man was Eric Brighteyes, who loved her not. But she
+desired him so sorely that, without him, all the world was dark to
+her, and her soul but as a ship driven rudderless upon a winter
+night. Therefore she put out all her strength to win him, and bent her
+witcheries upon him, and they were not few nor small. Nevertheless they
+went by him like the wind, for he dreamed ever of Gudruda alone, and he
+saw no eyes but hers, though as yet they spoke no word of love one to
+the other.
+
+But Swanhild in her wrath took counsel with her mother Groa, though
+there was little liking between them; and, when she had heard the
+maiden's tale, Groa laughed aloud:
+
+"Dost think me blind, girl?" she said; "all of this I have seen, yea and
+foreseen, and I tell thee thou art mad. Let this yeoman Eric go and I
+will find thee finer fowl to fly at."
+
+"Nay, that I will not," quoth Swanhild: "for I love this man alone, and
+I would win him; and Gudruda I hate, and I would overthrow her. Give me
+of thy counsel."
+
+Groa laughed again. "Things must be as they are fated. This now is my
+rede: Asmund would turn Gudruda's beauty to account, and that man must
+be rich in friends and money who gets her to wife, and in this matter
+the mind of Bjrn is as the mind of his father. Now we will watch, and,
+when a good time chances, we will bear tales of Gudruda to Asmund and to
+her brother Bjrn, and swear that she oversteps her modesty with
+Eric. Then shall Asmund be wroth and drive Eric from Gudruda's side.
+Meanwhile, I will do this: In the north there dwells a man mighty in all
+things and blown up with pride. He is named Ospakar Blacktooth. His wife
+is but lately dead, and he has given out that he will wed the fairest
+maid in Iceland. Now, it is in my mind to send Koll the Half-witted, my
+thrall, whom Asmund gave to me, to Ospakar as though by chance. He is a
+great talker and very clever, for in his half-wits is more cunning than
+in the brains of most; and he shall so bepraise Gudruda's beauty that
+Ospakar will come hither to ask her in marriage; and in this fashion, if
+things go well, thou shalt be rid of thy rival, and I of one who looks
+scornfully upon me. But, if this fail, then there are two roads left
+on which strong feet may travel to their end; and of these, one is that
+thou shouldest win Eric away with thine own beauty, and that is not
+little. All men are frail, and I have a draught that will make the heart
+as wax; but yet the other path is surer."
+
+"And what is that path, my mother?"
+
+"It runs through blood to blackness. By thy side is a knife and in
+Gudruda's bosom beats a heart. Dead women are unmeet for love!"
+
+Swanhild tossed her head and looked upon the dark face of Groa her
+mother.
+
+"Methinks, with such an end to win, I should not fear to tread that
+path, if there be need, my mother."
+
+"Now I see thou art indeed my daughter. Happiness is to the bold. To
+each it comes in uncertain shape. Some love power, some wealth, and
+some--a man. Take that which thou lovest--I say, cut thy path to it and
+take it; else shall thy life be but a weariness: for what does it serve
+to win the wealth and power when thou lovest a man alone, or the man
+when thou dost desire gold and the pride of place? This is wisdom: to
+satisfy the longing of thy youth; for age creeps on apace and beyond is
+darkness. Therefore, if thou seekest this man, and Gudruda blocks thy
+path, slay her, girl--by witchcraft or by steel--and take him, and in
+his arms forget that thine own are red. But first let us try the
+easier plan. Daughter, I too hate this proud girl, who scorns me as her
+father's light-of-love. I too long to see that bright head of hers dull
+with the dust of death, or, at the least, those proud eyes weeping tears
+of shame as the man she hates leads her hence as a bride. Were it not
+for her I should be Asmund's wife, and, when she is gone, with thy
+help--for he loves thee much and has cause to love thee--this I may be
+yet. So in this matter, if in no other, let us go hand in hand and match
+our wits against her innocence."
+
+
+Now, Koll the Half-witted went upon his errand, and the time passed till
+it lacked but a month to Yule, and men sat indoors, for the season was
+dark and much snow fell. At length came frost, and with it a clear sky,
+and Gudruda, ceasing from her spinning in the hall, went to the woman's
+porch, and, looking out, saw that the snow was hard, and a great longing
+came upon her to breathe the fresh air, for there was still an hour of
+daylight. So she threw a cloak about her and walked forth, taking the
+road towards Coldback in the Marsh that is by Ran River. But Swanhild
+watched her till she was over the hill. Then she also took a cloak and
+followed on that path, for she always watched Gudruda.
+
+Gudruda walked on for the half of an hour or so, when she became aware
+that the clouds gathered in the sky, and that the air was heavy with
+snow to come. Seeing this she turned homewards, and Swanhild hid
+herself to let her pass. Now flakes floated down as big and soft as fifa
+flowers. Quicker and more quick they came till all the plain was one
+white maze of mist, but through it Gudruda walked on, and after her
+crept Swanhild, like a shadow. And now the darkness gathered and the
+snow fell thick and fast, covering up the track of her footsteps and she
+wandered from the path, and after her wandered Swanhild, being loath to
+show herself. For an hour or more Gudruda wandered and then she called
+aloud and her voice fell heavily against the cloak of snow. At the last
+she grew weary and frightened, and sat down upon a shelving rock whence
+the snow had slipped away. Now, a little way behind was another rock and
+there Swanhild sat, for she wished to be unseen of Gudruda. So some time
+passed, and Swanhild grew heavy as though with sleep, when of a sudden
+a moving thing loomed upon the snowy darkness. Then Gudruda leapt to her
+feet and called. A man's voice answered:
+
+"Who passes there?"
+
+"I, Gudruda, Asmund's daughter."
+
+The form came nearer; now Swanhild could hear the snorting of a horse,
+and now a man leapt from it, and that man was Eric Brighteyes.
+
+"Is it thou indeed, Gudruda!" he said with a laugh, and his great shape
+showed darkly on the snow mist.
+
+"Oh, is it thou, Eric?" she answered. "I was never more joyed to see
+thee; for of a truth thou dost come in a good hour. A little while and I
+had seen thee no more, for my eyes grow heavy with the death-sleep."
+
+"Nay, say not so. Art lost, then? Why, so am I. I came out to seek three
+horses that are strayed, and was overtaken by the snow. May they
+dwell in Odin's stables, for they have led me to thee. Art thou cold,
+Gudruda?"
+
+"But a little, Eric. Yea, there is place for thee here on the rock."
+
+So he sat down by her on the stone, and Swanhild crept nearer; for now
+all weariness had left her. But still the snow fell thick.
+
+"It comes into my mind that we two shall die here," said Gudruda
+presently.
+
+"Thinkest thou so?" he answered. "Well, I will say this, that I ask no
+better end."
+
+"It is a bad end for thee, Eric: to be choked in snow, and with all thy
+deeds to do."
+
+"It is a good end, Gudruda, to die at thy side, for so I shall die
+happy; but I grieve for thee."
+
+"Grieve not for me, Brighteyes, worse things might befall."
+
+He drew nearer to her, and now he put his arms about her and clasped her
+to his bosom; nor did she say him nay. Swanhild saw and lifted herself
+up behind them, but for a while she heard nothing but the beating of her
+heart.
+
+"Listen, Gudruda," Eric said at last. "Death draws near to us, and
+before it comes I would speak to thee, if speak I may."
+
+"Speak on," she whispers from his breast.
+
+"This I would say, then: that I love thee, and that I ask no better fate
+than to die in thy arms."
+
+"First shalt thou see me die in thine, Eric."
+
+"Be sure, if that is so, I shall not tarry for long. Oh! Gudruda, since
+I was a child I have loved thee with a mighty love, and now thou art all
+to me. Better to die thus than to live without thee. Speak, then, while
+there is time."
+
+"I will not hide from thee, Eric, that thy words are sweet in my ears."
+
+And now Gudruda sobs and the tears fall fast from her dark eyes.
+
+"Nay, weep not. Dost thou, then, love me?"
+
+"Ay, sure enough, Eric."
+
+"Then kiss me before we pass. A man should not die thus, and yet men
+have died worse."
+
+And so these two kissed, for the first time, out in the snow on
+Coldback, and that first kiss was long and sweet.
+
+Swanhild heard and her blood seethed within her as water seethes in
+a boiling spring when the fires wake beneath. She put her hand to her
+kirtle and gripped the knife at her side. She half drew it, then drove
+it back.
+
+"Cold kills as sure as steel," she said in her heart. "If I slay her I
+cannot save myself or him. Let us die in peace, and let the snow cover
+up our troubling." And once more she listened.
+
+"Ah, sweet," said Eric, "even in the midst of death there is hope of
+life. Swear to me, then, that if by chance we live thou wilt love me
+always as thou lovest me now."
+
+"Ay, Eric, I swear that and readily."
+
+"And swear, come what may, that thou wilt wed no man but me."
+
+"I swear, if thou dost remain true to me, that I will wed none but thee,
+Eric."
+
+"Then I am sure of thee."
+
+"Boast not overmuch, Eric: if thou dost live thy days are all before
+thee, and with times come trials."
+
+Now the snow whirled down faster and more thick, till these two, clasped
+heart to heart, were but a heap of white, and all white was the horse,
+and Swanhild was nearly buried.
+
+"Where go we when we die, Eric?" said Gudruda; "in Odin's house there is
+no place for maids, and how shall my feet fare without thee?"
+
+"Nay, sweet, my May, Valhalla shuts its gates to me, a deedless man; up
+Bifrost's rainbow bridge I may not travel, for I do not die with byrnie
+on breast and sword aloft. To Hela shall we go, and hand in hand."
+
+"Art thou sure, Eric, that men find these abodes? To say sooth, at times
+I misdoubt me of them."
+
+"I am not so sure but that I also doubt. Still, I know this: that where
+thou goest there I shall be, Gudruda."
+
+"Then things are well, and well work the Norns.[*] Still, Eric, of a
+sudden I grow fey: for it comes upon me that I shall not die to-night,
+but that, nevertheless, I shall die with thy arms about me, and at thy
+side. There, I see it on the snow! I lie by thee, sleeping, and one
+comes with hands outstretched and sleep falls from them like a mist--by
+Freya, it is Swanhild's self! Oh! it is gone."
+
+[*] The Northern Fates.
+
+"It was nothing, Gudruda, but a vision of the snow--an untimely dream
+that comes before the sleep. I grow cold and my eyes are heavy; kiss me
+once again."
+
+"It was no dream, Eric, and ever I doubt me of Swanhild, for I think she
+loves thee also, and she is fair and my enemy," says Gudruda, laying her
+snow-cold lips on his lips. "Oh, Eric, awake! awake! See, the snow is
+done."
+
+He stumbled to his feet and looked forth. Lo! out across the sky flared
+the wild Northern fires, throwing light upon the darkness.
+
+"Now it seems that I know the land," said Eric. "Look: yonder are Golden
+Falls, though we did not hear them because of the snow; and there, out
+at sea, loom the Westmans; and that dark thing is the Temple Hof, and
+behind it stands the stead. We are saved, Gudruda, and thus far indeed
+thou wast fey. Now rise, ere thy limbs stiffen, and I will set thee on
+the horse, if he still can run, and lead thee down to Middalhof before
+the witchlights fail us."
+
+"So it shall be, Eric."
+
+Now he led Gudruda to the horse--that, seeing its master, snorted and
+shook the snow from its coat, for it was not frozen--and set her on the
+saddle, and put his arm about her waist, and they passed slowly through
+the deep snow. And Swanhild, too, crept from her place, for her burning
+rage had kept the life in her, and followed after them. Many times she
+fell, and once she was nearly swallowed in a drift of snow and cried out
+in her fear.
+
+"Who called aloud?" said Eric, turning; "I thought I heard a voice."
+
+"Nay," answers Gudruda, "it was but a night-hawk screaming."
+
+Now Swanhild lay quiet in the drift, but she said in her heart:
+
+"Ay, a night-hawk that shall tear out those dark eyes of thine, mine
+enemy!"
+
+The two go on and at length they come to the banked roadway that runs
+past the Temple to Asmund's hall. Here Swanhild leaves them, and,
+climbing over the turf-wall into the home meadow, passes round the
+hall by the outbuildings and so comes to the west end of the house, and
+enters by the men's door unnoticed of any. For all the people, seeing
+a horse coming and a woman seated on it, were gathered in front of the
+hall. But Swanhild ran to that shut bed where she slept, and, closing
+the curtain, threw off her garments, shook the snow from her hair, and
+put on a linen kirtle. Then she rested a while, for she was weary, and,
+going to the kitchen, warmed herself at the fire.
+
+Meanwhile Eric and Gudruda came to the house and there Asmund greeted
+them well, for he was troubled in his heart about his daughter, and very
+glad to know her living, seeing that men had but now begun to search for
+her, because of the snow and the darkness.
+
+Now Gudruda told her tale, but not all of it, and Asmund bade Eric to
+the house. Then one asked about Swanhild, and Eric said that he had seen
+nothing of her, and Asmund was sad at this, for he loved Swanhild. But
+as he told all men to go and search, an old wife came and said that
+Swanhild was in the kitchen, and while the carline spoke she came into
+the hall, dressed in white, very pale, and with shining eyes and fair to
+see.
+
+"Where hast thou been, Swanhild?" said Asmund. "I thought certainly thou
+wast perishing with Gudruda in the snow, and now all men go to seek thee
+while the witchlights burn."
+
+"Nay, foster-father, I have been to the Temple," she answered, lying.
+"So Gudruda has but narrowly escaped the snow, thanks be to Brighteyes
+yonder! Surely I am glad of it, for we could ill spare our sweet
+sister," and, going up to her, she kissed her. But Gudruda saw that
+her eyes burned like fire and felt that her lips were cold as ice, and
+shrank back wondering.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+HOW ASMUND BADE ERIC TO HIS YULE-FEAST
+
+Now it was supper-time and men sat at meat while the women waited upon
+them. But as she went to and fro, Gudruda always looked at Eric, and
+Swanhild watched them both. Supper being over, people gathered round the
+hearth, and, having finished her service, Gudruda came and sat by Eric,
+so that her sleeve might touch his. They spoke no word, but there they
+sat and were happy. Swanhild saw and bit her lip. Now, she was seated by
+Asmund and Bjrn his son.
+
+"Look, foster-father," she said; "yonder sit a pretty pair!"
+
+"That cannot be denied," answered Asmund. "One may ride many days to see
+such another man as Eric Brighteyes, and no such maid as Gudruda flowers
+between Middalhof and London town, unless it be thou, Swanhild. Well, so
+her mother said that it should be, and without doubt she was foresighted
+at her death."
+
+"Nay, name me not with Gudruda, foster-father; I am but a grey goose
+by thy white swan. But these shall be well wed and that will be a good
+match for Eric."
+
+"Let not thy tongue run on so fast," said Asmund sharply. "Who told thee
+that Eric should have Gudruda?"
+
+"None told me, but in truth, having eyes and ears, I grew certain of
+it," said Swanhild. "Look at them now: surely lovers wear such faces."
+
+Now it chanced that Gudruda had rested her chin on her hand, and was
+gazing into Eric's eyes beneath the shadow of her hair.
+
+"Methinks my sister will look higher than to wed a simple yeoman, though
+he is large as two other men," said Bjrn with a sneer. Now Bjrn was
+jealous of Eric's strength and beauty, and did not love him.
+
+"Trust nothing that thou seest and little that thou hearest, girl," said
+Asmund, raising himself from thought: "so shall thy guesses be good.
+Eric, come here and tell us how thou didst chance on Gudruda in the
+snow."
+
+"I was not so ill seated but that I could bear to stay," grumbled Eric
+beneath his breath; but Gudruda said "Go."
+
+So he went and told his tale; but not all of it, for he intended to ask
+Gudruda in marriage on the morrow, though his heart prophesied no luck
+in the matter, and therefore he was not overswift with it.
+
+"In this thing thou hast done me and mine good service," said Asmund
+coldly, searching Eric's face with his blue eyes. "It had been said if
+my fair daughter had perished in the snow, for, know this: I would set
+her high in marriage, for her honour and the honour of my house, and so
+some rich and noble man had lost great joy. But take thou this gift in
+memory of the deed, and Gudruda's husband shall give thee another such
+upon the day that he makes her wife," and he drew a gold ring off his
+arm.
+
+Now Eric's knees trembled as he heard, and his heart grew faint as
+though with fear. But he answered clear and straight:
+
+"Thy gift had been better without thy words, ring-giver; but I pray thee
+to take it back, for I have done nothing to win it, though perhaps the
+time will come when I shall ask thee for a richer."
+
+"My gifts have never been put away before," said Asmund, growing angry.
+
+"This wealthy farmer holds the good gold of little worth. It is foolish
+to take fish to the sea, my father," sneered Bjrn.
+
+"Nay, Bjrn, not so," Eric answered: "but, as thou sayest, I am but a
+farmer, and since my father, Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, died things have not
+gone too well on Ran River. But at the least I am a free man, and I will
+take no gifts that I cannot repay worth for worth. Therefore I will not
+have the ring."
+
+"As thou wilt," said Asmund. "Pride is a good horse if thou ridest
+wisely," and he thrust the ring back upon his arm.
+
+Then people go to rest; but Swanhild seeks her mother, and tells her all
+that has befallen her, nor does Groa fail to listen.
+
+"Now I will make a plan," she says, "for these things have chanced well
+and Asmund is in a ripe humour. Eric shall come no more to Middalhof
+till Gudruda is gone hence, led by Ospakar Blacktooth."
+
+"And if Eric does not come here, how shall I see his face? for, mother,
+I long for the sight of it."
+
+"That is thy matter, thou lovesick fool. Know this: that if Eric comes
+hither and gets speech with Gudruda, there is an end of thy hopes; for,
+fair as thou art, she is too fair for thee, and, strong as thou art, in
+a way she is too strong. Thou hast heard how these two love, and such
+loves mock at the will of fathers. Eric will win his desire or die
+beneath the swords of Asmund and Bjrn, if such men can prevail against
+his might. Nay, the wolf Eric must be fenced from the lamb till he grows
+hungry. Then let him search the fold and make spoil of thee, for, when
+the best is gone, he will desire the good."
+
+"So be it, mother. As I sat crouched behind Gudruda in the snow at
+Coldback, I had half a mind to end her love-words with this knife, for
+so I should have been free of her."
+
+"Yes, and fast in the doom-ring, thou wildcat. The gods help this Eric,
+if thou winnest him. Nay, choose thy time and, if thou must strike,
+strike secretly and home. Remember also that cunning is mightier than
+strength, that lies pierce further than swords, and that witchcraft wins
+where honesty must fail. Now I will go to Asmund, and he shall be an
+angry man before to-morrow comes."
+
+Then Groa went to the shut bed where Asmund the Priest slept. He was
+sitting on the bed and asked her why she came.
+
+"For love of thee, Asmund, and thy house, though thou dost treat me ill,
+who hast profited so much by me and my foresight. Say now: wilt thou
+that this daughter of thine, Gudruda the Fair, should be the light May
+of yonder long-legged yeoman?"
+
+"That is not in my mind," said Asmund, stroking his beard.
+
+"Knowest thou, then, that this very day your white Gudruda sat on Eric's
+lap in the snow, while he fondled her to his heart's content?"
+
+"Most likely it was for warmth. Men do not dream on love in the hour of
+death. Who saw this?"
+
+"Swanhild, who was behind, and hid herself for shame, and therefore she
+held that these two must soon be wed! Ah, thou art foolish now, Asmund.
+Young blood makes light of cold or death. Art thou blind, or dost thou
+not see that these two turn on each other like birds at nesting-time?"
+
+"They might do worse," said Asmund, "for they are a proper pair, and it
+seems to me that each was born for each."
+
+"Then all goes well. Still, it is a pity to see so fair a maid cast like
+rotten bait upon the waters to hook this troutlet of a yeoman. Thou hast
+enemies, Asmund; thou art too prosperous, and there are many who hate
+thee for thy state and wealth. Were it not wise to use this girl of
+thine to build a wall about thee against the evil day?"
+
+"I have been more wont, housekeeper, to trust to my own arm than to
+bought friends. But tell me, for at the least thou art far-seeing, how
+may this be done? As things are, though I spoke roughly to him last
+night, I am inclined to let Eric Brighteyes take Gudruda. I have always
+loved the lad, and he will go far."
+
+"Listen, Asmund! Surely thou hast heard of Ospakar Blacktooth--the
+priest who dwells in the north?"
+
+"Ay, I have heard of him, and I know him; there is no man like him for
+ugliness, or strength, or wealth and power. We sailed together on
+a viking cruise many years ago, and he did things at which my blood
+turned, and in those days I had no chicken heart."
+
+"With time men change their temper. Unless I am mistaken, this Ospakar
+wishes above all to have Gudruda in marriage, for, now that everything
+is his, this alone is left for him to ask--the fairest woman in Iceland
+as a housewife. Think then, with Ospakar for a son-in-law, who is there
+that can stand against thee?"
+
+"I am not so sure of this matter, nor do I altogether trust thee, Groa.
+Of a truth it seems to me that thou hast some stake upon the race. This
+Ospakar is evil and hideous. It were a shame to give Gudruda over to him
+when she looks elsewhere. Knowest thou that I swore to love and cherish
+her, and how runs this with my oath? If Eric is not too rich, yet he is
+of good birth and kin, and, moreover, a man of men. If he take her good
+will come of it."
+
+"It is like thee, Asmund, always to mistrust those who spend their days
+in plotting for thy weal. Do as thou wilt: let Eric take this treasure
+of thine--for whom earls would give their state--and live to rue it. But
+I say this: if he have thy leave to roam here with his dove the matter
+will soon grow, for these two sicken each to each, and young blood is
+hot and ill at waiting, and it is not always snow-time. So betroth her
+or let him go. And now I have said."
+
+"Thy tongue runs too fast. The man is quite unproved and I will try him.
+To-morrow I will warn him from my door; then things shall go as they
+are fated. And now peace, for I weary of thy talk, and, moreover, it is
+false; for thou lackest one thing--a little honesty to season all thy
+craft. What fee has Ospakar paid thee, I wonder. Thou at least hadst
+never refused the gold ring to-night, for thou wouldst do much for
+gold."
+
+"And more for love, and most of all for hate," Groa said, and laughed
+aloud; nor did they speak more on this matter that night.
+
+Now, early in the morning Asmund rose, and, going to the hall, awoke
+Eric, who slept by the centre hearth, saying that he would talk with him
+without. Then Eric followed him to the back of the hall.
+
+"Say now, Eric," he said, when they stood in the grey light outside the
+house, "who was it taught thee that kisses keep out the cold on snowy
+days?"
+
+Now Eric reddened to his yellow hair, but he answered: "Who was it told
+thee, lord, that I tried this medicine?"
+
+"The snow hides much, but there are eyes that can pierce the snow. Nay,
+more, thou wast seen, and there's an end. Now know this--I like thee
+well, but Gudruda is not for thee; she is far above thee, who art but a
+deedless yeoman."
+
+"Then I love to no end," said Eric; "I long for one thing only, and that
+is Gudruda. It was in my mind to ask her in marriage of thee to-day."
+
+"Then, lad, thou hast thy answer before thou askest. Be sure of one
+thing: if but once again I find thee alone with Gudruda, it is my axe
+shall kiss thee and not her lips."
+
+"That may yet be put to the proof, lord," said Eric, and turned to seek
+his horse, when suddenly Gudruda came and stood between them, and his
+heart leapt at the sight of her.
+
+"Listen, Gudruda," Eric said. "This is thy father's word: that we two
+speak together no more."
+
+"Then it is an ill saying for us," said Gudruda, laying her hand upon
+her breast.
+
+"Saying good or ill, so it surely is, girl," answered Asmund. "No more
+shalt thou go a-kissing, in the snow or in the flowers."
+
+"Now I seem to hear Swanhild's voice," she said. "Well, such things have
+happened to better folk, and a father's wish is to a maid what the wind
+is to the grass. Still, the sun is behind the cloud and it will shine
+again some day. Till then, Eric, fare thee well!"
+
+"It is not thy will, lord," said Eric, "that I should come to thy
+Yule-feast as thou hast asked me these ten years past?"
+
+Now Asmund grew wroth, and pointed with his hand towards the great
+Golden Falls that thunder down the mountain named Stonefell that is
+behind Middalhof, and there are no greater water-falls in Iceland.
+
+"A man may take two roads, Eric, from Coldback to Middalhof, one by the
+bridle-path over Coldback and the other down Golden Falls; but I never
+knew traveller to choose this way. Now, I bid thee to my feast by the
+path over Golden Falls; and, if thou comest that way, I promise thee
+this: if thou livest I will greet thee well, and if I find thee dead
+in the great pool I will bind on thy Hell-shoes and lay thee to earth
+neighbourly fashion. But if thou comest by any other path, then my
+thralls shall cut thee down at my door." And he stroked his beard and
+laughed.
+
+Now Asmund spoke thus mockingly because he did not think it possible
+that any man should try the path of the Golden Falls.
+
+Eric smiled and said, "I hold thee to thy word, lord; perhaps I shall be
+thy guest at Yule."
+
+But Gudruda heard the thunder of the mighty Falls as the wind turned,
+and cried "Nay, nay--it were thy death!"
+
+Then Eric finds his horse and rides away across the snow.
+
+Now it must be told of Koll the Half-witted that at length he came to
+Swinefell in the north, having journeyed hard across the snow. Here
+Ospakar Blacktooth had his great hall, in which day by day a hundred men
+sat down to meat. Now Koll entered the hall when Ospakar was at supper,
+and looked at him with big eyes, for he had never seen so wonderful a
+man. He was huge in stature--his hair was black, and black his beard,
+and on his lower lip there lay a great black fang. His eyes were small
+and narrow, but his cheekbones were set wide apart and high, like
+those of a horse. Koll thought him an ill man to deal with and half a
+troll,[*] and grew afraid of his errand, since in Koll's half-wittedness
+there was much cunning--for it was a cloak in which he wrapped himself.
+But as Ospakar sat in the high seat, clothed in a purple robe, with
+his sword Whitefire on his knee, he saw Koll, and called out in a great
+voice:
+
+[*] An able-bodied Goblin.
+
+"Who is this red fox that creeps into my earth?"
+
+For, to look at, Koll was very like a fox.
+
+"My name is Koll the Half-witted, Groa's thrall, lord. Am I welcome
+here?" he answered.
+
+"That is as it may be. Why do they call thee half-witted?"
+
+"Because I love not work overmuch, lord."
+
+"Then all my thralls are fellow to thee. Say, what brings thee here?"
+
+"This lord. It was told among men down in the south that thou wouldst
+give a good gift to him who should discover to thee the fairest maid in
+Iceland. So I asked leave of my mistress to come on a journey and tell
+thee of her."
+
+"Then a lie was told thee. Still, I love to hear of fair maids, and seek
+one for a wife if she be but fair enough. So speak on, Koll the Fox, and
+lie not to me, I warn thee, else I will knock what wits are left there
+from that red head of thine."
+
+So Koll took up the tale and greatly bepraised Gudruda's beauty; nor
+in truth, for all his talk, could he praise it too much. He told of her
+dark eyes and the whiteness of her skin, of the nobleness of her shape
+and the gold of her hair, of her wit and gentleness, till at length
+Ospakar grew afire to see this flower of maids.
+
+"By Thor, thou Koll," he said, "if the girl be but half of what thou
+sayest, her luck is good, for she shall be wife to Ospakar. But if thou
+hast lied to me about her, beware! for soon there shall be a knave the
+less in Iceland."
+
+Now a man rose in the hall and said that Koll spoke truth, for he had
+seen Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter, and there was no maid like her
+in Iceland.
+
+"I will do this now," said Blacktooth. "To-morrow I will send a
+messenger to Middalhof, saying to Asmund the Priest that I purpose to
+visit him at the time of the Yule-feast; then I shall see if the girl
+pleases me. Meanwhile, Koll, take thou a seat among the thralls, and
+here is something for thy pains," and he took off the purple cloak and
+threw it to him.
+
+"Thanks to thee, Gold-scatterer," said Koll. "It is wise to go soon to
+Middalhof, for such a bloom as this maid does not lack a bee. There is
+a youngling in the south, named Eric Brighteyes, who loves Gudruda, and
+she, I think, loves him, though he is but a yeoman of small wealth and
+is only twenty-five years old."
+
+"Ho! ho!" laughed great Ospakar, "and I am forty-five. But let not this
+suckling cross my desire, lest men call him Eric Holloweyes!"
+
+
+Now the messenger of Ospakar came to Middalhof, and his words pleased
+Asmund and he made ready a great feast. And Swanhild smiled, but Gudruda
+was afraid.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+HOW ERIC CAME DOWN GOLDEN FALLS
+
+Now Ospakar rode up to Middalhof on the day before the Yule-feast. He
+was splendidly apparelled, and with him came his two sons, Gizur the
+Lawman and Mord, young men of promise, and many armed thralls and
+servants. Gudruda, watching at the women's door, saw his face in the
+moonlight and loathed him.
+
+"What thinkest thou of him who comes to seek thee in marriage,
+foster-sister?" asked Swanhild, watching at her side.
+
+"I think he is like a troll, and that, seek as he will, he shall not
+find me. I had rather lie in the pool beneath Golden Falls than in
+Ospakar's hall."
+
+"That shall be proved," said Swanhild. "At the least he is rich and
+noble, and the greatest of men in size. It would go hard with Eric were
+those arms about him."
+
+"I am not so sure of that," said Gudruda; "but it is not likely to be
+known."
+
+"Comes Eric to the feast by the road of Golden Falls, Gudruda?"
+
+"Nay, no man may try that path and live."
+
+"Then he will die, for Eric will risk it."
+
+Now Gudruda thought, and a great fire burned in her heart and shone
+through her eyes. "If Eric dies," she said, "on thee be his blood,
+Swanhild--on thee and that dark mother of thine, for ye have plotted to
+bring this evil on us. How have I harmed thee that thou shouldst deal
+thus with me?"
+
+Swanhild turned white and wicked-looking, for passion mastered her, and
+she gazed into Gudruda's face and answered: "How hast thou harmed me?
+Surely I will tell thee. Thy beauty has robbed me of Eric's love."
+
+"It would be better to prate of Eric's love when he had told it thee,
+Swanhild."
+
+"Thou hast robbed me and therefore I hate thee, and therefore I will
+deliver thee to Ospakar, whom thou dost loath--ay and yet win Brighteyes
+to myself. Am I not also fair and can I not also love, and shall I see
+thee snatch my joy? By the Gods, never! I will see thee dead, and Eric
+with thee, ere it shall be so! but first I will see thee shamed!"
+
+"Thy words are ill-suited to a maiden's lips, Swanhild! But of this be
+sure: I fear thee not, and shall never fear thee. And one thing I know
+well that, whether thou or I prevail, in the end thou shalt harvest the
+greatest shame, and in times to come men shall speak of thee with hatred
+and name thee by ill names. Moreover, Eric shall never love thee; from
+year to year he shall hate thee with a deeper hate, though it may well
+be that thou wilt bring ruin on him. And now I thank thee that thou
+hast told me all thy mind, showing me what indeed thou art!" And Gudruda
+turned scornfully upon her heel and walked away.
+
+Now Asmund the Priest went out into the courtyard, and meeting Ospakar
+Blacktooth, greeted him heartily, though he did not like his looks, and
+took him by the hand and led him to the hall, that was bravely decked
+with tapestries, and seated him by his side on the high seat. And
+Ospakar's thralls brought good gifts for Asmund, who thanked the giver
+well.
+
+Now it was supper time, and Gudruda came in, and after her walked
+Swanhild. Ospakar gazed hard at Gudruda and a great desire entered into
+him to make her his wife. But she passed coldly by, nor looked on him at
+all.
+
+"This, then, is that maid of thine of whom I have heard tell, Asmund? I
+will say this: fairer was never born of woman."
+
+Then men ate and Ospakar drank much ale, but all the while he stared at
+Gudruda and listened for her voice. But as yet he said nothing of what
+he came to seek, though all knew his errand. And his two sons, Gizur
+and Mord, stared also at Gudruda, for they thought her most wonderfully
+fair. But Gizur found Swanhild also fair.
+
+And so the night wore on till it was time to sleep.
+
+
+
+On this same day Eric rode up from his farm on Ran River and took his
+road along the brow of Coldback till he came to Stonefell. Now all along
+Coldback and Stonefell is a steep cliff facing to the south, that grows
+ever higher till it comes to that point where Golden River falls over
+it and, parting its waters below, runs east and west--the branch to the
+east being called Ran River and that to the west Lax--for these two
+streams girdle round the rich plain of Middalhof, till at length they
+reach the sea. But in the midst of Golden River, on the edge of the
+cliff, a mass of rock juts up called Sheep-saddle, dividing the waters
+of the fall, and over this the spray flies, and in winter the ice
+gathers, but the river does not cover it. The great fall is thirty
+fathoms deep, and shaped like a horseshoe, of which the points lie
+towards Middalhof. Yet if he could but gain the Sheep-saddle rock that
+divides the midst of the waters, a strong and hardy man might climb down
+some fifteen fathoms of this depth and scarcely wet his feet.
+
+Now here at the foot of Sheep-saddle rock the double arches of waters
+meet, and fall in one torrent into the bottomless pool below. But, some
+three fathoms from this point of the meeting waters, and beneath
+it, just where the curve is deepest, a single crag, as large as a
+drinking-table and no larger, juts through the foam, and, if a man could
+reach it, he might leap from it some twelve fathoms, sheer into the
+spray-hidden pit beneath, there to sink or swim as it might befall. This
+crag is called Wolf's Fang.
+
+Now Eric stood for a long while on the edge of the fall and looked,
+measuring every thing with his eye. Then he went up above, where the
+river swirls down to the precipice, and looked again, for it is from
+this bank that the dividing island-rock Sheep-saddle must be reached.
+
+"A man may hardly do this thing; yet I will try it," he said to himself
+at last. "My honour shall be great for the feat, if I chance to live,
+and if I die--well, there is an end of troubling after maids and all
+other things."
+
+So he went home and sat silent that evening. Now, since Thorgrimur
+Iron-Toe's death, his housewife, Saevuna, Eric's mother, had grown dim
+of sight, and, though she peered and peered again from her seat in the
+ingle nook, she could not see the face of her son.
+
+"What ails thee, Eric, that thou sittest so silent? Was not the meat,
+then, to thy mind at supper?"
+
+"Yes, mother, the meat was well enough, though a little undersmoked."
+
+"Now I see that thou art not thyself, son, for thou hadst no meat, but
+only stock-fish--and I never knew a man forget his supper on the night
+of its eating, except he was distraught or deep in love."
+
+"Was it so?" said Brighteyes.
+
+"What troubles thee, Eric?--that sweet lass yonder?"
+
+"Ay, somewhat, mother."
+
+"What more, then?"
+
+"This, that I go down Golden Falls to-morrow, and I do not know how I
+may come from Sheep-saddle rock to Wolf's Fang crag and keep my life
+whole in me; and now, I pray thee, weary me not with words, for my brain
+is slow, and I must use it."
+
+When she heard this Saevuna screamed aloud, and threw herself before
+Eric, praying him to forgo his mad venture. But he would not listen
+to her, for he was slow to make up his mind, but, that being made up,
+nothing could change it. Then, when she learned that it was to get sight
+of Gudruda that he purposed thus to throw his life away, she was very
+angry and cursed her and all her kith and kin.
+
+"It is likely enough that thou wilt have cause to use such words before
+all this tale is told," said Eric; "nevertheless, mother, forbear to
+curse Gudruda, who is in no way to blame for these matters."
+
+"Thou art a faithless son," Saevuna said, "who wilt slay thyself
+striving to win speech with thy May, and leave thy mother childless."
+
+Eric said that it seemed so indeed, but he was plighted to it and the
+feat must be tried. Then he kissed her, and she sought her bed, weeping.
+
+
+
+Now it was the day of the Yule-feast, and there was no sun till one hour
+before noon. But Eric, having kissed his mother and bidden her farewell,
+called a thrall, Jon by name, and giving him a sealskin bag full of his
+best apparel, bade him ride to Middalhof and tell Asmund the Priest that
+Eric Brighteyes would come down Golden Falls an hour after mid-day, to
+join his feast; and thence go to the foot of the Golden Falls, to await
+him there. And the man went, wondering, for he thought his master mad.
+
+Then Eric took a good rope, and a staff tipped with iron, and, so soon
+as the light served, mounted his horse, forded Ran River, and rode along
+Coldback till he came to the lip of Golden Falls. Here he stayed a while
+till at length he saw many people streaming up the snow from Middalhof
+far beneath, and, among them, two women who by their stature should be
+Gudruda and Swanhild, and, near to them, a great man whom he did not
+know. Then he showed himself for a space on the brink of the gulf and
+turned his horse up stream. The sun shone bright upon the edge of
+the sky, but the frost bit like a sword. Still, he must strip off his
+garments, so that nothing remained on him except his sheepskin shoes,
+shirt and hose, and take the water. Now here the river runs mightily,
+and he must cross full thirty fathoms of the swirling water before he
+can reach Sheep-saddle, and woe to him if his foot slip on the boulders,
+for certainly he must be swept over the brink.
+
+Eric rested the staff against the stony bottom and, leaning his weight
+on it, took the stream, and he was so strong that it could not prevail
+against him till at length he was rather more than half-way across and
+the water swept above his shoulders. Now he was lifted from his feet
+and, letting the staff float, he swam for his life, and with such mighty
+strokes that he felt little of that icy cold. Down he was swept--now the
+lip of the fall was but three fathoms away on his left, and already
+the green water boiled beneath him. A fathom from him was the corner of
+Sheep-saddle. If he may grasp it, all is well; if not, he dies.
+
+Three great strokes and he held it. His feet were swept out over the
+brink of the fall, but he clung on grimly, and by the strength of his
+arms drew himself on to the rock and rested a while. Presently he stood
+up, for the cold began to nip him, and the people below became aware
+that he had swum the river above the fall and raised a shout, for the
+deed was great. Now Eric must begin to clamber down Sheep-saddle, and
+this was no easy task, for the rock is almost sheer, and slippery with
+ice, and on either side the waters rushed and thundered, throwing their
+blinding spray about him as they leapt to the depths beneath. He looked
+down, studying the rock; then, feeling that he grew afraid, made an end
+of doubt and, grasping a point with both hands, swung himself down his
+own length and more. Now for many minutes he climbed down Sheep-saddle,
+and the task was hard, for he was bewildered with the booming of the
+waters that bent out on either side of him like the arc of a bow, and
+the rock was very steep and slippery. Still, he came down all those
+fifteen fathoms and fell not, though twice he was near to falling, and
+the watchers below marvelled greatly at his hardihood.
+
+"He will be dashed to pieces where the waters meet," said Ospakar, "he
+can never gain Wolf's Fang crag beneath; and, if so it be that he come
+there and leaps to the pool, the weight of water will drive him down and
+drown him."
+
+"It is certainly so," quoth Asmund, "and it grieves me much; for it was
+my jest that drove him to this perilous adventure, and we cannot spare
+such a man as Eric Brighteyes."
+
+Now Swanhild turned white as death; but Gudruda said: "If great heart
+and strength and skill may avail at all, then Eric shall come safely
+down the waters."
+
+"Thou fool!" whispered Swanhild in her ear, "how can these help him? No
+troll could live in yonder cauldron. Dead is Eric, and thou art the bait
+that lured him to his death!"
+
+"Spare thy words," she answered; "as the Norns have ordered so it shall
+be."
+
+Now Eric stood at the foot of Sheep-saddle, and within an arm's length
+the mighty waters met, tossing their yellow waves and seething furiously
+as they leapt to the mist-hid gulf beneath. He bent over and looked
+through the spray. Three fathoms under him the rock Wolf's Fang split
+the waters, and thence, if he can come thither, he may leap sheer into
+the pool below. Now he unwound the rope that was about his middle, and
+made one end fast to a knob of rock--and this was difficult, for his
+hands were stiff with cold--and the other end he passed through his
+leathern girdle. Then Eric looked again, and his heart sank within him.
+How might he give himself to this boiling flood and not be shattered?
+But as he looked, lo! a rainbow grew upon the face of the water, and one
+end of it lit upon him, and the other, like a glory from the Gods, fell
+full upon Gudruda as she stood a little way apart, watching at the foot
+of Golden Falls.
+
+"Seest thou that," said Asmund to Groa, who was at his side, "the Gods
+build their Bifrost bridge between these two. Who now shall keep them
+asunder?"
+
+"Read the portent thus," she answered: "they shall be united, but not
+here. Yon is a Spirit bridge, and, see: the waters of Death foam and
+fall between them!"
+
+Eric, too, saw the omen and it seemed good to him, and all fear left his
+heart. Round about him the waters thundered, but amidst their roar he
+dreamed that he heard a voice calling:
+
+"Be of good cheer, Eric Brighteyes; for thou shalt live to do mightier
+deeds than this, and in guerdon thou shalt win Gudruda."
+
+So he paused no longer, but, shortening up the rope, pulled on it with
+all his strength, and then leapt out upon the arch of waters. They
+struck him and he was dashed out like a stone from a sling; again he
+fell against them and again was dashed away, so that his girdle burst.
+Eric felt it go and clung wildly to the rope and lo! with the inward
+swing, he fell on Wolf's Fang, where never a man has stood before and
+never a man shall stand again. Eric lay a little while on the rock till
+his breath came back to him, and he listened to the roar of the waters.
+Then, rising on his hands and knees, he crept to its point, for he could
+scarcely stand because of the trembling of the stone beneath the shock
+of the fall; and when the people below saw that he was not dead, they
+raised a great shout, and the sound of their voices came to him through
+the noise of the waters.
+
+Now, twelve fathoms beneath him was the surface of the pool; but he
+could not see it because of the wreaths of spray. Nevertheless, he must
+leap and that swiftly, for he grew cold. So of a sudden Eric stood up to
+his full height, and, with a loud cry and a mighty spring, bounded out
+from the point of Wolf's Fang far into the air, beyond the reach of the
+falling flood, and rushed headlong towards the gulf beneath. Now all men
+watching held their breath as his body travelled, and so great is the
+place and so high the leap that through the mist Eric seemed but as a
+big white stone hurled down the face of the arching waters.
+
+He was gone, and the watchers rushed down to the foot of the pool, for
+there, if he rose at all, he must pass to the shallows. Swanhild could
+look no more, but sank upon the ground. The face of Gudruda was set like
+a stone with doubt and anguish. Ospakar saw and read the meaning, and he
+said to himself: "Now Odin grant that this youngling rise not again! for
+the maid loves him dearly, and he is too much a man to be lightly swept
+aside."
+
+Eric struck the pool. Down he sank, and down and down--for the water
+falling from so far must almost reach the bottom of the pool before
+it can rise again--and he with it. Now he touched the bottom, but very
+gently, and slowly began to rise, and, as he rose, was carried along by
+the stream. But it was long before he could breathe, and it seemed to
+him that his lungs would burst. Still, he struggled up, striking great
+strokes with his legs.
+
+"Farewell to Eric," said Asmund, "he will rise no more now."
+
+But just as he spoke Gudruda pointed to something that gleamed, white
+and golden, beneath the surface of the current, and lo! the bright hair
+of Eric rose from the water, and he drew a great breath, shaking his
+head like a seal, and, though but feebly, struck out for the shallows
+that are at the foot of the pool. Now he found footing, but was swept
+over by the fierce current, and cut his forehead, and he carried that
+scar till his death. Again he rose, and with a rush gained the bank
+unaided and fell upon the snow.
+
+Now people gathered about him in silence and wondering, for none had
+known so great a deed. And presently Eric opened his eyes and looked up,
+and found the eyes of Gudruda fixed on his, and there was that in them
+which made him glad he had dared the path of Golden Falls.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+HOW ERIC WON THE SWORD WHITEFIRE
+
+Now Asmund the priest bent down, and Eric saw him and spoke:
+
+"Thou badest me to thy Yule-feast, lord, by yonder slippery road and I
+have come. Dost thou welcome me well?"
+
+"No man better," quoth Asmund. "Thou art a gallant man, though
+foolhardy; and thou hast done a deed that shall be told of while skalds
+sing and men live in Iceland."
+
+"Make place, my father," said Gudruda, "for Eric bleeds." And she loosed
+the kerchief from her neck and bound it about his wounded brow, and,
+taking the rich cloak from her body, threw it on his shoulders, and no
+man said her nay.
+
+Then they led him to the hall, where Eric clothed himself and rested,
+and he sent back the thrall Jon to Coldback, bidding him tell Saevuna,
+Eric's mother, that he was safe. But he was somewhat weak all that day,
+and the sound of waters roared in his ears.
+
+Now Ospakar and Groa were ill pleased at the turn things had taken; but
+all the others rejoiced much, for Eric was well loved of men and they
+had grieved if the waters had prevailed against his might. But Swanhild
+brooded bitterly, for Eric never turned to look on her.
+
+The hour of the feast drew on and, according to custom, it was held in
+the Temple, and thither went all men. When they were seated in the nave
+of the Hof, the fat ox that had been made ready for sacrifice was led in
+and dragged before the altar on which the holy fire burned. Now Asmund
+the Priest slew it, amid silence, before the figures of the Gods, and,
+catching its blood in the blood-bowl, sprinkled the altar and all
+the worshippers with the blood-twigs. Then the ox was cut up, and the
+figures of the almighty Gods were anointed with its molten fat and wiped
+with fair linen. Next the flesh was boiled in the cauldrons that were
+hung over fires lighted all down the nave, and the feast began.
+
+Now men ate, and drank much ale and mead, and all were merry. But
+Ospakar Blacktooth grew not glad, though he drank much, for he saw that
+the eyes of Gudruda ever watched Eric's face and that they smiled on
+each other. He was wroth at this, for he knew that the bait must be good
+and the line strong that should win this fair fish to his angle, and as
+he sat, unknowingly his fingers loosed the peace-strings of his sword
+Whitefire, and he half drew it, so that its brightness flamed in the
+firelight.
+
+"Thou hast a wondrous blade there, Ospakar!" said Asmund, "though this
+is no place to draw it. Whence came it? Methinks no such swords are
+fashioned now."
+
+"Ay, Asmund, a wondrous blade indeed. There is no other such in the
+world, for the dwarfs forged it of old, and he shall be unconquered who
+holds it aloft. This was King Odin's sword, and it is named Whitefire.
+Ralph the Red took it from King Eric's cairn in Norway, and he strove
+long with the Barrow-Dweller[*] before he wrenched it from his grasp.
+But my father won it and slew Ralph, though he had never done this had
+Whitefire been aloft against him. But Ralph the Red, being in drink when
+the ships met in battle, fought with an axe, and was slain by my father,
+and since then Whitefire has been the last light that many a chief's
+eyes have seen. Look at it, Asmund."
+
+[*] The ghost in the cairn.
+
+Now he drew the great sword, and men were astonished as it flashed
+aloft. Its hilt was of gold, and blue stones were set therein. It
+measured two ells and a half from crossbar to point, and so bright was
+the broad blade that no one could look on it for long, and all down its
+length ran runes.
+
+"A wondrous weapon, truly!" said Asmund. "How read the runes?"
+
+"I know not, nor any man--they are ancient."
+
+"Let me look at them," said Groa, "I am skilled in runes." Now she
+took the sword, and heaved it up, and looked at the runes and said, "A
+strange writing truly."
+
+"How runs it, housekeeper?" said Asmund.
+
+"Thus, lord, if my skill is not at fault:--
+
+ "Whitefire is my name--
+ Dwarf-folk forged me--
+ Odin's sword was I--
+ Eric's sword was I--
+ Eric's sword shall I be--
+ And where I fall there he must follow me."
+
+Now Gudruda looked at Eric Brighteyes wonderingly, and Ospakar saw it
+and became very angry.
+
+"Look not so, maiden," he said, "for it shall be another Eric than yon
+flapper-duck who holds Whitefire aloft, though it may very well chance
+that he shall feel its edge."
+
+Now Gudruda bit her lip, and Eric burned red to the brow and spoke:
+
+"It is ill, lord, to throw taunts like an angry woman. Thou art great
+and strong, yet I may dare a deed with thee."
+
+"Peace, boy! Thou canst climb a waterfall well, I gainsay it not; but
+beware ere thou settest up thyself against my strength. Say now, what
+game wilt thou play with Ospakar?"
+
+"I will go on holmgang with thee, byrnie-clad or baresark,[*] and fight
+thee with axe or sword, or I will wrestle with thee, and Whitefire
+yonder shall be the winner's prize."
+
+ [*] To a duel, usually fought, in mail or without it, on an
+ island--"holm"--within a circle of hazel-twigs.
+
+"Nay, I will have no bloodshed here at Middalhof," said Asmund sternly.
+"Make play with fists, or wrestle if ye will, for that were great sport
+to see; but weapons shall not be drawn."
+
+Now Ospakar grew mad with anger and drink--and he grinned like a dog,
+till men saw the red gums beneath his lips.
+
+"Thou wilt wrestle with me, youngling--with _me_ whom no man has ever so
+much as lifted from my feet? Good! I will lay thee on thy face and
+whip thee, and Whitefire shall be the stake--I swear it on the holy
+altar-ring; but what hast thou to set against the precious sword? Thy
+poor hovel and its lot of land shall be all too little."
+
+"I set my life on it; if I lose Whitefire let Whitefire slay me," said
+Eric.
+
+"Nay, that I will not have, and I am master here in this Temple," said
+Asmund. "Bethink thee of some other stake, Ospakar, or let the game be
+off."
+
+Now Ospakar gnawed his lip with his black fang and thought. Then he
+laughed aloud and spoke:
+
+"Bright is Whitefire and thou art named Brighteyes. See now: I set the
+great sword against thy right eye, and, if I win the match, it shall
+be mine to tear it out. Wilt thou play this game with me? If thy heart
+fails thee, let it go; but I will set no other stake against my good
+sword."
+
+"Eyes and limbs are a poor man's wealth," said Eric: "so be it. I stake
+my right eye against the sword Whitefire, and we will try the match
+to-morrow."
+
+"And to-morrow night thou shalt be called Eric One-eye," said
+Ospakar--at which some few of his thralls laughed.
+
+But most of the men did not laugh, for they thought this an ill game and
+a worst jest.
+
+Now the feast went on, and Asmund rose from his high seat in the centre
+of the nave, on the left hand looking down from the altar, and gave
+out the holy toasts. First men drank a full horn to Odin, praying for
+triumph on their foes. Then they drank to Frey, asking for plenty; to
+Thor, for strength in battle; to Freya, Goddess of Love (and to her Eric
+drank heartily); to the memory of the dead; and, last of all, to
+Bragi, God of all delight. When this cup was drunk, Asmund rose again,
+according to custom, and asked if none had an oath to swear as to some
+deed that should be done.
+
+For a while there was no answer, but presently Eric Brighteyes stood up.
+
+"Lord," he said, "I would swear an oath."
+
+"Set forth the matter, then," said Asmund.
+
+"It is this," quoth Eric. "On Mosfell mountain, over by Hecla, dwells a
+Baresark of whom all men have ill knowledge, for there are few whom he
+has not harmed. His name is Skallagrim; he is a mighty man and he has
+wrought much mischief in the south country, and brought many to their
+deaths and robbed more of their goods: for none can prevail against him.
+Still, I swear this, that, when the days lengthen, I will go up alone
+against him and challenge him to battle, and conquer him or fall."
+
+"Then, thou yellow-headed puppy-dog, thou shalt go with one eye against
+a Baresark with two," growled Ospakar.
+
+Men took no heed of his words, but shouted aloud, for Skallagrim had
+plagued them long, and there were none who dared to fight with him any
+more. Only Gudruda looked askance, for it seemed to her that Eric swore
+too fast. Nevertheless he went up to the altar, and, taking hold of the
+holy ring, he set his foot on the holy stone and swore his oath, while
+the feasters applauded, striking their cups upon the board.
+
+And after that the feast went merrily, till all men were drunk, except
+Asmund and Eric.
+
+Now Eric went to rest, but first he rubbed his limbs with the fat of
+seals, for he was still sore with the beating of the waters, and they
+must needs be supple on the morrow if he would keep his eye. Then he
+slept sound, and rose strong and well, and going to the stream behind
+the stead, bathed, and anointed his limbs afresh. But Ospakar did not
+sleep well, because of the ale that he had drunk. Now as Eric came back
+from bathing, in the dark of the morning, he met Gudruda, who watched
+for his coming, and, there being none to see, he kissed her often; but
+she chided him because of the match that he had made with Ospakar and
+the oath that he had sworn.
+
+"Surely," she said, "thou wilt lose thine eye, for this Ospakar is a
+giant, and strong as a troll; also he is merciless. Still, thou art a
+mighty man, and I shall love thee as well with one eye as with two. Oh!
+Eric, methought I should have died yesterday when thou didst leap from
+Wolf's Fang! My heart seemed to stop within me."
+
+"Yet I came safely to shore, sweetheart, and well does this kiss pay for
+all I did. And as for Ospakar, if but once I get these arms about him, I
+fear him little, or any man, and I covet that sword of his greatly. But
+we can talk more certainly of these things to-morrow."
+
+Now Gudruda clung to him and told him all that had befallen, and of the
+doings and words of Swanhild.
+
+"She honours me beyond my worth," he said, "who am in no way set on her,
+but on thee only, Gudruda."
+
+"Art thou so sure of that, Eric? Swanhild is fair and wise."
+
+"Ay and evil. When I love Swanhild, then thou mayest love Ospakar."
+
+"It is a bargain," she said, laughing. "Good luck go with thee in the
+wrestling," and with a kiss she left him, fearing lest she should be
+seen.
+
+Eric went back to the hall, and sat down by the centre hearth, for all
+men slept, being still heavy with drink, and presently Swanhild glided
+up to him, and greeted him.
+
+"Thou art greedy of deeds, Eric," she said. "Yesterday thou camest here
+by a path that no man has travelled, to-day thou dost wrestle with a
+giant for thine eye, and presently thou goest up against Skallagrim!"
+
+"It seems that this is true," said Eric.
+
+"Now all this thou doest for a woman who is the betrothed of another
+man."
+
+"All this I do for fame's sake, Swanhild. Moreover, Gudruda is betrothed
+to none."
+
+"Before another Yule-feast is spread, Gudruda shall be the wife of
+Ospakar."
+
+"That is yet to be seen, Swanhild."
+
+Now Swanhild stood silent for a while and then spoke: "Thou art a fool,
+Eric--yes, drunk with folly. Nothing but evil shall come to thee from
+this madness of thine. Forget it and pluck that which lies to thine
+hand," and she looked sweetly at him.
+
+"They call thee Swanhild the Fatherless," he answered, "but I think that
+Loki, the God of Guile, was thy father, for there is none to match thee
+in craft and evil-doing, and in beauty one only. I know thy plots well
+and all the sorrow that thou hast brought upon us. Still, each seeks
+honour after his own manner, so seek thou as thou wilt; but thou shalt
+find bitterness and empty days, and thy plots shall come back on thine
+own head--yes, even though they bring Gudruda and me to sorrow and
+death."
+
+Swanhild laughed. "A day shall dawn, Eric, when thou who dost hate me
+shalt hold me dear, and this I promise thee. Another thing I promise
+thee also: that Gudruda shall never call thee husband."
+
+But Eric did not answer, fearing lest in his anger he should say words
+that were better unspoken.
+
+Now men rose and sat down to meat, and all talked of the wrestling that
+should be. But in the morning Ospakar repented of the match, for it is
+truly said that _ale is another man_, and men do not like that in the
+morning which seemed well enough on yester eve. He remembered that he
+held Whitefire dear above all things, and that Eric's eye had no worth
+to him, except that the loss of it would spoil his beauty, so that
+perhaps Gudruda would turn from him. It would be very ill if he should
+chance to lose the play--though of this he had no fear, for he was
+held the strongest man in Iceland and the most skilled in all feats of
+strength--and, at the best, no fame is to be won from the overthrow of a
+deedless man, and the plucking out of his eye. Thus it came to pass that
+when he saw Eric he called to him in a big voice:
+
+"Hearken, thou Eric."
+
+"I hear thee, thou Ospakar," said Eric, mocking him, and people laughed;
+while Ospakar grinned angrily and said, "Thou must learn manners, puppy.
+Still, I shall find no honour in teaching thee in this wise. Last night
+we made a match in our cups, and I staked my sword Whitefire and thou
+thine eye. It would be bad that either of us should lose sword or eye;
+therefore, what sayest thou, shall we let it pass?"
+
+"Ay, Blacktooth, if thou fearest; but first pay thou forfeit of the
+sword."
+
+Now Ospakar grew very mad and shouted, "Thou wilt indeed stand against
+me in the ring! I will break thy back anon, youngster, and afterwards
+tear out thine eye before thou diest."
+
+"It may so befall," answered Eric, "but big words do not make big
+deeds."
+
+Presently the light came and thralls went out with spades and cleared
+away the snow in a circle two rods across, and brought dry sand and
+sprinkled it on the frozen turf, so that the wrestlers should not slip.
+And they piled the snow in a wall around the ring.
+
+But Groa came up to Ospakar and spoke to him apart.
+
+"Knowest thou, lord," she said, "that my heart bodes ill of this match?
+Eric is a mighty man, and, great though thou art, I think that thou
+shalt lout low before him."
+
+"It will be a bad business if I am overthrown by an untried man," said
+Ospakar, and was troubled in his mind, "and it would be evil moreover to
+lose the sword. For no price would I have it so."
+
+"What wilt thou give me, lord, if I bring thee victory?"
+
+"I will give thee two hundred in silver."
+
+"Ask no questions and it shall be so," said Groa.
+
+Now Eric was without, taking note of the ground in the ring, and
+presently Groa called to her the thrall Koll the Half-witted, whom she
+had sent to Swinefell.
+
+"See," she said, "yonder by the wall stand the wrestling shoes of Eric
+Brighteyes. Haste thee now and take grease, and rub the soles with it,
+then hold them in the heat of the fire, so that the fat sinks in. Do
+this swiftly and secretly, and I will give thee three pennies."
+
+Koll grinned, and did as he was bid, setting back the shoes just as
+they were before. Scarcely was the deed done when Eric came in, and made
+himself ready for the game, binding the greased shoes upon his feet, for
+he feared no trick.
+
+Now everybody went out to the ring, and Ospakar and Eric stripped
+for wrestling. They were clad in tight woollen jerkins and hose, and
+sheep-skin shoes were on their feet.
+
+They named Asmund master of the game, and his word must be law to both
+of them. Eric claimed that Asmund should hold the sword Whitefire that
+was at stake, but Ospakar gainsaid him, saying that if he gave Whitefire
+into Asmund's keeping, Eric must also give his eye--and about this they
+debated hotly. Now the matter was brought before Asmund as umpire, and
+he gave judgment for Eric, "for," he said, "if Eric yield up his eye
+into my hand, I can return it to his head no more if he should win; but
+if Ospakar gives me the good sword and conquers, it is easy for me to
+pass it back to him unharmed."
+
+Men said that this was a good judgment.
+
+Thus then was the arm-game set. Ospakar and Eric must wrestle thrice,
+and between each bout there would be a space while men could count a
+thousand. They might strike no blow at one another with hand, or head,
+or elbow, foot or knee; and it should be counted no fall if the haunch
+and the head of the fallen were not on the ground at the self-same time.
+He who suffered two falls should be adjudged conquered and lose his
+stake.
+
+Asmund called these rules aloud in the presence of witnesses, and
+Ospakar and Eric said that should bind them. Ospakar drew a small knife
+and gave it to his son Gizur to hold.
+
+"Thou shalt soon know, youngling, how steel tastes in the eyeball," he
+said.
+
+"We shall soon know many things," Eric answered.
+
+Now they drew off their cloaks and stood in the ring. Ospakar was great
+beyond the bigness of men and his arms were clothed with black hair
+like the limbs of a goat. Beneath the shoulder joint they were almost
+as thick as a girl's thigh. His legs also were mighty, and the muscles
+stood out upon him in knotty lumps. He seemed a very giant, and fierce
+as a Baresark, but still somewhat round about the body and heavy in
+movement.
+
+From him men looked at Eric.
+
+"Lo! Baldur and the Troll!" said Swanhild, and everybody laughed, since
+so it was indeed; for, if Ospakar was black and hideous as a troll, Eric
+was beautiful as Baldur, the loveliest of the Gods. He was taller than
+Ospakar by the half of a hand and as broad in the chest. Still, he was
+not yet come to his greatest strength, and, though his limbs were well
+knit, they seemed but as a child's against the limbs of Ospakar. But he
+was quick as a cat and lithe, his neck and arms were white as whey, and
+beneath his golden hair his bright eyes shone like spears.
+
+Now they stood face to face, with arms outstretched, waiting the word of
+Asmund. He gave it and they circled round each other with arms held low.
+Presently Ospakar made a rush and, seizing Eric about the middle, tried
+to lift him, but with no avail. Thrice he strove and failed, then Eric
+moved his foot and lo! it slipped upon the sanded turf. Again Eric moved
+and again he slipped, a third time and he slipped a third time, and
+before he could recover himself he was full on his back and fairly
+thrown.
+
+Gudruda saw and was sad at heart, and those around her said that it was
+easy to know how the game would end.
+
+"What said I?" quoth Swanhild, "that it would go badly with Eric were
+Ospakar's arms about him."
+
+"All is not done yet," answered Gudruda. "Methinks Eric's feet slipped
+most strangely, as though he stood on ice."
+
+But Eric was very sore at heart and could make nothing of this
+matter--for he was not overthrown by strength.
+
+He sat on the snow and Ospakar and his sons mocked him. But Gudruda drew
+near and whispered to him to be of good cheer, for fortune might yet
+change.
+
+"I think that I am bewitched," said Eric sadly: "my feet have no hold of
+the ground."
+
+Gudruda covered her eyes with her hand and thought. Presently she looked
+up quickly. "I seem to see guile here," she said. "Now look narrowly on
+thy shoes."
+
+He heard, and, loosening his shoe-string, drew a shoe from his foot and
+looked at the sole. The cold of the snow had hardened the fat, and there
+it was, all white upon the leather.
+
+Now Eric rose in wrath. "Methought," he cried, "that I dealt with men
+of honourable mind, not with cheating tricksters. See now! it is little
+wonder that I slipped, for grease has been set upon my shoes--and, by
+Thor! I will cleave the man who did it to the chin," and as he said it
+his eyes blazed so dreadfully that folk fell back from him. Asmund took
+the shoes and looked at them. Then he spoke:
+
+"Brighteyes tells the truth, and we have a sorry knave among us.
+Ospakar, canst thou clear thyself of this ill deed?"
+
+"I will swear on the holy ring that I know nothing of it, and if any man
+in my company has had a hand therein he shall die," said Ospakar.
+
+"That we will swear also," cried his sons Gizur and Mord.
+
+"This is more like a woman's work," said Gudruda, and she looked at
+Swanhild.
+
+"It is no work of mine," quoth Swanhild.
+
+"Then go and ask thy mother of it," answered Gudruda.
+
+Now all men cried aloud that this was the greatest shame, and that the
+match must be set afresh; only Ospakar bethought him of that two hundred
+in silver which he had promised to Groa, and looked around, but she was
+not there. Still, he gainsaid Eric in the matter of the match being set
+afresh.
+
+Then Eric cried out in his anger that he would let the game stand as it
+was, since Ospakar swore himself free of the shameful deed. Men thought
+this a mad saying, but Asmund said it should be so. Still, he swore
+in his heart that, even if he were worsted, Eric should not lose his
+eye--no not if swords were held aloft to take it. For of all tricks this
+seemed to him the very worst.
+
+Now Ospakar and Eric faced each other again in the ring, but this time
+the feet of Eric were bare.
+
+Ospakar rushed to get the upper hold, but Eric was too swift for him and
+sprang aside. Again he rushed, but Eric dropped and gripped him round
+the middle. Now they were face to face, hugging each other like bears,
+but moving little. For a time things went thus, while Ospakar strove to
+lift Eric, but in nowise could he stir him. Then of a sudden Eric put
+out his strength, and they staggered round the ring, tearing at each
+other till their jerkins were rent from them, leaving them almost bare
+to the waist. Suddenly, Eric seemed to give, and Ospakar put out his
+foot to trip him. But Brighteyes was watching. He caught the foot in
+the crook of his left leg, and threw his weight forward on the chest of
+Blacktooth. Backward he went, falling with the thud of a tree on snow,
+and there he lay on the ground, and Eric over him.
+
+Then men shouted "A fall! a fair fall!" and were very glad, for the
+fight seemed most uneven to them, and the wrestlers rolled asunder,
+breathing heavily.
+
+Gudruda threw a cloak over Eric's naked shoulders.
+
+"That was well done, Brighteyes," she said.
+
+"The game is still to play, sweet," he gasped, "and Ospakar is a mighty
+man. I threw him by skill, not by strength. Next time it must be by
+strength or not at all."
+
+Now breathing-time was done, and once more the two were face to face.
+Thrice Ospakar rushed, and thrice did Eric slip away, for he would waste
+Blacktooth's strength. Again Ospakar rushed, roaring like a bear, and
+fire seemed to come from his eyes, and the steam went up from him and
+hung upon the frosty air like the steam of a horse. This time Eric could
+not get away, but was swept up into that great grip, for Ospakar had the
+lower hold.
+
+"Now there is an end of Eric," said Swanhild.
+
+"The arrow is yet on the bow," answered Gudruda.
+
+Blacktooth put out his might and reeled round and round the ring,
+dragging Eric with him. This way and that he twisted, and time on time
+Eric's leg was lifted from the ground, but so he might not be thrown.
+Now they stood almost still, while men shouted madly, for no such
+wrestling had been known in the southlands. Grimly they hugged and
+strove: forsooth it was a mighty sight to see. Grimly they hugged, and
+their muscles strained and cracked, but they could stir each other no
+inch.
+
+Ospakar grew fearful, for he could make no play with this youngling.
+Black rage swelled in his heart. He ground his fangs, and thought on
+guile. By his foot gleamed the naked foot of Eric. Suddenly he stamped
+on it so fiercely that the skin burst.
+
+"Ill done! ill done!" folk cried; but in his pain Eric moved his foot.
+
+Lo! he was down, but not altogether down, for he did but sit upon his
+haunches, and still he clung to Blacktooth's thighs, and twined his legs
+about his ankles. Now with all his strength Ospakar strove to force the
+head of Brighteyes to the ground, but still he could not, for Eric clung
+to him like a creeper to a tree.
+
+"A losing game for Eric," said Asmund, and as he spoke Brighteyes was
+pressed back till his yellow hair almost swept the sand.
+
+Then the folk of Ospakar shouted in triumph, but Gudruda cried aloud:
+
+"Be not overthrown, Eric; loose thee and spring aside."
+
+Eric heard, and of a sudden loosed all his grip. He fell on his
+outspread hand, then, with a swing sideways and a bound, once more
+he stood upon his feet. Ospakar came at him like a bull made mad with
+goading, but he could no longer roar aloud. They closed and this time
+Eric had the better hold. For a while they struggled round and round
+till their feet tore the frozen turf, then once more they stood face
+to face. Now the two were almost spent; yet Blacktooth gathered up his
+strength and swung Eric from his feet, but he found them again. He grew
+mad with rage, and hugged him till Brighteyes was nearly pressed to
+death, and black bruises sprang upon the whiteness of his flesh. Ospakar
+grew mad, and madder yet, till at length in his fury he fixed his fangs
+in Eric's shoulder and bit till the blood spurted.
+
+"Ill kissed, thou rat!" gasped Eric, and with the pain and rush of
+blood, his strength came back to him. He shifted his grip swiftly, now
+his right hand was beneath the fork of Blacktooth's thigh and his left
+on the hollow of Blacktooth's back. Twice he lifted--twice the bulk of
+Ospakar rose from the ground--a third mighty lift--so mighty that the
+wrapping on Eric's forehead burst, and the blood streamed down his
+face--and lo! great Blacktooth flew in air. Up he flew, and backward he
+fell into the bank of snow, and was buried there almost to the knees.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WAS BETROTHED TO UNNA
+
+For a moment there was silence, for all that company was wonderstruck at
+the greatness of the deed. Then they cheered and cheered again, and to
+Eric it seemed that he slept, and the sound of shouting reached him but
+faintly, as though he heard through snow. Suddenly he woke and saw a
+man rush at him with axe aloft. It was Mord, Ospakar's son, mad at his
+father's overthrow. Eric sprang aside, or the blow had been his bane,
+and, as he sprang, smote with his fist, and it struck heavily on the
+head of Mord above the ear, so that the axe flew from his hand, and he
+fell senseless on his father in the snow.
+
+Now swords flashed out, and men ringed round Eric to guard him, and it
+came near to the spilling of blood, for the people of Ospakar gnashed
+their teeth to see so great a hero overthrown by a youngling, while the
+southern folk of Middalhof and Ran River rejoiced loudly, for Eric was
+dear to their hearts.
+
+"Down swords," cried Asmund the priest, "and haul yon carcass from the
+snow."
+
+This then they did, and Ospakar sat up, breathing in great gasps, the
+blood running from his mouth and ears, and he was an evil sight to see,
+for what with blood and snow and rage his face was like the face of the
+Swinefell Goblin.
+
+But Swanhild spoke in the ear of Gudruda:
+
+"Here," she said, looking at Eric, "we two have a man worth loving,
+foster-sister."
+
+"Ay," answered Gudruda, "worth and well worth!"
+
+Now Asmund drew near and before all men kissed Eric Brighteyes on the
+brow.
+
+"In sooth," he said, "thou art a mighty man, Eric, and the glory of the
+south. This I prophesy of thee: that thou shalt do deeds such as have
+not been done in Iceland. Thou hast ill been served, for a knave unknown
+greased thy shoes. Yon swarthy Ospakar, the most mighty of all men in
+Iceland, could not overthrow thee, though, like a wolf, he fastened his
+fangs in thee, and, like a coward, stamped upon thy naked foot. Take
+thou the great sword that thou hast won and wear it worthily."
+
+Now Eric took snow and wiped the blood from his brow. Then he grasped
+Whitefire and drew it from the scabbard, and high aloft flashed the
+war-blade. Thrice he wheeled it round his head, then sang aloud:
+
+ "Fast, yestermorn, down Golden Falls,
+ Fared young Eric to thy feast,
+ Asmund, father of Gudruda--
+ Maid whom much he longs to clasp.
+ But to-day on Giant Blacktooth
+ Hath he done a needful deed:
+ Hurling him in heaped-up snowdrift;
+ Winning Whitefire for his wage."
+
+And again he sang:
+
+ "Lord, if in very truth thou thinkest
+ Brighteyes is a man midst men,
+ Swear to him, the stalwart suitor,
+ Handsel of thy sweet maid's hand:
+ Whom, long loved, to win, down Goldfoss
+ Swift he sped through frost and foam;
+ Whom, to win, to troll-like Ogre,
+ He, 'gainst Whitefire, waged his eye."
+
+Men thought this well sung, and turned to hear Asmund's answer, nor must
+they wait long.
+
+"Eric," he said, "I will promise thee this, that if thou goest on as
+thou hast begun, I will give Gudruda in marriage to no other man."
+
+"That is good tidings, lord," said Eric.
+
+"This I say further: in a year I will give thee full answer according as
+to how thou dost bear thyself between now and then, for this is no light
+gift thou askest; also that, if ye will it, you twain may now plight
+troth, for the blame shall be yours if it is broken, and not mine, and I
+give thee my hand on it."
+
+Eric took his hand, and Gudruda heard her father's words and happiness
+shone in her dark eyes, and she grew faint for very joy. And now Eric
+turned to her, all torn and bloody from the fray, the great sword in his
+hand, and he spoke thus:
+
+"Thou hast heard thy father's words, Gudruda? Now it seems that there is
+no great need of troth-plighting between us two. Still, here before
+all men I ask thee, if thou dost love me and art willing to take me to
+husband?"
+
+Gudruda looked up into his face, and answered in a sweet, clear voice
+that could be heard by all:
+
+"Eric, I say to thee now, what I have said before, that I love thee
+alone of all men, and, if it be my father's wish, I will wed no other
+whilst thou dost remain true to me and hold me dear."
+
+"Those are good words," said Eric. "Now, in pledge of them, swear this
+troth of thine upon my sword that I have won."
+
+Gudruda smiled, and, taking great Whitefire in her hand, she said the
+words again, and, in pledge of them, kissed the bright blade.
+
+Then Eric took back the war-sword and spoke thus: "I swear that I will
+love thee, and thee only, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter, whom I
+have desired all my days; and, if I fail of this my oath, then our troth
+is at an end, and thou mayst wed whom thou wilt," and in turn he put his
+lips upon the sword, while Swanhild watched them do the oath.
+
+Now Ospakar was recovered from the fight, and he sat there upon the
+snow, with bowed head, for he knew well that he had won the greatest
+shame, and had lost both wife and sword. Black rage filled his heart as
+he listened, and he sprang to his feet.
+
+"I came hither, Asmund," he said, "to ask this maid of thine in
+marriage, and methinks that had been a good match for her and thee. But
+I have been overthrown by witchcraft of this man in a wrestling-bout,
+and thereby lost my good sword; and now I must seem to hear him
+betrothed to the maid before me."
+
+"Thou hast heard aright, Ospakar," said Asmund, "and thy wooing is soon
+sped. Get thee back whence thou camest and seek a wife in thine own
+quarter, for thou art unfit in age and aspect to have so sweet a maid.
+Moreover, here in the south we hold men of small account, however great
+and rich they be, who do not shame to seek to overcome a foe by foul
+means. With my own eyes I saw thee stamp on the naked foot of Eric,
+Thorgrimur's son; with my own eyes I saw thee, like a wolf, fasten that
+black fang of thine upon him--there is the mark of it; and, as for the
+matter of the greased shoes, thou knowest best what hand thou hadst in
+it."
+
+"I had no hand. If any did this thing, it was Groa the Witch, thy
+Finnish bedmate. For the rest, I was mad and know not what I did. But
+hearken, Asmund: ill shall befall thee and thy house, and I will ever
+be thy foe. Moreover, I will yet wed this maid of thine. And now, thou
+Eric, hearken also: I will have another game with thee. This one was
+but the sport of boys; when we meet again--and the time shall not be
+long--swords shall be aloft, and thou shalt learn the play of men. I
+tell thee that I will slay thee, and tear Gudruda, shrieking, from thy
+arms to be my wife! I tell thee that, with yonder good sword Whitefire,
+I will yet hew off thy head!"--and he choked and stopped.
+
+"Thou art much foam and little water," said Eric. "These things are
+easily put to proof. If thou willest it, to-morrow I will come with thee
+to a holmgang, and there we may set the twigs and finish what we have
+begun to-day."
+
+"I cannot do that, for thou hast my sword; and, till I am suited with
+another weapon, I may fight no holmgang. Still, fear not: we shall soon
+meet with weapons aloft and byrnie on breast."
+
+"Never too soon can the hour come, Blacktooth," said Eric, and turning
+on his heel, he limped to the hall to clothe himself afresh. On the
+threshold of the men's door he met Groa the Witch.
+
+"Thou didst put grease upon my shoes, carline and witch-hag that thou
+art," he said.
+
+"It is not true, Brighteyes."
+
+"There thou liest, and for all this I will repay thee. Thou art not yet
+the wife of Asmund, nor shalt be, for a plan comes into my head about
+it."
+
+Groa looked at him strangely. "If thou speakest so, take heed to thy
+meat and drink," she said. "I was not born among the Finns for nothing;
+and know, I am still minded to wed Asmund. For thy shoes, I would to the
+Gods that they were Hell-shoon, and that I was now binding them on thy
+dead feet."
+
+"Oh! the cat begins to spit," said Eric. "But know this: thou mayest
+grease my shoes--fit work for a carline!--but thou mayest never bind
+them on. Thou art a witch, and wilt come to the end of witches; and
+what thy daughter is, that I will not say," and he pushed past her and
+entered the hall.
+
+Presently Asmund came to seek Eric there, and prayed him to be gone to
+his stead on Ran River. The horses of Ospakar had strayed, and he must
+stop at Middalhof till they were found; but, if these two should abide
+under the same roof, bloodshed would come of it, and that Asmund knew.
+
+Eric said yea to this, and, when he had rested a while, he kissed
+Gudruda, and, taking a horse, rode away to Coldback, bearing the sword
+Whitefire with him, and for a time he saw no more of Ospakar.
+
+When he came there, his mother Saevuna greeted him as one risen from
+the dead, and hung about his neck. Then he told her all that had come
+to pass, and she thought it a marvellous story, and sorrowed that
+Thorgrimur, her husband, was not alive to know it. But Eric mused a
+while, and spoke.
+
+"Mother," he said, "now my uncle Thorod of Greenfell is dead, and his
+daughter, my cousin Unna, has no home. She is a fair woman and skilled
+in all things. It comes into my mind that we should bid her here to
+dwell with us."
+
+"Why, I thought thou wast betrothed to Gudruda the Fair," said Saevuna.
+"Wherefore, then, wouldst thou bring Unna hither?"
+
+"For this cause," said Eric; "because it seems that Asmund the Priest
+wearies of Groa the Witch, and would take another wife, and I wish to
+draw the bands between us tighter, if it may befall so."
+
+"Groa will take it ill," said Saevuna.
+
+"Things cannot be worse between us than they are now, therefore I do not
+fear Groa," he answered.
+
+"It shall be as thou wilt, son; to-morrow we will send to Unna and bid
+her here, if it pleases her to come."
+
+Now Ospakar stayed three more days at Middalhof, till his horses were
+found, and he was fit to travel, for Eric had shaken him sorely. But he
+had no words with Gudruda and few with Asmund. Still, he saw Swanhild,
+and she bid him to be of good cheer, for he should yet have Gudruda.
+For now that the maid had passed from him the mind of Ospakar was set
+in winning her. Bjrn also, Asmund's son, spoke words of good comfort
+to him, for he envied Eric his great fame, and he thought the match
+with Blacktooth would be good. And so at length Ospakar rode away to
+Swinefell with all his company; but Gizur, his son, left his heart
+behind.
+
+For Swanhild had not been idle this while. Her heart was sore, but she
+must follow her ill-nature, and so she had put out her woman's strength
+and beguiled Gizur into loving her. But she did not love him at all, and
+the temper of Asmund the Priest was so angry that Gizur dared not ask
+her in marriage. So nothing was said of the matter.
+
+
+Now Unna came to Coldback, to dwell with Saevuna, Eric's mother, and she
+was a fair and buxom woman. She had been once wedded, but within a month
+of her marriage her husband was lost at sea, this two years gone. At
+first Gudruda was somewhat jealous of this coming of Unna to Coldback;
+but Eric showed her what was in his mind, and she fell into the plan,
+for she hated and feared Groa greatly, and desired to be rid of her.
+
+Since this matter of the greasing of Eric's wrestling-shoes great
+loathing of Groa had come into Asmund's mind, and he bethought him often
+of those words that his wife Gudruda the Gentle spoke as she lay dying,
+and grieved that the oath which he swore then had in part been broken.
+He would have no more to do with Groa now, but he could not be rid of
+her; and, notwithstanding her evil doings, he still loved Swanhild. But
+Groa grew thin with spite and rage, and wandered about the place glaring
+with her great black eyes, and people hated her more and more.
+
+Now Asmund went to visit at Coldback, and there he saw Unna, and was
+pleased with her, for she was a blithe woman and a bonny. The end of it
+was that he asked her in marriage of Eric; at which Brighteyes was glad,
+but said that he must know Unna's mind. Unna hearkened, and did not
+say no, for though Asmund was somewhat gone in years, still he was an
+upstanding man, wealthy in lands, goods, and moneys out at interest, and
+having many friends. So they plighted troth, and the wedding-feast was
+to be in the autumn after hay-harvest. Now Asmund rode back to Middalhof
+somewhat troubled at heart, for these tidings must be told to Groa, and
+he feared her and her witchcraft. In the hall he found her, standing
+alone.
+
+"Where hast thou been, lord?" she asked.
+
+"At Coldback," he answered.
+
+"To see Unna, Eric's cousin, perchance?"
+
+"That is so."
+
+"What is Unna to thee, then, lord?"
+
+"This much, that after hay-harvest she will be my wife, and that is ill
+news for thee, Groa."
+
+Now Groa turned and grasped fiercely at the air with her thin hands. Her
+eyes started out, foam was on her lips, and she shook in her fury like
+a birch-tree in the wind, looking so evil that Asmund drew back a little
+way, saying:
+
+"Now a veil is lifted from thee and I see thee as thou art. Thou hast
+cast a glamour over me these many years, Groa, and it is gone."
+
+"Mayhap, Asmund Asmundson--mayhap, thou knowest me; but I tell thee that
+thou shalt see me in a worse guise before thou weddest Unna. What! have
+I borne the greatest shame, lying by thy side these many years, and
+shall I live to see a rival, young and fair, creep into my place with
+honour? That I will not while runes have power and spells can conjure
+the evil thing upon thee. I call down ruin on thee and thine--yea and
+on Brighteyes also, for he has brought this thing to pass. Death take ye
+all! May thy blood no longer run in mortal veins anywhere on the earth!
+Go down to Hela, Asmund, and be forgotten!" and she began to mutter
+runes swiftly.
+
+Now Asmund turned white with wrath. "Cease thy evil talk," he said, "or
+thou shalt be hurled as a witch into Goldfoss pool."
+
+"Into Goldfoss pool?--yea, there I may lie. I see it!--I seem to see
+this shape of mine rolling where the waters boil fiercest--but thine
+eyes shall never see it! _Thy_ eyes are shut, and shut are the eyes of
+Unna, for ye have gone before!--I do but follow after," and thrice Groa
+shrieked aloud, throwing up her arms, then fell foaming on the sanded
+floor.
+
+"An evil woman and a fey!" said Asmund as he called people to her. "It
+had been better for me if I had never seen her dark face."
+
+Now it is to be told that Groa lay beside herself for ten full days, and
+Swanhild nursed her. Then she found her sense again, and craved to see
+Asmund, and spoke thus to him:
+
+"It seems to me, lord, if indeed it be aught but a vision of my dreams,
+that before this sickness struck me I spoke mad and angry words against
+thee, because thou hast plighted troth to Unna, Thorod's daughter."
+
+"That is so, in truth," said Asmund.
+
+"I have to say this, then, lord: that most humbly I crave thy pardon for
+my ill words, and ask thee to put them away from thy mind. Sore heart
+makes sour speech, and thou knowest well that, howsoever great my
+faults, at least I have always loved thee and laboured for thee, and
+methinks that in some fashion thy fortunes are the debtor to my wisdom.
+Therefore when my ears heard that thou hadst of a truth put me away,
+and that another woman comes an honoured wife to rule in Middalhof, my
+tongue forgot its courtesy, and I spoke words that are of all words the
+farthest from my mind. For I know well that I grow old, and have put off
+that beauty with which I was adorned of yore, and that held thee to me.
+'_Carline_' Eric Brighteyes named me, and 'carline' I am--an old hag, no
+more! Now, forgive me, and, in memory of all that has been between us,
+let me creep to my place in the ingle and still watch and serve thee and
+thine till my service is outworn. Out of Ran's net I came to thee, and,
+if thou drivest me hence, I tell thee that I will lie down and die upon
+thy threshold, and when thou sinkest into eld surely the memory of it
+shall grieve thee."
+
+Thus she spoke and wept much, till Asmund's heart softened in him, and,
+though with a doubting mind, he said it should be as she willed.
+
+So Groa stayed on at Middalhof, and was lowly in her bearing and soft of
+speech.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+HOW ERIC WENT UP MOSFELL AGAINST SKALLAGRIM THE BARESARK
+
+Now Atli the Good, earl of the Orkneys, comes into the story.
+
+It chanced that Atli had sailed to Iceland in the autumn on a business
+about certain lands that had fallen to him in right of his mother Helga,
+who was an Icelander, and he had wintered west of Reyjanes. Spring being
+come, he wished to sail home, and, when his ship was bound, he put to
+sea full early in the year. But it chanced that bad weather came up from
+the south-east, with mist and rain, so he must needs beach his ship in a
+creek under shelter of the Westman Islands.
+
+Now Atli asked what people dwelt in these parts, and, when he heard the
+name of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, he was glad, for in old days he and
+Asmund had gone many a viking cruise together.
+
+"We will leave the ship here," he said, "till the weather clears, and go
+up to Middalhof to stay with Asmund."
+
+So they made the ship snug, and left men to watch her; but two of the
+company, with Earl Atli, rode up to Middalhof.
+
+It must be told of Atli that he was the best of the earls who lived in
+those days, and he ruled the Orkneys so well that men gave him a by-name
+and called him Atli the Good. It was said of him that he had never
+turned a poor man away unsuccoured, nor bowed his head before a strong
+man, nor drawn his sword without cause, nor refused peace to him who
+prayed it. He was sixty years old, but age had left few marks on
+him, except that of his long white beard. He was keen-eyed, and
+well-fashioned of form and face, a great warrior and the strongest of
+men. His wife was dead, leaving him no children, and this was a sorrow
+to him; but as yet he had taken no other wife, for he would say: "Love
+makes an old man blind," and "When age runs with youth, both shall
+fall," and again, "Mix grey locks and golden and spoil two heads." For
+this earl was a man of many wise sayings.
+
+Now Atli came to Middalhof just as men sat down to meat and, hearing the
+clatter of arms, all sprang to their feet, thinking that perhaps Ospakar
+had come again as he had promised. But when Asmund saw Atli he knew him
+at once, though they had not met for nearly thirty years, and he greeted
+him lovingly, and put him in the high seat, and gave place to his men
+upon the cross-benches. Atli told all his story, and Asmund bade him
+rest a while at Middalhof till the weather grew clearer.
+
+Now the Earl saw Swanhild and thought the maid wondrous fair, and so
+indeed she was, as she moved scornfully to and fro in her kirtle of
+white. Soft was her curling hair and deep were her dark blue eyes, and
+bent were her red lips as is a bow above her dimpled chin, and her teeth
+shone like pearls.
+
+"Is that fair maid thy daughter, Asmund," asked Atli.
+
+"She is named Swanhild the Fatherless," he answered, turning his face
+away.
+
+"Well," said Atli, looking sharply on him, "were the maid sprung from
+me, she would not long be called the 'Fatherless,' for few have such a
+daughter."
+
+"She is fair enough," said Asmund, "in all save temper, and that is bad
+to cross."
+
+"In every sword a flaw," answers Atli; "but what has an old man to do
+with young maids and their beauty?" and he sighed.
+
+"I have known younger men who would seem less brisk at bridals," said
+Asmund, and for that time they talked no more of the matter.
+
+Now, Swanhild heard something of this speech, and she guessed more; and
+it came into her mind that it would be the best of sport to make this
+old man love her, and then to mock him and say him nay. So she set
+herself to the task, as it ever was her wont, and she found it easy. For
+all day long, with downcast eyes and gentle looks, she waited upon the
+Earl, and now, at his bidding, she sang to him in a voice soft and low,
+and now she talked so wisely well that Atli thought no such maid had
+trod the earth before. But he checked himself with many learned saws,
+and on a day when the weather had grown fair, and they sat alone, he
+told her that his ship was bound for Orkney Isles.
+
+Then, as though by chance, Swanhild laid her white hand in his, and on a
+sudden looked deep into his eyes, and said with trembling lips, "Ah, go
+not yet, lord!--I pray thee, go not yet!"--and, turning, she fled away.
+
+But Atli was much moved, and he said to himself: "Now a strange thing
+is come to pass: a fair maid loves an old man; and yet, methinks, he
+who looks into those eyes sees deep waters," and he beat his brow and
+thought.
+
+But Swanhild in her chamber laughed till the tears ran from those same
+eyes, for she saw that the great fish was hooked and now the time had
+come to play him.
+
+For she did not know that it was otherwise fated.
+
+Gudruda, too, saw all these things and knew not how to read them, for
+she was of an honest mind, and could not understand how a woman may love
+a man as Swanhild loved Eric and yet make such play with other men,
+and that of her free will. For she guessed little of Swanhild's
+guilefulness, nor of the coldness of her heart to all save Eric; nor of
+how this was the only joy left to her: to make a sport of men and put
+them to grief and shame. Atli said to himself that he would watch this
+maid well before he uttered a word to Asmund, and he deemed himself very
+cunning, for he was wondrous cautious after the fashion of those about
+to fall. So he set himself to watching, and Swanhild set herself to
+smiling, and he told her tales of warfare and of daring, and she clasped
+her hands and said:
+
+"Was there ever such a man since Odin trod the earth?" And so it went
+on, till the serving-women laughed at the old man in love and the wit of
+her that mocked him.
+
+
+Now upon a day, Eric having made an end of sowing his corn, bethought
+himself of his vow to go up alone against Skallagrim the Baresark in his
+den on Mosfell over by Hecla. Now, this was a heavy task: for Skallagrim
+was held so mighty among men that none went up against him any more; and
+at times Eric thought of Gudruda, and sighed, for it was likely that
+she would be a widow before she was made a wife. Still, his oath must
+be fulfilled, and, moreover, of late Skallagrim having heard that a
+youngling named Eric Brighteyes had vowed to slay him single-handed,
+had made a mock of him in this fashion. For Skallagrim rode down
+to Coldback on Ran River and at night-time took a lamb from the fold.
+Holding the lamb beneath his arm, he drew near to the house and smote
+thrice on the door with his battle-axe, and they were thundering knocks.
+Then he leapt on to his horse and rode off a space and waited. Presently
+Eric came out, but half clad, a shield in one hand and Whitefire in the
+other, and, looking, by the bright moonlight he saw a huge black-bearded
+man seated on a horse, having a great axe in one hand and the lamb
+beneath his arm.
+
+"Who art thou?" roared Eric.
+
+"I am called Skallagrim, youngling," answered the man on the horse.
+"Many men have seen me once, none have wished to see me twice, and some
+few have never seen aught again. Now, it has been echoed in my ears that
+thou hast vowed a vow to go up Mosfell against Skallagrim the Baresark,
+and I am come hither to say that I will make thee right welcome. See,"
+and with his axe he cut off the lamb's tail on the pommel of his saddle:
+"of the flesh of this lamb of thine I will brew broth and of his skin I
+will make me a vest. Take thou this tail, and when thou fittest it on
+to the skin again, Skallagrim will own a lord," and he hurled the tail
+towards him.
+
+"Bide thou there till I can come to thee," shouted Eric; "it will spare
+me a ride to Mosfell."
+
+"Nay, nay. It is good for lads to take the mountain air," and Skallagrim
+turned his horse away, laughing.
+
+Eric watched Skallagrim vanish over the knoll, and then, though he was
+very angry, laughed also and went in. But first he picked up the tail,
+and on the morrow he skinned it.
+
+Now the time was come when the matter must be tried, and Eric bade
+farewell to Saevuna his mother, and Unna his cousin, and girt Whitefire
+round him and set upon his head a golden helm with wings on it. Then he
+found the byrnie which his father Thorgrimur had stripped, together with
+the helm, from that Baresark who cut off his leg--and this was a good
+piece, forged of the Welshmen--and he put it on his breast, and taking
+a stout shield of bull's hide studded with nails, rode away with one
+thrall, the strong carle named Jon.
+
+But the women misdoubted them much of this venture; nevertheless Eric
+might not be gainsayed.
+
+Now, the road to Mosfell runs past Middalhof and thither he came. Atli,
+standing at the men's door, saw him and cried aloud: "Ho! a mighty man
+comes here."
+
+Swanhild looked out and saw Eric, and he was a goodly sight in his
+war-gear. For now, week by week, he seemed to grow more fair and great,
+as the full strength of his manhood rose in him, like sap in the spring
+grass, and Gudruda was very proud of her lover. That night Eric stayed
+at Middalhof, and sat hand in hand with Gudruda and talked with Earl
+Atli. Now the heart of the old viking went out to Eric, and he took
+great delight in him and in his strength and deeds, and he longed much
+that the Gods had given him such a son.
+
+"I prophesy this of thee, Brighteyes," he cried: "that it shall go ill
+with this Baresark thou seekest--yes, and with all men who come within
+sweep of that great sword of thine. But remember this, lad: guard thy
+head with thy buckler, cut low beneath his shield, if he carries one,
+and mow the legs from him: for ever a Baresark rushes on, shield up."
+
+Eric thanked him for his good words and went to rest. But, before it
+was light, he rose, and Gudruda rose also and came into the hall, and
+buckled his harness on him with her own hands.
+
+"This is a sad task for me, Eric!" she sighed, "for how do I know that
+Baresark's hands shall not loose this helm of thine?"
+
+"That is as it may be, sweet," he said; "but I fear not the Baresark or
+any man. How goes it with Swanhild now?"
+
+"I know not. She makes herself sweet to that old Earl and he is fain of
+her, and that is beyond my sight."
+
+"I have seen as much," said Eric. "It will be well for us if he should
+wed her."
+
+"Ay, and ill for him; but it is to be doubted if that is in her mind."
+
+Now Eric kissed her soft and sweet, and went away, bidding her look for
+his return on the day after the morrow.
+
+Gudruda bore up bravely against her fears till he was gone, but then she
+wept a little.
+
+
+
+Now it is to be told that Eric and his thrall Jon rode hard up Stonefell
+and across the mountains and over the black sand, till, two hours before
+sunset, they came to the foot of Mosfell, having Hecla on their right.
+It is a grim mountain, grey with moss, standing alone in the desert
+plain; but between it and Hecla there is good grassland.
+
+"Here is the fox's earth. Now to start him," said Eric.
+
+He knows something of the path by which this fortress can be climbed
+from the south, and horses may be ridden up it for a space. So on they
+go, till at length they come to a flat place where water runs down the
+black rocks, and here Eric drank of the water, ate food, and washed his
+face and hands. This done, he bid Jon tend the horses--for hereabouts
+there is a little grass--and be watchful till he returned, since he
+must go up against Skallagrim alone. And there with a doubtful heart
+Jon stayed all that night. For of all that came to pass he saw but one
+thing, and that was the light of Whitefire as it flashed out high above
+him on the brow of the mountain when first Brighteyes smote at foe.
+
+Eric went warily up the Baresark path, for he would keep his breath in
+him, and the light shone redly on his golden helm. High he went, till at
+length he came to a pass narrow and dark and hedged on either side
+with sheer cliffs, such as two armed men might hold against a score.
+He peered down this path, but he saw no Baresark, though it was worn by
+Baresark feet. He crept along its length, moving like a sunbeam through
+the darkness of the pass, for the light gathered on his helm and sword,
+till suddenly the path turned and he was on the brink of a gulf that
+seemed to have no bottom, and, looking across and down, he could see Jon
+and the horses more than a hundred fathoms beneath. Now Eric must stop,
+for this path leads but into the black gulf. Also he was perplexed to
+know where Skallagrim had his lair. He crept to the brink and gazed.
+Then he saw that a point of rock jutted from the sheer face of the cliff
+and that the point was worn with the mark of feet.
+
+"Where Baresark passes, there may yeoman follow," said Eric and,
+sheathing Whitefire, without more ado, though he liked the task little,
+he grasped the overhanging rock and stepped down on to the point below.
+Now he was perched like an eagle over the dizzy gulf and his brain
+swam. Backward he feared to go, and forward he might not, for there was
+nothing but air. Beside him, growing from the face of the cliff, was a
+birch-bush. He grasped it to steady himself. It bent beneath his clutch,
+and then he saw, behind it, a hole in the rock through which a man could
+creep, and down this hole ran footmarks.
+
+"First through air like a bird; now through earth like a fox," said Eric
+and entered the hole. Doubling his body till his helm almost touched his
+knee he took three paces and lo! he stood on a great platform of rock,
+so large that a hall might be built on it, which, curving inwards,
+cannot be seen from the narrow pass. This platform, that is backed
+by the sheer cliff, looks straight to the south, and from it he could
+search the plain and the path that he had travelled, and there once more
+he saw Jon and the horses far below him.
+
+"A strong place, truly, and well chosen," said Eric and looked around.
+On the floor of the rock and some paces from him a turf fire still
+smouldered, and by it were sheep's bones, and beyond, in the face of the
+overhanging precipice, was the mouth of a cave.
+
+"The wolf is at home, or was but lately," said Eric; "now for his lair;"
+and with that he walked warily to the mouth of the cave and peered
+in. He could see nothing yet a while, but surely he heard a sound of
+snoring?
+
+Then he crept in, and, presently, by the red light of the burning
+embers, he saw a great black-bearded man stretched at length upon a rug
+of sheepskins, and by his side an axe.
+
+"Now it would be easy to make an end of this cave-dweller," thought
+Eric; "but that is a deed I will not do--no, not even to a Baresark--to
+slay him in his sleep," and therewith he stepped lightly to the side
+of Skallagrim, and was about to prick him with the point of Whitefire,
+when! as he did so, another man sat up behind Skallagrim.
+
+"By Thor! for two I did not bargain," said Eric, and sprang from the
+cave.
+
+Then, with a grunt of rage, that Baresark who was behind Skallagrim
+came out like a she-bear robbed of her whelps, and ran straight at Eric,
+sword aloft. Eric gives before him right to the edge of the cliff.
+Then the Baresark smites at him and Brighteyes catches the blow on his
+shield, and smites at him in turn so well and truly, that the head of
+the Baresark flies from his shoulders and spins along the ground, but
+his body, with outstretched arms yet gripping at the air, falls over the
+edge of the gulf sheer into the water, a hundred fathoms down. It was
+the flash that Whitefire made as it circled ere it smote that Jon saw
+while he waited in the dell upon the mountain side. But of the Baresark
+he saw nothing, for he passed down into the great fire-riven cleft and
+was never seen more, save once only, in a strange fashion that shall be
+told. This was the first man whom Brighteyes slew.
+
+Now the old tale tells that Eric cried aloud: "Little chance had this
+one," and that then a wonderful thing came to pass. For the head on the
+rock opened its eyes and answered:
+
+"Little chance indeed against thee, Eric Brighteyes. Still, I tell thee
+this: that where my body fell there thou shalt fall, and where it lies
+there thou shalt lie also."
+
+Now Eric was afraid, for he thought it a strange thing that a severed
+head should speak to him.
+
+"Here it seems I have to deal with trolls," he said; "but at the least,
+though he speak, this one shall strike no more," and he looked at the
+head, but it answered nothing.
+
+Now Skallagrim slept through it all and the light grew so dim that Eric
+thought it time to make an end this way or that. Therefore, he took
+the head of the slain man, though he feared to touch it, and rolled it
+swiftly into the cave, saying, "Now, being so glib of speech, go tell
+thy mate that Eric Brighteyes knocks at his door."
+
+Then came sounds as of a man rising, and presently Skallagrim rushed
+forth with axe aloft and his fellow's head in his left hand. He was
+clothed in nothing but a shirt and the skin of Eric's lamb was bound to
+his chest.
+
+"Where now is my mate?" he said. Then he saw Eric leaning on Whitefire,
+his golden helm ablaze with the glory of the passing sun.
+
+"It seems that thou holdest somewhat of him in thine hand, Skallagrim,
+and for the rest, go seek it in yonder rift."
+
+"Who art thou?" roared Skallagrim.
+
+"Thou mayest know me by this token," said Eric, and he threw towards him
+the skin of that lamb's tail which Skallagrim had lifted from Coldback.
+
+Now Skallagrim knew him and the Baresark fit came on. His eyes rolled,
+foam flew to his lips, his mouth grinned, and he was awesome to see. He
+let fall the head, and, swinging the great axe aloft, rushed at Eric.
+But Brighteyes is too swift for him. It would not be well to let that
+stroke fall, and it must go hard with aught it struck. He springs
+forward, he louts low and sweeps upwards with Whitefire. Skallagrim sees
+the sword flare and drops almost to his knee, guarding his head with the
+axe; but Whitefire strikes on the iron half of the axe and shears it in
+two, so that the axe-head falls to earth. Now the Baresark is weaponless
+but unharmed, and it would be an easy task to slay him as he rushes
+by. But it came into Eric's mind that it is an unworthy deed to slay
+a swordless man, and this came into his mind also, that he desired
+to match his naked might against a Baresark in his rage. So, in the
+hardihood of his youth and strength, he cast Whitefire aside, and crying
+"Come, try a fall with me, Baresark," rushed on Skallagrim.
+
+"Thou art mad," yells the Baresark, and they are at it hard. Now they
+grip and rend and tear. Ospakar was strong, but the Baresark strength
+of Skallagrim is more than the strength of Ospakar, and soon Brighteyes
+thinks longingly on Whitefire that he has cast aside. Eric is mighty
+beyond the might of men, but he can scarcely hold his own against this
+mad man, and very soon he knows that only one chance is left to him, and
+that is to cling to Skallagrim till the Baresark fit be passed and he is
+once more like other men. But this is easier to tell of than to do, and
+presently, strive as he will, Eric is on his back, and Skallagrim
+on him. But still he holds the Baresark as with bands of iron, and
+Skallagrim may not free his arms, though he strive furiously. Now they
+roll over and over on the rock, and the gloom gathers fast about them
+till presently Eric sees that they draw near to the brink of that mighty
+rift down which the severed head of the cave-dweller has foretold his
+fall.
+
+"Then we go together," says Eric, but the Baresark does not heed. Now
+they are on the very brink, and here as it chances, or as the Norns
+decree, a little rock juts up and this keeps them from falling. Eric is
+uppermost, and, strive as he will, Skallagrim may not turn him on his
+back again. Still, Brighteyes' strength may not endure very long, for he
+grows faint, and his legs slip slowly over the side of the rift till now
+he clings, as it were, by his ribs and shoulder-blades alone, that rub
+against the little rock. The light dies away, and Eric thinks on sweet
+Gudruda and makes ready to die also, when suddenly a last ray from the
+sun falls on the fierce face of Skallagrim, and lo! Brighteyes sees it
+change, for the madness goes out of it, and in a moment the Baresark
+becomes but as a child in his mighty grip.
+
+"Hold!" said Skallagrim, "I crave peace," and he loosed his clasp.
+
+"Not too soon, then," gasped Eric as, drawing his legs from over the
+brink of the rift, he gained his feet and, staggering to his sword,
+grasped it very thankfully.
+
+"I am fordone!" said Skallagrim; "come, drag me from this place, for I
+fall; or, if thou wilt, hew off my head."
+
+"I will not serve thee thus," said Eric. "Thou art a gallant foe," and
+he put out his hand and drew him into safety.
+
+For a while Skallagrim lay panting, then he gained his hands and knees
+and crawled to where Eric leaned against the rock.
+
+"Lord," he said, "give me thy hand."
+
+Eric stretched forth his left hand, wondering, and Skallagrim took
+it. He did not stretch out his right, for, fearing guile, he gripped
+Whitefire in it.
+
+"Lord," Skallagrim said again, "of all men who ever were, thou art
+the mightiest. Five other men had not stood before me in my rage, but,
+scorning thy weapon, thou didst overcome me in the noblest fashion, and
+by thy naked strength alone. Now hearken. Thou hast given me my life,
+and it is thine from this hour to the end. Here I swear fealty to thee.
+Slay me if thou wilt, or use me if thou wilt, but I think it will be
+better for thee to do this rather than that, for there is but one who
+has mastered me, and thou art he, and it is borne in upon my mind that
+thou wilt have need of my strength, and that shortly."
+
+"That may well be, Skallagrim," said Eric, "yet I put little trust in
+outlaws and cave-dwellers. How do I know, if I take thee to me, that
+thou wilt not murder me in my sleep, as it would have been easy for me
+to do by thee but now?"
+
+"What is it that runs from thy arm," asked Skallagrim.
+
+"Blood," said Eric.
+
+"Stretch out thine arm, lord."
+
+Eric did so, and the Baresark put his lips to the scratch and sucked the
+blood, then said:
+
+"In this blood of thine I pledge thee, Eric Brighteyes! May Valhalla
+refuse me and Hela take me; may I be hunted like a fox from earth to
+earth; may trolls torment me and wizards sport with me o' night; may my
+limbs shrivel and my heart turn to water; may my foes overtake me, and
+my bones be crushed across the doom-stone--if I fail in one jot from
+this my oath that I have sworn! I will guard thy back, I will smite
+thy enemies, thy hearthstone shall be my temple, thy honour my honour.
+Thrall am I of thine, and thrall I will be, and whiles thou wilt we will
+live one life, and, in the end, we will die one death."
+
+"It seems that in going to seek a foe I have found a friend," said Eric,
+"and it is likely enough that I shall need one. Skallagrim, Baresark and
+outlaw as thou art, I take thee at thy word. Henceforth, we are master
+and man and we will do many a deed side by side, and in token of it I
+lengthen thy name and call thee Skallagrim Lambstail. Now, if thou hast
+it, give me food and drink, for I am faint from that hug of thine, old
+bear."
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+HOW OSPAKAR BLACKTOOTH FOUND ERIC BRIGHTEYES AND SKALLAGRIM LAMBSTAIL ON
+HORSE-HEAD HEIGHTS
+
+Now Skallagrim led Eric to his cave and fed the fire and gave him flesh
+to eat and ale to drink. When he had eaten his fill Eric looked at the
+Baresark. He had black hair streaked with grey that hung down upon his
+shoulders. His nose was hooked like an eagle's beak, his beard was wild
+and his sunken eyes were keen as a hawk's. He was somewhat bent and not
+over tall, but of a mighty make, for his shoulders must pass many a door
+sideways.
+
+"Thou art a great man," said Eric, "and it is something to have overcome
+thee. Now tell me what turned thee Baresark."
+
+"A shameful deed that was done against me, lord. Ten years ago I was a
+yeoman of small wealth in the north. I had but one good thing, and that
+was the fairest housewife in those parts--Thorunna by name--and I loved
+her much, but we had no children. Now, not far from my stead is a
+place called Swinefell, and there dwells a mighty chief named Ospakar
+Blacktooth; he is an evil man and strong----"
+
+Eric started at the name and then bade Skallagrim take up the tale.
+
+"It chanced that Ospakar saw my wife Thorunna and would take her, but
+at first she did not listen. Then he promised her wealth and all good
+things, and she was weary of our hard way of life and hearkened. Still,
+she would not go away openly, for that had brought shame on her, but
+plotted with Ospakar that he should come and take her as though by
+force. So it came about, as I lay heavily asleep one night at Thorunna's
+side, having drunk somewhat too deeply of the autumn ale, that armed men
+seized me, bound me, and haled me from my bed. There were eight of them,
+and with them was Ospakar. Then Blacktooth bid Thorunna rise, clothe
+herself and come to be his May, and she made pretence to weep at this,
+but fell to it readily enough. Now she bound her girdle round her and to
+it a knife hung.
+
+"'Kill thyself, sweet,' I cried: 'death is better than shame.'
+
+"'Not so, husband,' she answered. 'It is true that I love but thee;
+yet a woman may find another love, but not another life,' and I saw
+her laugh through her mock tears. Now Ospakar rode in hot haste away
+to Swinefell and with him went Thorunna, but his men stayed a while and
+drank my ale, and, as they drank, they mocked me who was bound before
+them, and little by little all the truth was told of the doings of
+Ospakar and Thorunna my housewife, and I learned that it was she who had
+planned this sport. Then my eyes grew dark and I drew near to death from
+very shame and bitterness. But of a sudden something leaped up in my
+heart, fire raged before my eyes and voices in my ears called on to war
+and vengeance. I was Baresark--and like hay bands I burst my cords. My
+axe hung on the wainscot. I snatched it thence, and of what befell I
+know this alone, that, when the madness passed, eight men lay stretched
+out before me, and all the place was but a gore of blood.
+
+"'Then I drew the dead together and piled drinking tables over them, and
+benches, and turf, and anything else that would burn, and put cod's
+oil on the pile, and fired the stead above them, so that the tale went
+abroad that all these men were burned in their cups, and I with them.
+
+"'But I took the name of Skallagrim and swore an oath against all men,
+ay, and women too, and away I went to the wood-folk and worked much
+mischief, for I spared few, and so on to Mosfell. Here I have stayed
+these five years, awaiting the time when I shall find Ospakar and
+Thorunna the harlot, and I have fought many men, but, till thou camest
+up against me, none could stand before my might."
+
+"A strange tale, truly," said Eric; "but now hearken thou to a stranger,
+for of a truth it seems that we have not come together by chance,"
+and he told him of Gudruda and the wrestling and of the overthrow of
+Blacktooth, and showed him Whitefire which he won out of the hand of
+Ospakar.
+
+Skallagrim listened and laughed aloud. "Surely," he said, "this is the
+work of the Norns. See, lord, thou and I will yet smite this Ospakar. He
+has taken my wife and he would take thy betrothed. Let it be! Let it be!
+Ah, would that I had been there to see the wrestling--Ospakar had never
+risen from his snow-bed. But there is time left to us, and I shall yet
+see his head roll along the dust. Thou hast his goodly sword and with it
+thou shalt sweep Blacktooth's head from his shoulders--or perchance that
+shall be my lot," and with this Skallagrim sprang up, gnashing his teeth
+and clutching at the air.
+
+"Peace," said Eric. "Blacktooth is not here. Save thy rage until it can
+run along thy sword and strike him."
+
+"Nay, not here, nor yet so far off, lord. Hearken: I know this Ospakar.
+If he has set eyes of longing on Gudruda, Asmund's daughter, he will not
+rest one hour till he have her or is slain; and if he has set eyes of
+hate on thee--then take heed to thy going and spy down every path before
+thy feet tread it. Soon shall the matter come on for judgment and even
+now Odin's Valkyries[*] choose their own."
+
+ [*] The "corse-choosing sisters" who were bidden by Odin to
+ single out those warriors whose hour had come to die in
+ battle and win Valhalla.
+
+"It is well, then," said Eric.
+
+"Yea, lord, it is well, for we two have little to fear from any six men,
+if so be that they fall on us in fair fight. But I do not altogether
+like thy tale. Too many women are mixed up in it, and women stab in the
+back. A man may deal with swords aloft, but not with tricks, and lies,
+and false women's witchery. It was a woman who greased thy wrestling
+soles; mayhap it will be a woman that binds on thy Hell-shoes when all
+is done--ay! and who makes them ready for thy feet."
+
+"Of women, as of men," answered Eric, "there is this to be said, that
+some are good and some evil."
+
+"Yes, lord, and this also, that the evil ones plot the ill of their
+evil, but the good do it of their blind foolishness. Forswear women and
+so shalt thou live happy and die in honour--cherish them and live in
+wretchedness and die an outcast."
+
+"Thy talk is foolish," said Eric. "Birds must to the air, the sea to
+the shore, and man must to woman. As things are so let them be, for they
+will soon seem as though they had never been. I had rather kiss my dear
+and die, if so it pleases me to do, than kiss her not and live, for at
+the last the end will be one end, and kisses are sweet!"
+
+"That is a good saying," said Skallagrim, and they fell asleep side by
+side and Eric had no fear.
+
+Now they awoke and the light was already full, for they were weary and
+their sleep had been heavy.
+
+Hard by the mouth of the cave is a little well of water that gathers
+there from the rocks above and in this Eric washed himself. Then
+Skallagrim showed him the cave and the goodly store of arms that he had
+won from those whom he had slain and robbed.
+
+"A wondrous place, truly," said Eric, "and well fitted to the uses of
+such a chapman[*] as thou art; but, say, how didst thou find it?"
+
+[*] Merchant.
+
+"I followed him who was here before me and gave him choice--to go, or to
+fight for the stronghold. But he needs must fight and that was his bane,
+for I slew him."
+
+"Who was that, then," asked Eric, "whose head lies yonder?"
+
+"A cave-dweller, lord, whom I took to me because of the lonesomeness
+of the winter tide. He was an evil man, for though it is good to be
+Baresark from time to time, yet to dwell with one who is always Baresark
+is not good, and thou didst a needful deed in smiting his head from
+him--and now let it go to find its trunk," and he rolled it over the
+edge of the great rift.
+
+"Knowest thou, Skallagrim, that this head spoke to me after it had left
+the man's shoulders, saying that where its body fell there I should
+fall, and where it lay there I should lie also?"
+
+"Then, lord, that is likely to be thy doom, for this man was
+foresighted, and, but the night before last, as we rode out to seek
+sheep, he felt his head, and said that, before the sun sank again, a
+hundred fathoms of air should link it to his shoulders."
+
+"It may be so," answered Eric. "I thought as I lay in thy grip yonder
+that the fate was near. And now arm thyself, and take such goods as thou
+needest, and let us hence, for that thrall of mine who waits me yonder
+will think thou hast been too mighty for me."
+
+Skallagrim went to the edge of the rift and searched the plain with his
+hawk eyes.
+
+"No need to hasten, lord," he said. "See yonder rides thy thrall across
+the black sand, and with him goes thy horse. Surely he thought thou
+camest no more down the path by which thou wentest up, and it is not
+thrall's work to seek Skallagrim in his lair and ask for tidings."
+
+"Wolves take him for a fool!" said Eric in anger. "He will ride to
+Middalhof and sing my death-song, and that will sound sadly in some
+ears."
+
+"It is pleasant, lord," said Skallagrim, "when good tidings dog the
+heels of bad, and womenfolk can spare some tears and be little poorer. I
+have horses in a secret dell that I will show thee, and on them we will
+ride hence to Middalhof--and there thou must claim peace for me."
+
+"It is well," said Eric; "now arm thyself, for if thou goest with me
+thou must make an end of thy Baresark ways, or keep them for the hour of
+battle."
+
+"I will do thy bidding, lord," said Skallagrim. Then he entered the cave
+and set a plain black steel helm upon his black locks, and a black chain
+byrnie about his breast. He took the great axe-head also and fitted to
+it the half of another axe that lay among the weapons. Then he drew out
+a purse of money and a store of golden rings, and set them in a bag of
+otter skin, and buckled it about him. But the other goods he wrapped
+up in skins and hid behind some stones which were at the bottom of the
+cave--purposing to come another time and fetch them.
+
+Then they went forth by that same perilous path which Eric had trod, and
+Skallagrim showed him how he might pass the rock in safety.
+
+"A rough road this," said Eric as he gained the deep cleft.
+
+"Yea, lord, and, till thou camest, one that none but wood-folk have
+trodden."
+
+"I would tread it no more," said Eric again, "and yet that fellow thief
+of thine said that I should die here," and for a while his heart was
+heavy.
+
+Now Skallagrim Lambstail led him by secret paths to a dell rich in
+grass, that is hid in the round of the mountain, and here three good
+horses were at feed. Then, going to a certain rock, he brought out bits
+and saddles, and they caught the horses, and, mounting them, rode away
+from Mosfell.
+
+
+
+Now Eric and his henchman Skallagrim the Baresark rode four hours and
+saw nobody, till at length they came to the brow of a hill that is named
+Horse-Head Heights, and, crossing it, found themselves almost in the
+midst of a score of armed men who were about to mount their horses.
+
+"Now we have company," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Yes, and bad company," answered Eric, "for yonder I spy Ospakar
+Blacktooth, and Gizur and Mord his sons, ay and others. Down, and back
+to back, for they will show us little gentleness."
+
+Then they sprang to earth and took their stand upon a mound of rising
+ground--and the men rode towards them.
+
+"I shall soon know what thy fellowship is worth," said Eric.
+
+"Fear not, lord," answered Skallagrim. "Hold thou thy head and I will
+hold thy back. We are met in a good hour."
+
+"Good or ill, it is likely to be a short one. Hearken thou: if thou
+must turn Baresark when swords begin to flash, at the least stand and be
+Baresark where thou art, for if thou rushest on the foe, my back will be
+naked and I must soon be sped."
+
+"It shall be as thou sayest, lord."
+
+Now men rode round them, but at first they did not know Eric, because of
+the golden helm that hid his face in shadow.
+
+"Who are ye?" called Ospakar.
+
+"I think that thou shouldst know me, Blacktooth," Eric answered, "for
+I set thee heels up in the snow but lately--or, at the least, thou wilt
+know this," and he drew great Whitefire.
+
+"Thou mayest know me also, Ospakar," cried the Baresark. "Skallagrim,
+men called me, Lambstail, Eric Brighteyes calls me, but once thou didst
+call me Ounound. Say, lord, what tidings of Thorunna?"
+
+Now Ospakar shook his sword, laughing. "I came out to seek one foe, and
+I have found two," he cried. "Hearken, Eric: when thou art slain I go
+hence to burn and kill at Middalhof. Shall I bear thy head as keepsake
+from thee to Gudruda? For thee, Ounound, I thought thee dead; but, being
+yet alive, Thorunna, my sweet love, sends thee this," and he hurled a
+spear at him with all his might.
+
+But Skallagrim catches the spear as it flies and hurls it back. It
+strikes right on the shield of Ospakar and pierces it, ay and the
+byrnie, and the shoulder that is beneath the byrnie, so that Blacktooth
+was made unmeet for fight, and howled with pain and rage.
+
+"Go, bid Thorunna draw that splinter forth," says Skallagrim, "and heal
+the hole with kisses."
+
+Now Ospakar, writhing with his hurt, shouts to his men to slay the two
+of them, and then the fight begins.
+
+One rushes at Eric and smites at him with an axe. The blow falls on his
+shield, and shears off the side of it, then strikes the byrnie beneath,
+but lightly. In answer Eric sweeps low at him with Whitefire, and cuts
+his leg from under him between knee and thigh, and he falls and dies.
+
+Another rushes in. Down flashes Whitefire before he can smite, and
+the carle's shield is cloven through. Then he chooses to draw back and
+fights no more that day.
+
+Skallagrim slays a man, and wounds another sore. A tall chief with a red
+scar on his face comes at Brighteyes. Twice he feints at the head while
+Eric watches, then lowers the sword beneath the cover of his shield,
+and sweeps suddenly at Eric's legs. Brighteyes leaps high into the air,
+smiting downward with Whitefire as he leaps, and presently that chief is
+dead, shorn through shoulder to breast.
+
+Now Skallagrim slays another man, and grows Baresark. He looks so fierce
+that men fall back from him.
+
+Two rush on Eric, one from either side. The sword of him on the right
+falls on his shield and sinks in, but Brighteyes twists the shorn shield
+so strongly that the sword is wrenched from the smiter's hand. Now
+the other sword is aloft above him, and that had been Eric's bane, but
+Skallagrim glances round and sees it about to fall. He has no time to
+turn, but dashes the hammer of his axe backward. It falls full on the
+swordsman's head, and the head is shattered.
+
+"That was well done," says Eric as the sword goes down.
+
+"Not so ill but it might be worse," growls Skallagrim.
+
+Presently all men drew back from those two, for they have had enough of
+Whitefire and the Baresark's axe.
+
+Ospakar sits on his horse, his shield pinned to his shoulder and curses
+aloud.
+
+"Close in, you cowards!" he yells, "close in and cut them down!" but no
+man stirs.
+
+Then Eric mocks them. "There are but two of us," he says, "will no man
+try a game with me? Let it not be sung that twenty were overcome of
+two."
+
+Now Ospakar's son Mord hears, and he grows mad with rage. He holds his
+shield aloft and rushes on. But Gizur the Lawman does not come, for
+Gizur was a coward.
+
+Skallagrim turns to meet Mord, but Eric says:--
+
+"This one for me, comrade," and steps forward.
+
+Mord strikes a mighty blow. Eric's shield is all shattered and cannot
+stay it. It crashes through and falls full on the golden helm, beating
+Brighteyes to his knee. Now he is up again and blows fall thick and
+fast. Mord is a strong man, unwearied, and skilled in war, and Eric's
+arms grow faint and his strength sinks low. Mord smites again and wounds
+him somewhat on the shoulder.
+
+Eric throws aside his cloven shield and, shouting, plies Whitefire with
+both arms. Mord gives before him, then rushes and smites; Eric leaps
+aside. Again he rushes and lo! Brighteyes has dropped his point, and it
+stands a full span through the back of Mord, and instantly that was his
+bane.
+
+Now men rush to their horses, mount in hot haste and ride away,
+crying that these are trolls whom they have to do with here, not men.
+Skallagrim sees, and the Baresark fit takes him sore. With axe aloft he
+charges after them, screaming as he comes. There is one man, the same
+whom he had wounded. He cannot mount easily, and when the Baresark comes
+he still lies on the neck of his horse. The great axe wheels on high and
+falls, and it is told of this stroke that it was so mighty that man and
+horse sank dead beneath it, cloven through and through. Then the fit
+leaves Skallagrim and he walks back, and they are alone with the dead
+and dying.
+
+Eric leans on Whitefire and speaks:
+
+"Get thee gone, Skallagrim Lambstail!" he said; "get thee gone!"
+
+"It shall be as thou wilt, lord," answered the Baresark; "but I have not
+befriended thee so ill that thou shouldst fear for blows to come."
+
+"I will keep no man with me who puts my word aside, Skallagrim. What did
+I bid thee? Was it not that thou shouldst have done with the Baresark
+ways, and where thou stoodest there thou shouldst bide? and see: thou
+didst forget my word swiftly! Now get thee gone!"
+
+"It is true, lord," he said. "He who serves must serve wholly," and
+Skallagrim turned to seek his horse.
+
+"Stay," said Eric; "thou art a gallant man and I forgive thee: but
+cross my will no more. We have slain several men and Ospakar goes hence
+wounded. We have got honour, and they loss and the greatest shame.
+Nevertheless, ill shall come of this to me, for Ospakar has many friends
+and will set a law-suit on foot against me at the Althing,[*] and thou
+didst draw the first blood."
+
+ [*] The annual assembly of free men which, in Iceland,
+ performed the functions of a Parliament and Supreme Court of
+ Law.
+
+"Would that the spear had gone more home," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Ospakar's time is not yet," answered Eric; "still, he has something by
+which to bear us in mind."
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+HOW SWANHILD DEALT WITH GUDRUDA
+
+Now Jon, Eric's thrall, watched all night on Mosfell, but saw nothing
+except the light of Whitefire as it smote the Baresark's head from his
+shoulders. He stayed there till daylight, much afraid; then, making sure
+that Eric was slain, Jon rode hard and fast for Middalhof, whither he
+came at evening.
+
+Gudruda was watching by the women's door. She strained her eyes towards
+Mosfell to catch the light gleaming on Eric's golden helm, and presently
+it gleamed indeed, white not red.
+
+"See," said Swanhild at her side, "Eric comes!"
+
+"Not Eric, but his thrall," answered Gudruda, "to tell us that Eric is
+sped."
+
+They waited in silence while Jon galloped towards them.
+
+"What news of Brighteyes?" cried Swanhild.
+
+"Little need to ask," said Gudruda, "look at his face."
+
+Now Jon told his tale and Gudruda listened, clinging to the door post.
+But Swanhild cursed him for a coward, so that he shrank before her eyes.
+
+Gudruda turned and walked into the hall and her face was like the face
+of death. Men saw her, and Asmund asked why she wore so strange a mien.
+Then Gudruda sang this song:
+
+ "Up to Mosfell, battle eager,
+ Rode helmed Brighteyen to the fray.
+ Back from Mosfell, battle shunning.
+ Slunk yon coward thrall I ween.
+ Now shall maid Gudruda never
+ Know a husband's dear embrace;
+ Widowed is she--sunk in sorrow,
+ Eric treads Valhalla's halls!"
+
+And with this she walked from the stead, looking neither to the right
+nor to the left.
+
+"Let the maid be," said Atli the Earl. "Grief fares best alone. But my
+heart is sore for Eric. It should go ill with that Baresark if I might
+get a grip of him."
+
+"That I will have before summer is gone," said Asmund, for the death of
+Eric seemed to him the worst of sorrows.
+
+Gudruda walked far, and, crossing Lax by the stepping stones, climbed
+Stonefell till she came to the head of Golden Falls, for, like a
+stricken thing, she desired to be alone in her grief. But Swanhild saw
+her and followed, coming on her as she sat watching the water thunder
+down the mighty cleft. Presently Swanhild's shadow fell athwart her, and
+Gudruda looked up.
+
+"What wouldst thou with me, Swanhild?" she asked. "Art thou come to mock
+my grief?"
+
+"Nay, foster-sister, for then I must mock my own. I come to mix my tears
+with thine. See, we loved Eric, thou and I, and Eric is dead. Let our
+hate be buried in his grave, whence neither may draw him back."
+
+Gudruda looked upon her coldly, for nothing could stir her now.
+
+"Get thee gone," she said. "Weep thine own tears and leave me to weep
+mine. Not with thee will I mourn Eric."
+
+Swanhild frowned and bit her lip. "I will not come to thee with words
+of peace a second time, my rival," she said. "Eric is dead, but my hate
+that was born of Eric's love for thee lives on and grows, and its flower
+shall be thy death, Gudruda!"
+
+"Now that Brighteyes is dead, I would fain follow on his path: so, if
+thou listest, throw the gates wide," Gudruda answered, and heeded her no
+more.
+
+Swanhild went, but not far. On the further side of a knoll of grass she
+flung herself to earth and grieved as her fierce heart might. She shed
+no tears, but sat silently, looking with empty eyes adown the past, and
+onward to the future, and finding no good therein.
+
+But Gudruda wept as the weight of her loss pressed in upon her--wept
+heavy silent tears and cried in her heart to Eric who was gone--cried to
+death to come upon her and bring her sleep or Eric.
+
+So she sat and so she grieved till, quite outworn with sorrow, sleep
+stole upon her and she dreamed. Gudruda dreamed that she was dead
+and that she sat nigh to the golden door that is in Odin's house at
+Valhalla, by which the warriors pass and repass for ever. There she
+sat from age to age, listening to the thunder of ten thousand thousand
+tramping feet, and watching the fierce faces of the chosen as they
+marched out in armies to do battle in the meads. And as she sat, at
+length a one-eyed man, clad in gleaming garments, drew near and spoke to
+her. He was glorious to look on, and old, and she knew him for Odin the
+Allfather.
+
+"Whom seekest thou, maid Gudruda?" he asked, and the voice he spoke with
+was the voice of waters.
+
+"I seek Eric Brighteyes," she answered, "who passed hither a thousand
+years ago, and for love of whom I am heart-broken."
+
+"Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur's son?" quoth Odin. "I know him well;
+no brisker warrior enters at Valhalla's doors, and none shall do more
+service at the coming of grey wolf Fenrir.[*] Pass on and leave him to
+his glory and his God."
+
+[*] The foe destined to bring destruction on the Norse gods.
+
+Then, in her dream, she wept sore, and prayed of Odin by the name of
+Freya that he would give Eric to her for a little space.
+
+"What wilt thou pay, then, maid Gudruda?" said Odin.
+
+"My life," she answered.
+
+"Good," he said; "for a night Eric shall be thine. Then die, and let thy
+death be his cause of death." And Odin sang this song:
+
+ "Now, corse-choosing Daughters, hearken
+ To the dread Allfather's word:
+ When the gale of spears' breath gathers
+ Count not Eric midst the slain,
+ Till Brighteyen once hath slumbered,
+ Wedded, at Gudruda's side--
+ Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;
+ Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!"
+
+And Gudruda awoke, but in her ears the mighty waters still seemed to
+speak with Odin's voice, saying:
+
+ "Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;
+ Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!"
+
+She awoke from that fey sleep, and looked upwards, and lo! before her,
+with shattered shield and all besmeared with war's red rain, stood
+gold-helmed Eric. There he stood, great and beautiful to see, and she
+looked on him trembling and amazed.
+
+"Is it indeed thou, Eric, or is it yet my dream?" she said.
+
+"I am no dream, surely," said Eric; "but why lookest thou thus on me,
+Gudruda?"
+
+She rose slowly. "Methought," she said, "methought that thou wast dead
+at the hand of Skallagrim." And with a great cry she fell into his arms
+and lay there sobbing.
+
+It was a sweet sight thus to see Gudruda the Fair, her head of gold
+pillowed on Eric's war-stained byrnie, her dark eyes afloat with tears
+of joy; but not so thought Swanhild, watching. She shook in jealous
+rage, then crept away, and hid herself where she could see no more, lest
+she should be smitten with madness.
+
+"Whence camest thou? ah! whence camest thou?" said Gudruda. "I thought
+thee dead, my love; but now I dreamed that I prayed Odin, and he spared
+thee to me for a little."
+
+"Well, and that he hath, though hardly," and he told her all that had
+happened, and how, as he rode with Skallagrim, who yet sat yonder on
+his horse, he caught sight of a woman seated on the grass and knew the
+colour of the cloak.
+
+Then Gudruda kissed him for very joy, and they were happy each with
+each--for of all things that are sweet on earth, there is nothing more
+sweet than this: to find him we loved, and thought dead and cold, alive
+and at our side.
+
+And so they talked and were very glad with the gladness of youth and
+love, till Eric said he must on to Middalhof before the light failed,
+for he could not come on horseback the way that Gudruda took, but must
+ride round the shoulder of the hill; and, moreover, he was spent with
+toil and hunger, and Skallagrim grew weary of waiting.
+
+"Go!" said Gudruda; "I will be there presently!"
+
+So he kissed her and went, and Swanhild saw the kiss and saw him go.
+
+"Well, lord," said Skallagrim, "hast thou had thy fill of kissing?"
+
+"Not altogether," answered Eric.
+
+They rode a while in silence.
+
+"I thought the maid seemed very fair!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"There are women less favoured, Skallagrim."
+
+"Rich bait for mighty fish!" said Skallagrim. "This I tell thee: that,
+strive as thou mayest against thy fate, that maid will be thy bane and
+mine also."
+
+"Things foredoomed will happen," said Eric; "but if thou fearest a maid,
+the cure is easy: depart from my company."
+
+"Who was the other?" asked the Baresark--"she who crept and peered,
+listened, then crept back again, hid her face in her hands, and talked
+with a grey wolf that came to her like a dog?"
+
+"That must have been Swanhild," said Eric, "but I did not see her. Ever
+does she hide like a rat in the thatch, and as for the wolf, he must
+be her Familiar; for, like Groa, her mother, Swanhild plays much with
+witchcraft. Now I will away back to Gudruda, for my heart misdoubts me
+of this matter. Stay thou here till I come, Lambstail!" And Eric turns
+and gallops back to the head of Goldfoss.
+
+
+
+When Eric left her, Gudruda drew yet nearer to the edge of the mighty
+falls, and seated herself on their very brink. Her breast was full
+of joy, and there she sat and let the splendour of the night and the
+greatness of the rushing sounds sink into her heart. Yonder shone the
+setting sun, poised, as it were, on Westman's distant peaks, and here
+sped the waters, and by that path Eric had come back to her. Yea, and
+there on Sheep-saddle was the road that he had trod down Goldfoss; and
+but now he had slain one Baresark and won another to be his thrall, and
+they two alone had smitten the company of Ospakar, and come thence
+with honour and but little harmed. Surely no such man as Eric had ever
+lived--none so fair and strong and tender; and she was right happy in
+his love! She stretched out her arms towards him whom but an hour gone
+she had thought dead, but who had lived to come back to her with honour,
+and blessed his beloved name, and laughed aloud in her joyousness of
+heart, calling:
+
+"_Eric! Eric!_"
+
+But Swanhild, creeping behind her, did not laugh. She heard Gudruda's
+voice and guessed Gudruda's gladness, and jealousy arose within her and
+rent her. Should this fair rival like to take her joy from her?
+
+"_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what sayest thou?_"
+
+See, now, if Gudruda were gone, if she rolled a corpse into those
+boiling waters, Eric might yet be hers; or, if he was not hers, yet
+Gudruda's he could never be.
+
+"_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy counsel?_"
+
+Right on the brink of the great gulf sat Gudruda. One stroke and all
+would be ended. Eric had gone; there was no eye to see--none save the
+Grey Wolf's; there was no tongue to tell the deed that might be done.
+Who could call her to account? The Gods! Who were the Gods? What were
+the Gods? Were they not dreams? There were no Gods save the Gods of
+Evil--the Gods she knew and communed with.
+
+"_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy rede?_"
+
+There sat Gudruda, laughing in the triumph of her joy, with the
+sunset-glow shining on her beauty, and there, behind her, Swanhild
+crept--crept like a fox upon his sleeping prey.
+
+Now she is there--
+
+"_I hear thee, Grey Wolf! Back to my breast, Grey Wolf!_"
+
+Surely Gudruda heard something? She half turned her head, then again
+fell to calling aloud to the waters:
+
+"Eric! beloved Eric!--ah! is there ever a light like the light of thine
+eyes--is there ever a joy like the joy of thy kiss?"
+
+Swanhild heard, and her springs of mercy froze. Hate and fury entered
+into her. She rose upon her knees and gathered up her strength:
+
+"Seek, then, thy joy in Goldfoss," she cried aloud, and with all her
+force she thrust.
+
+Gudruda fell a fathom or more, then, with a cry, she clutched wildly at
+a little ledge of rock, and hung there, her feet resting on the shelving
+bank. Thirty fathoms down swirled and poured and rolled the waters
+of the Golden Falls. A fathom above, red in the red light of evening,
+lowered the pitiless face of Swanhild. Gudruda looked beneath her and
+saw. Pale with agony she looked up and saw, but she said naught.
+
+"Let go, my rival; let go!" cried Swanhild: "there is none to help thee,
+and none to tell thy tale. Let go, I say, and seek thy marriage-bed in
+Goldfoss!"
+
+But Gudruda clung on and gazed upwards with white face and piteous eyes.
+
+"What! art thou so fain of a moment's life?" said Swanhild. "Then I will
+save thee from thyself, for it must be ill to suffer thus!" and she ran
+to seek a rock. Now she finds one and, staggering beneath its weight
+to the brink of the gulf, peers over. Still Gudruda hangs. Space yawns
+beneath her, the waters roar in her ears, the red sky glows above. She
+sees Swanhild come and shrieks aloud.
+
+Eric is there, though Swanhild hears him not, for the sound of his
+horse's galloping feet is lost in the roar of waters. But that cry comes
+to his ears, he sees the poised rock, and all grows clear to him.
+He leaps from his horse, and even as she looses the stone, clutches
+Swanhild's kirtle and hurls her back. The rock bounds sideways and
+presently is lost in the waters.
+
+Eric looks over. He sees Gudruda's white face gleaming in the gloom.
+Down he leaps upon the ledge, though this is no easy thing.
+
+"Hold fast! I come; hold fast!" he cries.
+
+"I can no more," gasps Gudruda, and one hand slips.
+
+Eric grasps the rock and, stretching downward, grips her wrist; just as
+her hold loosens he grips it, and she swings loose, her weight hanging
+on his arm.
+
+Now he must needs lift her up and that with one hand, for the ledge is
+narrow and he dare not loose his hold of the rock above. She swings
+over the great gulf and she is senseless as one dead. He gathers all his
+mighty strength and lifts. His feet slip a little, then catch, and once
+more Gudruda swings. The sweat bursts out upon his forehead and his
+blood drums through him. Now it must be, or not at all. Again he lifts
+and his muscles strain and crack, and she lies beside him on the narrow
+ledge!
+
+All is not yet done. The brink of the cleft is the height of a man above
+him. There he must lay her, for he may not leave her to find aid, lest
+she should wake and roll into the chasm. Loosing his hold of the cliff,
+he turns, facing the rock, and, bending over Gudruda, twists his hands
+in her kirtle below the breast and above the knee. Then once more Eric
+puts out his might and draws her up to the level of his breast, and
+rests. Again with all his force he lifts her above the crest of his helm
+and throws her forward, so that now she lies upon the brink of the great
+cliff. He almost falls backward at the effort, but, clutching the rock,
+he saves himself, and with a struggle gains her side, and lies there,
+panting like a wearied hound of chase.
+
+Of all trials of strength that ever were put upon his might, Eric was
+wont to say, this lifting of Gudruda was the greatest; for she was no
+light woman, and there was little to stand on and almost nothing to
+cling to.
+
+Presently Brighteyes rose and peered at Gudruda through the gloom. She
+still swooned. Then he gazed about him--but Swanhild, the witchgirl, was
+gone.
+
+Then he took Gudruda in his arms, and, leading the horse, stumbled
+through the darkness, calling on Skallagrim. The Baresark answered, and
+presently his large form was seen looming in the gloom.
+
+Eric told his tale in few words.
+
+"The ways of womankind are evil," said Skallagrim; "but of all the deeds
+that I have known done at their hands, this is the worst. It had been
+well to hurl the wolf-witch from the cliff."
+
+"Ay, well," said Eric; "but that song must yet be sung."
+
+Now dimly lighted of the rising moon by turns they bore Gudruda down the
+mountain side, till at length, utterly fordone, they saw the fires of
+Middalhof.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+HOW ASMUND SPOKE WITH SWANHILD
+
+Now as the days went, though Atli's ship was bound for sea, she did not
+sail, and it came about that the Earl sank ever deeper in the toils
+of Swanhild. He called to mind many wise saws, but these availed him
+little: for when Love rises like the sun, wisdom melts like the mists.
+So at length it came to this, that on the day of Eric's coming back,
+Atli went to Asmund the Priest, and asked him for the hand of Swanhild
+the Fatherless in marriage. Asmund heard and was glad, for he knew well
+that things went badly between Swanhild and Gudruda, and it seemed good
+to him that seas should be set between them. Nevertheless, he thought it
+honest to warn the Earl that Swanhild was apart from other women.
+
+"Thou dost great honour, earl, to my foster-daughter and my house," he
+said. "Still, it behoves me to move gently in this matter. Swanhild is
+fair, and she shall not go hence a wife undowered. But I must tell thee
+this: that her ways are dark and secret, and strange and fiery are her
+moods, and I think that she will bring evil on the man who weds her.
+Now, I love thee, Atli, were it only for our youth's sake, and thou art
+not altogether fit to mate with such a maid, for age has met thee on thy
+way. For, as thou wouldst say, youth draws to youth as the tide to the
+shore, and falls away from eld as the wave from the rock. Think, then:
+is it well that thou shouldst take her, Atli?"
+
+"I have thought much and overmuch," answered the Earl, stroking his grey
+beard; "but ships old and new drive before a gale."
+
+"Ay, Atli, and the new ship rides, where the old one founders."
+
+"A true rede, a heavy rede, Asmund; yet I am minded to sail this sea,
+and, if it sink me--well, I have known fair weather! Great longing has
+got hold of me, and I think the maid looks gently on me, and that things
+may yet go well between us. I have many things to give such as women
+love. At the least, if thou givest me thy good word, I will risk it,
+Asmund: for the bold thrower sometimes wins the stake. Only I say this,
+that, if Swanhild is unwilling, let there be an end of my wooing, for I
+do not wish to take a bride who turns from my grey hairs."
+
+Asmund said that it should be so, and they made an end of talking just
+as the light faded.
+
+Now Asmund went out seeking Swanhild, and presently he met her near the
+stead. He could not see her face, and that was well, for it was not good
+to look on, but her mien was wondrous wild.
+
+"Where hast thou been, Swanhild?" he asked.
+
+"Mourning Eric Brighteyes," she made answer.
+
+"It is meeter for Gudruda to mourn over Eric than for thee, for her loss
+is heavy," Asmund said sternly. "What hast thou to do with Eric?"
+
+"Little, or much; or all--read it as thou wilt, foster-father. Still,
+all wept for are not lost, nor all who are lost wept for."
+
+"Little do I know of thy dark redes," said Asmund. "Where is Gudruda
+now?"
+
+"High is she or low, sleeping or perchance awakened: naught reck I. She
+also mourned for Eric, and we went nigh to mingling tears--near together
+were brown curls and golden," and she laughed aloud.
+
+"Thou art surely fey, thou evil girl!" said Asmund.
+
+"Ay, foster-father, fey: yet is this but the first of my feydom. Here
+starts the road that I must travel, and my feet shall be red ere the
+journey's done."
+
+"Leave thy dark talk," said Asmund, "for to me it is as the wind's
+song, and listen: a good thing has befallen thee--ay, good beyond thy
+deserving."
+
+"Is it so? Well, I stand greatly in need of good. What is thy tidings,
+foster-father?"
+
+"This: Atli the Earl asks thee in marriage, and he is a mighty man, well
+honoured in his own land, and set higher, moreover, than I had looked
+for thee."
+
+"Ay," answered Swanhild, "set like the snow above the fells, set in the
+years that long are dead. Nay, foster-father, this white-bearded
+dotard is no mate for me. What! shall I mix my fire with his frost, my
+breathing youth with the creeping palsy of his age? Never! If Swanhild
+weds she weds not so, for it is better to go maiden to the grave than
+thus to shrink and wither at the touch of eld. Now is Atli's wooing
+sped, and there's an end."
+
+Asmund heard and grew wroth, for the matter seemed strange to him; nor
+are maidens wont thus to put aside the word of those set over them.
+
+"There is no end," he said; "I will not be answered thus by a girl who
+lives upon my bounty. It is my rede that thou weddest Atli, or else thou
+goest hence. I have loved thee, and for that love's sake I have borne
+thy wickedness, thy dark secret ways, and evil words; but I will be
+crossed no more by thee, Swanhild."
+
+"Thou wouldst drive me hence with Groa my mother, though perchance thou
+hast yet more reason to hold me dear, foster-father. Fear not: I will
+go--perhaps further than thou thinkest," and once more Swanhild laughed,
+and passed from him into the darkness.
+
+But Asmund stood looking after her. "Truly," he said in his heart, "ill
+deeds are arrows that pierce him who shot them. I have sowed evilly, and
+now I reap the harvest. What means she with her talk of Gudruda and the
+rest?"
+
+Now as he thought, he saw men and horses draw near, and one man, whose
+helm gleamed in the moonlight, bore something in his arms.
+
+"Who passes?" he called.
+
+"Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda, Asmund's daughter,"
+answered a voice; "who art thou?"
+
+Then Asmund the Priest sprang forward, most glad at heart, for he never
+thought to see Eric again.
+
+"Welcome, and thrice welcome art thou, Eric," he cried; "for, know, we
+deemed thee dead."
+
+"I have lately gone near to death, lord," said Eric, for he knew the
+voice; "but I am hale and whole, though somewhat weary."
+
+"What has come to pass, then?" asked Asmund, "and why holdest thou
+Gudruda in thy arms? Is the maid dead?"
+
+"Nay, she does but swoon. See, even now she stirs," and as he spake
+Gudruda awoke, shuddering, and with a little cry threw her arms about
+the neck of Eric.
+
+He set her down and comforted her, then once more turned to Asmund:
+
+"Three things have come about," he said. "First, I have slain one
+Baresark, and won another to be my thrall, and for him I crave thy
+peace, for he has served me well. Next, we two were set upon by Ospakar
+Blacktooth and his fellowship, and, fighting for our hands, have wounded
+Ospakar, slain Mord his son, and six other men of his following."
+
+"That is good news and bad," said Asmund, "since Ospakar will ask a
+great weregild[*] for these men, and thou wilt be outlawed, Eric."
+
+[*] The penalty for manslaying.
+
+"That may happen, lord. There is time enough to think of it. Now there
+are other tidings to tell. Coming to the head of Goldfoss I found
+Gudruda, my betrothed, mourning my death, and spoke with her. Afterwards
+I left her, and presently returned again, to see her hanging over the
+gulf, and Swanhild hurling rocks upon her to crush her."
+
+"These are tidings in truth," said Asmund--"such tidings as my heart
+feared! Is this true, Gudruda?"
+
+"It is true, my father," answered Gudruda, trembling. "As I sat on the
+brink of Goldfoss, Swanhild crept behind me and thrust me into the gulf.
+There I clung above the waters, and she brought a rock to hurl upon me,
+when suddenly I saw Eric's face, and after that my mind left me and I
+can tell no more."
+
+Now Asmund grew as one mad. He plucked at his beard and stamped on the
+ground. "Maid though she be," he cried, "yet shall Swanhild's back be
+broken on the Stone of Doom for a witch and a murderess, and her body
+hurled into the pool of faithless women, and the earth will be well rid
+of her!"
+
+Now Gudruda looked up and smiled: "It would be ill to wreak such a
+vengeance on her, father," she said; "and this would also bring the
+greatest shame on thee, and all our house. I am saved, by the mercy
+of the Gods and the might of Eric's arm, and this is my counsel: that
+nothing be told of this tale, but that Swanhild be sent away where she
+can harm us no more."
+
+"She must be sent to the grave, then," said Asmund, and fell to
+thinking. Presently he spoke again: "Bid yon man fall back, I would
+speak with you twain," and Skallagrim went grumbling.
+
+"Hearken now, Eric and Gudruda: only an hour ago hath Atli the Good
+asked Swanhild of me in marriage. But now I met Swanhild here, and her
+mien was wild. Still, I spoke of the matter to her, and she would have
+none of it. Now, this is my counsel: that choice be given to Swanhild,
+either that she go hence Atli's wife, or take her trial in the
+Doom-ring."
+
+"That will be bad for the Earl then," said Eric. "Methinks he is too
+good a man to be played on thus."
+
+"_Bairn first, then friend_," answered Asmund.
+
+"Now I will tell thee something that, till this hour, I have hidden from
+all, for it is my shame. This Swanhild is my daughter, and therefore I
+have loved her and put away her evil deeds, and she is half-sister
+to thee, Gudruda. See, then, how sore is my straight, who must avenge
+daughter upon daughter."
+
+"Knows thy son Bjrn of this?" asked Eric.
+
+"None knew it till this hour, except Groa and I."
+
+"Yet I have feared it long, father," said Gudruda, "and therefore I have
+also borne with Swanhild, though she hates me much and has striven hard
+to draw my betrothed from me. Now thou canst only take one counsel,
+and it is: to give choice to Swanhild of these two things, though it is
+unworthy that Atli should be deceived, and at the best little good can
+come of it."
+
+"Yet it must be done, for honour is often slain of heavy need," said
+Asmund. "But we must first swear this Baresark thrall of thine, though
+little faith lives in Baresark's breast."
+
+Now Eric called to Skallagrim and charged him strictly that he should
+tell nothing of Swanhild, and of the wolf that he saw by her, and of how
+Gudruda was found hanging over the gulf.
+
+"Fear not," growled the Baresark, "my tongue is now my master's. What
+is it to me if women do their wickedness one on another? Let them
+work magic, hate and slay by stealth, so shall evil be lessened in the
+world."
+
+"Peace!" said Eric; "if anything of this passes thy lips thou art no
+longer a thrall of mine, and I give thee up to the men of thy quarter."
+
+"And I cleave that wolf's head of thine down to thy hawk's eyes; but,
+otherwise, I give thee peace, and will hold thee from harm, wood-dweller
+as thou art," said Asmund.
+
+The Baresark laughed: "My hands will hold my head against ten such
+mannikins as thou art, Priest. There was never but one man who might
+overcome me in fair fight and there he stands, and his bidding is my
+law. So waste no words and make not niddering threats against greater
+folk," and he slouched back to his horse.
+
+"A mighty man and a rough," said Asmund, looking after him; "I like his
+looks little."
+
+"Natheless a strong in battle," quoth Eric; "had he not been at my back
+some six hours gone, by now the ravens had torn out these eyes of mine.
+Therefore, for my sake, bear with him."
+
+Asmund said it should be so, and then they passed on to the stead.
+
+Here Eric stripped off his harness, washed, and bound up his wounds.
+Then, followed by Skallagrim, axe in hand, he came into the hall as men
+made ready to sit at meat. Now the tale of the mighty deeds that he
+had done, except that of the saving of Gudruda, had gone abroad, and as
+Brighteyes came all men rose and with one voice shouted till the roof of
+the great hall rocked:
+
+"_Welcome, Eric Brighteyes, thou glory of the south!_"
+
+Only Bjrn, Asmund's son, bit his hand, and did not shout, for he hated
+Eric because of the fame that he had won.
+
+Brighteyes stood still till the clamour died, then said:
+
+"Much noise for little deeds, brethren. It is true that I overthrew the
+Mosfell Baresarks. See, here is one," and he turned to Skallagrim; "I
+strangled him in my arms on Mosfell's brink, and that was something of
+a deed. Then he swore fealty to me, and we are blood-brethren now, and
+therefore I ask peace for him, comrades--even from those whom he has
+wronged or whose kin he has slain. I know this, that when thereafter we
+stood back to back and met the company of Ospakar Blacktooth, who
+came to slay us--ay, and Asmund also, and bear away Gudruda to be his
+wife--he warred right gallantly, till seven of their band lay stiff on
+Horse-Head Heights, overthrown of us, and among them Mord, Blacktooth's
+son; and Ospakar himself went thence sore smitten of this Skallagrim.
+Therefore, for my sake, do no harm to this man who was Baresark, but now
+is my thrall; and, moreover, I beg the aid and friendship of all men of
+this quarter in those suits that will be laid against me at the Althing
+for these slayings, which I hereby give out as done by my hand, and by
+the hand of Skallagrim Lambstail, the Baresark."
+
+At these words all men shouted again; but Atli the Earl sprang from the
+high seat where Asmund had placed him, and, coming to Eric, kissed him,
+and, drawing a gold chain from his neck, flung it about the neck of
+Eric, crying:
+
+"Thou art a glorious man, Eric Brighteyes. I thought the world had no
+more of such a breed. Listen to my bidding: come thou to the earldom in
+Orkneys and be a son to me, and I will give thee all good gifts, and,
+when I die, thou shalt sit in my seat after me."
+
+But Eric thought of Swanhild, who must go from Iceland as wife to Atli,
+and answered:
+
+"Thou doest me great honour, Earl, but this may not be. Where the fir
+is planted, there it must grow and fall. Iceland I love, and I will stay
+here among my own people till I am driven away."
+
+"That may well happen, then," said Atli, "for be sure Ospakar and his
+kin will not let the matter of these slayings rest, and I think that
+it will not avail thee much that thou smotest for thine own hand. Then,
+come thou and be my man."
+
+"Where the Norns lead there I must follow," said Eric, and sat down to
+meat. Skallagrim sat down also at the side-bench; but men shrank from
+him, and he glowered on them in answer.
+
+Presently Gudruda entered, and she seemed pale and faint.
+
+When he had done eating, Eric drew Gudruda on to his knee, and she sat
+there, resting her golden head upon his breast. But Swanhild did not
+come into the hall, though ever Earl Atli sought her dark face and
+lovely eyes of blue, and he wondered greatly how his wooing had sped.
+Still, at this time he spoke no more of it to Asmund.
+
+Now Skallagrim drank much ale, and glared about him fiercely; for he
+had this fault, that at times he was drunken. In front of him were two
+thralls of Asmund's; they were brothers, and large-made men, and they
+watched Asmund's sheep upon the fells in winter. These two also grew
+drunk and jeered at Skallagrim, asking him what atonement he would make
+for those ewes of Asmund's that he had stolen last Yule, and how it came
+to pass that he, a Baresark, had been overthrown of an unarmed man.
+
+Skallagrim bore their gibes for a space as he drank on, but suddenly
+he rose and rushed at them, and, seizing a man's throat in either hand,
+thrust them to the ground beneath him and nearly choked them there.
+
+Then Eric ran down the hall, and, putting out his strength, tore the
+Baresark from them.
+
+"This then is thy peacefulness, thou wolf!" Eric cried. "Thou art
+drunk!"
+
+"Ay," growled Skallagrim, "ale is many a man's doom."
+
+"Have a care that it is not thine and mine, then!" said Eric. "Go,
+sleep; and know that, if I see thee thus once more, I see thee not
+again."
+
+
+
+But after this men jeered no more at Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric's
+thrall.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+HOW SWANHILD BID FAREWELL TO ERIC
+
+Now all this while Asmund sat deep in thought; but when, at length, men
+were sunk in sleep, he took a candle of fat and passed to the shut bed
+where Swanhild slept alone. She lay on her bed, and her curling hair was
+all about her. She was awake, for the light gleamed in her blue eyes,
+and on a naked knife that was on the bed beside her, half hidden by her
+hair.
+
+"What wouldst thou, foster-father?" she asked, rising in the couch.
+Asmund closed the curtains, then looked at her sternly and spoke in a
+low voice:
+
+"Thou art fair to be so vile a thing, Swanhild," he said. "Who now
+would have dreamed that heart of thine could talk with goblins and with
+were-wolves--that those eyes of thine could bear to look on murder and
+those white hands find strength to do the sin?"
+
+She held up her shapely arms and, looking on them, laughed. "Would that
+they had been fashioned in a stronger mould," she said. "May they wither
+in their woman's weakness! else had the deed been done outright. Now my
+crime is as heavy upon me and nothing gained by it. Say what fate for
+me, foster-father--the Stone of Doom and the pool where faithless women
+lie? Ah, then might Gudruda laugh indeed, and I will not live to hear
+that laugh. See," and she gripped the dagger at her side: "along this
+bright edge runs the path to peace and freedom, and, if need be, I will
+tread it."
+
+"Be silent," said Asmund. "This Gudruda, my daughter, whom thou wouldst
+have foully done to death, is thine own sister, and it is she who,
+pitying thee, hath pleaded for thy life."
+
+"I will naught of her pity who have no pity," she answered; "and this
+I say to thee who art my father: shame be on thee who hast not dared to
+own thy child!"
+
+"Hadst thou not been my child, Swanhild, and had I not loved thee
+secretly as my child, be sure of this, I had long since driven thee
+hence; for my eyes have been open to much that I have not seemed to see.
+But at length thy wickedness has overcome my love, and I will see thy
+face no more. Listen: none have heard of this shameful deed of thine
+save those who saw it, and their tongues are sealed. Now I give thee
+choice: wed Atli and go, or stand in the Doom-ring and take thy fate."
+
+"Have I not said, father, while death may be sought otherwise, that I
+will never do this last? Nor will I do the first. I am not all of the
+tame breed of you Iceland folk--other and quicker blood runs in my
+veins; nor will I be sold in marriage to a dotard as a mare is sold at a
+market. I have answered."
+
+"Fool! think again, for I go not back upon my word. Wed Atli or die--by
+thy own hand, if thou wilt--there I will not gainsay thee; or, if thou
+fearest this, then anon in the Doom-ring."
+
+Now Swanhild covered her eyes with her hands and shook the long hair
+about her face, and she seemed wondrous fair to Asmund the Priest who
+watched. And as she sat thus, it came into her mind that marriage is
+not the end of a young maid's life--that old husbands have been known to
+die, and that she might rule this Atli and his earldom and become a rich
+and honoured woman, setting her sails in such fashion that when the wind
+turned it would fill them. Otherwise she must die--ay, die shamed and
+leave Gudruda with her love.
+
+Suddenly she slipped from the bed to the floor of the chamber, and,
+clasping the knees of Asmund, looked up through the meshes of her hair,
+while tears streamed from her beautiful eyes:
+
+"I have sinned," she sobbed--"I have sinned greatly against thee and my
+sister. Hearken: I was mad with love of Eric, whom from a child I have
+turned to, and Gudruda is fairer than I and she took him from me. Most
+of all was I mad this night when I wrought the deed of shame, for ill
+things counselled me--things that I did not call; and oh, I thank the
+Gods--if there are Gods--that Gudruda died not at my hand. See now,
+father, I put this evil from me and tear Eric from my heart," and she
+made as though she rent her bosom--"I will wed Atli, and be a good
+housewife to him, and I crave but this of Gudruda: that she forgive me
+her wrong; for it was not done of my will, but of my madness, and of the
+driving of those whom my mother taught me to know."
+
+Asmund listened and the springs of his love thawed within him. "Now thou
+dost take good counsel," he said, "and of this be sure, that so long as
+thou art in that mood none shall harm thee; and for Gudruda, she is the
+most gentle of women, and it may well be that she will put away thy sin.
+So weep no more, and have no more dealings with thy Finnish witchcraft,
+but sleep; and to-morrow I will bear thy word to Atli, for his ship is
+bound and thou must swiftly be made a wife."
+
+He went out, bearing the light with him; but Swanhild rose from the
+ground and sat on the edge of the bed, staring into the darkness and
+shuddering from time to time.
+
+"I shall soon be made his wife," she murmured, "who would be but one
+man's wife--and methinks I shall soon be made a widow also. Thou wilt
+have me, dotard--take me and thy fate! Well, well; better to wed an Earl
+than to be shamed and stretched across the Doom-stone. Oh, weak arms
+that failed me at my need, no more will I put trust in you! When next I
+wound, it shall be with the tongue; when next I strive to slay, it shall
+be by another's hand. Curses on thee, thou ill counseller of darkness,
+who didst betray me at the last! Is it for this that I worshipped thee
+and swore the oath?"
+
+
+
+The morning came, and at the first light Asmund sought the Earl. His
+heart was heavy because of the guile that his tongue must practise, and
+his face was dark as a winter dawn.
+
+"What news, Asmund?" asked Atli. "_Early tidings are bad tidings_, so
+runs the saw, and thy looks give weight to it."
+
+"Not altogether bad, Earl. Swanhild gives herself to thee."
+
+"Of her own will, Asmund?"
+
+"Ay, of her own will. But I have warned thee of her temper."
+
+"Her temper! Little hangs to a maid's temper. Once a wife and it
+will melt in softness like the snow when summer comes. These are glad
+tidings, comrade, and methinks I grow young again beneath the breath of
+them. Why art thou so glum then?"
+
+"There is something that must yet be told of Swanhild," said Asmund.
+"She is called the Fatherless, but, if thou wilt have the truth, why
+here it is for thee--she is my daughter, born out of wedlock, and I know
+not how that will please thee."
+
+Atli laughed aloud, and his bright eyes shone in his wrinkled face. "It
+pleases me well, Asmund, for then the maid is sprung from a sound stock.
+The name of the Priest of Middalhof is famous far south of Iceland; and
+never that Iceland bred a comelier girl. Is that all?"
+
+"One more thing, Earl. This I charge thee: watch thy wife, and hold her
+back from witchcraft and from dealings with evil things and trolls of
+darkness. She is of Finnish blood and the women of the Finns are much
+given to such wicked work."
+
+"I set little store by witchwork, goblins and their kin," said Atli. "I
+doubt me much of their power, and I shall soon wean Swanhild from such
+ways, if indeed she practise them."
+
+Then they fell to talking of Swanhild's dower, and that was not small.
+Afterwards Asmund sought Eric and Gudruda, and told them what had come
+to pass, and they were glad at the news, though they grieved for Atli
+the Earl. And when Swanhild met Gudruda, she came to her humbly, and
+humbly kissed her hand, and with tears craved pardon of her evil doing,
+saying that she had been mad; nor did Gudruda withhold it, for of all
+women she was the gentlest and most forgiving. But to Eric, Swanhild
+said nothing.
+
+The wedding-feast must be held on the third day from this, for Atli
+would sail on that same day, since his people wearied of waiting and his
+ship might lie bound no longer. Blithe was Atli the Earl, and Swanhild
+was all changed, for now she seemed the gentlest of maids, and, as
+befitted one about to be made a wife, moved through the house with soft
+words and downcast eyes. But Skallagrim, watching her, bethought him of
+the grey wolf that he had seen by Goldfoss, and this seemed not well to
+him.
+
+"It would be bad now," he said to Eric, as they rode to Coldback, "to
+stand in yon old earl's shoes. This woman's weather has changed too
+fast, and after such a calm there'll come a storm indeed. I am now
+minded of Thorunna, for she went just so the day before she gave herself
+to Ospakar, and me to shame and bonds."
+
+"Talk not of the raven till you hear his croak," said Eric.
+
+"He is on the wing, lord," answered Skallagrim.
+
+Now Eric came to Coldback in the Marsh, and Saevuna his mother and Unna,
+Thorod's daughter, the betrothed of Asmund, were glad to welcome him;
+for the tidings of his mighty deeds and of the overthrow of Ospakar
+and the slaying of Mord were noised far and wide. But at Skallagrim
+Lambstail they looked askance. Still, when they heard of those things
+that he had wrought on Horse-Head Heights, they welcomed him for his
+deed's sake.
+
+Eric sat two nights at Coldback, and on the second day Saevuna his
+mother and Unna rode thence with their servants to the wedding-feast of
+Swanhild the Fatherless. But Eric stopped at Coldback that night, saying
+that he would be at Middalhof within two hours of sunrise, for he must
+talk with a shepherd who came from the fells.
+
+Saevuna and her company came to Middalhof and was asked, first by
+Gudruda, then by Swanhild, why Brighteyes tarried. She answered that he
+would be there early on the morrow. Next morning, before it was light,
+Eric girded on Whitefire, took horse and rode from Coldback alone, for
+he would not bring Skallagrim, fearing lest he should get drunk at the
+feast and shed some man's blood.
+
+It was Swanhild's wedding-day; but she greeted it with little
+lightsomeness of heart, and her eyes knew no sleep that night, though
+they were heavy with tears.
+
+At the first light she rose, and, gliding from the house, walked through
+the heavy dew down the path by which Eric must draw near, for she
+desired to speak with him. Gudruda also rose a while after, though she
+did not know this, and followed on the same path, for she would greet
+her lover at his coming.
+
+Now three furlongs or more from the stead stood a vetch stack, and
+Swanhild waited on the further side of this stack. Presently she heard
+a sound of singing come from behind the shoulder of the fell and of the
+tramp of a horse's hoofs. Then she saw the golden wings of Eric's
+helm all ablaze with the sunlight as he rode merrily along, and great
+bitterness laid hold of her that Eric could be of such a joyous mood on
+the day when she who loved him must be made the wife of another man.
+
+Presently he was before her, and Swanhild stepped from the shadow of the
+stack and laid her hand upon his horse's bridle.
+
+"Eric," she said humbly and with bowed head, "Gudruda sleeps yet. Canst
+thou, then, find time to hearken to my words?"
+
+He frowned and said: "Methinks, Swanhild, it would be better if thou
+gavest thy words to him who is thy lord."
+
+She let the bridle-rein drop from her hands. "I am answered," she said;
+"ride on."
+
+Now pity stirred in Eric's heart, for Swanhild's mien was most heavy,
+and he leaped down from his horse. "Nay," he said, "speak on, if thou
+hast anything to tell me."
+
+"I have this to tell thee, Eric; that now, before we part for ever, I am
+come to ask thy pardon for my ill-doing--ay, and to wish all joy to thee
+and thy fair love," and she sobbed and choked.
+
+"Speak no more of it, Swanhild," he said, "but let thy good deeds cover
+up the ill, which are not small; so thou shalt be happy."
+
+She looked at him strangely, and her face was white with pain.
+
+"How then are we so differently fashioned that thou, Eric, canst prate
+to me of happiness when my heart is racked with grief? Oh, Eric, I blame
+thee not, for thou hast not wrought this evil on me willingly; but I
+say this: that my heart is dead, as I would that I were dead. See those
+flowers: they smell sweet--for me they have no odour. Look on the light
+leaping from Coldback to the sea, from the sea to Westman Isles, and
+from the Westman crown of rocks far into the wide heavens above. It is
+beautiful, is it not? Yet I tell thee, Eric, that now to my eyes howling
+winter darkness is every whit as fair. Joy is dead within me, music's
+but a jangled madness in my ears, food hath no savour on my tongue, my
+youth is sped ere my dawn is day. Nothing is left to me, Eric, save this
+fair body that thou didst scorn, and the dreams which I may gather from
+my hours of scanty sleep, and such shame as befalls a loveless bride."
+
+"Speak not so, Swanhild," he said, and clasped her by the hand, for,
+though he loathed her wickedness, being soft-hearted and but young, it
+grieved him to hear her words and see the anguish of her mind. For it is
+so with men, that they are easily moved by the pleading of a fair woman
+who loves them, even though they love her not.
+
+"Yea, I will speak out all my mind before I seal it up for ever. See,
+Eric, this is my state and thou hast set this crown of sorrow on my
+brows: and thou comest singing down the fell, and I go weeping o'er the
+sea! I am not all so ill at heart. It was love of thee that drove me
+down to sin, as love of thee might otherwise have lifted me to holiness.
+But, loving thee as thou seest, this day I wed a dotard, and go his
+chattel and his bride across the sea, and leave thee singing on the
+fell, and by thy side her who is my foe. Thou hast done great deeds,
+Brighteyes, and still greater shalt thou do; yet but as echoes they
+shall reach my ears. Thou wilt be to me as one dead, for it is Gudruda's
+to bind the byrnie on thy breast when thou goest forth to war, and hers
+to loose the winged helm from thy brow when thou returnest, battle-worn
+and conquering."
+
+Now Swanhild ceased, and choked with grief; then spoke again:
+
+"So now farewell; doubtless I weary thee, and--Gudruda waits. Nay, look
+not on my foolish tears: they are the heritage of woman, of naught else
+is she sure! While I live, Eric, morn by morn the thought of thee shall
+come to wake me as the sun wakes yon snowy peak, and night by night
+thy memory shall pass as at eve he passes from the valleys, but to dawn
+again in dreams. For, Eric, 'tis thee I wed to-day--at heart I am thy
+bride, thine and thine only; and when shalt thou find a wife who holds
+thee so dear as that Swanhild whom once thou knewest? So now farewell!
+Yes, this time thou shalt kiss away my tears; then let them stream for
+ever. Thus, Eric! and thus! and thus! do I take farewell of thee."
+
+And now she clung about his neck, gazing on him with great dewy eyes
+till things grew strange and dim, and he must kiss her if only for her
+love and tender beauty's sake. And so he kissed, and it chanced that
+as they clung thus, Gudruda, passing by this path to give her betrothed
+greeting, came upon them and stood astonished. Then she turned and,
+putting her hands to her head, fled back swiftly to the stead, and
+waited there, great anger burning in her heart; for Gudruda had this
+fault, that she was very jealous.
+
+Now Eric and Swanhild did not see her, and presently they parted, and
+Swanhild wiped her eyes and glided thence.
+
+As she drew near the stead she found Gudruda watching.
+
+"Where hast thou been, Swanhild?" she said.
+
+"To bid farewell to Brighteyes, Gudruda."
+
+"Then thou art foolish, for doubtless he thrust thee from him."
+
+"Nay, Gudruda, he drew me to him. Hearken, I say, thou sister. Vex me
+not, for I go my ways and thou goest thine. Thou art strong and fair,
+and hitherto thou hast overcome me. But I am also fair, and, if I find
+space to strike in, I also have a show of strength. Pray thou that I
+find not space, Gudruda. Now is Eric thine. Perchance one day he may be
+mine. It lies in the lap of the Norns."
+
+"Fair words from Atli's bride," mocked Gudruda.
+
+"Ay, Atli's bride, but never Atli's love!" said Swanhild, and swept on.
+
+A while after Eric rode up. He was shamefaced and vexed at heart,
+because he had yielded thus to Swanhild's beauty, and been melted by her
+tender words and kissed her. Then he saw Gudruda, and at the sight of
+her all thought of Swanhild passed from him, for he loved Gudruda and
+her alone. He leapt down from his horse and ran to her. But, drawn to
+her full height, she stood with dark flashing eyes and fair face set in
+anger.
+
+Still, he would have greeted her loverwise; but she lifted her hand and
+waved him back, and fear took hold of him.
+
+"What now, Gudruda?" he asked, faltering.
+
+"What now, Eric?" she answered, faltering not. "Hast seen Swanhild?"
+
+"Yea, I have seen Swanhild. She came to bid farewell to me. What of it?"
+
+"What of it? Why '_thus! and thus! and thus!_' didst thou bid farewell
+to Atli's bride. Ay, 'thus and thus,' with clinging lips and twined
+arms. Warm and soft was thy farewell kiss to her who would have slain
+me, Brighteyes!"
+
+"Gudruda, thou speakest truth, though how thou sawest I know not. Think
+no ill of it, and scourge me not with words, for, sooth to say, I was
+melted by her grief and the music of her talk."
+
+"It is shame to thee so to speak of her whom but now thou heldest in
+thine arms. By the grief and the music of the talk of her who would have
+murdered me thou wast melted into kisses, Eric!--for I saw it with these
+eyes. Knowest thou what I am minded to say to thee? It is this: 'Go
+hence and see me no more;' for I have little wish to cleave to such
+a feather-man, to one so blown about by the first breath of woman's
+tempting."
+
+"Yet, methinks, Gudruda, I have withstood some such winds. I tell thee
+that, hadst thou been in my place, thyself hadst yielded to Swanhild and
+kissed her in farewell, for she was more than woman in that hour."
+
+"Nay, Eric, I am no weak man to be led astray thus. Yet she is more than
+woman--troll is she also, that I know; but less than man art thou, Eric,
+thus to fall before her who hates me. Time may come when she shall woo
+thee after a stronger sort, and what wilt thou say to her then, thou who
+art so ready with thy kisses?"
+
+"I will withstand her, Gudruda, for I love thee only, and this is well
+known to thee."
+
+"Truly I know thou lovest me, Eric; but tell me of what worth is this
+love of man that eyes of beauty and tongue of craft may so readily
+bewray? I doubt me of thee, Eric!"
+
+"Nay, doubt me not, Gudruda. I love thee alone, but I grew soft as wax
+beneath her pleading. My heart consented not, yet I did consent. I have
+no more to say."
+
+Now Gudruda looked on him long and steadfastly. "Thy plight is sorry,
+Eric," she said, "and this once I forgive thee. Look to it that thou
+givest me no more cause to doubt thee, for then I shall remember how
+thou didst bid farewell to Swanhild."
+
+"I will give none," he answered, and would have embraced her; but this
+she would not suffer then, nor for many days after, for she was angry
+with him. But with Swanhild she was still more angry, though she said
+nothing of it. That Swanhild had tried to murder her, Gudruda could
+forgive, for there she had failed; but not that she had won Eric to kiss
+her, for in this she had succeeded well.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+HOW ERIC WAS OUTLAWED AND SAILED A-VIKING
+
+Now the marriage-feast went on, and Swanhild, draped in white and girt
+about with gold, sat by Atli's side upon the high seat. He was fain of
+her and drew her to him, but she looked at him with cold calm eyes in
+which hate lurked. The feast was done, and all the company rode to the
+sea strand, where the Earl's ship lay at anchor. They came there, and
+Swanhild kissed Asmund, and talked a while with Groa, her mother,
+and bade farewell to all men. But she bade no farewell to Eric and to
+Gudruda.
+
+"Why sayest thou no word to these two?" asked Atli, her husband.
+
+"For this reason, Earl," she answered, "because ere long we three shall
+meet again; but I shall see Asmund, my father, and Groa, my mother, no
+more."
+
+"That is an ill saying, wife," said Atli. "Methinks thou dost foretell
+their doom."
+
+"Mayhap! And now I will add to my redes, for I foretell _thy_ doom also:
+it is not yet, but it draws on."
+
+Then Atli bethought him of many wise saws, but spoke no more, for it
+seemed to him this was a strange bride that he had wed.
+
+They hauled the anchor home, shook out the great sail, and passed away
+into the evening night. But while land could still be seen, Swanhild
+stood near the helm, gazing with her blue eyes upon the lessening coast.
+Then she passed to the hold, and shut herself in alone, and there she
+stayed, saying that she was sick, till at length, after a fair voyage of
+twenty days, they made the Orkney Islands.
+
+But all this pleased Atli wondrous ill, yet he dared not cross her mood.
+
+
+
+Now, in Iceland the time drew on when men must ride to the Althing, and
+notice was given to Eric Brighteyes of many suits that were laid against
+him, in that he had brought Mord, Ospakar's son, to his death, dealing
+him a brain or a body or a marrow wound, and others of that company.
+But no suits were laid against Skallagrim, for he was already outlaw.
+Therefore he must go in hiding, for men were out to slay him, and this
+he did unwillingly, at Eric's bidding. Asmund took up Eric's case, for
+he was the most famous of all lawmen in that day, and when thirteen full
+weeks of summer were done, they two rode to the Thing, and with them a
+great company of men of their quarter.
+
+Now, men go up to the Lgberg, and there came Ospakar, though he was
+not yet healed of his wound, and all his company, and laid their suits
+against Eric by the mouth of Gizur the Lawman, Ospakar's son. The
+pleadings were long and cunning on either side; but the end of it was
+that Ospakar brought it about, by the help of his friends--and of
+these had many--that Eric must go into outlawry for three years. But no
+weregild was to be paid to Ospakar and his men for those who had been
+killed, and no atonement for the great wound that Skallagrim Lambstail
+gave him, or for the death of Mord, his son, inasmuch as Eric fought for
+his own hand to save his life.
+
+The party of Ospakar were ill pleased at this finding, and Eric was not
+over glad, for it was little to his mind that he should sail a-warring
+across the seas, while Gudruda sat at home in Iceland. Still, there was
+no help for the matter.
+
+Now Ospakar spoke with his company, and the end of it was that he called
+on them to take their weapons and avenge themselves by their own
+might. Asmund and Eric, seeing this, mustered their army of freemen and
+thralls. There were one hundred and five of them, all stout men; but
+Ospakar Blacktooth's band numbered a hundred and thirty-three, and they
+stood with their backs to the Raven's Rift.
+
+"Now I would that Skallagrim was here to guard my back," said Eric, "for
+before this fight is done few will left standing to tell its tale."
+
+"It is a sad thing," said Asmund, "that so many men must die because
+some men are now dead."
+
+"A very sad thing," said Eric, and took this counsel. He stalked alone
+towards the ranks of Ospakar and called in a loud voice, saying:
+
+"It would be grievous that so many warriors should fall in such a
+matter. Now hearken, you company of Ospakar Blacktooth! If there be any
+two among you who will dare to match their might against my single sword
+in holmgang, here I, Eric Brighteyes, stand and wait them. It is better
+that one man, or perchance three men, should fall, than that anon so
+many should roll in the dust. What say ye?"
+
+Now all those who watched called out that this was a good offer and a
+manly one, though it might turn out ill for Eric; but Ospakar answered:
+
+"Were I but well of my wound I alone would cut that golden comb of
+thine, thou braggart; as it is, be sure that two shall be found."
+
+"Who is the braggart?" answered Eric. "He who twice has learned the
+weight of this arm and yet boasts his strength, or I who stand craving
+that two should come against me? Get thee hence, Ospakar; get thee home
+and bid Thorunna, thy leman, whom thou didst beguile from that Ounound
+who now is named Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark, nurse thee whole
+of the wound her husband gave thee. Be sure we shall yet stand face to
+face, and that combs shall be cut then, combs black or golden. Nurse
+thee! nurse thee! cease thy prating--get thee home, and bid Thorunna
+nurse thee; but first name thou the two who shall stand against me in
+holmgang in Oxar's stream."
+
+Folk laughed aloud while Eric mocked, but Ospakar gnashed his teeth with
+rage. Still, he named the two mightiest men in his company, bidding them
+take up their swords against Brighteyes. This, indeed, they were loth
+to do; still, because of the shame that they must get if they hung
+back, and for fear of the wrath of Ospakar, they made ready to obey his
+bidding.
+
+Then all men passed down to the bank of Oxar, and, on the other side,
+people came from their booths and sat upon the slope of All Man's Raft,
+for it was a new thing that one man should fight two in holmgang.
+
+Now Eric crossed to the island where holmgangs are fought to this day,
+and after him came the two chosen, flourishing their swords bravely, and
+taking counsel how one should rush at his face, while the other passed
+behind his back and spitted him, as woodfolk spit a lamb. Eric drew
+Whitefire and leaned on it, waiting for the word, and all the women held
+him to be wondrous fair as, clad in his byrnie and his golden helm,
+he leaned thus on Whitefire. Presently the word was given, and Eric,
+standing not to defend himself as they deemed he surely would, whirled
+Whitefire round his helm and rushed headlong on his foes, shield aloft.
+
+The great carles saw the light that played on Whitefire's edge and the
+other light that burned in Eric's eyes, and terror got hold of them. Now
+he was almost come, and Whitefire sprang aloft like a tongue of flame.
+Then they stayed no more, but, running one this way and one that, cast
+themselves into the flood and swam for the river-edge. Now from either
+bank rose up a roar of laughter, that grew and grew, till it echoed
+against the lava rifts and scared the ravens from their nests.
+
+Eric, too, stopped his charge and laughed aloud; then walked back to
+where Asmund stood, unarmed, to second him in the holmgang.
+
+"I can get little honour from such champions as these," he said.
+
+"Nay," answered Asmund, "thou hast got the greatest honour, and they,
+and Ospakar, such shame as may not be wiped out."
+
+Now when Blacktooth saw what had come to pass, he well-nigh choked,
+and fell from his horse in fury. Still, he could find no stomach for
+fighting, but, mustering his company, rode straightway from the Thing
+home again to Swinefell. But he caused those two whom he had put up
+to do battle with Eric to be set upon with staves and driven from
+his following, and the end of it was that they might stay no more in
+Iceland, but took ship and sailed south, and now they are out of the
+story.
+
+On the next day, Asmund, and with him Eric and all their men, rode back
+to Middalhof. Gudruda greeted Eric well, and for the first time since
+Swanhild went away she kissed him. Moreover, she wept bitterly when she
+learned that he must go into outlawry, while she must bide at home.
+
+"How shall the days pass by, Eric?" she said, "when thou art far, and I
+know not where thou art, nor how it goes with thee, nor if thou livest
+or art already dead?"
+
+"In sooth I cannot say, sweet," he answered; "but of this I am sure
+that, wheresoever I am, yet more weary shall be my hours."
+
+"Three years," she went on--"three long, cold years, and no sight of
+thee, and perchance no tidings from thee, till mayhap I learn that thou
+art in that land whence tidings cannot come. Oh, it would be better to
+die than to part thus."
+
+"Well I wot that it is better to die than to live, and better never to
+have been born than to live and die," answered Eric sadly. "Here, it
+would seem, is nothing but hate and strife, weariness and bitter envy
+to fret away our strength, and at last, if we come so far, sorrowful age
+and death, and thereafter we know not what. Little of good do we find to
+our hands, and much of evil; nor know I for what ill-doing these burdens
+are laid upon us. Yet must we needs breathe such an air as is blown
+about us, Gudruda, clasping at this happiness which is given, though we
+may not hold it. At the worst, the game will soon be played, and others
+will stand where we have stood, and strive as we have striven, and fail
+as we have failed, and so on, till man has worked out his doom, and the
+Gods cease from their wrath, or Ragnarrk come upon them, and they too
+are lost in the jaws of grey wolf Fenrir."
+
+"Men may win one good thing, and that is fame, Eric."
+
+"Nay, Gudruda, what is it to win fame? Is it not to raise up foes, as it
+were, from the very soil, who, made with secret hate, seek to stab us
+in the back? Is it not to lose peace, and toil on from height to height
+only to be hurled down at last? Happy, then, is the man whom fame flies
+from, for hers is a deadly gift."
+
+"Yet there is one thing left that thou hast not numbered, Eric, and
+it is love--for love is to our life what the sun is to the world, and,
+though it seems to set in death, yet it may rise again. We are happy,
+then, in our love, for there are many who live their lives and do not
+find it."
+
+So these two, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair, talked sadly, for
+their hearts were heavy, and on them lay the shadow of sorrows that were
+to come.
+
+"Say, sweet," said Eric at length, "wilt thou that I go not into
+banishment? Then I must fall into outlawry, and my life will be in the
+hands of him who may take it; yet I think that my foes will find it hard
+to come by while my strength remains, and at the worst I do but turn to
+meet the fate that dogs me."
+
+"Nay, that I will not suffer, Brighteyes. Now we will go to my father,
+and he shall give thee his dragon of war--she is a good vessel--and thou
+shalt man her with the briskest men of our quarter: for there are many
+who will be glad to fare abroad with thee, Eric. Soon she shall be bound
+and thou shalt sail at once, Eric: for the sooner thou art gone the
+sooner the three years will be sped, and thou shalt come back to me.
+But, oh! that I might go with thee."
+
+Now Gudruda and Eric went to Asmund and spoke of this matter.
+
+"I desired," he answered, "that thou, Eric, shouldst bide here in
+Iceland till after harvest, for it is then that I would take Unna,
+Thorod's daughter, to wife, and it was meet that thou shouldst sit at
+the wedding-feast and give her to me."
+
+"Nay, father, let Eric go," said Gudruda, "for well begun is, surely,
+half done. He must remain three years in outlawry: add thou no day to
+them, for, if he stays here for long, I know this: that I shall find no
+heart to let him go, and, if go he must, then I shall go with him."
+
+"That may never be," said Asmund; "thou art too young and fair to sail
+a-viking down the sea-path. Hearken, Eric: I give thee the good ship,
+and now we will go about to find stout men to man her."
+
+"That is a good gift," said Eric; and afterwards they rode to the
+seashore and overhauled the vessel as she lay in her shed. She was a
+great dragon of war, long and slender, and standing high at stem and
+prow. She was fashioned of oak, all bolted together with iron, and at
+her prow was a gilded dragon most wonderfully carved.
+
+Eric looked on her and his eyes brightened.
+
+"Here rests a wave-horse that shall bear a viking well," he said.
+
+"Ay," answered Asmund, "of all the things I own this ship is the very
+best. She is so swift that none may catch her, and she can almost go
+about in her own length. That gale must be heavy that shall fill her,
+with thee to steer; yet I give her to thee freely, Eric, and thou shalt
+do great deeds with this my gift, and, if things go well, she shall come
+back to this shore at last, and thou in her."
+
+"Now I will name this war-gift with a new name," said Eric. "'Gudruda,'
+I name her: for, as Gudruda here is the fairest of all women, so is this
+the fairest of all war-dragons."
+
+"So be it," said Asmund.
+
+Then they rode back to Middalhof, and now Eric Brighteyes let it be
+known that he needed men to sail the seas with him. Nor did he ask in
+vain, for, when it was told that Eric went a-viking, so great was his
+fame grown, that many a stout yeoman and many a great-limbed carle
+reached down sword and shield and came up to Middalhof to put their
+hands in his. For mate, he took a certain man named Hall of Lithdale,
+and this because Bjrn asked it, for Hall was a friend to Bjrn, and he
+had, moreover, great skill in all manner of seamanship, and had often
+sailed the Northern Seas--ay, and round England to the coast of France.
+
+But when Gudruda saw this man, she did not like him, because of his
+sharp face, uncanny eyes, and smooth tongue, and she prayed Eric to have
+nothing to do with him.
+
+"It is too late now to talk of that," said Eric. "Hall is a well-skilled
+man, and, for the rest, fear not: I will watch him."
+
+"Then evil will come of it," said Gudruda.
+
+Skallagrim also liked Hall little, nor did Hall love Skallagrim and his
+great axe.
+
+At length all were gathered; they were fifty in number and it is said
+that no such band of men ever took ship from Iceland.
+
+Now the great dragon was bound and her faring goods were aboard of her,
+for Eric must sail on the morrow, if the wind should be fair. All day
+long he stalked to and fro among his men; he would trust nothing to
+others, and there was no sword or shield in his company but he himself
+had proved it. All day long he stalked, and at his back went Skallagrim
+Lambstail, axe on shoulder, for he would never leave Eric if he had his
+will, and they were a mighty pair.
+
+At length all was ready and men sat down to the faring-feast in the hall
+at Middalhof, and that was a great feast. Eric's folk were gathered on
+the side-benches, and by the high seat at Asmund's side sat Brighteyes,
+and near to him where Bjrn, Asmund's son, Gudruda, Unna, Asmund's
+betrothed, and Saevuna, Eric's mother. For this had been settled between
+Asmund and Eric, that his mother Saevuna, who was some somewhat sunk in
+age, should flit from Coldback and come with Unna to dwell at Middalhof.
+But Eric set a trusty grieve to dwell at Coldback and mind the farm.
+
+When the faring-toasts had been drunk, Eric spoke to Asmund and said: "I
+fear one thing, lord, and it is that when I am gone Ospakar will trouble
+thee. Now, I pray you all to beware of Blacktooth, for, though the hound
+is whipped, he can still bite, and it seems that he has not yet put
+Gudruda from his mind."
+
+Now Bjrn had sat silently, thinking much and drinking more, for he
+loved Eric less than ever on this day when he saw how all men did him
+honour and mourned his going, and his father not the least of them.
+
+"Methinks it is thou, Eric," he said, "whom Ospakar hates, and thee on
+whom he would work his vengeance, and that for no light cause."
+
+"When bad fortune sits in thy neighbour's house, she knocks upon thy
+door, Bjrn. Gudruda, thy sister, is my betrothed, and thou art a party
+to this feud," said Eric. "Therefore it becomes thee better to hold her
+honour and thy own against this Northlander, than to gird at me for that
+in which I have no blame."
+
+Bjrn grew wroth at these words. "Prate not to me," he said. "Thou art
+an upstart who wouldst teach their duty to thy betters--ay, puffed up
+with light-won fame, like a feather on the breeze. But I say this: the
+breeze shall fail, and thou shalt fall upon the goose's back once more.
+And I say this also, that, had I my will, Gudruda should wed Ospakar:
+for he is a mighty chief, and not a long-legged carle, outlawed for
+man-slaying."
+
+Now Eric sprang from his seat and laid hand upon the hilt of Whitefire,
+while men murmured in the hall, for they held this an ill speech of
+Bjrn's.
+
+"In thee, it seems, I have no friend," said Eric, "and hadst thou been
+any other man than Gudruda's brother, forsooth thou shouldst answer for
+thy mocking words. This I tell thee, Bjrn, that, wert thou twice her
+brother, if thou plottest with Ospakar when I am gone, thou shalt pay
+dearly for it when I come back again. I know thy heart well: it is
+cunning and greedy of gain, and filled with envy as a cask with ale;
+yet, if thou lovest to feel it beating in thy breast, strive not to work
+me mischief and to put Gudruda from me."
+
+Now Bjrn sprang up also and drew his sword, for he was white with rage;
+but Asmund his father cried, "Peace!" in a great voice.
+
+"Peace!" he said. "Be seated, Eric, and take no heed of this foolish
+talk. And for thee, Bjrn, art thou the Priest of Middalhof, and
+Gudruda's father, or am I? It has pleased me to betroth Brighteyes to
+Gudruda, and it pleased me not to betroth her to Ospakar, and that is
+enough for thee. For the rest, Ospakar would have slain Eric, not he
+Ospakar, therefore Eric's hands are clean. Though thou art my son, I say
+this, that, if thou workest ill to Eric when he is over sea, thou shalt
+rightly learn the weight of Whitefire: it is a niddering deed to plot
+against an absent man."
+
+Eric sat down, but Bjrn strode scowling from the hall, and, taking
+horse, rode south; nor did he and Eric meet again till three years had
+come and gone, and then they met but once.
+
+"Maggots shall be bred of that fly, nor shall they lack flesh to feed
+on," said Skallagrim in Eric's ears as he watched Bjrn pass. But Eric
+bade him be silent, and turned to Gudruda.
+
+"Look not so sad, sweet," he said, "for hasty words rise like the foam
+on mead and pass as soon. It vexes Bjrn that thy father has given me
+the good ship: but his anger will soon pass, or, at the very worst, I
+fear him not while thou art true to me."
+
+"Then thou hast little to fear, Eric," she answered. "Look now on thy
+hair: it grows long as a woman's, and that is ill, for at sea the salt
+will hang to it. Say, shall I cut it for thee?"
+
+"Yes, Gudruda."
+
+So she cut his yellow locks, and one of them lay upon her heart for many
+a day.
+
+"Now thou shalt swear to me," she whispered in his ear, "that no other
+man or woman shall cut thy hair till thou comest back to me and I clip
+it again."
+
+"That I swear, and readily," he answered. "I will go long-haired like a
+girl for thy sake, Gudruda."
+
+He spoke low, but Koll the Half-witted, Groa's thrall, heard this oath
+and kept it in his mind.
+
+
+
+Very early on the morrow all men rose, and, taking horse, rode once more
+to the seaside, till they came to that shed where the Gudruda lay.
+
+Then, when the tide was high, Eric's company took hold of the black
+ship's thwarts, and at his word dragged her with might and main. She
+ran down the greased blocks and sped on quivering to the sea, and as her
+dragon-prow dipped in the water people cheered aloud.
+
+Now Eric must bid farewell to all, and this he did with a brave heart
+till at the last he came to Saevuna, his mother, and Gudruda, his dear
+love.
+
+"Farewell, son," said the old dame; "I have little hope that these eyes
+shall look again upon that bonny face of thine, yet I am well paid for
+my birth-pains, for few have borne such a man as thou. Think of me at
+times, for without me thou hadst never been. Be not led astray of women,
+nor lead them astray, or ill shall overtake thee. Be not quarrelsome
+because of thy great might, for there is a stronger than the strongest.
+Spare a fallen foe, and take not a poor man's goods or a brave man's
+sword; but, when thou smitest, smite home. So shalt thou win honour,
+and, at the last, peace, that is more than honour."
+
+Eric thanked her for her counsel, and kissed her, then turned to
+Gudruda, who stood, white and still, plucking at her golden girdle.
+
+"What can I say to thee?" he asked.
+
+"Say nothing, but go," she answered: "go before I weep."
+
+"Weep not, Gudruda, or thou wilt unman me. Say, thou wilt think on me?"
+
+"Ay, Eric, by day and by night."
+
+"And thou wilt be true to me?"
+
+"Ay, till death and after, for so long as thou cleavest to me I will
+cleave to thee. I will first die rather than betray thee. But of thee I
+am not so sure. Perchance thou mayest find Swanhild in thy journeyings
+and crave more kisses of her?"
+
+"Anger me not, Gudruda! thou knowest well that I hate Swanhild more than
+any other woman. When I kiss her again, then thou mayst wed Ospakar."
+
+"Speak not so rashly, Eric," she said, and as she spoke Skallagrim drew
+near.
+
+"If thou lingerest here, lord, the tide will serve us little round
+Westmans," he said, eyeing Gudruda as it were with jealousy.
+
+"I come," said Eric. "Gudruda, fare thee well!"
+
+She kissed him and clung to him, but did not answer, for she could not
+speak.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+HOW HALL THE MATE CUT THE GRAPNEL CHAIN
+
+Gudruda bent her head like a drooping flower, and presently sank to
+earth, for her knees would bear her weight no more; but Eric marched to
+the lip of the sea, his head held high and laughing merrily to hide his
+pain of heart. Here stood Asmund, who gripped him by both hands, and
+kissed him on the brow, bidding him good luck.
+
+"I know not whether we shall meet again," he said; "but, if my hours
+be sped before thou returnest, this I charge thee: that thou mindest
+Gudruda well, for she is the sweetest of all women that I have known,
+and I hold her the most dear."
+
+"Fear not for that, lord," said Eric; "and I pray thee this, that, if
+I come back no more, as well may happen, do not force Gudruda into
+marriage, if she wills it not, and I think she will have little leaning
+that way. And I say this also: do not count overmuch on Bjrn thy son,
+for he has no loyal heart; and beware of Groa, who was thy housekeeper,
+for she loves not that Unna should take her place and more. And now I
+thank thee for many good things, and farewell."
+
+"Farewell, my son," said Asmund, "for in this hour thou seemest as a son
+to me."
+
+Eric turned to enter the sea and wade to the vessel, but Skallagrim
+caught him in his arms as though he were but a child, and, wading into
+the surf till the water covered his waistbelt, bore him to the vessel
+and lifted him up so that Eric reached the bulwarks with his hands.
+
+Then they loosed the cable and got out the oars and soon were dancing
+over the sea. Presently the breeze caught them, and they set the great
+sail and sped away like a gull towards the Westman Isles. But Gudruda
+sat on the shore watching till, at length, the light faded from Eric's
+golden helm as he stood upon the poop, and the world grew dark to her.
+
+
+
+Now Ospakar Blacktooth had news of this sailing and took counsel of
+Gizur his son, and the end of it was that they made ready two great
+ships, dragons of war, and, placing sixty fighting men in each of them,
+sailed round the Iceland coast to the Westmans and waited there to
+waylay Eric. They had spies on the land, and from them they learned of
+Brighteyes' coming, and sailed out to meet him in the channel between
+the greater and the lesser islands, where they knew that he must pass.
+
+Now it drew towards evening when Eric rowed down this channel, for the
+wind had fallen and he desired to be clear at sea. Presently, as the
+Gudruda came near to the mouth of the channel, that had high cliffs on
+either hand, Eric saw two long dragons of war--for their bulwarks were
+shield-hung--glide from the cover of the island and take their station
+side by side between him and the open sea.
+
+"Now here are vikings," said Eric to Skallagrim.
+
+"Now here is Ospakar Blacktooth," answered Skallagrim, "for well I know
+that raven banner of his. This is a good voyage, for we must seek but a
+little while before we come to fighting."
+
+Eric bade the men lay on their oars, and spoke:
+
+"Before us is Ospakar Blacktooth in two great dragons, and he is here to
+cut us off. Now two choices are left to us: one is to bout ship and run
+before him, and the other to row on and give him battle. What say ye,
+comrades?"
+
+Hall of Lithdale, the mate, answered, saying:
+
+"Let us go back, lest we die. The odds are too great, Eric."
+
+But a man among the crew cried out, "When thou didst go on holmgang at
+Thingvalla, Eric, Ospakar's two chosen champions stood before thee,
+yet at Whitefire's flash they skurried through the water like startled
+ducks. It was an omen, for so shall his great ships fly when we swoop on
+them." Then the others shouted:
+
+"Ay, ay! Never let it be said that we fled from Ospakar--fie on thy
+woman's talk, Hall!"
+
+"Then we are all of one mind, save Hall only," said Eric. "Let us put
+Ospakar to the proof." And while men shouted "Yea!" he turned to speak
+with Skallagrim. The Baresark was gone, for, wasting no breath in words,
+already he was fixing the long shields on the bulwark rail.
+
+The men busked on their harness and made them fit for fight, and, when
+all was ready, Eric mounted the poop, and with him Skallagrim, and bade
+the rowers give way. The Gudruda leapt forward and rushed on towards
+Ospakar's ships. Now they saw that these were bound together with a
+cable and yet they must go betwixt them.
+
+Eric ran forward to the prow, and with him Skallagrim, and called aloud
+to a great man who stood upon the ship to starboard, wearing a black
+helm with raven's wings:
+
+"Who art thou that bars the sea against me?"
+
+"I am named Ospakar Blacktooth," answered the great man.
+
+"And what must we lose at thy hands, Ospakar?"
+
+"But one thing--your lives!" answered Blacktooth.
+
+"Thrice have we stood face to face, Ospakar," said Eric, "and it seems
+that hitherto thou hast won no great glory. Now it shall be proved if
+thy luck has bettered."
+
+"Art yet healed, lord, of that prick in the shoulder which thou camest
+by on Horse-Head Heights?" roared Skallagrim.
+
+For answer, Ospakar seized a spear and hurled it straight at Eric, and
+it had been his death had he not caught it in his hand as it flew. Then
+he cast it back, and that so mightily that it sped right through the
+shield of Ospakar and was the bane of a man who stood beside him.
+
+"A gift for a gift!" laughed Eric. On rushed the Gudruda, but now the
+cable was strained six fathoms from her bow that held together the ships
+of Ospakar and it was too strong for breaking. Eric looked and saw. Then
+he drew Whitefire, and while all men wondered, leaped over the prow of
+the ship and, clasping the golden dragon's head with his arm, set his
+feet upon its claws and waited. On sped the ship and spears flew thick
+and fast about him, but there Brighteyes hung. Now the Gudruda's bow
+caught the great rope and strained it taut and, as it rose beneath her
+weight, Eric smote swift and strong with Whitefire and clove it in two,
+so that the severed ends fell with a splash into the quiet water.
+
+Eric sprang back to deck while stones and spears hissed about him.
+
+"That was well done, lord," said Skallagrim; "now we shall be snugly
+berthed."
+
+"In oars and out grappling-irons," shouted Eric.
+
+Up rose the rowers, and their war-gear rattled as they rose. They drew
+in the long oars, and not before it was time, for now the Gudruda forced
+her way between the two dragons of Ospakar and lay with her bow to their
+sterns. Then with a shout Eric's men cast the irons and soon the ships
+were locked fast and the fight began. The spears flew thick, and on
+either side some got their death before them. Then the men of that
+vessel, named the Raven, which was to larboard of the Gudruda, made
+ready to board. On they came with a rush, and were driven back, though
+hardly, for they were many, and those who stood against them few. Again
+they came, scrambling over the bulwarks, and this time a score of them
+leapt aboard. Eric turned from the fight against the dragon of Ospakar
+and saw it. Then, with Skallagrim, he rushed to meet the boarders as
+they swarmed along the hold, and naught might they withstand the axe and
+sword.
+
+Through and through them swept the mighty pair, now Whitefire flashed,
+and now the great axe fell, and at every stroke a man lay dead
+or wounded. Six of the boarders turned to fly, but just then the
+grappling-iron broke and their ship drifted out with the tide towards
+the open sea, and presently no man of that twenty was left alive.
+
+Now the men of the ship of Ospakar and of the Gudruda pressed each other
+hard. Thrice did Ospakar strive to come aboard and thrice he was pushed
+back. Eric was ever where he was most needed, and with him Skallagrim,
+for these two threw themselves from side to side, and were now here and
+now there, so that it seemed as though there were not one golden helm
+and one black, but rather four on board the Gudruda.
+
+Eric looked and saw that the other ship was drawing round, though
+somewhat slowly, to come alongside of them once more.
+
+"Now we must make an end of Ospakar, else our hands will be overfull,"
+he said, and therewith sprang up upon the bulwarks and after him many
+men. Once they were driven back, but came on again, and now they thrust
+all Ospakar's men before them and passed up his ship on both boards. By
+the mast stood Ospakar and with him Gizur his son, and Eric strove to
+come to him. But many men were between them, and he could not do this.
+
+Presently, while the fight yet went on hotly and men fell fast,
+Brighteyes felt the dragon of Ospakar strike, and, looking, saw that
+they had drifted with the send of the tide on to the rocks of the
+island. There was a great hole in the hull amidships and the water
+rushed in fast.
+
+"Back! men; back!" he cried, and all his folk that were unhurt, ran, and
+leapt on board the Gudruda; but Ospakar and his men sprang into the sea
+and swam for the shore. Then Skallagrim cut loose the grappling-irons
+with his axe, and that not too soon, for, scarcely had they pushed
+clear with great toil when the long warship slipped from the rock and
+foundered, taking many dead and wounded men with her.
+
+Now Ospakar and some of his people stood safe upon the rocks, and Eric
+called to him in mockery, bidding him come aboard the Gudruda.
+
+Ospakar made no answer, but stood gnawing his hand, while the water ran
+from him. Only Gizur his son cursed them aloud.
+
+Eric was greatly minded to follow them, and land and fight them there;
+but he might not do this, because of the rocks and of the other dragon,
+that hung about them, fearing to come on and yet not willing to go back.
+
+"We will have her, at the least," said Eric, and bade the rowers get out
+their oars.
+
+Now, when the men on board the other ship saw the Gudruda drawing on,
+they took to their oars at once and rowed swiftly for the sea, and at
+this a great roar of laughter went down Eric's ship.
+
+"They shall not slip from us so easily," said Eric; "give way, comrades,
+and after them."
+
+But the men were much wearied with fighting, and the decks were all
+cumbered with dead and wounded, so that by the time that the Gudruda had
+put about, and come to the mouth of the waterway, Ospakar's vessel
+had shaken out her sails and caught the wind, that now blew strong off
+shore, and sped away six furlongs or more from Eric's prow.
+
+"Now we shall see how the Gudruda sails," said Eric, and they spread
+their canvas and gave chase.
+
+Then Eric bade men clear the decks of the dead, and tend the wounded. He
+had lost seven men slain outright, and three were wounded, one to death.
+But on board the ship there lay of Ospakar's force twenty and three dead
+men.
+
+When all were cast into the sea, men ate and rested.
+
+"We have not done so badly," said Eric to Skallagrim.
+
+"We shall do better yet," said Skallagrim to Eric; "rather had I seen
+Ospakar's head lying in the scuppers than those of all his carles; for
+he may get more men, but never another head!"
+
+Now the wind freshened till by midnight it blew strongly. The mate Hall
+came to Eric and said:
+
+"The Gudruda dips her nose deep in Ran's cup. Say, Eric, shall we
+shorten sail?"
+
+"Nay," answered Eric, "keep her full and bail. Where yonder Raven flies,
+my Sea-stag must follow," and he pointed to the warship that rode the
+waves before them.
+
+After midnight clouds came up, with rain, and hid the face of the
+night-sun and the ship they sought. The wind blew ever harder, till at
+length, when the rain had passed and the clouds lifted, there was much
+water in the hold and the bailers could hardly stand at their work.
+
+Men murmured, and Hall the mate murmured most of all; but still Eric
+held on, for there, not two furlongs ahead of them, rode the dragon of
+Ospakar. But now, being afraid of the wind and sea, she had lowered
+her sail somewhat, and made as though she would put about and run for
+Iceland.
+
+"That she may not do," called Eric to Skallagrim, "if once she rolls
+side on to those seas Ran has her, for she must fill and sink."
+
+"So they hold, lord," answered Skallagrim; "see, once more she runs!"
+
+"Ay, but we run faster--she is outsailed. Up, men, up: for presently the
+fight begins."
+
+"It is bad to join battle in such a sea," quoth Hall.
+
+"Good or bad," growled Skallagrim, "do thou thy lord's bidding," and he
+half lifted up his axe.
+
+The mate said no more, for he misdoubted him of Skallagrim Lambstail and
+his axe.
+
+Then men made ready for the fray as best they might, and stood, sword in
+hand and drenched with foam, clinging to the bulwarks of the Gudruda as
+she wallowed through the seas.
+
+Eric went aft to the helm and seized it. Now but a length ahead
+Ospakar's ship laboured on beneath her small sail, but the Gudruda
+rushed towards her with all canvas set and at every leap plunged her
+golden dragon beneath the surf and shook the water from her foredeck.
+
+"Make ready the grapnel!" shouted Eric through the storm. Skallagrim
+seized the iron and stood by. Now the Gudruda rushed alongside the
+Raven, and Eric steered so skilfully that there was a fathom space, and
+no more, between the ships.
+
+Skallagrim cast the iron well and truly, so that it hooked and held. On
+sped the Gudruda and the cable tautened--now her stern kissed the bow of
+Ospakar's ship, as though she was towing her, and thus for a space they
+travelled through the seas.
+
+Eric's folk shouted and strove to cast spears; but they did this but
+ill, because of the rocking of the vessel. As for Ospakar's men, they
+clung to their bulwarks and did nothing, for all the heart was out of
+them between fear of Eric and terror of the sea. Eric called to a man to
+hold the helm, and Skallagrim crept aft to where he stood.
+
+"What counsel shall we take now?" said Eric, and as he spoke a sea broke
+over them--for the gale was strong.
+
+"Board them and make an end," answered Skallagrim.
+
+"Rough work; still, we will try it," said Eric, "for we may not lie thus
+for long, and I am loath to leave them."
+
+Then Eric called for men to follow him, and many answered, creeping as
+best they might to where he stood.
+
+"Thou art mad, Eric," said Hall the mate; "cut loose and let us drive,
+else we shall both founder, and that is a poor tale to tell."
+
+Eric took no heed, but, watching his chance, leapt on to the bows of the
+Raven, and after him leapt Skallagrim. Even as he did so, a great sea
+came and swept past and over them, so that half the ship was hid for
+foam. Now, Hall the mate stood near to the grapnel cable, and, fearing
+lest they should sink, out of the cowardice of his heart, he let his
+axe fall upon the chain, and severed it so swiftly that no man saw
+him, except Skallagrim only. Forward sprang the Gudruda, freed from her
+burden, and rushed away before the wind, leaving Eric and Skallagrim
+alone upon the Raven's prow.
+
+"Now we are in an evil plight," said Eric, "the cable has parted!"
+
+"Ay," answered Skallagrim, "and that losel Hall hath parted it! I saw
+his axe fall."
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+HOW ERIC DREAMED A DREAM
+
+Now, when the men of Ospakar, who were gathered on the poop of the
+Raven, saw what had come about, they shouted aloud and made ready to
+slay the pair. But Eric and Skallagrim clambered to the mast and got
+their backs against it, and swiftly made themselves fast with a rope, so
+that they might not fall with the rolling of the ship. Then the people
+of Ospakar came on to cut them down.
+
+But this was no easy task, for they might scarcely stand, and they could
+not shoot with the bow. Moreover, Eric and Skallagrim, being bound
+to the mast, had the use of both hands and were minded to die hard.
+Therefore Ospakar's folks got but one thing by their onslaught, and
+that was death, for three of their number fell beneath the long sweep
+of Whitefire, and one bowed before the axe of Skallagrim. Then they drew
+back and strove to throw spears at these two, but they flew wide because
+of the rolling of the vessel. One spear struck the mast near the head of
+Skallagrim. He drew it out, and, waiting till the ship steadied herself
+in the trough of the sea, hurled it at a knot of Ospakar's thralls, and
+a man got his death from it. After that they threw no more spears.
+
+Thence once more the crew came on with swords and axes, but
+faint-heartedly, and the end of it was that they lost some more men dead
+and wounded and fell back again.
+
+Skallagrim mocked at them with bitter words, and one of them, made mad
+by his scoffing, cast a heavy ballast-stone at him. It fell upon his
+shoulder and numbed him.
+
+"Now I am unmeet for fight, lord," said Skallagrim, "for my right arm is
+dead and I can scarcely hold my axe."
+
+"That is ill, then," said Eric, "for we have little help, except from
+each other, and I, too, am well-nigh spent. Well, we have done a great
+deed and now it is time to rest."
+
+"My left arm is yet whole, lord, and I can make shift for a while with
+it. Cut loose the cord before they bait us to death, and let us rush
+upon these wolves and fall fighting."
+
+"A good counsel," said Eric, "and a quick end; but stay a while: what
+plan have they now?"
+
+Now the men of Ospakar, having little heart left in them for such work
+as this, had taken thought together.
+
+"We have got great hurt, and little honour," said the mate. "There are
+but nineteen of us left alive, and that is scarcely enough to work the
+ship, and it seems that we shall be fewer before Eric Brighteyes and
+Skallagrim Lambstail lie quiet by yonder mast. They are mighty men,
+indeed, and it would be better, methinks, to deal with them by craft,
+rather than by force."
+
+The sailors said that this was a good word, for they were weary of the
+sight of Whitefire as he flamed on high and the sound of the axe of
+Skallagrim as it crashed through helm and byrnie; and as fear crept in
+valour fled out.
+
+"This is my rede, then," said the mate: "that we go to them and give
+them peace, and lay them in bonds, swearing that we will put them ashore
+when we are come back to Iceland. But when we have them fast, as they
+sleep at night, we will creep on them and hurl them into the sea, and
+afterwards we will say that we slew them fighting."
+
+"A shameful deed!" said a man.
+
+"Then go thou up against them," answered the mate. "If we slay them
+not, then shall this tale be told against us throughout Iceland: that a
+ship's company were worsted by two men, and we may not live beneath that
+dishonour."
+
+The man held his peace, and the mate, laying down his arms, crept
+forward alone, towards the mast, just as Eric and Skallagrim were about
+to cut themselves loose and rush on them.
+
+"What wouldest thou?" shouted Eric. "Has it gone so well with you with
+arms that ye are minded to come up against us bearing none?"
+
+"It has gone ill, Eric," said the mate, "for ye twain are too mighty for
+us. We have lost many men, and we shall lose more ere ye are laid low.
+Therefore we make you this offer: that you lay down your weapons and
+suffer yourselves to be bound till such time as we touch land, where we
+will set you ashore, and give you your arms again. Meanwhile, we will
+deal with you in friendly fashion, giving you of the best we have; nor
+will we set foot any suit against you for those of our number whom ye
+two have slain."
+
+"Wherefore then should we be bound?" said Eric.
+
+"For this reason only: that we dare not leave you free within our ship.
+Now choose, and, if ye will, take peace, which we swear by all the Gods
+we will keep towards you, and, if ye will not, then we will bear you
+down with beams and sails and stones, and slay you."
+
+"What thinkest thou, Skallagrim?" said Eric beneath his breath.
+
+"I think that I find little faith in yon carle's face," answered
+Skallagrim. "Still, I am unfit to fight, and thy strength is spent, so
+it seems that we must lie low if we would rise again. They can scarcely
+be so base as to do murder having handselled peace to us."
+
+"I am not so sure of that," said Eric; "still, starving beggars must eat
+bones. Hearken thou: we take the terms, trusting to your honour; and I
+say this: that ye shall get shame and death if ye depart from them to
+harm us."
+
+"Have no fear, lord," said the mate, "we are true men."
+
+"That we shall look to your deeds to learn," said Eric, laying down his
+sword and shield.
+
+Skallagrim did likewise, though with no good grace. Then men came with
+strong cords and bound them fast hand and foot, handling them fearsomely
+as men handle a live bear in a net. Then they led them forward to the
+prow.
+
+As they went Eric looked up. Yonder, twenty furlongs and more away,
+sailed the Gudruda.
+
+"This is good fellowship," said Skallagrim, "thus to leave us in the
+trap."
+
+"Nay," answered Eric. "They cannot put about in such a sea, and
+doubtless also they think us dead. Nevertheless, if ever it comes about
+that Hall and I stand face to face again, there will be need for me to
+think of gentleness."
+
+"I shall think little thereon," growled Skallagrim.
+
+Now they were come to the prow, and there was a half deck under which
+they were set, out of reach of the wind and water. In the deck was a
+stout iron ring, and the men made them fast with ropes to it, so that
+they might move but little, and they set their helms and weapons behind
+them in such fashion that they could not come at them. Then they flung
+cloaks about them, and brought them food and drink, of which they stood
+much in need, and treated them well in every way. But for all this
+Skallagrim trusted them no more.
+
+"We are new-hooked, lord," he said, "and they give us line. Presently
+they will haul us in."
+
+"Evil comes soon enough," answered Eric, "no need to run to greet
+it," and he fell to thinking of Gudruda, and of the day's deeds, till
+presently he dropped asleep, for he was very weary.
+
+
+
+Now it chanced that as Eric slept he dreamed a dream so strong and
+strange that it seemed to live within him. He dreamed that he slept
+there beneath the Raven's deck, and that a rat came and whispered spells
+into his ear. Then he dreamed that Swanhild glided towards him, walking
+on the stormy seas. He saw her afar, and she came swiftly, and ever the
+sea grew smooth before her feet, nor did the wind so much as stir her
+hair. Presently she stood by him in the ship, and, bending over him,
+touched him on the shoulder, saying:
+
+"Awake, Eric Brighteyes! Awake! awake!"
+
+It seemed to him that he awoke and said "What tidings, Swanhild?" and
+that she answered:
+
+"Ill tidings, Eric--so ill that I am come hither from Straumey[*] to
+tell of them--ay, come walking on the seas. Had Gudruda done so much,
+thinkest thou?"
+
+[*] Stroma, the southernmost of the Orkneys.
+
+"Gudruda is no witch," he said in his dream.
+
+"Nay, but I am a witch, and it is well for thee, Eric. Ay, I am a witch.
+Now do I seem to sleep at Atli's side, and lo! here I stand by thine,
+and I must journey back again many a league before another day be
+born--ay, many a league, and all for love of thee, Eric! Hearken, for
+not long may the spell endure. I have seen this by my magic: that these
+men who bound thee come even now to take thee, sleeping, and cast thee
+and thy thrall into the deep, there to drown."
+
+"If it is fated it will befall," he said in his dream.
+
+"Nay, it shall not befall. Put forth all thy might and burst thy bonds.
+Then fetch Whitefire; cut away the bonds of Skallagrim, and give him his
+axe and shield. This done, cover yourselves with your cloaks, and wait
+till ye hear the murderers come. Then rise and rush upon them, the two
+of you, and they shall melt before your might. I have journeyed over the
+great deep to tell thee this, Eric! Had Gudruda done as much, thinkest
+thou?"
+
+And it seemed to him that the wraith of Swanhild kissed him on the brow,
+sighed and vanished, bearing the rat in her bosom.
+
+
+
+Eric awoke suddenly, just as though he had never slept, and looked
+around. He knew by the lowness of the sun that it was far into the
+night, and that he had slept for many hours. They were alone beneath
+the deck, and far aft, beyond the mast, as the vessel rose upon the
+waves--for the sea was still rough, though the wind had fallen--Eric
+saw the mate of the Raven talking earnestly with some men of his crew.
+Skallagrim snored beside him.
+
+"Awake!" Eric said in his ear, "awake and listen!"
+
+He yawned and roused himself. "What now, lord?" he said.
+
+"This," said Eric, and he told him the dream that he had dreamed.
+
+"That was a fey dream," said Skallagrim, "and now we must do as the
+wraith bade thee."
+
+"Easy to say, but hard to do," quoth Eric; "this is a great rope that
+holds us, and a strong."
+
+"Yes, it is great and strong; still, we must burst it."
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim were made fast in this fashion: their hands were
+bound behind them, and their legs were lashed above the feet and above
+the knee. Moreover, a thick cord was fixed about the waist of each, and
+this cord was passed through the iron ring and knotted there. But it
+chanced that beneath the hollows of their knees ran an oaken beam, which
+held the forepart of the dragon together.
+
+"We may try this," said Eric: "to set our feet against the beam and
+strain with all our strength upon the rope; though I think that no two
+men can part it."
+
+"We shall know that presently," said Skallagrim, gathering up his legs.
+
+Then they set their feet against the beam and pulled till it groaned;
+but, though the rope gave somewhat, it would not break. They rested a
+while, then strained again till the sweat burst out upon them and the
+rope cut into their flesh, but still it would not part.
+
+"We have found our match," said Eric.
+
+"That is not altogether proved yet," answered the Baresark. "Many a
+shield is riven at the third stroke."
+
+So once again they set their feet against the beam, and put out all
+their strength.
+
+"The ring bends," gasped Eric. "Now, when the roll of the ship throws
+our weight to leeward, in the name of Thor pull!"
+
+They waited, then put out their might, and lo! though the rope did not
+break, the iron ring burst asunder and they rolled upon the deck.
+
+"Well pulled, truly," said Skallagrim as he struggled to his haunches:
+"I am marked about the middle with rope-twists for many a day to come,
+that I will swear. What next, lord?"
+
+"Whitefire," answered Eric.
+
+Now, their arms were piled a fathom or more from where they sat, and
+right in the prow of the ship. Hither, then, they must crawl upon their
+knees, and this was weary work, for ever as the ship rolled they fell,
+and could in no wise save themselves from hurt. Eric was bleeding at the
+brow, and bloody was the hooked nose of Skallagrim, before they came to
+where Whitefire was. At length they reached the sword, and pushed aside
+the bucklers that were over it with their heads. The great war-blade was
+sheathed, and Eric must needs lie upon his breast and draw the weapon
+somewhat with his teeth.
+
+"This is an ill razor to shave with," he said, rising, for the keen
+blade had cut his chin.
+
+"So some have thought and perchance more shall think," answered
+Skallagrim. "Now set the rope on the edge and rub."
+
+This they did, and presently the thick cord that bound them was in two.
+Then Eric knelt upon the deck and pressed the bonds that bound his legs
+upon the blade, and after him Skallagrim. They were free now, except for
+their hands, and it was no easy thing to cut away the bonds upon their
+wrists. It was done thus: Skallagrim sat upon the deck, and Eric pushed
+the sword between his fingers with his feet. Then the Baresark rose,
+holding the sword, and Eric, turning back to back with him, fretted the
+cords upon his wrists against the blade. Twice he cut himself, but the
+third time the cord parted and he was free. He stretched his arms,
+for they were stiff; then took Whitefire and cut away the bonds of
+Skallagrim.
+
+"How goes it with that hurt of thine?" he asked.
+
+"Better than I had thought," answered Skallagrim; "the soreness has come
+out with the bruise."
+
+"That is good news," said Eric, "for methinks, unless Swanhild walked
+the seas for nothing, thou wilt soon need thine arms."
+
+"They have never failed me yet," said Skallagrim and took his axe and
+shield. "What counsel now?"
+
+"This, Skallagrim: that we lie down as we were, and put the cloaks about
+us as though we were yet in bonds. Then, if these knaves come, we can
+take them unawares as they think to take us."
+
+So they went again to where they had been bound, and lay down upon their
+shields and weapons, drawing cloaks over them. Scarcely had they done
+this and rested a while, when they saw the mate and all the crew coming
+along both boards towards them. They bore no weapons in their hands.
+
+"None too soon did Swanhild walk," said Eric; "now we shall learn their
+purpose. Be thou ready to leap forth when I give the word."
+
+"Ay, lord," answered Skallagrim as he worked his stiff arms to and fro.
+"In such matters few have thought me backward."
+
+"What news, friends?" cried Eric as the men drew near.
+
+"Bad news for thee, Brighteyes," answered the mate, "and that Baresark
+thrall of thine, for we must loose your bands."
+
+"That is good news, then," said Eric, "for our limbs are numb and dead
+because of the nipping of the cords. Is land in sight?"
+
+"Nay, nor will be for thee, Eric."
+
+"How now, friend? how now? Sure, having handselled peace to us, ye mean
+no harm towards two unarmed men?"
+
+"We swore to do you no harm, nor will we, Eric; this only will we do:
+deliver you, bound, to Ran, and leave her to deal with you as she may."
+
+"Bethink you, sirs," said Eric: "this is a cruel deed and most unmanly.
+We yielded to you in faith--will ye break your troth?"
+
+"War has no troth," he answered, "ye are too great to let slip between
+our fingers. Shall it be said of us that two men overcame us all?"
+
+"Mayhap!" murmured Skallagrim beneath his breath.
+
+"Oh, sirs, I beseech you," said Eric; "I am young, and there is a maid
+who waits me out in Iceland, and it is hard to die," and he made as
+though he wept, while Skallagrim laughed within his sleeve, for it was
+strange to see Eric feigning fear.
+
+But the men mocked aloud.
+
+"This is the great man," they cried, "this is that Eric of whose deeds
+folk sing! Look! he weeps like a child when he sees the water. Drag him
+forth and away with him into the sea!"
+
+"Little need for that," cried Eric, and lo! the cloaks about him and
+Skallagrim flew aside. Out they came with a roar; they came out as
+a she-bear from her cave, and high above Brighteyes' golden curls
+Whitefire shone in the pale light, and nigh to it shone the axe of
+Skallagrim. Whitefire flared aloft, then down he fell and sought the
+false heart of the mate. The great axe of Skallagrim shone and was lost
+in the breast of the carle who stood before him.
+
+"Trolls!" shrieked one. "Here are trolls!" and turned to fly. But again
+Whitefire was up and that man flew not far--one pace, and no more. Then
+they fled screaming and after them came axe and sword. They fled, they
+fell, they leaped into the sea, till none were left to fall and leap,
+for they had no time or heart to find or draw their weapons, and
+presently Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail stood alone upon the
+deck--alone with the dead.
+
+"Swanhild is a wise witch," gasped Eric, "and, whatever ill she has
+done, I will remember this to her honour."
+
+"Little good comes of witchcraft," answered Skallagrim, wiping his brow:
+"to-day it works for our hands, to-morrow it shall work against them."
+
+"To the helm," said Eric; "the ship yaws and comes side on to the seas."
+
+Skallagrim sprang to the tiller and put his strength on it, and but just
+in time, for one big sea came aboard them and left much water in the
+hold.
+
+"We owe this to thy Baresark ways," said Eric. "Hadst thou not slain the
+steersman we had not filled with water."
+
+"True, lord," answered Skallagrim; "but when once my axe is aloft, it
+seems to fly of itself, till nothing is left before it. What course
+now?"
+
+"The same on which the Gudruda was laid. Perhaps, if we may endure till
+we come to the Farey Isles,[*] we shall find her in harbour there."
+
+[*] The Faroes.
+
+"There is not much chance of that," said Skallagrim; "still, the wind is
+fair, and we fly fast before it."
+
+Then they lashed the tiller and set to bailing. They bailed long, and it
+was heavy work, but they rid the ship of much water. After that they ate
+food, for it was now morning, and it came on to blow yet more strongly.
+
+For three days and three nights it blew thus, and the Raven sped along
+before the gale. All this time, turn and turn about, Eric and Skallagrim
+stood at the helm and tended the sails. They had little time to eat, and
+none to sleep. They were so hard pressed also, and must harbour their
+strength so closely, that the bodies of the dead men yet cumbered the
+hold. Thus they grew very weary and like to fall from faintness, but
+still they held the Raven on her course. In the beginning of the fourth
+night a great sea struck the good ship so that she quivered from stem to
+stern.
+
+"Methinks I hear water bubbling up," said Skallagrim in a hoarse voice.
+
+Eric climbed down into the well and lifted the bottom planks, and
+there beneath them was a leak through which the water spouted in a thin
+stream. He stopped up the rent as best he might with garments from the
+dead men, and placed ballast stones upon them, then clambered on to the
+deck again.
+
+"Our hours are short now," he said, "the water rushes in apace."
+
+"Well, it is time to rest," said Skallagrim; "but see, lord!" and he
+pointed ahead. "What land is that?"
+
+"It must be the Fareys," answered Eric; "now, if we can but keep afloat
+for three hours more, we may yet die ashore."
+
+After this the wind began to fall, but still there was enough to drive
+the Raven on swiftly.
+
+And ever the water gained in the hold.
+
+Now they were not far from land, for ahead of them the bleak hills
+towered up, shining in the faint midnight light, and between the hills
+was a cleft that seemed to be a fjord. Another hour passed, and they
+were no more than ten furlongs from the mouth of the fjord, when
+suddenly the wind fell, and they were in calm water under shelter of the
+land. They went amidships and looked. The hold was half full of water,
+and in it floated the bodies of Ospakar's men.
+
+"She has not long to live," said Skallagrim, "but we may still be saved
+if the boat is not broken."
+
+Now aft, near the tiller, a small boat was bound on the half deck of the
+Raven. They went to it and looked; it was whole, with oars lashed in
+it, but half full of water, which they must bail out. This they did as
+swiftly as they might; then they cut the little boat loose, and, having
+made it fast with a rope, lifted it over the side-rail and let it fall
+into the sea, and that was no great way, for the Raven had sunk deep.
+It fell on an even keel, and Eric let himself down the rope into it and
+called to Skallagrim to follow.
+
+"Bide a while, lord," he answered; "there is that which I would bring
+with me."
+
+For a space Eric waited and then called aloud, "Swift! thou fool; swift!
+the ship sinks!"
+
+And as he called, Skallagrim came, and his arms were full of swords and
+byrnies, and red rings of gold that he had found time to gather from the
+dead and out of the cabin.
+
+"Throw all aside and come," said Eric, laying on to the oars, for the
+Raven wallowed before she sank.
+
+"There is yet time, lord, and the gear is good," answered Skallagrim,
+and one by one he threw pieces down into the boat. As the last fell the
+Raven sank to her bulwarks. Then Skallagrim stepped from the sinking
+deck into the boat, and cut the cord, not too soon.
+
+Eric gave way with all his strength, and, as he pulled, when he was no
+more than five fathoms from her, the Raven vanished with a huge swirl.
+
+"Hold still," he said, "or we shall follow."
+
+Round spun the boat in the eddy, she was sucked down till the water
+trickled over her gunwale, and for a moment they knew not if they were
+lost or saved. Eric held his breath and watched, then slowly the boat
+lifted her nose, and they were safe from the whirlpool of the lost
+dragon.
+
+"Greed is many a man's bane," said Eric, "and it was nearly thine and
+mine, Skallagrim."
+
+"I had no heart to leave the good gear," he answered; "and thou seest,
+lord, it is safe and we with it."
+
+Then they got the boat's head round slowly into the mouth of the fjord,
+pausing now and again to rest, for their strength was spent. For two
+hours they rowed down a gulf, as it were, and on either side of them
+were barren hills. At length the water-way opened out into a great
+basin, and there, on the further side of the basin, they saw green
+slopes running down to the water's edge, strewn with white stock-fish
+set to dry in the wind and sun, and above the slopes a large hall, and
+about it booths. Moreover, they saw a long dragon of war at anchor near
+the shore. For a while they rowed on, easing now and again. Then Eric
+spoke to Skallagrim.
+
+"What thinkest thou of yonder ship, Lambstail?"
+
+"I think this, lord: that she is fashioned wondrous like to the
+Gudruda."
+
+"That is in my mind also," said Eric, "and our fortune is good if it is
+she."
+
+They rowed on again, and presently a ray from the sun came over the
+hills--for now it was three hours past midnight--and, the ship having
+swung a little with the tide, lit upon her prow, and lo! there gleamed
+the golden dragon of the Gudruda.
+
+"This is a strange thing," said Eric.
+
+"Ay, lord, a strange and a merry, for now I shall talk with Hall the
+mate," and the Baresark smiled grimly.
+
+"Thou shalt do no hurt to Hall," said Eric. "I am lord here, and I must
+judge."
+
+"Thy will is my will," said Skallagrim; "but if my will were thine, he
+would hang on the mast till sea-birds nested amidst his bones."
+
+Now they were close to the ship, but they could see no man. Skallagrim
+would have called aloud, but Eric bade him hold his peace.
+
+"Either they are dead, and thy calling cannot wake them, or perchance
+they sleep and will wake of themselves. We will row under the stern,
+and, having made fast, climb aboard and see with our own eyes."
+
+This, then, they did as silently as might be, and saw that the Gudruda
+had not been handled gently by the winds and waves, for her shield rail
+was washed away. This they found also, that all men lay deep in sleep.
+Now, amidships a fire still burned, and by it was food. They came there
+and ate of the food, of which they had great need. Then they took two
+cloaks that lay on the deck, and, throwing them about them, warmed
+themselves over the fire: for they were cold and wet, ay, and utterly
+outworn.
+
+As they sat thus warming themselves, a man of the crew awoke and saw
+them, and being amazed, at once called to his fellows, saying that two
+giants were aboard, warming themselves at the fire. Now men sprang up,
+and, seizing their weapons, ran towards them, and among them was Hall
+the mate.
+
+Then suddenly Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail threw aside the
+cloaks and stood up. They were gaunt and grim to see. Their cheeks were
+hollow and their eyes stared wide with want of sleep. Thick was their
+harness with brine, and open wounds gaped upon their faces and their
+hands. Men saw and fell back in fear, for they held them to be wizards
+risen from the sea in the shapes of Eric and the Baresark.
+
+Then Eric sang this song:
+
+ "Swift and sure across the Swan's Bath
+ Sped Sea-stag on Raven's track,
+ Heav'd Ran's breast in raging billows,
+ Stream'd gale-banners through the sky!
+ Yet did Eric the war-eager
+ Leap with Baresark-mate aboard,
+ Fierce their onset on the foemen!
+ Wherefore brake the grapnel-chain?"
+
+Hall heard and slunk back, for now he saw that these were indeed Eric
+and Skallagrim come up alive from the sea, and that they knew his
+baseness.
+
+Eric looked at him and sang again:
+
+ "Swift away sped ship Gudruda,
+ Left her lord in foeman's ring;
+ Brighteyes back to back with Baresark
+ Held his head 'gainst mighty odds.
+ Down amidst the ballast tumbling,
+ Ospakar's shield-carles were rolled.
+ Holy peace at length they handselled,
+ Eric must in bonds be laid!
+
+ "Came the Grey Rat, came the Earl's wife,
+ Came the witch-word from afar;
+ Cag'd wolves roused them, and with struggling
+ Tore their fetter from its hold.
+ Now they watch upon their weapons;
+ Now they weep and pray for life;
+ Now they leap forth like a torrent--
+ Swept away in foeman's strength!
+
+ "Then alone upon the Raven
+ Three long days they steer and sail,
+ Till the waters, welling upwards,
+ Wash dead men about their feet.
+ Fails the gale and sinks the dragon,
+ Barely may they win the boat:
+ Safe they stand on ship Gudruda--
+ Say, who cut the grapnel-chain?"
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+HOW ERIC DWELT IN LONDON TOWN
+
+Men stood astonished, but Hall the mate slunk back.
+
+"Hold, comrade," said Eric, "I have something to say that songs cannot
+carry. Hearken, my shield-mates: we swore to be true to each other,
+even to death: is it not so? What then shall be said of that man who cut
+loose the Gudruda and left us two to die at the foeman's hand?"
+
+"Who was the man?" asked a voice.
+
+"That man was Hall of Lithdale," said Eric.
+
+"It is false!" said Hall, gathering up his courage; "the cable parted
+beneath the straining of the ship, and afterwards we could not put about
+because of the great sea."
+
+"Thou art false!" roared Skallagrim. "With my eyes I saw thee let thine
+axe fall upon the cable. Liar art thou and dastard! Thou art jealous
+also of Brighteyes thy lord, and this was in thy mind: to let him die
+upon the Raven and then to bind his shoes upon thy cowardly feet. Though
+none else saw, I saw; and I say this: that if I may have my will, I will
+string thee, living, to the prow in that same cable till gulls tear out
+thy fox-heart!"
+
+Now Hall grew very white and his knees trembled beneath him. "It is
+true," he said, "that I cut the chain, but not from any thought of evil.
+Had I not cut it the vessel must have sunk and all been lost."
+
+"Did we not swear, Hall," said Eric sternly, "together to fight and
+together to fall--together to fare and, if need be, together to cease
+from faring, and dost thou read the oath thus? Say, mates, what
+reward shall be paid to this man for his good fellowship to us and his
+tenderness for your lives?"
+
+As with one voice the men answered "_Death!_"
+
+"Thou hearest, Hall?" said Eric. "Yet I would deal more gently with one
+to whom I swore fellowship so lately. Get thee gone from our company,
+and let us see thy cur's face no more. Get thee gone, I say, before I
+repent of my mercy."
+
+Then amidst a loud hooting, Hall took his weapons and without a word
+slunk into the boat of the Raven that lay astern, and rowed ashore; nor
+did Eric see his face for many months.
+
+"Thou hast done foolishly, lord, to let that weasel go," said
+Skallagrim, "for he will live to nip thy hand."
+
+"For good or evil, he is gone," said Eric, "and now I am worn out and
+desire to sleep."
+
+
+
+After this Eric and Skallagrim rested three full days, and they were so
+weary that they were awake for little of this time. But on the third day
+they rose up, strong and well, except for their hurts and soreness. Then
+they told the men of that which had come to pass, and all wondered at
+their might and hardihood. To them indeed Eric seemed as a God, for few
+such deeds as his had been told of since the God-kind were on earth.
+
+But Brighteyes thought little of his deeds, and much of Gudruda. At
+times also he thought of Swanhild, and of that witch-dream she sent him:
+for it was wonderful to him that she should have saved him thus from
+Ran's net.
+
+Eric was heartily welcomed by the Earl of the Farey Isles, for, when he
+heard his deeds, he made a feast in his honour, and set him in the high
+seat. It was a great feast, but Skallagrim became drunk at it and ran
+down the chamber, axe aloft, roaring for Hall of Lithdale.
+
+This angered Eric much and he would scarcely speak to Skallagrim for
+many days, though the great Baresark slunk about after him like his
+shadow, or a whipped hound at its master's heel, and at length humbled
+his pride so far as to ask pardon for his fault.
+
+"I grant it for thy deeds' sake," said Eric shortly; "but this is upon
+my mind: that thou wilt err thus again, and it shall be my cause of
+death--ay, and that of many more."
+
+"First may my bones be white," said Skallagrim.
+
+"They shall be white thereafter," answered Eric.
+
+At Fareys Eric shipped twelve good men and true, to take the seats of
+those who had been slain by Ospakar's folk. Afterwards, when the wounded
+were well of their hurts (except one man who died), and the Gudruda was
+made fit to take the sea again, Brighteyes bade farewell to the Earl of
+those Isles, who gave him a good cloak and a gold ring at parting, and
+sailed away.
+
+
+
+Now it were too long to tell of all the deeds that Eric and his men
+did. Never, so scalds sing, was there a viking like him for strength
+and skill and hardihood, and, in those days, no such war-dragon as the
+Gudruda had been known upon the sea. Wherever Eric joined battle, and
+that was in many places, he conquered, for none prevailed against him,
+till at last foes would fly before the terror of his name, and earls and
+kings would send from far craving the aid of his hands. Withal he was
+the best and gentlest of men. It is said of Eric that in all his days he
+did no base deed, nor hurt the weak, nor refused peace to him who prayed
+it, nor lifted sword against prisoner or wounded foe. From traders
+he would take a toll of their merchandise only and let them go, and
+whatever gains he won he would share equally, asking no larger part than
+the meanest of his band. All men loved Eric, and even his foes gave him
+honour and spoke well of him. Now that Hall of Lithdale was gone, there
+was no man among his mates who would not have passed to death for him,
+for they held him dearer than their lives. Women, too, loved him much;
+but his heart was set upon Gudruda, and he seldom turned to look on
+them.
+
+The first summer of his outlawry Eric warred along the coast of Ireland,
+but in the winter he came to Dublin, and for a while served in the
+body-guard of the king of that town, who held him in honour, and would
+have had him stay there. But Eric would not bide there, and next spring,
+the Gudruda being ready for sea, he sailed for the shores of England.
+There he gave battle to two vikings' ships of war, and took them after
+a hard fight. It was in this fight that Skallagrim Lambstail was wounded
+almost to death. For when, having taken one ship, Eric boarded the other
+with but few men, he was driven back and fell over a beam, and would
+have been slain, had not Skallagrim thrown himself across his body,
+taking on his own back that blow of a battle-axe which was aimed at
+Eric's head. This was a great wound, for the axe shore through the steel
+of the byrnie and sank into the flesh. But when Eric's men saw their
+lord down, and Skallagrim, as they deemed, dead athwart him, they made
+so fierce a rush that the foemen fell before them like leaves before
+a winter gale, and the end of it was that the vikings prayed peace of
+Eric. Skallagrim lay sick for many days, but he was hard to kill, and
+Eric nursed him back to life. After this these two loved each other as
+brother loves twin brother, and they could scarcely bear to be apart.
+But other people did not love Skallagrim, nor he them.
+
+Eric sailed on up the Thames to London, bringing the viking ships with
+him, and he delivered their captains bound to Edmund, Edward's son,
+the king who was called Edmund the Magnificent. These captains the King
+hung, for they had wrought damage to his ships.
+
+Eric found much favour with the King, and, indeed, his fame had
+gone before him. So when he came into the court, bravely clad, with
+Skallagrim at his back, who was now almost recovered of his wound, the
+King called out to him to draw near, saying that he desired to look on
+the bravest viking and most beauteous man who sailed the seas, and on
+that fierce Baresark whom men called "Eric's Death-shadow."
+
+So Eric came forward up the long hall that was adorned with things more
+splendid than ever his eyes had seen, and stood before the King. With
+him came Skallagrim, driving the two captive viking chiefs before him
+with his axe, as a flesher drives lambs. Now, during these many months
+Brighteyes had grown yet more great in girth and glorious to look on
+than he was before. Moreover, his hair was now so long that it flowed
+like a flood of gold down towards his girdle, for since Gudruda trimmed
+it no shears had come near his head, and his locks grew fast as a
+woman's. The King looked at him and was astonished.
+
+"Of a truth," he said, "men have not lied about thee, Icelander, nor
+concerning that great wolf-hound of thine," and he pointed at Skallagrim
+with his sword of state. "Never saw I such a man;" and he bade all the
+mightiest men of his body-guard stand forward that he might measure them
+against Eric. But Brighteyes was an inch taller than the tallest, and
+measured half a span more round the chest than the biggest.
+
+"What wouldest thou of me, Icelander?" asked the King.
+
+"This, lord," said Eric: "to serve thee a while, and all my men with
+me."
+
+"That is an offer that few would turn from," answered the King. "Thou
+shalt go into my body-guard, and, if I have my will, thou shalt be near
+me in battle, and thy wolf-dog also."
+
+Eric said that he asked no better, and thereafter he went up with Edmund
+the King to make war on the Danes of Mercia, and he and Skallagrim did
+great deeds before the eyes of the Englishmen.
+
+That winter Eric and his company came back to London, and abode with
+the King in much state and honour. Now, there was a certain lady of
+the court named Elfrida. She was both fair and wealthy, the sweetest of
+women, and of royal blood by her mother's side. So soon as her eyes fell
+on Eric she loved him, and no one thing did she desire more than to
+be his wife. But Brighteyes kept aloof from her, for he loved Gudruda
+alone; and so the winter wore away, and in the spring he went away
+warring, nor did he come back till autumn was at hand.
+
+The Lady Elfrida sat at a window when Eric rode through London Town
+in the King's following, and as he passed she threw him a wreath of
+flowers. The King saw it and laughed.
+
+"My cold kinswoman seems to melt before those bright eyes of thine,
+Icelander," he said, "as my foes melt before Whitefire's flame. Well, I
+could wish her a worse mate," and he looked on him strangely.
+
+Eric bowed, but made no answer.
+
+That night, as they sat at meat in the palace, the Lady Elfrida, being
+bidden in jest of Edmund the King to fill the cup of the bravest, passed
+down the board, and, before all men, poured wine into Eric's cup, and,
+as she did so, welcomed him back with short sweet words.
+
+Eric grew red as dawn, and thanked her graciously; but after the feast
+he spoke with Skallagrim, asking him of the Gudruda, and when she could
+be ready to take the sea.
+
+"In ten days, lord," said Skallagrim; "but stay we not here with the
+King this winter? It is late to sail."
+
+"Nay," said Eric, "we bide not here. I would winter this year in Fareys,
+for they are the nighest place to Iceland that I may reach. Next summer
+my three years of outlawry are over, and I would fare back homewards."
+
+"Now, I see the shadow of a woman's hand," said Skallagrim. "It is very
+late to face the northern seas, and we may sail to Iceland from London
+in the spring."
+
+"It is my will that we should sail," answered Eric.
+
+"Past Orkneys runs the road to Fareys," said Skallagrim, "and in Orkneys
+sits a hawk to whom the Lady Elfrida is but a dove. In faring from ill
+we may hap on worse."
+
+"It is my will that we sail," said Eric stubbornly.
+
+"As thou wilt, and as the King wills," answered Skallagrim.
+
+On the morrow Eric went in before the King, and craved a boon.
+
+"There is little that thou canst ask, Brighteyes," said the King, "that
+I will not give thee, for, by my troth, I hold thee dear."
+
+"I am come back to seek no great thing, lord," answered Eric, "but this
+only: leave to bid thee farewell. I would wend homeward."
+
+"Say, Eric," said the King, "have I not dealt well with thee?"
+
+"Well, and overwell, lord."
+
+"Why, then, wouldst thou leave me? I have this in my mind--to bring thee
+to great honour. See, now, there is a fair lady in this court, and in
+her veins runs blood that even an Iceland viking might be proud to mate
+with. She has great lands, and, mayhap, she shall have more. Canst thou
+not find a home on them, thinkest thou, Brighteyes?"
+
+"In Iceland only I am at home, lord," said Eric.
+
+Then the King was wroth, and bade him begone when it pleased him, and
+Eric bowed before him and went out.
+
+Two days afterwards, while Eric was walking in the Palace gardens he met
+the Lady Elfrida face to face. She held white flowers in her hand, and
+she was fair to see and pale as the flowers she bore.
+
+He greeted her, and, after a while, she spoke to him in a gentle voice:
+"They say that thou goest from England, Brighteyes?" she said.
+
+"Yes, lady; I go," he answered.
+
+She looked on him once and twice and then burst out weeping. "Why goest
+thou hence to that cold land of thine?" she sobbed--"that hateful land
+of snow and ice! Is not England good enough for thee?"
+
+"I am at home there, lady, and there my mother waits me."
+
+"'There thy mother waits thee,' Eric?--say, does a maid called Gudruda
+the Fair wait thee there also?"
+
+"There is such a maid in Iceland," said Eric.
+
+"Yes; I know it--I know it all," she answered, drying her tears, and
+of a sudden growing cold and proud; "Eric, thou art betrothed to this
+Gudruda; and, for thy welfare, somewhat overfaithful to thy troth. For
+hearken, Eric Brighteyes. I know this: that little luck shall come
+to thee from the maid Gudruda. It would become me ill to say more;
+nevertheless, this is true--that here, in England, good fortune waits
+thy hand, and there in Iceland such fortune as men mete to their foes.
+Knowest thou this?"
+
+Eric looked at her and answered: "Lady," he said, "men are not born of
+their own will, they live and do little that they will, they do and go,
+perchance, whither they would not. Yet it may happen to a man that one
+meets him whose hand he fain would hold, if it be but for an hour's
+travel over icy ways; and it is better to hold that hand for this short
+hour than to wend his life through at a stranger's side."
+
+"Perhaps there is wisdom in thy folly," said the Lady Elfrida. "Still, I
+tell thee this: that no good luck waits thee there in Iceland."
+
+"It well may be," said Eric: "my days have been stormy, and the gale is
+still brewing. But it is a poor heart that fears the storm. Better to
+sink; for, coward or hero, all must sink at last."
+
+"Say, Eric," said the lady, "if that hand thou dost desire to hold is
+lost to thee, what then?"
+
+"If that hand is cold in death, then henceforth I wend my ways alone."
+
+"And if it be held of another hand than thine?"
+
+"Then I will journey back to England, lady, and here in this fair garden
+I may crave speech of thee again."
+
+They looked one on another. "Fare thee well, Eric!" said the Lady
+Elfrida. "Here in this garden we may talk again; and, if we talk no
+more--why, fare thee well! Days come and go; the swallow takes flight
+at winter, and lo! at spring it twitters round the eaves. And if it come
+not again, then farewell to that swallow. The world is a great house,
+Eric, and there is room for many swallows. But alas! for her who is left
+desolate--alas, alas!" And she turned and went.
+
+It is told of this lady Elfrida that she became very wealthy and was
+much honoured for her gentleness and wisdom, and that, when she was old,
+she built a great church and named it Ericskirk. It is also told that,
+though many sought her in marriage, she wedded none.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+HOW SWANHILD WALKED THE SEAS
+
+Within two days afterwards, the Gudruda being bound for sea, Eric went
+up to bid farewell to the King. But Edmund was so angry with him because
+of his going that he would not see him. Thereon Eric took horse and rode
+down sadly from the Palace to the river-bank where the Gudruda lay. But
+when he was about to give the word to get out the oars, the King himself
+rode up, and with him men bearing costly gifts. Eric went ashore to
+speak with him.
+
+"I am angry with thee, Brighteyes," said Edmund, "yet it is not in my
+heart to let thee go without words and gifts of farewell. This only I
+ask of thee now, that, if things go not well with thee there, out in
+Iceland, thou wilt come back to me."
+
+"I will--that I promise thee, King," said Eric, "for I shall never find
+a better lord."
+
+"Nor I a braver servant," said the King. Then he gave him the gifts and
+kissed him before all men. To Skallagrim also he gave a good byrnie of
+Welsh steel coloured black.
+
+Then Eric went aboard again and dropped down the river with the tide.
+
+For five days all went well with them, the sea being calm and the winds
+light and favourable. But on the fifth night, as they sailed slowly
+along the coasts of East Anglia over against Yarmouth sands, the moon
+rose red and ringed and the sea fell dead calm.
+
+"Yonder hangs a storm-lamp, lord," said Skallagrim, pointing to the
+angry moon. "We shall soon be bailing, for the autumn gales draw near."
+
+"Wait till they come, then speak," said Eric. "Thou croakest ever like a
+raven."
+
+"And ravens croak before foul weather," answered Skallagrim, and just as
+he spoke a sudden gust of wind came up from the south-east and laid the
+Gudruda over. After this it came on to blow, and so fiercely that
+for whole days and nights their clothes were scarcely dry. They ran
+northwards before the storm and still northward, sighting no land and
+seeing no stars. And ever as they scudded on the gale grew fiercer, till
+at length the men were worn out with bailing and starved with wet and
+cold. Three of their number also were washed away by the seas, and all
+were in sorry plight.
+
+It was the fourth night of the gale. Eric stood at the helm, and by
+him Skallagrim. They were alone, for their comrades were spent and lay
+beneath decks, waiting for death. The ship was half full of water, but
+they had no more strength to bail. Eric seemed grim and gaunt in the
+white light of the moon, and his long hair streamed about him wildly.
+Grimmer yet was Skallagrim as he clung to the shield-rail and stared
+across the deep.
+
+"She rolls heavily, lord," he shouted, "and the water gains fast."
+
+"Can the men bail no more?" asked Eric.
+
+"Nay, they are outworn and wait for death."
+
+"They need not wait long," said Eric. "What do they say of me?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+Then Eric groaned aloud. "It was my stubbornness that brought us to this
+pass," he said; "I care little for myself, but it is ill that all should
+die for one man's folly."
+
+"Grieve not, lord," answered Skallagrim, "that is the world's way, and
+there are worse things than to drown. Listen! methinks I hear the roar
+of breakers yonder," and he pointed to the left.
+
+"Breakers they surely are," said Eric. "Now the end is near. But see, is
+not that land looming up on the right, or is it cloud?"
+
+"It is land," said Skallagrim, "and I am sure of this, that we run into
+a firth. Look, the seas boil like a hot spring. Hold on thy course,
+lord, perchance we may yet steer between rocks and land. Already the
+wind falls and the current lessens the seas."
+
+"Ay," said Eric, "already the fog and rain come up," and he pointed
+ahead where dense clouds gathered in the shape of a giant, whose head
+reached to the skies and moved towards them, hiding the moon.
+
+Skallagrim looked, then spoke: "Now here, it seems, is witchwork. Say,
+lord, hast thou ever seen mist travel against wind as it travels now?"
+
+"Never before," said Eric, and as he spoke the light of the moon went
+out.
+
+
+
+Swanhild, Atli's wife, sat in beauty in her bower on Straumey Isle and
+looked with wide eyes towards the sea. It was midnight. None stirred in
+Atli's hall, but still Swanhild looked out towards the sea.
+
+Now she turned and spoke into the darkness, for there was no light in
+the bower save the light of her great eyes.
+
+"Art thou there?" she said. "I have summoned thee thrice in the words
+thou knowest. Say, Toad, art there?"
+
+"Ay, Swanhild the Fatherless! Swanhild, Groa's daughter! Witch-mother's
+witch-child! I am here. What is thy will with me?" piped a thin voice
+like the voice of a dying babe.
+
+Swanhild shuddered a little and her eyes grew brighter--as bright as the
+eyes of a cat.
+
+"This first," she said: "that thou show thyself. Hideous as thou art, I
+had rather see thee, than speak with thee seeing thee not."
+
+"Mock not my form, lady," answered the thin voice, "for it is as thou
+dost fashion it in thy thought. To the good I am fair as day; to the
+evil, foul as their heart. _Toad_ thou didst call me: look, now I come
+as a toad!"
+
+Swanhild looked, and behold! a ring of the darkness grew white with
+light, and in it crouched a thing hideous to see. It was shaped as a
+great spotted toad, and on it was set a hag's face, with white locks
+hanging down on either side. Its eyes were blood-red and sunken, black
+were its fangs, and its skin was dead yellow. It grinned horribly as
+Swanhild shrank from it, then spoke again:
+
+"_Grey Wolf_ thou didst call me once, Swanhild, when thou wouldst have
+thrust Gudruda down Goldfoss gulf, and as a grey wolf I came, and gave
+thee counsel that thou tookest but ill. _Rat_ didst thou call me once,
+when thou wouldst save Brighteyes from the carles of Ospakar, and as a
+rat I came and in thy shape I walked the seas. _Toad_ thou callest me
+now, and as a toad I creep about thy feet. Name thy will, Swanhild,
+and I will name my price. But be swift, for there are other fair ladies
+whose wish I must do ere dawn."
+
+"Thou art hideous to look on!" said Swanhild, placing her hand before
+her eyes.
+
+"Say not so, lady; say not so. Look at this face of mine. Knowest thou
+it not? It is thy mother's--dead Groa lent it me. I took it from where
+she lies; and my toad's skin I drew from thy spotted heart, Swanhild,
+and more hideous than I am shalt thou be in a day to come, as once I was
+more fair than thou art to-day."
+
+Swanhild opened her lips to shriek, but no sound came.
+
+"Troll," she whispered, "mock me not with lies, but hearken to my
+bidding: where sails Eric now?"
+
+"Look out into the night, lady, and thou shalt see."
+
+Swanhild looked, and the ways of the darkness opened before her
+witch-sight. There at the mouth of Pentland Firth the Gudruda laboured
+heavily in the great seas, and by the tiller stood Eric, and with him
+Skallagrim.
+
+"Seest thou thy love?" asked the Familiar.
+
+"Yea," she answered, "full clearly; he is worn with wind and sea, but
+more glorious than aforetime, and his hair is long. Say, what shall
+befall him if thou aidest not?"
+
+"This, that he shall safely pass the Firth, for the gale falls, and come
+safely to Fareys, and from Fareys isles to Gudruda's arms."
+
+"And what canst thou do, Goblin?"
+
+"This: I can lure Eric's ship to wreck, and give his comrades, all
+save Skallagrim, to Ran's net, and bring him to thy arms, Swanhild,
+witch-mother's witch-child!"
+
+She hearkened. Her breast heaved and her eyes flashed.
+
+"And thy price, Toad?"
+
+"_Thou_ art the price, lady," piped the goblin. "Thou shalt give thyself
+to me when thy day is done, and merrily will we sisters dwell in Hela's
+halls, and merrily for ever will we fare about the earth o' nights,
+doing such tasks as this task of thine, Swanhild, and working wicked woe
+till the last woe is worked on us. Art thou content?"
+
+Swanhild thought. Twice her breath went from her lips in great sighs.
+Then she stood, pale and silent.
+
+"Safely shall he sail the Firth," piped the thin voice. "Safely shall he
+sit in Fareys. Safely shall he lie in white Gudruda's arms--_hee! hee!_
+Think of it, lady!"
+
+Then Swanhild shook like a birth-tree in the gale, and her face grew
+ashen.
+
+"I am content," she said.
+
+"_Hee! hee!_ Brave lady! She is content! Ah, we sisters shall be merry.
+Hearken: if I aid thee thus I may do no more. Thrice has the night-owl
+come at thy call--now it must wing away. Yet things will be as I have
+said; thine own wisdom shall guide the rest. Ere morn Brighteyes shall
+stand in Atli's hall, ere spring he will be thy love, and ere autumn
+Gudruda shall sit on the high seat in the hall of Middalhof the bride of
+Ospakar. Draw nigh, give me thine arm, sister, that blood may seal our
+bargain."
+
+Swanhild drew near the toad, and, shuddering, stretched out her arm,
+and then and there the red blood ran, and there they sealed their
+sisterhood. And as the nameless deed was wrought, it seemed to Swanhild
+as though fire shot through her veins, and fire surged before her eyes,
+and in the fire a shape passed up weeping.
+
+"It is done, Blood-sister," piped the voice; "now I must away in thy
+form to be about thy tasks. Seat thee here before me--so. Now lay thy
+brow upon my brow--fear not, it was thy mother's--life on death! curling
+locks on corpse hair! See, so we change--we change. Now thou art the
+Death-toad and I am Swanhild, Atli's wife, who shall be Eric's love."
+
+Then Swanhild knew that her beauty had entered into the foulness of the
+toad, and the foulness of the toad into her beauty, for there before her
+stood her own shape and here she crouched a toad upon the floor.
+
+"Away to work, away!" said a soft low voice, her own voice speaking from
+her own body that stood before her, and lo! it was gone.
+
+But Swanhild crouched, in the shape of a hag-headed toad, upon the
+ground in her bower of Atli's hall, and felt wickedness and evil
+longings and hate boil and seethe within her heart. She looked out
+through her sunken horny eyes and she seemed to see strange sights. She
+saw Atli, her lord, dead upon the grass. She saw a woman asleep, and
+above her flashed a sword. She saw the hall of Middalhof red with blood.
+She saw a great gulf in a mountain's heart, and men fell down it. And,
+last, she saw a war-ship sailing fast out on the sea, afire, and vanish
+there.
+
+Now the witch-hag who wore Swanhild's loveliness stood upon the cliffs
+of Straumey and tossed her white arms towards the north.
+
+"Come, fog! come, sleet!" she cried. "Come, fog! come, sleet! Put out
+the moon and blind the eyes of Eric!" And as she called, the fog rose up
+like a giant and stretched his arms from shore to shore.
+
+"Move, fog! beat, rain!" she cried. "Move and beat against the gale, and
+blind the eyes of Eric!"
+
+And the fog moved on against the wind, and with it sleet and rain.
+
+"Now I am afeared," said Eric to Skallagrim, as they stood in darkness
+upon the ship: "the gale blows from behind us, and yet the mist drives
+fast in our faces. What comes now?"
+
+"This is witch-work, lord," answered Skallagrim, "and in such things
+no counsel can avail. Hold the tiller straight and drive on, say I.
+Methinks the gale lessens more and more."
+
+So they did for a little while, and all around them sounded the roar of
+breakers. Darker grew the sky and darker yet, till at the last, though
+they stood side by side, they could not see each other's shapes.
+
+"This is strange sailing," said Eric. "I hear the roar of breakers as it
+were beneath the prow."
+
+"Lash the helm, lord, and let us go forward. If there are breakers,
+perhaps we shall see their foam through the blackness," said Skallagrim.
+
+Eric did so, and they crept forward on the starboard board right to the
+prow of the ship, and there Skallagrim peered into the fog and sleet.
+
+"Lord," he whispered presently, and his voice shook strangely, "what is
+that yonder on the waters? Seest thou aught?"
+
+Eric stared and said, "By Odin! I see a shape of light like to the
+shape of a woman; it walks upon the waters towards us and the mist melts
+before it, and the sea grows calm beneath its feet."
+
+"I see that also!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"She comes nigh!" gasped Eric. "See how swift she comes! By the dead,
+it is Swanhild's shape! Look, Skallagrim! look how her eyes flame!--look
+how her hair streams upon the wind!"
+
+"It is Swanhild, and we are fey!" quoth Skallagrim, and they ran back to
+the helm, where Skallagrim sank upon the deck in fear.
+
+"See, Skallagrim, she glides before the Gudruda's beak! she glides
+backwards and she points yonder--there to the right! Shall I put the
+helm down and follow her?"
+
+"Nay, lord, nay; set no faith in witchcraft or evil will befall us."
+
+As he spoke a great gust of wind shook the ship, the music of the
+breakers roared in their ears, and the gleaming shape upon the waters
+tossed its arms wildly and pointed to the right.
+
+"The breakers call ahead," said Eric. "The shape points yonder, where
+I hear no sound of sea. Once before, thou mindest, Swanhild walked the
+waves to warn us and thereby saved us from the men of Ospakar. Ever she
+swore she loved me; now she is surely come in love to save us and all
+our comrades. Say, shall I put about? Look: once more she waves her arms
+and points," and as he spoke he gripped the helm.
+
+"I have no rede, lord," said Skallagrim, "and I love not witch-work. We
+can die but once, and death is all around; be it as thou wilt."
+
+Eric put down the helm with all his might. The good ship answered, and
+her timbers groaned loudly, as though in woe, when the strain of the sea
+struck her abeam. Then once more she flew fast across the waters, and
+fast before her glided the wraith of Swanhild. Now it pointed here and
+now there, and as it pointed so Eric shaped his course. For a while
+the noise of breakers lessened, but now again came a thunder, like the
+thunder of waves smiting on a cliff, and about the sides of the Gudruda
+the waves hissed like snakes.
+
+Suddenly the Shape threw up its arms and seemed to sink beneath the
+waves, while a sound like the sound of a great laugh went up from sea to
+sky.
+
+"Now here is the end," said Skallagrim, "and we are lured to doom."
+
+Ere ever the words had passed his lips the ship struck, and so fiercely
+that they were rolled upon the deck. Suddenly the sky grew clear, the
+moon shone out, and before them were cliffs and rocks, and behind them
+a great wave rushed on. From the hold of the ship there came a cry, for
+now their comrades were awake and they knew that death was here.
+
+Eric gripped Skallagrim round the middle and looked aft. On rushed the
+wave, no such wave had he ever seen. Now it struck and the Gudruda burst
+asunder beneath the blow.
+
+But Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail were lifted on its crest
+and knew no more.
+
+
+
+Swanhild, crouching in hideous guise upon the ground in the bower of
+Atli's hall, looked upon the visions that passed before her. Suddenly a
+woman's shape, her own shape, was there.
+
+"It is done, Blood-sister," said a voice, her own voice. "Merrily I
+walked the waves, and oh, merry was the cry of Eric's folk when Ran
+caught them in her net! Be thyself, again, Blood-sister--be fair as thou
+art foul; then arise, wake Atli thy lord, and go down to the sea's lip
+by the southern cliffs and see what thou shalt find. We shall meet no
+more till all this game is played and another game is set," and the
+shape of Swanhild crouched upon the floor before the hag-headed toad
+muttering "Pass! pass!"
+
+Then Swanhild felt her flesh come back to her, and as it grew upon her
+so the shape of the Death-headed toad faded away.
+
+"Farewell, Blood-sister!" piped a voice; "make merry as thou mayest, but
+merrier shall be our nights when thou hast gone a-sailing with Eric on
+the sea. Farewell! farewell! _Were-wolf_ thou didst call me once, and
+as a wolf I came. _Rat_ thou didst call me once, and as a rat I came.
+_Toad_ didst thou call me once, and as a toad I came. Say, at the last,
+what wilt thou call me and in what shape shall I come, Blood-sister?
+Till then farewell!"
+
+
+
+And all was gone and all was still.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WEDDED UNNA, THOROD'S DAUGHTER
+
+Now the story goes back to Iceland.
+
+When Brighteyes was gone, for a while Gudruda the Fair moved sadly about
+the stead, like one new-widowed. Then came tidings. Men told how Ospakar
+Blacktooth had waylaid Eric on the seas with two long ships, dragons of
+war, and how Eric had given him battle and sunk one dragon with great
+loss to Ospakar. They told also how Blacktooth's other dragon, the
+Raven, had sailed away before the wind, and Eric had sailed after it in
+a rising gale. But of what befell these ships no news came for many a
+month, and it was rumoured that this had befallen them--that both had
+sunk in the gale, and that Eric was dead.
+
+But Gudruda would not believe this. When Asmund the Priest, her father,
+asked her why she did not believe it, she answered that, had Eric been
+dead, her heart would surely have spoken to her of it. To this Asmund
+said that it might be so.
+
+Hay-harvest being done, Asmund made ready for his wedding with Unna,
+Thorod's daughter and Eric's cousin.
+
+Now it was agreed that the marriage-feast should be held at Middalhof;
+for Asmund wished to ask a great company to the wedding, and there was
+no place at Coldback to hold so many. Also some of the kin of Thorod,
+Unna's father, were bidden to the feast from the east and north. At
+length all was prepared and the guests came in great companies, for no
+such feast had been made in this quarter for many years.
+
+On the eve of the marriage Asmund spoke with Groa. The witch-wife had
+borne herself humbly since she was recovered from her sickness. She
+passed about the stead like a rat at night, speaking few words and
+with downcast eyes. She was busy also making all things ready for the
+feasting.
+
+Now as Asmund went up the hall seeing that everything was in order, Groa
+drew near to him and touched him gently on the shoulder.
+
+"Are things to thy mind, lord?" she said.
+
+"Yes, Groa," he answered, "more to my mind than to thine I fear."
+
+"Fear not, lord; thy will is my will."
+
+"Say, Groa, is it thy wish to bide here in Middalhof when Unna is my
+housewife?"
+
+"It is my wish to serve thee as aforetime," she answered softly, "if so
+be that Unna wills it."
+
+"That is her desire," said Asmund and went his ways.
+
+But Groa stood looking after him and her face was fierce and evil.
+
+"While bane has virtue, while runes have power, and while hand has
+cunning, never, Unna, shalt thou take my place at Asmund's side! Out
+of the water I came to thee, Asmund; into the water I go again. Unquiet
+shall I lie there--unquiet shall I wend through Hela's halls; but Unna
+shall rest at Asmund's side--in Asmund's cairn!"
+
+Then again she moved about the hall, making all things ready for the
+feast. But at midnight, when the light was low and folk slept, Groa
+rose, and, veiled in a black robe, with a basket in her hand, passed
+like a shadow through the mists that hang about the river's edge, and
+in silence, always looking behind her, like one who fears a hidden foe,
+culled flowers of noisome plants that grow in the marsh. Her basket
+being filled, she passed round the stead to a hidden dell upon the
+mountain side. Here a man stood waiting, and near him burned a fire
+of turf. In his hand he held an iron-pot. It was Koll the Half-witted,
+Groa's thrall.
+
+"Are all things ready, Koll?" she said.
+
+"Yes," he answered; "but I like not these tasks of thine, mistress. Say
+now, what wouldst thou do with the fire and the pot?"
+
+"This, then, Koll. I would brew a love-potion for Asmund the Priest as
+he has bidden me to do."
+
+"I have done many an ill deed for thee, mistress, but of all of them I
+love this the least," said the thrall, doubtfully.
+
+"I have done many a good deed for thee, Koll. It was I who saved thee
+from the Doom-stone, seeming to prove thee innocent--ay, even when thy
+back was stretched on it, because thou hadst slain a man in his sleep.
+Is it not so?"
+
+"Yea, mistress."
+
+"And yet thou wast guilty, Koll. And I have given thee many good gifts,
+is it not so?"
+
+"Yes, it is so."
+
+"Listen then: serve me this once and I will give thee one last gift--thy
+freedom, and with it two hundred in silver."
+
+Koll's eyes glistened. "What must I do, mistress?"
+
+"To-day at the wedding-feast it will be thy part to pour the cups while
+Asmund calls the toasts. Last of all, when men are merry, thou wilt mix
+that cup in which Asmund shall pledge Unna his wife and Unna must pledge
+Asmund. Now, when thou hast poured, thou shalt pass the cup to me, as I
+stand at the foot of the high seat, waiting to give the bride greeting
+on behalf of the serving-women of the household. Thou shalt hand the
+cup to me as though in error, and that is but a little thing to ask of
+thee."
+
+"A little thing indeed," said Koll, staring at her, and pulling with his
+hand at his red hair, "yet I like it not. What if I say no, mistress?"
+
+"Say no or speak of this and I will promise thee one thing only, thou
+knave, and it is, before winter comes, that the crows shall pick thy
+bones! Now, brave me, if thou darest," and straightway Groa began to
+mutter some witch-words.
+
+"Nay," said Koll, holding up his hand as though to ward away a blow.
+"Curse me not: I will do as thou wilt. But when shall I touch the two
+hundred in silver?"
+
+"I will give thee half before the feast begins, and half when it is
+ended, and with it freedom to go where thou wilt. And now leave me, and
+on thy life see that thou fail me not."
+
+"I have never failed thee yet," said Koll, and went his ways.
+
+Now Groa set the pot upon the fire, and, placing in it the herbs that
+she had gathered, poured water on them. Presently they began to boil and
+as they boiled she stirred them with a peeled stick and muttered spells
+over them. For long she sat in that dim and lonely place stirring the
+pot and muttering spells, till at length the brew was done.
+
+She lifted the pot from the fire and smelt at it. Then drawing a phial
+from her robe she poured out the liquor and held it to the sky. The
+witch-water was white as milk, but presently it grew clear. She looked
+at it, then smiled evilly.
+
+"Here is a love-draught for a queen--ah, a love-draught for a queen!"
+she said, and, still smiling, she placed the phial in her breast.
+
+Then, having scattered the fire with her foot, Groa took the pot and
+threw it into a deep pool of water, where it could not be found readily,
+and crept back to the stead before men were awake.
+
+
+
+Now the day wore on and all the company were gathered at the
+marriage-feast to the number of nearly two hundred. Unna sat in the high
+seat, and men thought her a bonny bride, and by her side sat Asmund the
+Priest. He was a hale, strong man to look on, though he had seen some
+three-score winters; but his mien was sad, and his heart heavy. He drank
+cup after cup to cheer him, but all without avail. For his thought sped
+back across the years and once more he seemed to see the face of Gudruda
+the Gentle as she lay dying, and to hear her voice when she foretold
+evil to him if he had aught to do with Groa the Witch-wife. And now it
+seemed to him that the evil was at hand, though whence it should come he
+knew not. He looked up. There Groa moved along the hall, ministering to
+the guests; but he saw as she moved that her eyes were always fixed,
+now on him and now on Unna. He remembered that curse also which Groa had
+called down upon him when he had told her that he was betrothed to
+Unna, and his heart grew cold with fear. "Now I will change my counsel,"
+Asmund said to himself: "Groa shall not stay here in this stead, for
+I will look no longer on that dark face of hers. She goes hence
+to-morrow."
+
+Not far from Asmund sat Bjrn, his son. As Gudruda the Fair, his sister,
+brought him mead he caught her by the sleeve, whispering in her ear.
+"Methinks our father is sad. What weighs upon his heart?"
+
+"I know not," said Gudruda, but as she spoke she looked first on Asmund,
+then at Groa.
+
+"It is ill that Groa should stop here," whispered Bjrn again.
+
+"It is ill," answered Gudruda, and glided away.
+
+Asmund saw their talk and guessed its purport. Rousing himself he
+laughed aloud and called to Koll the Half-witted to pour the cups that
+he might name the toasts.
+
+Koll filled, and, as Asmund called the toasts one by one, Koll handed
+the cups to him. Asmund drank deep of each, till at length his sorrow
+passed from him, and, together with all who sat there, he grew merry.
+
+Last of all came the toast of the bride's cup. But before Asmund called
+it, the women of the household drew near the high seat to welcome Unna,
+when she should have drunk. Gudruda stood foremost, and Groa was next to
+her.
+
+Now Koll filled as before, and it was a great cup of gold that he
+filled.
+
+Asmund rose to call the toast, and with him all who were in the hall.
+Koll brought up the cup, and handed it, not to Asmund, but to Groa; but
+there were few who noted this, for all were listening to Asmund's toast
+and most of the guests were somewhat drunken.
+
+"The cup," cried Asmund--"give me the cup that I may drink."
+
+Then Groa started forward, and as she did so she seemed to stumble,
+so that for a moment her robe covered up the great bride-cup. Then she
+gathered herself together slowly, and, smiling, passed up the cup.
+
+Asmund lifted it to his lips and drank deep. Then he turned and gave it
+to Unna his wife, but before she drank he kissed her on the lips.
+
+Now while all men shouted such a welcome that the hall shook, and as
+Unna, smiling, drank from the cup, the eyes of Asmund fell upon Groa
+who stood beneath him, and lo! her eyes seemed to flame and her face was
+hideous as the face of a troll.
+
+Asmund grew white and put his hand to his head, as though to think, then
+cried aloud:
+
+"Drink not, Unna! the draught is drugged!" and he struck at the vessel
+with his hand.
+
+He smote it indeed, and so hard that it flew from her hand far down the
+hall.
+
+But Unna had already drunk deep.
+
+"The draught is drugged!" Asmund cried, and pointed to Groa, while all
+men stood silent, not knowing what to do.
+
+"The draught is drugged!" he cried a third time, "and that witch has
+drugged it!" And he began to tear at his breast.
+
+Then Groa laughed so shrilly that men trembled to hear her.
+
+"Yes, lord," she screamed, "the draught is drugged, and Groa the
+Witch-wife hath drugged it! Ay, tear thy heart out, Asmund, and Unna,
+grow thou white as snow--soon, if my medicine has virtue, thou shalt be
+whiter yet! Hearken all men. Asmund the Priest is Swanhild's father,
+and for many a year I have been Asmund's mate. What did I tell thee,
+lord?--that I would see the two of you dead ere Unna should take my
+place!--ay, and on Gudruda the Fair, thy daughter, and Bjrn thy son,
+and Eric Brighteyes, Gudruda's love, and many another man--on them too
+shall my curse fall! Tear thy heart out, Asmund! Unna, grow thou
+white as snow! The draught is drugged and Groa, Ran's gift! Groa the
+Witch-Wife! Groa, Asmund's love! hath drugged it!"
+
+And ere ever a man might lift a hand to stay her Groa glided past the
+high seat and was gone.
+
+For a space all stood silent. Asmund ceased clutching at his breast.
+Rising he spoke heavily:
+
+"Now I learn that sin is a stone to smite him who hurled it. Gudruda the
+Gentle spoke sooth when she warned me against this woman. _New wed, new
+dead!_ Unna, fare thee well!"
+
+And straightway Asmund fell down and died there by the high seat in his
+own hall.
+
+Unna gazed at him with ashen face. Then, plucking at her bosom she
+sprang from the dais and rushed along the hall, screaming. Men made way
+for her, and at the door she also fell dead.
+
+
+
+This then was the end of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, and Unna, Thorod's
+daughter, Eric's cousin, his new-made wife.
+
+
+
+For a moment there was silence in the hall. But before the echoes of
+Unna's screams had died away, Bjrn cried aloud:
+
+"The witch! where is the witch?"
+
+Then with a yell of rage, men leaped to their feet, seizing their
+weapons, and rushed from the stead. Out they ran. There, on the
+hill-side far above them, a black shape climbed and leapt swiftly. They
+gave tongue like dogs set upon a wolf and sped up the hill.
+
+They gained the crest of the hill, and now they were at Goldfoss brink.
+Lo! the witch-wife had crossed the bed of the torrent, for little rain
+had fallen and the river was low. She stood on Sheep-saddle, the water
+running from her robes. On Sheep-saddle she stood and cursed them.
+
+Bjrn took a bow and set a shaft upon the string. He drew it and the
+arrow sung through the air and smote her, speeding through her heart.
+With a cry Groa threw up her arms.
+
+Then down she plunged. She fell on Wolf's Fang, where Eric once had
+stood and, bouncing thence, rushed to the boiling deeps below and was no
+more seen for ever.
+
+Thus, then, did Asmund the Priest wed Unna, Thorod's daughter, and this
+was the end of the feasting.
+
+Thereafter Bjrn, Asmund's son, ruled at Middalhof, and was Priest in
+his place. He sought for Koll the Half-witted to kill him, but Koll took
+the fells, and after many months he found passage in a ship that was
+bound for Scotland.
+
+Now Bjrn was a hard man and a greedy. He was no friend to Eric
+Brighteyes, and always pressed it on Gudruda that she should wed Ospakar
+Blacktooth. But to this counsel Gudruda would not listen, for day and
+night she thought upon her love. Next summer there came tidings that
+Eric was safe in Ireland, and men spoke of his deeds, and of how he and
+Skallagrim had swept the ship of Ospakar single-handed. Now after these
+tidings, for a while Gudruda walked singing through the meads, and no
+flower that grew in them was half so fair as she.
+
+That summer also Ospakar Blacktooth met Bjrn, Asmund's son, at the
+Thing, and they talked much together in secret.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+HOW EARL ATLI FOUND ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM ON THE SOUTHERN ROCKS OF
+STRAUMEY ISLE
+
+Swanhild, robed in white, as though new risen from sleep, stood, candle
+in hand, by the bed of Atli the Earl, her lord, crying "Awake!"
+
+"What passes now?" said Atli, lifting himself upon his arm. "What
+passes, Swanhild, and why dost thou ever wander alone at nights, looking
+so strangely? I love not thy dark witch-ways, Swanhild, and I was wed to
+thee in an ill hour, wife who art no wife."
+
+"In an ill hour indeed, Earl Atli," she answered, "an ill hour for thee
+and me, for, as thou hast said, eld and youth are strange yokefellows
+and pull different paths. Arise now, Earl, for I have dreamed a dream."
+
+"Tell it to me on the morrow, then," quoth Atli; "there is small
+joyousness in thy dreams, that always point to evil, and I must bear
+enough evil of late."
+
+"Nay, lord, my rede may not be put aside so. Listen now: I have
+dreamed that a great dragon of war has been cast away upon Straumey's
+south-western rocks. The cries of those who drowned rang in my ears. But
+I thought that some came living to the shore, and lie there senseless,
+to perish of the cold. Arise, therefore, take men and go down to the
+rocks."
+
+"I will go at daybreak," said Atli, letting his head fall upon the
+pillow. "I have little faith in such visions, and it is too late for
+ships of war to try the passage of the Firth."
+
+"Arise, I say," answered Swanhild sternly, "and do my bidding, else I
+will myself go to search the rocks."
+
+Then Atli rose grumbling, and shook the heavy sleep from his eyes:
+for of all living folk he most feared Swanhild his wife. He donned his
+garments, threw a thick cloak about him, and, going to the hall where
+men snored around the dying fires, for the night was bitter, he awoke
+some of them. Now among those men whom he called was Hall of Lithdale,
+Hall the mate who had cut the grapnel-chain. For this Hall, fearing to
+return to Iceland, had come hither saying that he had been wounded off
+Fareys, in the great fight between Eric and Ospakar's men, and left
+there to grow well of his hurt or die. Then Atli, not knowing that the
+carle lied, had bid him welcome for Eric's sake, for he still loved Eric
+above all men.
+
+But Hall loved not labour and nightfarings to search for shipwrecked
+men of whom the Lady Swanhild had chanced to dream. So he turned himself
+upon his side and slept again. Still, certain of Atli's folk rose at his
+bidding, and they went together down to the south-western rocks.
+
+But Swanhild, a cloak thrown over her night-gear, sat herself in the
+high seat of the hall and fixing her eyes, now upon the dying fires and
+now upon the blood-marks in her arm, waited in silence. The night was
+cold and windy, but the moon shone bright, and by its light Atli and his
+people made their way to the south-western rocks, on which the sea beat
+madly.
+
+"What lies yonder?" said Atli, pointing to some black things that lay
+beneath them upon the rock, cast there by the waves. A man climbed down
+the cliff's side that is here as though it were cut in steps, and then
+cried aloud:
+
+"A ship's mast, new broken, lord."
+
+"It seems that Swanhild dreams true," muttered Atli; "but I am sure of
+this: that none have come ashore alive in such a sea."
+
+Presently the man who searched the rocks below cried aloud again:
+
+"Here lie two great men, locked in each other's arms. They seem to be
+dead."
+
+Now all the men climb down the slippery rocks as best they may, though
+the spray wets them, and with them goes Atli. The Earl is a brisk man,
+though old in years, and he comes first to where the two lie. He who
+was undermost lay upon his back, but his face is hid by the thick golden
+hair that flowed across it.
+
+"Man's body indeed, but woman's locks," said Atli as he put out his hand
+and drew the hair away, so that the light of the moon fell on the face
+beneath.
+
+He looked, then staggered back against the rock.
+
+"By Thor!" he cried, "here lies the corpse of Eric Brighteyes!" and Atli
+wrung his hands and wept, for he loved Eric much.
+
+"Be not so sure that the men are dead, Earl," said one, "I thought I saw
+yon great carle move but now."
+
+"He is Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric's Death-shadow," said Atli again. "Up
+with them, lads--see, yonder lies a plank--and away to the hall. I will
+give twenty in silver to each of you if Eric lives," and he unclasped
+his cloak and threw it over both of them.
+
+Then with much labour they loosed the grip of the two men one from the
+other, and they set Skallagrim on the plank. But eight men bore Eric up
+the cliff between them, and the task was not light, though the Earl held
+his head, from which the golden hair hung like seaweed from a rock.
+
+At length they came to the hall and carried them in. Swanhild, seeing
+them come, moved down from the high seat.
+
+"Bring lamps, and pile up the fires," cried Atli. "A strange thing has
+come to pass, Swanhild, and thou dost dream wisely, indeed, for here
+we have Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail. They were locked like
+lovers in each other's arms, but I know not if they are dead or living."
+
+Now Swanhild started and came on swiftly. Had the Familiar tricked her
+and had she paid the price for nothing? Was Eric taken from Gudruda and
+given to her indeed--but given dead? She bent over him, gazing keenly on
+his face. Then she spoke.
+
+"He is not dead but senseless. Bring dry clothes, and make water hot,"
+and, kneeling down, she loosed Eric's helm and harness and ungirded
+Whitefire from his side.
+
+For long Swanhild and Atli tended Eric at one fire, and the serving
+women tended Skallagrim at the other. Presently there came a cry that
+Skallagrim stirred, and Atli with others ran to see. At this moment also
+the eyes of Eric were unsealed, and Swanhild saw them looking at her
+dimly from beneath. Moved to it by her passion and her joy that he yet
+lived, Swanhild let her face fall till his was hidden in her unbound
+hair, and kissed him upon the lips. Eric shut his eyes again, sighing
+heavily, and presently he was asleep. They bore him to a bed and heaped
+warm wrappings upon him. At daybreak he woke, and Atli, who sat watching
+at his side, gave him hot mead to drink.
+
+"Do I dream?" said Eric, "or is it Earl Atli who tends me, and did I but
+now see the face of Swanhild bending over me?"
+
+"It is no dream, Eric, but the truth. Thou hast been cast away here on
+my isle of Straumey."
+
+"And Skallagrim--where is Skallagrim?"
+
+"Skallagrim lives--fear not!"
+
+"And my comrades, how went it with them?"
+
+"But ill, Eric. Ran has them all. Now sleep!"
+
+Eric groaned aloud. "I had rather died also than live to hear such heavy
+tidings," he said. "Witch-work! witch-work! and that fair witch-face
+wrought it." And once again he slept, nor did he wake till the sun was
+high. But Atli could make nothing of his words.
+
+
+
+When Swanhild left the side of Eric she met Hall of Lithdale face to
+face and his looks were troubled.
+
+"Say, lady," he asked, "will Brighteyes live?"
+
+"Grieve not, Hall," she answered, "Eric will surely live and he will be
+glad to find a messmate here to greet him, having left so many yonder,"
+and she pointed to the sea.
+
+"I shall not be glad," said Hall, letting his eyes fall.
+
+"Why not, Hall? Fearest thou Skallagrim? or hast thou done ill by Eric?"
+
+"Ay, lady, I fear Skallagrim, for he swore to slay me, and that kind
+of promise he ever keeps. Also, if the truth must out, I have not dealt
+altogether well with Eric, and of all men I least wish to talk with
+him."
+
+"Speak on," she said.
+
+Then, being forced to it, Hall told her something of the tale of the
+cutting of the cable, being careful to put another colour on it.
+
+"Now it seems that thou art a coward, Hall," Swanhild said when he had
+done, "and I scarcely looked for that in thee," for she had not been
+deceived by the glozing of his speech. "It will be bad for thee to
+meet Eric and Skallagrim, and this is my counsel: that thou goest hence
+before they wake, for they will sit this winter here in Atli's hall."
+
+"And whither shall I go, lady?"
+
+Swanhild gazed on him, and as she did so a dark thought came into her
+heart: here was a knave who might serve her ends.
+
+"Hall," she said, "thou art an Icelander, and I have known of thee from
+a child, and therefore I wish to serve thee in thy strait, though thou
+deservest it little. See now, Atli the Earl has a farm on the mainland
+not two hours' ride from the sea. Thither thou shalt go, if thou art
+wise, and thou shalt sit there this winter and be hidden from Eric and
+Skallagrim. Nay, thank me not, but listen: it may chance that I shall
+have a service for thee to do before spring is come."
+
+"Lady, I shall wait upon thy word," said Hall.
+
+"Good. Now, so soon as it is light, I will find a man to sail with thee
+across the Firth, for the sea falls, and bear my message to the steward
+at Atli's farm. Also if thou needest faring-money thou shalt have it.
+Farewell."
+
+Thus then did Hall fly before Eric and Skallagrim.
+
+
+
+On the morrow Eric and Skallagrim arose, sick and bruised indeed, but
+not at all harmed, and went down to the shore. There they found many
+dead men of their company, but never a one in whom the breath of life
+remained.
+
+Skallagrim looked at Eric and spoke: "Last night the mist came up
+against the wind: last night we saw Swanhild's wraith upon the waves,
+and there is the path it showed, and there"--and he pointed to the dead
+men--"is the witch-seed's flower. Now to-day we sit in Atli's hall and
+here we must stay this winter at Swanhild's side, and in all this there
+lies a riddle that I cannot read."
+
+But Eric shook his head, making no answer. Then, leaving Skallagrim with
+the dead, he turned, and striding back alone towards the hall, sat down
+on a rock in the home meadows and, covering his face with his hands,
+wept for his comrades.
+
+As he wept Swanhild came to him, for she had seen him from afar, and
+touched him gently on the arm.
+
+"Why weepest thou, Eric?" she said.
+
+"I weep for the dead, Swanhild," he answered.
+
+"Weep not for the dead--they are at peace; if thou must weep, weep for
+the living. Nay, weep not at all; rejoice rather that thou art here to
+mourn. Hast thou no word of greeting for me who have not heard thy voice
+these many months?"
+
+"How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who would never have seen thy face
+again if I might have had my will? Knowest thou that yesternight, as we
+laboured in yonder Firth, we saw a shape walking the waters to lead
+us to our doom? How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who art a witch and
+evil?"
+
+"And knowest thou, Eric, that yesternight I woke from sleep, having
+dreamed that thou didst lie upon the shore, and thus I saved thee alive,
+as perchance I have saved thee aforetime? If thou didst see a shape
+walking the waters it was that shape which led thee here. Hadst thou
+sailed on, not only those thou mournest, but Skallagrim and thou thyself
+had now been numbered with the lost."
+
+"Better so than thus," said Brighteyes. "Knowest thou also, Swanhild,
+that when last night my life came back again in Atli's hall, methought
+that Atli's wife leaned over me and kissed me on the lips? That was an
+ill dream, Swanhild."
+
+"Some had found it none so ill, Eric," she made answer, looking on him
+strangely. "Still, it was but a dream. Thou didst dream that Atli's wife
+breathed back the breath of life into thy pale lips--be sure of it thou
+didst but dream. Ah, Eric, fear me no more; forget the evil that I have
+wrought in the blindness and folly of my youth. Now things are otherwise
+with me. Now I am a wedded wife and faithful hearted to my lord. Now, if
+I still love thee, it is with a sister's love. Therefore forget my
+sins, remember only that as children we played upon the Iceland fells.
+Remember that, as boy and girl, we rode along the marshes, while the
+sea-mews clamoured round our heads. The world is cold, Eric, and few
+are the friends we find in it; many are already gone, and soon the
+friendless dark draws near. So put me not away, my brother and my
+friend; but, for a little space, whilst thou art here in Atli's hall,
+let us walk hand in hand as we walked long years ago in Iceland,
+gathering up the fifa-bloom, and watching the midnight shadows creep up
+the icy jkul's crest."
+
+Thus Swanhild spoke to him most sweetly, in a low voice of music, while
+the tears gathered in her eyes, talking ever of Iceland that he loved,
+and of days long dead, till Eric's heart softened in him.
+
+"Almost do I believe thee, Swanhild," he said, stretching out his hand;
+"but I know thus: that thou art never twice in the same mood, and that
+is beyond my measuring. Thou hast done much evil and thou hast striven
+to do more; also I love not those who seem to walk the seas o' nights.
+Still, hold thou to this last saying of thine and there shall be peace
+between us while I bide here."
+
+She touched his hand humbly and turned to go. But as she went Eric spoke
+again: "Say, Swanhild, hast thou tidings from Iceland yonder? I have
+heard no word of Asmund or of Gudruda for two long years and more."
+
+She stood still, and a dark shadow that he could not see flitted across
+her face.
+
+"I have few tidings, Eric," she said, turning, "and those few, if I may
+trust them, bad enough. For this is the rumour that I have heard:
+that Asmund the Priest, my father, is dead; that Groa, my mother, is
+dead--how, I know not; and, lastly, that Gudruda the Fair, thy love, is
+betrothed to Ospakar Blacktooth and weds him in the spring."
+
+Now Eric sprang up with an oath and grasped the hilt of Whitefire. Then
+he sat down again upon the stone and covered his face with his hands.
+
+"Grieve not, Eric," she said gently; "I put no faith in this news, for
+rumour, like the black-backed gull, often changes colour in its flight
+across the seas. Also I had it but at fifth hand. I am sure of this, at
+least, that Gudruda will never forsake thee without a cause."
+
+"It shall go ill with Ospakar if this be true," said Eric, smiling
+grimly, "for Whitefire is yet left me and with it one true friend."
+
+"Run not to meet the evil, Eric. Thou shalt come to Iceland with the
+summer flowers and find Gudruda faithful and yet fairer than of yore.
+Knowest thou that Hall of Lithdale, who was thy mate, has sat here these
+two months? He is gone but this morning, I know not whither, leaving a
+message that he returns no more."
+
+"He did well to go," said Eric, and he told her how Hall had cut the
+cable.
+
+"Ay, well indeed," answered Swanhild. "Had Atli known this he would have
+scourged Hall hence with rods of seaweed. And now, Eric, I desire to
+ask thee one more thing: why wearest thou thy hair long like a woman's?
+Indeed, few women have such hair as thine is now."
+
+"For this cause, Swanhild: I swore to Gudruda that none should cut my
+hair till she cut it once more. It is a great burden to me surely, for
+never did hair grow so fast and strong as mine, and once in a fray I was
+held fast by it and went near to the losing of my life. Still, I will
+keep the oath even if it grows on to my feet," and he laughed a little
+and shook back his golden locks.
+
+Swanhild smiled also and, turning, went. But when her face was hidden
+from him she smiled no more.
+
+"As I live," she said in her heart, "before spring rains fall I again
+will cause thee to break this oath, Eric. Ay, I will cut a lock of that
+bright hair of thine and send it for a love-token to Gudruda."
+
+But Eric still sat upon the rock thinking. Swanhild had set an evil seed
+of doubt in his heart, and already it put forth roots. What if the
+tale were true? What if Gudruda had given herself to Ospakar? Well, if
+so--she should soon be a widow, that he swore.
+
+Then he rose, and stalked grimly towards the hall.
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+HOW KOLL THE HALF-WITTED BROUGHT TIDINGS FROM ICELAND
+
+Presently as Eric walked he met Atli the Earl seeking him. Atli greeted
+him.
+
+"I have seen strange things, Eric," he said, "but none more strange than
+this coming of thine and the manner of it. Swanhild is foresighted, and
+that was a doom-dream of hers."
+
+"I think her foresighted also," said Eric. "And now, Earl, knowest thou
+this: that little good can come to thee at the hands of one whom thou
+hast saved from the sea."
+
+"I set no faith in such old wives' tales," answered Atli. "Here thou art
+come, and it is my will that thou shouldest sit here. At the least, I
+will give thee no help to go hence."
+
+"Then we must bide in Straumey, it seems," said Eric: "for of all my
+goods and gear this alone is left me," and he looked at Whitefire.
+
+"Thou hast still a gold ring or two upon thy arm," answered the Earl,
+laughing. "But surely, Eric, thou wouldst not begone?"
+
+"I know not, Earl. Listen: it is well that I should be plain with thee.
+Once, before thou didst wed Swanhild, she had another mind."
+
+"I have heard something of that, and I have guessed more, Brighteyes;
+but methinks Swanhild is little given to gadding now. She is as cold as
+ice, and no good wife for any man," and Atli sighed, "'Snow melts not if
+sun shines not,' so runs the saw. Thou art an honest man, Eric, and no
+whisperer in the ears of others' wives."
+
+"I am not minded indeed to do thee such harm, Earl, but this thou
+knowest: that woman's guile and beauty are swords few shields can brook.
+Now I have spoken--and they are hard words to speak--be it as thou
+wilt."
+
+"It is my will that thou shouldest sit here this winter, Eric. Had I my
+way, indeed, never wouldest thou sit elsewhere. Listen: things have
+not gone well with me of late. Age hath a grip of me, and foes rise up
+against one who has no sons. That was an ill marriage, too, which I made
+with Swanhild yonder: for she loves me not, and I have found no luck
+since first I saw her face. Moreover, it is in my mind that my days
+are almost sped. Swanhild has already foretold my death, and, as thou
+knowest well, she is foresighted. So I pray thee, Eric, bide thou here
+while thou mayest, for I would have thee at my side."
+
+"It shall be as thou wilt, Earl," said Eric.
+
+
+
+So Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail sat that winter in the hall
+of Atli the Earl at Straumey. For many weeks all things went well and
+Eric forgot his fears. Swanhild was gentle to him and kindly. She loved
+much to talk with him, even of Gudruda her rival; but no word of love
+passed her lips. Nevertheless, she did but bide her time, for when she
+struck she determined to strike home. Atli and Eric were ever side by
+side, and Eric gave the Earl much good counsel. He promised to do this
+also, for now, being simple-minded, his doubts had passed and he had
+no more fear of Swanhild. On the mainland lived a certain chief who had
+seized large lands of Atli's, and held them for a year or more. Now Eric
+gave his word that, before he sailed for Iceland in the early summer, he
+would go up against this man and drive him from the lands, if he could.
+For Brighteyes might not come to Iceland till hard upon midsummer, when
+his three years of outlawry were spent.
+
+The winter wore away and the spring came. Then Atli gathered his men
+and went with Eric in boats to where the chief dwelt who held his lands.
+There they fell on him and there was a fierce fight. But in the end the
+man was slain by Skallagrim, and Eric did great deeds, as was his wont.
+Now in this fray Eric was wounded in the foot by a spear, so that he
+must be borne back to Straumey, and he lay there in the hall for many
+days. Swanhild nursed him, and most days he sat talking with her in her
+bower.
+
+When Eric was nearly healed of his hurt, the Earl went with all his
+people to a certain island of the Orkneys to gather scat[*] that was
+unpaid, and Skallagrim went with him. But Eric did not go, because of
+his hurt, fearing lest the wound should open if he walked overmuch. Thus
+it came to pass that, except for some women, he was left almost alone
+with Swanhild.
+
+[*] Tribute.
+
+Now, when Atli had been gone three days, it chanced on an afternoon that
+Swanhild heard how a man from Iceland sought speech with her. She bade
+them bring him in to where she was alone in her bower, for Eric was not
+there, having gone down to the sea to fish.
+
+The man came and she knew him at once for Koll the Half-witted, who
+had been her mother Groa's thrall. On his shoulders was the cloak that
+Ospakar Blacktooth had given him; it was much torn now, and he had a
+worn and hungry look.
+
+"Whence comest thou, Koll?" she asked, "and what are thy tidings?"
+
+"From Scotland last, lady, where I sat this winter; before that, from
+Iceland. As for my tidings, they are heavy, if thou hast not heard them.
+Asmund the Priest is dead, and dead is Unna his wife, poisoned by thy
+mother, Groa, at their marriage-feast. Dead, too, is thy mother, Groa.
+Bjrn, Asmund's son, shot her with an arrow, and she lies in Goldfoss
+pool."
+
+Now Swanhild hid her face for a while in her hands. Then she lifted it
+and it was white to see. "Speakest thou truth, fox? If thou liest, this
+I swear to thee--thy tongue shall be dragged from thee by the roots!"
+
+"I speak the truth, lady," he answered. But still he spoke not all the
+truth, for he said nothing of the part which he had played in the deaths
+of Asmund and Unna. Then he told her of the manner of their end.
+
+Swanhild listened silently--then said:
+
+"What news of Gudruda, Asmund's daughter? Is she wed?"
+
+"Nay, lady. Folk spoke of her and Ospakar, that was all."
+
+"Hearken, Koll," said Swanhild, "bearing such heavy tidings, canst thou
+not weight the ship a little more? Eric Brighteyes is here. Canst thou
+not swear to him that, when thou didst leave Iceland it was said without
+question that Gudruda had betrothed herself to Ospakar, and that the
+wedding-feast was set for this last Yule? Thou hast a hungry look, Koll,
+and methinks that things have not gone altogether well with thee of
+late. Now, if thou canst so charge thy memory, thou shalt lose little
+by it. But, if thou canst not, then thou goest hence from Straumey with
+never a luck-penny in thy purse, and never a sup to stay thy stomach
+with."
+
+Now of all things Koll least desired to be sent from Straumey; for,
+though Swanhild did not know it, he was sought for on the mainland as a
+thief.
+
+"That I may do, lady," he said, looking at her cunningly. "Now I
+remember that Gudruda the Fair charged me with a certain message for
+Eric Brighteyes, if I should chance to see him as I journeyed."
+
+Then Swanhild, Atli's wife, and Koll the Half-witted talked long and
+earnestly together.
+
+
+
+At nightfall Eric came in from his fishing. His heart was light, for
+the time drew near when he should sail for home, and he did not think on
+evil. For now he feared Swanhild no longer, and, no fresh tidings having
+come from Iceland about Ospakar and Gudruda, he had almost put the
+matter from his mind. On he walked to the hall, limping somewhat from
+his wound, but singing as he came, and bearing his fish slung upon a
+pole.
+
+At the men's door of the hall a woman stood waiting. She told Eric that
+the lady Swanhild would speak with him in her bower. Thither he went and
+knocked. Getting no answer he knocked again, then entered.
+
+Swanhild sat on a couch. She was weeping, and her hair fell about her
+face.
+
+"What now, Swanhild?" he said.
+
+She looked up heavily. "Ill news for thee and me, Eric. Koll, who was
+my mother's thrall, has come hither from Iceland, and these are
+his tidings: that Asmund is dead, and Unna, thy cousin, Thorod of
+Greenfell's daughter, is dead, and my mother Groa is dead also."
+
+"Heavy tidings, truly!" said Eric; "and what of Gudruda, is she also
+dead?"
+
+"Nay, Eric she is wed--wed to Ospakar."
+
+Now Eric reeled against the wall, clutching it, and for a space all
+things swam round him. "Where is this Koll?" he gasped. "Send me Koll
+hither."
+
+Presently he came, and Eric questioned him coldly and calmly. But Koll
+could lie full well. It is said that in his day there was no one in
+Iceland who could lie so well as Koll the Half-witted. He told Eric how
+it was said that Gudruda was plighted to Ospakar, and how the match had
+been agreed on at the Althing in the summer that was gone (and indeed
+there had been some such talk), and how that the feast was to be at
+Middalhof on last Yule Day.
+
+"Is that all thy tidings?" said Eric. "If so, I give no heed to them:
+for ever, Koll, I have known thee for a liar!"
+
+"Nay, Eric, it is not all," answered Koll. "As it chanced, two days
+before the ship in which I sailed was bound, I saw Gudruda the Fair.
+Then she asked me whither I was going, and I told her that I would
+journey to London, where men said thou wert, and asked her if she would
+send a message. Then she alighted from her horse, Blackmane, and spoke
+with me apart. 'Koll,' she said, 'it well may happen that thou wilt see
+Eric Brighteyes in London town. Now, if thou seest him, I charge thee
+straightly tell him this. Tell him that my father is dead, and my
+brother Bjrn, who rules in his place, is a hard man, and has ever urged
+me on to wed Ospakar, till at last, having no choice, I have consented
+to it. And say to Eric that I grieve much and sorely, and that, though
+we twain should never meet more, yet I shall always hold his memory
+dear.'"
+
+"It is not like Gudruda to speak thus," said Eric: "she had ever a stout
+heart and these are craven words. Koll, I hold that thou liest; and, if
+indeed I find it so, I'll wring the head from off thee!"
+
+"Nay, Eric, I lie not. Wherefore should I lie? Hearken: thou hast not
+heard all my tale. When the lady Gudruda had made an end of speaking
+she drew something from her breast and gave it me, saying: 'Give this to
+Eric, in witness of my words.'"
+
+"Show me the token," said Eric.
+
+Now, many years ago, when they were yet boy and girl, it chanced that
+Eric had given to Gudruda the half of an ancient gold piece that he
+had found upon the shore. He had given her half, and half he had kept,
+wearing it next his heart. But he knew not this, for she feared to tell
+him, that Gudruda had lost her half. Nor indeed had she lost it, for
+Swanhild had taken the love-token and hidden it away. Now she brought it
+forth for Koll to build his lies upon.
+
+Then Koll drew out the half-piece from a leather purse and passed it to
+him. Eric plunged his hand into his breast and found his half. He placed
+the two side by side, while Swanhild watched him. Lo! they fitted well.
+
+Then Eric laughed aloud, a hard and bitter laugh. "There will be
+slaying," he cried, "before all this tale is told. Take thy fee and
+begone, thou messenger of ill," and he cast the broken piece at Koll.
+"For once thou hast spoken the truth."
+
+Koll stooped, found the gold and went, leaving Brighteyes and Swanhild
+face to face.
+
+He hid his brow in his arms and groaned aloud. Softly Swanhild crept up
+to him--softly she drew his hands away, holding them between her own.
+
+"Heavy tidings, Eric," she said, "heavy tidings for thee and me! She is
+a murderess who gave me birth and she has slain my own father--my father
+and thy cousin Unna also. Gudruda is a traitress, a traitress fair and
+false. I did ill to be born of such a woman; thou didst ill to put thy
+faith in such a woman. Together let us weep, for our woe is equal."
+
+"Ay, let us weep together," Eric answered. "Nay, why should we weep?
+Together let us be merry, for we know the worst. All words are said--all
+hopes are sped! Let us be merry, then, for now we have no more tidings
+to fear."
+
+"Ay," Swanhild answered, looking on him darkly, "we will be merry and
+laugh our sorrows down. Ah! thou foolish Eric, under what unlucky star
+wast thou born that thou knewest not true from false?" and she called
+the serving-women, bidding them bring food and wine.
+
+Now Eric sat alone with Swanhild in her bower and made pretence to eat.
+But he could eat little, though he drank deep of the southern wine.
+Close beside him sat Swanhild, filling his cup. She was wondrous fair
+that night, and it seemed to Eric that her eyes gleamed like stars.
+Sweetly she spoke also and wisely. She told strange tales and she sang
+strange songs, and ever her eyes shone more and more, and ever she crept
+closer to him. Eric's brain was afire, though his heart was cold and
+dead. He laughed loud and mightily, he told great tales of deeds that he
+had done, growing boastful in his folly, and still Swanhild's eyes shone
+more and more, and still she crept closer, wooing him in many ways.
+
+Now of a sudden Eric thought of his friend, Earl Atli, and his mind grew
+clear.
+
+"This may not be, Swanhild," he said. "Yet I would that I had loved thee
+from the first, and not the false Gudruda: for, with all thy dark ways,
+at least thou art better than she."
+
+"Thou speakest wisely, Eric," Swanhild answered, though she meant not
+that he should go. "The Norns have appointed us an evil fate, giving
+me as wife to an old man whom I do not love, and thee for a lover to a
+woman who has betrayed thee. Ah, Eric Brighteyes, thou foolish Eric! why
+knewest thou not the false from the true while yet there was time?
+Now are all words said and all things done--nor can they be undone. Go
+hence, Eric, ere ill come of it; but, before thou goest, drink one cup
+of parting, and then farewell."
+
+And she slipped from him and filled the cup, mixing in it a certain
+love-portion that she had made ready.
+
+"Give it me that I may swear an oath on it," said Eric.
+
+Swanhild gave him the cup and stood before him, watching him.
+
+"Hearken," he said: "I swear this, that before snow falls again in
+Iceland I will see Ospakar dead at my feet or lie dead at the feet of
+Ospakar."
+
+"Well spoken, Eric," Swanhild answered. "Now, before thou drinkest,
+grant me one little boon. It is but a woman's fancy, and thou canst
+scarce deny me. The years will be long when thou art gone, for from this
+night it is best that we should meet no more, and I would keep something
+of thee to call back thy memory and the memories of our youth when thou
+hast passed away and I grow old."
+
+"What wouldst have then, Swanhild? I have nothing left to give, except
+Whitefire alone."
+
+"I do not ask Whitefire, Eric, though Whitefire shall kiss the gift. I
+ask nothing but one tress of that golden hair of thine."
+
+"Once I swore that none should touch my hair again except Gudruda's
+self."
+
+"It will grow long, then, Eric, for now Gudruda tends black locks and
+thinks little on golden. Broken are all oaths."
+
+Eric groaned. "All oaths are broken in sooth," he said. "Have then thy
+will;" and, loosing the peace-strings, he drew Whitefire from its sheath
+and gave her the great war-sword.
+
+Swanhild took it by the hilt, and, lifting a tress of Eric's yellow
+hair, she shore through it deftly with Whitefire's razor-edge, smiling
+as she shore. With the same war-blade on which Eric and Gudruda had
+pledged their troth, did Swanhild cut the locks that Eric had sworn no
+hand should clip except Gudruda's.
+
+He took back the sword and sheathed it, and, knotting the long tress,
+Swanhild hid it in her bosom.
+
+"Now drink the cup, Eric," she said--"pledge me and go."
+
+Eric drank to the dregs and cast the cup down, and lo! all things
+changed to him, for his blood was afire, and seas seemed to roll within
+his brain. Only before him stood Swanhild like a shape of light and
+glory, and he thought that she sang softly over him, always drawing
+nearer, and that with her came a scent of flowers like the scent of the
+Iceland meads in May.
+
+"All oaths are broken, Eric," she murmured, "all oaths are broken
+indeed, and now must new oaths be sworn. For cut is thy golden hair,
+Brighteyes, and not by Gudruda's hand!"
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+HOW ERIC WAS NAMED ANEW
+
+Eric dreamed. He dreamed that Gudruda stood by him looking at him with
+soft, sad eyes, while with her hand she pointed to his hair, and spake.
+
+"Thou hast done ill, Eric," she seemed to say. "Thou hast done ill to
+doubt me; and now thou art for ever shamed, for thou hast betrayed Atli,
+thy friend. Thou hast broken thy oath, and therefore hast thou fallen
+into this pit; for when Swanhild shore that lock of thine, my watching
+Spirit passed, leaving thee to Swanhild and thy fate. Now, I tell thee
+this: that shame shall lead to shame, and many lives shall pay forfeit
+for thy sin, Eric."
+
+Eric awoke, thinking that this was indeed an evil dream which he had
+dreamed. He woke, and lo! by him was Swanhild, Atli's wife. He looked
+upon her beauty, and fear and shame crept into his heart, for now he
+knew that it was no dream, but he was lost indeed. He looked again at
+Swanhild, and hatred and loathing of her shook him. She had overcome
+him by her arts; that cup was drugged which he had drunk, and he was mad
+with grief. Yes, she had played upon his woe like a harper on a harp,
+and now he was ashamed--now he had betrayed his friend who loved him!
+Had Whitefire been to his hand at that moment, Eric had surely slain
+himself. But the great sword was not there, for it hung in Swanhild's
+bower. Eric groaned aloud, and Swanhild turned at the sound. But he
+sprang away and stood over her, cursing her.
+
+"Thou witch!" he cried, "what hast thou done? What didst thou mix in
+that cup yestre'en? Thou hast brought me to this that I have betrayed
+Atli, my friend--Atli, thy lord, who left thee in my keeping!"
+
+He seemed so terrible in his woe and rage that Swanhild shrank from him,
+and, throwing her hair about her face, peeped at him through its meshes
+as once she had peeped at Asmund.
+
+"It is like a man," she said, gathering up her courage and her wit;
+"'tis like a man, having won my love, now to turn upon me and upbraid
+me. Fie upon thee, Eric! thou hast dealt ill with me to bring me to
+this."
+
+Now Eric ceased his raving, and spoke more calmly.
+
+"Well thou knowest the truth, Swanhild," he said.
+
+"Hearken, Eric," she answered. "Let this be secret between us. Atli is
+old, and methinks that not for long shall he bide here in Straumey.
+Soon he will die; it is upon my mind that he soon will die, and, being
+childless, his lands and goods pass to me. Then, Eric, thou shalt sit in
+Atli's hall, and in all honour shall Atli's wife become thy bride."
+
+Eric listened coldly. "I can well believe," he said, "that thou hast it
+in mind to slay thy lord, for all evil is in thy heart, Swanhild. Now
+know this: that if in honour or dishonour my lips touch that fair face
+of thine again, may the limbs rot from thy trunk, and may I lie a log
+for ever in the halls of Hela! If ever my eyes of their own will look
+again upon thy beauty, may I go blind and beg my meat from homestead
+to homestead! If ever my tongue whisper word of love into thy ears, may
+dumbness seize it, and may it wither to the root!"
+
+Swanhild heard and sank upon the ground before him, her head bowed
+almost to her feet.
+
+"Now, Swanhild, fare thee well," said Eric. "Living or dead, may I never
+see thy face again!"
+
+She gazed up through her falling hair; her face was wild and white, and
+her eyes glowed in it as live embers glow in the ashes of burnt wood.
+
+"We are not so easily parted, Eric," she said. "Not for this came I to
+witchcraft and to sin. Thou fool! hast thou never heard that, of all the
+foes a man may have, none is so terrible as the woman he has scorned?
+Thou shalt learn this lesson, Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur's son: for
+here we have but the beginning of the tale. For its end, I will write it
+in runes of blood."
+
+"Write on," said Eric. "Thou canst do no worse than thou hast done," and
+he passed thence.
+
+For a while Swanhild crouched upon the ground, brooding in silence. Then
+she rose, and, throwing up her arms, wept aloud.
+
+"Is it for this that I have sold my soul to the Hell-hag?" she cried.
+"Is it for this that I have become a witch, and sunk so low as I sank
+last night--to be scorned, to be hated, to be betrayed? Now Eric will
+go to Atli and tell this tale. Nay, there I will be beforehand with him,
+and with another story--an ancient wile of women truly, but one that
+never yet has failed them, nor ever will. And then for vengeance! I will
+see thee dead, Eric, and dead will I see Gudruda at thy side! Afterwards
+let darkness come--ay, though the horror rides it! Swift!--I must be
+swift!"
+
+
+
+Eric passed into Swanhild's bower, and, finding Whitefire, bore it
+thence. On the table was food. He took it. Then, going to the place
+where he was wont to sleep, he armed himself, girding his byrnie on his
+breast and his golden helm upon his head, and taking shield and spear
+in his hand. Then he passed out. By the men's door he found some women
+spreading fish in the sun. Eric greeted them, saying that when the Earl
+came back, for he was to come on that morning, he would find him on the
+south-western rocks nigh to where the Gudruda sank. This he begged of
+them to tell Atli, for he desired speech with him.
+
+The women wondered that Brighteyes should go forth thus and fully armed,
+but, holding that he had some deed to do, they said nothing.
+
+Eric came to the rocks, and there he sat all day long looking on the
+sea, and grieving so bitterly that he thought his heart would burst
+within him. For of all the days of Eric's life this was the heaviest,
+except one other only.
+
+But Swanhild, going to her bower, caused Koll the Half-witted to be
+summoned. To him she spoke long and earnestly, and they made a shameful
+plot together. Then she bade Koll watch for Atli's coming and, when he
+saw the Earl leave his boats, to run to him and say that she would speak
+with him.
+
+After this Swanhild sent a man across the firth to the stead where Hall
+of Lithdale sat, bidding him to come to her at speed.
+
+When the afternoon grew towards the evening, Koll, watching, saw the
+boats of Atli draw to the landing-place. Then he went down, and, going
+to the Earl, bowed before him:
+
+"What wouldst thou, fellow, and who art thou?" asked Atli.
+
+"I am a man from Iceland; perchance, lord, thou sawest me in Asmund's
+hall at Middalhof. I am sent here by the Lady Swanhild to say that she
+desires speech with thee, and that at once." Then, seeing Skallagrim,
+Koll fled back to the house, for he feared Skallagrim.
+
+Now Atli was uneasy in his mind, and, saying nothing, he hurried up to
+the hall, and through it into Swanhild's bower.
+
+There she sat on a couch, her eyes red with weeping, and her curling
+hair unbound.
+
+"What now, Swanhild?" he asked. "Why lookest thou thus?"
+
+"Why look I thus, my lord?" she answered heavily. "Because I have to
+tell thee that which I cannot find words to fit," and she ceased.
+
+"Speak on," he said. "Is aught wrong with Eric?"
+
+Then Swanhild drew near and told him a false tale.
+
+When it was done for a moment or so Atli stood still, and grew white
+beneath his ruddy skin, white as his beard. Then he staggered back
+against the wainscoting of the bower.
+
+"Woman, thou liest!" he said. "Never will I believe so vile a thing of
+Eric Brighteyes, whom I have loved."
+
+"Would that I could not believe it!" she answered. "Would that I could
+think it was but an evil dream! But alas! Nay, I will prove it. Suffer
+that I summon Koll, the Icelander, who was my mother's thrall--Groa
+who now is dead, for I have that tidings also. He saw something of this
+thing, and he will bear me witness."
+
+"Call the man," said Atli sternly.
+
+So Koll was summoned, and told his lies with a bold face. He was so well
+taught, and so closely did his story tally with that of Swanhild, that
+Atli could find no flaw in it.
+
+"Now I am sure, Swanhild, that thou speakest truth," said the Earl when
+Koll had gone. "And now also I have somewhat to say to this Eric. For
+thee, rest thyself; that which cannot be mended must be borne," and he
+went out.
+
+
+
+Now, when Skallagrim came to the house he asked for Eric. The women
+told him that Brighteyes had gone down to the sea, fully armed, in the
+morning, and had not returned.
+
+"Then there must be fighting toward, and that I am loth to miss," said
+Skallagrim, and, axe aloft, he started for the south-western rocks at a
+run. Skallagrim came to the rocks. There he found Eric, sitting in his
+harness, looking out across the sea. The evening was wet and windy; the
+rain beat upon him as he sat, but Eric took no heed.
+
+"What seekest thou, lord?" asked the Baresark.
+
+"Rest," said Eric, "and I find none."
+
+"Thou seekest rest helm on head and sword in hand? This is a strange
+thing, truly!"
+
+"Stranger things have been Skallagrim. Wouldst thou hear a tale?" and he
+told him all.
+
+"What said I?" asked Skallagrim. "We had fared better in London town.
+Flying from the dove thou hast found the falcon."
+
+"I have found the falcon, comrade, and she has pecked out my eyes. Now I
+would speak with Atli, and then I go hence."
+
+"Hence go the twain of us, lord. The Earl will be here presently
+and rough words will fly in this rough weather. Is Whitefire sharp,
+Brighteyes?"
+
+"Whitefire was sharp enough to shear my hair, Skallagrim; but if Atli
+would strike let him lay on. Whitefire will not be aloft for him."
+
+"That we shall see," said Skallagrim. "At least, if thou art harmed
+because of this loose quean, my axe will be aloft."
+
+"Keep thou thine axe in its place," said Eric, and as he spoke Atli
+came, and with him many men.
+
+Eric rose and turned to meet the Earl, looking on him with sad eyes. For
+Atli, his face was as the face of a trapped wolf, for he was mad with
+rage at the shame that had been put upon him and the ill tale that
+Swanhild had told of Eric's dealings with her.
+
+"It seems that the Earl has heard of these tidings," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Then I shall be spared the telling of them," answered Eric.
+
+Now they stood face to face; Atli leaned upon his drawn sword, and his
+wrath was so fierce that for a while he could not speak. At length he
+found words.
+
+"See ye that man, comrades?" he said, pointing at Eric with the sword.
+"He has been my guest these many months. He has sat in my hall and eaten
+of my bread, and I have loved him as a son. And wot ye how he has
+repaid me? He has put me to the greatest shame, me and my wife the Lady
+Swanhild, whom I left in his guard--to such shame, indeed, that I cannot
+speak it."
+
+"True words, Earl," said Eric, while folk murmured and handled their
+swords.
+
+"True, but not all the truth," growled Skallagrim. "Methinks the Earl
+has heard a garbled tale."
+
+"True words, thyself thou sayest it," went on Atli "thou hound that I
+saved from the sea! 'Ran's gift, Hela's gift,' so runs the saw, and now
+from Ran to Hela thou shalt go, thou mishandler of defenceless women!"
+
+"Here is somewhat of which I know nothing," said Eric.
+
+"And here is something of which thou shalt know," answered Atli, and he
+shook his sword before Eric's eyes. "Guard thyself!"
+
+"Nay, Earl; thou art old, and I have done the wrong--I may not fight
+with thee."
+
+"Art thou a coward also?" said the Earl.
+
+"Some have deemed otherwise," said Eric, "but it is true that heavy
+heart makes weak hand. Nevertheless this is my rede. With thee are ten
+men. Stand thou aside and let them fall on me till I am slain."
+
+"The odds are too heavy even for thee," said Skallagrim. "Back to back,
+lord, as we have stood aforetime, and let us play this game together."
+
+"Not so," cried Atli, "this shame is mine, and I have sworn to Swanhild
+that I will wipe it out in Eric's blood. Stand thou before me and draw!"
+
+Then Eric drew Whitefire and raised his shield. Atli the Earl rushed at
+him and smote a great two-handed blow. Eric caught it on his shield and
+suffered no harm; but he would not smite back.
+
+Atli dropped his point. "Niddering art thou, and coward to the last!" he
+cried. "See, men, Eric Brighteyes fears to fight. I am not come to this
+that I will cut down a man who is too faint-hearted to give blow for
+blow. This is my word: take ye your spear-shafts and push this coward to
+the shore. Then put him in a boat and drive him hence."
+
+Now Eric grew red as the red light of sunset, for his manhood might not
+bear this.
+
+"Take shield," he said, "and, Earl, on thine own head be thy blood, for
+none shall live to call Eric niddering and coward."
+
+Atli laughed in his folly and his rage. He took a shield, and, once more
+springing on Brighteyes, struck a great blow.
+
+Eric parried, then whirled Whitefire on high and smote--once and once
+only! Down rushed the bright blade like a star through the night. Sword
+and shield did Atli lift to catch the blow. Through shield it sheared,
+and arm that held the shield, through byrnie mail and deep into Earl
+Atli's side. He fell prone to earth, while men held their breath,
+wondering at the greatness of that stroke.
+
+But Eric leaned on Whitefire and looked at the old Earl upon the rock.
+
+"Now, Atli, thou hast had thy way," he said, "and methinks things are
+worse than they were before. But I will say this: would that I lay there
+and thou stoodest to watch me die, for as lief would I have slain my
+father as thee, Earl Atli. There lies Swanhild's work!"
+
+Atli gazed upwards into Eric's sad eyes and, while he gazed so, his rage
+left him, and of a sudden a light brake upon his mind, as even then the
+light of the setting sun brake through the driving mist.
+
+"Eric," he said, "draw near and speak with me ere I am sped. Methinks
+that I have been beguiled and that thou didst not do this thing that
+Swanhild said and Koll bore witness to."
+
+"What did Swanhild say, then, Earl Atli?"
+
+The Earl told him.
+
+"It was to be looked for from her," said Eric, "though I never thought
+of it. Now hearken!" and he told him all.
+
+Atli groaned aloud. "I know this now, Eric," he said: "that thou
+speakest truth, and once more I have been deceived. Eric, I forgive thee
+all, for no man may fight against woman's witchcraft, and witch's wine.
+Swanhild is evil to the heart. Yet, Eric, I lay this doom upon thee--I
+do not lay it of my own will, for I would not harm thee, whom I love,
+but because of the words that the Norns put in my mouth, for now I am
+fey in this the hour of my death. Thou hast sinned, and that thou didst
+sin against thy will shall avail thee nothing, for of thy sin fate shall
+fashion a handle to the spear which pierces thee. Henceforth thou art
+accursed. For I tell thee that this wicked woman Swanhild shall drag
+thee down to death, and worse than death, and with thee those thou
+lovest. By witchcraft she brought thee to Straumey, by lies she laid me
+here before thee. Now by hate and might and cruel deeds shall she bring
+thee to lie more low than I do. For, Eric, thou art bound to her, and
+thou shalt never loose the bond!"
+
+Atli ceased a while, then spoke again more faintly:
+
+"Hearken, comrades," he cried; "my strength is well-nigh spent. Ye
+shall swear four things to me--that ye will give Eric Brighteyes and
+Skallagrim Lambstail safe passage from Straumey. That ye will tell
+Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa's daughter and Atli's wife, that, at last,
+I know her for what she is--a murderess, a harlot, a witch and a liar;
+and that I forgive Eric whom she tricked, but that her I hate and spit
+upon. That ye will slay Koll the Half-witted, Groa's thrall, who came
+hither about two days gone, since by his lies he hath set an edge upon
+this sword of falsehood. That ye will raise no blood-feud against Eric
+for this my slaying, for I goaded him to the deed. Do ye swear?"
+
+"We swear," said the men.
+
+"Then farewell! And to thee farewell, also, Eric Brighteyes! Now take
+my hand and hold it while I die. Behold! I give thee a new name, and by
+that name thou shalt be called in story. I name thee _Eric the Unlucky_.
+Of all tales that are told, thine shall be the greatest. A mighty stroke
+that was of thine--a mighty stroke! Farewell!"
+
+Then his head fell back upon the rock and Earl Atli died. And as he died
+the last rays of light went out of the sky.
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+HOW HALL OF LITHDALE TOOK TIDINGS TO ICELAND
+
+Now on the same night that Atli died at the hand of Eric, Swanhild spake
+with Hall of Lithdale, whom she had summoned from the mainland. She bade
+him do this: take passage in a certain ship that should sail for Iceland
+on the morrow from the island that is called Westra, and there tell all
+these tidings of the ill-doings of Eric and of the slaying of Atli by
+his hand.
+
+"Thou shalt say this," she went on, "that Eric had been my love for
+long, but that at length the matter came to the ears of Atli, the Earl.
+Then, holding this the greatest shame, he went on holmgang with Eric and
+was slain by him. This shalt thou add to thy tale also, that presently
+Eric and I will wed, and that Eric shall rule as Earl in Orkneys. Now
+these tidings must soon come to the ears of Gudruda the Fair, and she
+will send for thee, and question thee straightly concerning them, and
+thou shalt tell her the tale as thou toldest it at first. Then thou
+shalt give Gudruda this packet, which I send her as a gift, saying, that
+I bade her remember a certain oath which Eric took as to the cutting of
+his hair. And when she sees that which is within the packet is somewhat
+stained, tell her that is but the blood of Atli that is upon it, as his
+blood is upon Eric's hands. Now remember thou this, Hall, that if thou
+fail in the errand thy life shall pay forfeit, for presently I will also
+come to Iceland and hear how thou hast sped."
+
+Then Swanhild gave him faring-money and gifts of wadmal and gold rings,
+promising that he should have so much again when she came to Iceland.
+
+Hall said that he would do all these things, and went at once; nor did
+he fail in his tasks.
+
+
+
+Atli being dead, Eric loosed his hand and called to the men to take up
+his body and bear it to the hall. This they did. Eric stood and watched
+them till they were lost in the darkness.
+
+"Whither now, lord?" said Skallagrim.
+
+"It matters little," said Eric. "What is thy counsel?"
+
+"This is my counsel. That we take ship and sail back to the King in
+London. There we will tell all this tale. It is a far cry from Straumey
+to London town, and there we shall sit in peace, for the King will
+think little of the slaying of an Orkney Earl in a brawl about a woman.
+Mayhap, too, the Lady Elfrida will not set great store by it. Therefore,
+I say, let us fare back to London."
+
+"In but one place am I at home, and that is Iceland," said Eric.
+"Thither I will go, Skallagrim, though it be but to miss friend from
+stead and bride from bed. At the least I shall find Ospakar there."
+
+"Listen, lord!" said Skallagrim. "Was it not my rede that we should bide
+this winter through in London? Thou wouldst none of it, and what
+came about? Our ship is sunk, gone are our comrades, thine honour is
+tarnished, and dead is thy host at thine own hand. Yet I say all is not
+lost. Let us hence south, and see no more of Swanhild, of Gudruda, of
+Bjrn and Ospakar. So shall we break the spell. But if thou goest to
+Iceland, I am sure of this: that the evil fate which Atli foretold will
+fall on thee, and the days to come shall be even more unlucky than the
+days that have been."
+
+"It may be so," said Eric. "Methinks, indeed, it will be so. Henceforth
+I am Eric the Unlucky. I will go back to Iceland and there play out
+the game. I care little if I live or am slain--I have no more joy in my
+life. I stand alone, like a fir upon a mountain-top, and every wind from
+heaven and every storm of hail and snow beats upon my head. But I say to
+thee, Skallagrim: go thy road, and leave a luckless man to his ill fate.
+Otherwise it shall be thine also. Good friend hast thou been to me; now
+let us part and wend south and north. The King will be glad to greet
+thee yonder in London, Lambstail."
+
+"But one severing shall we know, lord," said Skallagrim, "and that shall
+be sword's work, nor will it be for long. It is ill to speak such words
+as these of the parting of lord and thrall. Bethink thee of the oath I
+swore on Mosfell. Let us go north, since it is thy will: in fifty years
+it will count for little which way we wended from the Isles."
+
+So they went together down to the shore, and, finding a boat and men who
+as yet knew nothing of what had chanced to Atli, they sailed across the
+firth at the rising of the moon.
+
+Two days afterwards they found a ship at Wick that was bound for Fareys,
+and sailed in her, Eric buying a passage with the half of a gold ring
+that the King had given him in London.
+
+Here at Fareys they sat a month or more; but not in the Earl's hall as
+when Eric came with honour in the Gudruda, but in a farmer's stead.
+For the tale of Eric's dealings with Atli and Atli's wife had reached
+Fareys, and the Earl there had been a friend of Atli's. Moreover,
+Eric was now a poor man, having neither ship nor goods, nor friends.
+Therefore all looked coldly on him, though they wondered at his beauty
+and his might. Still, they dared not to speak ill or make a mock of him;
+for, two men having done so, were nearly slain of Skallagrim, who seized
+the twain by the throat, one in either hand, and dashed their heads
+together. After that men said little.
+
+They sat there a month, till at length a chapman put in at Fareys, bound
+for Iceland, and they took passage with him, Eric paying the other half
+of his gold ring for ship-room. The chapman was not willing to give them
+place at first, for he, too, had heard the tale; but Skallagrim offered
+him choice, either to do so or to go on holmgang with him. Then the
+chapman gave them passage.
+
+
+
+Now it is told that when his thralls and house-carles bore the corpse of
+Atli the Earl to his hall in Straumey, Swanhild met it and wept over it.
+And when the spokesman among them stood forward and told her those words
+that Atli had bidden them to say to her, sparing none, she spoke thus:
+
+"My lord was distraught and weak with loss of blood when he spoke thus.
+The tale I told him was true, and now Eric has added to his sin by
+shedding the blood of him whom he wronged so sorely."
+
+And thereafter she spoke so sweetly and with so much gentleness, craft,
+and wisdom that, though they still doubted them, all men held her words
+weighty. For Swanhild had this art, that she could make the false sound
+true in the ears of men and the true sound false.
+
+Still, being mindful of their oath, they hunted for Koll and found
+him. And when the thrall knew that they would slay him he ran thence
+screaming. Nor did Swanhild lift a hand to save his life, for she
+desired that Koll should die, lest he should bear witness against her.
+Away he ran towards the cliffs, and after him sped Atli's house-carles,
+till he came to the great cliffs that edge in the sea. Now they were
+close upon him and their swords were aloft. Then, sooner than know the
+kiss of steel, the liar leapt from the cliffs and was crushed, dying
+miserably on the rocks below. This was the end of Koll the Half-witted,
+Groa's thrall.
+
+Swanhild sat in Straumey for a while, and took all Atli's heritage into
+her keeping, for he had no male kin; nor did any say her nay. Also she
+called in the moneys that he had out at interest, and that was a great
+sum, for Atli was a careful and a wealthy man. Then Swanhild made ready
+to go to Iceland. Atli had a great dragon of war, and she manned that
+ship and filled it with stores and all things needful. This done, she
+set stewards and grieves over the Orkney lands and farms, and, when the
+Earl was six weeks dead, she sailed for Iceland, giving out that she
+went thither to set a blood-suit on foot against Eric for the death of
+Atli, her lord. There she came in safety just as folk rode to the Thing.
+
+
+
+Now Hall of Lithdale came to Iceland and told his tale of the doings
+of Eric and the death of Atli. Oft and loud he told it, and soon people
+gossiped of it in field and fair and stead. Bjrn, Asmund's son, heard
+this talk and sent for Hall. To him also Hall told the tale.
+
+"Now," said Bjrn, "we will go to my sister Gudruda the Fair, and learn
+how she takes these tidings."
+
+So they went in to where Gudruda sat spinning in the hall, singing as
+she span.
+
+"Greeting, Gudruda," said Bjrn; "say, hast thou tidings of Eric
+Brighteyes, thy betrothed?"
+
+"I have no tidings," said Gudruda.
+
+"Then here is one who brings them."
+
+Now for the first time Gudruda the Fair saw Hall of Lithdale. Up she
+sprang. "Thou hast tidings of Eric, Hall? Ah! thou art welcome, for no
+tidings have come of him for many a month. Speak on," and she pressed
+her hand against her heart and leaned towards him.
+
+"My tidings are ill, lady."
+
+"Is Eric dead? Say not that my love is dead!"
+
+"He is worse than dead," said Hall. "He is shamed."
+
+"There thou liest, Hall," she answered. "Shame and Eric are things
+apart."
+
+"Mayst thou think so when thou hast heard my tale, lady," said Hall,
+"for I am sad at heart to speak it of one who was my mate."
+
+"Speak on, I say," answered Gudruda, in such a voice that Hall shrank
+from her. "Speak on; but of this I warn thee: that if in one word thou
+liest, that shall be thy death when Eric comes."
+
+Now Hall was afraid, thinking of the axe of Skallagrim. Still, he might
+not go back upon his word. So he began at the beginning, telling the
+story of how he was wounded in the fight with Ospakar's ships and left
+Farey isles, and how he came thence to Scotland and sat in Atli's hall
+on Orkneys. Then he told how the Gudruda was wrecked on Straumey,
+and, of all aboard, Eric and Skallagrim alone were saved because of
+Swanhild's dream.
+
+"Herein I see witch-work," said Gudruda.
+
+Then Hall told that Eric became Swanhild's love, but of the other tale
+which Swanhild had whispered to Atli he said nothing. For he knew that
+Gudruda would not believe this, and, moreover, if it were so, Swanhild
+had not sent the token which he should give.
+
+"It may well be," said Gudruda, proudly; "Swanhild is fair and light
+of mind. Perchance she led Brighteyes into this snare." But, though
+she spoke thus, bitter jealousy and anger burned in her breast and she
+remembered the sight which she had seen when Eric and Swanhild met on
+the morn of Atli's wedding.
+
+Then Hall told of the slaying of Atli the Good by Eric, but he said
+nothing of the Earl's dying words, nor of how he goaded Brighteyes with
+his bitter words.
+
+"It was an ill deed in sooth," said Gudruda, "for Eric to slay an old
+man whom he had wronged. Still, it may chance that he was driven to it
+for his own life's sake."
+
+Then Hall said that he had seen Swanhild after Atli's slaying, and that
+she had told him that she and Eric should wed shortly, and that Eric
+would rule in Orkneys by her side.
+
+Gudruda asked if that was all his tale.
+
+"Yes, lady," answered Hall, "that is all my tale, for after that I
+sailed and know not what happened. But I am charged to give something
+to thee, and that by the Lady Swanhild. She bade me say this also: that,
+when thou lookest on the gift, thou shouldst think on a certain oath
+which Eric took as to the cutting of his hair." And he drew a linen
+packet from his breast and gave it to her.
+
+Thrice Gudruda looked on it, fearing to open it. Then, seeing the smile
+of mockery on Bjrn's cold face, she took the shears that hung at her
+side and cut the thread with them. And as she cut, a lock of golden hair
+rose from the packet, untwisting itself like a living snake. The lock
+was long, and its end was caked with gore.
+
+"Whose hair is this?" said Gudruda, though she knew the hair well.
+
+"Eric's hair," said Hall, "that Swanhild cut from his head with Eric's
+sword."
+
+Now Gudruda put her hand to her bosom. She drew out a satchel, and from
+the satchel a lock of yellow hair. Side by side she placed the locks,
+looking first at one and then at the other.
+
+"This is Eric's hair in sooth," she said--"Eric's hair that he swore
+none but I should cut! Eric's hair that Swanhild shore with Whitefire
+from Eric's head--Whitefire whereon we plighted troth! Say now, whose
+blood is this that stains the hair of Eric?"
+
+"It is Atli's blood, whom Eric first dishonoured and then slew with his
+own hand," answered Hall.
+
+Now there burned a fire on the hearth, for the day was cold. Gudruda the
+Fair stood over the fire and with either hand she let the two locks of
+Eric's hair fall upon the embers. Slowly they twisted up and burned. She
+watched them burn, then she threw up her hands and with a great cry fled
+from the hall.
+
+Bjrn and Hall of Lithdale looked on each other.
+
+"Thou hadst best go hence!" said Bjrn; "and of this I warn thee, Hall,
+though I hold thy tidings good, that, if thou hast spoken one false
+word, that will be thy death. For then it would be better for thee to
+face all the wolves in Iceland than to stand before Eric in his rage."
+
+Again Hall bethought himself of the axe of Skallagrim, and he went out
+heavily.
+
+
+
+That day a messenger came from Gudruda to Bjrn, saying that she would
+speak with him. He went to where she sat alone upon her bed. Her face
+was white as death, and her dark eyes glowed.
+
+"Eric has dealt badly with thee, sister, to bring thee to this sorrow,"
+said Bjrn.
+
+"Speak no evil of Eric to me," Gudruda answered. "The evil that he has
+done will be paid back to him; there is little need for thee to heap
+words upon his head. Hearken, Bjrn my brother: is it yet thy will that
+I should wed Ospakar Blacktooth?"
+
+"That is my will, surely. There is no match in Iceland as this Ospakar,
+and I should win many friends by it."
+
+"Do this then, Bjrn. Send messengers to Swinefell and say to Ospakar
+that if he would still wed Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter, let
+him come to Middalhof when folk ride from the Thing and he shall not go
+hence alone. Nay, I have done. Now, I pray thee speak no more to me of
+Eric or of Ospakar. Of the one I have seen and heard enough, and of the
+other I shall hear and see enough in the years that are to come."
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+HOW ERIC CAME HOME AGAIN
+
+Swanhild made a good passage from the Orkneys, and was in Iceland
+thirty-five days before Eric and Skallagrim set foot there. But she did
+not land by Westman Isles, for she had no wish to face Gudruda at
+that time, but by Reyjaness. Now she rode thence with her company to
+Thingvalla, for here all men were gathered for the Thing. At first
+people hung aloof from her, notwithstanding her wealth and beauty; but
+Swanhild knew well how to win the hearts of men. For now she told the
+same story of Eric that she had told to Atli, and there were none to say
+her nay. So it came to pass that she was believed, and Eric Brighteyes
+held to be shamed indeed. Now, too, she set a suit on foot against Eric
+for the death of Atli at his hand, claiming that sentence of the greater
+outlawry should be passed against him, and that his lands at Coldback in
+the Marsh on Ran River should be given, half to her in atonement for the
+Earl's death, and half to the men of Eric's quarter.
+
+On the day of the opening of the Thing Ospakar Blacktooth came from the
+north, and with him his son Gizur and a great company of men. Ospakar
+was blithe, for from the Thing he should ride to Middalhof, there to wed
+Gudruda the Fair. Then Swanhild clad herself in beautiful attire, and,
+taking men with her, went to the booth of Ospakar.
+
+Blacktooth sat in his booth and by him sat Gizur his son the Lawman.
+When he saw a beauteous lady, very richly clad, enter the booth he did
+not know who it might be. But Gizur knew her well, for he could never
+put Swanhild from his mind.
+
+"Lo! here comes Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's widow," said Gizur,
+flushing red with joy at the sight of her.
+
+Then Ospakar greeted her heartily, and made place for her by him at the
+top of the booth.
+
+"Ospakar Blacktooth," she said, "I am come to ask this of thee: that
+thou shalt befriend me in the suit which I have against Eric Brighteyes
+for the slaying of Earl Atli, my husband."
+
+"Thou couldst have come to no man who is more willing," said Ospakar,
+"for, if thou hast something against Eric, I have yet more."
+
+"I would ask this, too, Ospakar: that thy son Gizur should take up my
+suit and plead it; for I know well that he is the most skilful of all
+lawmen."
+
+"I will do that," said Gizur, his eyes yet fixed upon her face.
+
+"I looked for no less from thee," said Swanhild, "and be sure of
+this, that thou shalt not plead for nothing," and she glanced at him
+meaningly. Then she set out her case with a lying tongue, and afterwards
+went back to her booth, glad at heart. For now she learned that Hall had
+not failed in his errand, seeing that Gudruda was about to wed Ospakar.
+
+Gizur gave warning of the blood-suit, and the end of it was that, though
+he had no notice and was not there to answer to the charge, against all
+right and custom Eric was declared outlaw and his lands were given, half
+to Swanhild and half to the men of his quarter. For now all held that
+Swanhild's was a true tale, and Eric the most shameful of men, and
+therefore they were willing to stretch the law against him. Also, being
+absent, he had few friends, and those men of small account; whereas
+Ospakar, who backed Swanhild's suit, was the most powerful of the
+northern chiefs, as Gizur was the most skilled lawman in Iceland.
+Moreover, Bjrn the Priest, Asmund's son, was among the judges, and,
+though Swanhild's tale seemed strange to him after that which he had
+heard from Hall of Lithdale, he loved Eric little. He feared also that
+if Eric came a free man to Iceland before Gudruda was wed to Ospakar,
+her love would conquer her anger, for he could see well that she still
+loved Brighteyes. Therefore he strove with might and main that Eric
+should be brought in guilty, nor did he fail in this.
+
+So the end of it was that Eric Brighteyes was outlawed, his lands
+declared forfeit, and his head a wolf's head, to be taken by him who
+might, should he set foot in Iceland.
+
+Thereafter, the Althing being ended, Bjrn, Gizur, and Ospakar, with all
+their company, rode away to Middalhof to sit at the marriage-feast. But
+Swanhild and her folk went by sea in the long war-ship to Westmans. For
+this was her plan: to seize on Coldback and to sit there for a while,
+till she saw if Eric came out to Iceland. Also she desired to see the
+wedding of Ospakar and Gudruda, for she had been bidden to it by Bjrn,
+her half-brother.
+
+Now Ospakar came to Middalhof, and found Gudruda waiting his coming.
+
+She stood in the great hall, pale and cold as April snow, and greeted
+him courteously. But when he would have kissed her, she shrank from him,
+for now he was more hideous in her sight than he had ever been, and she
+loathed him in her heart.
+
+That night there was feasting in the hall, and at the feast Gudruda
+heard that Eric had been made outlaw. Then she spoke:
+
+"This is an ill deed, thus to judge an absent man."
+
+"Say, Gudruda," said Bjrn in her ear, "hast thou not also judged Eric
+who is absent?"
+
+She turned her head and spoke no more of Eric; but Bjrn's words fixed
+themselves in her heart like arrows. The tale was strange to her, for it
+seemed that Eric had been made outlaw at Swanhild's suit, and yet
+Eric was Swanhild's love: for Swanhild's self had sent the lock of
+Brighteyes' hair by Hall, saying that he was her love and soon would wed
+her. How, then, did Swanhild bring a suit against him who should be her
+husband? Moreover, she heard that Swanhild sailed down to Coldback, and
+was bidden to the marriage-feast, that should be on the third day from
+now. Could it be, then, when all was said and done, that Eric was less
+faithless than she deemed? Gudruda's heart stood still and the blood
+rushed to her brow when she thought on it. Also, even if it were so, it
+was now too late. And surely it was not so, for had not Eric been made
+outlaw? Men were not made outlaw for a little thing. Nay, she would meet
+her fate, and ask no more of Eric and his doings.
+
+On the morrow, as Gudruda sat in her chamber, it was told her that
+Saevuna, Thorgrimur's widow and Eric's mother, had come from Coldback to
+speak with her. For, after the death of Asmund and of Unna, Saevuna had
+moved back to Coldback on the Marsh.
+
+"Nay, how can this be?" said Gudruda astonished, for she knew well that
+Saevuna was now both blind and bed-ridden.
+
+"She has been borne here in a chair," said the woman who told her, "and
+that is a strange sight to see."
+
+At first Gudruda was minded to say her nay; but her heart softened, and
+she bade them bring Saevuna in. Presently she came, being set in a chair
+upon the shoulders of four men. She was white to see, for sickness had
+aged her much, and she stared about her with sightless eyes. But she was
+still tall and straight, and her face was stern to look on. To Gudruda
+it seemed like that of Eric when he was angered.
+
+"Am I nigh to Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter?" asked Saevuna.
+"Methinks I hear her breathe."
+
+"I am here, mother," said Gudruda. "What is thy will with me?"
+
+"Set down, carles, and begone!" quoth Saevuna; "that which I have to say
+I would say alone. When I summon you, come."
+
+The carles set down the chair upon the floor and went.
+
+"Gudruda," said the dame, "I am risen from my deathbed, and I have
+caused myself to be borne on my last journey here across the meads, that
+I may speak with thee and warn thee. I hear that thou hast put away my
+son, Eric Brighteyes, to whom thou art sworn in marriage, and art about
+to give thyself to Ospakar Blacktooth. I hear also that thou hast done
+this deed because a certain man, Hall of Lithdale--whom from his youth
+up I have known for a liar and a knave, and whom thou thyself didst
+mistrust in years gone by--has come hither to Iceland from Orkneys,
+bearing a tale of Eric's dealings with thy half-sister Swanhild. This I
+hear, further: that Swanhild, Atli's widow, hath come out to Iceland and
+laid a suit against Eric for the slaying of Atli the Earl, her husband,
+and that Eric has been outlawed and his lands at Coldback are forfeit.
+Tell me now, Gudruda, Asmund's daughter, if these tales be true?"
+
+"The tales are true, mother," said Gudruda.
+
+"Then hearken to me, girl. Eric sprang from my womb, who of all living
+men is the best and first, as he is the bravest and most strong. I have
+reared this Eric from a babe and I know his heart well. Now I tell thee
+this, that, whatever Eric has done or left undone, naught of dishonour
+is on his hands. Mayhap Swanhild has deceived him--thou art a woman, and
+thou knowest well the arts which women have, and the strength that Freya
+gives them. Well thou knowest, also, of what breed this Swanhild came;
+and perchance thou canst remember how she dealt with thee, and with what
+mind she looked on Eric. Perchance thou canst remember how she plotted
+against thee and Eric--ay, how she thrust thee from Goldfoss brink.
+Say, then, wilt thou take her word? Wilt thou take the word of this
+witch-daughter of a witch? Wilt thou not think on Groa, her mother, and
+of Groa's dealings with thy father, and with Unna my kinswoman? As the
+mother is, so shall the daughter be. Wilt thou cast Eric aside, and that
+unheard?"
+
+"There is no more room for doubt, mother," said Gudruda. "I have proof
+of this: that Eric has forsaken me."
+
+"So thou thinkest, child; but I tell thee that thou art wrong! Eric
+loves thee now as he loved thee aforetime, and will love thee always."
+
+"Would that I could believe it!" said Gudruda. "If I could believe that
+Eric still loved me--ay, even though he had been faithless to me--I
+would die ere I wed Ospakar!"
+
+"Thou art foolish, Gudruda, and thou shalt rue thy folly bitterly. I
+am outworn, and death draws near to me--far from me now are hates and
+loves, hopes and fears; but I know this: that woman is mad who, loving a
+man, weds where she loves not. Shame shall be her portion and bitterness
+her bread. Unhappy shall she live, and when she comes to die, but as a
+wilderness--but as the desolate winter snow, shall be the record of her
+days!"
+
+Now Gudruda wept aloud. "What is done is done," she cried; "the
+bridegroom sits within the hall--the bride awaits him in the bower. What
+is done is done--I may hope no more to be saved from Ospakar."
+
+"What is done is done, yet it can be brought to nothing; but soon that
+shall be done which may never be undone! Gudruda, fare thee well!
+Never shall I listen to thy voice again. I hold thee shameless, thou
+unfaithful woman, who in thy foolish jealousy art ready to sell thyself
+to the arms of one thou hatest! Ho! carles; come hither. Bear me hence!"
+
+Now the men came in and took up Saevuna's chair. Gudruda watched them
+bear her forth. Then suddenly she sprang from her seat and ran after her
+into the hall, weeping bitterly.
+
+Now as Saevuna, Eric's mother, was carried out she was met by Ospakar
+and Bjrn.
+
+"Stay," said Bjrn. "What does this carline here?--and why weeps
+Gudruda, my sister?"
+
+The men halted. "Who calls me 'carline'?" said Saevuna. "Is the voice I
+hear the voice of Bjrn, Asmund's son?"
+
+"It is my voice, truly," said Bjrn, "and I would know this--and this
+would Ospakar, who stands at my side, know also--why thou comest here,
+carline? and why Gudruda weeps?"
+
+"Gudruda weeps because she has good cause to weep, Bjrn. She weeps
+because she has betrayed her love, Eric Brighteyes, my son, and is about
+to be sold in marriage--to be sold to thee, Ospakar Blacktooth, like a
+heifer at a fair."
+
+Then Bjrn grew angry and cursed Saevuna, nor did Ospakar spare to add
+his ill words. But the old dame sat in her chair, listening silently
+till all their curses were spent.
+
+"Ye are evil, the twain of you," she said, "and ye have told lies of
+Eric, my son; and ye have taken his bride for lust and greed, playing on
+the jealous folly of a maid like harpers on a harp. Now I tell you
+this, Bjrn and Ospakar! My blind eyes are opened and I see this hall
+of Middalhof, and lo! it is but a gore of blood! Blood flows upon
+the board--blood streams along the floor, and ye--ye twain!--lie
+dead thereon, and about your shapes are shrouds, and on her feet are
+Hell-shoon! Eric comes and Whitefire is aloft, and no more shall ye
+stand before him whom ye have slandered than stands the birch before the
+lightning stroke! Eric comes! I see his angry eyes--I see his helm flash
+in the door-place! Red was that marriage-feast at which sat Unna, my
+kinswoman, and Asmund, thy father--redder shall be the feast where sit
+Gudruda, thy sister, and Ospakar! The wolf howls at thy door, Bjrn! the
+grave-worm opens his mouth! trolls run to and fro upon thy threshold,
+and the ghosts of men speed Hellwards! Ill were the deeds of Groa--worse
+shall be the deeds of Groa's daughter! Red is thy hall with blood,
+Bjrn!--for Whitefire is aloft and--_I tell thee Eric comes!_"--and with
+one great cry she fell back--dead.
+
+Now they stood amazed, and trembling in their fear.
+
+"Saevuna hath spoken strange words," said Bjrn.
+
+"Shall we be frightened by a dead hag?" quoth Ospakar, drawing his
+breath again. "Fellows, bear this carrion forth, or we fling it to the
+dogs."
+
+Then the men tied the body of Saevuna, Thorgrimur's widow, Eric's
+mother, fast in the chair, and bore it thence. But when at length
+they came to Coldback, they found that Swanhild was there with all her
+following, and had driven Eric's grieve and his folk to the fells. But
+one old carline, who had been nurse to Eric, was left there, and she sat
+wailing in an outhouse, being too weak to move.
+
+Then the men set down the corpse of Saevuna in the outhouse, and, having
+told all their tale to the carline, they fled also.
+
+That night passed, and passed the morrow; but on the next day at dawn
+Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail landed near Westman Isles. They
+had made a bad passage from Fareys, having been beat about by contrary
+winds; but at length they came safe and well to land.
+
+Now this was the day of the marriage-feast of Gudruda the Fair and
+Ospakar; but Eric knew nothing of these tidings.
+
+"Where to now, lord?" said Skallagrim.
+
+"To Coldback first, to see my mother, if she yet lives, and to learn
+tidings of Gudruda. Then as it may chance."
+
+Near to the beach was a yeoman's house. Thither they went to hire
+horses; but none were in the house, for all had gone to Gudruda's
+marriage-feast. In the home meadow ran two good horses, and in the
+outhouses were saddles and bridles. They caught the horses, saddled them
+and rode for Coldback. When they had ridden for something over an hour
+they came to the crest of a height whence they could see Coldback in the
+Marsh.
+
+Eric drew rein and looked, and his heart swelled within him at the sight
+of the place where he was born. But as he looked he saw a great train of
+people ride away from Coldback towards Middalhof--and in the company a
+woman wearing a purple cloak.
+
+"Now what may this mean?" said Eric.
+
+"Ride on and we shall learn," answered Skallagrim.
+
+So they rode on, and as they rode Eric's breast grew heavy with fear.
+Now they passed up the banked way through the home meadows of the house,
+but they could see no one; and now they were at the door. Down sprang
+Eric and walked into the hall. But none were there to greet him, though
+a fire yet burned upon the earth. Only a gaunt hound wandered about the
+hall, and, seeing him, sprang towards him, growling. Eric knew him for
+his old wolf-hound, and called him by his name. The dog listened, then
+ran up and smelt his hands, and straightway howled with joy and leapt
+upon him. For a while he leapt thus, while Eric stared around him
+wondering and sad at heart. Then the dog ran to the door and stopped,
+whining. Eric followed after him. The hound passed through the entrance,
+and across the yard till he came to an outhouse. Here the dog stopped
+and scratched at the door, still whining. Eric thrust it open. Lo! there
+before him sat Saevuna, his mother, dead in a chair, and at her feet
+crouched the carline--she who had been Eric's nurse.
+
+Now he grasped the door-posts to steady himself, and his shadow fell
+upon the white face of his mother and the old carline at her feet.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+HOW ERIC WAS A GUEST AT THE WEDDING-FEAST OF GUDRUDA THE FAIR
+
+Eric looked, but said nothing.
+
+"Who art thou?" whined the carline, gazing up at him with tear-blinded
+eyes. But Eric's face was in the shadow, and she only saw the glint of
+his golden hair and the flash of the golden helm. For Eric could not
+speak yet a while.
+
+"Art thou one of the Swanhild's folk, come to drive me hence with the
+rest? Good sir, I cannot go to the fells, my limbs are too weak. Slay
+me, if thou wilt, but drive me not from this," and she pointed to the
+corpse. "Say now, will thou not help me to give it burial? It is unmeet
+that she who in her time had husband, and goods, and son, should lie
+unburied like a dead cow on the fells. I have still a hundred in silver,
+if I might but come at it. It is hidden, sir, and I will pay thee if
+thou wilt help me to bury her. These old hands are too feeble to dig a
+grave, nor could I bear her there alone if it were dug. Thou wilt not
+help me?--then may thine own mother's bones lie uncovered, and be picked
+of gulls and ravens. Oh, that Eric Brighteyes would come home again! Oh,
+that Eric was here! there is work to do and never a man to do it."
+
+Now Eric gave a great sob and cried, "Nurse, nurse! knowest thou me not!
+_I_ am Eric Brighteyes."
+
+She uttered a loud cry, and, clasping him by the knees, looked up into
+his face.
+
+"Thanks be to Odin! Thou art Eric--Eric come home again! But alas, thou
+hast come too late!"
+
+"What has happened, then?" said Eric.
+
+"What has happened? All evil things. Thou art outlawed, Eric, at the
+suit of Swanhild for the slaying of Atli the Earl. Swanhild sits here in
+Coldback, for she hath seized thy lands. Saevuna, thy mother, died
+two days ago in the hall of Middalhof, whither she went to speak with
+Gudruda."
+
+"Gudruda! what of Gudruda?" cried Eric.
+
+"This, Brighteyes: to-day she weds Ospakar Blacktooth."
+
+Eric covered his face with his hand. Presently he lifted it.
+
+"Thou art rich in evil tidings, nurse, though, it would seem, poor in
+all besides. Tell me at what hour is the wedding-feast?"
+
+"An hour after noon, Eric; but now Swanhild has ridden thither with her
+company."
+
+"Then room must be found at Middalhof for one more guest," said
+Eric, and laughed aloud. "Go on!--pour out thy evil news and spare
+me not!--for nothing has any more power to harm me now! Come hither,
+Skallagrim, and see and hearken."
+
+Skallagrim came and looked on the face of dead Saevuna.
+
+"I am outlawed at Swanhild's suit, Lambstail. My life lies in thy hand,
+if so be thou wouldst take it! Hew off my head, if thou wilt, and
+bear it to Gudruda the Fair--she will thank thee for the gift. Lay on,
+Lambstail; lay on with that axe of thine."
+
+"Child's talk!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"Child's talk, but man's work! Thou hast not heard the tale out.
+Swanhild hath seized my lands and sits here at Coldback! And--what
+thinkest thou, Skallagrim?--but now she has ridden a-guesting to the
+marriage-feast of Ospakar Blacktooth with Gudruda the Fair! Swanhild at
+Gudruda's wedding!--the eagle in the wild swan's nest! But there will be
+another guest," and again he laughed aloud.
+
+"_Two_ other guests," said Skallagrim.
+
+"More of thy tale, old nurse!--more of thy tale!" quoth Eric. "No better
+didst thou ever tell me when, as a lad, I sat by thee, in the ingle o'
+winter nights--and the company is fitting to the tale!" and he pointed
+to dead Saevuna.
+
+Then the carline told on. She told how Hall of Lithdale had come out to
+Iceland, and of the story that he bore to Gudruda, and of the giving of
+the lock of hair.
+
+"What did I say, lord?" broke in Skallagrim--"that in Hall thou hadst
+let a weasel go who would live to nip thee?"
+
+"Him I will surely live to shorten by a head," quoth Eric.
+
+"Nay, lord, this one for me--Ospakar for thee, Hall for me!"
+
+"As thou wilt, Baresark. Among so many there is room to pick and choose.
+Tell on, nurse!"
+
+Then she told how Swanhild came out to Iceland, and, having won Ospakar
+Blacktooth and Gizur to her side, had laid a suit against Eric at the
+Thing, and there bore false witness against him, so that Brighteyes was
+declared outlaw, being absent. She told, too, how Gudruda had betrothed
+herself to Ospakar, and how Swanhild had moved down to Coldback and
+seized the lands. Lastly she told of the rising of Saevuna from her
+deathbed, of her going to Middalhof, of the words she spoke to Bjrn and
+Ospakar, and of her death in the hall at Middalhof.
+
+When all was told, Eric stooped and kissed the cold brow of his mother.
+
+"There is little time to bury thee now, my mother," he said, "and
+perchance before six hours are sped there will be one to bury at thy
+side. Nevertheless, thou shalt sit in a better place than this."
+
+Then he cut loose the cords that bound the body of Saevuna to the chair,
+and, lifting it in his arms, bore it to the hall. There he set the
+corpse in the high seat of the hall.
+
+"We need not start yet a while, Skallagrim," said Eric, "if indeed thou
+wouldst go a-guesting with me to Middalhof. Therefore let us eat and
+drink, for there are deeds to do this day."
+
+So they found meat and mead and ate and drank. Then Eric washed himself,
+combed out his golden locks, and looked well to his harness and
+to Whitefire's edge. Skallagrim also ground his great axe upon the
+whetstone in the yard, singing as he ground. When all was ready, the
+horses were caught, and Eric spoke to the carline:
+
+"Hearken, nurse. If it may be that thou canst find any of our folk--and
+perchance now that they see that Swanhild has ridden to Middalhof some
+one of them will come down to spy--thou shalt say this to them. Thou
+shalt say that, if Eric Brighteyes yet lives, he will be at the foot of
+Mosfell to-morrow before midday, and if, for the sake of old days and
+fellowship, they are minded to befriend a friendless man, let them come
+thither with food, for by then food will be needed, and I will speak
+with them. And now farewell," and Eric kissed her and went, leaving her
+weeping.
+
+As it chanced, before another hour was sped, Jon, Eric's thrall, who had
+stayed at home in Iceland, seeing Coldback empty, crept down from the
+fells and looked in. The carline saw him, and told him these tidings.
+Then he went thence to find the other men. Having found them he told
+them Eric's words, and a great gladness came upon them when they learned
+that Brighteyes still lived, and was in Iceland. Then they gathered
+food and gear, and rode away to the foot of Mosfell that is now called
+Ericsfell.
+
+
+
+Ospakar sat in the hall at Middalhof, near to the high seat. He was
+fully armed, and a black helm with a raven's crest was on his head.
+For, though he said nothing of it, not a little did he fear that Saevuna
+spoke sooth--that her words would come true, and, before this day was
+done, he and Eric should once more stand face to face. At his side
+sat Gudruda the Fair, robed in white, a worked head-dress on her head,
+golden clasps upon her breast and golden rings about her arms. Never had
+she been more beautiful to see; but her face was whiter than her robes.
+She looked with loathing on Blacktooth at her side, rough like a bear,
+and hideous as a troll. But he looked on her with longing, and laughed
+from side to side of his great mouth when he thought that at last he had
+got her for his own.
+
+"Ah, if Eric would but come, faithless though he be!--if Eric would
+but come!" thought Gudruda; but no Eric came to save her. The guests
+gathered fast, and presently Swanhild swept in with all her company,
+wrapped about in her purple cloak. She came up to the high seat where
+Gudruda sat, and bent the knee before her, looking on her with lovely
+mocking face and hate in her blue eyes.
+
+"Greeting, Gudruda, my sister!" she said. "When last we met I sat,
+Atli's bride, where to-day thou sittest the bride of Ospakar. Then
+Eric Brighteyes held thy hand, and little thou didst think of wedding
+Ospakar. Now Eric is afar--so strangely do things come about--and
+Blacktooth, Brighteyes' foe, holds that fair hand of thine."
+
+Gudruda looked on her and turned whiter yet in her pain, but she
+answered never a word.
+
+"What! no word for me, sister?" said Swanhild. "And yet it is through me
+that thou comest to this glad hour. It is through me that thou art rid
+of Eric, and it is I who have given thee to the arms of mighty Ospakar.
+No word of thanks for so great a service!--fie on thee, Gudruda! fie!"
+
+Then Gudruda spoke: "Strange tales are told of thee and Eric, Groa's
+daughter! I have done with Eric, but I have done with thee also. Thou
+hast thrust thyself here against my will and, if I may, I would see thy
+face no more."
+
+"Wouldst thou see Eric's face, Gudruda?--say, wouldst see Eric's face? I
+tell thee it is fair!"
+
+But Gudruda answered nothing, and Swanhild fell back, laughing.
+
+Now the feast began, and men waxed merry. But ever Gudruda's heart grew
+heavier, for in it echoed those words that Saevuna had spoken. Her eyes
+were dim, and she seemed to see naught but the face of Eric as it had
+looked when he came back to her that day on the brink of Goldfoss Falls
+and she had thought him dead. Oh! what if he still loved her and were
+yet true at heart? Swanhild mocked her!--what if this was a plot of
+Swanhild's? Had not Swanhild plotted aforetime, and could a wolf cease
+from ravening or a witch from witch-work? Nay, she had seen Eric's
+hair--that he had sworn none save she should touch! Perchance he had
+been drugged, and the hair shorn from him in his sleep? Too late to
+think! Of what use was thought?--beside her sat Ospakar, in one short
+hour she would be his. Ah! that she could see him dead--the troll who
+had trafficked her to shame, the foe she had summoned in her wrath and
+jealousy! She had done ill--she had fallen into Swanhild's snare, and
+now Swanhild came to mock her!
+
+The feast went on--cup followed cup. Now they poured the bride-cup!
+Before her heart beat two hundred times she would be the wife of
+Ospakar!
+
+Blacktooth took the cup--pledged her in it, and drank deep. Then he
+turned and strove to kiss her. But Gudruda shrank from him with horror
+in her eyes, and all men wondered. Still she must drink the bridal cup.
+She took it. Dimly she saw the upturned faces, faintly she heard the
+murmur of a hundred voices.
+
+What was that voice she caught above them all--there--without the hall?
+
+Holding the cup in her hand, Gudruda bent forward, staring down the
+skali. Then she cried aloud, pointing to the door, and the cup fell
+clattering from her hand and rolled along the ground.
+
+Men turned and looked. They saw this: there on the threshold stood a
+man, glorious to look at, and from his winged helm of gold the rays of
+light flashed through the dusky hall. The man was great and beautiful to
+see. He had long yellow hair bound in about his girdle, and in his left
+hand he held a pointed shield, in his right a spear, and at his thigh
+there hung a mighty sword. Nor was he alone, for by his side, a broad
+axe on his shoulder and shield in hand, stood another man, clad in
+black-hued mail--a man well-nigh as broad and big, with hawk's eyes,
+eagle beak, and black hair streaked with grey.
+
+For a moment there was silence. Then a voice spoke:
+
+"Lo! here be the Gods Baldur and Thor!--come from Valhalla to grace the
+marriage-feast!"
+
+Then the man with golden hair cried aloud in a voice that made the
+rafters ring:
+
+"Here are Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail, his thrall, come
+from over sea to grace the feast, indeed!"
+
+"I could have looked for no worse guests," said Bjrn, beneath his
+breath, and rose to bid men thrust them out. But before he could speak,
+lo! gold-helmed Eric and black-helmed Skallagrim were stalking up the
+length of that great hall. Side by side they stalked, with faces fierce
+and cold; nor stayed they till they stood before the high seat. Eric
+looked up and round, and the light of his eyes was as the light of a
+sword. Men marvelled at his greatness and his wonderful beauty, and to
+Gudruda he seemed like a God.
+
+"Here I see faces that are known to me," said Eric. "Greetings,
+comrades!"
+
+"Greetings, Brighteyes!" shouted the Middalhof folk and the company of
+Swanhild; but the carles of Ospakar laid hand on sword--they too knew
+Eric. For still all men loved Eric, and the people of his quarter were
+proud of the deeds he had done oversea.
+
+"Greeting, Bjrn, Asmund's son!" quoth Eric. "Greeting, Ospakar
+Blacktooth! Greeting, Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's witch-wife--Groa's
+witch-bairn! Greeting, Hall of Lithdale, Hall the liar--Hall who cut
+the grapnel-chain! And to thee, sweet Bride, to thee Gudruda the Fair,
+greeting!"
+
+Now Bjrn spoke: "I will take no greeting from a shamed and outlawed
+man. Get thee gone, Eric Brighteyes, and take thy wolf-hound with thee,
+lest thou bidest here stiff and cold."
+
+"Speak not so loud, rat, lest hound's fang worry thee!" growled
+Skallagrim.
+
+But Eric laughed aloud and cried--
+
+"Words must be said, and perchance men shall die, ere ever I leave this
+hall, Bjrn!"
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+HOW THE FEAST WENT
+
+"Hearken all men!" said Eric.
+
+"Thrust him out!" quoth Bjrn.
+
+"Nay, cut him down!" said Ospakar, "he is an outlawed man."
+
+"Words first, then deeds," answered Skallagrim. "Thou shalt have thy
+fill of both, Blacktooth, before day is done."
+
+"Let Eric say his say," said Gudruda, lifting her head. "He has been
+doomed unheard, and it is my will that he shall say his say."
+
+"What hast thou to do with Eric?" snarled Ospakar.
+
+"The bride-cup is not yet drunk, lord," she answered.
+
+"To thee, then, I will speak, lady," quoth Eric. "How comes it that,
+being betrothed to me, thou dost sit there the bride of Ospakar?"
+
+"Ask of Swanhild," said Gudruda in a low voice. "Ask also of Hall of
+Lithdale yonder, who brought me Swanhild's gift from Straumey."
+
+"I must ask much of Hall and he must answer much," said Eric. "What
+tale, then, did he bring thee from Straumey?"
+
+"He said this, Eric," Gudruda answered: "that thou wast Swanhild's love;
+that for Swanhild's sake thou hadst basely killed Atli the Good, and
+that thou wast about to wed Swanhild's self and take the Earl's seat in
+Orkneys."
+
+"And for what cause was I made outlaw at the Althing?"
+
+"For this cause, Eric," said Bjrn, "that thou hadst dealt evilly with
+Swanhild, bringing her to shame against her will, and thereafter that
+thou hadst slain the Earl, her husband."
+
+"Which, then, of these tales is true? for both cannot be true," said
+Brighteyes. "Speak, Swanhild."
+
+"Thou knowest well that the last is true," said Swanhild boldly.
+
+"How then comes it that thou didst charge Hall with that message to
+Gudruda? How then comes it that thou didst send her the lock of hair
+which thou didst cozen me to give thee?"
+
+"I charged Hall with no message, and I sent no lock of hair," Swanhild
+answered.
+
+"Stand thou forward, Hall!" said Eric, "and liar and coward though thou
+art, dare not to speak other than the truth! Nay, look not at the door:
+for, if thou stirrest, this spear shall find thee before thou hast gone
+a pace!"
+
+Now Hall stood forward, trembling with fear, for he saw the eye of
+Skallagrim watching him close, and while Lambstail watched, his fingers
+toyed with the handle of his axe.
+
+"It is true, lord, that Swanhild charged me with that message which I
+gave to the Lady Gudruda. Also she bade me give the lock of hair."
+
+"And for this service thou didst take money, Hall?"
+
+"Ay, lord, she gave me money for my faring."
+
+"And all the while thou knewest the tidings false?"
+
+Hall made no reply.
+
+"Answer!" thundered Eric--"answer the truth, knave, or by every God that
+passes the hundred gates I will not spare thee twice!"
+
+"It is so, lord," said Hall.
+
+"Thou liest, fox!" cried Swanhild, white with wrath and casting a fierce
+look upon Hall. But men took no heed of Swanhild's words, for all eyes
+were bent on Eric.
+
+"Is it now your pleasure, comrades, that I should tell you the truth?"
+said Brighteyes.
+
+The most part of the company shouted "Yea!" but the men of Ospakar stood
+silent.
+
+"Speak on, Eric," quoth Gudruda.
+
+"This is the truth, then: Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's wife, has
+always sought my love, and she has ever hated Gudruda whom I loved. From
+a child she has striven to work mischief between us. Ay, and she did
+this, though till now it has been hidden: she strove to murder Gudruda;
+it was on the day that Skallagrim and I overcame Ospakar and his band
+on Horse-Head Heights. She thrust Gudruda from the brink of Golden Falls
+while she sat looking on the waters, and as she hung there I dragged her
+back. Is it not so, Gudruda?"
+
+"It is so," said Gudruda.
+
+Now men murmured and looked at Swanhild. But she shrank back, plucking
+at her purple cloak.
+
+"It was for this cause," said Eric, "that Asmund, Swanhild's father,
+gave her choice to wed Atli the Earl and pass over sea or to take her
+trial in the Doom-Ring. She wedded Atli and went away. Afterwards, by
+witchcraft, she brought my ship to wreck on Straumey's Isle--ay, she
+walked the waters like a shape of light and lured us on to ruin, so
+that all were drowned except Skallagrim and myself. Is it not so,
+Skallagrim?"
+
+"It is so, lord. I saw her with my eyes."
+
+Again folk murmured.
+
+"Then we must sit in Atli's hall," said Eric, "and there we dwelt last
+winter. For a while Swanhild did no harm, till I feared her no more.
+But some three months ago, I was left with her: and a man called Koll,
+Groa's thrall, of whom ye know, came out from Iceland, bringing news
+of the death of Asmund the priest, of Unna my cousin, and of Groa the
+witch. To these ill-tidings Swanhild bribed him to add something. She
+bribed him to add this: that thou, Gudruda, wast betrothed to Ospakar,
+and wouldst wed him on last Yule Day. Moreover, he gave me a certain
+message from thee, Gudruda, and, in token of its truth, the half of that
+coin which I broke with thee long years ago. Say now, lady, didst thou
+send the coin?"
+
+"Nay, never!" cried Gudruda; "many years ago I lost the half thou gavest
+me, though I feared to tell thee."
+
+"Perchance one stands there who found it," said Eric, pointing with his
+spear at Swanhild. "At the least I was deceived by it. Now the tale is
+short. Swanhild mourned with me, and in my sorrow I mourned bitterly.
+Then it was she asked a boon, that lock of mine, Gudruda, and, thinking
+thee faithless, I gave it, holding all oaths broken. Then too, when
+I would have left her, she drugged me with a witch-draught--ay, she
+drugged me, and I woke to find myself false to my oath, false to Atli,
+and false to thee, Gudruda. I cursed her and I left her, waiting for
+the Earl, to tell him all. But Swanhild outwitted me. She told him
+that other tale of shame that ye have heard, and brought Koll to him as
+witness of the tale. Atli was deceived by her, and not until I had cut
+him down in anger at the bitter words he spoke, calling me coward and
+niddering, did he know the truth. But before he died he knew it; and
+he died, holding my hand and bidding those about him find Koll and slay
+him. Is it not so, ye who were Atli's men?"
+
+"It is so, Eric!" they cried; "we heard it with our own ears, and we
+slew Koll. But afterwards Swanhild brought is to believe that Earl Atli
+was distraught when he spoke thus, and that things were indeed as she
+had said."
+
+Again men murmured, and a strange light shone in Gudruda's eyes.
+
+"Now, Gudruda, thou hast heard all my story," said Eric. "Say, dost thou
+believe me?"
+
+"I believe thee, Eric."
+
+"Say then, wilt thou still wed yon Ospakar?"
+
+Gudruda looked on Blacktooth, then she looked at golden Eric and opened
+her lips to speak. But before a word could pass them Ospakar rose in
+wrath, laying his hand upon his sword.
+
+"Thinkest thou thus to lure away my dove, outlaw? First I will see thee
+food for crows."
+
+"Well spoken, Blacktooth," laughed Eric. "I waited for such words from
+thee. Thrice have we striven together--once out yonder in the snow, once
+on Horse-Head Heights, and once by Westman Isles--and still we live
+to tell the tale. Come down, Ospakar: come down from that soft seat of
+thine and here and now let us put it to the proof who is the better man.
+When we met before, the stake was Whitefire set against my eye. Now the
+stake is our lives and fair Gudruda's hand. Talk no more, Ospakar, but
+fall to it."
+
+"Gudruda shall never wed thee, while I live!" said Bjrn; "thou art a
+landless loon, a brawler, and an outlaw. Get thee gone, Eric, with thy
+wolf-hound!"
+
+"Squeak not so loud, rat--squeak not so loud, lest hound's fang worry
+thee!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"Whether I wed Gudruda or whether I wed her not is a matter that shall
+be known in its season," said Eric. "For thy words, I say this: that it
+is risky to hurl names at such as I am, Bjrn, lest perchance I answer
+them with spear-thrusts. Thy answer, Ospakar! What need to wait? Thy
+answer!"
+
+Now Ospakar looked at Brighteyes and grew afraid. He was a mighty man,
+but he knew the weight of Eric's arm.
+
+"I will not fight with thee, carle," he said, "who hast naught to lose."
+
+"Then thou art coward and niddering!" said Eric. "Ospakar _Niddering_ I
+name thee here before all men! What! thou couldst plot against me--thou
+couldst waylay me, ten to one and two ships to one, but face to face
+with me alone thou dost not dare to stand? Comrades, look on your
+lord!--look at Ospakar the _Niddering!_"
+
+Now the swarthy brow of Blacktooth grew red with rage, and his breath
+came in great gasps. "Ho, men!" he cried, "drive this knave away. Strip
+his harness off him and whip him hence with rods."
+
+"Let but a man stir towards me and this spear flies through thy heart,
+Niddering," cried Eric. "Gudruda, what thinkest thou of thy lord?"
+
+"I know this," said Gudruda, "that I will not wed a man who is named
+'Niddering' in the face of all and lifts no sword."
+
+Gudruda spoke thus, because she was mad with love and fear and shame,
+and she desired that Eric should stand face to face with Ospakar
+Blacktooth, for thus, alone, she might perhaps be rid of Ospakar.
+
+"Such words do not come well from gentle lips," said Bjrn.
+
+"Is it to be borne, brother," answered Gudruda, "that the man who would
+call me wife should be named Ospakar the Niddering? When that shame is
+washed away, and then only, can I think on marriage. I will never be
+Niddering's bride!"
+
+"Thou hearest, Ospakar Niddering?" said Eric. Then he gave the spear
+in his hand to Skallagrim, and, gripping Whitefire's hilt, he burst the
+peace-strings, and tore it from the scabbard.
+
+Now the great sword shone on high like lightning leaping from a cloud,
+and as it shone men shouted, "_Ospakar! Ospakar Niddering!_ Come, win
+back Whitefire from Eric's hand, or be for ever shamed!"
+
+Blacktooth could endure this no more. He snatched sword and shield, and,
+like a bear from a cave, like a wolf from his lair, rushed roaring from
+his seat. On he came, and the ground shook beneath his bulk.
+
+"At last, Niddering!" cried Eric, and sprang to meet him.
+
+"Back! all men, back!" shouted Skallagrim, "now we shall see blows."
+
+As he spoke the great swords flashed aloft and clanged upon the iron
+shields. So heavy were the blows that fire leapt out from them. Ospakar
+reeled back beneath the shock, and Eric was beaten to his knee. Now he
+was up, but as he rushed, Ospakar struck again and swept away half of
+Brighteyen's pointed shield so that it fell upon the floor. Eric smote
+also, but Ospakar dropped his knee to earth and the sword hissed over
+him. Blacktooth cut at Eric's legs; but Brighteyes sprang from the
+ground and took no harm.
+
+Now some cried, "_Eric! Eric!_" and some cried "_Ospakar! Ospakar!_" for
+no one knew how the fight would go.
+
+Gudruda sat watching in the high seat, and as blows fell her colour came
+and went.
+
+Swanhild drew near, watching also, and she desired in her fierce heart
+to see Eric brought to shame and death, for, should he win, then Gudruda
+would be rid of Ospakar. Now by her side stood Gizur, Ospakar's son,
+and near to her was Bjrn. These two held their breath, for, if Eric
+conquered, all their plans were brought to nothing.
+
+Even as he sprang into the air, Eric smote down with all his strength.
+The blow fell on Ospakar's shield. It shore through the shield and
+struck on the shoulder beneath. But Blacktooth's byrnie was good, nor
+did the sword bite into it. Still the stroke was so heavy that Ospakar
+staggered back four paces beneath it, then fell upon the ground.
+
+Now folk raised a shout of "_Eric! Eric!_" for it seemed that Ospakar
+was sped. Brighteyes, too, cried aloud, then rushed forward. Now, as he
+came, Swanhild whispered an eager word into the ear of Bjrn. By Bjrn's
+foot lay that half of Eric's shield which had been shorn away by the
+sword of Ospakar. Gudruda, watching, saw Bjrn push it with his shoe so
+that it slid before the feet of Brighteyes. His right foot caught on it,
+he stumbled heavily--stumbled again, then fell prone on his face,
+and, as he fell, stretched out his sword hand to save himself, so that
+Whitefire flew from his grasp. The blade struck its hilt against the
+ground, then circled in the air and fixed itself, point downwards, in
+the clay of the flooring. The hand of Ospakar rising from the ground
+smote against the hilt of Whitefire. He saw it, with a shout he cast his
+own sword away and clasped Whitefire.
+
+Away circled the sword of Ospakar; and of that cast this strange thing
+is told, false or true. Far in the corner of the hall lurked Thorunna,
+she who had betrayed Skallagrim when he was named Ounound. She had come
+with a heavy heart to Middalhof in the company of Ospakar; but when she
+saw Skallagrim, her husband--whom she had betrayed, and who had turned
+Baresark because of her wickedness--shame smote her, and she crept away
+and hid herself behind the hangings of the hall. The sword sped along
+point first, it rushed like a spear through the air. It fell on the
+hangings, piercing them, piercing the heart of Thorunna, who cowered
+behind them, so that with one cry she sank dead to earth, slain by her
+lover's hand.
+
+
+
+Now when men saw that Ospakar once more held Whitefire in his
+hand--Whitefire that Brighteyes had won from him--they called aloud that
+it was an omen. The sword of Blacktooth had come back to Blacktooth and
+now Eric would surely be slain of it!
+
+Eric sprang from the ground. He heard the shouts and saw Whitefire
+blazing in Ospakar's hand.
+
+"Now thou art weaponless, fly! Brighteyes; fly!" cried some.
+
+Gudruda's cheek grew white with fear, and for a moment Eric's heart
+failed him.
+
+"Fly not!" roared Skallagrim. "Bjrn tripped thee. Yet hast thou half a
+shield!"
+
+Ospakar rushed on, and Whitefire flickered over Eric's helm. Down it
+came and shore one wing from the helm. Again it shone and fell, but
+Brighteyes caught the blow on his broken shield.
+
+Then, while men waited to see him slain, Eric gave a great war-shout and
+sprang forward.
+
+"Thou art mad!" shouted the folk.
+
+"Ye shall see! Ye shall see!" screamed Skallagrim.
+
+Again Ospakar smote and again Eric caught the blow; and behold! he
+struck back, thrusting with the point of the shorn shield straight at
+the face of Ospakar.
+
+"_Peck! Eagle; peck!_" cried Skallagrim.
+
+Once more Whitefire shone above him. Eric rushed in beneath the
+sword, and with all his mighty strength thrust the buckler-point at
+Blacktooth's face. It struck fair and full, and lo! the helm of Ospakar
+burst asunder. He threw wide his giant arms, then fell as a pine falls
+upon the mountain edge. He fell back, and he lay still.
+
+But Eric, stooping over him, took Whitefire from his hand.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+HOW THE FEAST ENDED
+
+For a moment there was silence in the hall, for men had known no such
+fight as this.
+
+"Why, then, do ye gape?" laughed Skallagrim, pointing with the spear.
+"Dead is Ospakar!--slain by the swordless man! Eric Brighteyes hath
+slain Ospakar Blacktooth!"
+
+Then there went up such a shout as never was heard in the hall of
+Middalhof.
+
+Now when Gudruda knew that Ospakar was sped, she looked at Eric as he
+rested, leaning on his sword, and her heart was filled with awe and
+love. She sprang from her seat, and, coming to where Brighteyes stood,
+she greeted him.
+
+"Welcome to Iceland, Eric!" she said. "Welcome, thou glory of the
+south!"
+
+Now Swanhild grew wild, for she saw that Eric was about to take Gudruda
+in his arms and kiss her before all men.
+
+"Say, Bjrn," she cried; "wilt thou suffer that this outlaw, having
+slain Ospakar, should lead Gudruda hence as wife?"
+
+"He shall never do so while I live," cried Bjrn, nearly mad with rage.
+"This is my command, sister: that thou dost see Eric no more."
+
+"Say, Bjrn," answered Gudruda, "did I dream, or did I indeed see thee
+thrust the broken buckler before Eric's feet, so that he stumbled on it
+and fell?"
+
+"That thou sawest, lady," said Skallagrim; "for I saw it also."
+
+Now Bjrn grew white in his anger. He did not answer Gudruda, but called
+aloud to his men to slay Eric and Skallagrim. Gizur called also to the
+folk of Ospakar, and Swanhild to those who came with her.
+
+Then Gudruda fled back to her seat.
+
+But Eric cried aloud also: "Ye who love me, cleave to me. Suffer it not
+that Brighteyes be cut down of northerners and outland men. Hear me,
+Atli's folk; hear me, carles of Coldback and of Middalhof!"
+
+And so greatly did many love Eric that half of the thralls of Bjrn, and
+almost all of the company of Swanhild who had been Atli's shield-men and
+Brighteyes' comrades, drew swords, shouting "Eric! Eric!" But the carles
+of Ospakar came on to make an end of him.
+
+Bjrn saw, and, drawing sword, smote at Brighteyes, taking him unawares.
+But Skallagrim caught the blow upon his axe, and before Bjrn could
+smite again Whitefire was aloft and down fell Bjrn, dead!
+
+That was the end of Bjrn, Asmund's son.
+
+"Thou hast squeaked thy last, rat! What did I tell thee?" cried
+Skallagrim. "Take Bjrn's shield and back to back, lord, for here come
+foes."
+
+"There goes one," answered Eric, pointing to the door.
+
+Now Hall of Lithdale slunk through the doorway--Hall, the liar, who cut
+the grapnel-chain--for he wished to see the last of Skallagrim. But the
+Baresark still held Eric's spear in his hand. He whirled it aloft, and
+it hissed through the air. The aim was good, for, as he crept away,
+the spear struck Hall between neck and shoulder, pinning him to the
+doorpost, and there the liar died.
+
+"Now the weasel is nailed to the beam," said Skallagrim. "Hall of
+Lithdale, what did I promise thee?"
+
+"Guard thy head and my back," quoth Eric; "blows fall!"
+
+Now men smote at Eric and Skallagrim, nor did they spare to smite in
+turn. And as foes fell before him, Eric stepped one pace forward towards
+the door, and Skallagrim, who, back to back with him, held off those
+who pressed behind, took one step rearwards. Thus, a foe for every step,
+they won their way down the long hall. Fierce raged the fray around
+them, for, made with hate and drink and the lust of fight, Swanhild's
+folk--Eric's friends--remembering the words of Atli, fell on Ospakar's;
+and the people of Bjrn fell on each other, brother on brother, and
+father on son--nor might the fray be stayed. The boards were overthrown,
+dead men lay among the meats and mead, and the blood of freeman, lord
+and thrall ran adown the floor. Everywhere through the dusky hall
+glittered the sheen of flashing swords and rose the clang of war. Darts
+clove the air like tongues of flame, and the clamour of battle beat
+against the roof.
+
+Blinded of the Norns who brought these things to pass, men sought no
+mercy and they gave none, but smote and slew till few were left to slay.
+
+And still Gudruda sat in her bride-seat, and, with eyes fixed in horror,
+watched the waxing of the war. Near to her stood Swanhild, marking all
+things with a fierce-set face, and calling down curses on her folk, who
+one and all cried "Eric! Eric!" and swept the thralls of Ospakar as corn
+is swept of the sickle.
+
+And there, nigh to the door, pale of face and beautiful to see, golden
+Eric clove his way, and with him went black Skallagrim. Terrible was
+the flare of Whitefire as he flicked aloft like the levin in the cloud.
+Terrible was the flare of Whitefire; but more terrible was the light
+of Eric's eyes, for they seemed to flame in his head, and wherever that
+fire fell it lighted men the way to death. Whitefire sung and flickered,
+and crashed the axe of Skallagrim, and still through the press of war
+they won their way. Now Gizur stands before them, spear aloft, and
+Whitefire leaps up to meet him. Lo! he turns and flies. The coward son
+of Ospakar does not seek the fate of Ospakar!
+
+The door is won. They stand without but little harmed, while women wail
+aloud.
+
+"To horse!" cried Skallagrim; "to horse, ere our luck fail us!"
+
+"There is no luck in this," gasped Eric; "for I have slain many men, and
+among them is Bjrn, the brother of her whom I would make my bride."
+
+"Better one such fight than many brides," said Skallagrim, shaking his
+red axe. "We have won great glory this day, Brighteyes, and Ospakar is
+dead--slain by a swordless man!"
+
+
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim ran to their horses, none hindering them, and,
+mounting, rode towards Mosfell.
+
+All that evening and all the night they rode, and at morning they came
+across the black sand to Mosfell slopes that are by the Hecla. Here they
+rested, and, taking off their armour, washed themselves in the stream:
+for they were very weary and foul with blood and wounds. When they had
+finished washing and had buckled on their harness again, Skallagrim,
+peering across the plain with his hawk's eyes, saw men riding fast
+towards them.
+
+"Foes are soon afoot, lord," he said. "I thought we had stayed their
+hunger for a while."
+
+"Would that I might stay mine," quoth Eric. "I am weary, and unfit for
+fight."
+
+"I have still strength for one or two," said Skallagrim, "and then
+good-night! But these are no foes. They are of the Coldback folk. The
+carline has kept her word."
+
+Then Eric was glad, and presently six men, headed by Jon his thrall,
+the same man who had watched on Mosfell when Eric went up to slay the
+Baresark, rode to them and greeted them. "Beggar women," said Jon, "whom
+they met at Ran River, had told them of the death of Ospakar, and of
+the great slaying at Middalhof, and they would know if the tidings were
+true."
+
+"It is true, Jon," said Eric; "but first give us food, if ye have it,
+for we are hungered and spent. When we have eaten we will speak."
+
+So they led up a pack-horse and from it took stockfish and smoked meat,
+of which Eric and Skallagrim ate heartily, till their strength came back
+to them.
+
+Then Eric spoke. "Comrades," he said, "I am an outlawed man, and, though
+I have not sought it, much blood is on my head. Atli is dead at my hand;
+Ospakar is dead at my hand; Bjrn the Priest, Asmund's son, is dead at
+my hand, and with them many another man. Nor may the matter stay here,
+for Gizur, Blacktooth's son, yet lives, and Bjrn has kin in the south,
+and Swanhild will buy friends with gold, and all of these will set on me
+to slay me, so that at the last I die by the sword."
+
+"No need for that," said Skallagrim. "Our vengeance is wrought, and
+now, as before, the sea is open, and I think that a welcome awaits us in
+London."
+
+"Now Gudruda is widowed before she was fully wed," said Eric, "therefore
+I bide an outlawed man here in Iceland. I go hence no more, though it be
+death to stay, unless indeed Gudruda the Fair goes with me."
+
+"It will be death, then," said Skallagrim, "and the swords are forged
+that we shall feel. The odds are too heavy, lord."
+
+"Mayhap," answered Eric. "No man may flee his fate, and I shall not
+altogether grieve when mine finds me. Hearken, comrades: I go up to
+Mosfell height, and there I stay, till those be found who can drag me
+from my hole. But this is my counsel to you: that ye leave me to my
+doom, for I am an unlucky man who always chooses the wrong road."
+
+"That will not I," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Nor we," said Eric's folk; "Swanhild holds Coldback, and we are driven
+to the fells. To the fells then we will go with thee, Eric Brighteyes,
+and become cave-dwellers and outlaws for thy sake. Fear not, thou shalt
+still find many friends."
+
+"I did not look for such a thing at your hands," said Eric; "but stormy
+waters show how the boat is built. May no bad luck come to you from your
+good fellowship. And now let us to our nest."
+
+Then they caught the horses, and rode with Brighteyes up the steep
+side of Mosfell, till at length they came to that secret dell which
+Skallagrim had once shown to Eric. Here they turned the horses loose to
+feed, and, going forward on foot, reached the dark and narrow pass that
+Brighteyes had trod when he sought for the Baresark foe. Skallagrim led
+the way along it, then came Eric and the rest. One by one they stepped
+on to the giddy point of rock, and, catching at the birch-bush, entered
+the hole. So they gained the platform and the great cave beyond; and
+they found that no man had set foot there since the day when Eric had
+striven with Skallagrim. For there on the rock, rotten with the weather,
+lay that haft of wood which Brighteyes had hewed from the axe of
+Skallagrim, and in the cave were many things beside as the Baresark had
+left them.
+
+So they took up their dwelling in the cave, Eric, Skallagrim, and the
+six Coldback men, and there they dwelt many months. But Eric sent out
+his men, one at a time, and got together food and a store of sheepskins,
+and other needful things. For he knew this well: that Gizur and Swanhild
+would before long come up against them, and, if they could not take them
+by force, would set themselves to watch the mountain-path and starve
+them out.
+
+
+
+When Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Middalhof the fight still raged
+fiercely in the hall, and nothing but death might stay it. The minds of
+men were mad, and they smote one another, and slew each other, till
+at length of all that marriage company few were left unharmed, except
+Gizur, Swanhild, and Gudruda. For the serving thralls and womenfolk had
+fled the hall, and with them some peaceful men.
+
+Then Gudruda spoke as one in a dream.
+
+"Saevuna's prophecy was true," she said, "red was the marriage-feast of
+Asmund my father, redder has been the marriage-feast of Ospakar! She saw
+the hall of Middalhof one gore of blood, and lo! it is so; look upon thy
+work, Swanhild," and she pointed to the piled-up dead--"look upon thy
+work, witch-sister, and grow fearful: for all this death is on thy
+head!"
+
+Swanhild laughed aloud. "I think it a merry sight," she cried. "The
+marriage-feast of Asmund our father was red, and thy marriage-feast,
+Gudruda, has been redder. Would that thy blood and the blood of Eric
+ran with the blood of Bjrn and Ospakar! That tale must yet be told,
+Gudruda. There shall be binding on of Hell-shoes at Middalhof, but I
+bind them not. My task is still to come: for I will live to fasten the
+Hell-shoes on the feet of Eric, and on thy feet, Gudruda! At the least,
+I have brought about this much, that thou canst scarcely wed Eric the
+outlaw: for with his own hand he slew Bjrn our brother, and because
+of this I count all that death as nothing. Thou canst not mate with
+Brighteyes, lest the wide wounds of Bjrn thy brother should take
+tongues and cry thy shame from sea to sea!"
+
+Gudruda made no answer, but sat as one carved in stone. Then Swanhild
+spoke again:
+
+"Let us away to the north, Gizur; there to gather strength to make an
+end of Eric. Say, wilt thou help us, Gudruda? The blood-feud for the
+death of Bjrn is thine."
+
+"Ye are enough to bring about the fall of one unfriended man," Gudruda
+said. "Go, and leave me with my sorrow and the dead. Nay! before thou
+goest, listen, Swanhild, for there is that in my heart which tells me I
+shall never look again upon thy face. From evil to evil thou hast ever
+gone, Swanhild, and from evil to evil thou wilt go. It may well chance
+that thy wickedness will win. It may well chance that thou wilt crown
+thy crimes with my slaying and the slaying of the man who loves me. But
+I tell thee this, traitress--murderess, as thou art--that here the tale
+ends not. Not by death, Swanhild, shalt thou escape the deeds of life!
+_There_ they shall rise up against thee, and _there_ every shame that
+thou hast worked, every sin that thou hast sinned, and every soul that
+thou hast brought to Hela's halls, shall come to haunt thee and to drive
+thee on from age to age! That witchcraft which thou lovest shall mesh
+thee. Shadows shall bewilder thee; from the bowl of empty longings thou
+shalt drink and drink, and not be satisfied. Yea! lusts shall mock and
+madden thee. Thou shalt ride the winds, thou shalt sail the seas, but
+thou shalt find no harbour, and never shalt thou set foot upon a shore
+of peace.
+
+"Go on, Swanhild--dye those hands in blood--wade through the river of
+shame! Seek thy desire, and finding, lose! Work thy evil, and winning,
+fail! I yet shall triumph--I yet shall trample thee; and, in a place
+to come, with Eric at my side, I shall make a mock of Swanhild the
+murderess! Swanhild the liar, and the wanton, and the witch! Now get
+thee gone!"
+
+Swanhild heard. She looked up at Gudruda's face and it was alight
+as with a fire. She strove to answer, but no words came. Then Groa's
+daughter turned and went, and with her went Gizur.
+
+
+
+Now women and thralls came in and drew out the wounded and those who
+still breathed from among the dead, taking them to the temple. They bore
+away the body of Ospakar also, but they left the rest.
+
+
+
+All night long Gudruda sat in the bride's seat. There she sat in the
+silver summer midnight, looking on the slain who were strewn about the
+great hall. All night she sat alone in the bride's seat thinking--ever
+thinking.
+
+How, then, would it end? There her brother Bjrn lay a-cold--Bjrn the
+justly slain of Brighteyes; yet how could she wed the man who slew
+her brother? From Ospakar she was divorced by death; from Eric she was
+divorced by the blood of Bjrn her brother! How might she unravel this
+tangled skein and float to weal upon this sea of death? All things went
+amiss! The doom was on her! She had lived to an ill purpose--her love
+had wrought evil! What availed it to have been born to be fair among
+women and to have desired that which might not be? And she herself had
+brought these things to pass--she had loosed the rock which crushed her!
+Why had she hearkened to that false tale?
+
+Gudruda sat on high in the bride's seat, asking wisdom of the piled-up
+dead, while the cold blue shadows of the nightless night gathered over
+her and them--gathered, and waned, and grew at last to the glare of day.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+HOW ERIC VENTURED DOWN TO MIDDALHOF AND WHAT HE FOUND
+
+Gizur went north to Swinefell, and Swanhild went with him. For now that
+Ospakar was dead at Eric's hand, Gizur ruled in his place at Swinefell,
+and was the greatest lord in all the north. He loved Swanhild, and
+desired to make her his wife; but she played with him, talking darkly of
+what might be. Swanhild was not minded to be the wife of any man, except
+of Eric; to all others she was cold as the winter earth. Still, she
+fooled Gizur as she had fooled Atli the Good, and he grew blind with
+love of her. For still the beauty of Swanhild waxed as the moon waxes in
+the sky, and her wicked eyes shone as the stars shine when the moon has
+set.
+
+Now they came to Swinefell, and there Gizur buried Ospakar Blacktooth,
+his father, with much state. He set him in a chamber of rock and timbers
+on a mountain-top, whence he might see all the lands that once were his,
+and built up a great mound of earth above him. To this day people tell
+that here on Yule night black Ospakar bursts out, and golden Eric rides
+down the blast to meet him. Then come the clang of swords, and groans,
+and the sound of riven helms, till presently Brighteyes passes southward
+on the wind, bearing in his hand the half of a cloven shield.
+
+So Gizur bound the Hell-shoes on his father, and swore that he would
+neither rest nor stay till Eric Brighteyes was dead and dead was
+Skallagrim Lambstail. Then he gathered a great force of men and rode
+south to Coldback, to the slaying of Eric, and with him went Swanhild.
+
+
+
+Gudruda sat alone in the haunted hall of Middalhof and brooded on her
+love and on her fate. Eric, too, sat in Mosfell cave and brooded on his
+evil chance. His heart was sick with sorrow, and there was little that
+he could do except think about the past. He would not go to foray, after
+the fashion of outlaws, and there was no need of this. For the talk of
+his mighty deeds spread through the land, so that the people spoke of
+little else. And the men of his quarter were so proud of these deeds of
+Eric's that, though some of their kind had fallen at his hands in the
+great fight of Middalhof and some at the hands of Skallagrim, yet they
+spoke of him as men speak of a God. Moreover they brought him gifts of
+food and clothing and arms, as many as his people could carry away,
+and laid them in a booth that is on the plain near the foot of Mosfell,
+which thenceforth was named Ericsfell. Further, they bade his thralls
+tell him that, if he wished it, they would find him a good ship of war
+to take him from Iceland--ay, and man it with loyal men and true.
+
+Eric thanked them through Jon his thrall, but answered that he wished to
+die here in Iceland.
+
+
+
+Now, when Eric had sat two months and more in Mosfell cave and autumn
+was coming, he learned that Gizur and Swanhild had moved down to
+Coldback, and with them a great company of men who were sworn to slay
+him. He asked if Gudruda the Fair had also gathered men for his slaying.
+They told him no; that Gudruda stayed with her thralls and women at
+Middalhof, mourning for Bjrn her brother. From these tidings Eric took
+some heart of hope: at the least Gudruda laid no blood-feud against him.
+For he waited, thinking, if indeed she yet loved him, that Gudruda would
+send him some word or token of her love. But no word came, since between
+them ran the blood of Bjrn. On the morrow of these tidings Skallagrim
+spoke to Eric.
+
+"This is my counsel, lord," he said, "that we ride out by night and fall
+on the folk of Gizur at Coldback, and burn the stead over them, putting
+them to the sword. I am weary of sitting here like an eagle in a cage."
+
+"Such is no counsel of mine, Skallagrim," answered Brighteyes. "I am
+weary of sitting here, indeed; but I am yet more weary of bringing men
+to their death. I will shed no more blood, unless it is to save my own
+head. When the people of Gizur came to seek me on Mosfell, they shall
+find me here; but I will not go to them."
+
+"Thy heart is out of thee, lord," said Skallagrim; "thou wast not wont
+to speak thus."
+
+"Ay, Skallagrim," said Eric, "the heart is out of me. Yet I ride from
+Mosfell to-day."
+
+"Whither, lord?"
+
+"To Middalhof, to have speech with Gudruda the Fair."
+
+"Like enough, then, thou wilt be silent thereafter."
+
+"It well may be," said Eric. "Yet I will ride. I can bear this doubt no
+longer."
+
+"Then I shall come with thee," said Skallagrim.
+
+"As thou wilt," answered Eric.
+
+So at midday Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Mosfell in a storm of
+rain. The rain was so heavy that those of Gizur's spies who watched the
+mountain did not see them. All that day they rode and all the night,
+till by morning they came to Middalhof. Eric told Skallagrim to stay
+with the horses and let them feed, while he went on foot to see if by
+chance he might get speech with Gudruda. This the Baresark did, though
+he grumbled at the task, fearing lest Eric should be done to death, and
+he not there to die with him.
+
+Now Eric walked to within two bowshots of the house, then sat down in a
+dell by the river, from the edge of which he could see those who passed
+in and out. Presently his heart gave a leap, for there came out from the
+woman's door a lady tall and beautiful to see, and with golden hair
+that flowed about her breast. It was Gudruda, and he saw that she bore a
+napkin in her hand. Then Eric knew, according to her custom on the warm
+mornings, that she came alone to bathe in the river, as she had always
+done from a child. It was her habit to bathe here in this place: for at
+the bottom of the dell was a spot where reeds and bushes grew thick, and
+the water lay in a basin of rock and was clear and still. For at this
+spot a hot spring ran into the river.
+
+Eric went down the dell, hid himself close in the bushes and waited, for
+he feared to speak with Gudruda in the open field. A while passed, and
+presently the shadow of the lady crept over the edge of the dell, then
+she came herself in that beauty which since her day has not been known
+in Iceland. Her face was sad and sweet, her dark and lovely eyes were
+sad. On she came, till she stood within a spear's length of where Eric
+lay, crouched in the bush, and looking at her through the hedge of
+reeds. Here a flat rock overhung the water, and Gudruda sat herself
+on this rock, and, shaking off her shoes, dipped her white feet in the
+water. Then suddenly she threw aside her cloak, baring her arms, and,
+gazing upon the shadow of her beauty in the mirror of the water, sighed
+and sighed again, while Eric looked at her with a bursting heart, for as
+yet he could find no words to say.
+
+Now she spoke aloud. "Of what use to be so fair?" she said. "Oh,
+wherefore was I born so fair to bring death to many and sorrow on myself
+and him I love?" And she shook her golden hair about her arms of snow,
+and, holding the napkin to her eyes, wept softly. But it seemed to Eric
+that between her sobs she called upon his name.
+
+Now Eric could no longer bear the sight of Gudruda weeping. While she
+wept, hiding her eyes, he rose from behind the screen of reeds and stood
+beside her in such fashion that his shadow fell upon her. She felt the
+sunlight pass and looked up. Lo! it was no cloud, but the shape of Eric,
+and the sun glittered on his golden helm and hair.
+
+"Eric!" Gudruda cried; "Eric!" Then, remembering how she was attired,
+snatching her cloak, she threw it about her arms and thrust her wet feet
+into her shoes. "Out upon thee!" she said; "is it not enough, then, that
+thou shouldst break thy troth for Swanhild's sake, that thou shouldst
+slay my brother and turn my hall to shambles? Wouldst now steal upon me
+thus!"
+
+"Methought that thou didst weep and call upon my name, Gudruda," he said
+humbly.
+
+"By what right art thou here to hearken to my words?" she answered.
+"Is it, then, strange that I should speak the name of him who slew my
+brother? Is it strange that I should weep over that brother whom thou
+didst slay? Get thee gone, Brighteyes, before I call my folk to kill
+thee!"
+
+"Call on, Gudruda. I set little price upon my life. I laid it in the
+hands of chance when I came from Mosfell to speak with thee, and now I
+will pay it down if so it pleases thee. Fear not, thy thralls shall have
+an easy task: for I shall scarcely care to hold my own. Say, shall I
+call for thee?"
+
+"Hush! Speak not so loud! Folk may hear thee, Eric, and then thou wilt
+be in danger--I would say that, then shall ill things be told of me,
+because I am found with him who slew my brother?"
+
+"I slew Ospakar too, Gudruda. Surely the death of him by whose side thou
+didst sit as wife is more to thee than the death of Bjrn?"
+
+"The bride-cup was not yet drunk, Eric; therefore I have no blood-feud
+for Ospakar."
+
+"Is it, then, thy will that I should go, lady?"
+
+"Yes, go!--go! Never let me see thy face again!"
+
+Brighteyes turned without a word. He took three paces and Gudruda
+watched him as he went.
+
+"Eric!" she called. "Eric! thou mayest not go yet: for at this hour the
+thralls bring down the kine to milk, and they will see thee. Liest thou
+hid here. I--I will go. For though, indeed, thou dost deserve to die, I
+am not willing to bring thee to thy end--because of old friendship I am
+not willing!"
+
+"If thou goest, I will go also," said Eric. "Thralls or no thralls, I
+will go, Gudruda."
+
+"Thou art cruel to drive me to such a choice, and I have a mind to give
+thee to thy fate."
+
+"As thou wilt," said Eric; but she made as though she did not hear his
+words.
+
+"Now," she said, "if we must stay here, it is better that we hide where
+thou didst hide, lest some come upon thee." And she passed through the
+screen of rushes and sat down in a grassy place beyond, and spoke again.
+
+"Nay, sit not near me; sit yonder. I would not touch thee, nor look upon
+thee, who wast Swanhild's love, and didst slay Bjrn my brother."
+
+"Say, Gudruda," said Eric, "did I not tell thee of the magic arts of
+Swanhild? Did I not tell thee before all men yonder in the hall, and
+didst thou not say that thou didst believe my words? Speak."
+
+"That is true," said Gudruda.
+
+"Wherefore, then, dost thou taunt me with being Swanhild's love--with
+being the love of her whom of all alive I hate the most--and whose
+wicked guile has brought these sorrows on us?"
+
+But Gudruda did not answer.
+
+"And for this matter of the death of Bjrn at my hands, think, Gudruda:
+was I to blame in it? Did not Bjrn thrust the cloven shield before my
+feet, and thus give me into the hand of Ospakar? Did he not afterwards
+smite at me from behind, and would he not have slain me if Skallagrim
+had not caught the blow? Was I, then, to blame if I smote back and if
+the sword flew home? Wilt thou let the needful deed rise up against our
+love? Speak, Gudruda!"
+
+"Talk no more of love to me, Eric," she answered; "the blood of Bjrn
+has blotted out our love: it cries to me for vengeance. How may I speak
+of love with him who slew my brother? Listen!" she went on, looking on
+him sidelong, as one who wished to look and yet not seem to see: "here
+thou must hide an hour, and, since thou wilt not sit in silence, speak
+no tender words to me, for it is not fitting; but tell me of those
+deeds thou didst in the south lands over sea, before thou wentest to woo
+Swanhild and camest hither to kill my brother. For till then thou wast
+mine--till then I loved thee--who now love thee not. Therefore I would
+hear of the deeds of that Eric whom once I loved, before he became as
+one dead to me."
+
+"Heavy words, lady," said Eric--"words to make death easy."
+
+"Speak not so," she said; "it is unmanly thus to work upon my fears.
+Tell me those tidings of which I ask."
+
+So Eric told her all his deeds, though he showed small boastfulness
+about them. He told her how he had smitten the war-dragons of Ospakar,
+how he had boarded the Raven and with Skallagrim slain those who sailed
+in her. He told her also of his deeds in Ireland, and of how he took the
+viking ships and came to London town.
+
+And as he told, Gudruda listened as one who hung upon her lover's dying
+words, and there was but one light in the world for her, the light of
+Eric's eyes, and there was but one music, the music of his voice. Now
+she looked upon him sidelong no longer, but with open eyes and parted
+lips she drank in his words, and always, though she knew it not herself,
+she crept closer to his side.
+
+Then he told her how he had been greatly honoured of the King of
+England, and of the battles he had fought in at his side. Lastly, Eric
+told her how the King would have given him a certain great lady of royal
+blood in marriage, and how Edmund had been angered because he would not
+stay in England.
+
+"Tell me of this lady," said Gudruda, quickly. "Is she fair, and how is
+she named?"
+
+"She is fair, and her name is Elfrida," said Eric.
+
+"And didst thou have speech with her on this matter?"
+
+"Somewhat."
+
+Now Gudruda drew herself away from Eric's side.
+
+"What was the purport of thy speech?" she said, looking down. "Speak
+truly, Eric."
+
+"It came to little," he answered. "I told her that there was one in
+Iceland to whom I was betrothed, and to Iceland I must go."
+
+"And what said this Elfrida, then?"
+
+"She said that I should get little luck at the hands of Gudruda the
+Fair. Moreover, she asked, should my betrothed be faithless to me, or
+put me from her, if I should come again to England."
+
+Now Gudruda looked him in the face and spoke. "Say, Eric, is it in thy
+mind to sail for England in the spring, if thou canst escape thy foes so
+long?"
+
+Now Eric took counsel with himself, and in his love and doubt grew
+guileful as he had never been before. For he knew well that Gudruda had
+this weakness--she was a jealous woman.
+
+"Since thou dost put me from thee, that is in my mind, lady," he
+answered.
+
+Gudruda heard. She thought on the great and beauteous Lady Elfrida, far
+away in England, and of Eric walking at her side, and sorrow took hold
+of her. She said no word, but fixed her dark eyes on Brighteyes' face,
+and lo! they filled with tears.
+
+Eric might not bear this sight, for his heart beat within him as though
+it would burst the byrnie over it. Suddenly he stretched out his arms
+and swept her to his breast. Soft and sweet he kissed her, again and yet
+again, and she struggled not, though she wept a little.
+
+"It is small blame to me," she whispered, "if thou dost hold me on thy
+breast and kiss me, for thou art more strong than I. Bjrn must know
+this if his dead eyes see aught. Yet for thee, Eric, it is the greatest
+shame of all thy shames."
+
+"Talk not, my sweet; talk not," said Eric, "but kiss thou me: for thou
+knowest well that thou lovest me yet as I love thee."
+
+Now the end of it was that Gudruda yielded and kissed him whom she had
+not kissed for many years.
+
+"Loose me, Eric," she said; "I would speak with thee," and he loosed
+her, though unwillingly.
+
+"Hearken," she went on, hiding her fair face in her hands: "it is true
+that for life and death I love thee now as ever--how much thou mayest
+never know. Though Bjrn be dead at thy hands, yet I love thee; but how
+I may wed thee and not win the greatest shame, that I know not. I am
+sure of one thing, that we may not bide here in Iceland. Now if, indeed,
+thou lovest me, listen to my rede. Get thee back to Mosfell, Eric, and
+sit there in safety through this winter, for they may not come at thee
+yonder on Mosfell. Then, if thou art willing, in the spring I will make
+ready a ship, for I have no ship now, and, moreover, it is too late to
+sail. Then, perchance, leaving all my lands and goods, I will take thy
+hand, Eric, and we will fare together to England, seeking such fortune
+as the Norns may give us. What sayest thou?"
+
+"I say it is a good rede, and would that the spring were come."
+
+"Ay, Eric, would that the spring were come. Our lot has been hard, and I
+doubt much if things will go well with us at the last. And now thou
+must hence, for presently the serving-women will come to seek me.
+Guard thyself, Eric, as thou lovest me--guard thyself, and beware of
+Swanhild!" Then once more they kissed soft and long, and Eric went.
+
+But Gudruda sat a while behind the screen of reeds, and was very happy
+for a space. For it was as though the winter were past and summer shone
+upon her heart again.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+HOW GUDRUDA WENT UP TO MOSFELL
+
+Eric walked warily till he came to the dell where he had left Skallagrim
+and the horses. It was the same dell in which Groa had brewed the
+poison-draught for Asmund the Priest and Unna, Thorod's daughter.
+
+"What news, lord?" said Skallagrim. "Thou wast gone so long that I
+thought of seeking thee. Hast thou seen Gudruda?"
+
+"Ay," said Eric, "and this is the upshot of it, that in the spring we
+sail for England and bid farewell to Iceland and our ill luck."
+
+"Would, then, that it were spring," said Skallagrim, speaking
+Brighteyes' own words. "Why not sail now and make an end?"
+
+"Gudruda has no ship and it is late to take the sea. Also I think that
+she would let a time go by because of the blood-feud which she has
+against me for the death of Bjrn."
+
+"I would rather risk these things than stay the winter through in
+Iceland," said Skallagrim, "it is long from now to spring, and yon
+wolf's den is cold-lying in the dark months, as I know well."
+
+"There is light beyond the darkness," said Eric, and they rode away.
+Everything went well with them till late at night they came to the
+slopes of Mosfell. They were half asleep on their horses, being weary
+with much riding, and the horses were weary also. Suddenly, Skallagrim,
+looking up, caught the faint gleam of light from swords hidden behind
+some stones.
+
+"Awake, lord!" he cried, "here are foes ahead."
+
+Gizur's folk behind the stones heard his voice and came out from their
+ambush. There were six of them, and they formed in line before the pair.
+They were watching the mountain, for a rumour had reached them that Eric
+was abroad, and, seeing him, they had hidden hastily behind the stones.
+
+"Now what counsel shall we take?" said Eric, drawing Whitefire.
+
+"We have often stood against men more than six, and sometimes we have
+left more men than six to mark where we stood," answered Skallagrim. "It
+is my counsel that we ride at them!"
+
+"So be it," said Eric, and he spurred his weary horse with his heels.
+Now when the six saw Eric and Skallagrim charge on them boldly, they
+wavered, and the end of it was that they broke and fled to either side
+before a blow was struck. For it had come to this pass, so great was the
+terror of the names of Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail, that no
+six men dared to stand before them in open fight.
+
+So the path being clear they rode on up the slope. But when they had
+gone a little way, Skallagrim turned his horse, and mocked those who had
+lain in ambush, saying:
+
+"Ye fight well, ye carles of Gizur, Ospakar's son! Ye are heroes,
+surely! Say now, mighty men, will ye stand there if I come down alone
+against you?"
+
+At these words the men grew mad with wrath, and flung their spears.
+Skallagrim caught one on his shield and it fell to the earth, but
+another passed over his head and struck Eric on the left shoulder,
+near the neck, making a deep wound. Feeling the spear fast in him, Eric
+grasped it with his right hand, drew it forth, and turning, hurled it so
+hard, that the man before it got his death from the blow, for his shield
+did not serve to stay it. Then the rest fled.
+
+Skallagrim bound up Eric's wound as well as he could, and they went on
+to the cave. But when Eric's folk, watching above, saw the fight they
+ran down and met him. Now the hurt was bad and Eric bled much; still,
+within ten days it healed up for the time.
+
+But a little while after Eric's wound was skinned over, the snows set
+in on Mosfell, and the days grew short and the nights long. Once Gizur's
+men to the number of fifty came half way up the mountain to take it;
+but, when they saw how strong the place was, they feared, and went back,
+and after that returned no more, though they always watched the fell.
+
+It was very dark and lonesome there upon the fell. For a while Eric kept
+in good heart, but as the days went by he grew troubled. For since he
+was wounded this had come upon him, that he feared the dark, and the
+death of Atli at his hand and Atli's words weighed more and more upon
+his mind. They had no candles on the fell, yet, rather than stay in the
+blackness of the cave, Eric would wrap sheepskins about him and sit by
+the edge of that gulf down which the head of the Baresark had foretold
+his fall, and look out at the wide plains and fells and ice-mountains,
+gleaming in the silver shine of the Northern lights or in the white
+beams of the stars.
+
+It chanced that Eric had bidden the men who stayed with him to build a
+stone hut upon the flat space of rock before the cave, and to roof it
+with turves. He had done this that work might keep them in heart, also
+that they might have a place to store such goods as they had gathered.
+Now there was one stone lying near that no two men of their number could
+move, except Skallagrim and one other. One day, while it was light, Eric
+watched these two rolling the stone along to where it must stand, and it
+was slow work. Presently they stayed to rest. Then Eric came and putting
+his hands beneath the stone, lifted, and while men wondered, he rolled
+the mass alone, to where it should be set as the corner stone of the
+hut.
+
+"Ye are all children," he said, and laughed merrily.
+
+"Ay, when we set our strength against thine, lord," answered Skallagrim;
+"but look: the blood runs from thy neck--the spear-wound has broken out
+afresh."
+
+"So it is, surely," said Eric. Then he washed the wound and bound it up,
+thinking little of the matter.
+
+But that night, according to his custom, Eric sat on the edge of the
+gulf and looked at the winter lights as they played over Hecla's snows.
+He was sad and heavy at heart, for he thought of Gudruda and wondered
+much if they should live to wed. Remembering Atli's words, he had little
+faith in his good luck. Now as Eric sat and thought, the bandage on his
+neck slipped, so that the hurt bled, and the frost got hold of the wound
+and froze it, and froze his long hair to it also, in such fashion that
+when he went to the cave where all men slept, he could not loose his
+hair from the sore, but lay down with it frozen to him. On the morrow
+the hair was caked so fast about his neck that it could only be freed by
+shearing it. But this Eric would not suffer. None, he said, should shear
+his hair, except Gudruda. Thus he had sworn, and when he broke the oath
+misfortune had come of it. He would break that vow no more, if it cost
+him his life. For sorrow and his ill luck had taken so great a hold of
+Eric's mind that in some ways he was scarcely himself.
+
+So it came to pass that he fell more and more sick, till at length
+he could not rise from his bed in the cave, but lay there all day and
+night, staring at the little light which pierced the gloom. Still, he
+would not suffer that anyone should touch his hair. And when one stole
+upon him sleeping, thinking so to cut it before he woke, and come at the
+wound, suddenly he sat up and dealt the man such a buffet on the head
+that he went near to death from it.
+
+Then Skallagrim spoke.
+
+"On this matter," he said, "it seems that Brighteyes is mad. He will not
+suffer that any touch his hair, except Gudruda, and yet, if his hair is
+not shorn, he must die, for the wound will fester under it. Nor may we
+cut it by strength, for then he will kill himself in struggling. It is
+come to this then: either Gudruda must be brought hither or Eric will
+shortly die."
+
+"That may not be," they answered. "How can the lady Gudruda come here
+across the snows, even if she will come?"
+
+"Come she can, if she has the heart," said Skallagrim, "though I put
+little trust in women's hearts. Still, I ride down to Middalhof, and
+thou, Jon, shalt go with me. For the rest, I charge you watch your lord;
+for, if I come back and find anything amiss, that shall be the death of
+some, and if I do not come back but perish on the road, yet I will haunt
+you."
+
+Now Jon liked not this task; still, for love of Eric and fear of
+Skallagrim, he set out with the Baresark. They had a hard journey
+through the snow-drifts and the dark, but on the third day they came to
+Middalhof, knocked upon the door and entered.
+
+Now it was supper-time, and people, sitting at meat, saw a great black
+man, covered with snow and rime, stalk up the hall, and after him
+another smaller man, who groaned with the cold, and they wondered at
+the sight. Gudruda sat on the high seat and the firelight beat upon her
+face.
+
+"Who comes here?" she said.
+
+"One who would speak with thee, lady," answered Skallagrim.
+
+"Here is Skallagrim the Baresark," said a man. "He is an outlaw, let us
+kill him!"
+
+"Ay, it is Skallagrim," he answered, "and if there is killing to be
+done, why here's that which shall do it," and he drew out his axe and
+smiled grimly.
+
+Then all held their peace, for they feared the axe of Skallagrim.
+
+"Lady," he said, "I do not come for slaying or such child's play, I come
+to speak a word in thine ear--but first I ask a cup of mead and a morsel
+of food, for we have spent three days in the snows."
+
+So they ate and drank. Then Gudruda bade the Baresark draw near and tell
+her his tale.
+
+"Lady," said he, "Eric, my lord, lies dying on Mosfell."
+
+Gudruda turned white as the snow.
+
+"Dying?--Eric lies dying?" she said. "Why, then, art thou here?"
+
+"For this cause, lady: I think that thou canst save him, if he is not
+already sped." And he told her all the tale.
+
+Now Gudruda thought a while.
+
+"This is a hard journey," she said, "and it does not become a maid to
+visit outlaws in their caves. Yet I am come to this, that I will die
+before I shrink from anything that may save the life of Eric. When must
+we ride, Skallagrim?"
+
+"This night," said the Baresark. "This night while the men sleep, for
+now night and day are almost the same. The snow is deep and we have no
+time to lose if we would find Brighteyes living."
+
+"Then we will ride to-night," answered Gudruda.
+
+Afterwards, when people slept, Gudruda the Fair summoned her women, and
+bade them say to all who asked for her that she lay sick in bed. But she
+called three trusty thralls, bidding them bring two pack-horses laden
+with hay, food, drugs, candles made of sheep's fat, and other goods,
+and ride with her. Then, all being ready, they rode away secretly
+up Stonefell, Gudruda on her horse Blackmane, and the others on good
+geldings that had been hay-fed in the yard, and by daylight they passed
+up Horse-Head Heights. They slept two nights in the snow, and on
+the second night almost perished there, for much soft snow fell. But
+afterwards came frost and a bitter northerly wind and they passed on.
+Gudruda was a strong woman and great of heart and will, and so it
+came about that on the third day she reached Mosfell, weary but little
+harmed, though the fingers of her left hand were frostbitten. They
+climbed the mountain, and when they came to the dell where the horses
+were kept, certain of Eric's men met them and their faces were sad.
+
+"How goes it now with Brighteyes?" said Skallagrim, for Gudruda could
+scarcely speak because of doubt and cold. "Is he dead, then?"
+
+"Nay," they answered, "but like to die, for he is beside himself and
+raves wildly."
+
+"Push on," quoth Gudruda; "push on, lest it be too late."
+
+So they climbed the mountain on foot, won the pass and came to that
+giddy point of rock where he must tread who would reach the platform
+that is before the cave. Now since she had hung by her hands over
+Goldfoss gulf, Gudruda had feared to tread upon a height with nothing to
+hold to. Skallagrim went first, then called to her to follow. Thrice she
+looked, and turned away, trembling, for the place was awful and the fall
+bottomless. Then she spoke aloud to herself:
+
+"Eric did not fear to risk his life to save me when I hung over Golden
+Falls; less, then, should I fear to risk mine to save him," and she
+stepped boldly down upon the point. But when she stood there, over the
+giddy height, shivers ran along her body, and her mind grew dark. She
+clutched at the rock, gave one low cry and began to fall. Indeed she
+would have fallen and been lost, had not Skallagrim, lying on his breast
+in the narrow hole, stretched out his arms, caught her by the cloak and
+kirtle and dragged her to him. Presently her senses came back.
+
+"I am safe!" she gasped, "but by a very little. Methinks that here
+in this place I must live and die, for I can never tread yonder rock
+again."
+
+"Thou shalt pass it safe enough, lady, with a rope round thee," said
+Skallagrim, and led the way to the cave.
+
+Gudruda entered, forgetting all things in her love of Eric. A great fire
+of turf burned in the mouth of the cave to temper the bitter wind and
+frost, and by its light Gudruda saw her love through the smoke-reek. He
+lay upon a bed of skins at the far end of the cave and his bright grey
+eyes were wild, his wan face was white, and now of a sudden it grew red
+with fever, and then was white again. He had thrown the sheepskins from
+his mighty chest, the bones of which stood out grimly. His long arms
+were thrust through the locks of his golden hair, and on one side of his
+neck the hair clung to him and it was but a black mass.
+
+He raved loudly in his madness. "Touch me not, carles, touch me not;
+ye think me spent and weak, but, by Thor! if ye touch my hair, I will
+loosen the knees of some. Gudruda alone shall shear my hair: I have
+sworn and I will keep the oath that I once broke. Give me snow! snow! my
+throat burns! Heap snow on my head, I bid you. Ye will not? Ye mock me,
+thinking me weak! Where, then, is Whitefire?--I have yet a deed to do!
+Who comes yonder? Is it a woman's shape or is it but a smoke-wraith?
+'Tis Swanhild the Fatherless who walks the waters. Begone, Swanhild,
+thou witch! thou hast worked evil enough upon me. Nay, it is not
+Swanhild, it is Elfrida; lady, here in England I may not stay. In
+Iceland I am at home. Yea, yea, things go crossly; perchance in this
+garden we may speak again!"
+
+Now Gudruda could bear his words no longer, bur ran to him and knelt
+beside him.
+
+"Peace, Eric!" she whispered. "Peace! It is I, thy love. It is Gudruda,
+who am come to thee."
+
+He turned his head and looked upon her strangely.
+
+"No, no," he said, "it is not Gudruda the Fair. She will have little to
+do with outlaws, and this is too rough a place for her to come to. It is
+dark also and Atli speaks in the darkness. If thou art Gudruda, give
+me a sign. Why comest thou here and where is Skallagrim? Ah! that was a
+good fight--
+
+ "Down among the ballast tumbling
+ Ospakar's shield-carles were rolled.
+
+"But he should never have slain the steersman. The axe goes first and
+Skallagrim follows after. Ha, ha! Ay, Swanhild, we'll mingle tears. Give
+me the cup. Why, what is this? Thou art afire, a glory glows about thee,
+and from thee floats a scent like the scent of the Iceland meads in
+May."
+
+"Eric! Eric!" cried Gudruda, "I am come to shear thy hair, as thou didst
+swear that I alone should do."
+
+"Now I know that thou art Gudruda," said the crazed man. "Cut, cut; but
+let not those knaves touch my head, lest I should slay them."
+
+Then Gudruda drew out her shears, and without more ado shore off
+Brighteyes' golden locks. It was no easy task, for they were thick as
+a horse's mane, and glued to the wound. Yet when she had cut them, she
+loosened the hair from the flesh with water which she heated upon the
+fire. The wound was in a bad state and blue, still Eric never winced
+while she dragged the hair from it. Then she washed the sore clean, and
+put sweet ointment on it and covered it with napkins.
+
+This done, she gave Eric broth and he drank. Then, laying her hand upon
+his head, she looked into his eyes and bade him sleep. And presently
+he slept--which he had scarcely done for many days--slept like a little
+child.
+
+Eric slept for a day and a night. But at that same hour of the evening,
+when he had fallen asleep, Gudruda, watching him by the light of a taper
+that was set upon a rock, saw him smile in his dreams. Presently he
+opened his eyes and stared at the fire which glowed in the mouth of the
+cave, and the great shadows that fell upon the rocks.
+
+"Strange!" she heard him murmur, "it is very strange! but I dreamed I
+slept, and that Gudruda the Fair leaned over me as I slept. Where, then,
+is Skallagrim? Perhaps I am dead and that is Hela's fire," and he tried
+to lift himself upon his arm, but fell back from faintness, for he was
+very weak. Then Gudruda took his hand, and, leaning over him, spoke:
+
+"Hush, Eric!" she said; "that was no dream, for I am here. Thou hast
+been sick to death, Eric; but now, if thou wilt rest, things shall go
+well with thee."
+
+"_Thou_ art here?" said Eric, turning his white face towards her. "Do I
+still dream, or how comest thou here to Mosfell, Gudruda?"
+
+"I came through the snows, Eric, to cut thy hair, which clung to the
+festering wound, for in thy madness thou wouldst not suffer anyone to
+touch it."
+
+"Thou camest through the snows--over the snows--to nurse me, Gudruda?
+Thou must love me much then," and he was so weak that, as he spoke, the
+tears rolled down Eric's cheeks.
+
+Then Gudruda kissed him, weeping also, and, laying her face by his, bade
+him be at peace, for she was there to watch him.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+HOW SWANHILD WON TIDINGS OF ERIC
+
+Now Eric's strength came back to him and his heart opened in the light
+of Gudruda's eyes like a flower in the sunshine. For all day long she
+sat at his side, holding his hand and talking to him, and they found
+much to say.
+
+But on the fifth day from the day of his awakening she spoke thus:
+
+"Eric, now I must go back to Middalhof. Thou art safe and it is not well
+that I should stay here."
+
+"Not yet, Gudruda," he said; "leave me not yet."
+
+"Yes, love, I must leave thee. The moon is bright, the sky has cleared,
+and the snow is hard with frost and fit for the hoofs of horses. I must
+go before more storms come. Listen now: in the second week of spring,
+if all is well, I will send thee a messenger with words of token, then
+shalt thou come down secretly to Middalhof, and there, Eric, we will be
+wed. Then, on the next day, we will sail for England in a trading-ship
+that I shall get ready, to seek our fortune there."
+
+"It will be a good fortune if thou art by my side," said Eric, "so
+good that I doubt greatly if I may find it, for I am Eric the Unlucky.
+Swanhild must yet be reckoned with, Gudruda. Yes, thou art right: thou
+must go hence, Gudruda, and swiftly, though it grieves me much to part
+with thee."
+
+Then Eric called Skallagrim and bade him make things ready to ride down
+to Middalhof with the Lady Gudruda.
+
+This Skallagrim did swiftly, and afterwards Eric and Gudruda kissed and
+parted, and they were sad at heart to part.
+
+Now on the fifth day after the going of Gudruda, Skallagrim came back
+to Mosfell somewhat cold and weary. And he told Eric, who could now walk
+and grew strong again, that he and Jon had ridden with Gudruda the Fair
+to Horse-Head Heights, seeing no man, and had left her there to go on
+with her thralls. He had come back also seeing no one, for the weather
+was too cold for the men of Gizur to watch the fell in the snows.
+
+
+
+Now Gudruda came safely to Middalhof, having been eleven days gone, and
+found that few had visited the house, and that these had been told that
+she lay sick abed. Her secret had been well kept, and, though Swanhild
+had no lack of spies, many days went by before she learned that Gudruda
+had gone up to Mosfell to nurse Eric.
+
+After this Gudruda began to make ready for her flight from Iceland. She
+called in the moneys that she had out at interest, and with them bought
+from a certain chapman a good trading-ship which lay in its shed under
+the shelter of Westman Isles. This ship she began to make ready for sea
+so soon as the heart of the winter was broken, putting it about that she
+intended to send her on a trading voyage to Scotland in the spring. And
+also to give colour to this tale she bought many pelts and other goods,
+such as chapmen deal in.
+
+Thus the days passed on--not so badly for Gudruda, who strove to fill
+their emptiness in making ready for the full and happy time; but for
+Eric in his cave they were very heavy, for he could find nothing to do
+except to sleep and eat, and think of Gudruda, whom he might not see.
+
+For Swanhild also, sitting at Coldback, the days did not go well. She
+was weary of the courting of Gizur, whom she played with as a cat plays
+with a rat, and her heart was sick with love, hate, and jealousy. For
+she well knew that Gudruda and Eric still clung to each other and found
+means of greeting, if not of speech. At that time she wished to kill
+Eric if she could, though she would rather kill Gudruda if she dared.
+Still, she could not come at Eric, for her men feared to try the narrow
+way of Mosfell, and when they met him in the open they fled before him.
+
+Presently it came to her ears that Gudruda made a ship ready to sail to
+Scotland on a trading voyage, and she was perplexed by this tale, for
+she knew that Gudruda had no love of trading and never thought of gain.
+So she set spies to watch the ship. Still, the slow days drew on, and
+at length the air grew soft with spring, and flowers showed through the
+snow.
+
+Eric sat in his mountain nest waiting for tidings, and watched the
+nesting eagles wheel about the cliffs. At length news came. For one
+morning, as he rose, Skallagrim told him that a man wanted to speak with
+him. He had come to the mountain in the darkness, and had lain in a dell
+till the breaking of the light, for, now that the snows were melting,
+the men of Gizur and Swanhild watched the ways.
+
+Eric bade them bring the man to him. When he saw him he knew that he was
+a thrall of Gudruda's and welcomed him heartily.
+
+"What tidings?" he asked.
+
+"This, lord," said the thrall: "Gudruda the Fair bids me say that she is
+well and that the snows melt on the roof of Middalhof."
+
+Now this was the signal word that had been agreed upon between Eric and
+Gudruda, that she should send him when all was ready.
+
+"Good," said Eric, "ride back to Gudruda the Fair and say that Eric
+Brighteyes is well, but on Hecla the snows melt not."
+
+By this answer he meant that he would be with her presently, though the
+thrall could make nothing of it. Then Skallagrim asked tidings of the
+man, and learned that Swanhild was still at Middalhof, and with her
+Gizur, and that they gave out that they wished to make an end of waiting
+and slay Eric.
+
+"First snare your bird, then wring his neck," laughed Skallagrim.
+
+Then Eric did this: among his men were some who he knew were not willing
+to sail from Iceland, and Jon, his thrall, was of them, for Jon did not
+love the angry sea. He bade these bide a while on Mosfell and make fires
+nightly on the platform of rock which is in front of the cave, that the
+spies of Gizur and Swanhild might be deceived by them, and think that
+Eric was still on the fell. Then, when they heard that he had sailed,
+they were to come down and hide themselves with friends till Gizur and
+his following rode north. But he told two of the men who would sail with
+him to make ready.
+
+That night before the moon rose Eric said farewell to Jon and the others
+who stayed on Mosfell, and rode away with Skallagrim and the two who
+went with him. They passed the plain of black sand in safety, and so
+on to Horse-Head Heights. Now at length, as the afternoon drew on to
+evening, from Stonefell's crest they saw the Hall of Middalhof before
+them, and Eric's heart swelled in his breast. Yet they must wait till
+darkness fell before they dared enter the place, lest they should be
+seen and notice of their coming should be carried to Gizur and Swanhild.
+And this came into the mind of Eric, that of all the hours of his life
+that hour of waiting was the longest. Scarcely, indeed, could Skallagrim
+hold him back from going down the mountain side, he was so set on coming
+to Gudruda whom he should wed that night.
+
+At length the darkness fell, and they went on. Eric rode swiftly down
+the rough mountain path, while Skallagrim and the two men followed
+grumbling, for they feared that their horses would fall. At length they
+came to the place, and riding into the yard, Eric sprang from his
+horse and strode to the women's door. Now Gudruda stood in the porch,
+listening; and while he was yet some way off, she heard the clang of
+Brighteyen's harness, and the colour came and went upon her cheek. Then
+she turned and fled to the high seat of the hall, and sat down there.
+Only two women were left in Middalhof with her, and some thralls who
+tended the kine and horses. But these slept, not in the hall, but in an
+outhouse. Gudruda had sent the rest of her people down to the ship to
+help in the lading, for it was given out that the vessel sailed on the
+morrow. She had done this that there might be no talk of the coming of
+Eric to Middalhof.
+
+Now Brighteyes came to the porch, and, finding the door wide, walked
+in. But Skallagrim and the men stayed without a while, and tended the
+horses. A fire burned upon the centre hearth in the hall, and threw
+shadows on the panelling. Eric walked on by its light, looking to left
+and right, but seeing neither man nor woman. Then a great fear took
+him lest Gudruda should be gone, or perhaps slain of Swanhild, Groa's
+daughter, and he trembled at the thought. He stood by the fire, and
+Gudruda, watching from the shadow of the high seat, saw the dull light
+glow upon his golden helm, and a sigh of joy broke from her lips. Eric
+heard the sigh and looked, and as he looked a stick of pitchy driftwood
+fell into the fire and flared up fiercely. Then he saw. There, in the
+carved high seat, robed all in bridal white, sat Gudruda the Fair,
+his love. Her golden hair flowed about her breast, her white arms were
+stretched towards him, and on her sweet face shone such a look of love
+as he had never seen.
+
+"_Eric!_" she whispered softly, and the breath of her voice ran down the
+empty panelled hall, that from all sides seemed to answer, "_Eric._"
+
+Slowly he drew near to her. He saw nothing but the glory of Gudruda's
+face and the light shining on Gudruda's hair; he heard nothing save the
+sighing of her breath; he knew nothing except that before him sat his
+fair bride, won after many years.
+
+Now he had climbed the high seat, and now, wrapped in each other's arms,
+they sat and gazed into each other's eyes, and lo! the air of the great
+hall rolled round them a sea of glory, and sweet voices whispered in
+their ears. Now Freya smiled upon them and led them through her gates of
+love, and they were glad that they had been born.
+
+Thus then they were wed.
+
+
+
+Now the story tells that Swanhild spoke with Gizur, Ospakar's son, in
+the house at Coldback.
+
+"I tire of this slow play," she said. "We have tarried here for many
+weeks, and Atli's blood yet cries out for vengeance, and cries for
+vengeance the blood of black Ospakar, thy father, and the blood of many
+another, dead at great Eric's hand."
+
+"I tire also," said Gizur, "and I am much needed in the north. I say
+this to thee, Swanhild, that, hadst thou not so strictly laid it on me
+that Eric must die ere thou weddest me, I had flitted back to Swinefell
+before now, and there bided my time to bring Brighteyes to his end."
+
+"I will never wed thee, Gizur, till Eric is dead," said Swanhild
+fiercely.
+
+"How shall we come at him then?" he answered. "We may not go up that
+mountain path, for two men can hold it against all our strength, and
+folk do not love to meet Eric and Skallagrim in a narrow way."
+
+"The place has been badly watched," said Swanhild. "I am sure of this,
+that Eric has been down to Middalhof and seen Gudruda, my half-sister.
+She is shameless, who still holds commune with him who slew her brother
+and my husband. Death should be her reward, and I am minded to slay her
+because of the shame that she has brought upon our blood."
+
+"That is a deed which thou wilt do alone, then," said Gizur, "for I will
+have no hand in the murder of that fair maid--no, nor will any who live
+in Iceland!"
+
+Swanhild glanced at him strangely. "Hearken, Gizur!" she said: "Gudruda
+makes a ship ready to sail with goods to Scotland and bring a cargo
+thence before winter comes again. Now I find this strange, for never
+before did I know Gudruda turn her thoughts to trading. I think that she
+has it in her mind to sail from Iceland with this outlaw Eric, and seek
+a home over seas, and that I will not bear."
+
+"It may be," said Gizur, "and I should not be sorry to see the last of
+Brighteyes, for I think that more men will die at his hand before he
+stiffens in his barrow."
+
+"Thou art cowardly-hearted, thou son of Ospakar!" Swanhild said. "Thou
+sayest thou lovest me and wouldest win me to wife: I tell thee that
+there is but one road to my arms, and it leads over the corpse of Eric.
+Now this is my counsel: that we send the most of our men to watch that
+ship of Gudruda's, and, when she lifts anchor, to board her and search,
+for she is already bound for sea. Also among the people here I have a
+carle who was born near Hecla, and he swears this to me, that, when
+he was a lad, searching for an eagle's eyrie, he found a path by which
+Mosfell might be climbed from the north, and that in the end he came
+to a large flat place, and, looking over, saw that platform where Eric
+dwells with his thralls. But he could not see the cave, because of the
+overhanging brow of the rock. Now we will do this: thou and I, and the
+carle alone--no more, for I do not wish that our search should be
+noised abroad--to-morrow at the dawn we will ride away for Mosfell, and,
+passing under Hecla, come round the mountain and see if this path may
+still be scaled. For, if so, we will return with men and make an end of
+Brighteyes."
+
+This plan pleased Gizur, and he said that it should be so.
+
+So very early on the following morning Swanhild, having sent many men to
+watch Gudruda's ship, rode away secretly with Gizur and the thrall, and
+before it was again dawn they were on the northern slopes of Mosfell.
+It was on this same night that Eric went down from the mountain to wed
+Gudruda.
+
+For a while the climbing was easy, but at length they came to a great
+wall of rock, a hundred fathoms high, on which no fox might find a
+foothold, nor anything that had not wings.
+
+"Here now is an end of our journey," said Gizur, "and I only pray this,
+that Eric may not ride round the mountain before we are down again." For
+he did not know that Brighteyes already rode hard for Middalhof.
+
+"Not so," said the thrall, "if only I can find the place by which, some
+thirty summers ago, I won yonder rift, and through it the crest of the
+fell," and he pointed to a narrow cleft in the face of the rock high
+above their heads, that was clothed with grey moss.
+
+Then he moved to the right and searched, peering behind stones and
+birch-bushes, till presently he held up his hand and whistled. They
+passed along the slope and found him standing by a little stream of
+water which welled from beneath a great rock.
+
+"Here is the place," the man said.
+
+"I see no place," answered Swanhild.
+
+"Still, it is there, lady," and he climbed on to the rock, drawing her
+after him. At the back of it was a hole, almost overgrown with moss.
+"Here is the path," he said again.
+
+"Then it is one that I have no mind to follow," answered Swanhild.
+"Gizur, go thou with the man and see if his tale is true. I will stay
+here till ye come back."
+
+Then the thrall let himself down into the hole and Gizur went after him.
+But Swanhild sat there in the shadow of the rock, her chin resting on
+her hand, and waited. Presently, as she sat, she saw two men ride round
+the base of the fell, and strike off to the right towards a turf-booth
+which stood the half of an hour's ride away. Now Swanhild was the
+keenest-sighted of all women of her day in Iceland, and when she looked
+at these two men she knew one of them for Jon, Eric's thrall, and she
+knew the horse also--it was a white horse with black patches, that Jon
+had ridden for many years. She watched them go till they came to the
+booth, and it seemed to her that they left their horses and entered.
+
+Swanhild waited upon the side of the fell for nearly two hours in all.
+Then, hearing a noise above her, she looked up, and there, black with
+dirt and wet with water, was Gizur, and with him was the thrall.
+
+"What luck, Gizur?" she asked.
+
+"This, Swanhild: Eric may hold Mosfell no more, for we have found a way
+to bolt the fox."
+
+"That is good news, then," said Swanhild. "Say on."
+
+"Yonder hole, Swanhild, leads to the cleft above, having been cut
+through the cliff by fire, or perhaps by water. Now up that cleft a man
+may climb, though hardly, as by a difficult stair, till he comes to the
+flat crest of the fell. Then, crossing the crest, on the further side,
+perhaps six fathoms below him, he sees that space of rock where is
+Eric's cave; but he cannot see the cave itself, because the brow of the
+cliff hangs over. And so it is that, if any come from the cave on to the
+space of rock, it will be an easy matter to roll stones upon them from
+above and crush them."
+
+Now when Swanhild heard this she laughed aloud.
+
+"Eric shall mock us no more," she said, "and his might can avail nothing
+against rocks rolled on him from above. Let us go back to Coldback and
+summon men to make an end of Brighteyes."
+
+So they went on down the mountain till they came to the place where they
+had hidden their horses. Then Swanhild remembered Jon and the other man
+whom she had seen riding to the booth, and she told Gizur of them.
+
+"Now," she said, "we will snare these birds, and perchance they will
+twitter tidings when we squeeze them."
+
+So they turned and rode for the booth, and drawing near, they saw two
+horses grazing without. Now they got off their horses, and creeping up
+to the booth, looked in through the door which was ajar. And they saw
+this, that one man sat on the ground with his back to the door, eating
+stock-fish, while Jon made bundles of fish and meal ready to tie on the
+horses. For it was here that those of his quarter who loved Eric brought
+food to be carried by his men to the cave on Mosfell.
+
+Now Swanhild touched Gizur on the arm, pointing first to the man who sat
+eating the fish and then to the spear in Gizur's hand. Gizur thought a
+while, for he shrank from this deed.
+
+Then Swanhild whispered in his ear, "Slay the man and seize the other; I
+would learn tidings from him."
+
+So Gizur cast the spear, and it passed through the man's heart, and he
+was dead at once. Then he and the thrall leapt into the booth and threw
+themselves on Jon, hurling him to the ground, and holding swords over
+him. Now Jon was a man of small heart, and when he saw his plight and
+his fellow dead he was afraid, and prayed for mercy.
+
+"If I spare thee, knave," said Swanhild, "thou shalt do this: thou shalt
+lead me up Mosfell to speak with Eric."
+
+"I may not do that, lady," groaned Jon; "for Eric is not on Mosfell."
+
+"Where is he, then?" asked Swanhild.
+
+Now Jon saw that he had said an unlucky thing, and answered:
+
+"Nay, I know not. Last night he rode from Mosfell with Skallagrim
+Lambstail."
+
+"Thou liest, knave," said Swanhild. "Speak, or thou shalt be slain."
+
+"Slay on," groaned Jon, glancing at the swords above him, and shutting
+his eyes. For, though he feared much to die, he had no will to make
+known Eric's plans.
+
+"Look not at the swords; thou shalt not die so easily. Hearken: speak,
+and speak truly, or thou shalt seek Hela's lap after this fashion," and,
+bending down, she whispered in his ear, then laughed aloud.
+
+Now Jon grew faint with fear; his lips turned blue, and his teeth
+chattered at the thought of how he should be made to die. Still, he
+would say nothing.
+
+Then Swanhild spoke to Gizur and the thrall, and bade them bind him with
+a rope, tear the garments from him, and bring snow. They did this, and
+pushed the matter to the drawing of knives. But when he saw the steel
+Jon cried aloud that he would tell all.
+
+"Now thou takest good counsel," said Swanhild.
+
+Then in his fear Jon told how Eric had gone down to Middalhof to wed
+Gudruda, and thence to fly with her to England.
+
+Now Swanhild was mad with wrath, for she had sooner died than that this
+should come about.
+
+"Let us away," she said to Gizur. "But first kill this man."
+
+"Nay," said Gizur, "I will not do that. He has told his tidings; let him
+go free."
+
+"Thou art chicken-hearted," said Swanhild, who, after the fashion of
+witches, had no mercy in her. "At the least, he shall not go hence to
+warn Eric and Gudruda of our coming. If thou wilt not kill him, then
+bind him and leave him."
+
+So Jon was bound, and there in the booth he sat two days before anyone
+came to loose him.
+
+"Whither away?" said Gizur to Swanhild.
+
+"To Middalhof first," Swanhild answered.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+HOW WENT THE BRIDAL NIGHT
+
+Now Eric and Gudruda sat silent in the high seat of the hall at
+Middalhof till they heard Skallagrim enter by the women's door. Then
+they came down from the high seat, and stood hand in hand by the fire
+on the hearth. Skallagrim greeted Gudruda, looking at her askance, for
+Skallagrim stood in fear of women alone.
+
+"What counsel now, lord?" said the Baresark.
+
+"Tell us thy plans, Gudruda," said Eric, for as yet no word had passed
+between them of what they should do.
+
+"This is my plan, Eric," she answered. "First, that we eat; then that
+thy men take horse and ride hence through the night to where the ship
+lies, bearing word that we will be there at dawn when the tide serves,
+and bidding the mate make everything ready for sailing. But thou and
+I and Skallagrim will stay here till to-morrow is three hours old,
+and this because I have tidings that Gizur's folk will search the ship
+to-night. Now, when they search and do not find us, they will go away.
+Then, at the dawning, thou and I and Skallagrim will row on board the
+ship as she lies at anchor, and, slipping the cable, put to sea before
+they know we are there, and so bid farewell to Swanhild and our woes."
+
+"Yet it is a risk for us to sleep here alone," said Eric.
+
+"There is little danger," said Gudruda. "Nearly all of Gizur's men watch
+the ship; and I have learned this from a spy, that, two days ago, Gizur,
+Swanhild, and one thrall rode from Coldback towards Mosfell, and they
+have not come back yet. Moreover, the place is strong, and thou and
+Skallagrim are here to guard it."
+
+"So be it, then," answered Eric, for indeed he had little thought left
+for anything, except Gudruda.
+
+After this the women came in and set meat on the board, and all ate.
+
+Now, when they had eaten, Eric bade Skallagrim fill a cup, and bring it
+to him as he sat on the high seat with Gudruda. Skallagrim did so; and
+then, looking deep into each other's eyes, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda
+the Fair, Asmund's daughter, drank the bride's cup.
+
+"There are few guests to grace our marriage-feast, husband," said
+Gudruda.
+
+"Yet shall our vows hold true, wife," said Eric.
+
+"Ay, Brighteyes," she answered, "in life and in death, now and for
+ever!" and they kissed.
+
+"It is time for us to be going, methinks," growled Skallagrim to those
+about him. "We are not wanted here."
+
+Then the men who were to go on to the ship rose, fetched their horses,
+and rode away. Also they caught the horses of Skallagrim, Eric, and
+Gudruda, saddled them and, slipping their bridles, made them fast in a
+shed in the yard, giving them hay to eat. Afterwards Skallagrim barred
+the men's door and the women's door, and, going to Gudruda, asked where
+he should stay the night till it was time to ride for the sea.
+
+"In the store-chamber," she answered, "for there is a shutter of which
+the latch has gone. See that thou watch it well, Skallagrim; though I
+think none will come to trouble thee."
+
+"I know the place. It shall go badly with the head that looks through
+yonder hole," said Skallagrim, glancing at his axe.
+
+Now Gudruda forgot this, that in the store-chamber were casks of strong
+ale.
+
+Then Gudruda told him to wake them when the morrow was two hours old,
+for Eric had neither eyes nor words except for Gudruda alone, and
+Skallagrim went.
+
+The women went also to their shut bed at the end of the hall, leaving
+Brighteyes and Gudruda alone. Eric looked at her.
+
+"Where do I sleep to-night?" he asked.
+
+"Thou sleepest with me, husband," she answered soft, "for nothing,
+except Death, shall come between us any more."
+
+Now Skallagrim went to the store-room, and sat down with his back
+against a cask. His heart was heavy in him, for he boded no good of this
+marriage. Moreover, he was jealous. Skallagrim loved but one thing in
+the world truly, and that was Eric Brighteyes, his lord. Now he knew
+that henceforth he must take a second place, and that for one thought
+which Eric gave to him, he would give ten to Gudruda. Therefore
+Skallagrim was very sad at heart.
+
+"A pest upon the women!" he said to himself, "for from them comes all
+evil. Brighteyes owes his ill luck to Swanhild and this fair wife of
+his, and that is scarcely done with yet. Well, well, 'tis nature; but
+would that we were safe at sea! Had I my will, we had not slept here
+to-night. But they are newly wed, and--well, 'tis nature! Better the
+bride loves to lie abed than to ride the cold wolds and seek the common
+deck."
+
+Now, as Skallagrim grumbled, fear gathered in his heart, he knew not
+of what. He began to think on trolls and goblins. It was dark in the
+store-room, except for a little line of light that crept through the
+crack of the shutter. At length he could bear the darkness and his
+thoughts no longer, but, rising, threw the shutter wide and let the
+bright moonlight pour into the chamber, whence he could see the hillside
+behind, and watch the shadows of the clouds as they floated across it.
+Again Skallagrim sat down against his cask, and as he sat it moved, and
+he heard the wash of ale inside it.
+
+"That is a good sound," said Skallagrim, and he turned and smelt at
+the cask; "aye, and a good smell, too! We tasted little ale yonder on
+Mosfell, and we shall find less at sea." Again he looked at the cask.
+There was a spigot in it, and lo! on the shelf stood horn cups.
+
+"It surely is on draught," he said; "and now it will stand till it goes
+sour. 'Tis a pity; but I will not drink. I fear ale--ale is another man!
+No, I will not drink," and all the while his hand went up to the cups
+upon the shelf. "Eric is better lain yonder in Gudruda's chamber than I
+am here alone with evil thoughts and trolls," he said. "Why, what fish
+was that we ate at supper? My throat is cracked with thirst! If there
+were water now I'd drink it, but I see none. Well, one cup to wish them
+joy! There is no harm in a cup of ale," and he drew the spigot from the
+cask and watched the brown drink flow into the cup. Then he lifted it to
+his lips and drank, saying "Skoll! skoll!"[*] nor did he cease till the
+horn was drained. "This is wondrous good ale," said Skallagrim as he
+wiped his grizzled beard. "One more cup, and evil thoughts shall cease
+to haunt me."
+
+[*] "Health! health!"
+
+Again he filled, drank, sat down, and for a while was merry. But
+presently the black thoughts came back into his mind. He rose, looked
+through the shutter-hole to the hillside. He could see nothing on it
+except the shadows of the clouds.
+
+"Trolls walk the winds to-night," he said. "I feel them pulling at my
+beard. One more cup to frighten them."
+
+He drank another draught of ale and grew merry. Then ale called for ale,
+and Skallagrim drained cup on cup, singing as he drained, till at last
+heavy sleep overcame him, and he sank drunken on the ground there by the
+barrel, while the brown ale trickled round him.
+
+
+
+Now Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair slept side by side, locked in
+each other's arms. Presently Gudruda was wide awake.
+
+"Rouse thee, Eric," she said, "I have dreamed an evil dream."
+
+He awoke and kissed her.
+
+"What, then, was thy dream, sweet?" he said. "This is no hour for bad
+dreams."
+
+"No hour for bad dreams, truly, husband; yet dreams do not weigh the
+hour of their coming. I dreamed this: that I lay dead beside thee and
+thou knewest it not, while Swanhild looked at thee and mocked."
+
+"An evil dream, truly," said Eric; "but see, thou art not dead. Thou
+hast thought too much on Swanhild of late."
+
+Now they slept once more, till presently Eric was wide awake.
+
+"Rouse thee, Gudruda," he said, "I too have dreamed a dream, and it is
+full of evil."
+
+"What, then, was thy dream, husband?" she asked.
+
+"I dreamed that Atli the Earl, whom I slew, stood by the bed. His face
+was white, and white as snow was his beard, and blood from his great
+wound ran down his byrnie. 'Eric Brighteyes,' he said, 'I am he whom
+thou didst slay, and I come to tell thee this: that before the moon is
+young again thou shalt lie stiff, with Hell-shoes on thy feet. Thou art
+Eric the Unlucky! Take thy joy and say thy say to her who lies at thy
+side, for wet and cold is the bed that waits thee and soon shall thy
+white lips be dumb.' Then he was gone, and lo! in his place stood
+Asmund, thy father, and he also spoke to me, saying, 'Thou who dost lie
+in my bed and at my daughter's side, know this: the words of Atli are
+true; but I add these to them: ye shall die, yet is death but the gate
+of life and love and rest,' and he was gone."
+
+Now Gudruda shivered with fear, and crept closer to Eric's side.
+
+"We are surely fey, for the Norns speak with the voices of Atli and
+of Asmund," she said. "Oh, Eric! Eric! whither go we when we die? Will
+Valhalla take thee, being so mighty a man, and must I away to Hela's
+halls, where thou art not? Oh! that would be death indeed! Say, Eric,
+whither do we go?"
+
+"What said the voice of Asmund?" answered Brighteyes. "That death is but
+the gate of life and love and rest. Hearken, Gudruda, my May! Odin does
+not reign over all the world, for when I sat out yonder in England,
+a certain holy man taught me of another God--a God who loves not
+slaughter, a God who died that men might live for ever in peace with
+those they love."
+
+"How is this God named, Eric?"
+
+"They name Him the White Christ, and there are many who cling to Him."
+
+"Would that I knew this Christ, Eric. I am weary of death and blood and
+evil deeds, such as are pleasing to our Gods. Oh, Eric, if I am taken
+from thee, swear this to me: that thou wilt slay no more, save for thy
+life's sake only."
+
+"I swear that, sweet," he made answer. "For I too am weary of death and
+blood, and desire peace most of all things. The world is sad, and sad
+have been our days. Yet it is well to have lived, for through many heavy
+days we have wandered to this happy night."
+
+"Yea, Eric, it is well to have lived; though I think that death draws
+on. Now this is my counsel: that we rise, and that thou dost put on thy
+harness and summon Skallagrim, so that, if evil comes, thou mayst meet
+it armed. Surely I thought I heard a sound--yonder in the hall!"
+
+"There is little use in that," said Eric, "for things will befall as
+they are fated. We may do nothing of our own will, I am sure of this,
+and it is no good to struggle with the Norns. Yet I will rise."
+
+So he kissed her, and made ready to leave the bed, when suddenly, as he
+lingered, a great heaviness seized him.
+
+"Gudruda," he said, "I am pressed down with sleep."
+
+"That I am also, Eric," she said. "My eyes shut of themselves and I can
+scarcely stir my limbs. Ah, Eric, we are fey indeed, and this is--death
+that comes!"
+
+"Perchance!" he said, speaking heavily.
+
+"Eric!--wake, Eric! Thou canst not move? Yet hearken to me--ah! this
+weight of sleep! Thou lovest me, Eric!--is it not so?"
+
+"Yea," he answered.
+
+"Now and for ever thou lovest me--and wilt cleave to me always wherever
+we go?"
+
+"Surely, sweet. Oh, sweet, farewell!" he said, and his voice sounded
+like the voice of one who speaks across the water.
+
+"Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!--my love--my love, farewell!" she answered
+very slowly, and together they sank into a sleep that was heavy as
+death.
+
+
+
+Now Gizur, Ospakar's son, and Swanhild, Atli's widow, rode fast and hard
+from Mosfell, giving no rest to their horses, and with them rode that
+thrall who had showed the secret path to Gizur. They stayed a while on
+Horse-Head Heights till the moon rose. Now one path led hence to the
+shore that is against the Westmans, where Gudruda's ship lay bound. Then
+Swanhild turned to the thrall. Her beautiful face was fierce and she had
+said few words all this while, but in her heart raged a fire of hate and
+jealousy which shone through her blue eyes.
+
+"Listen," she said to the thrall. "Thou shalt ride hence to the bay
+where the ship of Gudruda the Fair lies at anchor. Thou knowest where
+our folk are in hiding. Thou shalt speak thus to them. Before it is dawn
+they must take boats and board Gudruda's ship and search her. And, if
+they find Eric, the outlaw, aboard, they shall slay him, if they may."
+
+"That will be no easy task," said the thrall.
+
+"And if they find Gudruda they shall keep her prisoner. But if they find
+neither the one nor the other, they shall do this: they shall drive the
+crew ashore, killing as few as may be, and burn the ship."
+
+"It is an ill deed thus to burn another's ship," said Gizur.
+
+"Good or ill, it shall be done," answered Swanhild fiercely. "Thou art
+a lawman, and well canst thou meet the suit; moreover Gudruda has wedded
+an outlaw and shall suffer for her sin. Now go, and see thou tarry not,
+or thy back shall pay the price."
+
+The man rode away swiftly. Then Gizur turned to Swanhild, asking:
+"Whither, then, go we?"
+
+"I have said to Middalhof."
+
+"That is into the wolf's den, if Eric and Skallagrim are there," he
+answered: "I have little chance against the two of them."
+
+"Nay, nor against the one, Gizur. Why, if Eric's right hand were hewn
+from him, and he stood unarmed, he would still slay thee with his left,
+as, swordless, he slew Ospakar thy father. Yet I shall find a way to
+come at him, if he is there."
+
+Then they rode on, and Gizur's heart was heavy for fear of Eric and
+Skallagrim the Baresark. So fiercely did they ride that, within one hour
+after midnight, they were at the stead of Middalhof.
+
+"We will leave the horses here in the field," said Swanhild.
+
+So they leaped to earth and, tying the reins of the horses together,
+left them to feed on the growing grass. Then they crept into the yard
+and listened. Presently there came a sound of horses stamping in the far
+corner of the yard. They went thither, and there they found a horse and
+two geldings saddled, but with the bits slipped, and on the horse was
+such a saddle as women use.
+
+"Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda the Fair," whispered
+Swanhild, naming the horses and laughing evilly--"the birds are within!
+Now to snare them."
+
+"Were it not best to meet them by the ship?" asked Gizur.
+
+"Nay, thou fool; if once Eric and Skallagrim are back to back, and
+Whitefire is aloft, how many shall be dead before they are down,
+thinkest thou? We shall not find them sleeping twice."
+
+"It is shameful to slay sleeping men," said Gizur.
+
+"They are outlaws," she answered. "Hearken, Ospakar's son. Thou sayest
+thou dost love me and wouldst wed me: know this, that if thou dost
+fail me now, I will never look upon thy face again, but will name thee
+Niddering in all men's ears."
+
+Now Gizur loved Swanhild much, for she had thrown her glamour on him as
+once she did on Atli, and he thought of her day and night. For there
+was this strange thing about Swanhild that, though she was a witch and
+wicked, being both fair and gentle she could lead all men, except Eric,
+to love her.
+
+But of men she loved Eric alone.
+
+Then Gizur held his peace; but Swanhild spoke again:
+
+"It will be of no use to try the doors, for they are strong. Yet when
+I was a child before now I have passed in and out the house at night
+by the store-room casement. Follow me, Gizur." Then she crept along the
+shadow of the wall, for she knew it every stone, till she came to the
+store-room, and lo! the shutter stood open, and through it the moonlight
+poured into the chamber. Swanhild lifted her head above the sill and
+looked, then started back.
+
+"Hush!" she said, "Skallagrim lies asleep within."
+
+"Pray the Gods he wake not!" said Gizur beneath his breath, and turned
+to go. But Swanhild caught him by the arm; then gently raised her head
+and looked again, long and steadily. Presently she turned and laughed
+softly.
+
+"Things go well for us," she said; "the sot lies drunk. We have nothing
+to fear from him. He lies drunk in a pool of ale."
+
+Then Gizur looked. The moonlight poured into the little room, and by
+it he saw the great shape of Skallagrim. His head was thrown back, his
+mouth was wide. He snored loudly in his drunken sleep, and all about him
+ran the brown ale, for the spigot of the cask lay upon the floor. In his
+left hand was a horn cup, but in his right he still grasped his axe.
+
+"Now we must enter," said Swanhild. Gizur hung back, but she sprang upon
+the sill lightly as a fox, and slid thence into the store-room. Then
+Gizur must follow, and presently he stood beside her in the room, and at
+their feet lay drunken Skallagrim. Gizur looked first at his sword, then
+on the Baresark, and lastly at Swanhild.
+
+"Nay," she whispered, "touch him not. Perchance he would cry out--and we
+seek higher game. He has that within him which will hold him fast for a
+while. Follow where I shall lead."
+
+She took his hand and, gliding through the doorway, passed along the
+passage till she came to the great hall. Swanhild could see well in the
+dark, and moreover she knew the road. Presently they stood in the
+empty hall. The fire had burnt down, but two embers yet glowed upon the
+hearth, like red and angry eyes.
+
+For a while Swanhild stood still listening, but there was nothing to
+hear. Then she drew near to the shut bed where Gudruda slept, and, with
+her ear to the curtain, listened once more. Gizur came with her, and
+as he came his foot struck against a bench and stirred it. Now Swanhild
+heard murmured words and the sound of kisses. She started back, and fury
+filled her heart. Gizur also heard the voice of Eric, saying: "I will
+rise." Then he would have fled, but Swanhild caught him by the arm.
+
+"Fear not," she whispered, "they shall soon sleep sound."
+
+He felt her stretch out her arms and presently he saw this wonderful
+thing: the eyes of Swanhild glowing in the darkness as the embers glowed
+upon the hearth. Now they glowed brightly, so brightly that he could see
+the outstretched arms and the hard white face beneath them, and now
+they grew dim, of a sudden to shine bright again. And all the while she
+hissed words through her clenched teeth.
+
+Thus she hissed, fierce and low:
+
+ "Gudruda, Sister mine, hearken and sleep!
+ By the bond of blood I bid thee sleep!--
+ By the strength that is in me I bid thee sleep!--
+ Sleep! sleep sound!
+
+ "Eric Brighteyes, hearken and sleep!
+ By the bond of sin I charge thee sleep!--
+ By the blood of Atli I charge thee, sleep!--
+ Sleep! sleep sound!"
+
+Then thrice she tossed her hands aloft, saying:
+
+ "From love to sleep!
+ From sleep to death!
+ From death to Hela!
+ Say, lovers, where shall ye kiss again?"
+
+Then the light went out of her eyes and she laughed low. And ever as she
+whispered, the spoken words of the two in the shut bed grew fainter and
+more faint, till at length they died away, and a silence fell upon the
+place.
+
+"Thou hast no cause to fear the sword of Eric, Gizur," she said.
+"Nothing will wake him now till daylight comes."
+
+"Thou art awesome!" answered Gizur, for he shook with fear. "Look not on
+me with those flaming eyes, I pray thee!"
+
+"Fear not," she said, "the fire is out. Now to the work."
+
+"What must we do, then?"
+
+"_Thou_ must do this. Thou must enter and slay Eric."
+
+"That I can not--that I will not!" said Gizur.
+
+She turned and looked at him, and lo! her eyes began to flame
+again--upon his eyes they seemed to burn.
+
+"Thou wilt do as I bid thee," she said. "With Eric's sword thou shalt
+slay Eric, else I will curse thee where thou art, and bring such evil on
+thee as thou knowest not of."
+
+"Look not so, Swanhild," he said. "Lead on--I come."
+
+Now they creep into the shut chamber of Gudruda. It is so dark that they
+can see nothing, and nothing can they hear except the heavy breathing of
+the sleepers.
+
+This is to be told, that at this time Swanhild had it in her mind
+to kill, not Eric but Gudruda, for thus she would smite the heart of
+Brighteyes. Moreover, she loved Eric, and while he lived she might yet
+win him; but Eric dead must be Eric lost. But on Gudruda she would be
+bitterly avenged--Gudruda, who, for all her scheming, had yet been a
+wife to Eric!
+
+Now they stand by the bed. Swanhild puts out her hand, draws down the
+clothes, and feels the breast of Gudruda beneath, for Gudruda slept on
+the outside of the bed.
+
+Then she searches by the head of the bed and finds Whitefire which hung
+there, and draws the sword.
+
+"Here lies Eric, on the outside," she says to Gizur, "and here is
+Whitefire. Strike and strike home, leaving Whitefire in the wound."
+
+Gizur takes the sword and lifts it. He is sore at heart that he must do
+such a coward deed; but the spell of Swanhild is upon him, and he may
+not flinch from it. Then a thought takes him and he also puts down his
+hand to feel. It lights upon Gudruda's golden hair, that hangs about her
+breast and falls from the bed to the ground.
+
+"Here is woman's hair," he whispers.
+
+"No," Swanhild answers, "it is Eric's hair. The hair of Eric is long, as
+thou hast seen."
+
+Now neither of them knows that Gudruda cut Eric's locks when he lay sick
+on Mosfell, though Swanhild knows well that it is not Brighteyes whom
+she bids Gizur slay.
+
+Then Gizur, Ospakar's son, lifts the sword, and the faint starlight
+struggling into the chamber gathers and gleams upon the blade. Thrice he
+lifts it, and thrice it draws it back. Then with an oath he strikes--and
+drives it home with all his strength!
+
+From the bed beneath there comes one long sigh and a sound as of limbs
+trembling against the bed-gear. Then all is still.
+
+"It is done!" he says faintly.
+
+Swanhild puts down her hand once more. Lo! it is wet and warm. Then she
+bends herself and looks, and behold! the dead eyes of Gudruda glare up
+into her eyes. She can see them plainly, but none know what she read
+there. At the least it was something that she loved not, for she reels
+back against the panelling, then falls upon the floor.
+
+Presently, while Gizur stands as one in a dream, she rises, saying:
+"I am avenged of the death of Atli. Let us hence!--ah! let us hence
+swiftly! Give me thy hand, Gizur, for I am faint!"
+
+So Gizur gives her his hand and they pass thence. Presently they stand
+in the store-room, and there lies Skallagrim, still plunged in his
+drunken sleep.
+
+"Must I do more murder?" asks Gizur hoarsely.
+
+"Nay," Swanhild says. "I am sick with blood. Leave the knave."
+
+They pass out by the casement into the yard and so on till they find
+their horses.
+
+"Lift me, Gizur; I can no more," says Swanhild.
+
+He lifts her to the saddle.
+
+"Whither away?" he asks.
+
+"To Coldback, Gizur, and thence to cold Death."
+
+
+
+Thus did Gudruda, Eric's bride and Asmund's daughter, the fairest woman
+who ever lived in Iceland, die on her marriage night by the hand of
+Gizur, Ospakar's son, and through the hate and witchcraft of Swanhild
+the Fatherless, her half-sister.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+HOW THE DAWN CAME
+
+The dawn broke over Middalhof. Slowly the light gathered in the empty
+hall, it crept slowly into the little chamber where Eric slept, and
+Gudruda slept also with a deeper sleep.
+
+Now the two women came from their chamber at the far end of the hall,
+and drew near the hearth, shivering, for the air was cold. They knelt
+by the fire, blowing at the embers till the sticks they cast upon them
+crackled to a blaze.
+
+"It seems that Gudruda is not yet gone," said one to the other. "I
+thought she should ride away with Eric before the dawn."
+
+"Newly wed lie long abed!" laughed the other.
+
+"I am glad to see the blessed light," said the first woman, "for last
+night I dreamed that once again this hall ran red with blood, as at the
+marriage-feast of Ospakar."
+
+"Ah," answered the other, "it will be well for the south when Eric
+Brighteyes and Gudruda are gone over sea, for their loves have brought
+much bloodshed upon the land."
+
+"Well, indeed!" sighed the first. "Had Asmund the Priest never found
+Groa, Ran's gift, singing by the sea, Valhalla had not been so full
+to-day. Mindest thou the day he brought her here?"
+
+"I remember it well," she answered, "though I was but a girl at the
+time. Still, when I saw those dark eyes of hers--just such eyes as
+Swanhild's!--I knew her for a witch, as all Finn women are. It is an
+evil world: my husband is dead by the sword; dead are both my sons,
+fighting for Eric; dead is Unna, Thorod's daughter; Asmund, my lord, is
+dead, and dead is Bjrn; and now Gudruda the Fair, whom I have rocked
+to sleep, leaves us to go over sea. I may not go with her, for my
+daughter's sake; yet I almost wish that I too were dead."
+
+"That will come soon enough," said the other, who was young and fair.
+
+
+
+Now the witch-sleep began to roll from Eric's heart, though his eyes
+were not yet open. But the talk of the women echoed in his ears, and
+the words "_dead!_" "_dead!_" "_dead!_" fell heavily on his slumbering
+sense. At length he opened his eyes, only to shut them again, because
+of a bright gleam of light that ran up and down something at his
+side. Heavily he wondered what this might be, that shone so keen and
+bright--that shone like a naked sword.
+
+Now he looked again. Yes, it was a sword which stood by him upon the
+bed, and the golden hilt was like the hilt of Whitefire. He lifted up
+his hand to touch it, thinking that he dreamed. Lo! his hand and arm
+were red!
+
+Then he remembered, and the thought of Gudruda flashed through his
+heart. He sat up, gazing down into the shadow at his side.
+
+
+
+Presently the women at the fire heard a sound as of a great man falling
+to earth.
+
+"What is that noise?" said one.
+
+"Eric leaping from his bed," answered the other. "He has slept too long,
+as we have also."
+
+As they spoke the curtain of the shut bed was pushed away, and through
+it staggered Eric in his night-gear, and lo! the left side of it was
+red. His eyes were wide with horror, his mouth was open, and his face
+was white as ice.
+
+He stopped, looking at them, made as though to speak, and could not.
+Then, while they shrank from him in terror, he turned, and, walking like
+a drunken man, staggered from the hall down that passage which led to
+the store-chamber. The door stood wide, the shutter was wide, and on the
+floor, soaked in the dregs of ale, Skallagrim yet lay snoring, his axe
+in one hand and a cup in the other.
+
+Eric looked and understood.
+
+"Awake, drunkard!" he cried, in so terrible a voice that the room shook.
+"Awake, and look upon thy work!"
+
+Skallagrim sat up, yawning.
+
+"Forsooth, my head swims," he said. "Give me ale, I am thirsty."
+
+"Never wilt thou look on ale again, Skallagrim, when thou hast seen that
+which I have to show!" said Eric, in the same dread voice.
+
+Then Skallagrim rose to his feet and gaped upon him.
+
+"What means this, lord? Is it time to ride? and say! why is thy shirt
+red with blood?"
+
+"Follow me, drunkard, and look upon thy work!" Eric said again.
+
+Then Skallagrim grew altogether sober, and grasping his axe, followed
+after Brighteyes, sore afraid of what he might see.
+
+They went down the passage, past the high seat of the hall, till they
+came to the curtain of the shut bed; and after them followed the women.
+Eric seized the curtain in his hand, rent it from its fastenings, and
+cast it on the ground. Now the light flowed in and struck upon the bed.
+It fell upon the bed, it fell upon Whitefire's hilt and ran along the
+blade, it gleamed on a woman's snowy breast and golden hair, and shone
+in her staring eyes--a woman who lay stiff and cold upon the bed, the
+great sword fixed within her heart!
+
+"Look upon thy work, drunkard!" Eric cried again, while the women who
+peeped behind sent their long wail of woe echoing down the panelled
+hall.
+
+"Hearken!" said Eric: "while thou didst lie wallowing in thy
+swine's sleep, foes crept across thy carcase, and this is their
+handiwork:--yonder she lies who was my bride!--now is Gudruda the Fair a
+death-wife who last night was my bride! This is thy work, drunkard! and
+now what meed for thee?"
+
+Skallagrim looked. Then he spoke in a hoarse slow voice:
+
+"What meed, lord? But one--death!"
+
+Then with one hand he covered his eyes and with the other held out his
+axe to Eric Brighteyes.
+
+Eric took the axe, and while the women ran thence screaming, he whirled
+it thrice about his head. Then he smote down towards the skull of
+Skallagrim, but as he smote it seemed to him that a voice whispered in
+his ear: "_Thy oath!_"--and he remembered that he had sworn to slay no
+more, save for his own life's sake.
+
+The mighty blow was falling and he might only do this--loose the axe
+before it clove Skallagrim in twain. He loosed and away the great axe
+flew. It passed over the head of Skallagrim, and sped like light across
+the wide hall, till it crashed through the panelling on the further
+side, and buried itself to the haft in the wall beyond.
+
+"It is not for me to kill thee, drunkard! Go, die in thy drink!"
+
+"Then I will kill myself!" cried the Baresark, and, rushing across the
+hall he tore the great axe from its bed.
+
+"Hold!" said Eric; "perhaps there is yet a deed for thee to do. Then
+thou mayest die, if it pleases thee."
+
+"Ay," said Skallagrim coming back, "perchance there is still a deed to
+do!"
+
+And, flinging down the axe, Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark fell upon
+the floor and wept.
+
+But Eric did not weep. Only he drew Whitefire from the heart of Gudruda
+and looked at it.
+
+"Thou art a strange sword, Whitefire," he said, "who slayest both friend
+and foe! Shame on thee, Whitefire! We swore our oath on thee, Whitefire,
+and thou hast cut its chain! Now I am minded to shatter thee." And as
+Eric looked on the great blade, lo! it hummed strangely in answer.
+
+"'First must thou be the death of some,' thou sayest? Well, maybe,
+Whitefire! But never yet didst thou drink so sweet a life as hers who
+now lies dead, nor ever shalt again."
+
+Then he sheathed the sword, but neither then nor afterwards did he wipe
+the blood of Gudruda from its blade.
+
+"Last night a-marrying--to-day a-burying," said Eric, and he called to
+the women to bring spades. Then, having clothed himself, he went to
+the centre of the hall, and, brushing away the sand, broke the hard
+clay-flooring, dealing great blows on it with an axe. Now Skallagrim,
+seeing his purpose, came to him and took one of the spades, and together
+they laboured in silence till they had dug a grave a fathom deep.
+
+"Here," said Eric, "here, in thine own hall where thou wast born and
+lived, Gudruda the Fair, thou shalt sleep at the last. And of Middalhof
+I say this: that none shall live there henceforth. It shall be haunted
+and accursed till the rafters rot and the walls fall in, making thy
+barrow, Gudruda."
+
+Now this indeed came to pass, for none have lived in Middalhof since the
+days of Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter. It has been ruined these
+many years, and now it is but a pile of stones.
+
+
+
+When the grave was dug, Eric washed himself and ate some food. Then he
+went in to where Gudruda lay dead, and bade the women make her ready
+for burial. This they did. When she was washed and clad in a clean white
+robe, Eric came to her, and with his own hand bound the Hell-shoes on
+her feet and closed her eyes.
+
+It was just then that a man came who said that the people of Gizur and
+of Swanhild had burned Gudruda's ship, driving the crew ashore.
+
+"It is well," said Eric. "We need the ship no more; now hath she whom
+it should bear wings with which to fly." Then he went in and sat down on
+the bed by the body of Gudruda, while Skallagrim crouched on the ground
+without, tearing at his beard and muttering. For the fierce heart of
+Skallagrim was broken because of that evil which his drunkenness had
+brought about.
+
+All day Eric sat thus, looking on his dead love's face, till the hour
+came round when he and Gudruda had drunk the bride-cup. Then he rose and
+kissed dead Gudruda on the lips, saying:
+
+"I did not look to part with thee thus, sweet! It is sad that thou
+shouldst have gone and left me here. Natheless, I shall soon follow on
+thy path."
+
+Then he called aloud:
+
+"Art sober, drunkard?"
+
+Skallagrim came and stood before him, saying nothing.
+
+"Take thou the feet of her whom thou didst bring to death, and I will
+take her head."
+
+So they lifted up Gudruda and bore her to the grave. Then Eric stood
+near the grave, and, taking dead Gudruda in his arms, looked upon her
+face by the light of the fire and of the candles that were set about.
+
+He looked thrice, then sang aloud:
+
+ "Long ago, when swept the snow-blast,
+ Close we clung and plighted troth.
+ Many a year, through storm and sword-song,
+ Sore I strove to win thee, sweet!
+ But last night I held thee, Fairest,
+ Lock'd, a wife, in lover's arms.
+ Now, Gudruda, in thy death-rest,
+ Sleep thou soft till Eric come!
+
+ "Hence I go to wreak thy murder.
+ Hissing fire of flaming stead,
+ Groan of spear-carles, wail of women,
+ Soon shall startle through the night.
+ Then on Mosfell, Kirtle-Wearer,
+ Eric waits the face of Death.
+ Freed from weary life and sorrow,
+ Soon we'll kiss in Hela's halls!"
+
+Then he laid her in the grave, and, having shrouded a sheet over her,
+they filled it in together, hiding Gudruda the Fair from the sight of
+men for ever.
+
+Afterwards Eric armed himself, and this Skallagrim did also. Then he
+strode from the hall, and Skallagrim followed him. In the yard those
+horses were still tied that should have carried them to the ship, and
+on one was the saddle of Gudruda. She had ridden on this horse for
+many years, and loved it much, for it would follow her like a dog. Eric
+looked at him, then said aloud:
+
+"Gudruda may need thee where she is, Blackmane," for so the horse was
+named. "At the least, none shall ride thee more!" And he snatched the
+axe from the hand of Skallagrim and slew the horse at a blow.
+
+Then they rode away, heading for Coldback. The night was wild and windy,
+and the sky dark with scudding clouds, through which the moon peeped out
+at times. Eric looked up, then spoke to Skallagrim:
+
+"A good night for burning, drunkard!"
+
+"Ay, lord; the flames will fly briskly," answered Skallagrim.
+
+"How many, thinkest thou, walked over thee, drunkard, when thou didst
+lie yonder in the ale?"
+
+"I know not," groaned Skallagrim; "but I found this in the soft earth
+without: the print of a man's and a woman's feet; and this on the hill
+side: the track of two horses ridden hard."
+
+"Gizur and Swanhild, drunkard," said Eric. "Swanhild cast us into deep
+sleep by witchcraft, and Gizur dealt the blow. Better for him that he
+had never been born than that he has lived to deal that coward's blow!"
+
+
+
+Then they rode on, and when midnight was a little while gone they came
+to the stead at Coldback. Now this house was roofed with turves, and the
+windows were barred so that none could pass through them. Also in the
+yard were faggots of birch and a stack of hay.
+
+Eric and Skallagrim tied their horses in a dell that is to the north of
+the stead and crept up to the house. All was still; but a fire burnt in
+the hall, and, looking through a crack, Eric could see many men sleeping
+about it. Then he made signs to Skallagrim and together, very silently,
+they fetched hay and faggots, piling them against the north door of the
+house, for the wind blew from the north. Now Eric spoke to Skallagrim,
+bidding him stand, axe in hand, by the south door, and slay those who
+came out when the reek began to smart them: but he went himself to fire
+the pile.
+
+When Brighteyes had made all things ready for the burning, it came into
+his mind that, perhaps, Gizur and Swanhild were not in the house. But he
+would not hold his hand for this, for he was mad with grief and rage. So
+once more he prepared for the deed, when again he heard a voice in his
+ear--the voice of Gudruda, and it seemed to say:
+
+"_Thine oath, Eric! remember thine oath!_"
+
+Then he turned and the rage went out of his heart.
+
+"Let them seek me on Mosfell," he said, "I will not slay them secretly
+and by reek, the innocent and the guilty together." And he strode round
+the house to where Skallagrim stood at the south door, axe aloft and
+watching.
+
+"Does the fire burn, lord? I see no smoke," whispered Skallagrim.
+
+"Nay, I have made none. I will shed no more blood, except to save my
+life. I leave vengeance to the Norns."
+
+Now Skallagrim thought that Brighteyes was mad, but he dared say
+nothing. So they went to their horses, and when they found them,
+Eric rode back to the house. Presently they drew near, and Eric told
+Skallagrim to stay where he was, and riding on to the house, smote heavy
+blows upon the door, just as Skallagrim once had smitten, before Eric
+went up to Mosfell.
+
+Now Swanhild lay in her shut bed; but she could not sleep, because of
+what she saw in the eyes of Gudruda. Little may she ever sleep again,
+for when she shuts her eyes once more she sees that which was written in
+the dead eyes of Gudruda. So, as she lay, she heard the blows upon the
+door, and sprang frightened from her bed. Now there was tumult in the
+hall, for every man rose to his feet in fear, searching for his weapons.
+Again the loud knocks came.
+
+"It is the ghost of Eric!" cried one, for Gizur had given out that Eric
+was dead at his hand in fair fight.
+
+"Open!" said Gizur, and they opened, and there, a little way from the
+door, sat Brighteyes on a horse, great and shadowy to see, and behind
+him was Skallagrim the Baresark.
+
+"It is the ghost of Eric!" they cried again.
+
+"I am no ghost," said Brighteyes. "I am no ghost, ye men of Swanhild.
+Tell me: is Gizur, the son of Ospakar, among you?"
+
+"Gizur is here," said a voice; "but he swore he slew thee last night."
+
+"Then he lied," quoth Eric. "Gizur did not slay me--he murdered Gudruda
+the Fair as she lay asleep at my side. See!" and he drew Whitefire from
+its scabbard and held it in the rays of the moon that now shone out
+between the cloud rifts. "Whitefire is red with Gudruda's blood--Gudruda
+slaughtered in her sleep by Gizur's coward hand!"
+
+Now men murmured, for this seemed to them the most shameful of all
+deeds. But Gizur, hearing, shrank back aghast.
+
+"Listen again!" said Eric. "I was minded but now to burn you all as ye
+slept--ay, the firing is piled against the door. Still, I held my hand,
+for I have sworn to slay no more, except to save my life. Now I ride
+hence to Mosfell. Thither let Gizur come, Gizur the murderer, and
+Swanhild the witch, and with them all who will. There I will give them
+greeting, and wipe away the blood of Gudruda from Whitefire's blade."
+
+"Fear not, Eric," cried Swanhild, "I will come, and there thou mayst
+kill me, if thou canst."
+
+"Against thee, Swanhild," said Eric, "I lift no hand. Do thy worst,
+I leave thee to thy fate and the vengeance of the Norns. I am no
+woman-slayer. But to Gizur the murderer I say, come."
+
+Then he turned and went, and Skallagrim went with him.
+
+"Up, men, and cut Eric down!" cried Gizur, seeking to cover his shame.
+
+But no man stirred.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+HOW ERIC SENT AWAY HIS MEN FROM MOSFELL
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim came to Mosfell in safety, and during all
+that ride Brighteyes spoke no word. He rode in silence, and in silence
+Skallagrim rode after him. The heart of Skallagrim was broken because
+of the sorrow which his drunkenness had brought about, and the heart of
+Eric was buried in Gudruda's grave.
+
+On Mosfell Eric found four of his own men, two of whom had been among
+those that the people of Gizur and Swanhild had driven from Gudruda's
+ship before they fired her. For no fight had been made on the ship.
+There also he found Jon, who had been loosed from his bands in the booth
+by one who heard his cries as he rode past. Now when Jon saw Brighteyes,
+he told him all, and fell at Eric's feet and wept because he had
+betrayed him in his fear.
+
+But Eric spoke no angry word to him. Stooping down he raised him,
+saying, "Thou wast never overstout of heart, Jon, and thou art scarcely
+to be blamed because thou didst speak rather than die in torment, though
+perhaps some had chosen so to die and not to speak. Now I am a luckless
+man, and all things happen as they are fated, and the words of Atli come
+true, as was to be looked for. The Norns, against whom none may stand,
+did but work their will through thy mouth, Jon; so grieve no more for
+that which cannot be undone."
+
+Then he turned away, but Jon wept long and loudly.
+
+That night Eric slept well and dreamed no dreams. But on the morrow
+he woke at dawn, and clothed himself and ate. Then he called his men
+together, and with them Skallagrim. They came and stood before him, and
+Eric, drawing Whitefire, leaned upon it and spoke:
+
+"Hearken, mates," he said: "I know this, that my hours are short and
+death draws on. My years have been few and evil, and I cannot read the
+purpose of my life. She whom I loved has been slain by the witchcraft of
+Swanhild and the coward hand of Gizur the murderer, and I go to seek
+her where she waits. I am very glad to go, for now I have no more joy in
+life, being but a luckless man; it is an ill world, friends, and all
+the ways are red with blood. I have shed much blood, though but one life
+haunts me now at the last, and that is the life of Atli the Earl, for he
+was no match for my might and he is dead because of my sin. With my own
+blood I will wash away the blood of Atli, and then I seek another place,
+leaving nothing but a tale to be told in the ingle when fall the winter
+snows. For to this end we all come at the last, and it matters little if
+it find us at midday or at nightfall. We live in sorrow, we die in pain
+and darkness: for this is the curse that the Gods have laid upon men
+and each must taste it in his season. But I have sworn that no more men
+shall die for me. I will fight the last great fight alone; for I know
+this: I shall not easily be overcome, and with my fallen foes I will
+tread on Bifrost Bridge. Therefore, farewell! When the bones of Eric
+Brighteyes lie in their barrow, or are picked by ravens on the mountain
+side, Gizur will not trouble to hunt out those who clung to him, if
+indeed Gizur shall live to tell the tale. Nor need ye fear the hate of
+Swanhild, for she aims her spears at me alone. Go, therefore, and when
+I am dead, do not forget me, and do not seek to avenge me, for Death the
+avenger of all will find them also."
+
+Now Eric's men heard and groaned aloud, saying that they would die with
+him, for they loved Eric one and all. Only Skallagrim said nothing.
+
+Then Brighteyes spoke again: "Hear me, comrades. If ye will not go, my
+blood will be on your heads, for I will ride out alone, and meet the men
+of Gizur in the plain and fall there fighting."
+
+Then one by one they crept away to seek their horses in the dell. And
+each man as he went came to Eric and kissed his hand, then passed thence
+weeping. Jon was the last to go, except Skallagrim only, and he was so
+moved that he could not speak at all.
+
+It was this Jon who, in after years, when he was grown very old,
+wandered from stead to stead telling the deeds of Eric Brighteyes, and
+always finding a welcome because of his tale, till at length, as he
+journeyed, he was overtaken by a snowstorm and buried in a drift. For
+Jon, who lacked much, had this gift: he had a skald's tongue. Men have
+always held that it was to the honour of Jon that he told the tale thus,
+hiding nothing, seeing that some of it is against himself.
+
+
+
+Now when all had gone, Eric looked at Skallagrim, who still stood near
+him, axe in hand.
+
+"Wherefore goest thou not, drunkard?" he said. "Surely thou wilt find
+ale and mead in the vales or oversea. Here there is none. Hasten! I
+would be alone!"
+
+Now the great body of Skallagrim shook with grief and shame, and the red
+blood poured up beneath his dark sin. Then he spoke in a thick voice:
+
+"I did not think to live to hear such words from the lips of Eric
+Brighteyes. They are well earned, yet it is unmanly of thee, lord, thus
+to taunt one who loves thee. I would sooner die as Swanhild said yonder
+thrall should die than live to listen to such words. I have sinned
+against thee, indeed, and because of my sin my heart is broken. Hast
+thou, then, never sinned that thou wouldst tear it living from my breast
+as eagles tear a foundered horse? Think on thine own sins, Eric, and
+pity mine! Taunt me thus once more or bid me go once more and I will go
+indeed! I will go thus--on the edge of yonder gulf thou didst
+overcome me by thy naked might, and there I swore fealty to thee, Eric
+Brighteyes. Many a year have we wandered side by side, and, standing
+back to back, have struck many a blow. I am minded to do this: to stand
+by thee in the last great fight that draws on and to die there with
+thee. I have loved no other man save thee, and I am too old to seek new
+lords. Yet, if still thou biddest me, I will go thus. Where I swore my
+oath to thee, there I will end it. For I will lay me down on the brink
+of yonder gulf, as once I lay when thy hand was at my throat, and call
+out that thou art no more my lord and I am no more thy thrall. Then I
+will roll into the depths beneath, and by this death of shame thou shalt
+be freed of me, Eric Brighteyes."
+
+Eric looked at the great man--he looked long and sadly. Then he spoke:
+
+"Skallagrim Lambstail, thou hast a true heart. I too have sinned, and
+now I put away thy sin, although Gudruda is dead through thee and I must
+die because of thee. Stay by me if thou wilt and let us fall together."
+
+Then Skallagrim came to Eric, and, kneeling before him, took his hands
+and kissed them.
+
+"Now I am once more a man," he said, "and I know this: we two shall die
+such a great death that it will be well to have lived to die it!" and he
+arose and shouted:
+
+ "A! hai! A! hai! I see foes pass in pride!
+ A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!
+ Hear the song of the sword!
+ Whitefire is aloft--aloft!
+ Bare is the axe of the Baresark!
+ Croak, ye nesting ravens;
+ Flap your wings, ye eagles,
+ For bright is Mosfell's cave with blood!
+ Lap! lap! thou Grey Wolf,
+ Laugh aloud, Odin!
+
+ "Laugh till shake the golden doors;
+ Heroes' feet are set on Bifrost,
+ Open, ye hundred gates!
+ A! hai! A! hai! red runs the fray!
+ A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!"
+
+Then Skallagrim turned and went to clean his harness and the golden helm
+of Eric.
+
+
+
+Now at Coldback Gizur spoke with Swanhild.
+
+"Thou hast brought the greatest shame upon me," he said, "for thou hast
+caused me to slay a sleeping woman. Knowest thou that my own men will
+scarcely speak with me? I have come to this evil pass, through love of
+thee, that I have slain a sleeping woman!"
+
+"It was not my fault that thou didst kill Gudruda," answered Swanhild;
+"surely I thought it was Eric whom thy sword pierced! I have not sought
+thy love, Gizur, and I say this to thee: go, if thou wilt, and leave me
+alone!"
+
+Now Gizur looked at her, and was minded to go; but, as Swanhild knew
+well, she held him too fast in the net of her witcheries.
+
+"I would go, if I might go!" answered Gizur; "but I am bound to thee for
+good or evil, since it is fated that I shall wed thee."
+
+"Thou wilt never wed me while Eric lives," said Swanhild.
+
+Now she spoke thus truthfully, and by chance, as it were, not as driving
+Gizur on to slay Eric--for, now that Gudruda was dead, she was in two
+minds as to this matter, since, if she might, she still desired to take
+Eric to herself--but meaning that while Eric lived she would wed no
+other man. But Gizur took it otherwise.
+
+"Eric shall certainly die if I may bring it about," he answered, and
+went to speak with his men.
+
+Now all were gathered in the yard at Coldback, and that was a great
+company. But their looks were heavy because of the shame that Gizur,
+Ospakar's son, had brought upon them by the murder of Gudruda in her
+sleep.
+
+"Hearken, comrades!" said Gizur: "great shame is come upon me because of
+a deed that I have done unwittingly, for I aimed at the eagle Eric and I
+have slain the swan Gudruda."
+
+Then a certain old viking in the company, named Ketel, whom Gizur had
+hired for the slaying of Eric, spoke:
+
+"Man or woman, it is a niddering deed to kill folk in their sleep,
+Gizur! It is murder, and no less, and small luck can be hoped for from
+the stroke."
+
+Now Gizur felt that his people looked on him askance and heavily, and
+knew that it would be hard to show them that he was driven to this deed
+against his will, and by the witchcraft of Swanhild. So, as was his
+nature, he turned to guile for shelter, like a fox to his hole, and
+spoke to them with the tongue of a lawman; for Gizur had great skill in
+speech.
+
+"That tale was not all true which Eric Brighteyes told you," he said.
+"He was mad with grief, and moreover it seems that he slept, and only
+woke to find Gudruda dead. It came about thus: I stood with the lady
+Swanhild, and was about to call aloud on Eric to arm himself and come
+forth and meet me face to face----"
+
+"Then, lord, methinks thou hadst never met another foe," quoth the
+viking Ketel who had spoken first.
+
+"When of a sudden," went on Gizur, taking no note of Ketel's words, "one
+clothed in white sprang from the bed and rushed on me. Then I, thinking
+that it was Eric, lifted sword, not to smite, but to ward him away; but
+the linen-wearer met the sword and fell down dead. Then I fled, fearing
+lest men should wake and trap us, and that is all the tale. It was no
+fault of mine if Gudruda died upon the sword."
+
+Thus he spoke, but still men looked doubtfully upon him, for his eye was
+the eye of a liar--and Eric, as they knew, did not lie.
+
+"It is hard to find the truth between lawman's brain and tongue," said
+the old viking Ketel. "Eric is no lawman, but a true man, and he sang
+another song. I would slay Eric indeed, for between him and me there is
+a blood-feud, since my brother died at his hand when, with Whitefire
+for a crook, Brighteyes drove armed men like sheep down the hall of
+Middalhof--ay and swordless, slew Ospakar. Yet I say that Eric is a
+true man, and, whether or no thou art true, Gizur the Lawman, that thou
+knowest best--thou and Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa's daughter. If thou
+didst slay Gudruda as thou tellest, say, how come Gudruda's blood on
+Whitefire's blade? How did it chance, Gizur, that thou heldest Whitefire
+in thy hand and not thine own sword? Now I tell thee this: either thou
+shalt go up against Eric and clear thyself by blows, or I leave thee;
+and methinks there are others among this company who will do the same,
+for we have no wish to be partners with murderers and their wickedness."
+
+"Ay, a good word!" said many who stood by. "Let Gizur go up with us to
+Mosfell, and there stand face to face with Eric and clear himself by
+blows."
+
+"I ask no more," said Gizur; "we will ride to-night."
+
+"But much more shalt thou get, liar," quoth Ketel to himself, "for that
+hour when thou lookest once again on Whitefire shall be thy last!"
+
+
+
+So Gizur and Swanhild made ready to go up against Eric. That day they
+rode away with a great company, a hundred and one in all, and this was
+their plan. They sent six men with that thrall who had shown them the
+secret path, bidding him guide them to the mountain-top. Then, when they
+were come thither, and heard the shouts of those who sought to gain the
+platform from the south, they were to watch till Eric and his folk came
+out from the cave, and shoot them with arrows from above or crush them
+with stones. But if perchance Eric left the platform and came to meet
+his foes in the narrow pass, then they must let themselves down with
+ropes from the height above, and, creeping after him round the rock,
+must smite him in the back. Moreover, in secret, Gizur promised a great
+reward of ten hundreds in silver to him who should kill Eric, for he did
+not long to stand face to face with him alone. Swanhild also in secret
+made promise of reward to those who should bring Eric to her, bound, but
+living; and she bade them do this--to bear him down with shields and tie
+him with ropes.
+
+
+
+So they rode away, the seven who should climb the mountain from behind
+going first, and on the morrow morning they crossed the sand and came to
+Mosfell.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM GREW FEY
+
+Now the night came down upon Mosfell, and of all nights this was the
+strangest. The air was quiet and heavy, yet no rain fell. It was so
+silent, moreover, that, did a stone slip upon the mountain side or a
+horse neigh far off on the plains, the sound of it crept up the fell and
+was echoed from the crags.
+
+Eric and Skallagrim sat together on the open space of rock that is
+before the cave, and great heaviness and fear came into their hearts, so
+that they had no desire to sleep.
+
+"Methinks the night is ghost-ridden," said Eric, "and I am fey, for I
+grow cold, and it seems to me that one strokes my hair."
+
+"It is ghost-ridden, lord," answered Skallagrim. "Trolls are abroad, and
+the God-kind gather to see Eric die."
+
+For a while they sat in silence, then suddenly the mountain heaved up
+gently beneath them. Thrice it seemed to heave like a woman's breast,
+and left them frightened.
+
+"Now the dwarf-folk come from their caves," quoth Skallagrim, "and great
+deeds may be looked for, since they are not drawn to the upper earth by
+a little thing."
+
+Then once more they sat silent; and thick darkness came down upon the
+mountain, hiding the stars.
+
+"Look," said Eric of a sudden, and he pointed to Hecla.
+
+Skallagrim looked, and lo! the snowy dome of Hecla was aglow with a rosy
+flame like the light of dawn.
+
+"Winter lights," said Lambstail, shuddering.
+
+"Death lights!" answered Eric. "Look again!"
+
+They looked, and behold! in the rosy glow there sat three giant forms of
+fire, and their shapes were the shapes of women. Before them was a loom
+of blackness that stretched from earth to sky, and they wove at it with
+threads of flame. They were splendid and terrible to see. Their
+hair streamed behind them like meteor flames, their eyes shone like
+lightning, and their breasts gleamed like the polished bucklers of the
+gods. They wove fiercely at the loom of blackness, and as they wove they
+sang. The voice of the one was as the wind whistling through the pines;
+the voice of the other was as the sound of rain hissing on deep waters;
+and the voice of the third was as the moan of the sea. They wove
+fearfully and they sang loudly, but what they sang might not be known.
+Now the web grew and the woof grew, and a picture came upon the loom--a
+great picture written in fire.
+
+Behold! it was the semblance of a storm-awakened sea, and a giant ship
+fled before the gale--a dragon of war, and in the ship were piled the
+corses of men, and on these lay another corse, as one lies upon a bed.
+They looked, and the face of the corse grew bright. It was the face of
+Eric, and his head rested upon the dead heart of Skallagrim.
+
+Clinging to each other, Eric and Skallagrim saw the sight of fear that
+was written on the loom of the Norns. They saw it for a breath. Then,
+with a laugh like the wail of wolves, the shapes of fire sprang up
+and rent the web asunder. Then the first passed upward to the sky, the
+second southward towards Middalhof, but the third swept over Mosfell, so
+that the brightness of her flaming form shone on the rock where they sat
+by the cave, and the lightning of her eyes was mirrored in the byrnie of
+Skallagrim and on Eric's golden helm. She swept past, pointing downwards
+as she went, and lo! she was gone, and once more darkness and silence
+lay upon the earth.
+
+Now this sight was seen of Jon the thrall also, and he told it in
+his story of the deeds of Eric. For Jon lay hid in a secret place on
+Mosfell, waiting for tidings of what came to pass.
+
+
+
+For a while Eric and Skallagrim clung to each other. Then Skallagrim
+spoke.
+
+"We have seen the Valkyries," he said.
+
+"Nay," answered Eric, "we have seen the Norns--who are come to warn us
+of our doom! We shall die to-morrow."
+
+"At the least," said Skallagrim, "we shall not die alone: we had a
+goodly bed on yonder goblin ship, and all of our own slaying methinks.
+It is not so ill to die thus, lord!"
+
+"Not so ill!" said Eric; "and yet I am weary of blood and war, of glory
+and of my strength. Now I desire rest alone. Light fire--I can bear this
+darkness no longer; the marrow freezes in my bones."
+
+"Fire can be seen of foes," said Skallagrim.
+
+"It matters little now," said Eric, "we are feyfolk."
+
+So Skallagrim lighted the fire, piling much brushwood and dry turf over
+it, till presently it burnt up brightly, throwing light on all the space
+of rock, and heavy shadows against the cliff behind. They sat thus a
+while in the light of the flames, looking towards the deep gulf, till
+suddenly there came a sound as of one who climbed the gulf.
+
+"Who comes now, climbing where no man may pass?" cried Eric, seizing
+Whitefire and springing to his feet. Presently he sank down again with
+white face and staring eyes, and pointed at the edge of the cliff. And
+as he pointed, the neck of a man rose in the shadow above the brink, and
+the hands of a man grasped the rock. But there was no head on the neck.
+The shape of the headless man drew itself slowly over the brink, it
+walked slowly into the light towards the fire, then sat itself down in
+the glare of the flames, which shrank away from it as from a draught of
+wind. Pale with terror, Eric and Skallagrim looked on the headless
+thing and knew it. It was the wraith of the Baresark that Brighteyes had
+slain--the first of all the men he slew.
+
+"It is my mate, Eric, whom thou didst kill years ago and whose severed
+head spoke with thee!" gasped Skallagrim.
+
+"It is he, sure enough!" said Eric; "but where may his head be?"
+
+"Perchance the head will come," answered Skallagrim. "He is an evil
+sight to see, surely. Say, lord, shall I fall upon him, though I love
+not the task?"
+
+"Nay, Skallagrim, let him bide; he does but come to warn us of our fate.
+Moreover, ghosts can only be laid in one way--by the hewing off of the
+head and the laying of it at the thigh. But this one has no head to
+hew."
+
+Now as he spoke the headless man turned his neck as though to look.
+Once more there came the sound of feet and lo! men marched in from the
+darkness on either side. Eric and Skallagrim looked up and knew them.
+They were those of Ospakar's folk whom they had slain on Horse-Head
+Heights; all their wounds were on them and in front of them marched
+Mord, Ospakar's son. The ghosts gazed upon Eric and Skallagrim with cold
+dead eyes, then they too sat down by the fire. Now once more there came
+the sound of feet, and from every side men poured in who had died at the
+hands of Eric and Skallagrim. First came those who fell on that ship of
+Ospakar's which Eric sank by Westmans; then the crew of the Raven who
+had perished upon the sea-path. Even as the man died, so did each ghost
+come. Some had been drowned and their harness dripped water! Some had
+died of spear-thrusts and the spears were yet fixed in their breasts!
+Some had fallen beneath the flash of Whitefire and the weight of the axe
+of Skallagrim, and there they sat, looking on their wide wounds!
+
+Then came more and more. There were those whom Eric and Skallagrim had
+slain upon the seas, those who had fallen before them in the English
+wars, and all that company who had been drowned in the waters of the
+Pentland Firth when the witchcraft of Swanhild had brought the Gudruda
+to her wreck.
+
+"Now here we have a goodly crew," said Eric at length. "Is it done,
+thinkest thou, or will Mosfell send forth more dead?"
+
+As he spoke the wraith of a grey-headed man drew near. He had but one
+arm, for the other was hewn from him, and the byrnie on his left side
+was red with blood.
+
+"Welcome, Earl Atli!" cried Eric. "Sit thou over against me, who
+to-morrow shall be with thee."
+
+The ghost of the Earl seated itself and looked on Eric with sad eyes,
+but it spake never a word.
+
+Then came another company, and at their head stalked black Ospakar.
+
+"These be they who died at Middalhof," cried Eric. "Welcome, Ospakar!
+that marriage-feast of thine went ill!"
+
+"Now methinks we are overdone with trolls," said Skallagrim; "but see!
+here come more."
+
+As he spoke, Hall of Lithdale came, and with him Koll the Half-witted,
+and others. And so it went on till all the men whom Eric and Skallagrim
+had slain, or who had died because of them, or at their side, were
+gathered in deep ranks before them.
+
+"Now it is surely done," said Eric.
+
+"There is yet a space," said Skallagrim, pointing to the other side of
+the fire, "and Hell holds many dead."
+
+Even as the words left his lips there came a noise of the galloping of
+horse's hoofs, and one clad in white rode up. It was a woman, for her
+golden hair flowed down about her white arms. Then she slid from the
+horse and stood in the light of the fire, and behold! her white robe
+was red with blood, a great sword was set in her heart, and the face and
+eyes were the face and eyes of Gudruda the Fair, and the horse she rode
+was Blackmane, that Eric had slain.
+
+Now when Brighteyes saw her he gave a great cry.
+
+"Greeting, sweet!" he said. "I am no longer afraid, since thou comest to
+bear me company. Thou art dear to my sight--ay even in yon death-sheet.
+Greeting, sweet, my May! I laid thee stiff and cold in the earth at
+Middalhof, but, like a loving wife, thou hast burst thy bonds, and art
+come to save me from the grip of trolls. Thou art welcome, Gudruda,
+Asmund's daughter! Come, wife, sit thou at my side."
+
+The ghost of Gudruda spake no word. She walked through the fire towards
+him, and the flames went out beneath her feet, to burn up again when she
+had passed. Then she sat down over against Eric and looked on him with
+wide and tender eyes. Thrice he stretched out his arms to clasp her, but
+thrice their strength left them and they fell back to his side. It was
+as though they struck a wall of ice and were numbed by the bitter cold.
+
+"Look, here are more," groaned Skallagrim.
+
+Then Eric looked, and lo! the empty space to the left of the fire was
+filled with shadowy shapes like shapes of mist. Amongst them was Gizur,
+Ospakar's son, and many a man of his company. There, too, was Swanhild,
+Groa's daughter, and a toad nestled in her breast. She looked with wide
+eyes upon the eyes of dead Gudruda's ghost, that seemed not to see her,
+and a stare of fear was set on her lovely face. Nor was this all; for
+there, before that shadowy throng, stood two great shapes clad in their
+harness, and one was the shape of Eric and one the shape of Skallagrim.
+
+Thus, being yet alive, did these two look upon their own wraiths!
+
+Then Eric and Skallagrim cried out aloud and their brains swam and their
+senses left them, so that they swooned.
+
+
+
+When they opened their eyes and life came back to them the fire was
+dead, and it was day. Nor was there any sign of that company which had
+been gathered on the rock before them.
+
+"Skallagrim," quoth Eric, "it seems that I have dreamed a strange
+dream--a most strange dream of Norns and trolls!"
+
+"Tell me thy dream, lord," said Skallagrim.
+
+So Eric told all the vision, and the Baresark listened in silence.
+
+"It was no dream, lord," said Skallagrim, "for I myself have seen the
+same things. Now this is in my mind, that yonder sun is the last that
+we shall see, for we have beheld the death-shadows. All those who were
+gathered here last night wait to welcome us on Bifrost Bridge. And the
+mist-shapes who sat there, amongst whom our wraiths were numbered, are
+the shapes of those who shall die in the great fight to-day. For days
+are fled and we are sped!"
+
+"I would not have it otherwise," said Eric. "We have been greatly
+honoured of the Gods, and of the ghost-kind that are around us and above
+us. Now let us make ready to die as becomes men who have never turned
+back to blow, for the end of the story should fit the beginning, and of
+us there is a tale to tell."
+
+"A good word, lord," answered Skallagrim: "I have struck few strokes to
+be shamed of, and I do not fear to tread Bifrost Bridge in thy company.
+Now we will wash ourselves and eat, so that our strength may be whole in
+us."
+
+So they washed themselves with water, and ate merrily, and for the first
+time for many months Eric was merry. For now that the end was at hand
+his heart grew light within him. And when they had put the desire of
+food from them, and buckled on their harness, they looked out from their
+mountain height, and saw a cloud of dust rise in the desert plain of
+black sand beneath, and through it the sheen of spears.
+
+"Here come those of whom, if there is truth in visions, some few
+shall never go back again," said Eric. "Now, what counsel hast thou,
+Skallagrim? Where shall we meet them? Here on the space of rock, or
+yonder in the deep way of the cliff?"
+
+"My counsel is that we meet them here," said Skallagrim, "and cut them
+down one by one as they try to turn the rock. They can scarcely come at
+us to slay us here so long as our arms have strength to smite."
+
+"Yet they will come, though I know not how," answered Eric, "for I am
+sure of this, that our death lies before us. Here, then, we will meet
+them."
+
+Now the cloud of dust drew nearer, and they saw that this was a great
+company which came up against them. At the foot of the fell the men
+stayed and rested a while, and it was not till afternoon that they began
+to climb the mountain.
+
+"Night will be at hand before the game is played," said Skallagrim.
+"See, they climb slowly, saving their strength, and yonder among them is
+Swanhild in a purple cloak."
+
+"Ay, night will be at hand, Skallagrim--a last long night! A hundred to
+two--the odds are heavy; yet some shall wish them heavier. Now let us
+bind on our helms."
+
+
+
+Meanwhile Gizur and his folk crept up the paths from below. Now that
+thrall who knew the secret way had gone on with six chosen men, and
+already they climbed the watercourse and drew near to the flat crest of
+the fell. But Eric and Skallagrim knew nothing of this. So they sat down
+by the turning place that is over the gulf and waited, singing of the
+taking of the Raven and of the slaying in the stead at Middalhof, and
+telling tales of deeds that they had done. And the thrall and his six
+men climbed on till at length they gained the crest of the fell, and,
+looking over, saw Eric and Skallagrim beneath them.
+
+"The birds are in the snare, and hark! they sing," said the thrall; "now
+bring rocks and be silent."
+
+But Gizur and his people, having learned that Eric and Skallagrim were
+alone upon the mountain, pushed on.
+
+"We have not much to fear from two men," said Gizur.
+
+"That we shall learn presently," answered Swanhild. "I tell thee this,
+that I saw strange sights last night, though I did not sleep. I may
+sleep little now that Gudruda is dead, for that which I saw in her eyes
+haunts me."
+
+Then they went on, and the face of Gizur grew white with fear.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM FOUGHT THEIR LAST GREAT FIGHT
+
+Now the thrall and those with him on the crest of the fell heard the
+murmur of the company of Gizur and Swanhild as they won the mountain
+side, though they could not see them because of the rocks.
+
+"Now it is time to begin and knock these birds from their perch," said
+the thrall, "for that is an awkward corner for our folk to turn with
+Whitefire and the axe of Skallagrim waiting on the farther side."
+
+So he balanced a great stone, as heavy as three men could lift, on the
+brow of the rock, and aimed it. Then he pushed and let it go. It smote
+the platform beneath with a crash, two fathoms behind the spot where
+Eric and Skallagrim sat. Then it flew into the air, and, just as
+Brighteyes turned at the sound, it struck the wings of his helm, and,
+bursting the straps, tore the golden helm-piece from his head and
+carried it away into the gulf beneath.
+
+Skallagrim looked up and saw what had come about.
+
+"They have gained the crest of the fell," he cried. "Now we must fly
+into the cave or down the narrow way and hold it."
+
+"Down the narrow way, then," said Eric, and while rocks, spears and
+arrows rushed between and around them, they stepped on to the stone and
+won the path beyond. It was clear, for Gizur's folk had not yet come,
+and they ran nearly to the mouth of it, where there was a bend in the
+way, and stood there side by side.
+
+"Thou wast at death's door then, lord!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"Head-piece is not head," answered Eric; "but I wonder how they won the
+crest of the fell. I have never heard tell of any path by which it might
+be gained."
+
+"There they are at the least," said Skallagrim. "Now this is my will,
+that thou shouldst take my helm. I am Baresark and put little trust in
+harness, but rather in my axe and strength alone."
+
+"I will not do that," said Eric. "Listen: I hear them come."
+
+Presently the tumult of voices and the tramp of feet grew clearer, and
+after a while Gizur, Swanhild, and the men of their following turned
+the corner of the narrow way, and lo! there before them--ay within three
+paces of them--stood Eric and Skallagrim shoulder to shoulder, and the
+light poured down upon them from above.
+
+They were terrible to see, and the light shone brightly on Eric's golden
+hair and Whitefire's flashing blade, and the shadows lay dark on the
+black helm of Skallagrim and in the fierce black eyes beneath.
+
+Back surged Gizur and those with him. Skallagrim would have sprung upon
+them, but Eric caught him by the arm, saying: "A truce to thy Baresark
+ways. Rush not and move not! Let us stand here till they overwhelm us."
+
+Now those behind Gizur cried out to know what ailed them that they
+pushed back.
+
+"Only this," said Gizur, "that Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail
+stand like two grey wolves and hold the narrow way."
+
+"Now we shall have fighting worth the telling of," quoth Ketel the
+viking. "On, Gizur, Ospakar's son, and cut them down!"
+
+"Hold!" said Swanhild; "I will speak with Eric first," and, together
+with Gizur and Ketel, she passed round the corner of the path and came
+face to face with those who stood at bay there.
+
+"Now yield, Eric," she cried. "Foes are behind and before thee. Thou
+art trapped, and hast little chance of life. Yield thee, I say, with thy
+black wolf-hound, so perchance thou mayest find mercy even at the hands
+of her whose husband thou didst wrong and slay."
+
+"It is not my way to yield, lady," answered Eric, "and still less
+perchance is it the way of Skallagrim. Least of all will we yield to
+thee who, after working many ills, didst throw me in a witch-sleep, and
+to him who slew the wife sleeping at my side. Hearken, Swanhild: here
+we stand, awaiting death, nor will we take mercy from thy hand. For know
+this, we shall not die alone. Last night as we sat on Mosfell we saw
+the Norns weave our web of fate upon their loom of darkness. They sat on
+Helca's dome and wove their pictures in living flame, then rent the web
+and flew upward and southward and westward, crying our doom to sky
+and earth and sea. Last night as we sat by the fire on Mosfell all the
+company of the dead were gathered round us--ay! and all the company
+of those who shall die to-day. Thou wast there, Gizur the murderer,
+Ospakar's son! thou wast there, Swanhild the witch, Groa's daughter!
+thou wast there, Ketel Viking! with many another man; and there were we
+two also. Valkyries have kissed us and death draws near. Therefore, talk
+no more, but come and make an end. Greeting, Gizur, thou woman-murderer!
+Draw nigh! draw nigh! Out sword! up shield! and on, thou son of
+Ospakar!"
+
+Swanhild spoke no more, and Gizur had no word.
+
+"On, Gizur! Eric calls thee," quoth Ketel Viking; but Gizur slunk back,
+not forward.
+
+Then Ketel grew mad with rage and shame. He called to the men, and they
+drew near, as many as might, and looked doubtfully at the pair who stood
+before them like rocks upon a plain. Eric laughed aloud and Skallagrim
+gnawed the edge of his shield. Eric laughed aloud and the sound of his
+laughter ran up the rocks.
+
+"We are but two," he cried, "and ye are many! Is there never a pair
+among you will stand face to face with a Baresark and a helmless man?"
+and he tossed Whitefire high into the air and caught it by the hilt.
+
+Then Ketel and another man of his following sprang forward with an oath,
+and their axes thundered loud on the shields of Eric and of Skallagrim.
+But Whitefire flickered up and the axe of Skallagrim crashed, and at
+once their knees were loosened, so that they sank down dead.
+
+"More men! more men!" cried Eric. "These were brave, but their might was
+little. More men for the Grey Wolf's maw!"
+
+Then Swanhild lashed the folk with bitter words, and two of them sprang
+on. They sprang on like hounds upon a deer at bay, and they rolled back
+as gored hounds roll from the deer's horns.
+
+"More men! more men!" cried Eric. "Here lie but four and a hundred press
+behind. Now he shall win great honour who lays Brighteyes low and brings
+down the helm of Skallagrim."
+
+Again two came on, but they found no luck, for presently they also were
+down upon the bodies of those who went before. Now none could be found
+to come up against the pair, for they fought like Baldur and Thor, and
+none could touch them, and no harness might withstand the weight of
+their blows that shore through shield and helm and byrnie, deep to the
+bone beneath. Then Eric and Skallagrim leaned upon their weapons and
+mocked their foes, while these cursed and tore their beards with rage
+and shame.
+
+Now it is to be told that when the thrall and those with him saw Eric
+and Skallagrim had escaped their rocks and spears, they took counsel,
+and the end of it was that they slid down a rope to the platform that is
+under the crest of the fell. Thence, though they could see nothing, they
+could hear the clang of blows and the shouts of those who fought and
+fell--ay! and the mocking of Eric and of Skallagrim.
+
+"Now it goes thus," said the thrall, who was a cunning man: "Eric and
+Skallagrim hold the narrow way and none can stand against them. This,
+then, is my rede: that we turn the rock and take them in the back."
+
+His fellows thought this a good saying, and one by one they stood upon
+the little rock and won the narrow way. They crept along this till they
+were near to Eric and Skallagrim. Now Swanhild, looking up, saw them and
+started. Skallagrim noted this and glanced over his shoulder, and that
+not too soon, for, as he looked, the thrall lifted sword to smite the
+head of Eric.
+
+With a shout of "Back to back!" the Baresark swung round and ere ever
+the sword might fall his axe was buried deep in the thrall's breast.
+
+"Now we must cut our path through them," said Skallagrim, "and, if it
+may be, win the space that is before the cave. Keep them off in front,
+and I will mind these mannikins."
+
+Now Gizur's folk, seeing what had come about, took heart and fell upon
+Eric with a rush, and those who were with the dead thrall rushed at
+Skallagrim, and there began such a fight as has not been known in
+Iceland. But the way was so narrow that scarce more than one man could
+come to each of them at a time. And so fierce and true were the blows of
+Eric and Skallagrim that of those who came on few went back. Down they
+fell, and where they fell they died, and for every man who died Eric
+and Skallagrim won a pace towards the point of rock. Whitefire flamed so
+swift and swept so wide that it seemed to Swanhild, watching, as though
+three swords were aloft at once, and the axe of Skallagrim thundered
+down like the axe of a woodman against a tree, and those groaned on whom
+it fell as groans a falling tree. Now the shields of these twain were
+hewn through and through, and cast away, and their blood ran from many
+wounds. Still, their life was whole in them and they plied axe and sword
+with both hands. And ever men fell, and ever, fighting hard, they drew
+nearer to the point of rock.
+
+Now it was won, and now all the company that came with the thrall from
+over the mountain brow were dead or sorely wounded at the hands of
+black Skallagrim. Lo! one springs on Eric, and Gizur creeps behind him.
+Whitefire leaps to meet the man and does not leap in vain; but Gizur
+smites a coward blow at Eric's uncovered head, and wounds him sorely, so
+that he falls to his knee.
+
+"Now I am smitten to the death, Skallagrim," cries Eric. "Win the rock
+and leave me." Yet he rises from his knee.
+
+Then Skallagrim turns, red with blood and terrible to see.
+
+"'Tis but a scratch. Climb thou the rock--I follow," he says, and,
+screaming like a horse, with weapon aloft he leaps alone upon the foe.
+They break before the Baresark rush; they break, they fall--they are
+cloven by Baresark axe and trodden of Baresark feet! They roll back,
+leaving the way clear--save for the dead. Then Skallagrim follows
+Brighteyes to the rock.
+
+Now Eric wipes the gore from his eyes and sees. Then, slowly, and with
+a reeling brain, he steps down upon the giddy point. He goes near to
+falling, yet does not fall, for now he lies upon the open space, and
+creeps on hands and knees to the rock-wall that is by the cave, and sits
+resting his back against it, Whitefire on his knee.
+
+Before he is there, Skallagrim staggers to his side with a rush.
+
+"Now we have time to breathe, lord," he gasps. "See, here is water,"
+and he takes a pitcher that stands by, and gives Eric to drink from
+the pool, then drinks himself and pours the rest of the water on Eric's
+wound. Then new life comes to them, and they both stand on their feet
+and win back their breath.
+
+"We have not done so badly!" says Skallagrim, "and we are still a match
+for one or two. See, they come! Say, where shall we meet them, lord?"
+
+"Here," quoth Eric; "I cannot stand well upon my legs without the help
+of the rock. Now I am all unmeet for fight."
+
+"Yet shall this last stand of thine be sung of!" says Skallagrim.
+
+Now finding none to stay them, the men of Gizur climb one by one upon
+the rock and win the space that is beyond. Swanhild goes first of all,
+because she knows well that Eric will not harm her, and after her come
+Gizur and the others. But many do not come, for they will lift sword no
+more.
+
+Now Swanhild draws near and looks on Eric and mocks him in the
+fierceness of her heart and the rage of her wolf-love.
+
+"Now," she says, "now are Brighteyes dim eyes! What! weepest thou,
+Eric?"
+
+"Ay, Swanhild," he answered, "I weep tears of blood for those whom thou
+hast brought to doom."
+
+She draws nearer and speaks low to him: "Hearken, Eric. Yield thee! Thou
+hast done enough for honour, and thou art not smitten to the death of
+yonder cowardly hound. Yield and I will nurse thee back to health and
+bear thee hence, and together we will forget our hates and woes."
+
+"Not twice may a man lie in a witch's bed," said Eric, "and my troth is
+plighted to other than thee, Swanhild."
+
+"She is dead," says Swanhild.
+
+"Yes, she is dead, Swanhild; and I go to seek her amongst the dead--I go
+to seek her and to find her!"
+
+But the face of Swanhild grew fierce as the winter sea.
+
+"Thou hast put me away for the last time, Eric! Now thou shalt die, as I
+have promised thee and as I promised Gudruda the Fair!"
+
+"So shall I the more quickly find Gudruda and lose sight of thy evil
+face, Swanhild the harlot! Swanhild the murderess! Swanhild the witch!
+For I know this: thou shalt not escape!--thy doom draws on also!--and
+haunted and accursed shalt thou be for ever! Fare thee well, Swanhild;
+we shall meet no more, and the hour comes when thou shalt grieve that
+thou wast ever born!"
+
+Now Swanhild turned and called to the folk: "Come, cut down these outlaw
+rogues and make an end. Come, cut them down, for night draws on."
+
+Then once more the men of Gizur closed in upon them. Eric smote thrice
+and thrice the blow went home, then he could smite no more, for his
+strength was spent with toil and wounds, and he sank upon the ground.
+For a while Skallagrim stood over him like a she-bear o'er her young
+and held the mob at bay. Then Gizur, watching, cast a spear at Eric. It
+entered his side through a cleft in his byrnie and pierced him deep.
+
+"I am sped, Skallagrim Lambstail," cried Eric in a loud voice, and all
+men drew back to see giant Brighteyes die. Now his head fell against the
+rock and his eyes closed.
+
+Then Skallagrim, stooping, drew out the spear and kissed Eric on the
+forehead.
+
+"Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!" he said. "Iceland shall never see such
+another man, and few have died so great a death. Tarry a while, lord;
+tarry a while--I come--I come!"
+
+Then crying "_Eric! Eric!_" the Baresark fit took him, and once more
+and for the last time Skallagrim rushed screaming upon the foe, and
+once more they rolled to earth before him. To and fro he rushed, dealing
+great blows, and ever as he went they stabbed and cut and thrust at his
+side and back, for they dared not stand before him, till he bled from
+a hundred wounds. Now, having slain three more men, and wounded two
+others, Skallagrim might no more. He stood a moment swaying to and fro,
+then let his axe drop, threw his arms high above him, and with one loud
+cry of "_Eric!_" fell as a rock falls--dead upon the dead.
+
+But Eric was not yet gone. He opened his eyes and saw the death of
+Skallagrim and smiled.
+
+"Well ended, Lambstail!" he said in a faint voice.
+
+"Lo!" cried Gizur, "yon outlawed hound still lives! Now I will do a
+needful task and make an end of him, and so shall Ospakar's sword come
+back to Ospakar's son."
+
+"Thou art wondrous brave now that the bear lies dying!" said Swanhild.
+
+Now it seemed that Eric heard the words, for suddenly his might came
+back to him, and he staggered to his knees and thence to his feet. Then,
+as folk fall from him, with all his strength he whirls Whitefire round
+his head till it shines like a wheel of fire. "Thy service is done and
+thou art clean of Gudruda's blood--go back to those who forged thee!"
+Brighteyes cries, and casts Whitefire from him towards the gulf.
+
+Away speeds the great blade, flashing like lightning through the rays of
+the setting sun, and behold! as men watch it is gone--gone in mid-air!
+
+Since that day no such sword as Whitefire has been known in Iceland.
+
+"Now slay thou me, Gizur," says the dying Eric.
+
+Gizur comes on with little eagerness, and Eric cries aloud:
+
+"Swordless I slew thy father!--swordless, shieldless, and wounded to the
+death I will yet slay _thee_, Gizur the Murderer!" and with a loud cry
+he staggered towards him.
+
+Gizur smites him with his sword, but Eric does not stay, and while men
+wait and wonder, Brighteyes sweeps him into his great arms--ay, sweeps
+him up, lifts him from the ground and reels on.
+
+Eric reels on to the brink of the gulf. Gizur sees his purpose,
+struggles and shrieks aloud. But the strength of the dying Eric is more
+than the strength of Gizur. Now Brighteyes stands on the dizzy edge and
+the light of the passing sun flames about his head. And now, bearing
+Gizur with him, he hurls himself out into the gulf, and lo! the sun
+sinks!
+
+Men stand wondering, but Swanhild cries aloud:
+
+"Nobly done, Eric! nobly done! So I would have seen thee die who of all
+men wast the first!"
+
+
+
+This then was the end of Eric Brighteyes the Unlucky, who of all
+warriors that have lived in Iceland was the mightiest, the goodliest,
+and the best beloved of women and of those who clung to him.
+
+Now, on the morrow, Swanhild caused the body of Eric to be searched for
+in the cleft, and there they found it, floating in water and with
+the dead Gizur yet clasped in its bear-grip. Then she cleansed it and
+clothed it again in its rent armour, and bound on the Hell-shoes, and it
+was carried on horses to the sea-side, and with it were borne the bodies
+of Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark, Eric's thrall, and of all those
+men whom they had slain in the last great fight on Mosfell, that is now
+named Ericsfell.
+
+Then Swanhild drew her long dragon of war, in which she had come from
+Orkneys, from its shed over against Westman Isles, and in the centre of
+the ship, she piled the bodies of the slain in the shape of a bed,
+and lashed them fast. And on this bed she laid the corpse of Eric
+Brighteyes, and the breast of black Skallagrim the Baresark was his
+pillow, and the breast of Gizur, Ospakar's son, was his foot-rest.
+
+Then she caused the sails to be hoisted, and went alone aboard the long
+ship, the rails of which were hung with the shields of the dead men.
+
+And when at evening the breeze freshened to a gale that blew from the
+land, she cut the cable with her own hand, and the ship leapt forward
+like a thing alive, and rushed out in the red light of the sunset
+towards the open sea.
+
+Now ever the gale freshened and folk, standing on Westman Heights,
+saw the long ship plunge past, dipping her prow beneath the waves and
+sending the water in a rain of spray over the living Swanhild, over the
+dead Eric and those he lay upon.
+
+And by the head of Eric Brighteyes, her hair streaming on the wind,
+stood Swanhild the Witch, clad in her purple cloak, and with rings of
+gold about her throat and arms. She stood by Eric's head, swaying with
+the rush of the ship, and singing so sweet and wild a song that men grew
+weak who heard it.
+
+Now, as the people watched, two white swans came down from the clouds
+and sped on wide wings side by side over the vessel's mast.
+
+The ship rushed on through the glow of sunset into the gathering night.
+On sped the ship, but still Swanhild sung, and still the swans flew over
+her.
+
+The gale grew fierce, and fiercer yet. The darkness gathered deep upon
+the raging sea.
+
+Now that ship was seen no more, and the death-song of Swanhild as she
+passed to doom was never heard again.
+
+For swans and ship, and Swanhild, and dead Eric and his dead foes, were
+lost in the wind and the night.
+
+But far out on the sea a great flame of fire leapt up towards the sky.
+
+
+
+Now this is the tale of Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur's son; of Gudruda
+the Fair, Asmund's daughter; of Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's wife,
+and of Ounound, named Skallagrim Lambstail, the Baresark, Eric's thrall,
+all of whom lived and died before Thangbrand, Wilibald's son, preached
+the White Christ in Iceland.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERIC BRIGHTEYES ***
+
+***** This file should be named 2721-8.txt or 2721-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/2/2721/
+
+Produced by John Bickers; Dagny; Emma Dudding; David Widger
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/2721-8.zip b/old/2721-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..29f2d26
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/2721-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/2721-h.htm.2021-01-27 b/old/2721-h.htm.2021-01-27
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dec7692
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/2721-h.htm.2021-01-27
@@ -0,0 +1,15307 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Eric Brighteyes
+
+Author: H. Rider Haggard
+
+Release Date: March 31, 2006 [EBook #2721]
+Last Updated: September 22, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERIC BRIGHTEYES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Bickers; Dagny; Emma Dudding; David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ ERIC BRIGHTEYES
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by H. Rider Haggard
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> DEDICATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_INTR"> INTRODUCTION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> <big><b>ERIC BRIGHTEYES</b></big> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> II </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> IV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> V </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> VI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> VII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> VIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> IX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> X </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> XI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> XIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> XIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> XV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> XVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> XVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> XVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> XIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> XX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> XXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> XXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> XXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> XXIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> XXV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> XXVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> XXVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> XXVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> XXIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> XXX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> XXXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> XXXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> XXXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ DEDICATION
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Madam,
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ You have graciously conveyed to me the intelligence that during the weary
+ weeks spent far from his home&mdash;in alternate hope and fear, in
+ suffering and mortal trial&mdash;a Prince whose memory all men must
+ reverence, the Emperor Frederick, found pleasure in the reading of my
+ stories: that &ldquo;they interested and fascinated him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the world was watching daily at the bedside of your Majesty&rsquo;s
+ Imperial husband, while many were endeavouring to learn courage in our
+ supremest need from the spectacle of that heroic patience, a distant
+ writer little knew that it had been his fortune to bring to such a
+ sufferer an hour&rsquo;s forgetfulness of sorrow and pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This knowledge, to an author, is far dearer than any praise, and it is in
+ gratitude that, with your Majesty&rsquo;s permission, I venture to dedicate to
+ you the tale of Eric Brighteyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The late Emperor, at heart a lover of peace, though by duty a soldier of
+ soldiers, might perhaps have cared to interest himself in a warrior of
+ long ago, a hero of our Northern stock, whose days were spent in strife,
+ and whose latest desire was Rest. But it may not be; like the Golden Eric
+ of this Saga, and after a nobler fashion, he has passed through the
+ Hundred Gates into the Valhalla of Renown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To you, then, Madam, I dedicate this book, a token, however slight and
+ unworthy, of profound respect and sympathy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am, Madam,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your Majesty&rsquo;s most obedient servant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ H. Rider Haggard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ November 17, 1889.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To H.I.M. Victoria, Empress Frederick of Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric Brighteyes&rdquo; is a romance founded on the Icelandic Sagas. &ldquo;What is a
+ saga?&rdquo; &ldquo;Is it a fable or a true story?&rdquo; The answer is not altogether
+ simple. For such sagas as those of Burnt Njal and Grettir the Strong
+ partake both of truth and fiction: historians dispute as to the
+ proportions. This was the manner of the saga&rsquo;s growth: In the early days
+ of the Iceland community&mdash;that republic of aristocrats&mdash;say,
+ between the dates 900 and 1100 of our era, a quarrel would arise between
+ two great families. As in the case of the Njal Saga, its cause, probably,
+ was the ill doings of some noble woman. This quarrel would lead to
+ manslaughter. Then blood called for blood, and a vendetta was set on foot
+ that ended only with the death by violence of a majority of the actors in
+ the drama and of large numbers of their adherents. In the course of the
+ feud, men of heroic strength and mould would come to the front and perform
+ deeds worthy of the iron age which bore them. Women also would help to
+ fashion the tale, for good or ill, according to their natural gifts and
+ characters. At last the tragedy was covered up by death and time, leaving
+ only a few dinted shields and haunted cairns to tell of those who had
+ played its leading parts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But its fame lived on in the minds of men. From generation to generation
+ skalds wandered through the winter snows, much as Homer may have wandered
+ in his day across the Grecian vales and mountains, to find a welcome at
+ every stead, because of the old-time story they had to tell. Here, night
+ after night, they would sit in the ingle and while away the weariness of
+ the dayless dark with histories of the times when men carried their lives
+ in their hands, and thought them well lost if there might be a song in the
+ ears of folk to come. To alter the tale was one of the greatest of crimes:
+ the skald must repeat it as it came to him; but by degrees undoubtedly the
+ sagas did suffer alteration. The facts remained the same indeed, but
+ around them gathered a mist of miraculous occurrences and legends. To take
+ a single instance: the account of the burning of Bergthorsknoll in the
+ Njal Saga is not only a piece of descriptive writing that for vivid,
+ simple force and insight is scarcely to be matched out of Homer and the
+ Bible, it is also obviously true. We feel as we read, that no man could
+ have invented that story, though some great skald threw it into shape.
+ That the tale is true, the writer of &ldquo;Eric&rdquo; can testify, for, saga in
+ hand, he has followed every act of the drama on its very site. There he
+ who digs beneath the surface of the lonely mound that looks across plain
+ and sea to Westman Isles may still find traces of the burning, and see
+ what appears to be the black sand with which the hands of Bergthora and
+ her women strewed the earthen floor some nine hundred years ago, and even
+ the greasy and clotted remains of the whey that they threw upon the flame
+ to quench it. He may discover the places where Fosi drew up his men, where
+ Skarphedinn died, singing while his legs were burnt from off him, where
+ Kari leapt from the flaming ruin, and the dell in which he laid down to
+ rest&mdash;at every step, in short, the truth of the narrative becomes
+ more obvious. And yet the tale has been added to, for, unless we may
+ believe that some human beings are gifted with second sight, we cannot
+ accept as true the prophetic vision that came to Runolf, Thorstein&rsquo;s son;
+ or that of Njal who, on the evening of the onslaught, like Theoclymenus in
+ the Odyssey, saw the whole board and the meats upon it &ldquo;one gore of
+ blood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, in the Norse romance now offered to the reader, the tale of Eric and
+ his deeds would be true; but the dream of Asmund, the witchcraft of
+ Swanhild, the incident of the speaking head, and the visions of Eric and
+ Skallagrim, would owe their origin to the imagination of successive
+ generations of skalds; and, finally, in the fifteenth or sixteenth
+ century, the story would have been written down with all its supernatural
+ additions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tendency of the human mind&mdash;and more especially of the Norse mind&mdash;is
+ to supply uncommon and extraordinary reasons for actions and facts that
+ are to be amply accounted for by the working of natural forces. Swanhild
+ would have needed no &ldquo;familiar&rdquo; to instruct her in her evil schemes; Eric
+ would have wanted no love-draught to bring about his overthrow. Our common
+ experience of mankind as it is, in opposition to mankind as we fable it to
+ be, is sufficient to teach us that the passion of one and the human
+ weakness of the other would suffice to these ends. The natural magic, the
+ beauty and inherent power of such a woman as Swanhild, are things more
+ forceful than any spell magicians have invented, or any demon they are
+ supposed to have summoned to their aid. But no saga would be complete
+ without the intervention of such extraneous forces: the need of them was
+ always felt, in order to throw up the acts of heroes and heroines, and to
+ invest their persons with an added importance. Even Homer felt this need,
+ and did not scruple to introduce not only second sight, but gods and
+ goddesses, and to bring their supernatural agency to bear directly on the
+ personages of his chant, and that far more freely than any Norse sagaman.
+ A word may be added in explanation of the appearances of &ldquo;familiars&rdquo; in
+ the shapes of animals, an instance of which will be found in this story.
+ It was believed in Iceland, as now by the Finns and Eskimo, that the
+ passions and desires of sorcerers took visible form in such creatures as
+ wolves or rats. These were called &ldquo;sendings,&rdquo; and there are many allusions
+ to them in the Sagas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another peculiarity that may be briefly alluded to as eminently
+ characteristic of the Sagas is their fatefulness. As we read we seem to
+ hear the voice of Doom speaking continually. &ldquo;<i>Things will happen as
+ they are fated</i>&rdquo;: that is the keynote of them all. The Norse mind had
+ little belief in free will, less even than we have to-day. Men and women
+ were born with certain characters and tendencies, given to them in order
+ that their lives should run in appointed channels, and their acts bring
+ about an appointed end. They do not these things of their own desire,
+ though their desires prompt them to the deeds: they do them because they
+ must. The Norns, as they name Fate, have mapped out their path long and
+ long ago; their feet are set therein, and they must tread it to the end.
+ Such was the conclusion of our Scandinavian ancestors&mdash;a belief
+ forced upon them by their intense realisation of the futility of human
+ hopes and schemings, of the terror and the tragedy of life, the vanity of
+ its desires, and the untravelled gloom or sleep, dreamless or dreamfull,
+ which lies beyond its end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though the Sagas are entrancing, both as examples of literature of which
+ there is but little in the world and because of their living interest,
+ they are scarcely known to the English-speaking public. This is easy to
+ account for: it is hard to persuade the nineteenth century world to
+ interest itself in people who lived and events that happened a thousand
+ years ago. Moreover, the Sagas are undoubtedly difficult reading. The
+ archaic nature of the work, even in a translation; the multitude of its
+ actors; the Norse sagaman&rsquo;s habit of interweaving endless side-plots, and
+ the persistence with which he introduces the genealogy and adventures of
+ the ancestors of every unimportant character, are none of them to the
+ taste of the modern reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric Brighteyes&rdquo; therefore, is clipped of these peculiarities, and, to
+ some extent, is cast in the form of the romance of our own day, archaisms
+ being avoided as much as possible. The author will be gratified should he
+ succeed in exciting interest in the troubled lives of our Norse
+ forefathers, and still more so if his difficult experiment brings readers
+ to the Sagas&mdash;to the prose epics of our own race. Too ample, too
+ prolix, too crowded with detail, they cannot indeed vie in art with the
+ epics of Greece; but in their pictures of life, simple and heroic, they
+ fall beneath no literature in the world, save the Iliad and the Odyssey
+ alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ERIC BRIGHTEYES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST FOUND GROA THE WITCH
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ There lived a man in the south, before Thangbrand, Wilibald&rsquo;s son,
+ preached the White Christ in Iceland. He was named Eric Brighteyes,
+ Thorgrimur&rsquo;s son, and in those days there was no man like him for
+ strength, beauty and daring, for in all these things he was the first. But
+ he was not the first in good-luck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two women lived in the south, not far from where the Westman Islands stand
+ above the sea. Gudruda the Fair was the name of the one, and Swanhild,
+ called the Fatherless, Groa&rsquo;s daughter, was the other. They were
+ half-sisters, and there were none like them in those days, for they were
+ the fairest of all women, though they had nothing in common except their
+ blood and hate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now of Eric Brighteyes, of Gudruda the Fair and of Swanhild the
+ Fatherless, there is a tale to tell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two fair women saw the light in the self-same hour. But Eric
+ Brighteyes was their elder by five years. The father of Eric was
+ Thorgrimur Iron-Toe. He had been a mighty man; but in fighting with a
+ Baresark,[*] who fell upon him as he came up from sowing his wheat, his
+ foot was hewn from him, so that afterwards he went upon a wooden leg shod
+ with iron. Still, he slew the Baresark, standing on one leg and leaning
+ against a rock, and for that deed people honoured him much. Thorgrimur was
+ a wealthy yeoman, slow to wrath, just, and rich in friends. Somewhat late
+ in life he took to wife Saevuna, Thorod&rsquo;s daughter. She was the best of
+ women, strong in mind and second-sighted, and she could cover herself in
+ her hair. But these two never loved each other overmuch, and they had but
+ one child, Eric, who was born when Saevuna was well on in years.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] The Baresarks were men on whom a passing fury of battle
+ came; they were usually outlawed.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The father of Gudruda was Asmund Asmundson, the Priest of Middalhof. He
+ was the wisest and the wealthiest of all men who lived in the south of
+ Iceland in those days, owning many farms and, also, two ships of
+ merchandise and one long ship of war, and having much money out at
+ interest. He had won his wealth by viking&rsquo;s work, robbing the English
+ coasts, and black tales were told of his doings in his youth on the sea,
+ for he was a &ldquo;red-hand&rdquo; viking. Asmund was a handsome man, with blue eyes
+ and a large beard, and, moreover, was very skilled in matters of law. He
+ loved money much, and was feared of all. Still, he had many friends, for
+ as he aged he grew more kindly. He had in marriage Gudruda, the daughter
+ of Björn, who was very sweet and kindly of nature, so that they called her
+ Gudruda the Gentle. Of this marriage there were two children, Björn and
+ Gudruda the Fair; but Björn grew up like his father in youth, strong and
+ hard, and greedy of gain, while, except for her wonderful beauty, Gudruda
+ was her mother&rsquo;s child alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother of Swanhild the Fatherless was Groa the Witch. She was a Finn,
+ and it is told of her that the ship on which she sailed, trying to run
+ under the lee of the Westman Isles in a great gale from the north-east,
+ was dashed to pieces on a rock, and all those on board of her were caught
+ in the net of Ran[*] and drowned, except Groa herself, who was saved by
+ her magic art. This at the least is true, that, as Asmund the Priest rode
+ down by the sea-shore on the morning after the gale, seeking for some
+ strayed horses, he found a beautiful woman, who wore a purple cloak and a
+ great girdle of gold, seated on a rock, combing her black hair and singing
+ the while; and, at her feet, washing to and fro in a pool, was a dead man.
+ He asked whence she came, and she answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out of the Swan&rsquo;s Bath.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] The Norse goddess of the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next, he asked her where were her kin. But, pointing to the dead man, she
+ said that this alone was left of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who was the man, then?&rdquo; said Asmund the Priest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She laughed again and sang this song:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Groa sails up from the Swan&rsquo;s Bath,
+ Death Gods grip the Dead Man&rsquo;s hand.
+ Look where lies her luckless husband,
+ Bolder sea-king ne&rsquo;er swung sword!
+ Asmund, keep the kirtle-wearer,
+ For last night the Norns were crying,
+ And Groa thought they told of thee:
+ Yea, told of thee and babes unborn.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How knowest thou my name?&rdquo; asked Asmund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The sea-mews cried it as the ship sank, thine and others&mdash;and they
+ shall be heard in story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then that is the best of luck,&rdquo; quoth Asmund; &ldquo;but I think that thou art
+ fey.&rdquo;[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] I.e. subject to supernatural presentiments, generally
+ connected with approaching doom.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;fey and fair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True enough thou art fair. What shall we do with this dead man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Leave him in the arms of Ran. So may all husbands lie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They spoke no more with her at that time, seeing that she was a
+ witchwoman. But Asmund took her up to Middalhof, and gave her a farm, and
+ she lived there alone, and he profited much by her wisdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it chanced that Gudruda the Gentle was with child, and when her time
+ came she gave a daughter birth&mdash;a very fair girl, with dark eyes. On
+ the same day, Groa the witchwoman brought forth a girl-child, and men
+ wondered who was its father, for Groa was no man&rsquo;s wife. It was women&rsquo;s
+ talk that Asmund the Priest was the father of this child also; but when he
+ heard it he was angry, and said that no witchwoman should bear a bairn of
+ his, howsoever fair she was. Nevertheless, it was still said that the
+ child was his, and it is certain that he loved it as a man loves his own;
+ but of all things, this is the hardest to know. When Groa was questioned
+ she laughed darkly, as was her fashion, and said that she knew nothing of
+ it, never having seen the face of the child&rsquo;s father, who rose out of the
+ sea at night. And for this cause some thought him to have been a wizard or
+ the wraith of her dead husband; but others said that Groa lied, as many
+ women have done on such matters. But of all this talk the child alone
+ remained and she was named Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, but an hour before the child of Gudruda the Gentle was born, Asmund
+ went up from his house to the Temple, to tend the holy fire that burned
+ night and day upon the altar. When he had tended the fire, he sat down
+ upon the cross-benches before the shrine, and, gazing on the image of the
+ Goddess Freya, he fell asleep and dreamed a very evil dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He dreamed that Gudruda the Gentle bore a dove most beautiful to see, for
+ all its feathers were of silver; but that Groa the Witch bore a golden
+ snake. And the snake and the dove dwelt together, and ever the snake
+ sought to slay the dove. At length there came a great white swan flying
+ over Coldback Fell, and its tongue was a sharp sword. Now the swan saw the
+ dove and loved it, and the dove loved the swan; but the snake reared
+ itself, and hissed, and sought to kill the dove. But the swan covered her
+ with his wings, and beat the snake away. Then he, Asmund, came out and
+ drove away the swan, as the swan had driven the snake, and it wheeled high
+ into the air and flew south, and the snake swam away also through the sea.
+ But the dove drooped and now it was blind. Then an eagle came from the
+ north, and would have taken the dove, but it fled round and round, crying,
+ and always the eagle drew nearer to it. At length, from the south the swan
+ came back, flying heavily, and about its neck was twined the golden snake,
+ and with it came a raven. And it saw the eagle and loud it trumpeted, and
+ shook the snake from it so that it fell like a gleam of gold into the sea.
+ Then the eagle and the swan met in battle, and the swan drove the eagle
+ down and broke it with his wings, and, flying to the dove, comforted it.
+ But those in the house ran out and shot at the swan with bows and drove it
+ away, but now he, Asmund, was not with them. And once more the dove
+ drooped. Again the swan came back, and with it the raven, and a great host
+ were gathered against them, and, among them, all of Asmund&rsquo;s kith and kin,
+ and the men of his quarter and some of his priesthood, and many whom he
+ did not know by face. And the swan flew at Björn his son, and shot out the
+ sword of its tongue and slew him, and many a man it slew thus. And the
+ raven, with a beak and claws of steel, slew also many a man, so that
+ Asmund&rsquo;s kindred fled and the swan slept by the dove. But as it slept the
+ golden snake crawled out of the sea, and hissed in the ears of men, and
+ they rose up to follow it. It came to the swan and twined itself about its
+ neck. It struck at the dove and slew it. Then the swan awoke and the raven
+ awoke, and they did battle till all who remained of Asmund&rsquo;s kindred and
+ people were dead. But still the snake clung about the swan&rsquo;s neck, and
+ presently snake and swan fell into the sea, and far out on the sea there
+ burned a flame of fire. And Asmund awoke trembling and left the Temple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now as he went, a woman came running, and weeping as she ran.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Haste, haste!&rdquo; she cried; &ldquo;a daughter is born to thee, and Gudruda thy
+ wife is dying!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it so?&rdquo; said Asmund; &ldquo;after ill dreams ill tidings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now in the bed-closet off the great hall of Middalhof lay Gudruda the
+ Gentle and she was dying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art thou there, husband?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even so, wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou comest in an evil hour, for it is my last. Now hearken. Take thou
+ the new-born babe within thine arms and kiss it, and pour water over it,
+ and name it with my name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Asmund did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken, my husband. I have been a good wife to thee, though thou hast
+ not been all good to me. But thus shalt thou atone: thou shalt swear that,
+ though she is a girl, thou wilt not cast this bairn forth to perish, but
+ wilt cherish and nurture her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I swear it,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou shalt swear that thou wilt not take the witchwoman Groa to wife,
+ nor have anything to do with her, and this for thine own sake: for, if
+ thou dost, she will be thy death. Dost thou swear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I swear it,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is well; but, husband, if thou dost break thine oath, either in the
+ words or in the spirit of the words, evil shall overtake thee and all thy
+ house. Now bid me farewell, for I die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bent over her and kissed her, and it is said that Asmund wept in that
+ hour, for after his fashion he loved his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me the babe,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that it may lie once upon my breast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They gave her the babe and she looked upon its dark eyes and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fairest of women shalt thou be, Gudruda&mdash;fair as no woman in Iceland
+ ever was before thee; and thou shalt love with a mighty love&mdash;and
+ thou shalt lose&mdash;and, losing, thou shalt find again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, it is said that, as she spoke these words, her face grew bright as a
+ spirit&rsquo;s, and, having spoken them, she fell back dead. And they laid her
+ in earth, but Asmund mourned her much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, when all was over and done, the dream that he had dreamed lay heavy
+ on him. Now of all diviners of dreams Groa was the most skilled, and when
+ Gudruda had been in earth seven full days, Asmund went to Groa, though
+ doubtfully, because of his oath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came to the house and entered. On a couch in the chamber lay Groa, and
+ her babe was on her breast and she was very fair to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greeting, lord!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;What wouldest thou here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have dreamed a dream, and thou alone canst read it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is as it may be,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;It is true that I have some skill
+ in dreams. At the least I will hear it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he unfolded it to her every word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What wilt thou give me if I read thy dream?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What dost thou ask? Methinks I have given thee much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, lord,&rdquo; and she looked at the babe upon her breast. &ldquo;I ask but a
+ little thing: that thou shalt take this bairn in thy arms, pour water over
+ it and name it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Men will talk if I do this, for it is the father&rsquo;s part.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a little thing what men say: talk goes by as the wind. Moreover,
+ thou shalt give them the lie in the child&rsquo;s name, for it shall be Swanhild
+ the Fatherless. Nevertheless that is my price. Pay it if thou wilt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Read me the dream and I will name the child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, first name thou the babe: for then no harm shall come to her at thy
+ hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Asmund took the child, poured water over her, and named her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Groa spoke: &ldquo;This lord, is the reading of thy dream, else my wisdom
+ is at fault: The silver dove is thy daughter Gudruda, the golden snake is
+ my daughter Swanhild, and these two shall hate one the other and strive
+ against each other. But the swan is a mighty man whom both shall love,
+ and, if he love not both, yet shall belong to both. And thou shalt send
+ him away; but he shall return and bring bad luck to thee and thy house,
+ and thy daughter shall be blind with love of him. And in the end he shall
+ slay the eagle, a great lord from the north who shall seek to wed thy
+ daughter, and many another shall he slay, by the help of that raven with
+ the bill of steel who shall be with him. But Swanhild shall triumph over
+ thy daughter Gudruda, and this man, and the two of them, shall die at her
+ hands, and, for the rest, who can say? But this is true&mdash;that the
+ mighty man shall bring all thy race to an end. See now, I have read thy
+ rede.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Asmund was very wroth. &ldquo;Thou wast wise to beguile me to name thy
+ bastard brat,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;else had I been its death within this hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This thou canst not do, lord, seeing that thou hast held it in thy arms,&rdquo;
+ Groa answered, laughing. &ldquo;Go rather and lay out Gudruda the Fair on
+ Coldback Hill; so shalt thou make an end of the evil, for Gudruda shall be
+ its very root. Learn this, moreover: that thy dream does not tell all,
+ seeing that thou thyself must play a part in the fate. Go, send forth the
+ babe Gudruda, and be at rest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That cannot be, for I have sworn to cherish it, and with an oath that may
+ not be broken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is well,&rdquo; laughed Groa. &ldquo;Things will befall as they are fated; let
+ them befall in their season. There is space for cairns on Coldback and the
+ sea can shroud its dead!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Asmund went thence, angered at heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC TOLD HIS LOVE TO GUDRUDA IN THE SNOW ON COLDBACK
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now, it must be told that, five years before the day of the death of
+ Gudruda the Gentle, Saevuna, the wife of Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, gave birth
+ to a son, at Coldback in the Marsh, on Ran River, and when his father came
+ to look upon the child he called out aloud:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here we have a wondrous bairn, for his hair is yellow like gold and his
+ eyes shine bright as stars.&rdquo; And Thorgrimur named him Eric Brighteyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, Coldback is but an hour&rsquo;s ride from Middalhof, and it chanced, in
+ after years, that Thorgrimur went up to Middalhof, to keep the Yule feast
+ and worship in the Temple, for he was in the priesthood of Asmund
+ Asmundson, bringing the boy Eric with him. There also was Groa with
+ Swanhild, for now she dwelt at Middalhof; and the three fair children were
+ set together in the hall to play, and men thought it great sport to see
+ them. Now, Gudruda had a horse of wood and would ride it while Eric pushed
+ the horse along. But Swanhild smote her from the horse and called to Eric
+ to make it move; but he comforted Gudruda and would not, and at that
+ Swanhild was angry and lisped out:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Push thou must, if I will it, Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he pushed sideways and with such good will that Swanhild fell almost
+ into the fire of the hearth, and, leaping up, she snatched a brand and
+ threw it at Gudruda, firing her clothes. Men laughed at this; but Groa,
+ standing apart, frowned and muttered witch-words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why lookest thou so darkly, housekeeper?&rdquo; said Asmund; &ldquo;the boy is bonny
+ and high of heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, he is bonny as no child is, and he shall be bonny all his life-days.
+ Nevertheless, she shall not stand against his ill luck. This I prophesy of
+ him: that women shall bring him to his end, and he shall die a hero&rsquo;s
+ death, but not at the hand of his foes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now the years went by peacefully. Groa dwelt with her daughter
+ Swanhild up at Middalhof and was the love of Asmund Asmundson. But, though
+ he forgot his oath thus far, yet he would never take her to wife. The
+ witchwife was angered at this, and she schemed and plotted much to bring
+ it about that Asmund should wed her. But still he would not, though in all
+ things else she led him as it were by a halter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty full years had gone by since Gudruda the Gentle was laid in earth;
+ and now Gudruda the Fair and Swanhild the Fatherless were women too. Eric,
+ too, was a man of five-and-twenty years, and no such man had lived in
+ Iceland. For he was strong and great of stature, his hair was yellow as
+ gold, and his grey eyes shone with the light of swords. He was gentle and
+ loving as a woman, and even as a lad his strength was the strength of two
+ men; and there were none in all the quarter who could leap or swim or
+ wrestle against Eric Brighteyes. Men held him in honour and spoke well of
+ him, though as yet he had done no deeds, but lived at home on Coldback,
+ managing the farm, for now Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, his father, was dead. But
+ women loved him much, and that was his bane&mdash;for of all women he
+ loved but one, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter. He loved her from a
+ child, and her alone till his day of death, and she, too, loved him and
+ him only. For now Gudruda was a maid of maids, most beautiful to see and
+ sweet to hear. Her hair, like the hair of Eric, was golden, and she was
+ white as the snow on Hecla; but her eyes were large and dark, and black
+ lashes drooped above them. For the rest she was tall and strong and
+ comely, merry of face, yet tender, and the most witty of women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild also was very fair; she was slender, small of limb, and dark of
+ hue, having eyes blue as the deep sea, and brown curling hair, enough to
+ veil her to the knees, and a mind of which none knew the end, for, though
+ she was open in her talk, her thoughts were dark and secret. This was her
+ joy: to draw the hearts of men to her and then to mock them. She beguiled
+ many in this fashion, for she was the cunningest girl in matters of love,
+ and she knew well the arts of women, with which they bring men to nothing.
+ Nevertheless she was cold at heart, and desired power and wealth greatly,
+ and she studied magic much, of which her mother Groa also had a store. But
+ Swanhild, too, loved a man, and that was the joint in her harness by which
+ the shaft of Fate entered her heart, for that man was Eric Brighteyes, who
+ loved her not. But she desired him so sorely that, without him, all the
+ world was dark to her, and her soul but as a ship driven rudderless upon a
+ winter night. Therefore she put out all her strength to win him, and bent
+ her witcheries upon him, and they were not few nor small. Nevertheless
+ they went by him like the wind, for he dreamed ever of Gudruda alone, and
+ he saw no eyes but hers, though as yet they spoke no word of love one to
+ the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Swanhild in her wrath took counsel with her mother Groa, though there
+ was little liking between them; and, when she had heard the maiden&rsquo;s tale,
+ Groa laughed aloud:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dost think me blind, girl?&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;all of this I have seen, yea and
+ foreseen, and I tell thee thou art mad. Let this yeoman Eric go and I will
+ find thee finer fowl to fly at.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, that I will not,&rdquo; quoth Swanhild: &ldquo;for I love this man alone, and I
+ would win him; and Gudruda I hate, and I would overthrow her. Give me of
+ thy counsel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Groa laughed again. &ldquo;Things must be as they are fated. This now is my
+ rede: Asmund would turn Gudruda&rsquo;s beauty to account, and that man must be
+ rich in friends and money who gets her to wife, and in this matter the
+ mind of Björn is as the mind of his father. Now we will watch, and, when a
+ good time chances, we will bear tales of Gudruda to Asmund and to her
+ brother Björn, and swear that she oversteps her modesty with Eric. Then
+ shall Asmund be wroth and drive Eric from Gudruda&rsquo;s side. Meanwhile, I
+ will do this: In the north there dwells a man mighty in all things and
+ blown up with pride. He is named Ospakar Blacktooth. His wife is but
+ lately dead, and he has given out that he will wed the fairest maid in
+ Iceland. Now, it is in my mind to send Koll the Half-witted, my thrall,
+ whom Asmund gave to me, to Ospakar as though by chance. He is a great
+ talker and very clever, for in his half-wits is more cunning than in the
+ brains of most; and he shall so bepraise Gudruda&rsquo;s beauty that Ospakar
+ will come hither to ask her in marriage; and in this fashion, if things go
+ well, thou shalt be rid of thy rival, and I of one who looks scornfully
+ upon me. But, if this fail, then there are two roads left on which strong
+ feet may travel to their end; and of these, one is that thou shouldest win
+ Eric away with thine own beauty, and that is not little. All men are
+ frail, and I have a draught that will make the heart as wax; but yet the
+ other path is surer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what is that path, my mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It runs through blood to blackness. By thy side is a knife and in
+ Gudruda&rsquo;s bosom beats a heart. Dead women are unmeet for love!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild tossed her head and looked upon the dark face of Groa her mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methinks, with such an end to win, I should not fear to tread that path,
+ if there be need, my mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I see thou art indeed my daughter. Happiness is to the bold. To each
+ it comes in uncertain shape. Some love power, some wealth, and some&mdash;a
+ man. Take that which thou lovest&mdash;I say, cut thy path to it and take
+ it; else shall thy life be but a weariness: for what does it serve to win
+ the wealth and power when thou lovest a man alone, or the man when thou
+ dost desire gold and the pride of place? This is wisdom: to satisfy the
+ longing of thy youth; for age creeps on apace and beyond is darkness.
+ Therefore, if thou seekest this man, and Gudruda blocks thy path, slay
+ her, girl&mdash;by witchcraft or by steel&mdash;and take him, and in his
+ arms forget that thine own are red. But first let us try the easier plan.
+ Daughter, I too hate this proud girl, who scorns me as her father&rsquo;s
+ light-of-love. I too long to see that bright head of hers dull with the
+ dust of death, or, at the least, those proud eyes weeping tears of shame
+ as the man she hates leads her hence as a bride. Were it not for her I
+ should be Asmund&rsquo;s wife, and, when she is gone, with thy help&mdash;for he
+ loves thee much and has cause to love thee&mdash;this I may be yet. So in
+ this matter, if in no other, let us go hand in hand and match our wits
+ against her innocence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, Koll the Half-witted went upon his errand, and the time passed till
+ it lacked but a month to Yule, and men sat indoors, for the season was
+ dark and much snow fell. At length came frost, and with it a clear sky,
+ and Gudruda, ceasing from her spinning in the hall, went to the woman&rsquo;s
+ porch, and, looking out, saw that the snow was hard, and a great longing
+ came upon her to breathe the fresh air, for there was still an hour of
+ daylight. So she threw a cloak about her and walked forth, taking the road
+ towards Coldback in the Marsh that is by Ran River. But Swanhild watched
+ her till she was over the hill. Then she also took a cloak and followed on
+ that path, for she always watched Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda walked on for the half of an hour or so, when she became aware
+ that the clouds gathered in the sky, and that the air was heavy with snow
+ to come. Seeing this she turned homewards, and Swanhild hid herself to let
+ her pass. Now flakes floated down as big and soft as fifa flowers. Quicker
+ and more quick they came till all the plain was one white maze of mist,
+ but through it Gudruda walked on, and after her crept Swanhild, like a
+ shadow. And now the darkness gathered and the snow fell thick and fast,
+ covering up the track of her footsteps and she wandered from the path, and
+ after her wandered Swanhild, being loath to show herself. For an hour or
+ more Gudruda wandered and then she called aloud and her voice fell heavily
+ against the cloak of snow. At the last she grew weary and frightened, and
+ sat down upon a shelving rock whence the snow had slipped away. Now, a
+ little way behind was another rock and there Swanhild sat, for she wished
+ to be unseen of Gudruda. So some time passed, and Swanhild grew heavy as
+ though with sleep, when of a sudden a moving thing loomed upon the snowy
+ darkness. Then Gudruda leapt to her feet and called. A man&rsquo;s voice
+ answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who passes there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I, Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The form came nearer; now Swanhild could hear the snorting of a horse, and
+ now a man leapt from it, and that man was Eric Brighteyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it thou indeed, Gudruda!&rdquo; he said with a laugh, and his great shape
+ showed darkly on the snow mist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, is it thou, Eric?&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I was never more joyed to see thee;
+ for of a truth thou dost come in a good hour. A little while and I had
+ seen thee no more, for my eyes grow heavy with the death-sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, say not so. Art lost, then? Why, so am I. I came out to seek three
+ horses that are strayed, and was overtaken by the snow. May they dwell in
+ Odin&rsquo;s stables, for they have led me to thee. Art thou cold, Gudruda?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But a little, Eric. Yea, there is place for thee here on the rock.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he sat down by her on the stone, and Swanhild crept nearer; for now all
+ weariness had left her. But still the snow fell thick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It comes into my mind that we two shall die here,&rdquo; said Gudruda
+ presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thinkest thou so?&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;Well, I will say this, that I ask no
+ better end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a bad end for thee, Eric: to be choked in snow, and with all thy
+ deeds to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a good end, Gudruda, to die at thy side, for so I shall die happy;
+ but I grieve for thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Grieve not for me, Brighteyes, worse things might befall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drew nearer to her, and now he put his arms about her and clasped her
+ to his bosom; nor did she say him nay. Swanhild saw and lifted herself up
+ behind them, but for a while she heard nothing but the beating of her
+ heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen, Gudruda,&rdquo; Eric said at last. &ldquo;Death draws near to us, and before
+ it comes I would speak to thee, if speak I may.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak on,&rdquo; she whispers from his breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This I would say, then: that I love thee, and that I ask no better fate
+ than to die in thy arms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First shalt thou see me die in thine, Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be sure, if that is so, I shall not tarry for long. Oh! Gudruda, since I
+ was a child I have loved thee with a mighty love, and now thou art all to
+ me. Better to die thus than to live without thee. Speak, then, while there
+ is time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not hide from thee, Eric, that thy words are sweet in my ears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now Gudruda sobs and the tears fall fast from her dark eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, weep not. Dost thou, then, love me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, sure enough, Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then kiss me before we pass. A man should not die thus, and yet men have
+ died worse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so these two kissed, for the first time, out in the snow on Coldback,
+ and that first kiss was long and sweet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild heard and her blood seethed within her as water seethes in a
+ boiling spring when the fires wake beneath. She put her hand to her kirtle
+ and gripped the knife at her side. She half drew it, then drove it back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cold kills as sure as steel,&rdquo; she said in her heart. &ldquo;If I slay her I
+ cannot save myself or him. Let us die in peace, and let the snow cover up
+ our troubling.&rdquo; And once more she listened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, sweet,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;even in the midst of death there is hope of life.
+ Swear to me, then, that if by chance we live thou wilt love me always as
+ thou lovest me now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Eric, I swear that and readily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And swear, come what may, that thou wilt wed no man but me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I swear, if thou dost remain true to me, that I will wed none but thee,
+ Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I am sure of thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Boast not overmuch, Eric: if thou dost live thy days are all before thee,
+ and with times come trials.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the snow whirled down faster and more thick, till these two, clasped
+ heart to heart, were but a heap of white, and all white was the horse, and
+ Swanhild was nearly buried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where go we when we die, Eric?&rdquo; said Gudruda; &ldquo;in Odin&rsquo;s house there is
+ no place for maids, and how shall my feet fare without thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, sweet, my May, Valhalla shuts its gates to me, a deedless man; up
+ Bifrost&rsquo;s rainbow bridge I may not travel, for I do not die with byrnie on
+ breast and sword aloft. To Hela shall we go, and hand in hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art thou sure, Eric, that men find these abodes? To say sooth, at times I
+ misdoubt me of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not so sure but that I also doubt. Still, I know this: that where
+ thou goest there I shall be, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then things are well, and well work the Norns.[*] Still, Eric, of a
+ sudden I grow fey: for it comes upon me that I shall not die to-night, but
+ that, nevertheless, I shall die with thy arms about me, and at thy side.
+ There, I see it on the snow! I lie by thee, sleeping, and one comes with
+ hands outstretched and sleep falls from them like a mist&mdash;by Freya,
+ it is Swanhild&rsquo;s self! Oh! it is gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] The Northern Fates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was nothing, Gudruda, but a vision of the snow&mdash;an untimely dream
+ that comes before the sleep. I grow cold and my eyes are heavy; kiss me
+ once again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was no dream, Eric, and ever I doubt me of Swanhild, for I think she
+ loves thee also, and she is fair and my enemy,&rdquo; says Gudruda, laying her
+ snow-cold lips on his lips. &ldquo;Oh, Eric, awake! awake! See, the snow is
+ done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stumbled to his feet and looked forth. Lo! out across the sky flared
+ the wild Northern fires, throwing light upon the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now it seems that I know the land,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Look: yonder are Golden
+ Falls, though we did not hear them because of the snow; and there, out at
+ sea, loom the Westmans; and that dark thing is the Temple Hof, and behind
+ it stands the stead. We are saved, Gudruda, and thus far indeed thou wast
+ fey. Now rise, ere thy limbs stiffen, and I will set thee on the horse, if
+ he still can run, and lead thee down to Middalhof before the witchlights
+ fail us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So it shall be, Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now he led Gudruda to the horse&mdash;that, seeing its master, snorted and
+ shook the snow from its coat, for it was not frozen&mdash;and set her on
+ the saddle, and put his arm about her waist, and they passed slowly
+ through the deep snow. And Swanhild, too, crept from her place, for her
+ burning rage had kept the life in her, and followed after them. Many times
+ she fell, and once she was nearly swallowed in a drift of snow and cried
+ out in her fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who called aloud?&rdquo; said Eric, turning; &ldquo;I thought I heard a voice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answers Gudruda, &ldquo;it was but a night-hawk screaming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild lay quiet in the drift, but she said in her heart:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, a night-hawk that shall tear out those dark eyes of thine, mine
+ enemy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two go on and at length they come to the banked roadway that runs past
+ the Temple to Asmund&rsquo;s hall. Here Swanhild leaves them, and, climbing over
+ the turf-wall into the home meadow, passes round the hall by the
+ outbuildings and so comes to the west end of the house, and enters by the
+ men&rsquo;s door unnoticed of any. For all the people, seeing a horse coming and
+ a woman seated on it, were gathered in front of the hall. But Swanhild ran
+ to that shut bed where she slept, and, closing the curtain, threw off her
+ garments, shook the snow from her hair, and put on a linen kirtle. Then
+ she rested a while, for she was weary, and, going to the kitchen, warmed
+ herself at the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Eric and Gudruda came to the house and there Asmund greeted them
+ well, for he was troubled in his heart about his daughter, and very glad
+ to know her living, seeing that men had but now begun to search for her,
+ because of the snow and the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda told her tale, but not all of it, and Asmund bade Eric to the
+ house. Then one asked about Swanhild, and Eric said that he had seen
+ nothing of her, and Asmund was sad at this, for he loved Swanhild. But as
+ he told all men to go and search, an old wife came and said that Swanhild
+ was in the kitchen, and while the carline spoke she came into the hall,
+ dressed in white, very pale, and with shining eyes and fair to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where hast thou been, Swanhild?&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;I thought certainly thou
+ wast perishing with Gudruda in the snow, and now all men go to seek thee
+ while the witchlights burn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, foster-father, I have been to the Temple,&rdquo; she answered, lying. &ldquo;So
+ Gudruda has but narrowly escaped the snow, thanks be to Brighteyes yonder!
+ Surely I am glad of it, for we could ill spare our sweet sister,&rdquo; and,
+ going up to her, she kissed her. But Gudruda saw that her eyes burned like
+ fire and felt that her lips were cold as ice, and shrank back wondering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ASMUND BADE ERIC TO HIS YULE-FEAST
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now it was supper-time and men sat at meat while the women waited upon
+ them. But as she went to and fro, Gudruda always looked at Eric, and
+ Swanhild watched them both. Supper being over, people gathered round the
+ hearth, and, having finished her service, Gudruda came and sat by Eric, so
+ that her sleeve might touch his. They spoke no word, but there they sat
+ and were happy. Swanhild saw and bit her lip. Now, she was seated by
+ Asmund and Björn his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look, foster-father,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;yonder sit a pretty pair!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That cannot be denied,&rdquo; answered Asmund. &ldquo;One may ride many days to see
+ such another man as Eric Brighteyes, and no such maid as Gudruda flowers
+ between Middalhof and London town, unless it be thou, Swanhild. Well, so
+ her mother said that it should be, and without doubt she was foresighted
+ at her death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, name me not with Gudruda, foster-father; I am but a grey goose by
+ thy white swan. But these shall be well wed and that will be a good match
+ for Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let not thy tongue run on so fast,&rdquo; said Asmund sharply. &ldquo;Who told thee
+ that Eric should have Gudruda?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None told me, but in truth, having eyes and ears, I grew certain of it,&rdquo;
+ said Swanhild. &ldquo;Look at them now: surely lovers wear such faces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it chanced that Gudruda had rested her chin on her hand, and was
+ gazing into Eric&rsquo;s eyes beneath the shadow of her hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methinks my sister will look higher than to wed a simple yeoman, though
+ he is large as two other men,&rdquo; said Björn with a sneer. Now Björn was
+ jealous of Eric&rsquo;s strength and beauty, and did not love him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trust nothing that thou seest and little that thou hearest, girl,&rdquo; said
+ Asmund, raising himself from thought: &ldquo;so shall thy guesses be good. Eric,
+ come here and tell us how thou didst chance on Gudruda in the snow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was not so ill seated but that I could bear to stay,&rdquo; grumbled Eric
+ beneath his breath; but Gudruda said &ldquo;Go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he went and told his tale; but not all of it, for he intended to ask
+ Gudruda in marriage on the morrow, though his heart prophesied no luck in
+ the matter, and therefore he was not overswift with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In this thing thou hast done me and mine good service,&rdquo; said Asmund
+ coldly, searching Eric&rsquo;s face with his blue eyes. &ldquo;It had been said if my
+ fair daughter had perished in the snow, for, know this: I would set her
+ high in marriage, for her honour and the honour of my house, and so some
+ rich and noble man had lost great joy. But take thou this gift in memory
+ of the deed, and Gudruda&rsquo;s husband shall give thee another such upon the
+ day that he makes her wife,&rdquo; and he drew a gold ring off his arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric&rsquo;s knees trembled as he heard, and his heart grew faint as though
+ with fear. But he answered clear and straight:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy gift had been better without thy words, ring-giver; but I pray thee
+ to take it back, for I have done nothing to win it, though perhaps the
+ time will come when I shall ask thee for a richer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My gifts have never been put away before,&rdquo; said Asmund, growing angry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This wealthy farmer holds the good gold of little worth. It is foolish to
+ take fish to the sea, my father,&rdquo; sneered Björn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Björn, not so,&rdquo; Eric answered: &ldquo;but, as thou sayest, I am but a
+ farmer, and since my father, Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, died things have not
+ gone too well on Ran River. But at the least I am a free man, and I will
+ take no gifts that I cannot repay worth for worth. Therefore I will not
+ have the ring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As thou wilt,&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;Pride is a good horse if thou ridest
+ wisely,&rdquo; and he thrust the ring back upon his arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then people go to rest; but Swanhild seeks her mother, and tells her all
+ that has befallen her, nor does Groa fail to listen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I will make a plan,&rdquo; she says, &ldquo;for these things have chanced well
+ and Asmund is in a ripe humour. Eric shall come no more to Middalhof till
+ Gudruda is gone hence, led by Ospakar Blacktooth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if Eric does not come here, how shall I see his face? for, mother, I
+ long for the sight of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is thy matter, thou lovesick fool. Know this: that if Eric comes
+ hither and gets speech with Gudruda, there is an end of thy hopes; for,
+ fair as thou art, she is too fair for thee, and, strong as thou art, in a
+ way she is too strong. Thou hast heard how these two love, and such loves
+ mock at the will of fathers. Eric will win his desire or die beneath the
+ swords of Asmund and Björn, if such men can prevail against his might.
+ Nay, the wolf Eric must be fenced from the lamb till he grows hungry. Then
+ let him search the fold and make spoil of thee, for, when the best is
+ gone, he will desire the good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it, mother. As I sat crouched behind Gudruda in the snow at
+ Coldback, I had half a mind to end her love-words with this knife, for so
+ I should have been free of her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and fast in the doom-ring, thou wildcat. The gods help this Eric, if
+ thou winnest him. Nay, choose thy time and, if thou must strike, strike
+ secretly and home. Remember also that cunning is mightier than strength,
+ that lies pierce further than swords, and that witchcraft wins where
+ honesty must fail. Now I will go to Asmund, and he shall be an angry man
+ before to-morrow comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Groa went to the shut bed where Asmund the Priest slept. He was
+ sitting on the bed and asked her why she came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For love of thee, Asmund, and thy house, though thou dost treat me ill,
+ who hast profited so much by me and my foresight. Say now: wilt thou that
+ this daughter of thine, Gudruda the Fair, should be the light May of
+ yonder long-legged yeoman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is not in my mind,&rdquo; said Asmund, stroking his beard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knowest thou, then, that this very day your white Gudruda sat on Eric&rsquo;s
+ lap in the snow, while he fondled her to his heart&rsquo;s content?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most likely it was for warmth. Men do not dream on love in the hour of
+ death. Who saw this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Swanhild, who was behind, and hid herself for shame, and therefore she
+ held that these two must soon be wed! Ah, thou art foolish now, Asmund.
+ Young blood makes light of cold or death. Art thou blind, or dost thou not
+ see that these two turn on each other like birds at nesting-time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They might do worse,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;for they are a proper pair, and it
+ seems to me that each was born for each.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then all goes well. Still, it is a pity to see so fair a maid cast like
+ rotten bait upon the waters to hook this troutlet of a yeoman. Thou hast
+ enemies, Asmund; thou art too prosperous, and there are many who hate thee
+ for thy state and wealth. Were it not wise to use this girl of thine to
+ build a wall about thee against the evil day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been more wont, housekeeper, to trust to my own arm than to bought
+ friends. But tell me, for at the least thou art far-seeing, how may this
+ be done? As things are, though I spoke roughly to him last night, I am
+ inclined to let Eric Brighteyes take Gudruda. I have always loved the lad,
+ and he will go far.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen, Asmund! Surely thou hast heard of Ospakar Blacktooth&mdash;the
+ priest who dwells in the north?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, I have heard of him, and I know him; there is no man like him for
+ ugliness, or strength, or wealth and power. We sailed together on a viking
+ cruise many years ago, and he did things at which my blood turned, and in
+ those days I had no chicken heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With time men change their temper. Unless I am mistaken, this Ospakar
+ wishes above all to have Gudruda in marriage, for, now that everything is
+ his, this alone is left for him to ask&mdash;the fairest woman in Iceland
+ as a housewife. Think then, with Ospakar for a son-in-law, who is there
+ that can stand against thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not so sure of this matter, nor do I altogether trust thee, Groa. Of
+ a truth it seems to me that thou hast some stake upon the race. This
+ Ospakar is evil and hideous. It were a shame to give Gudruda over to him
+ when she looks elsewhere. Knowest thou that I swore to love and cherish
+ her, and how runs this with my oath? If Eric is not too rich, yet he is of
+ good birth and kin, and, moreover, a man of men. If he take her good will
+ come of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is like thee, Asmund, always to mistrust those who spend their days in
+ plotting for thy weal. Do as thou wilt: let Eric take this treasure of
+ thine&mdash;for whom earls would give their state&mdash;and live to rue
+ it. But I say this: if he have thy leave to roam here with his dove the
+ matter will soon grow, for these two sicken each to each, and young blood
+ is hot and ill at waiting, and it is not always snow-time. So betroth her
+ or let him go. And now I have said.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy tongue runs too fast. The man is quite unproved and I will try him.
+ To-morrow I will warn him from my door; then things shall go as they are
+ fated. And now peace, for I weary of thy talk, and, moreover, it is false;
+ for thou lackest one thing&mdash;a little honesty to season all thy craft.
+ What fee has Ospakar paid thee, I wonder. Thou at least hadst never
+ refused the gold ring to-night, for thou wouldst do much for gold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And more for love, and most of all for hate,&rdquo; Groa said, and laughed
+ aloud; nor did they speak more on this matter that night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, early in the morning Asmund rose, and, going to the hall, awoke Eric,
+ who slept by the centre hearth, saying that he would talk with him
+ without. Then Eric followed him to the back of the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say now, Eric,&rdquo; he said, when they stood in the grey light outside the
+ house, &ldquo;who was it taught thee that kisses keep out the cold on snowy
+ days?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric reddened to his yellow hair, but he answered: &ldquo;Who was it told
+ thee, lord, that I tried this medicine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The snow hides much, but there are eyes that can pierce the snow. Nay,
+ more, thou wast seen, and there&rsquo;s an end. Now know this&mdash;I like thee
+ well, but Gudruda is not for thee; she is far above thee, who art but a
+ deedless yeoman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I love to no end,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;I long for one thing only, and that
+ is Gudruda. It was in my mind to ask her in marriage of thee to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, lad, thou hast thy answer before thou askest. Be sure of one thing:
+ if but once again I find thee alone with Gudruda, it is my axe shall kiss
+ thee and not her lips.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That may yet be put to the proof, lord,&rdquo; said Eric, and turned to seek
+ his horse, when suddenly Gudruda came and stood between them, and his
+ heart leapt at the sight of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen, Gudruda,&rdquo; Eric said. &ldquo;This is thy father&rsquo;s word: that we two
+ speak together no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then it is an ill saying for us,&rdquo; said Gudruda, laying her hand upon her
+ breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Saying good or ill, so it surely is, girl,&rdquo; answered Asmund. &ldquo;No more
+ shalt thou go a-kissing, in the snow or in the flowers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I seem to hear Swanhild&rsquo;s voice,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Well, such things have
+ happened to better folk, and a father&rsquo;s wish is to a maid what the wind is
+ to the grass. Still, the sun is behind the cloud and it will shine again
+ some day. Till then, Eric, fare thee well!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not thy will, lord,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;that I should come to thy
+ Yule-feast as thou hast asked me these ten years past?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Asmund grew wroth, and pointed with his hand towards the great Golden
+ Falls that thunder down the mountain named Stonefell that is behind
+ Middalhof, and there are no greater water-falls in Iceland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A man may take two roads, Eric, from Coldback to Middalhof, one by the
+ bridle-path over Coldback and the other down Golden Falls; but I never
+ knew traveller to choose this way. Now, I bid thee to my feast by the path
+ over Golden Falls; and, if thou comest that way, I promise thee this: if
+ thou livest I will greet thee well, and if I find thee dead in the great
+ pool I will bind on thy Hell-shoes and lay thee to earth neighbourly
+ fashion. But if thou comest by any other path, then my thralls shall cut
+ thee down at my door.&rdquo; And he stroked his beard and laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Asmund spoke thus mockingly because he did not think it possible that
+ any man should try the path of the Golden Falls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric smiled and said, &ldquo;I hold thee to thy word, lord; perhaps I shall be
+ thy guest at Yule.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Gudruda heard the thunder of the mighty Falls as the wind turned, and
+ cried &ldquo;Nay, nay&mdash;it were thy death!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric finds his horse and rides away across the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it must be told of Koll the Half-witted that at length he came to
+ Swinefell in the north, having journeyed hard across the snow. Here
+ Ospakar Blacktooth had his great hall, in which day by day a hundred men
+ sat down to meat. Now Koll entered the hall when Ospakar was at supper,
+ and looked at him with big eyes, for he had never seen so wonderful a man.
+ He was huge in stature&mdash;his hair was black, and black his beard, and
+ on his lower lip there lay a great black fang. His eyes were small and
+ narrow, but his cheekbones were set wide apart and high, like those of a
+ horse. Koll thought him an ill man to deal with and half a troll,[*] and
+ grew afraid of his errand, since in Koll&rsquo;s half-wittedness there was much
+ cunning&mdash;for it was a cloak in which he wrapped himself. But as
+ Ospakar sat in the high seat, clothed in a purple robe, with his sword
+ Whitefire on his knee, he saw Koll, and called out in a great voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] An able-bodied Goblin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is this red fox that creeps into my earth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, to look at, Koll was very like a fox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name is Koll the Half-witted, Groa&rsquo;s thrall, lord. Am I welcome here?&rdquo;
+ he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is as it may be. Why do they call thee half-witted?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I love not work overmuch, lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then all my thralls are fellow to thee. Say, what brings thee here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This lord. It was told among men down in the south that thou wouldst give
+ a good gift to him who should discover to thee the fairest maid in
+ Iceland. So I asked leave of my mistress to come on a journey and tell
+ thee of her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then a lie was told thee. Still, I love to hear of fair maids, and seek
+ one for a wife if she be but fair enough. So speak on, Koll the Fox, and
+ lie not to me, I warn thee, else I will knock what wits are left there
+ from that red head of thine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Koll took up the tale and greatly bepraised Gudruda&rsquo;s beauty; nor in
+ truth, for all his talk, could he praise it too much. He told of her dark
+ eyes and the whiteness of her skin, of the nobleness of her shape and the
+ gold of her hair, of her wit and gentleness, till at length Ospakar grew
+ afire to see this flower of maids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Thor, thou Koll,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if the girl be but half of what thou
+ sayest, her luck is good, for she shall be wife to Ospakar. But if thou
+ hast lied to me about her, beware! for soon there shall be a knave the
+ less in Iceland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now a man rose in the hall and said that Koll spoke truth, for he had seen
+ Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, and there was no maid like her in
+ Iceland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will do this now,&rdquo; said Blacktooth. &ldquo;To-morrow I will send a messenger
+ to Middalhof, saying to Asmund the Priest that I purpose to visit him at
+ the time of the Yule-feast; then I shall see if the girl pleases me.
+ Meanwhile, Koll, take thou a seat among the thralls, and here is something
+ for thy pains,&rdquo; and he took off the purple cloak and threw it to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks to thee, Gold-scatterer,&rdquo; said Koll. &ldquo;It is wise to go soon to
+ Middalhof, for such a bloom as this maid does not lack a bee. There is a
+ youngling in the south, named Eric Brighteyes, who loves Gudruda, and she,
+ I think, loves him, though he is but a yeoman of small wealth and is only
+ twenty-five years old.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho! ho!&rdquo; laughed great Ospakar, &ldquo;and I am forty-five. But let not this
+ suckling cross my desire, lest men call him Eric Holloweyes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the messenger of Ospakar came to Middalhof, and his words pleased
+ Asmund and he made ready a great feast. And Swanhild smiled, but Gudruda
+ was afraid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC CAME DOWN GOLDEN FALLS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar rode up to Middalhof on the day before the Yule-feast. He was
+ splendidly apparelled, and with him came his two sons, Gizur the Lawman
+ and Mord, young men of promise, and many armed thralls and servants.
+ Gudruda, watching at the women&rsquo;s door, saw his face in the moonlight and
+ loathed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What thinkest thou of him who comes to seek thee in marriage,
+ foster-sister?&rdquo; asked Swanhild, watching at her side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think he is like a troll, and that, seek as he will, he shall not find
+ me. I had rather lie in the pool beneath Golden Falls than in Ospakar&rsquo;s
+ hall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That shall be proved,&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;At the least he is rich and noble,
+ and the greatest of men in size. It would go hard with Eric were those
+ arms about him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not so sure of that,&rdquo; said Gudruda; &ldquo;but it is not likely to be
+ known.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Comes Eric to the feast by the road of Golden Falls, Gudruda?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, no man may try that path and live.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then he will die, for Eric will risk it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda thought, and a great fire burned in her heart and shone
+ through her eyes. &ldquo;If Eric dies,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;on thee be his blood,
+ Swanhild&mdash;on thee and that dark mother of thine, for ye have plotted
+ to bring this evil on us. How have I harmed thee that thou shouldst deal
+ thus with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild turned white and wicked-looking, for passion mastered her, and
+ she gazed into Gudruda&rsquo;s face and answered: &ldquo;How hast thou harmed me?
+ Surely I will tell thee. Thy beauty has robbed me of Eric&rsquo;s love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would be better to prate of Eric&rsquo;s love when he had told it thee,
+ Swanhild.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast robbed me and therefore I hate thee, and therefore I will
+ deliver thee to Ospakar, whom thou dost loath&mdash;ay and yet win
+ Brighteyes to myself. Am I not also fair and can I not also love, and
+ shall I see thee snatch my joy? By the Gods, never! I will see thee dead,
+ and Eric with thee, ere it shall be so! but first I will see thee shamed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy words are ill-suited to a maiden&rsquo;s lips, Swanhild! But of this be
+ sure: I fear thee not, and shall never fear thee. And one thing I know
+ well that, whether thou or I prevail, in the end thou shalt harvest the
+ greatest shame, and in times to come men shall speak of thee with hatred
+ and name thee by ill names. Moreover, Eric shall never love thee; from
+ year to year he shall hate thee with a deeper hate, though it may well be
+ that thou wilt bring ruin on him. And now I thank thee that thou hast told
+ me all thy mind, showing me what indeed thou art!&rdquo; And Gudruda turned
+ scornfully upon her heel and walked away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Asmund the Priest went out into the courtyard, and meeting Ospakar
+ Blacktooth, greeted him heartily, though he did not like his looks, and
+ took him by the hand and led him to the hall, that was bravely decked with
+ tapestries, and seated him by his side on the high seat. And Ospakar&rsquo;s
+ thralls brought good gifts for Asmund, who thanked the giver well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it was supper time, and Gudruda came in, and after her walked
+ Swanhild. Ospakar gazed hard at Gudruda and a great desire entered into
+ him to make her his wife. But she passed coldly by, nor looked on him at
+ all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, then, is that maid of thine of whom I have heard tell, Asmund? I
+ will say this: fairer was never born of woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then men ate and Ospakar drank much ale, but all the while he stared at
+ Gudruda and listened for her voice. But as yet he said nothing of what he
+ came to seek, though all knew his errand. And his two sons, Gizur and
+ Mord, stared also at Gudruda, for they thought her most wonderfully fair.
+ But Gizur found Swanhild also fair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the night wore on till it was time to sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this same day Eric rode up from his farm on Ran River and took his road
+ along the brow of Coldback till he came to Stonefell. Now all along
+ Coldback and Stonefell is a steep cliff facing to the south, that grows
+ ever higher till it comes to that point where Golden River falls over it
+ and, parting its waters below, runs east and west&mdash;the branch to the
+ east being called Ran River and that to the west Laxà&mdash;for these two
+ streams girdle round the rich plain of Middalhof, till at length they
+ reach the sea. But in the midst of Golden River, on the edge of the cliff,
+ a mass of rock juts up called Sheep-saddle, dividing the waters of the
+ fall, and over this the spray flies, and in winter the ice gathers, but
+ the river does not cover it. The great fall is thirty fathoms deep, and
+ shaped like a horseshoe, of which the points lie towards Middalhof. Yet if
+ he could but gain the Sheep-saddle rock that divides the midst of the
+ waters, a strong and hardy man might climb down some fifteen fathoms of
+ this depth and scarcely wet his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here at the foot of Sheep-saddle rock the double arches of waters
+ meet, and fall in one torrent into the bottomless pool below. But, some
+ three fathoms from this point of the meeting waters, and beneath it, just
+ where the curve is deepest, a single crag, as large as a drinking-table
+ and no larger, juts through the foam, and, if a man could reach it, he
+ might leap from it some twelve fathoms, sheer into the spray-hidden pit
+ beneath, there to sink or swim as it might befall. This crag is called
+ Wolf&rsquo;s Fang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric stood for a long while on the edge of the fall and looked,
+ measuring every thing with his eye. Then he went up above, where the river
+ swirls down to the precipice, and looked again, for it is from this bank
+ that the dividing island-rock Sheep-saddle must be reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A man may hardly do this thing; yet I will try it,&rdquo; he said to himself at
+ last. &ldquo;My honour shall be great for the feat, if I chance to live, and if
+ I die&mdash;well, there is an end of troubling after maids and all other
+ things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he went home and sat silent that evening. Now, since Thorgrimur
+ Iron-Toe&rsquo;s death, his housewife, Saevuna, Eric&rsquo;s mother, had grown dim of
+ sight, and, though she peered and peered again from her seat in the ingle
+ nook, she could not see the face of her son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What ails thee, Eric, that thou sittest so silent? Was not the meat,
+ then, to thy mind at supper?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, mother, the meat was well enough, though a little undersmoked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I see that thou art not thyself, son, for thou hadst no meat, but
+ only stock-fish&mdash;and I never knew a man forget his supper on the
+ night of its eating, except he was distraught or deep in love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was it so?&rdquo; said Brighteyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What troubles thee, Eric?&mdash;that sweet lass yonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, somewhat, mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What more, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, that I go down Golden Falls to-morrow, and I do not know how I may
+ come from Sheep-saddle rock to Wolf&rsquo;s Fang crag and keep my life whole in
+ me; and now, I pray thee, weary me not with words, for my brain is slow,
+ and I must use it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she heard this Saevuna screamed aloud, and threw herself before Eric,
+ praying him to forgo his mad venture. But he would not listen to her, for
+ he was slow to make up his mind, but, that being made up, nothing could
+ change it. Then, when she learned that it was to get sight of Gudruda that
+ he purposed thus to throw his life away, she was very angry and cursed her
+ and all her kith and kin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is likely enough that thou wilt have cause to use such words before
+ all this tale is told,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;nevertheless, mother, forbear to curse
+ Gudruda, who is in no way to blame for these matters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art a faithless son,&rdquo; Saevuna said, &ldquo;who wilt slay thyself striving
+ to win speech with thy May, and leave thy mother childless.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric said that it seemed so indeed, but he was plighted to it and the feat
+ must be tried. Then he kissed her, and she sought her bed, weeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it was the day of the Yule-feast, and there was no sun till one hour
+ before noon. But Eric, having kissed his mother and bidden her farewell,
+ called a thrall, Jon by name, and giving him a sealskin bag full of his
+ best apparel, bade him ride to Middalhof and tell Asmund the Priest that
+ Eric Brighteyes would come down Golden Falls an hour after mid-day, to
+ join his feast; and thence go to the foot of the Golden Falls, to await
+ him there. And the man went, wondering, for he thought his master mad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric took a good rope, and a staff tipped with iron, and, so soon as
+ the light served, mounted his horse, forded Ran River, and rode along
+ Coldback till he came to the lip of Golden Falls. Here he stayed a while
+ till at length he saw many people streaming up the snow from Middalhof far
+ beneath, and, among them, two women who by their stature should be Gudruda
+ and Swanhild, and, near to them, a great man whom he did not know. Then he
+ showed himself for a space on the brink of the gulf and turned his horse
+ up stream. The sun shone bright upon the edge of the sky, but the frost
+ bit like a sword. Still, he must strip off his garments, so that nothing
+ remained on him except his sheepskin shoes, shirt and hose, and take the
+ water. Now here the river runs mightily, and he must cross full thirty
+ fathoms of the swirling water before he can reach Sheep-saddle, and woe to
+ him if his foot slip on the boulders, for certainly he must be swept over
+ the brink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric rested the staff against the stony bottom and, leaning his weight on
+ it, took the stream, and he was so strong that it could not prevail
+ against him till at length he was rather more than half-way across and the
+ water swept above his shoulders. Now he was lifted from his feet and,
+ letting the staff float, he swam for his life, and with such mighty
+ strokes that he felt little of that icy cold. Down he was swept&mdash;now
+ the lip of the fall was but three fathoms away on his left, and already
+ the green water boiled beneath him. A fathom from him was the corner of
+ Sheep-saddle. If he may grasp it, all is well; if not, he dies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three great strokes and he held it. His feet were swept out over the brink
+ of the fall, but he clung on grimly, and by the strength of his arms drew
+ himself on to the rock and rested a while. Presently he stood up, for the
+ cold began to nip him, and the people below became aware that he had swum
+ the river above the fall and raised a shout, for the deed was great. Now
+ Eric must begin to clamber down Sheep-saddle, and this was no easy task,
+ for the rock is almost sheer, and slippery with ice, and on either side
+ the waters rushed and thundered, throwing their blinding spray about him
+ as they leapt to the depths beneath. He looked down, studying the rock;
+ then, feeling that he grew afraid, made an end of doubt and, grasping a
+ point with both hands, swung himself down his own length and more. Now for
+ many minutes he climbed down Sheep-saddle, and the task was hard, for he
+ was bewildered with the booming of the waters that bent out on either side
+ of him like the arc of a bow, and the rock was very steep and slippery.
+ Still, he came down all those fifteen fathoms and fell not, though twice
+ he was near to falling, and the watchers below marvelled greatly at his
+ hardihood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He will be dashed to pieces where the waters meet,&rdquo; said Ospakar, &ldquo;he can
+ never gain Wolf&rsquo;s Fang crag beneath; and, if so it be that he come there
+ and leaps to the pool, the weight of water will drive him down and drown
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is certainly so,&rdquo; quoth Asmund, &ldquo;and it grieves me much; for it was my
+ jest that drove him to this perilous adventure, and we cannot spare such a
+ man as Eric Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild turned white as death; but Gudruda said: &ldquo;If great heart and
+ strength and skill may avail at all, then Eric shall come safely down the
+ waters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou fool!&rdquo; whispered Swanhild in her ear, &ldquo;how can these help him? No
+ troll could live in yonder cauldron. Dead is Eric, and thou art the bait
+ that lured him to his death!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spare thy words,&rdquo; she answered; &ldquo;as the Norns have ordered so it shall
+ be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric stood at the foot of Sheep-saddle, and within an arm&rsquo;s length the
+ mighty waters met, tossing their yellow waves and seething furiously as
+ they leapt to the mist-hid gulf beneath. He bent over and looked through
+ the spray. Three fathoms under him the rock Wolf&rsquo;s Fang split the waters,
+ and thence, if he can come thither, he may leap sheer into the pool below.
+ Now he unwound the rope that was about his middle, and made one end fast
+ to a knob of rock&mdash;and this was difficult, for his hands were stiff
+ with cold&mdash;and the other end he passed through his leathern girdle.
+ Then Eric looked again, and his heart sank within him. How might he give
+ himself to this boiling flood and not be shattered? But as he looked, lo!
+ a rainbow grew upon the face of the water, and one end of it lit upon him,
+ and the other, like a glory from the Gods, fell full upon Gudruda as she
+ stood a little way apart, watching at the foot of Golden Falls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seest thou that,&rdquo; said Asmund to Groa, who was at his side, &ldquo;the Gods
+ build their Bifrost bridge between these two. Who now shall keep them
+ asunder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Read the portent thus,&rdquo; she answered: &ldquo;they shall be united, but not
+ here. Yon is a Spirit bridge, and, see: the waters of Death foam and fall
+ between them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric, too, saw the omen and it seemed good to him, and all fear left his
+ heart. Round about him the waters thundered, but amidst their roar he
+ dreamed that he heard a voice calling:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be of good cheer, Eric Brighteyes; for thou shalt live to do mightier
+ deeds than this, and in guerdon thou shalt win Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he paused no longer, but, shortening up the rope, pulled on it with all
+ his strength, and then leapt out upon the arch of waters. They struck him
+ and he was dashed out like a stone from a sling; again he fell against
+ them and again was dashed away, so that his girdle burst. Eric felt it go
+ and clung wildly to the rope and lo! with the inward swing, he fell on
+ Wolf&rsquo;s Fang, where never a man has stood before and never a man shall
+ stand again. Eric lay a little while on the rock till his breath came back
+ to him, and he listened to the roar of the waters. Then, rising on his
+ hands and knees, he crept to its point, for he could scarcely stand
+ because of the trembling of the stone beneath the shock of the fall; and
+ when the people below saw that he was not dead, they raised a great shout,
+ and the sound of their voices came to him through the noise of the waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, twelve fathoms beneath him was the surface of the pool; but he could
+ not see it because of the wreaths of spray. Nevertheless, he must leap and
+ that swiftly, for he grew cold. So of a sudden Eric stood up to his full
+ height, and, with a loud cry and a mighty spring, bounded out from the
+ point of Wolf&rsquo;s Fang far into the air, beyond the reach of the falling
+ flood, and rushed headlong towards the gulf beneath. Now all men watching
+ held their breath as his body travelled, and so great is the place and so
+ high the leap that through the mist Eric seemed but as a big white stone
+ hurled down the face of the arching waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was gone, and the watchers rushed down to the foot of the pool, for
+ there, if he rose at all, he must pass to the shallows. Swanhild could
+ look no more, but sank upon the ground. The face of Gudruda was set like a
+ stone with doubt and anguish. Ospakar saw and read the meaning, and he
+ said to himself: &ldquo;Now Odin grant that this youngling rise not again! for
+ the maid loves him dearly, and he is too much a man to be lightly swept
+ aside.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric struck the pool. Down he sank, and down and down&mdash;for the water
+ falling from so far must almost reach the bottom of the pool before it can
+ rise again&mdash;and he with it. Now he touched the bottom, but very
+ gently, and slowly began to rise, and, as he rose, was carried along by
+ the stream. But it was long before he could breathe, and it seemed to him
+ that his lungs would burst. Still, he struggled up, striking great strokes
+ with his legs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Farewell to Eric,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;he will rise no more now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But just as he spoke Gudruda pointed to something that gleamed, white and
+ golden, beneath the surface of the current, and lo! the bright hair of
+ Eric rose from the water, and he drew a great breath, shaking his head
+ like a seal, and, though but feebly, struck out for the shallows that are
+ at the foot of the pool. Now he found footing, but was swept over by the
+ fierce current, and cut his forehead, and he carried that scar till his
+ death. Again he rose, and with a rush gained the bank unaided and fell
+ upon the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now people gathered about him in silence and wondering, for none had known
+ so great a deed. And presently Eric opened his eyes and looked up, and
+ found the eyes of Gudruda fixed on his, and there was that in them which
+ made him glad he had dared the path of Golden Falls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC WON THE SWORD WHITEFIRE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now Asmund the priest bent down, and Eric saw him and spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou badest me to thy Yule-feast, lord, by yonder slippery road and I
+ have come. Dost thou welcome me well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No man better,&rdquo; quoth Asmund. &ldquo;Thou art a gallant man, though foolhardy;
+ and thou hast done a deed that shall be told of while skalds sing and men
+ live in Iceland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make place, my father,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;for Eric bleeds.&rdquo; And she loosed
+ the kerchief from her neck and bound it about his wounded brow, and,
+ taking the rich cloak from her body, threw it on his shoulders, and no man
+ said her nay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they led him to the hall, where Eric clothed himself and rested, and
+ he sent back the thrall Jon to Coldback, bidding him tell Saevuna, Eric&rsquo;s
+ mother, that he was safe. But he was somewhat weak all that day, and the
+ sound of waters roared in his ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar and Groa were ill pleased at the turn things had taken; but
+ all the others rejoiced much, for Eric was well loved of men and they had
+ grieved if the waters had prevailed against his might. But Swanhild
+ brooded bitterly, for Eric never turned to look on her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hour of the feast drew on and, according to custom, it was held in the
+ Temple, and thither went all men. When they were seated in the nave of the
+ Hof, the fat ox that had been made ready for sacrifice was led in and
+ dragged before the altar on which the holy fire burned. Now Asmund the
+ Priest slew it, amid silence, before the figures of the Gods, and,
+ catching its blood in the blood-bowl, sprinkled the altar and all the
+ worshippers with the blood-twigs. Then the ox was cut up, and the figures
+ of the almighty Gods were anointed with its molten fat and wiped with fair
+ linen. Next the flesh was boiled in the cauldrons that were hung over
+ fires lighted all down the nave, and the feast began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now men ate, and drank much ale and mead, and all were merry. But Ospakar
+ Blacktooth grew not glad, though he drank much, for he saw that the eyes
+ of Gudruda ever watched Eric&rsquo;s face and that they smiled on each other. He
+ was wroth at this, for he knew that the bait must be good and the line
+ strong that should win this fair fish to his angle, and as he sat,
+ unknowingly his fingers loosed the peace-strings of his sword Whitefire,
+ and he half drew it, so that its brightness flamed in the firelight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast a wondrous blade there, Ospakar!&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;though this is
+ no place to draw it. Whence came it? Methinks no such swords are fashioned
+ now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Asmund, a wondrous blade indeed. There is no other such in the world,
+ for the dwarfs forged it of old, and he shall be unconquered who holds it
+ aloft. This was King Odin&rsquo;s sword, and it is named Whitefire. Ralph the
+ Red took it from King Eric&rsquo;s cairn in Norway, and he strove long with the
+ Barrow-Dweller[*] before he wrenched it from his grasp. But my father won
+ it and slew Ralph, though he had never done this had Whitefire been aloft
+ against him. But Ralph the Red, being in drink when the ships met in
+ battle, fought with an axe, and was slain by my father, and since then
+ Whitefire has been the last light that many a chief&rsquo;s eyes have seen. Look
+ at it, Asmund.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] The ghost in the cairn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now he drew the great sword, and men were astonished as it flashed aloft.
+ Its hilt was of gold, and blue stones were set therein. It measured two
+ ells and a half from crossbar to point, and so bright was the broad blade
+ that no one could look on it for long, and all down its length ran runes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A wondrous weapon, truly!&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;How read the runes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not, nor any man&mdash;they are ancient.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me look at them,&rdquo; said Groa, &ldquo;I am skilled in runes.&rdquo; Now she took
+ the sword, and heaved it up, and looked at the runes and said, &ldquo;A strange
+ writing truly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How runs it, housekeeper?&rdquo; said Asmund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thus, lord, if my skill is not at fault:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Whitefire is my name&mdash;
+ Dwarf-folk forged me&mdash;
+ Odin&rsquo;s sword was I&mdash;
+ Eric&rsquo;s sword was I&mdash;
+ Eric&rsquo;s sword shall I be&mdash;
+ And where I fall there he must follow me.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda looked at Eric Brighteyes wonderingly, and Ospakar saw it and
+ became very angry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look not so, maiden,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for it shall be another Eric than yon
+ flapper-duck who holds Whitefire aloft, though it may very well chance
+ that he shall feel its edge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda bit her lip, and Eric burned red to the brow and spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is ill, lord, to throw taunts like an angry woman. Thou art great and
+ strong, yet I may dare a deed with thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peace, boy! Thou canst climb a waterfall well, I gainsay it not; but
+ beware ere thou settest up thyself against my strength. Say now, what game
+ wilt thou play with Ospakar?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will go on holmgang with thee, byrnie-clad or baresark,[*] and fight
+ thee with axe or sword, or I will wrestle with thee, and Whitefire yonder
+ shall be the winner&rsquo;s prize.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] To a duel, usually fought, in mail or without it, on an
+ island&mdash;&ldquo;holm&rdquo;&mdash;within a circle of hazel-twigs.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I will have no bloodshed here at Middalhof,&rdquo; said Asmund sternly.
+ &ldquo;Make play with fists, or wrestle if ye will, for that were great sport to
+ see; but weapons shall not be drawn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar grew mad with anger and drink&mdash;and he grinned like a dog,
+ till men saw the red gums beneath his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou wilt wrestle with me, youngling&mdash;with <i>me</i> whom no man has
+ ever so much as lifted from my feet? Good! I will lay thee on thy face and
+ whip thee, and Whitefire shall be the stake&mdash;I swear it on the holy
+ altar-ring; but what hast thou to set against the precious sword? Thy poor
+ hovel and its lot of land shall be all too little.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I set my life on it; if I lose Whitefire let Whitefire slay me,&rdquo; said
+ Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, that I will not have, and I am master here in this Temple,&rdquo; said
+ Asmund. &ldquo;Bethink thee of some other stake, Ospakar, or let the game be
+ off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar gnawed his lip with his black fang and thought. Then he
+ laughed aloud and spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bright is Whitefire and thou art named Brighteyes. See now: I set the
+ great sword against thy right eye, and, if I win the match, it shall be
+ mine to tear it out. Wilt thou play this game with me? If thy heart fails
+ thee, let it go; but I will set no other stake against my good sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eyes and limbs are a poor man&rsquo;s wealth,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;so be it. I stake my
+ right eye against the sword Whitefire, and we will try the match
+ to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And to-morrow night thou shalt be called Eric One-eye,&rdquo; said Ospakar&mdash;at
+ which some few of his thralls laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But most of the men did not laugh, for they thought this an ill game and a
+ worst jest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the feast went on, and Asmund rose from his high seat in the centre of
+ the nave, on the left hand looking down from the altar, and gave out the
+ holy toasts. First men drank a full horn to Odin, praying for triumph on
+ their foes. Then they drank to Frey, asking for plenty; to Thor, for
+ strength in battle; to Freya, Goddess of Love (and to her Eric drank
+ heartily); to the memory of the dead; and, last of all, to Bragi, God of
+ all delight. When this cup was drunk, Asmund rose again, according to
+ custom, and asked if none had an oath to swear as to some deed that should
+ be done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a while there was no answer, but presently Eric Brighteyes stood up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I would swear an oath.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Set forth the matter, then,&rdquo; said Asmund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is this,&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;On Mosfell mountain, over by Hecla, dwells a
+ Baresark of whom all men have ill knowledge, for there are few whom he has
+ not harmed. His name is Skallagrim; he is a mighty man and he has wrought
+ much mischief in the south country, and brought many to their deaths and
+ robbed more of their goods: for none can prevail against him. Still, I
+ swear this, that, when the days lengthen, I will go up alone against him
+ and challenge him to battle, and conquer him or fall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, thou yellow-headed puppy-dog, thou shalt go with one eye against a
+ Baresark with two,&rdquo; growled Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men took no heed of his words, but shouted aloud, for Skallagrim had
+ plagued them long, and there were none who dared to fight with him any
+ more. Only Gudruda looked askance, for it seemed to her that Eric swore
+ too fast. Nevertheless he went up to the altar, and, taking hold of the
+ holy ring, he set his foot on the holy stone and swore his oath, while the
+ feasters applauded, striking their cups upon the board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And after that the feast went merrily, till all men were drunk, except
+ Asmund and Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric went to rest, but first he rubbed his limbs with the fat of
+ seals, for he was still sore with the beating of the waters, and they must
+ needs be supple on the morrow if he would keep his eye. Then he slept
+ sound, and rose strong and well, and going to the stream behind the stead,
+ bathed, and anointed his limbs afresh. But Ospakar did not sleep well,
+ because of the ale that he had drunk. Now as Eric came back from bathing,
+ in the dark of the morning, he met Gudruda, who watched for his coming,
+ and, there being none to see, he kissed her often; but she chided him
+ because of the match that he had made with Ospakar and the oath that he
+ had sworn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;thou wilt lose thine eye, for this Ospakar is a
+ giant, and strong as a troll; also he is merciless. Still, thou art a
+ mighty man, and I shall love thee as well with one eye as with two. Oh!
+ Eric, methought I should have died yesterday when thou didst leap from
+ Wolf&rsquo;s Fang! My heart seemed to stop within me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet I came safely to shore, sweetheart, and well does this kiss pay for
+ all I did. And as for Ospakar, if but once I get these arms about him, I
+ fear him little, or any man, and I covet that sword of his greatly. But we
+ can talk more certainly of these things to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda clung to him and told him all that had befallen, and of the
+ doings and words of Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She honours me beyond my worth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;who am in no way set on her,
+ but on thee only, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art thou so sure of that, Eric? Swanhild is fair and wise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay and evil. When I love Swanhild, then thou mayest love Ospakar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a bargain,&rdquo; she said, laughing. &ldquo;Good luck go with thee in the
+ wrestling,&rdquo; and with a kiss she left him, fearing lest she should be seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric went back to the hall, and sat down by the centre hearth, for all men
+ slept, being still heavy with drink, and presently Swanhild glided up to
+ him, and greeted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art greedy of deeds, Eric,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Yesterday thou camest here by
+ a path that no man has travelled, to-day thou dost wrestle with a giant
+ for thine eye, and presently thou goest up against Skallagrim!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems that this is true,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now all this thou doest for a woman who is the betrothed of another man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All this I do for fame&rsquo;s sake, Swanhild. Moreover, Gudruda is betrothed
+ to none.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before another Yule-feast is spread, Gudruda shall be the wife of
+ Ospakar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is yet to be seen, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild stood silent for a while and then spoke: &ldquo;Thou art a fool,
+ Eric&mdash;yes, drunk with folly. Nothing but evil shall come to thee from
+ this madness of thine. Forget it and pluck that which lies to thine hand,&rdquo;
+ and she looked sweetly at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They call thee Swanhild the Fatherless,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;but I think that
+ Loki, the God of Guile, was thy father, for there is none to match thee in
+ craft and evil-doing, and in beauty one only. I know thy plots well and
+ all the sorrow that thou hast brought upon us. Still, each seeks honour
+ after his own manner, so seek thou as thou wilt; but thou shalt find
+ bitterness and empty days, and thy plots shall come back on thine own head&mdash;yes,
+ even though they bring Gudruda and me to sorrow and death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild laughed. &ldquo;A day shall dawn, Eric, when thou who dost hate me
+ shalt hold me dear, and this I promise thee. Another thing I promise thee
+ also: that Gudruda shall never call thee husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric did not answer, fearing lest in his anger he should say words
+ that were better unspoken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now men rose and sat down to meat, and all talked of the wrestling that
+ should be. But in the morning Ospakar repented of the match, for it is
+ truly said that <i>ale is another man</i>, and men do not like that in the
+ morning which seemed well enough on yester eve. He remembered that he held
+ Whitefire dear above all things, and that Eric&rsquo;s eye had no worth to him,
+ except that the loss of it would spoil his beauty, so that perhaps Gudruda
+ would turn from him. It would be very ill if he should chance to lose the
+ play&mdash;though of this he had no fear, for he was held the strongest
+ man in Iceland and the most skilled in all feats of strength&mdash;and, at
+ the best, no fame is to be won from the overthrow of a deedless man, and
+ the plucking out of his eye. Thus it came to pass that when he saw Eric he
+ called to him in a big voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken, thou Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hear thee, thou Ospakar,&rdquo; said Eric, mocking him, and people laughed;
+ while Ospakar grinned angrily and said, &ldquo;Thou must learn manners, puppy.
+ Still, I shall find no honour in teaching thee in this wise. Last night we
+ made a match in our cups, and I staked my sword Whitefire and thou thine
+ eye. It would be bad that either of us should lose sword or eye;
+ therefore, what sayest thou, shall we let it pass?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Blacktooth, if thou fearest; but first pay thou forfeit of the
+ sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar grew very mad and shouted, &ldquo;Thou wilt indeed stand against me
+ in the ring! I will break thy back anon, youngster, and afterwards tear
+ out thine eye before thou diest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may so befall,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;but big words do not make big deeds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the light came and thralls went out with spades and cleared away
+ the snow in a circle two rods across, and brought dry sand and sprinkled
+ it on the frozen turf, so that the wrestlers should not slip. And they
+ piled the snow in a wall around the ring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Groa came up to Ospakar and spoke to him apart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knowest thou, lord,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that my heart bodes ill of this match?
+ Eric is a mighty man, and, great though thou art, I think that thou shalt
+ lout low before him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be a bad business if I am overthrown by an untried man,&rdquo; said
+ Ospakar, and was troubled in his mind, &ldquo;and it would be evil moreover to
+ lose the sword. For no price would I have it so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What wilt thou give me, lord, if I bring thee victory?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will give thee two hundred in silver.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ask no questions and it shall be so,&rdquo; said Groa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric was without, taking note of the ground in the ring, and presently
+ Groa called to her the thrall Koll the Half-witted, whom she had sent to
+ Swinefell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;yonder by the wall stand the wrestling shoes of Eric
+ Brighteyes. Haste thee now and take grease, and rub the soles with it,
+ then hold them in the heat of the fire, so that the fat sinks in. Do this
+ swiftly and secretly, and I will give thee three pennies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Koll grinned, and did as he was bid, setting back the shoes just as they
+ were before. Scarcely was the deed done when Eric came in, and made
+ himself ready for the game, binding the greased shoes upon his feet, for
+ he feared no trick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now everybody went out to the ring, and Ospakar and Eric stripped for
+ wrestling. They were clad in tight woollen jerkins and hose, and
+ sheep-skin shoes were on their feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They named Asmund master of the game, and his word must be law to both of
+ them. Eric claimed that Asmund should hold the sword Whitefire that was at
+ stake, but Ospakar gainsaid him, saying that if he gave Whitefire into
+ Asmund&rsquo;s keeping, Eric must also give his eye&mdash;and about this they
+ debated hotly. Now the matter was brought before Asmund as umpire, and he
+ gave judgment for Eric, &ldquo;for,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if Eric yield up his eye into my
+ hand, I can return it to his head no more if he should win; but if Ospakar
+ gives me the good sword and conquers, it is easy for me to pass it back to
+ him unharmed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men said that this was a good judgment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus then was the arm-game set. Ospakar and Eric must wrestle thrice, and
+ between each bout there would be a space while men could count a thousand.
+ They might strike no blow at one another with hand, or head, or elbow,
+ foot or knee; and it should be counted no fall if the haunch and the head
+ of the fallen were not on the ground at the self-same time. He who
+ suffered two falls should be adjudged conquered and lose his stake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asmund called these rules aloud in the presence of witnesses, and Ospakar
+ and Eric said that should bind them. Ospakar drew a small knife and gave
+ it to his son Gizur to hold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou shalt soon know, youngling, how steel tastes in the eyeball,&rdquo; he
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall soon know many things,&rdquo; Eric answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they drew off their cloaks and stood in the ring. Ospakar was great
+ beyond the bigness of men and his arms were clothed with black hair like
+ the limbs of a goat. Beneath the shoulder joint they were almost as thick
+ as a girl&rsquo;s thigh. His legs also were mighty, and the muscles stood out
+ upon him in knotty lumps. He seemed a very giant, and fierce as a
+ Baresark, but still somewhat round about the body and heavy in movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From him men looked at Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lo! Baldur and the Troll!&rdquo; said Swanhild, and everybody laughed, since so
+ it was indeed; for, if Ospakar was black and hideous as a troll, Eric was
+ beautiful as Baldur, the loveliest of the Gods. He was taller than Ospakar
+ by the half of a hand and as broad in the chest. Still, he was not yet
+ come to his greatest strength, and, though his limbs were well knit, they
+ seemed but as a child&rsquo;s against the limbs of Ospakar. But he was quick as
+ a cat and lithe, his neck and arms were white as whey, and beneath his
+ golden hair his bright eyes shone like spears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they stood face to face, with arms outstretched, waiting the word of
+ Asmund. He gave it and they circled round each other with arms held low.
+ Presently Ospakar made a rush and, seizing Eric about the middle, tried to
+ lift him, but with no avail. Thrice he strove and failed, then Eric moved
+ his foot and lo! it slipped upon the sanded turf. Again Eric moved and
+ again he slipped, a third time and he slipped a third time, and before he
+ could recover himself he was full on his back and fairly thrown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda saw and was sad at heart, and those around her said that it was
+ easy to know how the game would end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What said I?&rdquo; quoth Swanhild, &ldquo;that it would go badly with Eric were
+ Ospakar&rsquo;s arms about him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All is not done yet,&rdquo; answered Gudruda. &ldquo;Methinks Eric&rsquo;s feet slipped
+ most strangely, as though he stood on ice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric was very sore at heart and could make nothing of this matter&mdash;for
+ he was not overthrown by strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat on the snow and Ospakar and his sons mocked him. But Gudruda drew
+ near and whispered to him to be of good cheer, for fortune might yet
+ change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think that I am bewitched,&rdquo; said Eric sadly: &ldquo;my feet have no hold of
+ the ground.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda covered her eyes with her hand and thought. Presently she looked
+ up quickly. &ldquo;I seem to see guile here,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Now look narrowly on
+ thy shoes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He heard, and, loosening his shoe-string, drew a shoe from his foot and
+ looked at the sole. The cold of the snow had hardened the fat, and there
+ it was, all white upon the leather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric rose in wrath. &ldquo;Methought,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;that I dealt with men of
+ honourable mind, not with cheating tricksters. See now! it is little
+ wonder that I slipped, for grease has been set upon my shoes&mdash;and, by
+ Thor! I will cleave the man who did it to the chin,&rdquo; and as he said it his
+ eyes blazed so dreadfully that folk fell back from him. Asmund took the
+ shoes and looked at them. Then he spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brighteyes tells the truth, and we have a sorry knave among us. Ospakar,
+ canst thou clear thyself of this ill deed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will swear on the holy ring that I know nothing of it, and if any man
+ in my company has had a hand therein he shall die,&rdquo; said Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That we will swear also,&rdquo; cried his sons Gizur and Mord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is more like a woman&rsquo;s work,&rdquo; said Gudruda, and she looked at
+ Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is no work of mine,&rdquo; quoth Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then go and ask thy mother of it,&rdquo; answered Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now all men cried aloud that this was the greatest shame, and that the
+ match must be set afresh; only Ospakar bethought him of that two hundred
+ in silver which he had promised to Groa, and looked around, but she was
+ not there. Still, he gainsaid Eric in the matter of the match being set
+ afresh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric cried out in his anger that he would let the game stand as it
+ was, since Ospakar swore himself free of the shameful deed. Men thought
+ this a mad saying, but Asmund said it should be so. Still, he swore in his
+ heart that, even if he were worsted, Eric should not lose his eye&mdash;no
+ not if swords were held aloft to take it. For of all tricks this seemed to
+ him the very worst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar and Eric faced each other again in the ring, but this time the
+ feet of Eric were bare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ospakar rushed to get the upper hold, but Eric was too swift for him and
+ sprang aside. Again he rushed, but Eric dropped and gripped him round the
+ middle. Now they were face to face, hugging each other like bears, but
+ moving little. For a time things went thus, while Ospakar strove to lift
+ Eric, but in nowise could he stir him. Then of a sudden Eric put out his
+ strength, and they staggered round the ring, tearing at each other till
+ their jerkins were rent from them, leaving them almost bare to the waist.
+ Suddenly, Eric seemed to give, and Ospakar put out his foot to trip him.
+ But Brighteyes was watching. He caught the foot in the crook of his left
+ leg, and threw his weight forward on the chest of Blacktooth. Backward he
+ went, falling with the thud of a tree on snow, and there he lay on the
+ ground, and Eric over him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then men shouted &ldquo;A fall! a fair fall!&rdquo; and were very glad, for the fight
+ seemed most uneven to them, and the wrestlers rolled asunder, breathing
+ heavily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda threw a cloak over Eric&rsquo;s naked shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was well done, Brighteyes,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The game is still to play, sweet,&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;and Ospakar is a mighty
+ man. I threw him by skill, not by strength. Next time it must be by
+ strength or not at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now breathing-time was done, and once more the two were face to face.
+ Thrice Ospakar rushed, and thrice did Eric slip away, for he would waste
+ Blacktooth&rsquo;s strength. Again Ospakar rushed, roaring like a bear, and fire
+ seemed to come from his eyes, and the steam went up from him and hung upon
+ the frosty air like the steam of a horse. This time Eric could not get
+ away, but was swept up into that great grip, for Ospakar had the lower
+ hold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now there is an end of Eric,&rdquo; said Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The arrow is yet on the bow,&rdquo; answered Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blacktooth put out his might and reeled round and round the ring, dragging
+ Eric with him. This way and that he twisted, and time on time Eric&rsquo;s leg
+ was lifted from the ground, but so he might not be thrown. Now they stood
+ almost still, while men shouted madly, for no such wrestling had been
+ known in the southlands. Grimly they hugged and strove: forsooth it was a
+ mighty sight to see. Grimly they hugged, and their muscles strained and
+ cracked, but they could stir each other no inch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ospakar grew fearful, for he could make no play with this youngling. Black
+ rage swelled in his heart. He ground his fangs, and thought on guile. By
+ his foot gleamed the naked foot of Eric. Suddenly he stamped on it so
+ fiercely that the skin burst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ill done! ill done!&rdquo; folk cried; but in his pain Eric moved his foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lo! he was down, but not altogether down, for he did but sit upon his
+ haunches, and still he clung to Blacktooth&rsquo;s thighs, and twined his legs
+ about his ankles. Now with all his strength Ospakar strove to force the
+ head of Brighteyes to the ground, but still he could not, for Eric clung
+ to him like a creeper to a tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A losing game for Eric,&rdquo; said Asmund, and as he spoke Brighteyes was
+ pressed back till his yellow hair almost swept the sand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the folk of Ospakar shouted in triumph, but Gudruda cried aloud:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be not overthrown, Eric; loose thee and spring aside.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric heard, and of a sudden loosed all his grip. He fell on his outspread
+ hand, then, with a swing sideways and a bound, once more he stood upon his
+ feet. Ospakar came at him like a bull made mad with goading, but he could
+ no longer roar aloud. They closed and this time Eric had the better hold.
+ For a while they struggled round and round till their feet tore the frozen
+ turf, then once more they stood face to face. Now the two were almost
+ spent; yet Blacktooth gathered up his strength and swung Eric from his
+ feet, but he found them again. He grew mad with rage, and hugged him till
+ Brighteyes was nearly pressed to death, and black bruises sprang upon the
+ whiteness of his flesh. Ospakar grew mad, and madder yet, till at length
+ in his fury he fixed his fangs in Eric&rsquo;s shoulder and bit till the blood
+ spurted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ill kissed, thou rat!&rdquo; gasped Eric, and with the pain and rush of blood,
+ his strength came back to him. He shifted his grip swiftly, now his right
+ hand was beneath the fork of Blacktooth&rsquo;s thigh and his left on the hollow
+ of Blacktooth&rsquo;s back. Twice he lifted&mdash;twice the bulk of Ospakar rose
+ from the ground&mdash;a third mighty lift&mdash;so mighty that the
+ wrapping on Eric&rsquo;s forehead burst, and the blood streamed down his face&mdash;and
+ lo! great Blacktooth flew in air. Up he flew, and backward he fell into
+ the bank of snow, and was buried there almost to the knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WAS BETROTHED TO UNNA
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ For a moment there was silence, for all that company was wonderstruck at
+ the greatness of the deed. Then they cheered and cheered again, and to
+ Eric it seemed that he slept, and the sound of shouting reached him but
+ faintly, as though he heard through snow. Suddenly he woke and saw a man
+ rush at him with axe aloft. It was Mord, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, mad at his
+ father&rsquo;s overthrow. Eric sprang aside, or the blow had been his bane, and,
+ as he sprang, smote with his fist, and it struck heavily on the head of
+ Mord above the ear, so that the axe flew from his hand, and he fell
+ senseless on his father in the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now swords flashed out, and men ringed round Eric to guard him, and it
+ came near to the spilling of blood, for the people of Ospakar gnashed
+ their teeth to see so great a hero overthrown by a youngling, while the
+ southern folk of Middalhof and Ran River rejoiced loudly, for Eric was
+ dear to their hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Down swords,&rdquo; cried Asmund the priest, &ldquo;and haul yon carcass from the
+ snow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This then they did, and Ospakar sat up, breathing in great gasps, the
+ blood running from his mouth and ears, and he was an evil sight to see,
+ for what with blood and snow and rage his face was like the face of the
+ Swinefell Goblin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Swanhild spoke in the ear of Gudruda:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here,&rdquo; she said, looking at Eric, &ldquo;we two have a man worth loving,
+ foster-sister.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, &ldquo;worth and well worth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Asmund drew near and before all men kissed Eric Brighteyes on the
+ brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In sooth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;thou art a mighty man, Eric, and the glory of the
+ south. This I prophesy of thee: that thou shalt do deeds such as have not
+ been done in Iceland. Thou hast ill been served, for a knave unknown
+ greased thy shoes. Yon swarthy Ospakar, the most mighty of all men in
+ Iceland, could not overthrow thee, though, like a wolf, he fastened his
+ fangs in thee, and, like a coward, stamped upon thy naked foot. Take thou
+ the great sword that thou hast won and wear it worthily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric took snow and wiped the blood from his brow. Then he grasped
+ Whitefire and drew it from the scabbard, and high aloft flashed the
+ war-blade. Thrice he wheeled it round his head, then sang aloud:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Fast, yestermorn, down Golden Falls,
+ Fared young Eric to thy feast,
+ Asmund, father of Gudruda&mdash;
+ Maid whom much he longs to clasp.
+ But to-day on Giant Blacktooth
+ Hath he done a needful deed:
+ Hurling him in heaped-up snowdrift;
+ Winning Whitefire for his wage.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ And again he sang:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Lord, if in very truth thou thinkest
+ Brighteyes is a man midst men,
+ Swear to him, the stalwart suitor,
+ Handsel of thy sweet maid&rsquo;s hand:
+ Whom, long loved, to win, down Goldfoss
+ Swift he sped through frost and foam;
+ Whom, to win, to troll-like Ogre,
+ He, &lsquo;gainst Whitefire, waged his eye.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Men thought this well sung, and turned to hear Asmund&rsquo;s answer, nor must
+ they wait long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I will promise thee this, that if thou goest on as thou
+ hast begun, I will give Gudruda in marriage to no other man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is good tidings, lord,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This I say further: in a year I will give thee full answer according as
+ to how thou dost bear thyself between now and then, for this is no light
+ gift thou askest; also that, if ye will it, you twain may now plight
+ troth, for the blame shall be yours if it is broken, and not mine, and I
+ give thee my hand on it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric took his hand, and Gudruda heard her father&rsquo;s words and happiness
+ shone in her dark eyes, and she grew faint for very joy. And now Eric
+ turned to her, all torn and bloody from the fray, the great sword in his
+ hand, and he spoke thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast heard thy father&rsquo;s words, Gudruda? Now it seems that there is
+ no great need of troth-plighting between us two. Still, here before all
+ men I ask thee, if thou dost love me and art willing to take me to
+ husband?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda looked up into his face, and answered in a sweet, clear voice that
+ could be heard by all:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric, I say to thee now, what I have said before, that I love thee alone
+ of all men, and, if it be my father&rsquo;s wish, I will wed no other whilst
+ thou dost remain true to me and hold me dear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Those are good words,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Now, in pledge of them, swear this
+ troth of thine upon my sword that I have won.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda smiled, and, taking great Whitefire in her hand, she said the
+ words again, and, in pledge of them, kissed the bright blade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric took back the war-sword and spoke thus: &ldquo;I swear that I will
+ love thee, and thee only, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, whom I have
+ desired all my days; and, if I fail of this my oath, then our troth is at
+ an end, and thou mayst wed whom thou wilt,&rdquo; and in turn he put his lips
+ upon the sword, while Swanhild watched them do the oath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar was recovered from the fight, and he sat there upon the snow,
+ with bowed head, for he knew well that he had won the greatest shame, and
+ had lost both wife and sword. Black rage filled his heart as he listened,
+ and he sprang to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I came hither, Asmund,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to ask this maid of thine in marriage,
+ and methinks that had been a good match for her and thee. But I have been
+ overthrown by witchcraft of this man in a wrestling-bout, and thereby lost
+ my good sword; and now I must seem to hear him betrothed to the maid
+ before me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast heard aright, Ospakar,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;and thy wooing is soon
+ sped. Get thee back whence thou camest and seek a wife in thine own
+ quarter, for thou art unfit in age and aspect to have so sweet a maid.
+ Moreover, here in the south we hold men of small account, however great
+ and rich they be, who do not shame to seek to overcome a foe by foul
+ means. With my own eyes I saw thee stamp on the naked foot of Eric,
+ Thorgrimur&rsquo;s son; with my own eyes I saw thee, like a wolf, fasten that
+ black fang of thine upon him&mdash;there is the mark of it; and, as for
+ the matter of the greased shoes, thou knowest best what hand thou hadst in
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had no hand. If any did this thing, it was Groa the Witch, thy Finnish
+ bedmate. For the rest, I was mad and know not what I did. But hearken,
+ Asmund: ill shall befall thee and thy house, and I will ever be thy foe.
+ Moreover, I will yet wed this maid of thine. And now, thou Eric, hearken
+ also: I will have another game with thee. This one was but the sport of
+ boys; when we meet again&mdash;and the time shall not be long&mdash;swords
+ shall be aloft, and thou shalt learn the play of men. I tell thee that I
+ will slay thee, and tear Gudruda, shrieking, from thy arms to be my wife!
+ I tell thee that, with yonder good sword Whitefire, I will yet hew off thy
+ head!&rdquo;&mdash;and he choked and stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art much foam and little water,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;These things are easily
+ put to proof. If thou willest it, to-morrow I will come with thee to a
+ holmgang, and there we may set the twigs and finish what we have begun
+ to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot do that, for thou hast my sword; and, till I am suited with
+ another weapon, I may fight no holmgang. Still, fear not: we shall soon
+ meet with weapons aloft and byrnie on breast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never too soon can the hour come, Blacktooth,&rdquo; said Eric, and turning on
+ his heel, he limped to the hall to clothe himself afresh. On the threshold
+ of the men&rsquo;s door he met Groa the Witch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou didst put grease upon my shoes, carline and witch-hag that thou
+ art,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not true, Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There thou liest, and for all this I will repay thee. Thou art not yet
+ the wife of Asmund, nor shalt be, for a plan comes into my head about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Groa looked at him strangely. &ldquo;If thou speakest so, take heed to thy meat
+ and drink,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I was not born among the Finns for nothing; and
+ know, I am still minded to wed Asmund. For thy shoes, I would to the Gods
+ that they were Hell-shoon, and that I was now binding them on thy dead
+ feet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! the cat begins to spit,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;But know this: thou mayest
+ grease my shoes&mdash;fit work for a carline!&mdash;but thou mayest never
+ bind them on. Thou art a witch, and wilt come to the end of witches; and
+ what thy daughter is, that I will not say,&rdquo; and he pushed past her and
+ entered the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently Asmund came to seek Eric there, and prayed him to be gone to his
+ stead on Ran River. The horses of Ospakar had strayed, and he must stop at
+ Middalhof till they were found; but, if these two should abide under the
+ same roof, bloodshed would come of it, and that Asmund knew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric said yea to this, and, when he had rested a while, he kissed Gudruda,
+ and, taking a horse, rode away to Coldback, bearing the sword Whitefire
+ with him, and for a time he saw no more of Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he came there, his mother Saevuna greeted him as one risen from the
+ dead, and hung about his neck. Then he told her all that had come to pass,
+ and she thought it a marvellous story, and sorrowed that Thorgrimur, her
+ husband, was not alive to know it. But Eric mused a while, and spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;now my uncle Thorod of Greenfell is dead, and his
+ daughter, my cousin Unna, has no home. She is a fair woman and skilled in
+ all things. It comes into my mind that we should bid her here to dwell
+ with us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I thought thou wast betrothed to Gudruda the Fair,&rdquo; said Saevuna.
+ &ldquo;Wherefore, then, wouldst thou bring Unna hither?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For this cause,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;because it seems that Asmund the Priest
+ wearies of Groa the Witch, and would take another wife, and I wish to draw
+ the bands between us tighter, if it may befall so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Groa will take it ill,&rdquo; said Saevuna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Things cannot be worse between us than they are now, therefore I do not
+ fear Groa,&rdquo; he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall be as thou wilt, son; to-morrow we will send to Unna and bid her
+ here, if it pleases her to come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar stayed three more days at Middalhof, till his horses were
+ found, and he was fit to travel, for Eric had shaken him sorely. But he
+ had no words with Gudruda and few with Asmund. Still, he saw Swanhild, and
+ she bid him to be of good cheer, for he should yet have Gudruda. For now
+ that the maid had passed from him the mind of Ospakar was set in winning
+ her. Björn also, Asmund&rsquo;s son, spoke words of good comfort to him, for he
+ envied Eric his great fame, and he thought the match with Blacktooth would
+ be good. And so at length Ospakar rode away to Swinefell with all his
+ company; but Gizur, his son, left his heart behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Swanhild had not been idle this while. Her heart was sore, but she
+ must follow her ill-nature, and so she had put out her woman&rsquo;s strength
+ and beguiled Gizur into loving her. But she did not love him at all, and
+ the temper of Asmund the Priest was so angry that Gizur dared not ask her
+ in marriage. So nothing was said of the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Unna came to Coldback, to dwell with Saevuna, Eric&rsquo;s mother, and she
+ was a fair and buxom woman. She had been once wedded, but within a month
+ of her marriage her husband was lost at sea, this two years gone. At first
+ Gudruda was somewhat jealous of this coming of Unna to Coldback; but Eric
+ showed her what was in his mind, and she fell into the plan, for she hated
+ and feared Groa greatly, and desired to be rid of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since this matter of the greasing of Eric&rsquo;s wrestling-shoes great loathing
+ of Groa had come into Asmund&rsquo;s mind, and he bethought him often of those
+ words that his wife Gudruda the Gentle spoke as she lay dying, and grieved
+ that the oath which he swore then had in part been broken. He would have
+ no more to do with Groa now, but he could not be rid of her; and,
+ notwithstanding her evil doings, he still loved Swanhild. But Groa grew
+ thin with spite and rage, and wandered about the place glaring with her
+ great black eyes, and people hated her more and more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Asmund went to visit at Coldback, and there he saw Unna, and was
+ pleased with her, for she was a blithe woman and a bonny. The end of it
+ was that he asked her in marriage of Eric; at which Brighteyes was glad,
+ but said that he must know Unna&rsquo;s mind. Unna hearkened, and did not say
+ no, for though Asmund was somewhat gone in years, still he was an
+ upstanding man, wealthy in lands, goods, and moneys out at interest, and
+ having many friends. So they plighted troth, and the wedding-feast was to
+ be in the autumn after hay-harvest. Now Asmund rode back to Middalhof
+ somewhat troubled at heart, for these tidings must be told to Groa, and he
+ feared her and her witchcraft. In the hall he found her, standing alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where hast thou been, lord?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At Coldback,&rdquo; he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To see Unna, Eric&rsquo;s cousin, perchance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is Unna to thee, then, lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This much, that after hay-harvest she will be my wife, and that is ill
+ news for thee, Groa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Groa turned and grasped fiercely at the air with her thin hands. Her
+ eyes started out, foam was on her lips, and she shook in her fury like a
+ birch-tree in the wind, looking so evil that Asmund drew back a little
+ way, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now a veil is lifted from thee and I see thee as thou art. Thou hast cast
+ a glamour over me these many years, Groa, and it is gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayhap, Asmund Asmundson&mdash;mayhap, thou knowest me; but I tell thee
+ that thou shalt see me in a worse guise before thou weddest Unna. What!
+ have I borne the greatest shame, lying by thy side these many years, and
+ shall I live to see a rival, young and fair, creep into my place with
+ honour? That I will not while runes have power and spells can conjure the
+ evil thing upon thee. I call down ruin on thee and thine&mdash;yea and on
+ Brighteyes also, for he has brought this thing to pass. Death take ye all!
+ May thy blood no longer run in mortal veins anywhere on the earth! Go down
+ to Hela, Asmund, and be forgotten!&rdquo; and she began to mutter runes swiftly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Asmund turned white with wrath. &ldquo;Cease thy evil talk,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;or
+ thou shalt be hurled as a witch into Goldfoss pool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Into Goldfoss pool?&mdash;yea, there I may lie. I see it!&mdash;I seem to
+ see this shape of mine rolling where the waters boil fiercest&mdash;but
+ thine eyes shall never see it! <i>Thy</i> eyes are shut, and shut are the
+ eyes of Unna, for ye have gone before!&mdash;I do but follow after,&rdquo; and
+ thrice Groa shrieked aloud, throwing up her arms, then fell foaming on the
+ sanded floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An evil woman and a fey!&rdquo; said Asmund as he called people to her. &ldquo;It had
+ been better for me if I had never seen her dark face.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it is to be told that Groa lay beside herself for ten full days, and
+ Swanhild nursed her. Then she found her sense again, and craved to see
+ Asmund, and spoke thus to him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems to me, lord, if indeed it be aught but a vision of my dreams,
+ that before this sickness struck me I spoke mad and angry words against
+ thee, because thou hast plighted troth to Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is so, in truth,&rdquo; said Asmund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have to say this, then, lord: that most humbly I crave thy pardon for
+ my ill words, and ask thee to put them away from thy mind. Sore heart
+ makes sour speech, and thou knowest well that, howsoever great my faults,
+ at least I have always loved thee and laboured for thee, and methinks that
+ in some fashion thy fortunes are the debtor to my wisdom. Therefore when
+ my ears heard that thou hadst of a truth put me away, and that another
+ woman comes an honoured wife to rule in Middalhof, my tongue forgot its
+ courtesy, and I spoke words that are of all words the farthest from my
+ mind. For I know well that I grow old, and have put off that beauty with
+ which I was adorned of yore, and that held thee to me. &lsquo;<i>Carline</i>&rsquo;
+ Eric Brighteyes named me, and &lsquo;carline&rsquo; I am&mdash;an old hag, no more!
+ Now, forgive me, and, in memory of all that has been between us, let me
+ creep to my place in the ingle and still watch and serve thee and thine
+ till my service is outworn. Out of Ran&rsquo;s net I came to thee, and, if thou
+ drivest me hence, I tell thee that I will lie down and die upon thy
+ threshold, and when thou sinkest into eld surely the memory of it shall
+ grieve thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus she spoke and wept much, till Asmund&rsquo;s heart softened in him, and,
+ though with a doubting mind, he said it should be as she willed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Groa stayed on at Middalhof, and was lowly in her bearing and soft of
+ speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC WENT UP MOSFELL AGAINST SKALLAGRIM THE BARESARK
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now Atli the Good, earl of the Orkneys, comes into the story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It chanced that Atli had sailed to Iceland in the autumn on a business
+ about certain lands that had fallen to him in right of his mother Helga,
+ who was an Icelander, and he had wintered west of Reyjanes. Spring being
+ come, he wished to sail home, and, when his ship was bound, he put to sea
+ full early in the year. But it chanced that bad weather came up from the
+ south-east, with mist and rain, so he must needs beach his ship in a creek
+ under shelter of the Westman Islands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Atli asked what people dwelt in these parts, and, when he heard the
+ name of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, he was glad, for in old days he and
+ Asmund had gone many a viking cruise together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will leave the ship here,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;till the weather clears, and go
+ up to Middalhof to stay with Asmund.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they made the ship snug, and left men to watch her; but two of the
+ company, with Earl Atli, rode up to Middalhof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be told of Atli that he was the best of the earls who lived in
+ those days, and he ruled the Orkneys so well that men gave him a by-name
+ and called him Atli the Good. It was said of him that he had never turned
+ a poor man away unsuccoured, nor bowed his head before a strong man, nor
+ drawn his sword without cause, nor refused peace to him who prayed it. He
+ was sixty years old, but age had left few marks on him, except that of his
+ long white beard. He was keen-eyed, and well-fashioned of form and face, a
+ great warrior and the strongest of men. His wife was dead, leaving him no
+ children, and this was a sorrow to him; but as yet he had taken no other
+ wife, for he would say: &ldquo;Love makes an old man blind,&rdquo; and &ldquo;When age runs
+ with youth, both shall fall,&rdquo; and again, &ldquo;Mix grey locks and golden and
+ spoil two heads.&rdquo; For this earl was a man of many wise sayings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Atli came to Middalhof just as men sat down to meat and, hearing the
+ clatter of arms, all sprang to their feet, thinking that perhaps Ospakar
+ had come again as he had promised. But when Asmund saw Atli he knew him at
+ once, though they had not met for nearly thirty years, and he greeted him
+ lovingly, and put him in the high seat, and gave place to his men upon the
+ cross-benches. Atli told all his story, and Asmund bade him rest a while
+ at Middalhof till the weather grew clearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Earl saw Swanhild and thought the maid wondrous fair, and so
+ indeed she was, as she moved scornfully to and fro in her kirtle of white.
+ Soft was her curling hair and deep were her dark blue eyes, and bent were
+ her red lips as is a bow above her dimpled chin, and her teeth shone like
+ pearls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that fair maid thy daughter, Asmund,&rdquo; asked Atli.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is named Swanhild the Fatherless,&rdquo; he answered, turning his face
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Atli, looking sharply on him, &ldquo;were the maid sprung from me,
+ she would not long be called the &lsquo;Fatherless,&rsquo; for few have such a
+ daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is fair enough,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;in all save temper, and that is bad to
+ cross.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In every sword a flaw,&rdquo; answers Atli; &ldquo;but what has an old man to do with
+ young maids and their beauty?&rdquo; and he sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have known younger men who would seem less brisk at bridals,&rdquo; said
+ Asmund, and for that time they talked no more of the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, Swanhild heard something of this speech, and she guessed more; and it
+ came into her mind that it would be the best of sport to make this old man
+ love her, and then to mock him and say him nay. So she set herself to the
+ task, as it ever was her wont, and she found it easy. For all day long,
+ with downcast eyes and gentle looks, she waited upon the Earl, and now, at
+ his bidding, she sang to him in a voice soft and low, and now she talked
+ so wisely well that Atli thought no such maid had trod the earth before.
+ But he checked himself with many learned saws, and on a day when the
+ weather had grown fair, and they sat alone, he told her that his ship was
+ bound for Orkney Isles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as though by chance, Swanhild laid her white hand in his, and on a
+ sudden looked deep into his eyes, and said with trembling lips, &ldquo;Ah, go
+ not yet, lord!&mdash;I pray thee, go not yet!&rdquo;&mdash;and, turning, she
+ fled away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Atli was much moved, and he said to himself: &ldquo;Now a strange thing is
+ come to pass: a fair maid loves an old man; and yet, methinks, he who
+ looks into those eyes sees deep waters,&rdquo; and he beat his brow and thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Swanhild in her chamber laughed till the tears ran from those same
+ eyes, for she saw that the great fish was hooked and now the time had come
+ to play him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For she did not know that it was otherwise fated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda, too, saw all these things and knew not how to read them, for she
+ was of an honest mind, and could not understand how a woman may love a man
+ as Swanhild loved Eric and yet make such play with other men, and that of
+ her free will. For she guessed little of Swanhild&rsquo;s guilefulness, nor of
+ the coldness of her heart to all save Eric; nor of how this was the only
+ joy left to her: to make a sport of men and put them to grief and shame.
+ Atli said to himself that he would watch this maid well before he uttered
+ a word to Asmund, and he deemed himself very cunning, for he was wondrous
+ cautious after the fashion of those about to fall. So he set himself to
+ watching, and Swanhild set herself to smiling, and he told her tales of
+ warfare and of daring, and she clasped her hands and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was there ever such a man since Odin trod the earth?&rdquo; And so it went on,
+ till the serving-women laughed at the old man in love and the wit of her
+ that mocked him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now upon a day, Eric having made an end of sowing his corn, bethought
+ himself of his vow to go up alone against Skallagrim the Baresark in his
+ den on Mosfell over by Hecla. Now, this was a heavy task: for Skallagrim
+ was held so mighty among men that none went up against him any more; and
+ at times Eric thought of Gudruda, and sighed, for it was likely that she
+ would be a widow before she was made a wife. Still, his oath must be
+ fulfilled, and, moreover, of late Skallagrim having heard that a youngling
+ named Eric Brighteyes had vowed to slay him single-handed, had made a
+ mock of him in this fashion. For Skallagrim rode down to Coldback on Ran
+ River and at night-time took a lamb from the fold. Holding the lamb
+ beneath his arm, he drew near to the house and smote thrice on the door
+ with his battle-axe, and they were thundering knocks. Then he leapt on to
+ his horse and rode off a space and waited. Presently Eric came out, but
+ half clad, a shield in one hand and Whitefire in the other, and, looking,
+ by the bright moonlight he saw a huge black-bearded man seated on a horse,
+ having a great axe in one hand and the lamb beneath his arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who art thou?&rdquo; roared Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am called Skallagrim, youngling,&rdquo; answered the man on the horse. &ldquo;Many
+ men have seen me once, none have wished to see me twice, and some few have
+ never seen aught again. Now, it has been echoed in my ears that thou hast
+ vowed a vow to go up Mosfell against Skallagrim the Baresark, and I am
+ come hither to say that I will make thee right welcome. See,&rdquo; and with his
+ axe he cut off the lamb&rsquo;s tail on the pommel of his saddle: &ldquo;of the flesh
+ of this lamb of thine I will brew broth and of his skin I will make me a
+ vest. Take thou this tail, and when thou fittest it on to the skin again,
+ Skallagrim will own a lord,&rdquo; and he hurled the tail towards him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bide thou there till I can come to thee,&rdquo; shouted Eric; &ldquo;it will spare me
+ a ride to Mosfell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay. It is good for lads to take the mountain air,&rdquo; and Skallagrim
+ turned his horse away, laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric watched Skallagrim vanish over the knoll, and then, though he was
+ very angry, laughed also and went in. But first he picked up the tail, and
+ on the morrow he skinned it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the time was come when the matter must be tried, and Eric bade
+ farewell to Saevuna his mother, and Unna his cousin, and girt Whitefire
+ round him and set upon his head a golden helm with wings on it. Then he
+ found the byrnie which his father Thorgrimur had stripped, together with
+ the helm, from that Baresark who cut off his leg&mdash;and this was a good
+ piece, forged of the Welshmen&mdash;and he put it on his breast, and
+ taking a stout shield of bull&rsquo;s hide studded with nails, rode away with
+ one thrall, the strong carle named Jon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the women misdoubted them much of this venture; nevertheless Eric
+ might not be gainsayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, the road to Mosfell runs past Middalhof and thither he came. Atli,
+ standing at the men&rsquo;s door, saw him and cried aloud: &ldquo;Ho! a mighty man
+ comes here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild looked out and saw Eric, and he was a goodly sight in his
+ war-gear. For now, week by week, he seemed to grow more fair and great, as
+ the full strength of his manhood rose in him, like sap in the spring
+ grass, and Gudruda was very proud of her lover. That night Eric stayed at
+ Middalhof, and sat hand in hand with Gudruda and talked with Earl Atli.
+ Now the heart of the old viking went out to Eric, and he took great
+ delight in him and in his strength and deeds, and he longed much that the
+ Gods had given him such a son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I prophesy this of thee, Brighteyes,&rdquo; he cried: &ldquo;that it shall go ill
+ with this Baresark thou seekest&mdash;yes, and with all men who come
+ within sweep of that great sword of thine. But remember this, lad: guard
+ thy head with thy buckler, cut low beneath his shield, if he carries one,
+ and mow the legs from him: for ever a Baresark rushes on, shield up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric thanked him for his good words and went to rest. But, before it was
+ light, he rose, and Gudruda rose also and came into the hall, and buckled
+ his harness on him with her own hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is a sad task for me, Eric!&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;for how do I know that
+ Baresark&rsquo;s hands shall not loose this helm of thine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is as it may be, sweet,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but I fear not the Baresark or
+ any man. How goes it with Swanhild now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not. She makes herself sweet to that old Earl and he is fain of
+ her, and that is beyond my sight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have seen as much,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;It will be well for us if he should wed
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, and ill for him; but it is to be doubted if that is in her mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric kissed her soft and sweet, and went away, bidding her look for
+ his return on the day after the morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda bore up bravely against her fears till he was gone, but then she
+ wept a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it is to be told that Eric and his thrall Jon rode hard up Stonefell
+ and across the mountains and over the black sand, till, two hours before
+ sunset, they came to the foot of Mosfell, having Hecla on their right. It
+ is a grim mountain, grey with moss, standing alone in the desert plain;
+ but between it and Hecla there is good grassland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is the fox&rsquo;s earth. Now to start him,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knows something of the path by which this fortress can be climbed from
+ the south, and horses may be ridden up it for a space. So on they go, till
+ at length they come to a flat place where water runs down the black rocks,
+ and here Eric drank of the water, ate food, and washed his face and hands.
+ This done, he bid Jon tend the horses&mdash;for hereabouts there is a
+ little grass&mdash;and be watchful till he returned, since he must go up
+ against Skallagrim alone. And there with a doubtful heart Jon stayed all
+ that night. For of all that came to pass he saw but one thing, and that
+ was the light of Whitefire as it flashed out high above him on the brow of
+ the mountain when first Brighteyes smote at foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric went warily up the Baresark path, for he would keep his breath in
+ him, and the light shone redly on his golden helm. High he went, till at
+ length he came to a pass narrow and dark and hedged on either side with
+ sheer cliffs, such as two armed men might hold against a score. He peered
+ down this path, but he saw no Baresark, though it was worn by Baresark
+ feet. He crept along its length, moving like a sunbeam through the
+ darkness of the pass, for the light gathered on his helm and sword, till
+ suddenly the path turned and he was on the brink of a gulf that seemed to
+ have no bottom, and, looking across and down, he could see Jon and the
+ horses more than a hundred fathoms beneath. Now Eric must stop, for this
+ path leads but into the black gulf. Also he was perplexed to know where
+ Skallagrim had his lair. He crept to the brink and gazed. Then he saw that
+ a point of rock jutted from the sheer face of the cliff and that the point
+ was worn with the mark of feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where Baresark passes, there may yeoman follow,&rdquo; said Eric and, sheathing
+ Whitefire, without more ado, though he liked the task little, he grasped
+ the overhanging rock and stepped down on to the point below. Now he was
+ perched like an eagle over the dizzy gulf and his brain swam. Backward he
+ feared to go, and forward he might not, for there was nothing but air.
+ Beside him, growing from the face of the cliff, was a birch-bush. He
+ grasped it to steady himself. It bent beneath his clutch, and then he saw,
+ behind it, a hole in the rock through which a man could creep, and down
+ this hole ran footmarks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First through air like a bird; now through earth like a fox,&rdquo; said Eric
+ and entered the hole. Doubling his body till his helm almost touched his
+ knee he took three paces and lo! he stood on a great platform of rock, so
+ large that a hall might be built on it, which, curving inwards, cannot be
+ seen from the narrow pass. This platform, that is backed by the sheer
+ cliff, looks straight to the south, and from it he could search the plain
+ and the path that he had travelled, and there once more he saw Jon and the
+ horses far below him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A strong place, truly, and well chosen,&rdquo; said Eric and looked around. On
+ the floor of the rock and some paces from him a turf fire still
+ smouldered, and by it were sheep&rsquo;s bones, and beyond, in the face of the
+ overhanging precipice, was the mouth of a cave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The wolf is at home, or was but lately,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;now for his lair;&rdquo;
+ and with that he walked warily to the mouth of the cave and peered in. He
+ could see nothing yet a while, but surely he heard a sound of snoring?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he crept in, and, presently, by the red light of the burning embers,
+ he saw a great black-bearded man stretched at length upon a rug of
+ sheepskins, and by his side an axe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now it would be easy to make an end of this cave-dweller,&rdquo; thought Eric;
+ &ldquo;but that is a deed I will not do&mdash;no, not even to a Baresark&mdash;to
+ slay him in his sleep,&rdquo; and therewith he stepped lightly to the side of
+ Skallagrim, and was about to prick him with the point of Whitefire, when!
+ as he did so, another man sat up behind Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Thor! for two I did not bargain,&rdquo; said Eric, and sprang from the cave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, with a grunt of rage, that Baresark who was behind Skallagrim came
+ out like a she-bear robbed of her whelps, and ran straight at Eric, sword
+ aloft. Eric gives before him right to the edge of the cliff. Then the
+ Baresark smites at him and Brighteyes catches the blow on his shield, and
+ smites at him in turn so well and truly, that the head of the Baresark
+ flies from his shoulders and spins along the ground, but his body, with
+ outstretched arms yet gripping at the air, falls over the edge of the gulf
+ sheer into the water, a hundred fathoms down. It was the flash that
+ Whitefire made as it circled ere it smote that Jon saw while he waited in
+ the dell upon the mountain side. But of the Baresark he saw nothing, for
+ he passed down into the great fire-riven cleft and was never seen more,
+ save once only, in a strange fashion that shall be told. This was the
+ first man whom Brighteyes slew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the old tale tells that Eric cried aloud: &ldquo;Little chance had this
+ one,&rdquo; and that then a wonderful thing came to pass. For the head on the
+ rock opened its eyes and answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little chance indeed against thee, Eric Brighteyes. Still, I tell thee
+ this: that where my body fell there thou shalt fall, and where it lies
+ there thou shalt lie also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric was afraid, for he thought it a strange thing that a severed head
+ should speak to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here it seems I have to deal with trolls,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but at the least,
+ though he speak, this one shall strike no more,&rdquo; and he looked at the
+ head, but it answered nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Skallagrim slept through it all and the light grew so dim that Eric
+ thought it time to make an end this way or that. Therefore, he took the
+ head of the slain man, though he feared to touch it, and rolled it swiftly
+ into the cave, saying, &ldquo;Now, being so glib of speech, go tell thy mate
+ that Eric Brighteyes knocks at his door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came sounds as of a man rising, and presently Skallagrim rushed forth
+ with axe aloft and his fellow&rsquo;s head in his left hand. He was clothed in
+ nothing but a shirt and the skin of Eric&rsquo;s lamb was bound to his chest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where now is my mate?&rdquo; he said. Then he saw Eric leaning on Whitefire,
+ his golden helm ablaze with the glory of the passing sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems that thou holdest somewhat of him in thine hand, Skallagrim, and
+ for the rest, go seek it in yonder rift.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who art thou?&rdquo; roared Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou mayest know me by this token,&rdquo; said Eric, and he threw towards him
+ the skin of that lamb&rsquo;s tail which Skallagrim had lifted from Coldback.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Skallagrim knew him and the Baresark fit came on. His eyes rolled,
+ foam flew to his lips, his mouth grinned, and he was awesome to see. He
+ let fall the head, and, swinging the great axe aloft, rushed at Eric. But
+ Brighteyes is too swift for him. It would not be well to let that stroke
+ fall, and it must go hard with aught it struck. He springs forward, he
+ louts low and sweeps upwards with Whitefire. Skallagrim sees the sword
+ flare and drops almost to his knee, guarding his head with the axe; but
+ Whitefire strikes on the iron half of the axe and shears it in two, so
+ that the axe-head falls to earth. Now the Baresark is weaponless but
+ unharmed, and it would be an easy task to slay him as he rushes by. But it
+ came into Eric&rsquo;s mind that it is an unworthy deed to slay a swordless man,
+ and this came into his mind also, that he desired to match his naked might
+ against a Baresark in his rage. So, in the hardihood of his youth and
+ strength, he cast Whitefire aside, and crying &ldquo;Come, try a fall with me,
+ Baresark,&rdquo; rushed on Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art mad,&rdquo; yells the Baresark, and they are at it hard. Now they grip
+ and rend and tear. Ospakar was strong, but the Baresark strength of
+ Skallagrim is more than the strength of Ospakar, and soon Brighteyes
+ thinks longingly on Whitefire that he has cast aside. Eric is mighty
+ beyond the might of men, but he can scarcely hold his own against this mad
+ man, and very soon he knows that only one chance is left to him, and that
+ is to cling to Skallagrim till the Baresark fit be passed and he is once
+ more like other men. But this is easier to tell of than to do, and
+ presently, strive as he will, Eric is on his back, and Skallagrim on him.
+ But still he holds the Baresark as with bands of iron, and Skallagrim may
+ not free his arms, though he strive furiously. Now they roll over and over
+ on the rock, and the gloom gathers fast about them till presently Eric
+ sees that they draw near to the brink of that mighty rift down which the
+ severed head of the cave-dweller has foretold his fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we go together,&rdquo; says Eric, but the Baresark does not heed. Now they
+ are on the very brink, and here as it chances, or as the Norns decree, a
+ little rock juts up and this keeps them from falling. Eric is uppermost,
+ and, strive as he will, Skallagrim may not turn him on his back again.
+ Still, Brighteyes&rsquo; strength may not endure very long, for he grows faint,
+ and his legs slip slowly over the side of the rift till now he clings, as
+ it were, by his ribs and shoulder-blades alone, that rub against the
+ little rock. The light dies away, and Eric thinks on sweet Gudruda and
+ makes ready to die also, when suddenly a last ray from the sun falls on
+ the fierce face of Skallagrim, and lo! Brighteyes sees it change, for the
+ madness goes out of it, and in a moment the Baresark becomes but as a
+ child in his mighty grip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;I crave peace,&rdquo; and he loosed his clasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not too soon, then,&rdquo; gasped Eric as, drawing his legs from over the brink
+ of the rift, he gained his feet and, staggering to his sword, grasped it
+ very thankfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am fordone!&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;come, drag me from this place, for I
+ fall; or, if thou wilt, hew off my head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not serve thee thus,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Thou art a gallant foe,&rdquo; and he
+ put out his hand and drew him into safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a while Skallagrim lay panting, then he gained his hands and knees and
+ crawled to where Eric leaned against the rock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;give me thy hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric stretched forth his left hand, wondering, and Skallagrim took it. He
+ did not stretch out his right, for, fearing guile, he gripped Whitefire in
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; Skallagrim said again, &ldquo;of all men who ever were, thou art the
+ mightiest. Five other men had not stood before me in my rage, but,
+ scorning thy weapon, thou didst overcome me in the noblest fashion, and by
+ thy naked strength alone. Now hearken. Thou hast given me my life, and it
+ is thine from this hour to the end. Here I swear fealty to thee. Slay me
+ if thou wilt, or use me if thou wilt, but I think it will be better for
+ thee to do this rather than that, for there is but one who has mastered
+ me, and thou art he, and it is borne in upon my mind that thou wilt have
+ need of my strength, and that shortly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That may well be, Skallagrim,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;yet I put little trust in
+ outlaws and cave-dwellers. How do I know, if I take thee to me, that thou
+ wilt not murder me in my sleep, as it would have been easy for me to do by
+ thee but now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it that runs from thy arm,&rdquo; asked Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blood,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stretch out thine arm, lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric did so, and the Baresark put his lips to the scratch and sucked the
+ blood, then said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In this blood of thine I pledge thee, Eric Brighteyes! May Valhalla
+ refuse me and Hela take me; may I be hunted like a fox from earth to
+ earth; may trolls torment me and wizards sport with me o&rsquo; night; may my
+ limbs shrivel and my heart turn to water; may my foes overtake me, and my
+ bones be crushed across the doom-stone&mdash;if I fail in one jot from
+ this my oath that I have sworn! I will guard thy back, I will smite thy
+ enemies, thy hearthstone shall be my temple, thy honour my honour. Thrall
+ am I of thine, and thrall I will be, and whiles thou wilt we will live one
+ life, and, in the end, we will die one death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems that in going to seek a foe I have found a friend,&rdquo; said Eric,
+ &ldquo;and it is likely enough that I shall need one. Skallagrim, Baresark and
+ outlaw as thou art, I take thee at thy word. Henceforth, we are master and
+ man and we will do many a deed side by side, and in token of it I lengthen
+ thy name and call thee Skallagrim Lambstail. Now, if thou hast it, give me
+ food and drink, for I am faint from that hug of thine, old bear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW OSPAKAR BLACKTOOTH FOUND ERIC BRIGHTEYES AND SKALLAGRIM LAMBSTAIL ON
+ HORSE-HEAD HEIGHTS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Skallagrim led Eric to his cave and fed the fire and gave him flesh to
+ eat and ale to drink. When he had eaten his fill Eric looked at the
+ Baresark. He had black hair streaked with grey that hung down upon his
+ shoulders. His nose was hooked like an eagle&rsquo;s beak, his beard was wild
+ and his sunken eyes were keen as a hawk&rsquo;s. He was somewhat bent and not
+ over tall, but of a mighty make, for his shoulders must pass many a door
+ sideways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art a great man,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and it is something to have overcome
+ thee. Now tell me what turned thee Baresark.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A shameful deed that was done against me, lord. Ten years ago I was a
+ yeoman of small wealth in the north. I had but one good thing, and that
+ was the fairest housewife in those parts&mdash;Thorunna by name&mdash;and
+ I loved her much, but we had no children. Now, not far from my stead is a
+ place called Swinefell, and there dwells a mighty chief named Ospakar
+ Blacktooth; he is an evil man and strong&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric started at the name and then bade Skallagrim take up the tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It chanced that Ospakar saw my wife Thorunna and would take her, but at
+ first she did not listen. Then he promised her wealth and all good things,
+ and she was weary of our hard way of life and hearkened. Still, she would
+ not go away openly, for that had brought shame on her, but plotted with
+ Ospakar that he should come and take her as though by force. So it came
+ about, as I lay heavily asleep one night at Thorunna&rsquo;s side, having drunk
+ somewhat too deeply of the autumn ale, that armed men seized me, bound me,
+ and haled me from my bed. There were eight of them, and with them was
+ Ospakar. Then Blacktooth bid Thorunna rise, clothe herself and come to be
+ his May, and she made pretence to weep at this, but fell to it readily
+ enough. Now she bound her girdle round her and to it a knife hung.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Kill thyself, sweet,&rsquo; I cried: &lsquo;death is better than shame.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Not so, husband,&rsquo; she answered. &lsquo;It is true that I love but thee; yet a
+ woman may find another love, but not another life,&rsquo; and I saw her laugh
+ through her mock tears. Now Ospakar rode in hot haste away to Swinefell
+ and with him went Thorunna, but his men stayed a while and drank my ale,
+ and, as they drank, they mocked me who was bound before them, and little
+ by little all the truth was told of the doings of Ospakar and Thorunna my
+ housewife, and I learned that it was she who had planned this sport. Then
+ my eyes grew dark and I drew near to death from very shame and bitterness.
+ But of a sudden something leaped up in my heart, fire raged before my eyes
+ and voices in my ears called on to war and vengeance. I was Baresark&mdash;and
+ like hay bands I burst my cords. My axe hung on the wainscot. I snatched
+ it thence, and of what befell I know this alone, that, when the madness
+ passed, eight men lay stretched out before me, and all the place was but a
+ gore of blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Then I drew the dead together and piled drinking tables over them, and
+ benches, and turf, and anything else that would burn, and put cod&rsquo;s oil on
+ the pile, and fired the stead above them, so that the tale went abroad
+ that all these men were burned in their cups, and I with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;But I took the name of Skallagrim and swore an oath against all men, ay,
+ and women too, and away I went to the wood-folk and worked much mischief,
+ for I spared few, and so on to Mosfell. Here I have stayed these five
+ years, awaiting the time when I shall find Ospakar and Thorunna the
+ harlot, and I have fought many men, but, till thou camest up against me,
+ none could stand before my might.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A strange tale, truly,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but now hearken thou to a stranger,
+ for of a truth it seems that we have not come together by chance,&rdquo; and he
+ told him of Gudruda and the wrestling and of the overthrow of Blacktooth,
+ and showed him Whitefire which he won out of the hand of Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim listened and laughed aloud. &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;this is the
+ work of the Norns. See, lord, thou and I will yet smite this Ospakar. He
+ has taken my wife and he would take thy betrothed. Let it be! Let it be!
+ Ah, would that I had been there to see the wrestling&mdash;Ospakar had
+ never risen from his snow-bed. But there is time left to us, and I shall
+ yet see his head roll along the dust. Thou hast his goodly sword and with
+ it thou shalt sweep Blacktooth&rsquo;s head from his shoulders&mdash;or
+ perchance that shall be my lot,&rdquo; and with this Skallagrim sprang up,
+ gnashing his teeth and clutching at the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peace,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Blacktooth is not here. Save thy rage until it can
+ run along thy sword and strike him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, not here, nor yet so far off, lord. Hearken: I know this Ospakar. If
+ he has set eyes of longing on Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, he will not rest
+ one hour till he have her or is slain; and if he has set eyes of hate on
+ thee&mdash;then take heed to thy going and spy down every path before thy
+ feet tread it. Soon shall the matter come on for judgment and even now
+ Odin&rsquo;s Valkyries[*] choose their own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] The &ldquo;corse-choosing sisters&rdquo; who were bidden by Odin to
+ single out those warriors whose hour had come to die in
+ battle and win Valhalla.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is well, then,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, lord, it is well, for we two have little to fear from any six men,
+ if so be that they fall on us in fair fight. But I do not altogether like
+ thy tale. Too many women are mixed up in it, and women stab in the back. A
+ man may deal with swords aloft, but not with tricks, and lies, and false
+ women&rsquo;s witchery. It was a woman who greased thy wrestling soles; mayhap
+ it will be a woman that binds on thy Hell-shoes when all is done&mdash;ay!
+ and who makes them ready for thy feet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of women, as of men,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;there is this to be said, that some
+ are good and some evil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, lord, and this also, that the evil ones plot the ill of their evil,
+ but the good do it of their blind foolishness. Forswear women and so shalt
+ thou live happy and die in honour&mdash;cherish them and live in
+ wretchedness and die an outcast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy talk is foolish,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Birds must to the air, the sea to the
+ shore, and man must to woman. As things are so let them be, for they will
+ soon seem as though they had never been. I had rather kiss my dear and
+ die, if so it pleases me to do, than kiss her not and live, for at the
+ last the end will be one end, and kisses are sweet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a good saying,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, and they fell asleep side by
+ side and Eric had no fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they awoke and the light was already full, for they were weary and
+ their sleep had been heavy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hard by the mouth of the cave is a little well of water that gathers there
+ from the rocks above and in this Eric washed himself. Then Skallagrim
+ showed him the cave and the goodly store of arms that he had won from
+ those whom he had slain and robbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A wondrous place, truly,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and well fitted to the uses of such
+ a chapman[*] as thou art; but, say, how didst thou find it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Merchant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I followed him who was here before me and gave him choice&mdash;to go, or
+ to fight for the stronghold. But he needs must fight and that was his
+ bane, for I slew him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who was that, then,&rdquo; asked Eric, &ldquo;whose head lies yonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A cave-dweller, lord, whom I took to me because of the lonesomeness of
+ the winter tide. He was an evil man, for though it is good to be Baresark
+ from time to time, yet to dwell with one who is always Baresark is not
+ good, and thou didst a needful deed in smiting his head from him&mdash;and
+ now let it go to find its trunk,&rdquo; and he rolled it over the edge of the
+ great rift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knowest thou, Skallagrim, that this head spoke to me after it had left
+ the man&rsquo;s shoulders, saying that where its body fell there I should fall,
+ and where it lay there I should lie also?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, lord, that is likely to be thy doom, for this man was foresighted,
+ and, but the night before last, as we rode out to seek sheep, he felt his
+ head, and said that, before the sun sank again, a hundred fathoms of air
+ should link it to his shoulders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may be so,&rdquo; answered Eric. &ldquo;I thought as I lay in thy grip yonder that
+ the fate was near. And now arm thyself, and take such goods as thou
+ needest, and let us hence, for that thrall of mine who waits me yonder
+ will think thou hast been too mighty for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim went to the edge of the rift and searched the plain with his
+ hawk eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No need to hasten, lord,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;See yonder rides thy thrall across
+ the black sand, and with him goes thy horse. Surely he thought thou camest
+ no more down the path by which thou wentest up, and it is not thrall&rsquo;s
+ work to seek Skallagrim in his lair and ask for tidings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wolves take him for a fool!&rdquo; said Eric in anger. &ldquo;He will ride to
+ Middalhof and sing my death-song, and that will sound sadly in some ears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is pleasant, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;when good tidings dog the heels
+ of bad, and womenfolk can spare some tears and be little poorer. I have
+ horses in a secret dell that I will show thee, and on them we will ride
+ hence to Middalhof&mdash;and there thou must claim peace for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is well,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;now arm thyself, for if thou goest with me thou
+ must make an end of thy Baresark ways, or keep them for the hour of
+ battle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will do thy bidding, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. Then he entered the cave
+ and set a plain black steel helm upon his black locks, and a black chain
+ byrnie about his breast. He took the great axe-head also and fitted to it
+ the half of another axe that lay among the weapons. Then he drew out a
+ purse of money and a store of golden rings, and set them in a bag of otter
+ skin, and buckled it about him. But the other goods he wrapped up in skins
+ and hid behind some stones which were at the bottom of the cave&mdash;purposing
+ to come another time and fetch them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they went forth by that same perilous path which Eric had trod, and
+ Skallagrim showed him how he might pass the rock in safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A rough road this,&rdquo; said Eric as he gained the deep cleft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, lord, and, till thou camest, one that none but wood-folk have
+ trodden.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would tread it no more,&rdquo; said Eric again, &ldquo;and yet that fellow thief of
+ thine said that I should die here,&rdquo; and for a while his heart was heavy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Skallagrim Lambstail led him by secret paths to a dell rich in grass,
+ that is hid in the round of the mountain, and here three good horses were
+ at feed. Then, going to a certain rock, he brought out bits and saddles,
+ and they caught the horses, and, mounting them, rode away from Mosfell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric and his henchman Skallagrim the Baresark rode four hours and saw
+ nobody, till at length they came to the brow of a hill that is named
+ Horse-Head Heights, and, crossing it, found themselves almost in the midst
+ of a score of armed men who were about to mount their horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we have company,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and bad company,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;for yonder I spy Ospakar
+ Blacktooth, and Gizur and Mord his sons, ay and others. Down, and back to
+ back, for they will show us little gentleness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they sprang to earth and took their stand upon a mound of rising
+ ground&mdash;and the men rode towards them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall soon know what thy fellowship is worth,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim. &ldquo;Hold thou thy head and I will hold
+ thy back. We are met in a good hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good or ill, it is likely to be a short one. Hearken thou: if thou must
+ turn Baresark when swords begin to flash, at the least stand and be
+ Baresark where thou art, for if thou rushest on the foe, my back will be
+ naked and I must soon be sped.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall be as thou sayest, lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now men rode round them, but at first they did not know Eric, because of
+ the golden helm that hid his face in shadow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are ye?&rdquo; called Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think that thou shouldst know me, Blacktooth,&rdquo; Eric answered, &ldquo;for I
+ set thee heels up in the snow but lately&mdash;or, at the least, thou wilt
+ know this,&rdquo; and he drew great Whitefire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou mayest know me also, Ospakar,&rdquo; cried the Baresark. &ldquo;Skallagrim, men
+ called me, Lambstail, Eric Brighteyes calls me, but once thou didst call
+ me Ounound. Say, lord, what tidings of Thorunna?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar shook his sword, laughing. &ldquo;I came out to seek one foe, and I
+ have found two,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Hearken, Eric: when thou art slain I go hence
+ to burn and kill at Middalhof. Shall I bear thy head as keepsake from thee
+ to Gudruda? For thee, Ounound, I thought thee dead; but, being yet alive,
+ Thorunna, my sweet love, sends thee this,&rdquo; and he hurled a spear at him
+ with all his might.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Skallagrim catches the spear as it flies and hurls it back. It strikes
+ right on the shield of Ospakar and pierces it, ay and the byrnie, and the
+ shoulder that is beneath the byrnie, so that Blacktooth was made unmeet
+ for fight, and howled with pain and rage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go, bid Thorunna draw that splinter forth,&rdquo; says Skallagrim, &ldquo;and heal
+ the hole with kisses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar, writhing with his hurt, shouts to his men to slay the two of
+ them, and then the fight begins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One rushes at Eric and smites at him with an axe. The blow falls on his
+ shield, and shears off the side of it, then strikes the byrnie beneath,
+ but lightly. In answer Eric sweeps low at him with Whitefire, and cuts his
+ leg from under him between knee and thigh, and he falls and dies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another rushes in. Down flashes Whitefire before he can smite, and the
+ carle&rsquo;s shield is cloven through. Then he chooses to draw back and fights
+ no more that day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim slays a man, and wounds another sore. A tall chief with a red
+ scar on his face comes at Brighteyes. Twice he feints at the head while
+ Eric watches, then lowers the sword beneath the cover of his shield, and
+ sweeps suddenly at Eric&rsquo;s legs. Brighteyes leaps high into the air,
+ smiting downward with Whitefire as he leaps, and presently that chief is
+ dead, shorn through shoulder to breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Skallagrim slays another man, and grows Baresark. He looks so fierce
+ that men fall back from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two rush on Eric, one from either side. The sword of him on the right
+ falls on his shield and sinks in, but Brighteyes twists the shorn shield
+ so strongly that the sword is wrenched from the smiter&rsquo;s hand. Now the
+ other sword is aloft above him, and that had been Eric&rsquo;s bane, but
+ Skallagrim glances round and sees it about to fall. He has no time to
+ turn, but dashes the hammer of his axe backward. It falls full on the
+ swordsman&rsquo;s head, and the head is shattered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was well done,&rdquo; says Eric as the sword goes down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so ill but it might be worse,&rdquo; growls Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently all men drew back from those two, for they have had enough of
+ Whitefire and the Baresark&rsquo;s axe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ospakar sits on his horse, his shield pinned to his shoulder and curses
+ aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Close in, you cowards!&rdquo; he yells, &ldquo;close in and cut them down!&rdquo; but no
+ man stirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric mocks them. &ldquo;There are but two of us,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;will no man try
+ a game with me? Let it not be sung that twenty were overcome of two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar&rsquo;s son Mord hears, and he grows mad with rage. He holds his
+ shield aloft and rushes on. But Gizur the Lawman does not come, for Gizur
+ was a coward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim turns to meet Mord, but Eric says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This one for me, comrade,&rdquo; and steps forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mord strikes a mighty blow. Eric&rsquo;s shield is all shattered and cannot stay
+ it. It crashes through and falls full on the golden helm, beating
+ Brighteyes to his knee. Now he is up again and blows fall thick and fast.
+ Mord is a strong man, unwearied, and skilled in war, and Eric&rsquo;s arms grow
+ faint and his strength sinks low. Mord smites again and wounds him
+ somewhat on the shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric throws aside his cloven shield and, shouting, plies Whitefire with
+ both arms. Mord gives before him, then rushes and smites; Eric leaps
+ aside. Again he rushes and lo! Brighteyes has dropped his point, and it
+ stands a full span through the back of Mord, and instantly that was his
+ bane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now men rush to their horses, mount in hot haste and ride away, crying
+ that these are trolls whom they have to do with here, not men. Skallagrim
+ sees, and the Baresark fit takes him sore. With axe aloft he charges after
+ them, screaming as he comes. There is one man, the same whom he had
+ wounded. He cannot mount easily, and when the Baresark comes he still lies
+ on the neck of his horse. The great axe wheels on high and falls, and it
+ is told of this stroke that it was so mighty that man and horse sank dead
+ beneath it, cloven through and through. Then the fit leaves Skallagrim and
+ he walks back, and they are alone with the dead and dying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric leans on Whitefire and speaks:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get thee gone, Skallagrim Lambstail!&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;get thee gone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall be as thou wilt, lord,&rdquo; answered the Baresark; &ldquo;but I have not
+ befriended thee so ill that thou shouldst fear for blows to come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will keep no man with me who puts my word aside, Skallagrim. What did I
+ bid thee? Was it not that thou shouldst have done with the Baresark ways,
+ and where thou stoodest there thou shouldst bide? and see: thou didst
+ forget my word swiftly! Now get thee gone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is true, lord,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;He who serves must serve wholly,&rdquo; and
+ Skallagrim turned to seek his horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;thou art a gallant man and I forgive thee: but cross
+ my will no more. We have slain several men and Ospakar goes hence wounded.
+ We have got honour, and they loss and the greatest shame. Nevertheless,
+ ill shall come of this to me, for Ospakar has many friends and will set a
+ law-suit on foot against me at the Althing,[*] and thou didst draw the
+ first blood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] The annual assembly of free men which, in Iceland,
+ performed the functions of a Parliament and Supreme Court of
+ Law.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would that the spear had gone more home,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ospakar&rsquo;s time is not yet,&rdquo; answered Eric; &ldquo;still, he has something by
+ which to bear us in mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW SWANHILD DEALT WITH GUDRUDA
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now Jon, Eric&rsquo;s thrall, watched all night on Mosfell, but saw nothing
+ except the light of Whitefire as it smote the Baresark&rsquo;s head from his
+ shoulders. He stayed there till daylight, much afraid; then, making sure
+ that Eric was slain, Jon rode hard and fast for Middalhof, whither he came
+ at evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda was watching by the women&rsquo;s door. She strained her eyes towards
+ Mosfell to catch the light gleaming on Eric&rsquo;s golden helm, and presently
+ it gleamed indeed, white not red.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See,&rdquo; said Swanhild at her side, &ldquo;Eric comes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not Eric, but his thrall,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, &ldquo;to tell us that Eric is
+ sped.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They waited in silence while Jon galloped towards them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What news of Brighteyes?&rdquo; cried Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little need to ask,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;look at his face.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Jon told his tale and Gudruda listened, clinging to the door post. But
+ Swanhild cursed him for a coward, so that he shrank before her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda turned and walked into the hall and her face was like the face of
+ death. Men saw her, and Asmund asked why she wore so strange a mien. Then
+ Gudruda sang this song:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Up to Mosfell, battle eager,
+ Rode helmed Brighteyen to the fray.
+ Back from Mosfell, battle shunning.
+ Slunk yon coward thrall I ween.
+ Now shall maid Gudruda never
+ Know a husband&rsquo;s dear embrace;
+ Widowed is she&mdash;sunk in sorrow,
+ Eric treads Valhalla&rsquo;s halls!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ And with this she walked from the stead, looking neither to the right nor
+ to the left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let the maid be,&rdquo; said Atli the Earl. &ldquo;Grief fares best alone. But my
+ heart is sore for Eric. It should go ill with that Baresark if I might get
+ a grip of him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I will have before summer is gone,&rdquo; said Asmund, for the death of
+ Eric seemed to him the worst of sorrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda walked far, and, crossing Laxà by the stepping stones, climbed
+ Stonefell till she came to the head of Golden Falls, for, like a stricken
+ thing, she desired to be alone in her grief. But Swanhild saw her and
+ followed, coming on her as she sat watching the water thunder down the
+ mighty cleft. Presently Swanhild&rsquo;s shadow fell athwart her, and Gudruda
+ looked up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What wouldst thou with me, Swanhild?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;Art thou come to mock
+ my grief?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, foster-sister, for then I must mock my own. I come to mix my tears
+ with thine. See, we loved Eric, thou and I, and Eric is dead. Let our hate
+ be buried in his grave, whence neither may draw him back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda looked upon her coldly, for nothing could stir her now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get thee gone,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Weep thine own tears and leave me to weep
+ mine. Not with thee will I mourn Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild frowned and bit her lip. &ldquo;I will not come to thee with words of
+ peace a second time, my rival,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Eric is dead, but my hate that
+ was born of Eric&rsquo;s love for thee lives on and grows, and its flower shall
+ be thy death, Gudruda!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now that Brighteyes is dead, I would fain follow on his path: so, if thou
+ listest, throw the gates wide,&rdquo; Gudruda answered, and heeded her no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild went, but not far. On the further side of a knoll of grass she
+ flung herself to earth and grieved as her fierce heart might. She shed no
+ tears, but sat silently, looking with empty eyes adown the past, and
+ onward to the future, and finding no good therein.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Gudruda wept as the weight of her loss pressed in upon her&mdash;wept
+ heavy silent tears and cried in her heart to Eric who was gone&mdash;cried
+ to death to come upon her and bring her sleep or Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she sat and so she grieved till, quite outworn with sorrow, sleep stole
+ upon her and she dreamed. Gudruda dreamed that she was dead and that she
+ sat nigh to the golden door that is in Odin&rsquo;s house at Valhalla, by which
+ the warriors pass and repass for ever. There she sat from age to age,
+ listening to the thunder of ten thousand thousand tramping feet, and
+ watching the fierce faces of the chosen as they marched out in armies to
+ do battle in the meads. And as she sat, at length a one-eyed man, clad in
+ gleaming garments, drew near and spoke to her. He was glorious to look on,
+ and old, and she knew him for Odin the Allfather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whom seekest thou, maid Gudruda?&rdquo; he asked, and the voice he spoke with
+ was the voice of waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I seek Eric Brighteyes,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;who passed hither a thousand
+ years ago, and for love of whom I am heart-broken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur&rsquo;s son?&rdquo; quoth Odin. &ldquo;I know him well; no
+ brisker warrior enters at Valhalla&rsquo;s doors, and none shall do more service
+ at the coming of grey wolf Fenrir.[*] Pass on and leave him to his glory
+ and his God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] The foe destined to bring destruction on the Norse gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, in her dream, she wept sore, and prayed of Odin by the name of Freya
+ that he would give Eric to her for a little space.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What wilt thou pay, then, maid Gudruda?&rdquo; said Odin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My life,&rdquo; she answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;for a night Eric shall be thine. Then die, and let thy
+ death be his cause of death.&rdquo; And Odin sang this song:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Now, corse-choosing Daughters, hearken
+ To the dread Allfather&rsquo;s word:
+ When the gale of spears&rsquo; breath gathers
+ Count not Eric midst the slain,
+ Till Brighteyen once hath slumbered,
+ Wedded, at Gudruda&rsquo;s side&mdash;
+ Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;
+ Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ And Gudruda awoke, but in her ears the mighty waters still seemed to speak
+ with Odin&rsquo;s voice, saying:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;
+ Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ She awoke from that fey sleep, and looked upwards, and lo! before her,
+ with shattered shield and all besmeared with war&rsquo;s red rain, stood
+ gold-helmed Eric. There he stood, great and beautiful to see, and she
+ looked on him trembling and amazed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it indeed thou, Eric, or is it yet my dream?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am no dream, surely,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but why lookest thou thus on me,
+ Gudruda?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rose slowly. &ldquo;Methought,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;methought that thou wast dead at
+ the hand of Skallagrim.&rdquo; And with a great cry she fell into his arms and
+ lay there sobbing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a sweet sight thus to see Gudruda the Fair, her head of gold
+ pillowed on Eric&rsquo;s war-stained byrnie, her dark eyes afloat with tears of
+ joy; but not so thought Swanhild, watching. She shook in jealous rage,
+ then crept away, and hid herself where she could see no more, lest she
+ should be smitten with madness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whence camest thou? ah! whence camest thou?&rdquo; said Gudruda. &ldquo;I thought
+ thee dead, my love; but now I dreamed that I prayed Odin, and he spared
+ thee to me for a little.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, and that he hath, though hardly,&rdquo; and he told her all that had
+ happened, and how, as he rode with Skallagrim, who yet sat yonder on his
+ horse, he caught sight of a woman seated on the grass and knew the colour
+ of the cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Gudruda kissed him for very joy, and they were happy each with each&mdash;for
+ of all things that are sweet on earth, there is nothing more sweet than
+ this: to find him we loved, and thought dead and cold, alive and at our
+ side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so they talked and were very glad with the gladness of youth and love,
+ till Eric said he must on to Middalhof before the light failed, for he
+ could not come on horseback the way that Gudruda took, but must ride round
+ the shoulder of the hill; and, moreover, he was spent with toil and
+ hunger, and Skallagrim grew weary of waiting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go!&rdquo; said Gudruda; &ldquo;I will be there presently!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he kissed her and went, and Swanhild saw the kiss and saw him go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;hast thou had thy fill of kissing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not altogether,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They rode a while in silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought the maid seemed very fair!&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are women less favoured, Skallagrim.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rich bait for mighty fish!&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;This I tell thee: that,
+ strive as thou mayest against thy fate, that maid will be thy bane and
+ mine also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Things foredoomed will happen,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but if thou fearest a maid,
+ the cure is easy: depart from my company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who was the other?&rdquo; asked the Baresark&mdash;&ldquo;she who crept and peered,
+ listened, then crept back again, hid her face in her hands, and talked
+ with a grey wolf that came to her like a dog?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That must have been Swanhild,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;but I did not see her. Ever
+ does she hide like a rat in the thatch, and as for the wolf, he must be
+ her Familiar; for, like Groa, her mother, Swanhild plays much with
+ witchcraft. Now I will away back to Gudruda, for my heart misdoubts me of
+ this matter. Stay thou here till I come, Lambstail!&rdquo; And Eric turns and
+ gallops back to the head of Goldfoss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Eric left her, Gudruda drew yet nearer to the edge of the mighty
+ falls, and seated herself on their very brink. Her breast was full of joy,
+ and there she sat and let the splendour of the night and the greatness of
+ the rushing sounds sink into her heart. Yonder shone the setting sun,
+ poised, as it were, on Westman&rsquo;s distant peaks, and here sped the waters,
+ and by that path Eric had come back to her. Yea, and there on Sheep-saddle
+ was the road that he had trod down Goldfoss; and but now he had slain one
+ Baresark and won another to be his thrall, and they two alone had smitten
+ the company of Ospakar, and come thence with honour and but little harmed.
+ Surely no such man as Eric had ever lived&mdash;none so fair and strong
+ and tender; and she was right happy in his love! She stretched out her
+ arms towards him whom but an hour gone she had thought dead, but who had
+ lived to come back to her with honour, and blessed his beloved name, and
+ laughed aloud in her joyousness of heart, calling:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Eric! Eric!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Swanhild, creeping behind her, did not laugh. She heard Gudruda&rsquo;s
+ voice and guessed Gudruda&rsquo;s gladness, and jealousy arose within her and
+ rent her. Should this fair rival like to take her joy from her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what sayest thou?</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See, now, if Gudruda were gone, if she rolled a corpse into those boiling
+ waters, Eric might yet be hers; or, if he was not hers, yet Gudruda&rsquo;s he
+ could never be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy counsel?</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Right on the brink of the great gulf sat Gudruda. One stroke and all would
+ be ended. Eric had gone; there was no eye to see&mdash;none save the Grey
+ Wolf&rsquo;s; there was no tongue to tell the deed that might be done. Who could
+ call her to account? The Gods! Who were the Gods? What were the Gods? Were
+ they not dreams? There were no Gods save the Gods of Evil&mdash;the Gods
+ she knew and communed with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy rede?</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There sat Gudruda, laughing in the triumph of her joy, with the
+ sunset-glow shining on her beauty, and there, behind her, Swanhild crept&mdash;crept
+ like a fox upon his sleeping prey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now she is there&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I hear thee, Grey Wolf! Back to my breast, Grey Wolf!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely Gudruda heard something? She half turned her head, then again fell
+ to calling aloud to the waters:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric! beloved Eric!&mdash;ah! is there ever a light like the light of
+ thine eyes&mdash;is there ever a joy like the joy of thy kiss?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild heard, and her springs of mercy froze. Hate and fury entered into
+ her. She rose upon her knees and gathered up her strength:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seek, then, thy joy in Goldfoss,&rdquo; she cried aloud, and with all her force
+ she thrust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda fell a fathom or more, then, with a cry, she clutched wildly at a
+ little ledge of rock, and hung there, her feet resting on the shelving
+ bank. Thirty fathoms down swirled and poured and rolled the waters of the
+ Golden Falls. A fathom above, red in the red light of evening, lowered the
+ pitiless face of Swanhild. Gudruda looked beneath her and saw. Pale with
+ agony she looked up and saw, but she said naught.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let go, my rival; let go!&rdquo; cried Swanhild: &ldquo;there is none to help thee,
+ and none to tell thy tale. Let go, I say, and seek thy marriage-bed in
+ Goldfoss!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Gudruda clung on and gazed upwards with white face and piteous eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! art thou so fain of a moment&rsquo;s life?&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;Then I will
+ save thee from thyself, for it must be ill to suffer thus!&rdquo; and she ran to
+ seek a rock. Now she finds one and, staggering beneath its weight to the
+ brink of the gulf, peers over. Still Gudruda hangs. Space yawns beneath
+ her, the waters roar in her ears, the red sky glows above. She sees
+ Swanhild come and shrieks aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric is there, though Swanhild hears him not, for the sound of his horse&rsquo;s
+ galloping feet is lost in the roar of waters. But that cry comes to his
+ ears, he sees the poised rock, and all grows clear to him. He leaps from
+ his horse, and even as she looses the stone, clutches Swanhild&rsquo;s kirtle
+ and hurls her back. The rock bounds sideways and presently is lost in the
+ waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric looks over. He sees Gudruda&rsquo;s white face gleaming in the gloom. Down
+ he leaps upon the ledge, though this is no easy thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold fast! I come; hold fast!&rdquo; he cries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can no more,&rdquo; gasps Gudruda, and one hand slips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric grasps the rock and, stretching downward, grips her wrist; just as
+ her hold loosens he grips it, and she swings loose, her weight hanging on
+ his arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now he must needs lift her up and that with one hand, for the ledge is
+ narrow and he dare not loose his hold of the rock above. She swings over
+ the great gulf and she is senseless as one dead. He gathers all his mighty
+ strength and lifts. His feet slip a little, then catch, and once more
+ Gudruda swings. The sweat bursts out upon his forehead and his blood drums
+ through him. Now it must be, or not at all. Again he lifts and his muscles
+ strain and crack, and she lies beside him on the narrow ledge!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All is not yet done. The brink of the cleft is the height of a man above
+ him. There he must lay her, for he may not leave her to find aid, lest she
+ should wake and roll into the chasm. Loosing his hold of the cliff, he
+ turns, facing the rock, and, bending over Gudruda, twists his hands in her
+ kirtle below the breast and above the knee. Then once more Eric puts out
+ his might and draws her up to the level of his breast, and rests. Again
+ with all his force he lifts her above the crest of his helm and throws her
+ forward, so that now she lies upon the brink of the great cliff. He almost
+ falls backward at the effort, but, clutching the rock, he saves himself,
+ and with a struggle gains her side, and lies there, panting like a wearied
+ hound of chase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all trials of strength that ever were put upon his might, Eric was wont
+ to say, this lifting of Gudruda was the greatest; for she was no light
+ woman, and there was little to stand on and almost nothing to cling to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently Brighteyes rose and peered at Gudruda through the gloom. She
+ still swooned. Then he gazed about him&mdash;but Swanhild, the witchgirl,
+ was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he took Gudruda in his arms, and, leading the horse, stumbled through
+ the darkness, calling on Skallagrim. The Baresark answered, and presently
+ his large form was seen looming in the gloom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric told his tale in few words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The ways of womankind are evil,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;but of all the deeds
+ that I have known done at their hands, this is the worst. It had been well
+ to hurl the wolf-witch from the cliff.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, well,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but that song must yet be sung.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now dimly lighted of the rising moon by turns they bore Gudruda down the
+ mountain side, till at length, utterly fordone, they saw the fires of
+ Middalhof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ASMUND SPOKE WITH SWANHILD
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now as the days went, though Atli&rsquo;s ship was bound for sea, she did not
+ sail, and it came about that the Earl sank ever deeper in the toils of
+ Swanhild. He called to mind many wise saws, but these availed him little:
+ for when Love rises like the sun, wisdom melts like the mists. So at
+ length it came to this, that on the day of Eric&rsquo;s coming back, Atli went
+ to Asmund the Priest, and asked him for the hand of Swanhild the
+ Fatherless in marriage. Asmund heard and was glad, for he knew well that
+ things went badly between Swanhild and Gudruda, and it seemed good to him
+ that seas should be set between them. Nevertheless, he thought it honest
+ to warn the Earl that Swanhild was apart from other women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou dost great honour, earl, to my foster-daughter and my house,&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;Still, it behoves me to move gently in this matter. Swanhild is
+ fair, and she shall not go hence a wife undowered. But I must tell thee
+ this: that her ways are dark and secret, and strange and fiery are her
+ moods, and I think that she will bring evil on the man who weds her. Now,
+ I love thee, Atli, were it only for our youth&rsquo;s sake, and thou art not
+ altogether fit to mate with such a maid, for age has met thee on thy way.
+ For, as thou wouldst say, youth draws to youth as the tide to the shore,
+ and falls away from eld as the wave from the rock. Think, then: is it well
+ that thou shouldst take her, Atli?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have thought much and overmuch,&rdquo; answered the Earl, stroking his grey
+ beard; &ldquo;but ships old and new drive before a gale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Atli, and the new ship rides, where the old one founders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A true rede, a heavy rede, Asmund; yet I am minded to sail this sea, and,
+ if it sink me&mdash;well, I have known fair weather! Great longing has got
+ hold of me, and I think the maid looks gently on me, and that things may
+ yet go well between us. I have many things to give such as women love. At
+ the least, if thou givest me thy good word, I will risk it, Asmund: for
+ the bold thrower sometimes wins the stake. Only I say this, that, if
+ Swanhild is unwilling, let there be an end of my wooing, for I do not wish
+ to take a bride who turns from my grey hairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asmund said that it should be so, and they made an end of talking just as
+ the light faded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Asmund went out seeking Swanhild, and presently he met her near the
+ stead. He could not see her face, and that was well, for it was not good
+ to look on, but her mien was wondrous wild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where hast thou been, Swanhild?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mourning Eric Brighteyes,&rdquo; she made answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is meeter for Gudruda to mourn over Eric than for thee, for her loss
+ is heavy,&rdquo; Asmund said sternly. &ldquo;What hast thou to do with Eric?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little, or much; or all&mdash;read it as thou wilt, foster-father. Still,
+ all wept for are not lost, nor all who are lost wept for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little do I know of thy dark redes,&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;Where is Gudruda now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;High is she or low, sleeping or perchance awakened: naught reck I. She
+ also mourned for Eric, and we went nigh to mingling tears&mdash;near
+ together were brown curls and golden,&rdquo; and she laughed aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art surely fey, thou evil girl!&rdquo; said Asmund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, foster-father, fey: yet is this but the first of my feydom. Here
+ starts the road that I must travel, and my feet shall be red ere the
+ journey&rsquo;s done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Leave thy dark talk,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;for to me it is as the wind&rsquo;s song,
+ and listen: a good thing has befallen thee&mdash;ay, good beyond thy
+ deserving.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it so? Well, I stand greatly in need of good. What is thy tidings,
+ foster-father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This: Atli the Earl asks thee in marriage, and he is a mighty man, well
+ honoured in his own land, and set higher, moreover, than I had looked for
+ thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; answered Swanhild, &ldquo;set like the snow above the fells, set in the
+ years that long are dead. Nay, foster-father, this white-bearded dotard is
+ no mate for me. What! shall I mix my fire with his frost, my breathing
+ youth with the creeping palsy of his age? Never! If Swanhild weds she weds
+ not so, for it is better to go maiden to the grave than thus to shrink and
+ wither at the touch of eld. Now is Atli&rsquo;s wooing sped, and there&rsquo;s an
+ end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asmund heard and grew wroth, for the matter seemed strange to him; nor are
+ maidens wont thus to put aside the word of those set over them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no end,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I will not be answered thus by a girl who
+ lives upon my bounty. It is my rede that thou weddest Atli, or else thou
+ goest hence. I have loved thee, and for that love&rsquo;s sake I have borne thy
+ wickedness, thy dark secret ways, and evil words; but I will be crossed no
+ more by thee, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou wouldst drive me hence with Groa my mother, though perchance thou
+ hast yet more reason to hold me dear, foster-father. Fear not: I will go&mdash;perhaps
+ further than thou thinkest,&rdquo; and once more Swanhild laughed, and passed
+ from him into the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Asmund stood looking after her. &ldquo;Truly,&rdquo; he said in his heart, &ldquo;ill
+ deeds are arrows that pierce him who shot them. I have sowed evilly, and
+ now I reap the harvest. What means she with her talk of Gudruda and the
+ rest?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now as he thought, he saw men and horses draw near, and one man, whose
+ helm gleamed in the moonlight, bore something in his arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who passes?&rdquo; he called.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter,&rdquo;
+ answered a voice; &ldquo;who art thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Asmund the Priest sprang forward, most glad at heart, for he never
+ thought to see Eric again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Welcome, and thrice welcome art thou, Eric,&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;for, know, we
+ deemed thee dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have lately gone near to death, lord,&rdquo; said Eric, for he knew the
+ voice; &ldquo;but I am hale and whole, though somewhat weary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What has come to pass, then?&rdquo; asked Asmund, &ldquo;and why holdest thou Gudruda
+ in thy arms? Is the maid dead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, she does but swoon. See, even now she stirs,&rdquo; and as he spake
+ Gudruda awoke, shuddering, and with a little cry threw her arms about the
+ neck of Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He set her down and comforted her, then once more turned to Asmund:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three things have come about,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;First, I have slain one
+ Baresark, and won another to be my thrall, and for him I crave thy peace,
+ for he has served me well. Next, we two were set upon by Ospakar
+ Blacktooth and his fellowship, and, fighting for our hands, have wounded
+ Ospakar, slain Mord his son, and six other men of his following.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is good news and bad,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;since Ospakar will ask a great
+ weregild[*] for these men, and thou wilt be outlawed, Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] The penalty for manslaying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That may happen, lord. There is time enough to think of it. Now there are
+ other tidings to tell. Coming to the head of Goldfoss I found Gudruda, my
+ betrothed, mourning my death, and spoke with her. Afterwards I left her,
+ and presently returned again, to see her hanging over the gulf, and
+ Swanhild hurling rocks upon her to crush her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These are tidings in truth,&rdquo; said Asmund&mdash;&ldquo;such tidings as my heart
+ feared! Is this true, Gudruda?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is true, my father,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, trembling. &ldquo;As I sat on the
+ brink of Goldfoss, Swanhild crept behind me and thrust me into the gulf.
+ There I clung above the waters, and she brought a rock to hurl upon me,
+ when suddenly I saw Eric&rsquo;s face, and after that my mind left me and I can
+ tell no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Asmund grew as one mad. He plucked at his beard and stamped on the
+ ground. &ldquo;Maid though she be,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;yet shall Swanhild&rsquo;s back be
+ broken on the Stone of Doom for a witch and a murderess, and her body
+ hurled into the pool of faithless women, and the earth will be well rid of
+ her!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda looked up and smiled: &ldquo;It would be ill to wreak such a
+ vengeance on her, father,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;and this would also bring the
+ greatest shame on thee, and all our house. I am saved, by the mercy of the
+ Gods and the might of Eric&rsquo;s arm, and this is my counsel: that nothing be
+ told of this tale, but that Swanhild be sent away where she can harm us no
+ more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She must be sent to the grave, then,&rdquo; said Asmund, and fell to thinking.
+ Presently he spoke again: &ldquo;Bid yon man fall back, I would speak with you
+ twain,&rdquo; and Skallagrim went grumbling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken now, Eric and Gudruda: only an hour ago hath Atli the Good asked
+ Swanhild of me in marriage. But now I met Swanhild here, and her mien was
+ wild. Still, I spoke of the matter to her, and she would have none of it.
+ Now, this is my counsel: that choice be given to Swanhild, either that she
+ go hence Atli&rsquo;s wife, or take her trial in the Doom-ring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will be bad for the Earl then,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Methinks he is too good
+ a man to be played on thus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Bairn first, then friend</i>,&rdquo; answered Asmund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I will tell thee something that, till this hour, I have hidden from
+ all, for it is my shame. This Swanhild is my daughter, and therefore I
+ have loved her and put away her evil deeds, and she is half-sister to
+ thee, Gudruda. See, then, how sore is my straight, who must avenge
+ daughter upon daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knows thy son Björn of this?&rdquo; asked Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None knew it till this hour, except Groa and I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet I have feared it long, father,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;and therefore I have
+ also borne with Swanhild, though she hates me much and has striven hard to
+ draw my betrothed from me. Now thou canst only take one counsel, and it
+ is: to give choice to Swanhild of these two things, though it is unworthy
+ that Atli should be deceived, and at the best little good can come of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet it must be done, for honour is often slain of heavy need,&rdquo; said
+ Asmund. &ldquo;But we must first swear this Baresark thrall of thine, though
+ little faith lives in Baresark&rsquo;s breast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric called to Skallagrim and charged him strictly that he should tell
+ nothing of Swanhild, and of the wolf that he saw by her, and of how
+ Gudruda was found hanging over the gulf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not,&rdquo; growled the Baresark, &ldquo;my tongue is now my master&rsquo;s. What is
+ it to me if women do their wickedness one on another? Let them work magic,
+ hate and slay by stealth, so shall evil be lessened in the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peace!&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;if anything of this passes thy lips thou art no
+ longer a thrall of mine, and I give thee up to the men of thy quarter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I cleave that wolf&rsquo;s head of thine down to thy hawk&rsquo;s eyes; but,
+ otherwise, I give thee peace, and will hold thee from harm, wood-dweller
+ as thou art,&rdquo; said Asmund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Baresark laughed: &ldquo;My hands will hold my head against ten such
+ mannikins as thou art, Priest. There was never but one man who might
+ overcome me in fair fight and there he stands, and his bidding is my law.
+ So waste no words and make not niddering threats against greater folk,&rdquo;
+ and he slouched back to his horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A mighty man and a rough,&rdquo; said Asmund, looking after him; &ldquo;I like his
+ looks little.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Natheless a strong in battle,&rdquo; quoth Eric; &ldquo;had he not been at my back
+ some six hours gone, by now the ravens had torn out these eyes of mine.
+ Therefore, for my sake, bear with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asmund said it should be so, and then they passed on to the stead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Eric stripped off his harness, washed, and bound up his wounds. Then,
+ followed by Skallagrim, axe in hand, he came into the hall as men made
+ ready to sit at meat. Now the tale of the mighty deeds that he had done,
+ except that of the saving of Gudruda, had gone abroad, and as Brighteyes
+ came all men rose and with one voice shouted till the roof of the great
+ hall rocked:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Welcome, Eric Brighteyes, thou glory of the south!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, bit his hand, and did not shout, for he hated
+ Eric because of the fame that he had won.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brighteyes stood still till the clamour died, then said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much noise for little deeds, brethren. It is true that I overthrew the
+ Mosfell Baresarks. See, here is one,&rdquo; and he turned to Skallagrim; &ldquo;I
+ strangled him in my arms on Mosfell&rsquo;s brink, and that was something of a
+ deed. Then he swore fealty to me, and we are blood-brethren now, and
+ therefore I ask peace for him, comrades&mdash;even from those whom he has
+ wronged or whose kin he has slain. I know this, that when thereafter we
+ stood back to back and met the company of Ospakar Blacktooth, who came to
+ slay us&mdash;ay, and Asmund also, and bear away Gudruda to be his wife&mdash;he
+ warred right gallantly, till seven of their band lay stiff on Horse-Head
+ Heights, overthrown of us, and among them Mord, Blacktooth&rsquo;s son; and
+ Ospakar himself went thence sore smitten of this Skallagrim. Therefore,
+ for my sake, do no harm to this man who was Baresark, but now is my
+ thrall; and, moreover, I beg the aid and friendship of all men of this
+ quarter in those suits that will be laid against me at the Althing for
+ these slayings, which I hereby give out as done by my hand, and by the
+ hand of Skallagrim Lambstail, the Baresark.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At these words all men shouted again; but Atli the Earl sprang from the
+ high seat where Asmund had placed him, and, coming to Eric, kissed him,
+ and, drawing a gold chain from his neck, flung it about the neck of Eric,
+ crying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art a glorious man, Eric Brighteyes. I thought the world had no more
+ of such a breed. Listen to my bidding: come thou to the earldom in Orkneys
+ and be a son to me, and I will give thee all good gifts, and, when I die,
+ thou shalt sit in my seat after me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric thought of Swanhild, who must go from Iceland as wife to Atli,
+ and answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou doest me great honour, Earl, but this may not be. Where the fir is
+ planted, there it must grow and fall. Iceland I love, and I will stay here
+ among my own people till I am driven away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That may well happen, then,&rdquo; said Atli, &ldquo;for be sure Ospakar and his kin
+ will not let the matter of these slayings rest, and I think that it will
+ not avail thee much that thou smotest for thine own hand. Then, come thou
+ and be my man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where the Norns lead there I must follow,&rdquo; said Eric, and sat down to
+ meat. Skallagrim sat down also at the side-bench; but men shrank from him,
+ and he glowered on them in answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently Gudruda entered, and she seemed pale and faint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had done eating, Eric drew Gudruda on to his knee, and she sat
+ there, resting her golden head upon his breast. But Swanhild did not come
+ into the hall, though ever Earl Atli sought her dark face and lovely eyes
+ of blue, and he wondered greatly how his wooing had sped. Still, at this
+ time he spoke no more of it to Asmund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Skallagrim drank much ale, and glared about him fiercely; for he had
+ this fault, that at times he was drunken. In front of him were two thralls
+ of Asmund&rsquo;s; they were brothers, and large-made men, and they watched
+ Asmund&rsquo;s sheep upon the fells in winter. These two also grew drunk and
+ jeered at Skallagrim, asking him what atonement he would make for those
+ ewes of Asmund&rsquo;s that he had stolen last Yule, and how it came to pass
+ that he, a Baresark, had been overthrown of an unarmed man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim bore their gibes for a space as he drank on, but suddenly he
+ rose and rushed at them, and, seizing a man&rsquo;s throat in either hand,
+ thrust them to the ground beneath him and nearly choked them there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric ran down the hall, and, putting out his strength, tore the
+ Baresark from them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This then is thy peacefulness, thou wolf!&rdquo; Eric cried. &ldquo;Thou art drunk!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; growled Skallagrim, &ldquo;ale is many a man&rsquo;s doom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have a care that it is not thine and mine, then!&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Go, sleep;
+ and know that, if I see thee thus once more, I see thee not again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But after this men jeered no more at Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric&rsquo;s thrall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW SWANHILD BID FAREWELL TO ERIC
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now all this while Asmund sat deep in thought; but when, at length, men
+ were sunk in sleep, he took a candle of fat and passed to the shut bed
+ where Swanhild slept alone. She lay on her bed, and her curling hair was
+ all about her. She was awake, for the light gleamed in her blue eyes, and
+ on a naked knife that was on the bed beside her, half hidden by her hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What wouldst thou, foster-father?&rdquo; she asked, rising in the couch. Asmund
+ closed the curtains, then looked at her sternly and spoke in a low voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art fair to be so vile a thing, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Who now would
+ have dreamed that heart of thine could talk with goblins and with
+ were-wolves&mdash;that those eyes of thine could bear to look on murder
+ and those white hands find strength to do the sin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She held up her shapely arms and, looking on them, laughed. &ldquo;Would that
+ they had been fashioned in a stronger mould,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;May they wither
+ in their woman&rsquo;s weakness! else had the deed been done outright. Now my
+ crime is as heavy upon me and nothing gained by it. Say what fate for me,
+ foster-father&mdash;the Stone of Doom and the pool where faithless women
+ lie? Ah, then might Gudruda laugh indeed, and I will not live to hear that
+ laugh. See,&rdquo; and she gripped the dagger at her side: &ldquo;along this bright
+ edge runs the path to peace and freedom, and, if need be, I will tread
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be silent,&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;This Gudruda, my daughter, whom thou wouldst
+ have foully done to death, is thine own sister, and it is she who, pitying
+ thee, hath pleaded for thy life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will naught of her pity who have no pity,&rdquo; she answered; &ldquo;and this I
+ say to thee who art my father: shame be on thee who hast not dared to own
+ thy child!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hadst thou not been my child, Swanhild, and had I not loved thee secretly
+ as my child, be sure of this, I had long since driven thee hence; for my
+ eyes have been open to much that I have not seemed to see. But at length
+ thy wickedness has overcome my love, and I will see thy face no more.
+ Listen: none have heard of this shameful deed of thine save those who saw
+ it, and their tongues are sealed. Now I give thee choice: wed Atli and go,
+ or stand in the Doom-ring and take thy fate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I not said, father, while death may be sought otherwise, that I will
+ never do this last? Nor will I do the first. I am not all of the tame
+ breed of you Iceland folk&mdash;other and quicker blood runs in my veins;
+ nor will I be sold in marriage to a dotard as a mare is sold at a market.
+ I have answered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fool! think again, for I go not back upon my word. Wed Atli or die&mdash;by
+ thy own hand, if thou wilt&mdash;there I will not gainsay thee; or, if
+ thou fearest this, then anon in the Doom-ring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild covered her eyes with her hands and shook the long hair about
+ her face, and she seemed wondrous fair to Asmund the Priest who watched.
+ And as she sat thus, it came into her mind that marriage is not the end of
+ a young maid&rsquo;s life&mdash;that old husbands have been known to die, and
+ that she might rule this Atli and his earldom and become a rich and
+ honoured woman, setting her sails in such fashion that when the wind
+ turned it would fill them. Otherwise she must die&mdash;ay, die shamed and
+ leave Gudruda with her love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly she slipped from the bed to the floor of the chamber, and,
+ clasping the knees of Asmund, looked up through the meshes of her hair,
+ while tears streamed from her beautiful eyes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have sinned,&rdquo; she sobbed&mdash;&ldquo;I have sinned greatly against thee and
+ my sister. Hearken: I was mad with love of Eric, whom from a child I have
+ turned to, and Gudruda is fairer than I and she took him from me. Most of
+ all was I mad this night when I wrought the deed of shame, for ill things
+ counselled me&mdash;things that I did not call; and oh, I thank the Gods&mdash;if
+ there are Gods&mdash;that Gudruda died not at my hand. See now, father, I
+ put this evil from me and tear Eric from my heart,&rdquo; and she made as though
+ she rent her bosom&mdash;&ldquo;I will wed Atli, and be a good housewife to him,
+ and I crave but this of Gudruda: that she forgive me her wrong; for it was
+ not done of my will, but of my madness, and of the driving of those whom
+ my mother taught me to know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asmund listened and the springs of his love thawed within him. &ldquo;Now thou
+ dost take good counsel,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and of this be sure, that so long as
+ thou art in that mood none shall harm thee; and for Gudruda, she is the
+ most gentle of women, and it may well be that she will put away thy sin.
+ So weep no more, and have no more dealings with thy Finnish witchcraft,
+ but sleep; and to-morrow I will bear thy word to Atli, for his ship is
+ bound and thou must swiftly be made a wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went out, bearing the light with him; but Swanhild rose from the ground
+ and sat on the edge of the bed, staring into the darkness and shuddering
+ from time to time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall soon be made his wife,&rdquo; she murmured, &ldquo;who would be but one man&rsquo;s
+ wife&mdash;and methinks I shall soon be made a widow also. Thou wilt have
+ me, dotard&mdash;take me and thy fate! Well, well; better to wed an Earl
+ than to be shamed and stretched across the Doom-stone. Oh, weak arms that
+ failed me at my need, no more will I put trust in you! When next I wound,
+ it shall be with the tongue; when next I strive to slay, it shall be by
+ another&rsquo;s hand. Curses on thee, thou ill counseller of darkness, who didst
+ betray me at the last! Is it for this that I worshipped thee and swore the
+ oath?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morning came, and at the first light Asmund sought the Earl. His heart
+ was heavy because of the guile that his tongue must practise, and his face
+ was dark as a winter dawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What news, Asmund?&rdquo; asked Atli. &ldquo;<i>Early tidings are bad tidings</i>, so
+ runs the saw, and thy looks give weight to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not altogether bad, Earl. Swanhild gives herself to thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of her own will, Asmund?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, of her own will. But I have warned thee of her temper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her temper! Little hangs to a maid&rsquo;s temper. Once a wife and it will melt
+ in softness like the snow when summer comes. These are glad tidings,
+ comrade, and methinks I grow young again beneath the breath of them. Why
+ art thou so glum then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is something that must yet be told of Swanhild,&rdquo; said Asmund. &ldquo;She
+ is called the Fatherless, but, if thou wilt have the truth, why here it is
+ for thee&mdash;she is my daughter, born out of wedlock, and I know not how
+ that will please thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Atli laughed aloud, and his bright eyes shone in his wrinkled face. &ldquo;It
+ pleases me well, Asmund, for then the maid is sprung from a sound stock.
+ The name of the Priest of Middalhof is famous far south of Iceland; and
+ never that Iceland bred a comelier girl. Is that all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One more thing, Earl. This I charge thee: watch thy wife, and hold her
+ back from witchcraft and from dealings with evil things and trolls of
+ darkness. She is of Finnish blood and the women of the Finns are much
+ given to such wicked work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I set little store by witchwork, goblins and their kin,&rdquo; said Atli. &ldquo;I
+ doubt me much of their power, and I shall soon wean Swanhild from such
+ ways, if indeed she practise them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they fell to talking of Swanhild&rsquo;s dower, and that was not small.
+ Afterwards Asmund sought Eric and Gudruda, and told them what had come to
+ pass, and they were glad at the news, though they grieved for Atli the
+ Earl. And when Swanhild met Gudruda, she came to her humbly, and humbly
+ kissed her hand, and with tears craved pardon of her evil doing, saying
+ that she had been mad; nor did Gudruda withhold it, for of all women she
+ was the gentlest and most forgiving. But to Eric, Swanhild said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wedding-feast must be held on the third day from this, for Atli would
+ sail on that same day, since his people wearied of waiting and his ship
+ might lie bound no longer. Blithe was Atli the Earl, and Swanhild was all
+ changed, for now she seemed the gentlest of maids, and, as befitted one
+ about to be made a wife, moved through the house with soft words and
+ downcast eyes. But Skallagrim, watching her, bethought him of the grey
+ wolf that he had seen by Goldfoss, and this seemed not well to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would be bad now,&rdquo; he said to Eric, as they rode to Coldback, &ldquo;to
+ stand in yon old earl&rsquo;s shoes. This woman&rsquo;s weather has changed too fast,
+ and after such a calm there&rsquo;ll come a storm indeed. I am now minded of
+ Thorunna, for she went just so the day before she gave herself to Ospakar,
+ and me to shame and bonds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talk not of the raven till you hear his croak,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is on the wing, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric came to Coldback in the Marsh, and Saevuna his mother and Unna,
+ Thorod&rsquo;s daughter, the betrothed of Asmund, were glad to welcome him; for
+ the tidings of his mighty deeds and of the overthrow of Ospakar and the
+ slaying of Mord were noised far and wide. But at Skallagrim Lambstail they
+ looked askance. Still, when they heard of those things that he had wrought
+ on Horse-Head Heights, they welcomed him for his deed&rsquo;s sake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric sat two nights at Coldback, and on the second day Saevuna his mother
+ and Unna rode thence with their servants to the wedding-feast of Swanhild
+ the Fatherless. But Eric stopped at Coldback that night, saying that he
+ would be at Middalhof within two hours of sunrise, for he must talk with a
+ shepherd who came from the fells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saevuna and her company came to Middalhof and was asked, first by Gudruda,
+ then by Swanhild, why Brighteyes tarried. She answered that he would be
+ there early on the morrow. Next morning, before it was light, Eric girded
+ on Whitefire, took horse and rode from Coldback alone, for he would not
+ bring Skallagrim, fearing lest he should get drunk at the feast and shed
+ some man&rsquo;s blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Swanhild&rsquo;s wedding-day; but she greeted it with little
+ lightsomeness of heart, and her eyes knew no sleep that night, though they
+ were heavy with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first light she rose, and, gliding from the house, walked through
+ the heavy dew down the path by which Eric must draw near, for she desired
+ to speak with him. Gudruda also rose a while after, though she did not
+ know this, and followed on the same path, for she would greet her lover at
+ his coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now three furlongs or more from the stead stood a vetch stack, and
+ Swanhild waited on the further side of this stack. Presently she heard a
+ sound of singing come from behind the shoulder of the fell and of the
+ tramp of a horse&rsquo;s hoofs. Then she saw the golden wings of Eric&rsquo;s helm all
+ ablaze with the sunlight as he rode merrily along, and great bitterness
+ laid hold of her that Eric could be of such a joyous mood on the day when
+ she who loved him must be made the wife of another man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he was before her, and Swanhild stepped from the shadow of the
+ stack and laid her hand upon his horse&rsquo;s bridle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric,&rdquo; she said humbly and with bowed head, &ldquo;Gudruda sleeps yet. Canst
+ thou, then, find time to hearken to my words?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He frowned and said: &ldquo;Methinks, Swanhild, it would be better if thou
+ gavest thy words to him who is thy lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She let the bridle-rein drop from her hands. &ldquo;I am answered,&rdquo; she said;
+ &ldquo;ride on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now pity stirred in Eric&rsquo;s heart, for Swanhild&rsquo;s mien was most heavy, and
+ he leaped down from his horse. &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;speak on, if thou hast
+ anything to tell me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have this to tell thee, Eric; that now, before we part for ever, I am
+ come to ask thy pardon for my ill-doing&mdash;ay, and to wish all joy to
+ thee and thy fair love,&rdquo; and she sobbed and choked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak no more of it, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but let thy good deeds cover up
+ the ill, which are not small; so thou shalt be happy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him strangely, and her face was white with pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How then are we so differently fashioned that thou, Eric, canst prate to
+ me of happiness when my heart is racked with grief? Oh, Eric, I blame thee
+ not, for thou hast not wrought this evil on me willingly; but I say this:
+ that my heart is dead, as I would that I were dead. See those flowers:
+ they smell sweet&mdash;for me they have no odour. Look on the light
+ leaping from Coldback to the sea, from the sea to Westman Isles, and from
+ the Westman crown of rocks far into the wide heavens above. It is
+ beautiful, is it not? Yet I tell thee, Eric, that now to my eyes howling
+ winter darkness is every whit as fair. Joy is dead within me, music&rsquo;s but
+ a jangled madness in my ears, food hath no savour on my tongue, my youth
+ is sped ere my dawn is day. Nothing is left to me, Eric, save this fair
+ body that thou didst scorn, and the dreams which I may gather from my
+ hours of scanty sleep, and such shame as befalls a loveless bride.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak not so, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said, and clasped her by the hand, for,
+ though he loathed her wickedness, being soft-hearted and but young, it
+ grieved him to hear her words and see the anguish of her mind. For it is
+ so with men, that they are easily moved by the pleading of a fair woman
+ who loves them, even though they love her not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, I will speak out all my mind before I seal it up for ever. See,
+ Eric, this is my state and thou hast set this crown of sorrow on my brows:
+ and thou comest singing down the fell, and I go weeping o&rsquo;er the sea! I am
+ not all so ill at heart. It was love of thee that drove me down to sin, as
+ love of thee might otherwise have lifted me to holiness. But, loving thee
+ as thou seest, this day I wed a dotard, and go his chattel and his bride
+ across the sea, and leave thee singing on the fell, and by thy side her
+ who is my foe. Thou hast done great deeds, Brighteyes, and still greater
+ shalt thou do; yet but as echoes they shall reach my ears. Thou wilt be to
+ me as one dead, for it is Gudruda&rsquo;s to bind the byrnie on thy breast when
+ thou goest forth to war, and hers to loose the winged helm from thy brow
+ when thou returnest, battle-worn and conquering.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild ceased, and choked with grief; then spoke again:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So now farewell; doubtless I weary thee, and&mdash;Gudruda waits. Nay,
+ look not on my foolish tears: they are the heritage of woman, of naught
+ else is she sure! While I live, Eric, morn by morn the thought of thee
+ shall come to wake me as the sun wakes yon snowy peak, and night by night
+ thy memory shall pass as at eve he passes from the valleys, but to dawn
+ again in dreams. For, Eric, &lsquo;tis thee I wed to-day&mdash;at heart I am thy
+ bride, thine and thine only; and when shalt thou find a wife who holds
+ thee so dear as that Swanhild whom once thou knewest? So now farewell!
+ Yes, this time thou shalt kiss away my tears; then let them stream for
+ ever. Thus, Eric! and thus! and thus! do I take farewell of thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now she clung about his neck, gazing on him with great dewy eyes till
+ things grew strange and dim, and he must kiss her if only for her love and
+ tender beauty&rsquo;s sake. And so he kissed, and it chanced that as they clung
+ thus, Gudruda, passing by this path to give her betrothed greeting, came
+ upon them and stood astonished. Then she turned and, putting her hands to
+ her head, fled back swiftly to the stead, and waited there, great anger
+ burning in her heart; for Gudruda had this fault, that she was very
+ jealous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric and Swanhild did not see her, and presently they parted, and
+ Swanhild wiped her eyes and glided thence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she drew near the stead she found Gudruda watching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where hast thou been, Swanhild?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To bid farewell to Brighteyes, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then thou art foolish, for doubtless he thrust thee from him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Gudruda, he drew me to him. Hearken, I say, thou sister. Vex me not,
+ for I go my ways and thou goest thine. Thou art strong and fair, and
+ hitherto thou hast overcome me. But I am also fair, and, if I find space
+ to strike in, I also have a show of strength. Pray thou that I find not
+ space, Gudruda. Now is Eric thine. Perchance one day he may be mine. It
+ lies in the lap of the Norns.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fair words from Atli&rsquo;s bride,&rdquo; mocked Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Atli&rsquo;s bride, but never Atli&rsquo;s love!&rdquo; said Swanhild, and swept on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A while after Eric rode up. He was shamefaced and vexed at heart, because
+ he had yielded thus to Swanhild&rsquo;s beauty, and been melted by her tender
+ words and kissed her. Then he saw Gudruda, and at the sight of her all
+ thought of Swanhild passed from him, for he loved Gudruda and her alone.
+ He leapt down from his horse and ran to her. But, drawn to her full
+ height, she stood with dark flashing eyes and fair face set in anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, he would have greeted her loverwise; but she lifted her hand and
+ waved him back, and fear took hold of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What now, Gudruda?&rdquo; he asked, faltering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What now, Eric?&rdquo; she answered, faltering not. &ldquo;Hast seen Swanhild?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, I have seen Swanhild. She came to bid farewell to me. What of it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What of it? Why &lsquo;<i>thus! and thus! and thus!</i>&rsquo; didst thou bid
+ farewell to Atli&rsquo;s bride. Ay, &lsquo;thus and thus,&rsquo; with clinging lips and
+ twined arms. Warm and soft was thy farewell kiss to her who would have
+ slain me, Brighteyes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gudruda, thou speakest truth, though how thou sawest I know not. Think no
+ ill of it, and scourge me not with words, for, sooth to say, I was melted
+ by her grief and the music of her talk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is shame to thee so to speak of her whom but now thou heldest in thine
+ arms. By the grief and the music of the talk of her who would have
+ murdered me thou wast melted into kisses, Eric!&mdash;for I saw it with
+ these eyes. Knowest thou what I am minded to say to thee? It is this: &lsquo;Go
+ hence and see me no more;&rsquo; for I have little wish to cleave to such a
+ feather-man, to one so blown about by the first breath of woman&rsquo;s
+ tempting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet, methinks, Gudruda, I have withstood some such winds. I tell thee
+ that, hadst thou been in my place, thyself hadst yielded to Swanhild and
+ kissed her in farewell, for she was more than woman in that hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Eric, I am no weak man to be led astray thus. Yet she is more than
+ woman&mdash;troll is she also, that I know; but less than man art thou,
+ Eric, thus to fall before her who hates me. Time may come when she shall
+ woo thee after a stronger sort, and what wilt thou say to her then, thou
+ who art so ready with thy kisses?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will withstand her, Gudruda, for I love thee only, and this is well
+ known to thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly I know thou lovest me, Eric; but tell me of what worth is this love
+ of man that eyes of beauty and tongue of craft may so readily bewray? I
+ doubt me of thee, Eric!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, doubt me not, Gudruda. I love thee alone, but I grew soft as wax
+ beneath her pleading. My heart consented not, yet I did consent. I have no
+ more to say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda looked on him long and steadfastly. &ldquo;Thy plight is sorry,
+ Eric,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and this once I forgive thee. Look to it that thou
+ givest me no more cause to doubt thee, for then I shall remember how thou
+ didst bid farewell to Swanhild.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will give none,&rdquo; he answered, and would have embraced her; but this she
+ would not suffer then, nor for many days after, for she was angry with
+ him. But with Swanhild she was still more angry, though she said nothing
+ of it. That Swanhild had tried to murder her, Gudruda could forgive, for
+ there she had failed; but not that she had won Eric to kiss her, for in
+ this she had succeeded well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC WAS OUTLAWED AND SAILED A-VIKING
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now the marriage-feast went on, and Swanhild, draped in white and girt
+ about with gold, sat by Atli&rsquo;s side upon the high seat. He was fain of her
+ and drew her to him, but she looked at him with cold calm eyes in which
+ hate lurked. The feast was done, and all the company rode to the sea
+ strand, where the Earl&rsquo;s ship lay at anchor. They came there, and Swanhild
+ kissed Asmund, and talked a while with Groa, her mother, and bade farewell
+ to all men. But she bade no farewell to Eric and to Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why sayest thou no word to these two?&rdquo; asked Atli, her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For this reason, Earl,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;because ere long we three shall
+ meet again; but I shall see Asmund, my father, and Groa, my mother, no
+ more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is an ill saying, wife,&rdquo; said Atli. &ldquo;Methinks thou dost foretell
+ their doom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayhap! And now I will add to my redes, for I foretell <i>thy</i> doom
+ also: it is not yet, but it draws on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Atli bethought him of many wise saws, but spoke no more, for it
+ seemed to him this was a strange bride that he had wed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They hauled the anchor home, shook out the great sail, and passed away
+ into the evening night. But while land could still be seen, Swanhild stood
+ near the helm, gazing with her blue eyes upon the lessening coast. Then
+ she passed to the hold, and shut herself in alone, and there she stayed,
+ saying that she was sick, till at length, after a fair voyage of twenty
+ days, they made the Orkney Islands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all this pleased Atli wondrous ill, yet he dared not cross her mood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, in Iceland the time drew on when men must ride to the Althing, and
+ notice was given to Eric Brighteyes of many suits that were laid against
+ him, in that he had brought Mord, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, to his death, dealing him
+ a brain or a body or a marrow wound, and others of that company. But no
+ suits were laid against Skallagrim, for he was already outlaw. Therefore
+ he must go in hiding, for men were out to slay him, and this he did
+ unwillingly, at Eric&rsquo;s bidding. Asmund took up Eric&rsquo;s case, for he was the
+ most famous of all lawmen in that day, and when thirteen full weeks of
+ summer were done, they two rode to the Thing, and with them a great
+ company of men of their quarter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, men go up to the Lögberg, and there came Ospakar, though he was not
+ yet healed of his wound, and all his company, and laid their suits against
+ Eric by the mouth of Gizur the Lawman, Ospakar&rsquo;s son. The pleadings were
+ long and cunning on either side; but the end of it was that Ospakar
+ brought it about, by the help of his friends&mdash;and of these had many&mdash;that
+ Eric must go into outlawry for three years. But no weregild was to be paid
+ to Ospakar and his men for those who had been killed, and no atonement for
+ the great wound that Skallagrim Lambstail gave him, or for the death of
+ Mord, his son, inasmuch as Eric fought for his own hand to save his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The party of Ospakar were ill pleased at this finding, and Eric was not
+ over glad, for it was little to his mind that he should sail a-warring
+ across the seas, while Gudruda sat at home in Iceland. Still, there was no
+ help for the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar spoke with his company, and the end of it was that he called
+ on them to take their weapons and avenge themselves by their own might.
+ Asmund and Eric, seeing this, mustered their army of freemen and thralls.
+ There were one hundred and five of them, all stout men; but Ospakar
+ Blacktooth&rsquo;s band numbered a hundred and thirty-three, and they stood with
+ their backs to the Raven&rsquo;s Rift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I would that Skallagrim was here to guard my back,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for
+ before this fight is done few will left standing to tell its tale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a sad thing,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;that so many men must die because some
+ men are now dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A very sad thing,&rdquo; said Eric, and took this counsel. He stalked alone
+ towards the ranks of Ospakar and called in a loud voice, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would be grievous that so many warriors should fall in such a matter.
+ Now hearken, you company of Ospakar Blacktooth! If there be any two among
+ you who will dare to match their might against my single sword in
+ holmgang, here I, Eric Brighteyes, stand and wait them. It is better that
+ one man, or perchance three men, should fall, than that anon so many
+ should roll in the dust. What say ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now all those who watched called out that this was a good offer and a
+ manly one, though it might turn out ill for Eric; but Ospakar answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were I but well of my wound I alone would cut that golden comb of thine,
+ thou braggart; as it is, be sure that two shall be found.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is the braggart?&rdquo; answered Eric. &ldquo;He who twice has learned the weight
+ of this arm and yet boasts his strength, or I who stand craving that two
+ should come against me? Get thee hence, Ospakar; get thee home and bid
+ Thorunna, thy leman, whom thou didst beguile from that Ounound who now is
+ named Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark, nurse thee whole of the wound her
+ husband gave thee. Be sure we shall yet stand face to face, and that combs
+ shall be cut then, combs black or golden. Nurse thee! nurse thee! cease
+ thy prating&mdash;get thee home, and bid Thorunna nurse thee; but first
+ name thou the two who shall stand against me in holmgang in Oxarà&rsquo;s
+ stream.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Folk laughed aloud while Eric mocked, but Ospakar gnashed his teeth with
+ rage. Still, he named the two mightiest men in his company, bidding them
+ take up their swords against Brighteyes. This, indeed, they were loth to
+ do; still, because of the shame that they must get if they hung back, and
+ for fear of the wrath of Ospakar, they made ready to obey his bidding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then all men passed down to the bank of Oxarà, and, on the other side,
+ people came from their booths and sat upon the slope of All Man&rsquo;s Raft,
+ for it was a new thing that one man should fight two in holmgang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric crossed to the island where holmgangs are fought to this day, and
+ after him came the two chosen, flourishing their swords bravely, and
+ taking counsel how one should rush at his face, while the other passed
+ behind his back and spitted him, as woodfolk spit a lamb. Eric drew
+ Whitefire and leaned on it, waiting for the word, and all the women held
+ him to be wondrous fair as, clad in his byrnie and his golden helm, he
+ leaned thus on Whitefire. Presently the word was given, and Eric, standing
+ not to defend himself as they deemed he surely would, whirled Whitefire
+ round his helm and rushed headlong on his foes, shield aloft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great carles saw the light that played on Whitefire&rsquo;s edge and the
+ other light that burned in Eric&rsquo;s eyes, and terror got hold of them. Now
+ he was almost come, and Whitefire sprang aloft like a tongue of flame.
+ Then they stayed no more, but, running one this way and one that, cast
+ themselves into the flood and swam for the river-edge. Now from either
+ bank rose up a roar of laughter, that grew and grew, till it echoed
+ against the lava rifts and scared the ravens from their nests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric, too, stopped his charge and laughed aloud; then walked back to where
+ Asmund stood, unarmed, to second him in the holmgang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can get little honour from such champions as these,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Asmund, &ldquo;thou hast got the greatest honour, and they, and
+ Ospakar, such shame as may not be wiped out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now when Blacktooth saw what had come to pass, he well-nigh choked, and
+ fell from his horse in fury. Still, he could find no stomach for fighting,
+ but, mustering his company, rode straightway from the Thing home again to
+ Swinefell. But he caused those two whom he had put up to do battle with
+ Eric to be set upon with staves and driven from his following, and the end
+ of it was that they might stay no more in Iceland, but took ship and
+ sailed south, and now they are out of the story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the next day, Asmund, and with him Eric and all their men, rode back to
+ Middalhof. Gudruda greeted Eric well, and for the first time since
+ Swanhild went away she kissed him. Moreover, she wept bitterly when she
+ learned that he must go into outlawry, while she must bide at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How shall the days pass by, Eric?&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;when thou art far, and I
+ know not where thou art, nor how it goes with thee, nor if thou livest or
+ art already dead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In sooth I cannot say, sweet,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;but of this I am sure that,
+ wheresoever I am, yet more weary shall be my hours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three years,&rdquo; she went on&mdash;&ldquo;three long, cold years, and no sight of
+ thee, and perchance no tidings from thee, till mayhap I learn that thou
+ art in that land whence tidings cannot come. Oh, it would be better to die
+ than to part thus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well I wot that it is better to die than to live, and better never to
+ have been born than to live and die,&rdquo; answered Eric sadly. &ldquo;Here, it would
+ seem, is nothing but hate and strife, weariness and bitter envy to fret
+ away our strength, and at last, if we come so far, sorrowful age and
+ death, and thereafter we know not what. Little of good do we find to our
+ hands, and much of evil; nor know I for what ill-doing these burdens are
+ laid upon us. Yet must we needs breathe such an air as is blown about us,
+ Gudruda, clasping at this happiness which is given, though we may not hold
+ it. At the worst, the game will soon be played, and others will stand
+ where we have stood, and strive as we have striven, and fail as we have
+ failed, and so on, till man has worked out his doom, and the Gods cease
+ from their wrath, or Ragnarrök come upon them, and they too are lost in
+ the jaws of grey wolf Fenrir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Men may win one good thing, and that is fame, Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Gudruda, what is it to win fame? Is it not to raise up foes, as it
+ were, from the very soil, who, made with secret hate, seek to stab us in
+ the back? Is it not to lose peace, and toil on from height to height only
+ to be hurled down at last? Happy, then, is the man whom fame flies from,
+ for hers is a deadly gift.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet there is one thing left that thou hast not numbered, Eric, and it is
+ love&mdash;for love is to our life what the sun is to the world, and,
+ though it seems to set in death, yet it may rise again. We are happy,
+ then, in our love, for there are many who live their lives and do not find
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So these two, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair, talked sadly, for
+ their hearts were heavy, and on them lay the shadow of sorrows that were
+ to come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, sweet,&rdquo; said Eric at length, &ldquo;wilt thou that I go not into
+ banishment? Then I must fall into outlawry, and my life will be in the
+ hands of him who may take it; yet I think that my foes will find it hard
+ to come by while my strength remains, and at the worst I do but turn to
+ meet the fate that dogs me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, that I will not suffer, Brighteyes. Now we will go to my father, and
+ he shall give thee his dragon of war&mdash;she is a good vessel&mdash;and
+ thou shalt man her with the briskest men of our quarter: for there are
+ many who will be glad to fare abroad with thee, Eric. Soon she shall be
+ bound and thou shalt sail at once, Eric: for the sooner thou art gone the
+ sooner the three years will be sped, and thou shalt come back to me. But,
+ oh! that I might go with thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda and Eric went to Asmund and spoke of this matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I desired,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;that thou, Eric, shouldst bide here in Iceland
+ till after harvest, for it is then that I would take Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s
+ daughter, to wife, and it was meet that thou shouldst sit at the
+ wedding-feast and give her to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, father, let Eric go,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;for well begun is, surely, half
+ done. He must remain three years in outlawry: add thou no day to them,
+ for, if he stays here for long, I know this: that I shall find no heart to
+ let him go, and, if go he must, then I shall go with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That may never be,&rdquo; said Asmund; &ldquo;thou art too young and fair to sail
+ a-viking down the sea-path. Hearken, Eric: I give thee the good ship, and
+ now we will go about to find stout men to man her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a good gift,&rdquo; said Eric; and afterwards they rode to the seashore
+ and overhauled the vessel as she lay in her shed. She was a great dragon
+ of war, long and slender, and standing high at stem and prow. She was
+ fashioned of oak, all bolted together with iron, and at her prow was a
+ gilded dragon most wonderfully carved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric looked on her and his eyes brightened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here rests a wave-horse that shall bear a viking well,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; answered Asmund, &ldquo;of all the things I own this ship is the very
+ best. She is so swift that none may catch her, and she can almost go about
+ in her own length. That gale must be heavy that shall fill her, with thee
+ to steer; yet I give her to thee freely, Eric, and thou shalt do great
+ deeds with this my gift, and, if things go well, she shall come back to
+ this shore at last, and thou in her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I will name this war-gift with a new name,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;&lsquo;Gudruda,&rsquo; I
+ name her: for, as Gudruda here is the fairest of all women, so is this the
+ fairest of all war-dragons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it,&rdquo; said Asmund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they rode back to Middalhof, and now Eric Brighteyes let it be known
+ that he needed men to sail the seas with him. Nor did he ask in vain, for,
+ when it was told that Eric went a-viking, so great was his fame grown,
+ that many a stout yeoman and many a great-limbed carle reached down sword
+ and shield and came up to Middalhof to put their hands in his. For mate,
+ he took a certain man named Hall of Lithdale, and this because Björn asked
+ it, for Hall was a friend to Björn, and he had, moreover, great skill in
+ all manner of seamanship, and had often sailed the Northern Seas&mdash;ay,
+ and round England to the coast of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when Gudruda saw this man, she did not like him, because of his sharp
+ face, uncanny eyes, and smooth tongue, and she prayed Eric to have nothing
+ to do with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is too late now to talk of that,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Hall is a well-skilled
+ man, and, for the rest, fear not: I will watch him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then evil will come of it,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim also liked Hall little, nor did Hall love Skallagrim and his
+ great axe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length all were gathered; they were fifty in number and it is said that
+ no such band of men ever took ship from Iceland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the great dragon was bound and her faring goods were aboard of her,
+ for Eric must sail on the morrow, if the wind should be fair. All day long
+ he stalked to and fro among his men; he would trust nothing to others, and
+ there was no sword or shield in his company but he himself had proved it.
+ All day long he stalked, and at his back went Skallagrim Lambstail, axe on
+ shoulder, for he would never leave Eric if he had his will, and they were
+ a mighty pair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length all was ready and men sat down to the faring-feast in the hall
+ at Middalhof, and that was a great feast. Eric&rsquo;s folk were gathered on the
+ side-benches, and by the high seat at Asmund&rsquo;s side sat Brighteyes, and
+ near to him where Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, Gudruda, Unna, Asmund&rsquo;s betrothed,
+ and Saevuna, Eric&rsquo;s mother. For this had been settled between Asmund and
+ Eric, that his mother Saevuna, who was some somewhat sunk in age, should
+ flit from Coldback and come with Unna to dwell at Middalhof. But Eric set
+ a trusty grieve to dwell at Coldback and mind the farm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the faring-toasts had been drunk, Eric spoke to Asmund and said: &ldquo;I
+ fear one thing, lord, and it is that when I am gone Ospakar will trouble
+ thee. Now, I pray you all to beware of Blacktooth, for, though the hound
+ is whipped, he can still bite, and it seems that he has not yet put
+ Gudruda from his mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Björn had sat silently, thinking much and drinking more, for he loved
+ Eric less than ever on this day when he saw how all men did him honour and
+ mourned his going, and his father not the least of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methinks it is thou, Eric,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;whom Ospakar hates, and thee on
+ whom he would work his vengeance, and that for no light cause.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When bad fortune sits in thy neighbour&rsquo;s house, she knocks upon thy door,
+ Björn. Gudruda, thy sister, is my betrothed, and thou art a party to this
+ feud,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Therefore it becomes thee better to hold her honour and
+ thy own against this Northlander, than to gird at me for that in which I
+ have no blame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Björn grew wroth at these words. &ldquo;Prate not to me,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Thou art an
+ upstart who wouldst teach their duty to thy betters&mdash;ay, puffed up
+ with light-won fame, like a feather on the breeze. But I say this: the
+ breeze shall fail, and thou shalt fall upon the goose&rsquo;s back once more.
+ And I say this also, that, had I my will, Gudruda should wed Ospakar: for
+ he is a mighty chief, and not a long-legged carle, outlawed for
+ man-slaying.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric sprang from his seat and laid hand upon the hilt of Whitefire,
+ while men murmured in the hall, for they held this an ill speech of
+ Björn&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In thee, it seems, I have no friend,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and hadst thou been any
+ other man than Gudruda&rsquo;s brother, forsooth thou shouldst answer for thy
+ mocking words. This I tell thee, Björn, that, wert thou twice her brother,
+ if thou plottest with Ospakar when I am gone, thou shalt pay dearly for it
+ when I come back again. I know thy heart well: it is cunning and greedy of
+ gain, and filled with envy as a cask with ale; yet, if thou lovest to feel
+ it beating in thy breast, strive not to work me mischief and to put
+ Gudruda from me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Björn sprang up also and drew his sword, for he was white with rage;
+ but Asmund his father cried, &ldquo;Peace!&rdquo; in a great voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peace!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Be seated, Eric, and take no heed of this foolish talk.
+ And for thee, Björn, art thou the Priest of Middalhof, and Gudruda&rsquo;s
+ father, or am I? It has pleased me to betroth Brighteyes to Gudruda, and
+ it pleased me not to betroth her to Ospakar, and that is enough for thee.
+ For the rest, Ospakar would have slain Eric, not he Ospakar, therefore
+ Eric&rsquo;s hands are clean. Though thou art my son, I say this, that, if thou
+ workest ill to Eric when he is over sea, thou shalt rightly learn the
+ weight of Whitefire: it is a niddering deed to plot against an absent
+ man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric sat down, but Björn strode scowling from the hall, and, taking horse,
+ rode south; nor did he and Eric meet again till three years had come and
+ gone, and then they met but once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maggots shall be bred of that fly, nor shall they lack flesh to feed on,&rdquo;
+ said Skallagrim in Eric&rsquo;s ears as he watched Björn pass. But Eric bade him
+ be silent, and turned to Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look not so sad, sweet,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for hasty words rise like the foam on
+ mead and pass as soon. It vexes Björn that thy father has given me the
+ good ship: but his anger will soon pass, or, at the very worst, I fear him
+ not while thou art true to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then thou hast little to fear, Eric,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Look now on thy
+ hair: it grows long as a woman&rsquo;s, and that is ill, for at sea the salt
+ will hang to it. Say, shall I cut it for thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she cut his yellow locks, and one of them lay upon her heart for many a
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now thou shalt swear to me,&rdquo; she whispered in his ear, &ldquo;that no other man
+ or woman shall cut thy hair till thou comest back to me and I clip it
+ again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I swear, and readily,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I will go long-haired like a
+ girl for thy sake, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke low, but Koll the Half-witted, Groa&rsquo;s thrall, heard this oath and
+ kept it in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very early on the morrow all men rose, and, taking horse, rode once more
+ to the seaside, till they came to that shed where the Gudruda lay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, when the tide was high, Eric&rsquo;s company took hold of the black ship&rsquo;s
+ thwarts, and at his word dragged her with might and main. She ran down the
+ greased blocks and sped on quivering to the sea, and as her dragon-prow
+ dipped in the water people cheered aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric must bid farewell to all, and this he did with a brave heart till
+ at the last he came to Saevuna, his mother, and Gudruda, his dear love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Farewell, son,&rdquo; said the old dame; &ldquo;I have little hope that these eyes
+ shall look again upon that bonny face of thine, yet I am well paid for my
+ birth-pains, for few have borne such a man as thou. Think of me at times,
+ for without me thou hadst never been. Be not led astray of women, nor lead
+ them astray, or ill shall overtake thee. Be not quarrelsome because of thy
+ great might, for there is a stronger than the strongest. Spare a fallen
+ foe, and take not a poor man&rsquo;s goods or a brave man&rsquo;s sword; but, when
+ thou smitest, smite home. So shalt thou win honour, and, at the last,
+ peace, that is more than honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric thanked her for her counsel, and kissed her, then turned to Gudruda,
+ who stood, white and still, plucking at her golden girdle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What can I say to thee?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say nothing, but go,&rdquo; she answered: &ldquo;go before I weep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Weep not, Gudruda, or thou wilt unman me. Say, thou wilt think on me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Eric, by day and by night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou wilt be true to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, till death and after, for so long as thou cleavest to me I will
+ cleave to thee. I will first die rather than betray thee. But of thee I am
+ not so sure. Perchance thou mayest find Swanhild in thy journeyings and
+ crave more kisses of her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anger me not, Gudruda! thou knowest well that I hate Swanhild more than
+ any other woman. When I kiss her again, then thou mayst wed Ospakar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak not so rashly, Eric,&rdquo; she said, and as she spoke Skallagrim drew
+ near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If thou lingerest here, lord, the tide will serve us little round
+ Westmans,&rdquo; he said, eyeing Gudruda as it were with jealousy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I come,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Gudruda, fare thee well!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She kissed him and clung to him, but did not answer, for she could not
+ speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW HALL THE MATE CUT THE GRAPNEL CHAIN
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda bent her head like a drooping flower, and presently sank to earth,
+ for her knees would bear her weight no more; but Eric marched to the lip
+ of the sea, his head held high and laughing merrily to hide his pain of
+ heart. Here stood Asmund, who gripped him by both hands, and kissed him on
+ the brow, bidding him good luck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not whether we shall meet again,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but, if my hours be
+ sped before thou returnest, this I charge thee: that thou mindest Gudruda
+ well, for she is the sweetest of all women that I have known, and I hold
+ her the most dear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not for that, lord,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;and I pray thee this, that, if I
+ come back no more, as well may happen, do not force Gudruda into marriage,
+ if she wills it not, and I think she will have little leaning that way.
+ And I say this also: do not count overmuch on Björn thy son, for he has no
+ loyal heart; and beware of Groa, who was thy housekeeper, for she loves
+ not that Unna should take her place and more. And now I thank thee for
+ many good things, and farewell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Farewell, my son,&rdquo; said Asmund, &ldquo;for in this hour thou seemest as a son
+ to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric turned to enter the sea and wade to the vessel, but Skallagrim caught
+ him in his arms as though he were but a child, and, wading into the surf
+ till the water covered his waistbelt, bore him to the vessel and lifted
+ him up so that Eric reached the bulwarks with his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they loosed the cable and got out the oars and soon were dancing over
+ the sea. Presently the breeze caught them, and they set the great sail and
+ sped away like a gull towards the Westman Isles. But Gudruda sat on the
+ shore watching till, at length, the light faded from Eric&rsquo;s golden helm as
+ he stood upon the poop, and the world grew dark to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar Blacktooth had news of this sailing and took counsel of Gizur
+ his son, and the end of it was that they made ready two great ships,
+ dragons of war, and, placing sixty fighting men in each of them, sailed
+ round the Iceland coast to the Westmans and waited there to waylay Eric.
+ They had spies on the land, and from them they learned of Brighteyes&rsquo;
+ coming, and sailed out to meet him in the channel between the greater and
+ the lesser islands, where they knew that he must pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it drew towards evening when Eric rowed down this channel, for the
+ wind had fallen and he desired to be clear at sea. Presently, as the
+ Gudruda came near to the mouth of the channel, that had high cliffs on
+ either hand, Eric saw two long dragons of war&mdash;for their bulwarks
+ were shield-hung&mdash;glide from the cover of the island and take their
+ station side by side between him and the open sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now here are vikings,&rdquo; said Eric to Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now here is Ospakar Blacktooth,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, &ldquo;for well I know
+ that raven banner of his. This is a good voyage, for we must seek but a
+ little while before we come to fighting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric bade the men lay on their oars, and spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before us is Ospakar Blacktooth in two great dragons, and he is here to
+ cut us off. Now two choices are left to us: one is to bout ship and run
+ before him, and the other to row on and give him battle. What say ye,
+ comrades?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hall of Lithdale, the mate, answered, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us go back, lest we die. The odds are too great, Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a man among the crew cried out, &ldquo;When thou didst go on holmgang at
+ Thingvalla, Eric, Ospakar&rsquo;s two chosen champions stood before thee, yet at
+ Whitefire&rsquo;s flash they skurried through the water like startled ducks. It
+ was an omen, for so shall his great ships fly when we swoop on them.&rdquo; Then
+ the others shouted:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay! Never let it be said that we fled from Ospakar&mdash;fie on thy
+ woman&rsquo;s talk, Hall!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we are all of one mind, save Hall only,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Let us put
+ Ospakar to the proof.&rdquo; And while men shouted &ldquo;Yea!&rdquo; he turned to speak
+ with Skallagrim. The Baresark was gone, for, wasting no breath in words,
+ already he was fixing the long shields on the bulwark rail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men busked on their harness and made them fit for fight, and, when all
+ was ready, Eric mounted the poop, and with him Skallagrim, and bade the
+ rowers give way. The Gudruda leapt forward and rushed on towards Ospakar&rsquo;s
+ ships. Now they saw that these were bound together with a cable and yet
+ they must go betwixt them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric ran forward to the prow, and with him Skallagrim, and called aloud to
+ a great man who stood upon the ship to starboard, wearing a black helm
+ with raven&rsquo;s wings:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who art thou that bars the sea against me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am named Ospakar Blacktooth,&rdquo; answered the great man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what must we lose at thy hands, Ospakar?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But one thing&mdash;your lives!&rdquo; answered Blacktooth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thrice have we stood face to face, Ospakar,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and it seems
+ that hitherto thou hast won no great glory. Now it shall be proved if thy
+ luck has bettered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art yet healed, lord, of that prick in the shoulder which thou camest by
+ on Horse-Head Heights?&rdquo; roared Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For answer, Ospakar seized a spear and hurled it straight at Eric, and it
+ had been his death had he not caught it in his hand as it flew. Then he
+ cast it back, and that so mightily that it sped right through the shield
+ of Ospakar and was the bane of a man who stood beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A gift for a gift!&rdquo; laughed Eric. On rushed the Gudruda, but now the
+ cable was strained six fathoms from her bow that held together the ships
+ of Ospakar and it was too strong for breaking. Eric looked and saw. Then
+ he drew Whitefire, and while all men wondered, leaped over the prow of the
+ ship and, clasping the golden dragon&rsquo;s head with his arm, set his feet
+ upon its claws and waited. On sped the ship and spears flew thick and fast
+ about him, but there Brighteyes hung. Now the Gudruda&rsquo;s bow caught the
+ great rope and strained it taut and, as it rose beneath her weight, Eric
+ smote swift and strong with Whitefire and clove it in two, so that the
+ severed ends fell with a splash into the quiet water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric sprang back to deck while stones and spears hissed about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was well done, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;now we shall be snugly
+ berthed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In oars and out grappling-irons,&rdquo; shouted Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up rose the rowers, and their war-gear rattled as they rose. They drew in
+ the long oars, and not before it was time, for now the Gudruda forced her
+ way between the two dragons of Ospakar and lay with her bow to their
+ sterns. Then with a shout Eric&rsquo;s men cast the irons and soon the ships
+ were locked fast and the fight began. The spears flew thick, and on either
+ side some got their death before them. Then the men of that vessel, named
+ the Raven, which was to larboard of the Gudruda, made ready to board. On
+ they came with a rush, and were driven back, though hardly, for they were
+ many, and those who stood against them few. Again they came, scrambling
+ over the bulwarks, and this time a score of them leapt aboard. Eric turned
+ from the fight against the dragon of Ospakar and saw it. Then, with
+ Skallagrim, he rushed to meet the boarders as they swarmed along the hold,
+ and naught might they withstand the axe and sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through and through them swept the mighty pair, now Whitefire flashed, and
+ now the great axe fell, and at every stroke a man lay dead or wounded. Six
+ of the boarders turned to fly, but just then the grappling-iron broke and
+ their ship drifted out with the tide towards the open sea, and presently
+ no man of that twenty was left alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the men of the ship of Ospakar and of the Gudruda pressed each other
+ hard. Thrice did Ospakar strive to come aboard and thrice he was pushed
+ back. Eric was ever where he was most needed, and with him Skallagrim, for
+ these two threw themselves from side to side, and were now here and now
+ there, so that it seemed as though there were not one golden helm and one
+ black, but rather four on board the Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric looked and saw that the other ship was drawing round, though somewhat
+ slowly, to come alongside of them once more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we must make an end of Ospakar, else our hands will be overfull,&rdquo; he
+ said, and therewith sprang up upon the bulwarks and after him many men.
+ Once they were driven back, but came on again, and now they thrust all
+ Ospakar&rsquo;s men before them and passed up his ship on both boards. By the
+ mast stood Ospakar and with him Gizur his son, and Eric strove to come to
+ him. But many men were between them, and he could not do this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, while the fight yet went on hotly and men fell fast, Brighteyes
+ felt the dragon of Ospakar strike, and, looking, saw that they had drifted
+ with the send of the tide on to the rocks of the island. There was a great
+ hole in the hull amidships and the water rushed in fast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Back! men; back!&rdquo; he cried, and all his folk that were unhurt, ran, and
+ leapt on board the Gudruda; but Ospakar and his men sprang into the sea
+ and swam for the shore. Then Skallagrim cut loose the grappling-irons with
+ his axe, and that not too soon, for, scarcely had they pushed clear with
+ great toil when the long warship slipped from the rock and foundered,
+ taking many dead and wounded men with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar and some of his people stood safe upon the rocks, and Eric
+ called to him in mockery, bidding him come aboard the Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ospakar made no answer, but stood gnawing his hand, while the water ran
+ from him. Only Gizur his son cursed them aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric was greatly minded to follow them, and land and fight them there; but
+ he might not do this, because of the rocks and of the other dragon, that
+ hung about them, fearing to come on and yet not willing to go back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will have her, at the least,&rdquo; said Eric, and bade the rowers get out
+ their oars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, when the men on board the other ship saw the Gudruda drawing on, they
+ took to their oars at once and rowed swiftly for the sea, and at this a
+ great roar of laughter went down Eric&rsquo;s ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They shall not slip from us so easily,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;give way, comrades,
+ and after them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the men were much wearied with fighting, and the decks were all
+ cumbered with dead and wounded, so that by the time that the Gudruda had
+ put about, and come to the mouth of the waterway, Ospakar&rsquo;s vessel had
+ shaken out her sails and caught the wind, that now blew strong off shore,
+ and sped away six furlongs or more from Eric&rsquo;s prow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we shall see how the Gudruda sails,&rdquo; said Eric, and they spread their
+ canvas and gave chase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric bade men clear the decks of the dead, and tend the wounded. He
+ had lost seven men slain outright, and three were wounded, one to death.
+ But on board the ship there lay of Ospakar&rsquo;s force twenty and three dead
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When all were cast into the sea, men ate and rested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have not done so badly,&rdquo; said Eric to Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall do better yet,&rdquo; said Skallagrim to Eric; &ldquo;rather had I seen
+ Ospakar&rsquo;s head lying in the scuppers than those of all his carles; for he
+ may get more men, but never another head!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the wind freshened till by midnight it blew strongly. The mate Hall
+ came to Eric and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Gudruda dips her nose deep in Ran&rsquo;s cup. Say, Eric, shall we shorten
+ sail?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;keep her full and bail. Where yonder Raven flies,
+ my Sea-stag must follow,&rdquo; and he pointed to the warship that rode the
+ waves before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After midnight clouds came up, with rain, and hid the face of the
+ night-sun and the ship they sought. The wind blew ever harder, till at
+ length, when the rain had passed and the clouds lifted, there was much
+ water in the hold and the bailers could hardly stand at their work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men murmured, and Hall the mate murmured most of all; but still Eric held
+ on, for there, not two furlongs ahead of them, rode the dragon of Ospakar.
+ But now, being afraid of the wind and sea, she had lowered her sail
+ somewhat, and made as though she would put about and run for Iceland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That she may not do,&rdquo; called Eric to Skallagrim, &ldquo;if once she rolls side
+ on to those seas Ran has her, for she must fill and sink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So they hold, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim; &ldquo;see, once more she runs!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, but we run faster&mdash;she is outsailed. Up, men, up: for presently
+ the fight begins.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is bad to join battle in such a sea,&rdquo; quoth Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good or bad,&rdquo; growled Skallagrim, &ldquo;do thou thy lord&rsquo;s bidding,&rdquo; and he
+ half lifted up his axe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mate said no more, for he misdoubted him of Skallagrim Lambstail and
+ his axe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then men made ready for the fray as best they might, and stood, sword in
+ hand and drenched with foam, clinging to the bulwarks of the Gudruda as
+ she wallowed through the seas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric went aft to the helm and seized it. Now but a length ahead Ospakar&rsquo;s
+ ship laboured on beneath her small sail, but the Gudruda rushed towards
+ her with all canvas set and at every leap plunged her golden dragon
+ beneath the surf and shook the water from her foredeck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make ready the grapnel!&rdquo; shouted Eric through the storm. Skallagrim
+ seized the iron and stood by. Now the Gudruda rushed alongside the Raven,
+ and Eric steered so skilfully that there was a fathom space, and no more,
+ between the ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim cast the iron well and truly, so that it hooked and held. On
+ sped the Gudruda and the cable tautened&mdash;now her stern kissed the bow
+ of Ospakar&rsquo;s ship, as though she was towing her, and thus for a space they
+ travelled through the seas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric&rsquo;s folk shouted and strove to cast spears; but they did this but ill,
+ because of the rocking of the vessel. As for Ospakar&rsquo;s men, they clung to
+ their bulwarks and did nothing, for all the heart was out of them between
+ fear of Eric and terror of the sea. Eric called to a man to hold the helm,
+ and Skallagrim crept aft to where he stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What counsel shall we take now?&rdquo; said Eric, and as he spoke a sea broke
+ over them&mdash;for the gale was strong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Board them and make an end,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rough work; still, we will try it,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for we may not lie thus
+ for long, and I am loath to leave them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric called for men to follow him, and many answered, creeping as
+ best they might to where he stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art mad, Eric,&rdquo; said Hall the mate; &ldquo;cut loose and let us drive,
+ else we shall both founder, and that is a poor tale to tell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric took no heed, but, watching his chance, leapt on to the bows of the
+ Raven, and after him leapt Skallagrim. Even as he did so, a great sea came
+ and swept past and over them, so that half the ship was hid for foam. Now,
+ Hall the mate stood near to the grapnel cable, and, fearing lest they
+ should sink, out of the cowardice of his heart, he let his axe fall upon
+ the chain, and severed it so swiftly that no man saw him, except
+ Skallagrim only. Forward sprang the Gudruda, freed from her burden, and
+ rushed away before the wind, leaving Eric and Skallagrim alone upon the
+ Raven&rsquo;s prow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we are in an evil plight,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;the cable has parted!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, &ldquo;and that losel Hall hath parted it! I saw his
+ axe fall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC DREAMED A DREAM
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now, when the men of Ospakar, who were gathered on the poop of the Raven,
+ saw what had come about, they shouted aloud and made ready to slay the
+ pair. But Eric and Skallagrim clambered to the mast and got their backs
+ against it, and swiftly made themselves fast with a rope, so that they
+ might not fall with the rolling of the ship. Then the people of Ospakar
+ came on to cut them down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this was no easy task, for they might scarcely stand, and they could
+ not shoot with the bow. Moreover, Eric and Skallagrim, being bound to the
+ mast, had the use of both hands and were minded to die hard. Therefore
+ Ospakar&rsquo;s folks got but one thing by their onslaught, and that was death,
+ for three of their number fell beneath the long sweep of Whitefire, and
+ one bowed before the axe of Skallagrim. Then they drew back and strove to
+ throw spears at these two, but they flew wide because of the rolling of
+ the vessel. One spear struck the mast near the head of Skallagrim. He drew
+ it out, and, waiting till the ship steadied herself in the trough of the
+ sea, hurled it at a knot of Ospakar&rsquo;s thralls, and a man got his death
+ from it. After that they threw no more spears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thence once more the crew came on with swords and axes, but
+ faint-heartedly, and the end of it was that they lost some more men dead
+ and wounded and fell back again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim mocked at them with bitter words, and one of them, made mad by
+ his scoffing, cast a heavy ballast-stone at him. It fell upon his shoulder
+ and numbed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I am unmeet for fight, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;for my right arm is
+ dead and I can scarcely hold my axe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is ill, then,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for we have little help, except from each
+ other, and I, too, am well-nigh spent. Well, we have done a great deed and
+ now it is time to rest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My left arm is yet whole, lord, and I can make shift for a while with it.
+ Cut loose the cord before they bait us to death, and let us rush upon
+ these wolves and fall fighting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good counsel,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and a quick end; but stay a while: what plan
+ have they now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the men of Ospakar, having little heart left in them for such work as
+ this, had taken thought together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have got great hurt, and little honour,&rdquo; said the mate. &ldquo;There are but
+ nineteen of us left alive, and that is scarcely enough to work the ship,
+ and it seems that we shall be fewer before Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim
+ Lambstail lie quiet by yonder mast. They are mighty men, indeed, and it
+ would be better, methinks, to deal with them by craft, rather than by
+ force.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sailors said that this was a good word, for they were weary of the
+ sight of Whitefire as he flamed on high and the sound of the axe of
+ Skallagrim as it crashed through helm and byrnie; and as fear crept in
+ valour fled out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is my rede, then,&rdquo; said the mate: &ldquo;that we go to them and give them
+ peace, and lay them in bonds, swearing that we will put them ashore when
+ we are come back to Iceland. But when we have them fast, as they sleep at
+ night, we will creep on them and hurl them into the sea, and afterwards we
+ will say that we slew them fighting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A shameful deed!&rdquo; said a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then go thou up against them,&rdquo; answered the mate. &ldquo;If we slay them not,
+ then shall this tale be told against us throughout Iceland: that a ship&rsquo;s
+ company were worsted by two men, and we may not live beneath that
+ dishonour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man held his peace, and the mate, laying down his arms, crept forward
+ alone, towards the mast, just as Eric and Skallagrim were about to cut
+ themselves loose and rush on them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What wouldest thou?&rdquo; shouted Eric. &ldquo;Has it gone so well with you with
+ arms that ye are minded to come up against us bearing none?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It has gone ill, Eric,&rdquo; said the mate, &ldquo;for ye twain are too mighty for
+ us. We have lost many men, and we shall lose more ere ye are laid low.
+ Therefore we make you this offer: that you lay down your weapons and
+ suffer yourselves to be bound till such time as we touch land, where we
+ will set you ashore, and give you your arms again. Meanwhile, we will deal
+ with you in friendly fashion, giving you of the best we have; nor will we
+ set foot any suit against you for those of our number whom ye two have
+ slain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherefore then should we be bound?&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For this reason only: that we dare not leave you free within our ship.
+ Now choose, and, if ye will, take peace, which we swear by all the Gods we
+ will keep towards you, and, if ye will not, then we will bear you down
+ with beams and sails and stones, and slay you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What thinkest thou, Skallagrim?&rdquo; said Eric beneath his breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think that I find little faith in yon carle&rsquo;s face,&rdquo; answered
+ Skallagrim. &ldquo;Still, I am unfit to fight, and thy strength is spent, so it
+ seems that we must lie low if we would rise again. They can scarcely be so
+ base as to do murder having handselled peace to us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not so sure of that,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;still, starving beggars must eat
+ bones. Hearken thou: we take the terms, trusting to your honour; and I say
+ this: that ye shall get shame and death if ye depart from them to harm
+ us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have no fear, lord,&rdquo; said the mate, &ldquo;we are true men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That we shall look to your deeds to learn,&rdquo; said Eric, laying down his
+ sword and shield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim did likewise, though with no good grace. Then men came with
+ strong cords and bound them fast hand and foot, handling them fearsomely
+ as men handle a live bear in a net. Then they led them forward to the
+ prow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they went Eric looked up. Yonder, twenty furlongs and more away, sailed
+ the Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is good fellowship,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;thus to leave us in the
+ trap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Eric. &ldquo;They cannot put about in such a sea, and doubtless
+ also they think us dead. Nevertheless, if ever it comes about that Hall
+ and I stand face to face again, there will be need for me to think of
+ gentleness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall think little thereon,&rdquo; growled Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they were come to the prow, and there was a half deck under which they
+ were set, out of reach of the wind and water. In the deck was a stout iron
+ ring, and the men made them fast with ropes to it, so that they might move
+ but little, and they set their helms and weapons behind them in such
+ fashion that they could not come at them. Then they flung cloaks about
+ them, and brought them food and drink, of which they stood much in need,
+ and treated them well in every way. But for all this Skallagrim trusted
+ them no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are new-hooked, lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and they give us line. Presently they
+ will haul us in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Evil comes soon enough,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;no need to run to greet it,&rdquo; and
+ he fell to thinking of Gudruda, and of the day&rsquo;s deeds, till presently he
+ dropped asleep, for he was very weary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it chanced that as Eric slept he dreamed a dream so strong and strange
+ that it seemed to live within him. He dreamed that he slept there beneath
+ the Raven&rsquo;s deck, and that a rat came and whispered spells into his ear.
+ Then he dreamed that Swanhild glided towards him, walking on the stormy
+ seas. He saw her afar, and she came swiftly, and ever the sea grew smooth
+ before her feet, nor did the wind so much as stir her hair. Presently she
+ stood by him in the ship, and, bending over him, touched him on the
+ shoulder, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Awake, Eric Brighteyes! Awake! awake!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to him that he awoke and said &ldquo;What tidings, Swanhild?&rdquo; and that
+ she answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ill tidings, Eric&mdash;so ill that I am come hither from Straumey[*] to
+ tell of them&mdash;ay, come walking on the seas. Had Gudruda done so much,
+ thinkest thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Stroma, the southernmost of the Orkneys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gudruda is no witch,&rdquo; he said in his dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but I am a witch, and it is well for thee, Eric. Ay, I am a witch.
+ Now do I seem to sleep at Atli&rsquo;s side, and lo! here I stand by thine, and
+ I must journey back again many a league before another day be born&mdash;ay,
+ many a league, and all for love of thee, Eric! Hearken, for not long may
+ the spell endure. I have seen this by my magic: that these men who bound
+ thee come even now to take thee, sleeping, and cast thee and thy thrall
+ into the deep, there to drown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it is fated it will befall,&rdquo; he said in his dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, it shall not befall. Put forth all thy might and burst thy bonds.
+ Then fetch Whitefire; cut away the bonds of Skallagrim, and give him his
+ axe and shield. This done, cover yourselves with your cloaks, and wait
+ till ye hear the murderers come. Then rise and rush upon them, the two of
+ you, and they shall melt before your might. I have journeyed over the
+ great deep to tell thee this, Eric! Had Gudruda done as much, thinkest
+ thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it seemed to him that the wraith of Swanhild kissed him on the brow,
+ sighed and vanished, bearing the rat in her bosom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric awoke suddenly, just as though he had never slept, and looked around.
+ He knew by the lowness of the sun that it was far into the night, and that
+ he had slept for many hours. They were alone beneath the deck, and far
+ aft, beyond the mast, as the vessel rose upon the waves&mdash;for the sea
+ was still rough, though the wind had fallen&mdash;Eric saw the mate of the
+ Raven talking earnestly with some men of his crew. Skallagrim snored
+ beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Awake!&rdquo; Eric said in his ear, &ldquo;awake and listen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He yawned and roused himself. &ldquo;What now, lord?&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This,&rdquo; said Eric, and he told him the dream that he had dreamed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was a fey dream,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and now we must do as the wraith
+ bade thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Easy to say, but hard to do,&rdquo; quoth Eric; &ldquo;this is a great rope that
+ holds us, and a strong.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it is great and strong; still, we must burst it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric and Skallagrim were made fast in this fashion: their hands were
+ bound behind them, and their legs were lashed above the feet and above the
+ knee. Moreover, a thick cord was fixed about the waist of each, and this
+ cord was passed through the iron ring and knotted there. But it chanced
+ that beneath the hollows of their knees ran an oaken beam, which held the
+ forepart of the dragon together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We may try this,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;to set our feet against the beam and strain
+ with all our strength upon the rope; though I think that no two men can
+ part it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall know that presently,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, gathering up his legs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they set their feet against the beam and pulled till it groaned; but,
+ though the rope gave somewhat, it would not break. They rested a while,
+ then strained again till the sweat burst out upon them and the rope cut
+ into their flesh, but still it would not part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have found our match,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is not altogether proved yet,&rdquo; answered the Baresark. &ldquo;Many a shield
+ is riven at the third stroke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So once again they set their feet against the beam, and put out all their
+ strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The ring bends,&rdquo; gasped Eric. &ldquo;Now, when the roll of the ship throws our
+ weight to leeward, in the name of Thor pull!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They waited, then put out their might, and lo! though the rope did not
+ break, the iron ring burst asunder and they rolled upon the deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well pulled, truly,&rdquo; said Skallagrim as he struggled to his haunches: &ldquo;I
+ am marked about the middle with rope-twists for many a day to come, that I
+ will swear. What next, lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whitefire,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, their arms were piled a fathom or more from where they sat, and right
+ in the prow of the ship. Hither, then, they must crawl upon their knees,
+ and this was weary work, for ever as the ship rolled they fell, and could
+ in no wise save themselves from hurt. Eric was bleeding at the brow, and
+ bloody was the hooked nose of Skallagrim, before they came to where
+ Whitefire was. At length they reached the sword, and pushed aside the
+ bucklers that were over it with their heads. The great war-blade was
+ sheathed, and Eric must needs lie upon his breast and draw the weapon
+ somewhat with his teeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is an ill razor to shave with,&rdquo; he said, rising, for the keen blade
+ had cut his chin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So some have thought and perchance more shall think,&rdquo; answered
+ Skallagrim. &ldquo;Now set the rope on the edge and rub.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This they did, and presently the thick cord that bound them was in two.
+ Then Eric knelt upon the deck and pressed the bonds that bound his legs
+ upon the blade, and after him Skallagrim. They were free now, except for
+ their hands, and it was no easy thing to cut away the bonds upon their
+ wrists. It was done thus: Skallagrim sat upon the deck, and Eric pushed
+ the sword between his fingers with his feet. Then the Baresark rose,
+ holding the sword, and Eric, turning back to back with him, fretted the
+ cords upon his wrists against the blade. Twice he cut himself, but the
+ third time the cord parted and he was free. He stretched his arms, for
+ they were stiff; then took Whitefire and cut away the bonds of Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How goes it with that hurt of thine?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better than I had thought,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim; &ldquo;the soreness has come
+ out with the bruise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is good news,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for methinks, unless Swanhild walked the
+ seas for nothing, thou wilt soon need thine arms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They have never failed me yet,&rdquo; said Skallagrim and took his axe and
+ shield. &ldquo;What counsel now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, Skallagrim: that we lie down as we were, and put the cloaks about
+ us as though we were yet in bonds. Then, if these knaves come, we can take
+ them unawares as they think to take us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they went again to where they had been bound, and lay down upon their
+ shields and weapons, drawing cloaks over them. Scarcely had they done this
+ and rested a while, when they saw the mate and all the crew coming along
+ both boards towards them. They bore no weapons in their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None too soon did Swanhild walk,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;now we shall learn their
+ purpose. Be thou ready to leap forth when I give the word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim as he worked his stiff arms to and fro.
+ &ldquo;In such matters few have thought me backward.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What news, friends?&rdquo; cried Eric as the men drew near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad news for thee, Brighteyes,&rdquo; answered the mate, &ldquo;and that Baresark
+ thrall of thine, for we must loose your bands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is good news, then,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for our limbs are numb and dead
+ because of the nipping of the cords. Is land in sight?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nor will be for thee, Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now, friend? how now? Sure, having handselled peace to us, ye mean no
+ harm towards two unarmed men?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We swore to do you no harm, nor will we, Eric; this only will we do:
+ deliver you, bound, to Ran, and leave her to deal with you as she may.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bethink you, sirs,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;this is a cruel deed and most unmanly. We
+ yielded to you in faith&mdash;will ye break your troth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;War has no troth,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;ye are too great to let slip between our
+ fingers. Shall it be said of us that two men overcame us all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayhap!&rdquo; murmured Skallagrim beneath his breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, sirs, I beseech you,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;I am young, and there is a maid who
+ waits me out in Iceland, and it is hard to die,&rdquo; and he made as though he
+ wept, while Skallagrim laughed within his sleeve, for it was strange to
+ see Eric feigning fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the men mocked aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is the great man,&rdquo; they cried, &ldquo;this is that Eric of whose deeds
+ folk sing! Look! he weeps like a child when he sees the water. Drag him
+ forth and away with him into the sea!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little need for that,&rdquo; cried Eric, and lo! the cloaks about him and
+ Skallagrim flew aside. Out they came with a roar; they came out as a
+ she-bear from her cave, and high above Brighteyes&rsquo; golden curls Whitefire
+ shone in the pale light, and nigh to it shone the axe of Skallagrim.
+ Whitefire flared aloft, then down he fell and sought the false heart of
+ the mate. The great axe of Skallagrim shone and was lost in the breast of
+ the carle who stood before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trolls!&rdquo; shrieked one. &ldquo;Here are trolls!&rdquo; and turned to fly. But again
+ Whitefire was up and that man flew not far&mdash;one pace, and no more.
+ Then they fled screaming and after them came axe and sword. They fled,
+ they fell, they leaped into the sea, till none were left to fall and leap,
+ for they had no time or heart to find or draw their weapons, and presently
+ Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail stood alone upon the deck&mdash;alone
+ with the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Swanhild is a wise witch,&rdquo; gasped Eric, &ldquo;and, whatever ill she has done,
+ I will remember this to her honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little good comes of witchcraft,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, wiping his brow:
+ &ldquo;to-day it works for our hands, to-morrow it shall work against them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To the helm,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;the ship yaws and comes side on to the seas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim sprang to the tiller and put his strength on it, and but just
+ in time, for one big sea came aboard them and left much water in the hold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We owe this to thy Baresark ways,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Hadst thou not slain the
+ steersman we had not filled with water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim; &ldquo;but when once my axe is aloft, it
+ seems to fly of itself, till nothing is left before it. What course now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The same on which the Gudruda was laid. Perhaps, if we may endure till we
+ come to the Farey Isles,[*] we shall find her in harbour there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] The Faroes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is not much chance of that,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;still, the wind is
+ fair, and we fly fast before it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they lashed the tiller and set to bailing. They bailed long, and it
+ was heavy work, but they rid the ship of much water. After that they ate
+ food, for it was now morning, and it came on to blow yet more strongly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For three days and three nights it blew thus, and the Raven sped along
+ before the gale. All this time, turn and turn about, Eric and Skallagrim
+ stood at the helm and tended the sails. They had little time to eat, and
+ none to sleep. They were so hard pressed also, and must harbour their
+ strength so closely, that the bodies of the dead men yet cumbered the
+ hold. Thus they grew very weary and like to fall from faintness, but still
+ they held the Raven on her course. In the beginning of the fourth night a
+ great sea struck the good ship so that she quivered from stem to stern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methinks I hear water bubbling up,&rdquo; said Skallagrim in a hoarse voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric climbed down into the well and lifted the bottom planks, and there
+ beneath them was a leak through which the water spouted in a thin stream.
+ He stopped up the rent as best he might with garments from the dead men,
+ and placed ballast stones upon them, then clambered on to the deck again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our hours are short now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the water rushes in apace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it is time to rest,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;but see, lord!&rdquo; and he
+ pointed ahead. &ldquo;What land is that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must be the Fareys,&rdquo; answered Eric; &ldquo;now, if we can but keep afloat
+ for three hours more, we may yet die ashore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this the wind began to fall, but still there was enough to drive the
+ Raven on swiftly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And ever the water gained in the hold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they were not far from land, for ahead of them the bleak hills towered
+ up, shining in the faint midnight light, and between the hills was a cleft
+ that seemed to be a fjord. Another hour passed, and they were no more than
+ ten furlongs from the mouth of the fjord, when suddenly the wind fell, and
+ they were in calm water under shelter of the land. They went amidships and
+ looked. The hold was half full of water, and in it floated the bodies of
+ Ospakar&rsquo;s men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has not long to live,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;but we may still be saved if
+ the boat is not broken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now aft, near the tiller, a small boat was bound on the half deck of the
+ Raven. They went to it and looked; it was whole, with oars lashed in it,
+ but half full of water, which they must bail out. This they did as swiftly
+ as they might; then they cut the little boat loose, and, having made it
+ fast with a rope, lifted it over the side-rail and let it fall into the
+ sea, and that was no great way, for the Raven had sunk deep. It fell on an
+ even keel, and Eric let himself down the rope into it and called to
+ Skallagrim to follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bide a while, lord,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;there is that which I would bring with
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a space Eric waited and then called aloud, &ldquo;Swift! thou fool; swift!
+ the ship sinks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as he called, Skallagrim came, and his arms were full of swords and
+ byrnies, and red rings of gold that he had found time to gather from the
+ dead and out of the cabin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Throw all aside and come,&rdquo; said Eric, laying on to the oars, for the
+ Raven wallowed before she sank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is yet time, lord, and the gear is good,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, and
+ one by one he threw pieces down into the boat. As the last fell the Raven
+ sank to her bulwarks. Then Skallagrim stepped from the sinking deck into
+ the boat, and cut the cord, not too soon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric gave way with all his strength, and, as he pulled, when he was no
+ more than five fathoms from her, the Raven vanished with a huge swirl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold still,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;or we shall follow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Round spun the boat in the eddy, she was sucked down till the water
+ trickled over her gunwale, and for a moment they knew not if they were
+ lost or saved. Eric held his breath and watched, then slowly the boat
+ lifted her nose, and they were safe from the whirlpool of the lost dragon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greed is many a man&rsquo;s bane,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and it was nearly thine and
+ mine, Skallagrim.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had no heart to leave the good gear,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;and thou seest,
+ lord, it is safe and we with it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they got the boat&rsquo;s head round slowly into the mouth of the fjord,
+ pausing now and again to rest, for their strength was spent. For two hours
+ they rowed down a gulf, as it were, and on either side of them were barren
+ hills. At length the water-way opened out into a great basin, and there,
+ on the further side of the basin, they saw green slopes running down to
+ the water&rsquo;s edge, strewn with white stock-fish set to dry in the wind and
+ sun, and above the slopes a large hall, and about it booths. Moreover,
+ they saw a long dragon of war at anchor near the shore. For a while they
+ rowed on, easing now and again. Then Eric spoke to Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What thinkest thou of yonder ship, Lambstail?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think this, lord: that she is fashioned wondrous like to the Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is in my mind also,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and our fortune is good if it is
+ she.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They rowed on again, and presently a ray from the sun came over the hills&mdash;for
+ now it was three hours past midnight&mdash;and, the ship having swung a
+ little with the tide, lit upon her prow, and lo! there gleamed the golden
+ dragon of the Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is a strange thing,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, lord, a strange and a merry, for now I shall talk with Hall the
+ mate,&rdquo; and the Baresark smiled grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou shalt do no hurt to Hall,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;I am lord here, and I must
+ judge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy will is my will,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;but if my will were thine, he
+ would hang on the mast till sea-birds nested amidst his bones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they were close to the ship, but they could see no man. Skallagrim
+ would have called aloud, but Eric bade him hold his peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Either they are dead, and thy calling cannot wake them, or perchance they
+ sleep and will wake of themselves. We will row under the stern, and,
+ having made fast, climb aboard and see with our own eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, then, they did as silently as might be, and saw that the Gudruda had
+ not been handled gently by the winds and waves, for her shield rail was
+ washed away. This they found also, that all men lay deep in sleep. Now,
+ amidships a fire still burned, and by it was food. They came there and ate
+ of the food, of which they had great need. Then they took two cloaks that
+ lay on the deck, and, throwing them about them, warmed themselves over the
+ fire: for they were cold and wet, ay, and utterly outworn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they sat thus warming themselves, a man of the crew awoke and saw them,
+ and being amazed, at once called to his fellows, saying that two giants
+ were aboard, warming themselves at the fire. Now men sprang up, and,
+ seizing their weapons, ran towards them, and among them was Hall the mate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then suddenly Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail threw aside the
+ cloaks and stood up. They were gaunt and grim to see. Their cheeks were
+ hollow and their eyes stared wide with want of sleep. Thick was their
+ harness with brine, and open wounds gaped upon their faces and their
+ hands. Men saw and fell back in fear, for they held them to be wizards
+ risen from the sea in the shapes of Eric and the Baresark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric sang this song:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Swift and sure across the Swan&rsquo;s Bath
+ Sped Sea-stag on Raven&rsquo;s track,
+ Heav&rsquo;d Ran&rsquo;s breast in raging billows,
+ Stream&rsquo;d gale-banners through the sky!
+ Yet did Eric the war-eager
+ Leap with Baresark-mate aboard,
+ Fierce their onset on the foemen!
+ Wherefore brake the grapnel-chain?&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Hall heard and slunk back, for now he saw that these were indeed Eric and
+ Skallagrim come up alive from the sea, and that they knew his baseness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric looked at him and sang again:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Swift away sped ship Gudruda,
+ Left her lord in foeman&rsquo;s ring;
+ Brighteyes back to back with Baresark
+ Held his head &lsquo;gainst mighty odds.
+ Down amidst the ballast tumbling,
+ Ospakar&rsquo;s shield-carles were rolled.
+ Holy peace at length they handselled,
+ Eric must in bonds be laid!
+
+ &ldquo;Came the Grey Rat, came the Earl&rsquo;s wife,
+ Came the witch-word from afar;
+ Cag&rsquo;d wolves roused them, and with struggling
+ Tore their fetter from its hold.
+ Now they watch upon their weapons;
+ Now they weep and pray for life;
+ Now they leap forth like a torrent&mdash;
+ Swept away in foeman&rsquo;s strength!
+
+ &ldquo;Then alone upon the Raven
+ Three long days they steer and sail,
+ Till the waters, welling upwards,
+ Wash dead men about their feet.
+ Fails the gale and sinks the dragon,
+ Barely may they win the boat:
+ Safe they stand on ship Gudruda&mdash;
+ Say, who cut the grapnel-chain?&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC DWELT IN LONDON TOWN
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Men stood astonished, but Hall the mate slunk back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold, comrade,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;I have something to say that songs cannot
+ carry. Hearken, my shield-mates: we swore to be true to each other, even
+ to death: is it not so? What then shall be said of that man who cut loose
+ the Gudruda and left us two to die at the foeman&rsquo;s hand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who was the man?&rdquo; asked a voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That man was Hall of Lithdale,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is false!&rdquo; said Hall, gathering up his courage; &ldquo;the cable parted
+ beneath the straining of the ship, and afterwards we could not put about
+ because of the great sea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art false!&rdquo; roared Skallagrim. &ldquo;With my eyes I saw thee let thine
+ axe fall upon the cable. Liar art thou and dastard! Thou art jealous also
+ of Brighteyes thy lord, and this was in thy mind: to let him die upon the
+ Raven and then to bind his shoes upon thy cowardly feet. Though none else
+ saw, I saw; and I say this: that if I may have my will, I will string
+ thee, living, to the prow in that same cable till gulls tear out thy
+ fox-heart!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Hall grew very white and his knees trembled beneath him. &ldquo;It is true,&rdquo;
+ he said, &ldquo;that I cut the chain, but not from any thought of evil. Had I
+ not cut it the vessel must have sunk and all been lost.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did we not swear, Hall,&rdquo; said Eric sternly, &ldquo;together to fight and
+ together to fall&mdash;together to fare and, if need be, together to cease
+ from faring, and dost thou read the oath thus? Say, mates, what reward
+ shall be paid to this man for his good fellowship to us and his tenderness
+ for your lives?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As with one voice the men answered &ldquo;<i>Death!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hearest, Hall?&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Yet I would deal more gently with one to
+ whom I swore fellowship so lately. Get thee gone from our company, and let
+ us see thy cur&rsquo;s face no more. Get thee gone, I say, before I repent of my
+ mercy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then amidst a loud hooting, Hall took his weapons and without a word slunk
+ into the boat of the Raven that lay astern, and rowed ashore; nor did Eric
+ see his face for many months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast done foolishly, lord, to let that weasel go,&rdquo; said Skallagrim,
+ &ldquo;for he will live to nip thy hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For good or evil, he is gone,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and now I am worn out and
+ desire to sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this Eric and Skallagrim rested three full days, and they were so
+ weary that they were awake for little of this time. But on the third day
+ they rose up, strong and well, except for their hurts and soreness. Then
+ they told the men of that which had come to pass, and all wondered at
+ their might and hardihood. To them indeed Eric seemed as a God, for few
+ such deeds as his had been told of since the God-kind were on earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Brighteyes thought little of his deeds, and much of Gudruda. At times
+ also he thought of Swanhild, and of that witch-dream she sent him: for it
+ was wonderful to him that she should have saved him thus from Ran&rsquo;s net.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric was heartily welcomed by the Earl of the Farey Isles, for, when he
+ heard his deeds, he made a feast in his honour, and set him in the high
+ seat. It was a great feast, but Skallagrim became drunk at it and ran down
+ the chamber, axe aloft, roaring for Hall of Lithdale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This angered Eric much and he would scarcely speak to Skallagrim for many
+ days, though the great Baresark slunk about after him like his shadow, or
+ a whipped hound at its master&rsquo;s heel, and at length humbled his pride so
+ far as to ask pardon for his fault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I grant it for thy deeds&rsquo; sake,&rdquo; said Eric shortly; &ldquo;but this is upon my
+ mind: that thou wilt err thus again, and it shall be my cause of death&mdash;ay,
+ and that of many more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First may my bones be white,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They shall be white thereafter,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Fareys Eric shipped twelve good men and true, to take the seats of
+ those who had been slain by Ospakar&rsquo;s folk. Afterwards, when the wounded
+ were well of their hurts (except one man who died), and the Gudruda was
+ made fit to take the sea again, Brighteyes bade farewell to the Earl of
+ those Isles, who gave him a good cloak and a gold ring at parting, and
+ sailed away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it were too long to tell of all the deeds that Eric and his men did.
+ Never, so scalds sing, was there a viking like him for strength and skill
+ and hardihood, and, in those days, no such war-dragon as the Gudruda had
+ been known upon the sea. Wherever Eric joined battle, and that was in many
+ places, he conquered, for none prevailed against him, till at last foes
+ would fly before the terror of his name, and earls and kings would send
+ from far craving the aid of his hands. Withal he was the best and gentlest
+ of men. It is said of Eric that in all his days he did no base deed, nor
+ hurt the weak, nor refused peace to him who prayed it, nor lifted sword
+ against prisoner or wounded foe. From traders he would take a toll of
+ their merchandise only and let them go, and whatever gains he won he would
+ share equally, asking no larger part than the meanest of his band. All men
+ loved Eric, and even his foes gave him honour and spoke well of him. Now
+ that Hall of Lithdale was gone, there was no man among his mates who would
+ not have passed to death for him, for they held him dearer than their
+ lives. Women, too, loved him much; but his heart was set upon Gudruda, and
+ he seldom turned to look on them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first summer of his outlawry Eric warred along the coast of Ireland,
+ but in the winter he came to Dublin, and for a while served in the
+ body-guard of the king of that town, who held him in honour, and would
+ have had him stay there. But Eric would not bide there, and next spring,
+ the Gudruda being ready for sea, he sailed for the shores of England.
+ There he gave battle to two vikings&rsquo; ships of war, and took them after a
+ hard fight. It was in this fight that Skallagrim Lambstail was wounded
+ almost to death. For when, having taken one ship, Eric boarded the other
+ with but few men, he was driven back and fell over a beam, and would have
+ been slain, had not Skallagrim thrown himself across his body, taking on
+ his own back that blow of a battle-axe which was aimed at Eric&rsquo;s head.
+ This was a great wound, for the axe shore through the steel of the byrnie
+ and sank into the flesh. But when Eric&rsquo;s men saw their lord down, and
+ Skallagrim, as they deemed, dead athwart him, they made so fierce a rush
+ that the foemen fell before them like leaves before a winter gale, and the
+ end of it was that the vikings prayed peace of Eric. Skallagrim lay sick
+ for many days, but he was hard to kill, and Eric nursed him back to life.
+ After this these two loved each other as brother loves twin brother, and
+ they could scarcely bear to be apart. But other people did not love
+ Skallagrim, nor he them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric sailed on up the Thames to London, bringing the viking ships with
+ him, and he delivered their captains bound to Edmund, Edward&rsquo;s son, the
+ king who was called Edmund the Magnificent. These captains the King hung,
+ for they had wrought damage to his ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric found much favour with the King, and, indeed, his fame had gone
+ before him. So when he came into the court, bravely clad, with Skallagrim
+ at his back, who was now almost recovered of his wound, the King called
+ out to him to draw near, saying that he desired to look on the bravest
+ viking and most beauteous man who sailed the seas, and on that fierce
+ Baresark whom men called &ldquo;Eric&rsquo;s Death-shadow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Eric came forward up the long hall that was adorned with things more
+ splendid than ever his eyes had seen, and stood before the King. With him
+ came Skallagrim, driving the two captive viking chiefs before him with his
+ axe, as a flesher drives lambs. Now, during these many months Brighteyes
+ had grown yet more great in girth and glorious to look on than he was
+ before. Moreover, his hair was now so long that it flowed like a flood of
+ gold down towards his girdle, for since Gudruda trimmed it no shears had
+ come near his head, and his locks grew fast as a woman&rsquo;s. The King looked
+ at him and was astonished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of a truth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;men have not lied about thee, Icelander, nor
+ concerning that great wolf-hound of thine,&rdquo; and he pointed at Skallagrim
+ with his sword of state. &ldquo;Never saw I such a man;&rdquo; and he bade all the
+ mightiest men of his body-guard stand forward that he might measure them
+ against Eric. But Brighteyes was an inch taller than the tallest, and
+ measured half a span more round the chest than the biggest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What wouldest thou of me, Icelander?&rdquo; asked the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, lord,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;to serve thee a while, and all my men with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is an offer that few would turn from,&rdquo; answered the King. &ldquo;Thou
+ shalt go into my body-guard, and, if I have my will, thou shalt be near me
+ in battle, and thy wolf-dog also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric said that he asked no better, and thereafter he went up with Edmund
+ the King to make war on the Danes of Mercia, and he and Skallagrim did
+ great deeds before the eyes of the Englishmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That winter Eric and his company came back to London, and abode with the
+ King in much state and honour. Now, there was a certain lady of the court
+ named Elfrida. She was both fair and wealthy, the sweetest of women, and
+ of royal blood by her mother&rsquo;s side. So soon as her eyes fell on Eric she
+ loved him, and no one thing did she desire more than to be his wife. But
+ Brighteyes kept aloof from her, for he loved Gudruda alone; and so the
+ winter wore away, and in the spring he went away warring, nor did he come
+ back till autumn was at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lady Elfrida sat at a window when Eric rode through London Town in the
+ King&rsquo;s following, and as he passed she threw him a wreath of flowers. The
+ King saw it and laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My cold kinswoman seems to melt before those bright eyes of thine,
+ Icelander,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;as my foes melt before Whitefire&rsquo;s flame. Well, I
+ could wish her a worse mate,&rdquo; and he looked on him strangely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric bowed, but made no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night, as they sat at meat in the palace, the Lady Elfrida, being
+ bidden in jest of Edmund the King to fill the cup of the bravest, passed
+ down the board, and, before all men, poured wine into Eric&rsquo;s cup, and, as
+ she did so, welcomed him back with short sweet words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric grew red as dawn, and thanked her graciously; but after the feast he
+ spoke with Skallagrim, asking him of the Gudruda, and when she could be
+ ready to take the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In ten days, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;but stay we not here with the King
+ this winter? It is late to sail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;we bide not here. I would winter this year in Fareys,
+ for they are the nighest place to Iceland that I may reach. Next summer my
+ three years of outlawry are over, and I would fare back homewards.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, I see the shadow of a woman&rsquo;s hand,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;It is very
+ late to face the northern seas, and we may sail to Iceland from London in
+ the spring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is my will that we should sail,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Past Orkneys runs the road to Fareys,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and in Orkneys
+ sits a hawk to whom the Lady Elfrida is but a dove. In faring from ill we
+ may hap on worse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is my will that we sail,&rdquo; said Eric stubbornly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As thou wilt, and as the King wills,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morrow Eric went in before the King, and craved a boon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is little that thou canst ask, Brighteyes,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;that I
+ will not give thee, for, by my troth, I hold thee dear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am come back to seek no great thing, lord,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;but this
+ only: leave to bid thee farewell. I would wend homeward.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, Eric,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;have I not dealt well with thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, and overwell, lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, wouldst thou leave me? I have this in my mind&mdash;to bring
+ thee to great honour. See, now, there is a fair lady in this court, and in
+ her veins runs blood that even an Iceland viking might be proud to mate
+ with. She has great lands, and, mayhap, she shall have more. Canst thou
+ not find a home on them, thinkest thou, Brighteyes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In Iceland only I am at home, lord,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the King was wroth, and bade him begone when it pleased him, and Eric
+ bowed before him and went out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days afterwards, while Eric was walking in the Palace gardens he met
+ the Lady Elfrida face to face. She held white flowers in her hand, and she
+ was fair to see and pale as the flowers she bore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He greeted her, and, after a while, she spoke to him in a gentle voice:
+ &ldquo;They say that thou goest from England, Brighteyes?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, lady; I go,&rdquo; he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked on him once and twice and then burst out weeping. &ldquo;Why goest
+ thou hence to that cold land of thine?&rdquo; she sobbed&mdash;&ldquo;that hateful
+ land of snow and ice! Is not England good enough for thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am at home there, lady, and there my mother waits me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;There thy mother waits thee,&rsquo; Eric?&mdash;say, does a maid called
+ Gudruda the Fair wait thee there also?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is such a maid in Iceland,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; I know it&mdash;I know it all,&rdquo; she answered, drying her tears, and
+ of a sudden growing cold and proud; &ldquo;Eric, thou art betrothed to this
+ Gudruda; and, for thy welfare, somewhat overfaithful to thy troth. For
+ hearken, Eric Brighteyes. I know this: that little luck shall come to thee
+ from the maid Gudruda. It would become me ill to say more; nevertheless,
+ this is true&mdash;that here, in England, good fortune waits thy hand, and
+ there in Iceland such fortune as men mete to their foes. Knowest thou
+ this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric looked at her and answered: &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;men are not born of
+ their own will, they live and do little that they will, they do and go,
+ perchance, whither they would not. Yet it may happen to a man that one
+ meets him whose hand he fain would hold, if it be but for an hour&rsquo;s travel
+ over icy ways; and it is better to hold that hand for this short hour than
+ to wend his life through at a stranger&rsquo;s side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps there is wisdom in thy folly,&rdquo; said the Lady Elfrida. &ldquo;Still, I
+ tell thee this: that no good luck waits thee there in Iceland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It well may be,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;my days have been stormy, and the gale is
+ still brewing. But it is a poor heart that fears the storm. Better to
+ sink; for, coward or hero, all must sink at last.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, Eric,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;if that hand thou dost desire to hold is lost
+ to thee, what then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If that hand is cold in death, then henceforth I wend my ways alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if it be held of another hand than thine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I will journey back to England, lady, and here in this fair garden I
+ may crave speech of thee again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They looked one on another. &ldquo;Fare thee well, Eric!&rdquo; said the Lady Elfrida.
+ &ldquo;Here in this garden we may talk again; and, if we talk no more&mdash;why,
+ fare thee well! Days come and go; the swallow takes flight at winter, and
+ lo! at spring it twitters round the eaves. And if it come not again, then
+ farewell to that swallow. The world is a great house, Eric, and there is
+ room for many swallows. But alas! for her who is left desolate&mdash;alas,
+ alas!&rdquo; And she turned and went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is told of this lady Elfrida that she became very wealthy and was much
+ honoured for her gentleness and wisdom, and that, when she was old, she
+ built a great church and named it Ericskirk. It is also told that, though
+ many sought her in marriage, she wedded none.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW SWANHILD WALKED THE SEAS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Within two days afterwards, the Gudruda being bound for sea, Eric went up
+ to bid farewell to the King. But Edmund was so angry with him because of
+ his going that he would not see him. Thereon Eric took horse and rode down
+ sadly from the Palace to the river-bank where the Gudruda lay. But when he
+ was about to give the word to get out the oars, the King himself rode up,
+ and with him men bearing costly gifts. Eric went ashore to speak with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am angry with thee, Brighteyes,&rdquo; said Edmund, &ldquo;yet it is not in my
+ heart to let thee go without words and gifts of farewell. This only I ask
+ of thee now, that, if things go not well with thee there, out in Iceland,
+ thou wilt come back to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will&mdash;that I promise thee, King,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for I shall never
+ find a better lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor I a braver servant,&rdquo; said the King. Then he gave him the gifts and
+ kissed him before all men. To Skallagrim also he gave a good byrnie of
+ Welsh steel coloured black.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric went aboard again and dropped down the river with the tide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For five days all went well with them, the sea being calm and the winds
+ light and favourable. But on the fifth night, as they sailed slowly along
+ the coasts of East Anglia over against Yarmouth sands, the moon rose red
+ and ringed and the sea fell dead calm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yonder hangs a storm-lamp, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, pointing to the angry
+ moon. &ldquo;We shall soon be bailing, for the autumn gales draw near.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait till they come, then speak,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Thou croakest ever like a
+ raven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And ravens croak before foul weather,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, and just as
+ he spoke a sudden gust of wind came up from the south-east and laid the
+ Gudruda over. After this it came on to blow, and so fiercely that for
+ whole days and nights their clothes were scarcely dry. They ran northwards
+ before the storm and still northward, sighting no land and seeing no
+ stars. And ever as they scudded on the gale grew fiercer, till at length
+ the men were worn out with bailing and starved with wet and cold. Three of
+ their number also were washed away by the seas, and all were in sorry
+ plight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the fourth night of the gale. Eric stood at the helm, and by him
+ Skallagrim. They were alone, for their comrades were spent and lay beneath
+ decks, waiting for death. The ship was half full of water, but they had no
+ more strength to bail. Eric seemed grim and gaunt in the white light of
+ the moon, and his long hair streamed about him wildly. Grimmer yet was
+ Skallagrim as he clung to the shield-rail and stared across the deep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She rolls heavily, lord,&rdquo; he shouted, &ldquo;and the water gains fast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can the men bail no more?&rdquo; asked Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, they are outworn and wait for death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They need not wait long,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;What do they say of me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric groaned aloud. &ldquo;It was my stubbornness that brought us to this
+ pass,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I care little for myself, but it is ill that all should
+ die for one man&rsquo;s folly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Grieve not, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, &ldquo;that is the world&rsquo;s way, and
+ there are worse things than to drown. Listen! methinks I hear the roar of
+ breakers yonder,&rdquo; and he pointed to the left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Breakers they surely are,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Now the end is near. But see, is
+ not that land looming up on the right, or is it cloud?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is land,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and I am sure of this, that we run into a
+ firth. Look, the seas boil like a hot spring. Hold on thy course, lord,
+ perchance we may yet steer between rocks and land. Already the wind falls
+ and the current lessens the seas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;already the fog and rain come up,&rdquo; and he pointed ahead
+ where dense clouds gathered in the shape of a giant, whose head reached to
+ the skies and moved towards them, hiding the moon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim looked, then spoke: &ldquo;Now here, it seems, is witchwork. Say,
+ lord, hast thou ever seen mist travel against wind as it travels now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never before,&rdquo; said Eric, and as he spoke the light of the moon went out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s wife, sat in beauty in her bower on Straumey Isle and
+ looked with wide eyes towards the sea. It was midnight. None stirred in
+ Atli&rsquo;s hall, but still Swanhild looked out towards the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now she turned and spoke into the darkness, for there was no light in the
+ bower save the light of her great eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art thou there?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I have summoned thee thrice in the words thou
+ knowest. Say, Toad, art there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Swanhild the Fatherless! Swanhild, Groa&rsquo;s daughter! Witch-mother&rsquo;s
+ witch-child! I am here. What is thy will with me?&rdquo; piped a thin voice like
+ the voice of a dying babe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild shuddered a little and her eyes grew brighter&mdash;as bright as
+ the eyes of a cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This first,&rdquo; she said: &ldquo;that thou show thyself. Hideous as thou art, I
+ had rather see thee, than speak with thee seeing thee not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mock not my form, lady,&rdquo; answered the thin voice, &ldquo;for it is as thou dost
+ fashion it in thy thought. To the good I am fair as day; to the evil, foul
+ as their heart. <i>Toad</i> thou didst call me: look, now I come as a
+ toad!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild looked, and behold! a ring of the darkness grew white with light,
+ and in it crouched a thing hideous to see. It was shaped as a great
+ spotted toad, and on it was set a hag&rsquo;s face, with white locks hanging
+ down on either side. Its eyes were blood-red and sunken, black were its
+ fangs, and its skin was dead yellow. It grinned horribly as Swanhild
+ shrank from it, then spoke again:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Grey Wolf</i> thou didst call me once, Swanhild, when thou wouldst
+ have thrust Gudruda down Goldfoss gulf, and as a grey wolf I came, and
+ gave thee counsel that thou tookest but ill. <i>Rat</i> didst thou call me
+ once, when thou wouldst save Brighteyes from the carles of Ospakar, and as
+ a rat I came and in thy shape I walked the seas. <i>Toad</i> thou callest
+ me now, and as a toad I creep about thy feet. Name thy will, Swanhild, and
+ I will name my price. But be swift, for there are other fair ladies whose
+ wish I must do ere dawn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art hideous to look on!&rdquo; said Swanhild, placing her hand before her
+ eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say not so, lady; say not so. Look at this face of mine. Knowest thou it
+ not? It is thy mother&rsquo;s&mdash;dead Groa lent it me. I took it from where
+ she lies; and my toad&rsquo;s skin I drew from thy spotted heart, Swanhild, and
+ more hideous than I am shalt thou be in a day to come, as once I was more
+ fair than thou art to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild opened her lips to shriek, but no sound came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Troll,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;mock me not with lies, but hearken to my bidding:
+ where sails Eric now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look out into the night, lady, and thou shalt see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild looked, and the ways of the darkness opened before her
+ witch-sight. There at the mouth of Pentland Firth the Gudruda laboured
+ heavily in the great seas, and by the tiller stood Eric, and with him
+ Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seest thou thy love?&rdquo; asked the Familiar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;full clearly; he is worn with wind and sea, but more
+ glorious than aforetime, and his hair is long. Say, what shall befall him
+ if thou aidest not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, that he shall safely pass the Firth, for the gale falls, and come
+ safely to Fareys, and from Fareys isles to Gudruda&rsquo;s arms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what canst thou do, Goblin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This: I can lure Eric&rsquo;s ship to wreck, and give his comrades, all save
+ Skallagrim, to Ran&rsquo;s net, and bring him to thy arms, Swanhild,
+ witch-mother&rsquo;s witch-child!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She hearkened. Her breast heaved and her eyes flashed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thy price, Toad?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Thou</i> art the price, lady,&rdquo; piped the goblin. &ldquo;Thou shalt give
+ thyself to me when thy day is done, and merrily will we sisters dwell in
+ Hela&rsquo;s halls, and merrily for ever will we fare about the earth o&rsquo; nights,
+ doing such tasks as this task of thine, Swanhild, and working wicked woe
+ till the last woe is worked on us. Art thou content?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild thought. Twice her breath went from her lips in great sighs. Then
+ she stood, pale and silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Safely shall he sail the Firth,&rdquo; piped the thin voice. &ldquo;Safely shall he
+ sit in Fareys. Safely shall he lie in white Gudruda&rsquo;s arms&mdash;<i>hee!
+ hee!</i> Think of it, lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Swanhild shook like a birth-tree in the gale, and her face grew
+ ashen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am content,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Hee! hee!</i> Brave lady! She is content! Ah, we sisters shall be
+ merry. Hearken: if I aid thee thus I may do no more. Thrice has the
+ night-owl come at thy call&mdash;now it must wing away. Yet things will be
+ as I have said; thine own wisdom shall guide the rest. Ere morn Brighteyes
+ shall stand in Atli&rsquo;s hall, ere spring he will be thy love, and ere autumn
+ Gudruda shall sit on the high seat in the hall of Middalhof the bride of
+ Ospakar. Draw nigh, give me thine arm, sister, that blood may seal our
+ bargain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild drew near the toad, and, shuddering, stretched out her arm, and
+ then and there the red blood ran, and there they sealed their sisterhood.
+ And as the nameless deed was wrought, it seemed to Swanhild as though fire
+ shot through her veins, and fire surged before her eyes, and in the fire a
+ shape passed up weeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is done, Blood-sister,&rdquo; piped the voice; &ldquo;now I must away in thy form
+ to be about thy tasks. Seat thee here before me&mdash;so. Now lay thy brow
+ upon my brow&mdash;fear not, it was thy mother&rsquo;s&mdash;life on death!
+ curling locks on corpse hair! See, so we change&mdash;we change. Now thou
+ art the Death-toad and I am Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s wife, who shall be Eric&rsquo;s
+ love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Swanhild knew that her beauty had entered into the foulness of the
+ toad, and the foulness of the toad into her beauty, for there before her
+ stood her own shape and here she crouched a toad upon the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Away to work, away!&rdquo; said a soft low voice, her own voice speaking from
+ her own body that stood before her, and lo! it was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Swanhild crouched, in the shape of a hag-headed toad, upon the ground
+ in her bower of Atli&rsquo;s hall, and felt wickedness and evil longings and
+ hate boil and seethe within her heart. She looked out through her sunken
+ horny eyes and she seemed to see strange sights. She saw Atli, her lord,
+ dead upon the grass. She saw a woman asleep, and above her flashed a
+ sword. She saw the hall of Middalhof red with blood. She saw a great gulf
+ in a mountain&rsquo;s heart, and men fell down it. And, last, she saw a war-ship
+ sailing fast out on the sea, afire, and vanish there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the witch-hag who wore Swanhild&rsquo;s loveliness stood upon the cliffs of
+ Straumey and tossed her white arms towards the north.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, fog! come, sleet!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Come, fog! come, sleet! Put out the
+ moon and blind the eyes of Eric!&rdquo; And as she called, the fog rose up like
+ a giant and stretched his arms from shore to shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Move, fog! beat, rain!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Move and beat against the gale, and
+ blind the eyes of Eric!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the fog moved on against the wind, and with it sleet and rain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I am afeared,&rdquo; said Eric to Skallagrim, as they stood in darkness
+ upon the ship: &ldquo;the gale blows from behind us, and yet the mist drives
+ fast in our faces. What comes now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is witch-work, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim, &ldquo;and in such things no
+ counsel can avail. Hold the tiller straight and drive on, say I. Methinks
+ the gale lessens more and more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they did for a little while, and all around them sounded the roar of
+ breakers. Darker grew the sky and darker yet, till at the last, though
+ they stood side by side, they could not see each other&rsquo;s shapes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is strange sailing,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;I hear the roar of breakers as it
+ were beneath the prow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lash the helm, lord, and let us go forward. If there are breakers,
+ perhaps we shall see their foam through the blackness,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric did so, and they crept forward on the starboard board right to the
+ prow of the ship, and there Skallagrim peered into the fog and sleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; he whispered presently, and his voice shook strangely, &ldquo;what is
+ that yonder on the waters? Seest thou aught?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric stared and said, &ldquo;By Odin! I see a shape of light like to the shape
+ of a woman; it walks upon the waters towards us and the mist melts before
+ it, and the sea grows calm beneath its feet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see that also!&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She comes nigh!&rdquo; gasped Eric. &ldquo;See how swift she comes! By the dead, it
+ is Swanhild&rsquo;s shape! Look, Skallagrim! look how her eyes flame!&mdash;look
+ how her hair streams upon the wind!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is Swanhild, and we are fey!&rdquo; quoth Skallagrim, and they ran back to
+ the helm, where Skallagrim sank upon the deck in fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See, Skallagrim, she glides before the Gudruda&rsquo;s beak! she glides
+ backwards and she points yonder&mdash;there to the right! Shall I put the
+ helm down and follow her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, lord, nay; set no faith in witchcraft or evil will befall us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke a great gust of wind shook the ship, the music of the breakers
+ roared in their ears, and the gleaming shape upon the waters tossed its
+ arms wildly and pointed to the right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The breakers call ahead,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;The shape points yonder, where I
+ hear no sound of sea. Once before, thou mindest, Swanhild walked the waves
+ to warn us and thereby saved us from the men of Ospakar. Ever she swore
+ she loved me; now she is surely come in love to save us and all our
+ comrades. Say, shall I put about? Look: once more she waves her arms and
+ points,&rdquo; and as he spoke he gripped the helm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no rede, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and I love not witch-work. We
+ can die but once, and death is all around; be it as thou wilt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric put down the helm with all his might. The good ship answered, and her
+ timbers groaned loudly, as though in woe, when the strain of the sea
+ struck her abeam. Then once more she flew fast across the waters, and fast
+ before her glided the wraith of Swanhild. Now it pointed here and now
+ there, and as it pointed so Eric shaped his course. For a while the noise
+ of breakers lessened, but now again came a thunder, like the thunder of
+ waves smiting on a cliff, and about the sides of the Gudruda the waves
+ hissed like snakes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly the Shape threw up its arms and seemed to sink beneath the waves,
+ while a sound like the sound of a great laugh went up from sea to sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now here is the end,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and we are lured to doom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere ever the words had passed his lips the ship struck, and so fiercely
+ that they were rolled upon the deck. Suddenly the sky grew clear, the moon
+ shone out, and before them were cliffs and rocks, and behind them a great
+ wave rushed on. From the hold of the ship there came a cry, for now their
+ comrades were awake and they knew that death was here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric gripped Skallagrim round the middle and looked aft. On rushed the
+ wave, no such wave had he ever seen. Now it struck and the Gudruda burst
+ asunder beneath the blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail were lifted on its crest and
+ knew no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild, crouching in hideous guise upon the ground in the bower of
+ Atli&rsquo;s hall, looked upon the visions that passed before her. Suddenly a
+ woman&rsquo;s shape, her own shape, was there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is done, Blood-sister,&rdquo; said a voice, her own voice. &ldquo;Merrily I walked
+ the waves, and oh, merry was the cry of Eric&rsquo;s folk when Ran caught them
+ in her net! Be thyself, again, Blood-sister&mdash;be fair as thou art
+ foul; then arise, wake Atli thy lord, and go down to the sea&rsquo;s lip by the
+ southern cliffs and see what thou shalt find. We shall meet no more till
+ all this game is played and another game is set,&rdquo; and the shape of
+ Swanhild crouched upon the floor before the hag-headed toad muttering
+ &ldquo;Pass! pass!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Swanhild felt her flesh come back to her, and as it grew upon her so
+ the shape of the Death-headed toad faded away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Farewell, Blood-sister!&rdquo; piped a voice; &ldquo;make merry as thou mayest, but
+ merrier shall be our nights when thou hast gone a-sailing with Eric on the
+ sea. Farewell! farewell! <i>Were-wolf</i> thou didst call me once, and as
+ a wolf I came. <i>Rat</i> thou didst call me once, and as a rat I came. <i>Toad</i>
+ didst thou call me once, and as a toad I came. Say, at the last, what wilt
+ thou call me and in what shape shall I come, Blood-sister? Till then
+ farewell!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all was gone and all was still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WEDDED UNNA, THOROD&rsquo;S DAUGHTER
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now the story goes back to Iceland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Brighteyes was gone, for a while Gudruda the Fair moved sadly about
+ the stead, like one new-widowed. Then came tidings. Men told how Ospakar
+ Blacktooth had waylaid Eric on the seas with two long ships, dragons of
+ war, and how Eric had given him battle and sunk one dragon with great loss
+ to Ospakar. They told also how Blacktooth&rsquo;s other dragon, the Raven, had
+ sailed away before the wind, and Eric had sailed after it in a rising
+ gale. But of what befell these ships no news came for many a month, and it
+ was rumoured that this had befallen them&mdash;that both had sunk in the
+ gale, and that Eric was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Gudruda would not believe this. When Asmund the Priest, her father,
+ asked her why she did not believe it, she answered that, had Eric been
+ dead, her heart would surely have spoken to her of it. To this Asmund said
+ that it might be so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hay-harvest being done, Asmund made ready for his wedding with Unna,
+ Thorod&rsquo;s daughter and Eric&rsquo;s cousin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it was agreed that the marriage-feast should be held at Middalhof; for
+ Asmund wished to ask a great company to the wedding, and there was no
+ place at Coldback to hold so many. Also some of the kin of Thorod, Unna&rsquo;s
+ father, were bidden to the feast from the east and north. At length all
+ was prepared and the guests came in great companies, for no such feast had
+ been made in this quarter for many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the eve of the marriage Asmund spoke with Groa. The witch-wife had
+ borne herself humbly since she was recovered from her sickness. She passed
+ about the stead like a rat at night, speaking few words and with downcast
+ eyes. She was busy also making all things ready for the feasting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now as Asmund went up the hall seeing that everything was in order, Groa
+ drew near to him and touched him gently on the shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are things to thy mind, lord?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Groa,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;more to my mind than to thine I fear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not, lord; thy will is my will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, Groa, is it thy wish to bide here in Middalhof when Unna is my
+ housewife?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is my wish to serve thee as aforetime,&rdquo; she answered softly, &ldquo;if so be
+ that Unna wills it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is her desire,&rdquo; said Asmund and went his ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Groa stood looking after him and her face was fierce and evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;While bane has virtue, while runes have power, and while hand has
+ cunning, never, Unna, shalt thou take my place at Asmund&rsquo;s side! Out of
+ the water I came to thee, Asmund; into the water I go again. Unquiet shall
+ I lie there&mdash;unquiet shall I wend through Hela&rsquo;s halls; but Unna
+ shall rest at Asmund&rsquo;s side&mdash;in Asmund&rsquo;s cairn!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then again she moved about the hall, making all things ready for the
+ feast. But at midnight, when the light was low and folk slept, Groa rose,
+ and, veiled in a black robe, with a basket in her hand, passed like a
+ shadow through the mists that hang about the river&rsquo;s edge, and in silence,
+ always looking behind her, like one who fears a hidden foe, culled flowers
+ of noisome plants that grow in the marsh. Her basket being filled, she
+ passed round the stead to a hidden dell upon the mountain side. Here a man
+ stood waiting, and near him burned a fire of turf. In his hand he held an
+ iron-pot. It was Koll the Half-witted, Groa&rsquo;s thrall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are all things ready, Koll?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;but I like not these tasks of thine, mistress. Say
+ now, what wouldst thou do with the fire and the pot?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, then, Koll. I would brew a love-potion for Asmund the Priest as he
+ has bidden me to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have done many an ill deed for thee, mistress, but of all of them I
+ love this the least,&rdquo; said the thrall, doubtfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have done many a good deed for thee, Koll. It was I who saved thee from
+ the Doom-stone, seeming to prove thee innocent&mdash;ay, even when thy
+ back was stretched on it, because thou hadst slain a man in his sleep. Is
+ it not so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, mistress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet thou wast guilty, Koll. And I have given thee many good gifts, is
+ it not so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it is so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen then: serve me this once and I will give thee one last gift&mdash;thy
+ freedom, and with it two hundred in silver.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Koll&rsquo;s eyes glistened. &ldquo;What must I do, mistress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-day at the wedding-feast it will be thy part to pour the cups while
+ Asmund calls the toasts. Last of all, when men are merry, thou wilt mix
+ that cup in which Asmund shall pledge Unna his wife and Unna must pledge
+ Asmund. Now, when thou hast poured, thou shalt pass the cup to me, as I
+ stand at the foot of the high seat, waiting to give the bride greeting on
+ behalf of the serving-women of the household. Thou shalt hand the cup to
+ me as though in error, and that is but a little thing to ask of thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A little thing indeed,&rdquo; said Koll, staring at her, and pulling with his
+ hand at his red hair, &ldquo;yet I like it not. What if I say no, mistress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say no or speak of this and I will promise thee one thing only, thou
+ knave, and it is, before winter comes, that the crows shall pick thy
+ bones! Now, brave me, if thou darest,&rdquo; and straightway Groa began to
+ mutter some witch-words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Koll, holding up his hand as though to ward away a blow.
+ &ldquo;Curse me not: I will do as thou wilt. But when shall I touch the two
+ hundred in silver?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will give thee half before the feast begins, and half when it is ended,
+ and with it freedom to go where thou wilt. And now leave me, and on thy
+ life see that thou fail me not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have never failed thee yet,&rdquo; said Koll, and went his ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Groa set the pot upon the fire, and, placing in it the herbs that she
+ had gathered, poured water on them. Presently they began to boil and as
+ they boiled she stirred them with a peeled stick and muttered spells over
+ them. For long she sat in that dim and lonely place stirring the pot and
+ muttering spells, till at length the brew was done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She lifted the pot from the fire and smelt at it. Then drawing a phial
+ from her robe she poured out the liquor and held it to the sky. The
+ witch-water was white as milk, but presently it grew clear. She looked at
+ it, then smiled evilly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is a love-draught for a queen&mdash;ah, a love-draught for a queen!&rdquo;
+ she said, and, still smiling, she placed the phial in her breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, having scattered the fire with her foot, Groa took the pot and threw
+ it into a deep pool of water, where it could not be found readily, and
+ crept back to the stead before men were awake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the day wore on and all the company were gathered at the
+ marriage-feast to the number of nearly two hundred. Unna sat in the high
+ seat, and men thought her a bonny bride, and by her side sat Asmund the
+ Priest. He was a hale, strong man to look on, though he had seen some
+ three-score winters; but his mien was sad, and his heart heavy. He drank
+ cup after cup to cheer him, but all without avail. For his thought sped
+ back across the years and once more he seemed to see the face of Gudruda
+ the Gentle as she lay dying, and to hear her voice when she foretold evil
+ to him if he had aught to do with Groa the Witch-wife. And now it seemed
+ to him that the evil was at hand, though whence it should come he knew
+ not. He looked up. There Groa moved along the hall, ministering to the
+ guests; but he saw as she moved that her eyes were always fixed, now on
+ him and now on Unna. He remembered that curse also which Groa had called
+ down upon him when he had told her that he was betrothed to Unna, and his
+ heart grew cold with fear. &ldquo;Now I will change my counsel,&rdquo; Asmund said to
+ himself: &ldquo;Groa shall not stay here in this stead, for I will look no
+ longer on that dark face of hers. She goes hence to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not far from Asmund sat Björn, his son. As Gudruda the Fair, his sister,
+ brought him mead he caught her by the sleeve, whispering in her ear.
+ &ldquo;Methinks our father is sad. What weighs upon his heart?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not,&rdquo; said Gudruda, but as she spoke she looked first on Asmund,
+ then at Groa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is ill that Groa should stop here,&rdquo; whispered Björn again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is ill,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, and glided away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asmund saw their talk and guessed its purport. Rousing himself he laughed
+ aloud and called to Koll the Half-witted to pour the cups that he might
+ name the toasts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Koll filled, and, as Asmund called the toasts one by one, Koll handed the
+ cups to him. Asmund drank deep of each, till at length his sorrow passed
+ from him, and, together with all who sat there, he grew merry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Last of all came the toast of the bride&rsquo;s cup. But before Asmund called
+ it, the women of the household drew near the high seat to welcome Unna,
+ when she should have drunk. Gudruda stood foremost, and Groa was next to
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Koll filled as before, and it was a great cup of gold that he filled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asmund rose to call the toast, and with him all who were in the hall. Koll
+ brought up the cup, and handed it, not to Asmund, but to Groa; but there
+ were few who noted this, for all were listening to Asmund&rsquo;s toast and most
+ of the guests were somewhat drunken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The cup,&rdquo; cried Asmund&mdash;&ldquo;give me the cup that I may drink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Groa started forward, and as she did so she seemed to stumble, so
+ that for a moment her robe covered up the great bride-cup. Then she
+ gathered herself together slowly, and, smiling, passed up the cup.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asmund lifted it to his lips and drank deep. Then he turned and gave it to
+ Unna his wife, but before she drank he kissed her on the lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now while all men shouted such a welcome that the hall shook, and as Unna,
+ smiling, drank from the cup, the eyes of Asmund fell upon Groa who stood
+ beneath him, and lo! her eyes seemed to flame and her face was hideous as
+ the face of a troll.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asmund grew white and put his hand to his head, as though to think, then
+ cried aloud:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drink not, Unna! the draught is drugged!&rdquo; and he struck at the vessel
+ with his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smote it indeed, and so hard that it flew from her hand far down the
+ hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Unna had already drunk deep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The draught is drugged!&rdquo; Asmund cried, and pointed to Groa, while all men
+ stood silent, not knowing what to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The draught is drugged!&rdquo; he cried a third time, &ldquo;and that witch has
+ drugged it!&rdquo; And he began to tear at his breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Groa laughed so shrilly that men trembled to hear her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, lord,&rdquo; she screamed, &ldquo;the draught is drugged, and Groa the
+ Witch-wife hath drugged it! Ay, tear thy heart out, Asmund, and Unna, grow
+ thou white as snow&mdash;soon, if my medicine has virtue, thou shalt be
+ whiter yet! Hearken all men. Asmund the Priest is Swanhild&rsquo;s father, and
+ for many a year I have been Asmund&rsquo;s mate. What did I tell thee, lord?&mdash;that
+ I would see the two of you dead ere Unna should take my place!&mdash;ay,
+ and on Gudruda the Fair, thy daughter, and Björn thy son, and Eric
+ Brighteyes, Gudruda&rsquo;s love, and many another man&mdash;on them too shall
+ my curse fall! Tear thy heart out, Asmund! Unna, grow thou white as snow!
+ The draught is drugged and Groa, Ran&rsquo;s gift! Groa the Witch-Wife! Groa,
+ Asmund&rsquo;s love! hath drugged it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And ere ever a man might lift a hand to stay her Groa glided past the high
+ seat and was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a space all stood silent. Asmund ceased clutching at his breast.
+ Rising he spoke heavily:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I learn that sin is a stone to smite him who hurled it. Gudruda the
+ Gentle spoke sooth when she warned me against this woman. <i>New wed, new
+ dead!</i> Unna, fare thee well!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And straightway Asmund fell down and died there by the high seat in his
+ own hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unna gazed at him with ashen face. Then, plucking at her bosom she sprang
+ from the dais and rushed along the hall, screaming. Men made way for her,
+ and at the door she also fell dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This then was the end of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, and Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s
+ daughter, Eric&rsquo;s cousin, his new-made wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment there was silence in the hall. But before the echoes of
+ Unna&rsquo;s screams had died away, Björn cried aloud:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The witch! where is the witch?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then with a yell of rage, men leaped to their feet, seizing their weapons,
+ and rushed from the stead. Out they ran. There, on the hill-side far above
+ them, a black shape climbed and leapt swiftly. They gave tongue like dogs
+ set upon a wolf and sped up the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They gained the crest of the hill, and now they were at Goldfoss brink.
+ Lo! the witch-wife had crossed the bed of the torrent, for little rain had
+ fallen and the river was low. She stood on Sheep-saddle, the water running
+ from her robes. On Sheep-saddle she stood and cursed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Björn took a bow and set a shaft upon the string. He drew it and the arrow
+ sung through the air and smote her, speeding through her heart. With a cry
+ Groa threw up her arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then down she plunged. She fell on Wolf&rsquo;s Fang, where Eric once had stood
+ and, bouncing thence, rushed to the boiling deeps below and was no more
+ seen for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, then, did Asmund the Priest wed Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s daughter, and this
+ was the end of the feasting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereafter Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, ruled at Middalhof, and was Priest in his
+ place. He sought for Koll the Half-witted to kill him, but Koll took the
+ fells, and after many months he found passage in a ship that was bound for
+ Scotland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Björn was a hard man and a greedy. He was no friend to Eric
+ Brighteyes, and always pressed it on Gudruda that she should wed Ospakar
+ Blacktooth. But to this counsel Gudruda would not listen, for day and
+ night she thought upon her love. Next summer there came tidings that Eric
+ was safe in Ireland, and men spoke of his deeds, and of how he and
+ Skallagrim had swept the ship of Ospakar single-handed. Now after these
+ tidings, for a while Gudruda walked singing through the meads, and no
+ flower that grew in them was half so fair as she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That summer also Ospakar Blacktooth met Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, at the Thing,
+ and they talked much together in secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVIII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW EARL ATLI FOUND ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM ON THE SOUTHERN ROCKS OF STRAUMEY
+ ISLE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild, robed in white, as though new risen from sleep, stood, candle in
+ hand, by the bed of Atli the Earl, her lord, crying &ldquo;Awake!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What passes now?&rdquo; said Atli, lifting himself upon his arm. &ldquo;What passes,
+ Swanhild, and why dost thou ever wander alone at nights, looking so
+ strangely? I love not thy dark witch-ways, Swanhild, and I was wed to thee
+ in an ill hour, wife who art no wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In an ill hour indeed, Earl Atli,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;an ill hour for thee
+ and me, for, as thou hast said, eld and youth are strange yokefellows and
+ pull different paths. Arise now, Earl, for I have dreamed a dream.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell it to me on the morrow, then,&rdquo; quoth Atli; &ldquo;there is small
+ joyousness in thy dreams, that always point to evil, and I must bear
+ enough evil of late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, lord, my rede may not be put aside so. Listen now: I have dreamed
+ that a great dragon of war has been cast away upon Straumey&rsquo;s
+ south-western rocks. The cries of those who drowned rang in my ears. But I
+ thought that some came living to the shore, and lie there senseless, to
+ perish of the cold. Arise, therefore, take men and go down to the rocks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will go at daybreak,&rdquo; said Atli, letting his head fall upon the pillow.
+ &ldquo;I have little faith in such visions, and it is too late for ships of war
+ to try the passage of the Firth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Arise, I say,&rdquo; answered Swanhild sternly, &ldquo;and do my bidding, else I will
+ myself go to search the rocks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Atli rose grumbling, and shook the heavy sleep from his eyes: for of
+ all living folk he most feared Swanhild his wife. He donned his garments,
+ threw a thick cloak about him, and, going to the hall where men snored
+ around the dying fires, for the night was bitter, he awoke some of them.
+ Now among those men whom he called was Hall of Lithdale, Hall the mate who
+ had cut the grapnel-chain. For this Hall, fearing to return to Iceland,
+ had come hither saying that he had been wounded off Fareys, in the great
+ fight between Eric and Ospakar&rsquo;s men, and left there to grow well of his
+ hurt or die. Then Atli, not knowing that the carle lied, had bid him
+ welcome for Eric&rsquo;s sake, for he still loved Eric above all men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Hall loved not labour and nightfarings to search for shipwrecked men
+ of whom the Lady Swanhild had chanced to dream. So he turned himself upon
+ his side and slept again. Still, certain of Atli&rsquo;s folk rose at his
+ bidding, and they went together down to the south-western rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Swanhild, a cloak thrown over her night-gear, sat herself in the high
+ seat of the hall and fixing her eyes, now upon the dying fires and now
+ upon the blood-marks in her arm, waited in silence. The night was cold and
+ windy, but the moon shone bright, and by its light Atli and his people
+ made their way to the south-western rocks, on which the sea beat madly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What lies yonder?&rdquo; said Atli, pointing to some black things that lay
+ beneath them upon the rock, cast there by the waves. A man climbed down
+ the cliff&rsquo;s side that is here as though it were cut in steps, and then
+ cried aloud:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A ship&rsquo;s mast, new broken, lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems that Swanhild dreams true,&rdquo; muttered Atli; &ldquo;but I am sure of
+ this: that none have come ashore alive in such a sea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the man who searched the rocks below cried aloud again:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here lie two great men, locked in each other&rsquo;s arms. They seem to be
+ dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now all the men climb down the slippery rocks as best they may, though the
+ spray wets them, and with them goes Atli. The Earl is a brisk man, though
+ old in years, and he comes first to where the two lie. He who was
+ undermost lay upon his back, but his face is hid by the thick golden hair
+ that flowed across it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Man&rsquo;s body indeed, but woman&rsquo;s locks,&rdquo; said Atli as he put out his hand
+ and drew the hair away, so that the light of the moon fell on the face
+ beneath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked, then staggered back against the rock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Thor!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;here lies the corpse of Eric Brighteyes!&rdquo; and Atli
+ wrung his hands and wept, for he loved Eric much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be not so sure that the men are dead, Earl,&rdquo; said one, &ldquo;I thought I saw
+ yon great carle move but now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric&rsquo;s Death-shadow,&rdquo; said Atli again. &ldquo;Up
+ with them, lads&mdash;see, yonder lies a plank&mdash;and away to the hall.
+ I will give twenty in silver to each of you if Eric lives,&rdquo; and he
+ unclasped his cloak and threw it over both of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then with much labour they loosed the grip of the two men one from the
+ other, and they set Skallagrim on the plank. But eight men bore Eric up
+ the cliff between them, and the task was not light, though the Earl held
+ his head, from which the golden hair hung like seaweed from a rock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length they came to the hall and carried them in. Swanhild, seeing them
+ come, moved down from the high seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bring lamps, and pile up the fires,&rdquo; cried Atli. &ldquo;A strange thing has
+ come to pass, Swanhild, and thou dost dream wisely, indeed, for here we
+ have Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail. They were locked like
+ lovers in each other&rsquo;s arms, but I know not if they are dead or living.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild started and came on swiftly. Had the Familiar tricked her and
+ had she paid the price for nothing? Was Eric taken from Gudruda and given
+ to her indeed&mdash;but given dead? She bent over him, gazing keenly on
+ his face. Then she spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is not dead but senseless. Bring dry clothes, and make water hot,&rdquo;
+ and, kneeling down, she loosed Eric&rsquo;s helm and harness and ungirded
+ Whitefire from his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For long Swanhild and Atli tended Eric at one fire, and the serving women
+ tended Skallagrim at the other. Presently there came a cry that Skallagrim
+ stirred, and Atli with others ran to see. At this moment also the eyes of
+ Eric were unsealed, and Swanhild saw them looking at her dimly from
+ beneath. Moved to it by her passion and her joy that he yet lived,
+ Swanhild let her face fall till his was hidden in her unbound hair, and
+ kissed him upon the lips. Eric shut his eyes again, sighing heavily, and
+ presently he was asleep. They bore him to a bed and heaped warm wrappings
+ upon him. At daybreak he woke, and Atli, who sat watching at his side,
+ gave him hot mead to drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do I dream?&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;or is it Earl Atli who tends me, and did I but
+ now see the face of Swanhild bending over me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is no dream, Eric, but the truth. Thou hast been cast away here on my
+ isle of Straumey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Skallagrim&mdash;where is Skallagrim?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Skallagrim lives&mdash;fear not!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And my comrades, how went it with them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But ill, Eric. Ran has them all. Now sleep!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric groaned aloud. &ldquo;I had rather died also than live to hear such heavy
+ tidings,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Witch-work! witch-work! and that fair witch-face
+ wrought it.&rdquo; And once again he slept, nor did he wake till the sun was
+ high. But Atli could make nothing of his words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Swanhild left the side of Eric she met Hall of Lithdale face to face
+ and his looks were troubled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, lady,&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;will Brighteyes live?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Grieve not, Hall,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;Eric will surely live and he will be
+ glad to find a messmate here to greet him, having left so many yonder,&rdquo;
+ and she pointed to the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall not be glad,&rdquo; said Hall, letting his eyes fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not, Hall? Fearest thou Skallagrim? or hast thou done ill by Eric?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, lady, I fear Skallagrim, for he swore to slay me, and that kind of
+ promise he ever keeps. Also, if the truth must out, I have not dealt
+ altogether well with Eric, and of all men I least wish to talk with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak on,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, being forced to it, Hall told her something of the tale of the
+ cutting of the cable, being careful to put another colour on it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now it seems that thou art a coward, Hall,&rdquo; Swanhild said when he had
+ done, &ldquo;and I scarcely looked for that in thee,&rdquo; for she had not been
+ deceived by the glozing of his speech. &ldquo;It will be bad for thee to meet
+ Eric and Skallagrim, and this is my counsel: that thou goest hence before
+ they wake, for they will sit this winter here in Atli&rsquo;s hall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And whither shall I go, lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild gazed on him, and as she did so a dark thought came into her
+ heart: here was a knave who might serve her ends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hall,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;thou art an Icelander, and I have known of thee from a
+ child, and therefore I wish to serve thee in thy strait, though thou
+ deservest it little. See now, Atli the Earl has a farm on the mainland not
+ two hours&rsquo; ride from the sea. Thither thou shalt go, if thou art wise, and
+ thou shalt sit there this winter and be hidden from Eric and Skallagrim.
+ Nay, thank me not, but listen: it may chance that I shall have a service
+ for thee to do before spring is come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady, I shall wait upon thy word,&rdquo; said Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good. Now, so soon as it is light, I will find a man to sail with thee
+ across the Firth, for the sea falls, and bear my message to the steward at
+ Atli&rsquo;s farm. Also if thou needest faring-money thou shalt have it.
+ Farewell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus then did Hall fly before Eric and Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morrow Eric and Skallagrim arose, sick and bruised indeed, but not
+ at all harmed, and went down to the shore. There they found many dead men
+ of their company, but never a one in whom the breath of life remained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim looked at Eric and spoke: &ldquo;Last night the mist came up against
+ the wind: last night we saw Swanhild&rsquo;s wraith upon the waves, and there is
+ the path it showed, and there&rdquo;&mdash;and he pointed to the dead men&mdash;&ldquo;is
+ the witch-seed&rsquo;s flower. Now to-day we sit in Atli&rsquo;s hall and here we must
+ stay this winter at Swanhild&rsquo;s side, and in all this there lies a riddle
+ that I cannot read.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric shook his head, making no answer. Then, leaving Skallagrim with
+ the dead, he turned, and striding back alone towards the hall, sat down on
+ a rock in the home meadows and, covering his face with his hands, wept for
+ his comrades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he wept Swanhild came to him, for she had seen him from afar, and
+ touched him gently on the arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why weepest thou, Eric?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I weep for the dead, Swanhild,&rdquo; he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Weep not for the dead&mdash;they are at peace; if thou must weep, weep
+ for the living. Nay, weep not at all; rejoice rather that thou art here to
+ mourn. Hast thou no word of greeting for me who have not heard thy voice
+ these many months?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who would never have seen thy face
+ again if I might have had my will? Knowest thou that yesternight, as we
+ laboured in yonder Firth, we saw a shape walking the waters to lead us to
+ our doom? How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who art a witch and evil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And knowest thou, Eric, that yesternight I woke from sleep, having
+ dreamed that thou didst lie upon the shore, and thus I saved thee alive,
+ as perchance I have saved thee aforetime? If thou didst see a shape
+ walking the waters it was that shape which led thee here. Hadst thou
+ sailed on, not only those thou mournest, but Skallagrim and thou thyself
+ had now been numbered with the lost.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better so than thus,&rdquo; said Brighteyes. &ldquo;Knowest thou also, Swanhild, that
+ when last night my life came back again in Atli&rsquo;s hall, methought that
+ Atli&rsquo;s wife leaned over me and kissed me on the lips? That was an ill
+ dream, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some had found it none so ill, Eric,&rdquo; she made answer, looking on him
+ strangely. &ldquo;Still, it was but a dream. Thou didst dream that Atli&rsquo;s wife
+ breathed back the breath of life into thy pale lips&mdash;be sure of it
+ thou didst but dream. Ah, Eric, fear me no more; forget the evil that I
+ have wrought in the blindness and folly of my youth. Now things are
+ otherwise with me. Now I am a wedded wife and faithful hearted to my lord.
+ Now, if I still love thee, it is with a sister&rsquo;s love. Therefore forget my
+ sins, remember only that as children we played upon the Iceland fells.
+ Remember that, as boy and girl, we rode along the marshes, while the
+ sea-mews clamoured round our heads. The world is cold, Eric, and few are
+ the friends we find in it; many are already gone, and soon the friendless
+ dark draws near. So put me not away, my brother and my friend; but, for a
+ little space, whilst thou art here in Atli&rsquo;s hall, let us walk hand in
+ hand as we walked long years ago in Iceland, gathering up the fifa-bloom,
+ and watching the midnight shadows creep up the icy jökul&rsquo;s crest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Swanhild spoke to him most sweetly, in a low voice of music, while
+ the tears gathered in her eyes, talking ever of Iceland that he loved, and
+ of days long dead, till Eric&rsquo;s heart softened in him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Almost do I believe thee, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said, stretching out his hand;
+ &ldquo;but I know thus: that thou art never twice in the same mood, and that is
+ beyond my measuring. Thou hast done much evil and thou hast striven to do
+ more; also I love not those who seem to walk the seas o&rsquo; nights. Still,
+ hold thou to this last saying of thine and there shall be peace between us
+ while I bide here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She touched his hand humbly and turned to go. But as she went Eric spoke
+ again: &ldquo;Say, Swanhild, hast thou tidings from Iceland yonder? I have heard
+ no word of Asmund or of Gudruda for two long years and more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stood still, and a dark shadow that he could not see flitted across
+ her face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have few tidings, Eric,&rdquo; she said, turning, &ldquo;and those few, if I may
+ trust them, bad enough. For this is the rumour that I have heard: that
+ Asmund the Priest, my father, is dead; that Groa, my mother, is dead&mdash;how,
+ I know not; and, lastly, that Gudruda the Fair, thy love, is betrothed to
+ Ospakar Blacktooth and weds him in the spring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric sprang up with an oath and grasped the hilt of Whitefire. Then he
+ sat down again upon the stone and covered his face with his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Grieve not, Eric,&rdquo; she said gently; &ldquo;I put no faith in this news, for
+ rumour, like the black-backed gull, often changes colour in its flight
+ across the seas. Also I had it but at fifth hand. I am sure of this, at
+ least, that Gudruda will never forsake thee without a cause.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall go ill with Ospakar if this be true,&rdquo; said Eric, smiling grimly,
+ &ldquo;for Whitefire is yet left me and with it one true friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Run not to meet the evil, Eric. Thou shalt come to Iceland with the
+ summer flowers and find Gudruda faithful and yet fairer than of yore.
+ Knowest thou that Hall of Lithdale, who was thy mate, has sat here these
+ two months? He is gone but this morning, I know not whither, leaving a
+ message that he returns no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He did well to go,&rdquo; said Eric, and he told her how Hall had cut the
+ cable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, well indeed,&rdquo; answered Swanhild. &ldquo;Had Atli known this he would have
+ scourged Hall hence with rods of seaweed. And now, Eric, I desire to ask
+ thee one more thing: why wearest thou thy hair long like a woman&rsquo;s?
+ Indeed, few women have such hair as thine is now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For this cause, Swanhild: I swore to Gudruda that none should cut my hair
+ till she cut it once more. It is a great burden to me surely, for never
+ did hair grow so fast and strong as mine, and once in a fray I was held
+ fast by it and went near to the losing of my life. Still, I will keep the
+ oath even if it grows on to my feet,&rdquo; and he laughed a little and shook
+ back his golden locks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild smiled also and, turning, went. But when her face was hidden from
+ him she smiled no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As I live,&rdquo; she said in her heart, &ldquo;before spring rains fall I again will
+ cause thee to break this oath, Eric. Ay, I will cut a lock of that bright
+ hair of thine and send it for a love-token to Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric still sat upon the rock thinking. Swanhild had set an evil seed
+ of doubt in his heart, and already it put forth roots. What if the tale
+ were true? What if Gudruda had given herself to Ospakar? Well, if so&mdash;she
+ should soon be a widow, that he swore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he rose, and stalked grimly towards the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW KOLL THE HALF-WITTED BROUGHT TIDINGS FROM ICELAND
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Presently as Eric walked he met Atli the Earl seeking him. Atli greeted
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have seen strange things, Eric,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but none more strange than
+ this coming of thine and the manner of it. Swanhild is foresighted, and
+ that was a doom-dream of hers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think her foresighted also,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;And now, Earl, knowest thou
+ this: that little good can come to thee at the hands of one whom thou hast
+ saved from the sea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I set no faith in such old wives&rsquo; tales,&rdquo; answered Atli. &ldquo;Here thou art
+ come, and it is my will that thou shouldest sit here. At the least, I will
+ give thee no help to go hence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we must bide in Straumey, it seems,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;for of all my goods
+ and gear this alone is left me,&rdquo; and he looked at Whitefire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast still a gold ring or two upon thy arm,&rdquo; answered the Earl,
+ laughing. &ldquo;But surely, Eric, thou wouldst not begone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not, Earl. Listen: it is well that I should be plain with thee.
+ Once, before thou didst wed Swanhild, she had another mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have heard something of that, and I have guessed more, Brighteyes; but
+ methinks Swanhild is little given to gadding now. She is as cold as ice,
+ and no good wife for any man,&rdquo; and Atli sighed, &ldquo;&lsquo;Snow melts not if sun
+ shines not,&rsquo; so runs the saw. Thou art an honest man, Eric, and no
+ whisperer in the ears of others&rsquo; wives.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not minded indeed to do thee such harm, Earl, but this thou knowest:
+ that woman&rsquo;s guile and beauty are swords few shields can brook. Now I have
+ spoken&mdash;and they are hard words to speak&mdash;be it as thou wilt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is my will that thou shouldest sit here this winter, Eric. Had I my
+ way, indeed, never wouldest thou sit elsewhere. Listen: things have not
+ gone well with me of late. Age hath a grip of me, and foes rise up against
+ one who has no sons. That was an ill marriage, too, which I made with
+ Swanhild yonder: for she loves me not, and I have found no luck since
+ first I saw her face. Moreover, it is in my mind that my days are almost
+ sped. Swanhild has already foretold my death, and, as thou knowest well,
+ she is foresighted. So I pray thee, Eric, bide thou here while thou
+ mayest, for I would have thee at my side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall be as thou wilt, Earl,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail sat that winter in the hall of
+ Atli the Earl at Straumey. For many weeks all things went well and Eric
+ forgot his fears. Swanhild was gentle to him and kindly. She loved much to
+ talk with him, even of Gudruda her rival; but no word of love passed her
+ lips. Nevertheless, she did but bide her time, for when she struck she
+ determined to strike home. Atli and Eric were ever side by side, and Eric
+ gave the Earl much good counsel. He promised to do this also, for now,
+ being simple-minded, his doubts had passed and he had no more fear of
+ Swanhild. On the mainland lived a certain chief who had seized large lands
+ of Atli&rsquo;s, and held them for a year or more. Now Eric gave his word that,
+ before he sailed for Iceland in the early summer, he would go up against
+ this man and drive him from the lands, if he could. For Brighteyes might
+ not come to Iceland till hard upon midsummer, when his three years of
+ outlawry were spent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The winter wore away and the spring came. Then Atli gathered his men and
+ went with Eric in boats to where the chief dwelt who held his lands. There
+ they fell on him and there was a fierce fight. But in the end the man was
+ slain by Skallagrim, and Eric did great deeds, as was his wont. Now in
+ this fray Eric was wounded in the foot by a spear, so that he must be
+ borne back to Straumey, and he lay there in the hall for many days.
+ Swanhild nursed him, and most days he sat talking with her in her bower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Eric was nearly healed of his hurt, the Earl went with all his people
+ to a certain island of the Orkneys to gather scat[*] that was unpaid, and
+ Skallagrim went with him. But Eric did not go, because of his hurt,
+ fearing lest the wound should open if he walked overmuch. Thus it came to
+ pass that, except for some women, he was left almost alone with Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Tribute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, when Atli had been gone three days, it chanced on an afternoon that
+ Swanhild heard how a man from Iceland sought speech with her. She bade
+ them bring him in to where she was alone in her bower, for Eric was not
+ there, having gone down to the sea to fish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man came and she knew him at once for Koll the Half-witted, who had
+ been her mother Groa&rsquo;s thrall. On his shoulders was the cloak that Ospakar
+ Blacktooth had given him; it was much torn now, and he had a worn and
+ hungry look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whence comest thou, Koll?&rdquo; she asked, &ldquo;and what are thy tidings?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From Scotland last, lady, where I sat this winter; before that, from
+ Iceland. As for my tidings, they are heavy, if thou hast not heard them.
+ Asmund the Priest is dead, and dead is Unna his wife, poisoned by thy
+ mother, Groa, at their marriage-feast. Dead, too, is thy mother, Groa.
+ Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, shot her with an arrow, and she lies in Goldfoss
+ pool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild hid her face for a while in her hands. Then she lifted it and
+ it was white to see. &ldquo;Speakest thou truth, fox? If thou liest, this I
+ swear to thee&mdash;thy tongue shall be dragged from thee by the roots!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I speak the truth, lady,&rdquo; he answered. But still he spoke not all the
+ truth, for he said nothing of the part which he had played in the deaths
+ of Asmund and Unna. Then he told her of the manner of their end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild listened silently&mdash;then said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What news of Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter? Is she wed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, lady. Folk spoke of her and Ospakar, that was all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken, Koll,&rdquo; said Swanhild, &ldquo;bearing such heavy tidings, canst thou
+ not weight the ship a little more? Eric Brighteyes is here. Canst thou not
+ swear to him that, when thou didst leave Iceland it was said without
+ question that Gudruda had betrothed herself to Ospakar, and that the
+ wedding-feast was set for this last Yule? Thou hast a hungry look, Koll,
+ and methinks that things have not gone altogether well with thee of late.
+ Now, if thou canst so charge thy memory, thou shalt lose little by it.
+ But, if thou canst not, then thou goest hence from Straumey with never a
+ luck-penny in thy purse, and never a sup to stay thy stomach with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now of all things Koll least desired to be sent from Straumey; for, though
+ Swanhild did not know it, he was sought for on the mainland as a thief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I may do, lady,&rdquo; he said, looking at her cunningly. &ldquo;Now I remember
+ that Gudruda the Fair charged me with a certain message for Eric
+ Brighteyes, if I should chance to see him as I journeyed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s wife, and Koll the Half-witted talked long and
+ earnestly together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At nightfall Eric came in from his fishing. His heart was light, for the
+ time drew near when he should sail for home, and he did not think on evil.
+ For now he feared Swanhild no longer, and, no fresh tidings having come
+ from Iceland about Ospakar and Gudruda, he had almost put the matter from
+ his mind. On he walked to the hall, limping somewhat from his wound, but
+ singing as he came, and bearing his fish slung upon a pole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the men&rsquo;s door of the hall a woman stood waiting. She told Eric that
+ the lady Swanhild would speak with him in her bower. Thither he went and
+ knocked. Getting no answer he knocked again, then entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild sat on a couch. She was weeping, and her hair fell about her
+ face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What now, Swanhild?&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked up heavily. &ldquo;Ill news for thee and me, Eric. Koll, who was my
+ mother&rsquo;s thrall, has come hither from Iceland, and these are his tidings:
+ that Asmund is dead, and Unna, thy cousin, Thorod of Greenfell&rsquo;s daughter,
+ is dead, and my mother Groa is dead also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heavy tidings, truly!&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;and what of Gudruda, is she also
+ dead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Eric she is wed&mdash;wed to Ospakar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric reeled against the wall, clutching it, and for a space all things
+ swam round him. &ldquo;Where is this Koll?&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Send me Koll hither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he came, and Eric questioned him coldly and calmly. But Koll
+ could lie full well. It is said that in his day there was no one in
+ Iceland who could lie so well as Koll the Half-witted. He told Eric how it
+ was said that Gudruda was plighted to Ospakar, and how the match had been
+ agreed on at the Althing in the summer that was gone (and indeed there had
+ been some such talk), and how that the feast was to be at Middalhof on
+ last Yule Day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that all thy tidings?&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;If so, I give no heed to them: for
+ ever, Koll, I have known thee for a liar!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Eric, it is not all,&rdquo; answered Koll. &ldquo;As it chanced, two days before
+ the ship in which I sailed was bound, I saw Gudruda the Fair. Then she
+ asked me whither I was going, and I told her that I would journey to
+ London, where men said thou wert, and asked her if she would send a
+ message. Then she alighted from her horse, Blackmane, and spoke with me
+ apart. &lsquo;Koll,&rsquo; she said, &lsquo;it well may happen that thou wilt see Eric
+ Brighteyes in London town. Now, if thou seest him, I charge thee
+ straightly tell him this. Tell him that my father is dead, and my brother
+ Björn, who rules in his place, is a hard man, and has ever urged me on to
+ wed Ospakar, till at last, having no choice, I have consented to it. And
+ say to Eric that I grieve much and sorely, and that, though we twain
+ should never meet more, yet I shall always hold his memory dear.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not like Gudruda to speak thus,&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;she had ever a stout
+ heart and these are craven words. Koll, I hold that thou liest; and, if
+ indeed I find it so, I&rsquo;ll wring the head from off thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Eric, I lie not. Wherefore should I lie? Hearken: thou hast not
+ heard all my tale. When the lady Gudruda had made an end of speaking she
+ drew something from her breast and gave it me, saying: &lsquo;Give this to Eric,
+ in witness of my words.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Show me the token,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, many years ago, when they were yet boy and girl, it chanced that Eric
+ had given to Gudruda the half of an ancient gold piece that he had found
+ upon the shore. He had given her half, and half he had kept, wearing it
+ next his heart. But he knew not this, for she feared to tell him, that
+ Gudruda had lost her half. Nor indeed had she lost it, for Swanhild had
+ taken the love-token and hidden it away. Now she brought it forth for Koll
+ to build his lies upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Koll drew out the half-piece from a leather purse and passed it to
+ him. Eric plunged his hand into his breast and found his half. He placed
+ the two side by side, while Swanhild watched him. Lo! they fitted well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric laughed aloud, a hard and bitter laugh. &ldquo;There will be slaying,&rdquo;
+ he cried, &ldquo;before all this tale is told. Take thy fee and begone, thou
+ messenger of ill,&rdquo; and he cast the broken piece at Koll. &ldquo;For once thou
+ hast spoken the truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Koll stooped, found the gold and went, leaving Brighteyes and Swanhild
+ face to face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hid his brow in his arms and groaned aloud. Softly Swanhild crept up to
+ him&mdash;softly she drew his hands away, holding them between her own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heavy tidings, Eric,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;heavy tidings for thee and me! She is a
+ murderess who gave me birth and she has slain my own father&mdash;my
+ father and thy cousin Unna also. Gudruda is a traitress, a traitress fair
+ and false. I did ill to be born of such a woman; thou didst ill to put thy
+ faith in such a woman. Together let us weep, for our woe is equal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, let us weep together,&rdquo; Eric answered. &ldquo;Nay, why should we weep?
+ Together let us be merry, for we know the worst. All words are said&mdash;all
+ hopes are sped! Let us be merry, then, for now we have no more tidings to
+ fear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; Swanhild answered, looking on him darkly, &ldquo;we will be merry and
+ laugh our sorrows down. Ah! thou foolish Eric, under what unlucky star
+ wast thou born that thou knewest not true from false?&rdquo; and she called the
+ serving-women, bidding them bring food and wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric sat alone with Swanhild in her bower and made pretence to eat.
+ But he could eat little, though he drank deep of the southern wine. Close
+ beside him sat Swanhild, filling his cup. She was wondrous fair that
+ night, and it seemed to Eric that her eyes gleamed like stars. Sweetly she
+ spoke also and wisely. She told strange tales and she sang strange songs,
+ and ever her eyes shone more and more, and ever she crept closer to him.
+ Eric&rsquo;s brain was afire, though his heart was cold and dead. He laughed
+ loud and mightily, he told great tales of deeds that he had done, growing
+ boastful in his folly, and still Swanhild&rsquo;s eyes shone more and more, and
+ still she crept closer, wooing him in many ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now of a sudden Eric thought of his friend, Earl Atli, and his mind grew
+ clear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This may not be, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Yet I would that I had loved thee
+ from the first, and not the false Gudruda: for, with all thy dark ways, at
+ least thou art better than she.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou speakest wisely, Eric,&rdquo; Swanhild answered, though she meant not that
+ he should go. &ldquo;The Norns have appointed us an evil fate, giving me as wife
+ to an old man whom I do not love, and thee for a lover to a woman who has
+ betrayed thee. Ah, Eric Brighteyes, thou foolish Eric! why knewest thou
+ not the false from the true while yet there was time? Now are all words
+ said and all things done&mdash;nor can they be undone. Go hence, Eric, ere
+ ill come of it; but, before thou goest, drink one cup of parting, and then
+ farewell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she slipped from him and filled the cup, mixing in it a certain
+ love-portion that she had made ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give it me that I may swear an oath on it,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild gave him the cup and stood before him, watching him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken,&rdquo; he said: &ldquo;I swear this, that before snow falls again in Iceland
+ I will see Ospakar dead at my feet or lie dead at the feet of Ospakar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well spoken, Eric,&rdquo; Swanhild answered. &ldquo;Now, before thou drinkest, grant
+ me one little boon. It is but a woman&rsquo;s fancy, and thou canst scarce deny
+ me. The years will be long when thou art gone, for from this night it is
+ best that we should meet no more, and I would keep something of thee to
+ call back thy memory and the memories of our youth when thou hast passed
+ away and I grow old.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What wouldst have then, Swanhild? I have nothing left to give, except
+ Whitefire alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not ask Whitefire, Eric, though Whitefire shall kiss the gift. I ask
+ nothing but one tress of that golden hair of thine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Once I swore that none should touch my hair again except Gudruda&rsquo;s self.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will grow long, then, Eric, for now Gudruda tends black locks and
+ thinks little on golden. Broken are all oaths.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric groaned. &ldquo;All oaths are broken in sooth,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Have then thy
+ will;&rdquo; and, loosing the peace-strings, he drew Whitefire from its sheath
+ and gave her the great war-sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild took it by the hilt, and, lifting a tress of Eric&rsquo;s yellow hair,
+ she shore through it deftly with Whitefire&rsquo;s razor-edge, smiling as she
+ shore. With the same war-blade on which Eric and Gudruda had pledged their
+ troth, did Swanhild cut the locks that Eric had sworn no hand should clip
+ except Gudruda&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took back the sword and sheathed it, and, knotting the long tress,
+ Swanhild hid it in her bosom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now drink the cup, Eric,&rdquo; she said&mdash;&ldquo;pledge me and go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric drank to the dregs and cast the cup down, and lo! all things changed
+ to him, for his blood was afire, and seas seemed to roll within his brain.
+ Only before him stood Swanhild like a shape of light and glory, and he
+ thought that she sang softly over him, always drawing nearer, and that
+ with her came a scent of flowers like the scent of the Iceland meads in
+ May.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All oaths are broken, Eric,&rdquo; she murmured, &ldquo;all oaths are broken indeed,
+ and now must new oaths be sworn. For cut is thy golden hair, Brighteyes,
+ and not by Gudruda&rsquo;s hand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC WAS NAMED ANEW
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Eric dreamed. He dreamed that Gudruda stood by him looking at him with
+ soft, sad eyes, while with her hand she pointed to his hair, and spake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast done ill, Eric,&rdquo; she seemed to say. &ldquo;Thou hast done ill to
+ doubt me; and now thou art for ever shamed, for thou hast betrayed Atli,
+ thy friend. Thou hast broken thy oath, and therefore hast thou fallen into
+ this pit; for when Swanhild shore that lock of thine, my watching Spirit
+ passed, leaving thee to Swanhild and thy fate. Now, I tell thee this: that
+ shame shall lead to shame, and many lives shall pay forfeit for thy sin,
+ Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric awoke, thinking that this was indeed an evil dream which he had
+ dreamed. He woke, and lo! by him was Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s wife. He looked upon
+ her beauty, and fear and shame crept into his heart, for now he knew that
+ it was no dream, but he was lost indeed. He looked again at Swanhild, and
+ hatred and loathing of her shook him. She had overcome him by her arts;
+ that cup was drugged which he had drunk, and he was mad with grief. Yes,
+ she had played upon his woe like a harper on a harp, and now he was
+ ashamed&mdash;now he had betrayed his friend who loved him! Had Whitefire
+ been to his hand at that moment, Eric had surely slain himself. But the
+ great sword was not there, for it hung in Swanhild&rsquo;s bower. Eric groaned
+ aloud, and Swanhild turned at the sound. But he sprang away and stood over
+ her, cursing her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou witch!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;what hast thou done? What didst thou mix in that
+ cup yestre&rsquo;en? Thou hast brought me to this that I have betrayed Atli, my
+ friend&mdash;Atli, thy lord, who left thee in my keeping!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He seemed so terrible in his woe and rage that Swanhild shrank from him,
+ and, throwing her hair about her face, peeped at him through its meshes as
+ once she had peeped at Asmund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is like a man,&rdquo; she said, gathering up her courage and her wit; &ldquo;&lsquo;tis
+ like a man, having won my love, now to turn upon me and upbraid me. Fie
+ upon thee, Eric! thou hast dealt ill with me to bring me to this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric ceased his raving, and spoke more calmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well thou knowest the truth, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken, Eric,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Let this be secret between us. Atli is
+ old, and methinks that not for long shall he bide here in Straumey. Soon
+ he will die; it is upon my mind that he soon will die, and, being
+ childless, his lands and goods pass to me. Then, Eric, thou shalt sit in
+ Atli&rsquo;s hall, and in all honour shall Atli&rsquo;s wife become thy bride.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric listened coldly. &ldquo;I can well believe,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that thou hast it in
+ mind to slay thy lord, for all evil is in thy heart, Swanhild. Now know
+ this: that if in honour or dishonour my lips touch that fair face of thine
+ again, may the limbs rot from thy trunk, and may I lie a log for ever in
+ the halls of Hela! If ever my eyes of their own will look again upon thy
+ beauty, may I go blind and beg my meat from homestead to homestead! If
+ ever my tongue whisper word of love into thy ears, may dumbness seize it,
+ and may it wither to the root!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild heard and sank upon the ground before him, her head bowed almost
+ to her feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Swanhild, fare thee well,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Living or dead, may I never
+ see thy face again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She gazed up through her falling hair; her face was wild and white, and
+ her eyes glowed in it as live embers glow in the ashes of burnt wood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are not so easily parted, Eric,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Not for this came I to
+ witchcraft and to sin. Thou fool! hast thou never heard that, of all the
+ foes a man may have, none is so terrible as the woman he has scorned? Thou
+ shalt learn this lesson, Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur&rsquo;s son: for here we
+ have but the beginning of the tale. For its end, I will write it in runes
+ of blood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Write on,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Thou canst do no worse than thou hast done,&rdquo; and
+ he passed thence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a while Swanhild crouched upon the ground, brooding in silence. Then
+ she rose, and, throwing up her arms, wept aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it for this that I have sold my soul to the Hell-hag?&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Is
+ it for this that I have become a witch, and sunk so low as I sank last
+ night&mdash;to be scorned, to be hated, to be betrayed? Now Eric will go
+ to Atli and tell this tale. Nay, there I will be beforehand with him, and
+ with another story&mdash;an ancient wile of women truly, but one that
+ never yet has failed them, nor ever will. And then for vengeance! I will
+ see thee dead, Eric, and dead will I see Gudruda at thy side! Afterwards
+ let darkness come&mdash;ay, though the horror rides it! Swift!&mdash;I
+ must be swift!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric passed into Swanhild&rsquo;s bower, and, finding Whitefire, bore it thence.
+ On the table was food. He took it. Then, going to the place where he was
+ wont to sleep, he armed himself, girding his byrnie on his breast and his
+ golden helm upon his head, and taking shield and spear in his hand. Then
+ he passed out. By the men&rsquo;s door he found some women spreading fish in the
+ sun. Eric greeted them, saying that when the Earl came back, for he was to
+ come on that morning, he would find him on the south-western rocks nigh to
+ where the Gudruda sank. This he begged of them to tell Atli, for he
+ desired speech with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The women wondered that Brighteyes should go forth thus and fully armed,
+ but, holding that he had some deed to do, they said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric came to the rocks, and there he sat all day long looking on the sea,
+ and grieving so bitterly that he thought his heart would burst within him.
+ For of all the days of Eric&rsquo;s life this was the heaviest, except one other
+ only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Swanhild, going to her bower, caused Koll the Half-witted to be
+ summoned. To him she spoke long and earnestly, and they made a shameful
+ plot together. Then she bade Koll watch for Atli&rsquo;s coming and, when he saw
+ the Earl leave his boats, to run to him and say that she would speak with
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this Swanhild sent a man across the firth to the stead where Hall of
+ Lithdale sat, bidding him to come to her at speed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the afternoon grew towards the evening, Koll, watching, saw the boats
+ of Atli draw to the landing-place. Then he went down, and, going to the
+ Earl, bowed before him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What wouldst thou, fellow, and who art thou?&rdquo; asked Atli.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am a man from Iceland; perchance, lord, thou sawest me in Asmund&rsquo;s hall
+ at Middalhof. I am sent here by the Lady Swanhild to say that she desires
+ speech with thee, and that at once.&rdquo; Then, seeing Skallagrim, Koll fled
+ back to the house, for he feared Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Atli was uneasy in his mind, and, saying nothing, he hurried up to the
+ hall, and through it into Swanhild&rsquo;s bower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There she sat on a couch, her eyes red with weeping, and her curling hair
+ unbound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What now, Swanhild?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Why lookest thou thus?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why look I thus, my lord?&rdquo; she answered heavily. &ldquo;Because I have to tell
+ thee that which I cannot find words to fit,&rdquo; and she ceased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak on,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Is aught wrong with Eric?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Swanhild drew near and told him a false tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it was done for a moment or so Atli stood still, and grew white
+ beneath his ruddy skin, white as his beard. Then he staggered back against
+ the wainscoting of the bower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Woman, thou liest!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Never will I believe so vile a thing of
+ Eric Brighteyes, whom I have loved.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would that I could not believe it!&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Would that I could
+ think it was but an evil dream! But alas! Nay, I will prove it. Suffer
+ that I summon Koll, the Icelander, who was my mother&rsquo;s thrall&mdash;Groa
+ who now is dead, for I have that tidings also. He saw something of this
+ thing, and he will bear me witness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Call the man,&rdquo; said Atli sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Koll was summoned, and told his lies with a bold face. He was so well
+ taught, and so closely did his story tally with that of Swanhild, that
+ Atli could find no flaw in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I am sure, Swanhild, that thou speakest truth,&rdquo; said the Earl when
+ Koll had gone. &ldquo;And now also I have somewhat to say to this Eric. For
+ thee, rest thyself; that which cannot be mended must be borne,&rdquo; and he
+ went out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, when Skallagrim came to the house he asked for Eric. The women told
+ him that Brighteyes had gone down to the sea, fully armed, in the morning,
+ and had not returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then there must be fighting toward, and that I am loth to miss,&rdquo; said
+ Skallagrim, and, axe aloft, he started for the south-western rocks at a
+ run. Skallagrim came to the rocks. There he found Eric, sitting in his
+ harness, looking out across the sea. The evening was wet and windy; the
+ rain beat upon him as he sat, but Eric took no heed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What seekest thou, lord?&rdquo; asked the Baresark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rest,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and I find none.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou seekest rest helm on head and sword in hand? This is a strange
+ thing, truly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stranger things have been Skallagrim. Wouldst thou hear a tale?&rdquo; and he
+ told him all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What said I?&rdquo; asked Skallagrim. &ldquo;We had fared better in London town.
+ Flying from the dove thou hast found the falcon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have found the falcon, comrade, and she has pecked out my eyes. Now I
+ would speak with Atli, and then I go hence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hence go the twain of us, lord. The Earl will be here presently and rough
+ words will fly in this rough weather. Is Whitefire sharp, Brighteyes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whitefire was sharp enough to shear my hair, Skallagrim; but if Atli
+ would strike let him lay on. Whitefire will not be aloft for him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That we shall see,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;At least, if thou art harmed
+ because of this loose quean, my axe will be aloft.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Keep thou thine axe in its place,&rdquo; said Eric, and as he spoke Atli came,
+ and with him many men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric rose and turned to meet the Earl, looking on him with sad eyes. For
+ Atli, his face was as the face of a trapped wolf, for he was mad with rage
+ at the shame that had been put upon him and the ill tale that Swanhild had
+ told of Eric&rsquo;s dealings with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems that the Earl has heard of these tidings,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I shall be spared the telling of them,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they stood face to face; Atli leaned upon his drawn sword, and his
+ wrath was so fierce that for a while he could not speak. At length he
+ found words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See ye that man, comrades?&rdquo; he said, pointing at Eric with the sword. &ldquo;He
+ has been my guest these many months. He has sat in my hall and eaten of my
+ bread, and I have loved him as a son. And wot ye how he has repaid me? He
+ has put me to the greatest shame, me and my wife the Lady Swanhild, whom I
+ left in his guard&mdash;to such shame, indeed, that I cannot speak it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True words, Earl,&rdquo; said Eric, while folk murmured and handled their
+ swords.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, but not all the truth,&rdquo; growled Skallagrim. &ldquo;Methinks the Earl has
+ heard a garbled tale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True words, thyself thou sayest it,&rdquo; went on Atli &ldquo;thou hound that I
+ saved from the sea! &lsquo;Ran&rsquo;s gift, Hela&rsquo;s gift,&rsquo; so runs the saw, and now
+ from Ran to Hela thou shalt go, thou mishandler of defenceless women!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is somewhat of which I know nothing,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And here is something of which thou shalt know,&rdquo; answered Atli, and he
+ shook his sword before Eric&rsquo;s eyes. &ldquo;Guard thyself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Earl; thou art old, and I have done the wrong&mdash;I may not fight
+ with thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art thou a coward also?&rdquo; said the Earl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some have deemed otherwise,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;but it is true that heavy heart
+ makes weak hand. Nevertheless this is my rede. With thee are ten men.
+ Stand thou aside and let them fall on me till I am slain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The odds are too heavy even for thee,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;Back to back,
+ lord, as we have stood aforetime, and let us play this game together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; cried Atli, &ldquo;this shame is mine, and I have sworn to Swanhild
+ that I will wipe it out in Eric&rsquo;s blood. Stand thou before me and draw!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric drew Whitefire and raised his shield. Atli the Earl rushed at
+ him and smote a great two-handed blow. Eric caught it on his shield and
+ suffered no harm; but he would not smite back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Atli dropped his point. &ldquo;Niddering art thou, and coward to the last!&rdquo; he
+ cried. &ldquo;See, men, Eric Brighteyes fears to fight. I am not come to this
+ that I will cut down a man who is too faint-hearted to give blow for blow.
+ This is my word: take ye your spear-shafts and push this coward to the
+ shore. Then put him in a boat and drive him hence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric grew red as the red light of sunset, for his manhood might not
+ bear this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take shield,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and, Earl, on thine own head be thy blood, for
+ none shall live to call Eric niddering and coward.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Atli laughed in his folly and his rage. He took a shield, and, once more
+ springing on Brighteyes, struck a great blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric parried, then whirled Whitefire on high and smote&mdash;once and once
+ only! Down rushed the bright blade like a star through the night. Sword
+ and shield did Atli lift to catch the blow. Through shield it sheared, and
+ arm that held the shield, through byrnie mail and deep into Earl Atli&rsquo;s
+ side. He fell prone to earth, while men held their breath, wondering at
+ the greatness of that stroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric leaned on Whitefire and looked at the old Earl upon the rock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Atli, thou hast had thy way,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and methinks things are
+ worse than they were before. But I will say this: would that I lay there
+ and thou stoodest to watch me die, for as lief would I have slain my
+ father as thee, Earl Atli. There lies Swanhild&rsquo;s work!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Atli gazed upwards into Eric&rsquo;s sad eyes and, while he gazed so, his rage
+ left him, and of a sudden a light brake upon his mind, as even then the
+ light of the setting sun brake through the driving mist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;draw near and speak with me ere I am sped. Methinks that
+ I have been beguiled and that thou didst not do this thing that Swanhild
+ said and Koll bore witness to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did Swanhild say, then, Earl Atli?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl told him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was to be looked for from her,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;though I never thought of
+ it. Now hearken!&rdquo; and he told him all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Atli groaned aloud. &ldquo;I know this now, Eric,&rdquo; he said: &ldquo;that thou speakest
+ truth, and once more I have been deceived. Eric, I forgive thee all, for
+ no man may fight against woman&rsquo;s witchcraft, and witch&rsquo;s wine. Swanhild is
+ evil to the heart. Yet, Eric, I lay this doom upon thee&mdash;I do not lay
+ it of my own will, for I would not harm thee, whom I love, but because of
+ the words that the Norns put in my mouth, for now I am fey in this the
+ hour of my death. Thou hast sinned, and that thou didst sin against thy
+ will shall avail thee nothing, for of thy sin fate shall fashion a handle
+ to the spear which pierces thee. Henceforth thou art accursed. For I tell
+ thee that this wicked woman Swanhild shall drag thee down to death, and
+ worse than death, and with thee those thou lovest. By witchcraft she
+ brought thee to Straumey, by lies she laid me here before thee. Now by
+ hate and might and cruel deeds shall she bring thee to lie more low than I
+ do. For, Eric, thou art bound to her, and thou shalt never loose the
+ bond!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Atli ceased a while, then spoke again more faintly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken, comrades,&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;my strength is well-nigh spent. Ye shall
+ swear four things to me&mdash;that ye will give Eric Brighteyes and
+ Skallagrim Lambstail safe passage from Straumey. That ye will tell
+ Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa&rsquo;s daughter and Atli&rsquo;s wife, that, at last, I
+ know her for what she is&mdash;a murderess, a harlot, a witch and a liar;
+ and that I forgive Eric whom she tricked, but that her I hate and spit
+ upon. That ye will slay Koll the Half-witted, Groa&rsquo;s thrall, who came
+ hither about two days gone, since by his lies he hath set an edge upon
+ this sword of falsehood. That ye will raise no blood-feud against Eric for
+ this my slaying, for I goaded him to the deed. Do ye swear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We swear,&rdquo; said the men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then farewell! And to thee farewell, also, Eric Brighteyes! Now take my
+ hand and hold it while I die. Behold! I give thee a new name, and by that
+ name thou shalt be called in story. I name thee <i>Eric the Unlucky</i>.
+ Of all tales that are told, thine shall be the greatest. A mighty stroke
+ that was of thine&mdash;a mighty stroke! Farewell!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then his head fell back upon the rock and Earl Atli died. And as he died
+ the last rays of light went out of the sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW HALL OF LITHDALE TOOK TIDINGS TO ICELAND
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now on the same night that Atli died at the hand of Eric, Swanhild spake
+ with Hall of Lithdale, whom she had summoned from the mainland. She bade
+ him do this: take passage in a certain ship that should sail for Iceland
+ on the morrow from the island that is called Westra, and there tell all
+ these tidings of the ill-doings of Eric and of the slaying of Atli by his
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou shalt say this,&rdquo; she went on, &ldquo;that Eric had been my love for long,
+ but that at length the matter came to the ears of Atli, the Earl. Then,
+ holding this the greatest shame, he went on holmgang with Eric and was
+ slain by him. This shalt thou add to thy tale also, that presently Eric
+ and I will wed, and that Eric shall rule as Earl in Orkneys. Now these
+ tidings must soon come to the ears of Gudruda the Fair, and she will send
+ for thee, and question thee straightly concerning them, and thou shalt
+ tell her the tale as thou toldest it at first. Then thou shalt give
+ Gudruda this packet, which I send her as a gift, saying, that I bade her
+ remember a certain oath which Eric took as to the cutting of his hair. And
+ when she sees that which is within the packet is somewhat stained, tell
+ her that is but the blood of Atli that is upon it, as his blood is upon
+ Eric&rsquo;s hands. Now remember thou this, Hall, that if thou fail in the
+ errand thy life shall pay forfeit, for presently I will also come to
+ Iceland and hear how thou hast sped.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Swanhild gave him faring-money and gifts of wadmal and gold rings,
+ promising that he should have so much again when she came to Iceland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hall said that he would do all these things, and went at once; nor did he
+ fail in his tasks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Atli being dead, Eric loosed his hand and called to the men to take up his
+ body and bear it to the hall. This they did. Eric stood and watched them
+ till they were lost in the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whither now, lord?&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It matters little,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;What is thy counsel?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is my counsel. That we take ship and sail back to the King in
+ London. There we will tell all this tale. It is a far cry from Straumey to
+ London town, and there we shall sit in peace, for the King will think
+ little of the slaying of an Orkney Earl in a brawl about a woman. Mayhap,
+ too, the Lady Elfrida will not set great store by it. Therefore, I say,
+ let us fare back to London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In but one place am I at home, and that is Iceland,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Thither
+ I will go, Skallagrim, though it be but to miss friend from stead and
+ bride from bed. At the least I shall find Ospakar there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen, lord!&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;Was it not my rede that we should bide
+ this winter through in London? Thou wouldst none of it, and what came
+ about? Our ship is sunk, gone are our comrades, thine honour is tarnished,
+ and dead is thy host at thine own hand. Yet I say all is not lost. Let us
+ hence south, and see no more of Swanhild, of Gudruda, of Björn and
+ Ospakar. So shall we break the spell. But if thou goest to Iceland, I am
+ sure of this: that the evil fate which Atli foretold will fall on thee,
+ and the days to come shall be even more unlucky than the days that have
+ been.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may be so,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Methinks, indeed, it will be so. Henceforth I
+ am Eric the Unlucky. I will go back to Iceland and there play out the
+ game. I care little if I live or am slain&mdash;I have no more joy in my
+ life. I stand alone, like a fir upon a mountain-top, and every wind from
+ heaven and every storm of hail and snow beats upon my head. But I say to
+ thee, Skallagrim: go thy road, and leave a luckless man to his ill fate.
+ Otherwise it shall be thine also. Good friend hast thou been to me; now
+ let us part and wend south and north. The King will be glad to greet thee
+ yonder in London, Lambstail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But one severing shall we know, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and that shall
+ be sword&rsquo;s work, nor will it be for long. It is ill to speak such words as
+ these of the parting of lord and thrall. Bethink thee of the oath I swore
+ on Mosfell. Let us go north, since it is thy will: in fifty years it will
+ count for little which way we wended from the Isles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they went together down to the shore, and, finding a boat and men who
+ as yet knew nothing of what had chanced to Atli, they sailed across the
+ firth at the rising of the moon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days afterwards they found a ship at Wick that was bound for Fareys,
+ and sailed in her, Eric buying a passage with the half of a gold ring that
+ the King had given him in London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here at Fareys they sat a month or more; but not in the Earl&rsquo;s hall as
+ when Eric came with honour in the Gudruda, but in a farmer&rsquo;s stead. For
+ the tale of Eric&rsquo;s dealings with Atli and Atli&rsquo;s wife had reached Fareys,
+ and the Earl there had been a friend of Atli&rsquo;s. Moreover, Eric was now a
+ poor man, having neither ship nor goods, nor friends. Therefore all looked
+ coldly on him, though they wondered at his beauty and his might. Still,
+ they dared not to speak ill or make a mock of him; for, two men having
+ done so, were nearly slain of Skallagrim, who seized the twain by the
+ throat, one in either hand, and dashed their heads together. After that
+ men said little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They sat there a month, till at length a chapman put in at Fareys, bound
+ for Iceland, and they took passage with him, Eric paying the other half of
+ his gold ring for ship-room. The chapman was not willing to give them
+ place at first, for he, too, had heard the tale; but Skallagrim offered
+ him choice, either to do so or to go on holmgang with him. Then the
+ chapman gave them passage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it is told that when his thralls and house-carles bore the corpse of
+ Atli the Earl to his hall in Straumey, Swanhild met it and wept over it.
+ And when the spokesman among them stood forward and told her those words
+ that Atli had bidden them to say to her, sparing none, she spoke thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lord was distraught and weak with loss of blood when he spoke thus.
+ The tale I told him was true, and now Eric has added to his sin by
+ shedding the blood of him whom he wronged so sorely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thereafter she spoke so sweetly and with so much gentleness, craft,
+ and wisdom that, though they still doubted them, all men held her words
+ weighty. For Swanhild had this art, that she could make the false sound
+ true in the ears of men and the true sound false.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, being mindful of their oath, they hunted for Koll and found him.
+ And when the thrall knew that they would slay him he ran thence screaming.
+ Nor did Swanhild lift a hand to save his life, for she desired that Koll
+ should die, lest he should bear witness against her. Away he ran towards
+ the cliffs, and after him sped Atli&rsquo;s house-carles, till he came to the
+ great cliffs that edge in the sea. Now they were close upon him and their
+ swords were aloft. Then, sooner than know the kiss of steel, the liar
+ leapt from the cliffs and was crushed, dying miserably on the rocks below.
+ This was the end of Koll the Half-witted, Groa&rsquo;s thrall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild sat in Straumey for a while, and took all Atli&rsquo;s heritage into
+ her keeping, for he had no male kin; nor did any say her nay. Also she
+ called in the moneys that he had out at interest, and that was a great
+ sum, for Atli was a careful and a wealthy man. Then Swanhild made ready to
+ go to Iceland. Atli had a great dragon of war, and she manned that ship
+ and filled it with stores and all things needful. This done, she set
+ stewards and grieves over the Orkney lands and farms, and, when the Earl
+ was six weeks dead, she sailed for Iceland, giving out that she went
+ thither to set a blood-suit on foot against Eric for the death of Atli,
+ her lord. There she came in safety just as folk rode to the Thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Hall of Lithdale came to Iceland and told his tale of the doings of
+ Eric and the death of Atli. Oft and loud he told it, and soon people
+ gossiped of it in field and fair and stead. Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son, heard
+ this talk and sent for Hall. To him also Hall told the tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Björn, &ldquo;we will go to my sister Gudruda the Fair, and learn
+ how she takes these tidings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they went in to where Gudruda sat spinning in the hall, singing as she
+ span.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greeting, Gudruda,&rdquo; said Björn; &ldquo;say, hast thou tidings of Eric
+ Brighteyes, thy betrothed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no tidings,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then here is one who brings them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now for the first time Gudruda the Fair saw Hall of Lithdale. Up she
+ sprang. &ldquo;Thou hast tidings of Eric, Hall? Ah! thou art welcome, for no
+ tidings have come of him for many a month. Speak on,&rdquo; and she pressed her
+ hand against her heart and leaned towards him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My tidings are ill, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is Eric dead? Say not that my love is dead!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is worse than dead,&rdquo; said Hall. &ldquo;He is shamed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There thou liest, Hall,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Shame and Eric are things apart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayst thou think so when thou hast heard my tale, lady,&rdquo; said Hall, &ldquo;for
+ I am sad at heart to speak it of one who was my mate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak on, I say,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, in such a voice that Hall shrank from
+ her. &ldquo;Speak on; but of this I warn thee: that if in one word thou liest,
+ that shall be thy death when Eric comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Hall was afraid, thinking of the axe of Skallagrim. Still, he might
+ not go back upon his word. So he began at the beginning, telling the story
+ of how he was wounded in the fight with Ospakar&rsquo;s ships and left Farey
+ isles, and how he came thence to Scotland and sat in Atli&rsquo;s hall on
+ Orkneys. Then he told how the Gudruda was wrecked on Straumey, and, of all
+ aboard, Eric and Skallagrim alone were saved because of Swanhild&rsquo;s dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Herein I see witch-work,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Hall told that Eric became Swanhild&rsquo;s love, but of the other tale
+ which Swanhild had whispered to Atli he said nothing. For he knew that
+ Gudruda would not believe this, and, moreover, if it were so, Swanhild had
+ not sent the token which he should give.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may well be,&rdquo; said Gudruda, proudly; &ldquo;Swanhild is fair and light of
+ mind. Perchance she led Brighteyes into this snare.&rdquo; But, though she spoke
+ thus, bitter jealousy and anger burned in her breast and she remembered
+ the sight which she had seen when Eric and Swanhild met on the morn of
+ Atli&rsquo;s wedding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Hall told of the slaying of Atli the Good by Eric, but he said
+ nothing of the Earl&rsquo;s dying words, nor of how he goaded Brighteyes with
+ his bitter words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was an ill deed in sooth,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;for Eric to slay an old man
+ whom he had wronged. Still, it may chance that he was driven to it for his
+ own life&rsquo;s sake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Hall said that he had seen Swanhild after Atli&rsquo;s slaying, and that
+ she had told him that she and Eric should wed shortly, and that Eric would
+ rule in Orkneys by her side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda asked if that was all his tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, lady,&rdquo; answered Hall, &ldquo;that is all my tale, for after that I sailed
+ and know not what happened. But I am charged to give something to thee,
+ and that by the Lady Swanhild. She bade me say this also: that, when thou
+ lookest on the gift, thou shouldst think on a certain oath which Eric took
+ as to the cutting of his hair.&rdquo; And he drew a linen packet from his breast
+ and gave it to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thrice Gudruda looked on it, fearing to open it. Then, seeing the smile of
+ mockery on Björn&rsquo;s cold face, she took the shears that hung at her side
+ and cut the thread with them. And as she cut, a lock of golden hair rose
+ from the packet, untwisting itself like a living snake. The lock was long,
+ and its end was caked with gore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whose hair is this?&rdquo; said Gudruda, though she knew the hair well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric&rsquo;s hair,&rdquo; said Hall, &ldquo;that Swanhild cut from his head with Eric&rsquo;s
+ sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda put her hand to her bosom. She drew out a satchel, and from
+ the satchel a lock of yellow hair. Side by side she placed the locks,
+ looking first at one and then at the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is Eric&rsquo;s hair in sooth,&rdquo; she said&mdash;&ldquo;Eric&rsquo;s hair that he swore
+ none but I should cut! Eric&rsquo;s hair that Swanhild shore with Whitefire from
+ Eric&rsquo;s head&mdash;Whitefire whereon we plighted troth! Say now, whose
+ blood is this that stains the hair of Eric?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is Atli&rsquo;s blood, whom Eric first dishonoured and then slew with his
+ own hand,&rdquo; answered Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now there burned a fire on the hearth, for the day was cold. Gudruda the
+ Fair stood over the fire and with either hand she let the two locks of
+ Eric&rsquo;s hair fall upon the embers. Slowly they twisted up and burned. She
+ watched them burn, then she threw up her hands and with a great cry fled
+ from the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Björn and Hall of Lithdale looked on each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hadst best go hence!&rdquo; said Björn; &ldquo;and of this I warn thee, Hall,
+ though I hold thy tidings good, that, if thou hast spoken one false word,
+ that will be thy death. For then it would be better for thee to face all
+ the wolves in Iceland than to stand before Eric in his rage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again Hall bethought himself of the axe of Skallagrim, and he went out
+ heavily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That day a messenger came from Gudruda to Björn, saying that she would
+ speak with him. He went to where she sat alone upon her bed. Her face was
+ white as death, and her dark eyes glowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric has dealt badly with thee, sister, to bring thee to this sorrow,&rdquo;
+ said Björn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak no evil of Eric to me,&rdquo; Gudruda answered. &ldquo;The evil that he has
+ done will be paid back to him; there is little need for thee to heap words
+ upon his head. Hearken, Björn my brother: is it yet thy will that I should
+ wed Ospakar Blacktooth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is my will, surely. There is no match in Iceland as this Ospakar,
+ and I should win many friends by it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do this then, Björn. Send messengers to Swinefell and say to Ospakar that
+ if he would still wed Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, let him come to
+ Middalhof when folk ride from the Thing and he shall not go hence alone.
+ Nay, I have done. Now, I pray thee speak no more to me of Eric or of
+ Ospakar. Of the one I have seen and heard enough, and of the other I shall
+ hear and see enough in the years that are to come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC CAME HOME AGAIN
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild made a good passage from the Orkneys, and was in Iceland
+ thirty-five days before Eric and Skallagrim set foot there. But she did
+ not land by Westman Isles, for she had no wish to face Gudruda at that
+ time, but by Reyjaness. Now she rode thence with her company to
+ Thingvalla, for here all men were gathered for the Thing. At first people
+ hung aloof from her, notwithstanding her wealth and beauty; but Swanhild
+ knew well how to win the hearts of men. For now she told the same story of
+ Eric that she had told to Atli, and there were none to say her nay. So it
+ came to pass that she was believed, and Eric Brighteyes held to be shamed
+ indeed. Now, too, she set a suit on foot against Eric for the death of
+ Atli at his hand, claiming that sentence of the greater outlawry should be
+ passed against him, and that his lands at Coldback in the Marsh on Ran
+ River should be given, half to her in atonement for the Earl&rsquo;s death, and
+ half to the men of Eric&rsquo;s quarter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the day of the opening of the Thing Ospakar Blacktooth came from the
+ north, and with him his son Gizur and a great company of men. Ospakar was
+ blithe, for from the Thing he should ride to Middalhof, there to wed
+ Gudruda the Fair. Then Swanhild clad herself in beautiful attire, and,
+ taking men with her, went to the booth of Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blacktooth sat in his booth and by him sat Gizur his son the Lawman. When
+ he saw a beauteous lady, very richly clad, enter the booth he did not know
+ who it might be. But Gizur knew her well, for he could never put Swanhild
+ from his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lo! here comes Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli&rsquo;s widow,&rdquo; said Gizur,
+ flushing red with joy at the sight of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Ospakar greeted her heartily, and made place for her by him at the
+ top of the booth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ospakar Blacktooth,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I am come to ask this of thee: that thou
+ shalt befriend me in the suit which I have against Eric Brighteyes for the
+ slaying of Earl Atli, my husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou couldst have come to no man who is more willing,&rdquo; said Ospakar,
+ &ldquo;for, if thou hast something against Eric, I have yet more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would ask this, too, Ospakar: that thy son Gizur should take up my suit
+ and plead it; for I know well that he is the most skilful of all lawmen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will do that,&rdquo; said Gizur, his eyes yet fixed upon her face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I looked for no less from thee,&rdquo; said Swanhild, &ldquo;and be sure of this,
+ that thou shalt not plead for nothing,&rdquo; and she glanced at him meaningly.
+ Then she set out her case with a lying tongue, and afterwards went back to
+ her booth, glad at heart. For now she learned that Hall had not failed in
+ his errand, seeing that Gudruda was about to wed Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gizur gave warning of the blood-suit, and the end of it was that, though
+ he had no notice and was not there to answer to the charge, against all
+ right and custom Eric was declared outlaw and his lands were given, half
+ to Swanhild and half to the men of his quarter. For now all held that
+ Swanhild&rsquo;s was a true tale, and Eric the most shameful of men, and
+ therefore they were willing to stretch the law against him. Also, being
+ absent, he had few friends, and those men of small account; whereas
+ Ospakar, who backed Swanhild&rsquo;s suit, was the most powerful of the northern
+ chiefs, as Gizur was the most skilled lawman in Iceland. Moreover, Björn
+ the Priest, Asmund&rsquo;s son, was among the judges, and, though Swanhild&rsquo;s
+ tale seemed strange to him after that which he had heard from Hall of
+ Lithdale, he loved Eric little. He feared also that if Eric came a free
+ man to Iceland before Gudruda was wed to Ospakar, her love would conquer
+ her anger, for he could see well that she still loved Brighteyes.
+ Therefore he strove with might and main that Eric should be brought in
+ guilty, nor did he fail in this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the end of it was that Eric Brighteyes was outlawed, his lands declared
+ forfeit, and his head a wolf&rsquo;s head, to be taken by him who might, should
+ he set foot in Iceland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereafter, the Althing being ended, Björn, Gizur, and Ospakar, with all
+ their company, rode away to Middalhof to sit at the marriage-feast. But
+ Swanhild and her folk went by sea in the long war-ship to Westmans. For
+ this was her plan: to seize on Coldback and to sit there for a while, till
+ she saw if Eric came out to Iceland. Also she desired to see the wedding
+ of Ospakar and Gudruda, for she had been bidden to it by Björn, her
+ half-brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar came to Middalhof, and found Gudruda waiting his coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stood in the great hall, pale and cold as April snow, and greeted him
+ courteously. But when he would have kissed her, she shrank from him, for
+ now he was more hideous in her sight than he had ever been, and she
+ loathed him in her heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night there was feasting in the hall, and at the feast Gudruda heard
+ that Eric had been made outlaw. Then she spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is an ill deed, thus to judge an absent man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, Gudruda,&rdquo; said Björn in her ear, &ldquo;hast thou not also judged Eric who
+ is absent?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned her head and spoke no more of Eric; but Björn&rsquo;s words fixed
+ themselves in her heart like arrows. The tale was strange to her, for it
+ seemed that Eric had been made outlaw at Swanhild&rsquo;s suit, and yet Eric was
+ Swanhild&rsquo;s love: for Swanhild&rsquo;s self had sent the lock of Brighteyes&rsquo; hair
+ by Hall, saying that he was her love and soon would wed her. How, then,
+ did Swanhild bring a suit against him who should be her husband? Moreover,
+ she heard that Swanhild sailed down to Coldback, and was bidden to the
+ marriage-feast, that should be on the third day from now. Could it be,
+ then, when all was said and done, that Eric was less faithless than she
+ deemed? Gudruda&rsquo;s heart stood still and the blood rushed to her brow when
+ she thought on it. Also, even if it were so, it was now too late. And
+ surely it was not so, for had not Eric been made outlaw? Men were not made
+ outlaw for a little thing. Nay, she would meet her fate, and ask no more
+ of Eric and his doings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morrow, as Gudruda sat in her chamber, it was told her that
+ Saevuna, Thorgrimur&rsquo;s widow and Eric&rsquo;s mother, had come from Coldback to
+ speak with her. For, after the death of Asmund and of Unna, Saevuna had
+ moved back to Coldback on the Marsh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, how can this be?&rdquo; said Gudruda astonished, for she knew well that
+ Saevuna was now both blind and bed-ridden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has been borne here in a chair,&rdquo; said the woman who told her, &ldquo;and
+ that is a strange sight to see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first Gudruda was minded to say her nay; but her heart softened, and
+ she bade them bring Saevuna in. Presently she came, being set in a chair
+ upon the shoulders of four men. She was white to see, for sickness had
+ aged her much, and she stared about her with sightless eyes. But she was
+ still tall and straight, and her face was stern to look on. To Gudruda it
+ seemed like that of Eric when he was angered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I nigh to Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter?&rdquo; asked Saevuna.
+ &ldquo;Methinks I hear her breathe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am here, mother,&rdquo; said Gudruda. &ldquo;What is thy will with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Set down, carles, and begone!&rdquo; quoth Saevuna; &ldquo;that which I have to say I
+ would say alone. When I summon you, come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The carles set down the chair upon the floor and went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gudruda,&rdquo; said the dame, &ldquo;I am risen from my deathbed, and I have caused
+ myself to be borne on my last journey here across the meads, that I may
+ speak with thee and warn thee. I hear that thou hast put away my son, Eric
+ Brighteyes, to whom thou art sworn in marriage, and art about to give
+ thyself to Ospakar Blacktooth. I hear also that thou hast done this deed
+ because a certain man, Hall of Lithdale&mdash;whom from his youth up I
+ have known for a liar and a knave, and whom thou thyself didst mistrust in
+ years gone by&mdash;has come hither to Iceland from Orkneys, bearing a
+ tale of Eric&rsquo;s dealings with thy half-sister Swanhild. This I hear,
+ further: that Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s widow, hath come out to Iceland and laid a
+ suit against Eric for the slaying of Atli the Earl, her husband, and that
+ Eric has been outlawed and his lands at Coldback are forfeit. Tell me now,
+ Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, if these tales be true?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The tales are true, mother,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then hearken to me, girl. Eric sprang from my womb, who of all living men
+ is the best and first, as he is the bravest and most strong. I have reared
+ this Eric from a babe and I know his heart well. Now I tell thee this,
+ that, whatever Eric has done or left undone, naught of dishonour is on his
+ hands. Mayhap Swanhild has deceived him&mdash;thou art a woman, and thou
+ knowest well the arts which women have, and the strength that Freya gives
+ them. Well thou knowest, also, of what breed this Swanhild came; and
+ perchance thou canst remember how she dealt with thee, and with what mind
+ she looked on Eric. Perchance thou canst remember how she plotted against
+ thee and Eric&mdash;ay, how she thrust thee from Goldfoss brink. Say,
+ then, wilt thou take her word? Wilt thou take the word of this
+ witch-daughter of a witch? Wilt thou not think on Groa, her mother, and of
+ Groa&rsquo;s dealings with thy father, and with Unna my kinswoman? As the mother
+ is, so shall the daughter be. Wilt thou cast Eric aside, and that
+ unheard?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no more room for doubt, mother,&rdquo; said Gudruda. &ldquo;I have proof of
+ this: that Eric has forsaken me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So thou thinkest, child; but I tell thee that thou art wrong! Eric loves
+ thee now as he loved thee aforetime, and will love thee always.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would that I could believe it!&rdquo; said Gudruda. &ldquo;If I could believe that
+ Eric still loved me&mdash;ay, even though he had been faithless to me&mdash;I
+ would die ere I wed Ospakar!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art foolish, Gudruda, and thou shalt rue thy folly bitterly. I am
+ outworn, and death draws near to me&mdash;far from me now are hates and
+ loves, hopes and fears; but I know this: that woman is mad who, loving a
+ man, weds where she loves not. Shame shall be her portion and bitterness
+ her bread. Unhappy shall she live, and when she comes to die, but as a
+ wilderness&mdash;but as the desolate winter snow, shall be the record of
+ her days!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda wept aloud. &ldquo;What is done is done,&rdquo; she cried; &ldquo;the bridegroom
+ sits within the hall&mdash;the bride awaits him in the bower. What is done
+ is done&mdash;I may hope no more to be saved from Ospakar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is done is done, yet it can be brought to nothing; but soon that
+ shall be done which may never be undone! Gudruda, fare thee well! Never
+ shall I listen to thy voice again. I hold thee shameless, thou unfaithful
+ woman, who in thy foolish jealousy art ready to sell thyself to the arms
+ of one thou hatest! Ho! carles; come hither. Bear me hence!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the men came in and took up Saevuna&rsquo;s chair. Gudruda watched them bear
+ her forth. Then suddenly she sprang from her seat and ran after her into
+ the hall, weeping bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now as Saevuna, Eric&rsquo;s mother, was carried out she was met by Ospakar and
+ Björn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay,&rdquo; said Björn. &ldquo;What does this carline here?&mdash;and why weeps
+ Gudruda, my sister?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men halted. &ldquo;Who calls me &lsquo;carline&rsquo;?&rdquo; said Saevuna. &ldquo;Is the voice I
+ hear the voice of Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is my voice, truly,&rdquo; said Björn, &ldquo;and I would know this&mdash;and this
+ would Ospakar, who stands at my side, know also&mdash;why thou comest
+ here, carline? and why Gudruda weeps?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gudruda weeps because she has good cause to weep, Björn. She weeps
+ because she has betrayed her love, Eric Brighteyes, my son, and is about
+ to be sold in marriage&mdash;to be sold to thee, Ospakar Blacktooth, like
+ a heifer at a fair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Björn grew angry and cursed Saevuna, nor did Ospakar spare to add his
+ ill words. But the old dame sat in her chair, listening silently till all
+ their curses were spent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye are evil, the twain of you,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and ye have told lies of Eric,
+ my son; and ye have taken his bride for lust and greed, playing on the
+ jealous folly of a maid like harpers on a harp. Now I tell you this, Björn
+ and Ospakar! My blind eyes are opened and I see this hall of Middalhof,
+ and lo! it is but a gore of blood! Blood flows upon the board&mdash;blood
+ streams along the floor, and ye&mdash;ye twain!&mdash;lie dead thereon,
+ and about your shapes are shrouds, and on her feet are Hell-shoon! Eric
+ comes and Whitefire is aloft, and no more shall ye stand before him whom
+ ye have slandered than stands the birch before the lightning stroke! Eric
+ comes! I see his angry eyes&mdash;I see his helm flash in the door-place!
+ Red was that marriage-feast at which sat Unna, my kinswoman, and Asmund,
+ thy father&mdash;redder shall be the feast where sit Gudruda, thy sister,
+ and Ospakar! The wolf howls at thy door, Björn! the grave-worm opens his
+ mouth! trolls run to and fro upon thy threshold, and the ghosts of men
+ speed Hellwards! Ill were the deeds of Groa&mdash;worse shall be the deeds
+ of Groa&rsquo;s daughter! Red is thy hall with blood, Björn!&mdash;for Whitefire
+ is aloft and&mdash;<i>I tell thee Eric comes!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;and with one
+ great cry she fell back&mdash;dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they stood amazed, and trembling in their fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Saevuna hath spoken strange words,&rdquo; said Björn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall we be frightened by a dead hag?&rdquo; quoth Ospakar, drawing his breath
+ again. &ldquo;Fellows, bear this carrion forth, or we fling it to the dogs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the men tied the body of Saevuna, Thorgrimur&rsquo;s widow, Eric&rsquo;s mother,
+ fast in the chair, and bore it thence. But when at length they came to
+ Coldback, they found that Swanhild was there with all her following, and
+ had driven Eric&rsquo;s grieve and his folk to the fells. But one old carline,
+ who had been nurse to Eric, was left there, and she sat wailing in an
+ outhouse, being too weak to move.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the men set down the corpse of Saevuna in the outhouse, and, having
+ told all their tale to the carline, they fled also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night passed, and passed the morrow; but on the next day at dawn Eric
+ Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail landed near Westman Isles. They had
+ made a bad passage from Fareys, having been beat about by contrary winds;
+ but at length they came safe and well to land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this was the day of the marriage-feast of Gudruda the Fair and
+ Ospakar; but Eric knew nothing of these tidings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where to now, lord?&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Coldback first, to see my mother, if she yet lives, and to learn
+ tidings of Gudruda. Then as it may chance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near to the beach was a yeoman&rsquo;s house. Thither they went to hire horses;
+ but none were in the house, for all had gone to Gudruda&rsquo;s marriage-feast.
+ In the home meadow ran two good horses, and in the outhouses were saddles
+ and bridles. They caught the horses, saddled them and rode for Coldback.
+ When they had ridden for something over an hour they came to the crest of
+ a height whence they could see Coldback in the Marsh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric drew rein and looked, and his heart swelled within him at the sight
+ of the place where he was born. But as he looked he saw a great train of
+ people ride away from Coldback towards Middalhof&mdash;and in the company
+ a woman wearing a purple cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now what may this mean?&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ride on and we shall learn,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they rode on, and as they rode Eric&rsquo;s breast grew heavy with fear. Now
+ they passed up the banked way through the home meadows of the house, but
+ they could see no one; and now they were at the door. Down sprang Eric and
+ walked into the hall. But none were there to greet him, though a fire yet
+ burned upon the earth. Only a gaunt hound wandered about the hall, and,
+ seeing him, sprang towards him, growling. Eric knew him for his old
+ wolf-hound, and called him by his name. The dog listened, then ran up and
+ smelt his hands, and straightway howled with joy and leapt upon him. For a
+ while he leapt thus, while Eric stared around him wondering and sad at
+ heart. Then the dog ran to the door and stopped, whining. Eric followed
+ after him. The hound passed through the entrance, and across the yard till
+ he came to an outhouse. Here the dog stopped and scratched at the door,
+ still whining. Eric thrust it open. Lo! there before him sat Saevuna, his
+ mother, dead in a chair, and at her feet crouched the carline&mdash;she
+ who had been Eric&rsquo;s nurse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now he grasped the door-posts to steady himself, and his shadow fell upon
+ the white face of his mother and the old carline at her feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC WAS A GUEST AT THE WEDDING-FEAST OF GUDRUDA THE FAIR
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Eric looked, but said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who art thou?&rdquo; whined the carline, gazing up at him with tear-blinded
+ eyes. But Eric&rsquo;s face was in the shadow, and she only saw the glint of his
+ golden hair and the flash of the golden helm. For Eric could not speak yet
+ a while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art thou one of the Swanhild&rsquo;s folk, come to drive me hence with the
+ rest? Good sir, I cannot go to the fells, my limbs are too weak. Slay me,
+ if thou wilt, but drive me not from this,&rdquo; and she pointed to the corpse.
+ &ldquo;Say now, will thou not help me to give it burial? It is unmeet that she
+ who in her time had husband, and goods, and son, should lie unburied like
+ a dead cow on the fells. I have still a hundred in silver, if I might but
+ come at it. It is hidden, sir, and I will pay thee if thou wilt help me to
+ bury her. These old hands are too feeble to dig a grave, nor could I bear
+ her there alone if it were dug. Thou wilt not help me?&mdash;then may
+ thine own mother&rsquo;s bones lie uncovered, and be picked of gulls and ravens.
+ Oh, that Eric Brighteyes would come home again! Oh, that Eric was here!
+ there is work to do and never a man to do it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric gave a great sob and cried, &ldquo;Nurse, nurse! knowest thou me not!
+ <i>I</i> am Eric Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She uttered a loud cry, and, clasping him by the knees, looked up into his
+ face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks be to Odin! Thou art Eric&mdash;Eric come home again! But alas,
+ thou hast come too late!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What has happened, then?&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What has happened? All evil things. Thou art outlawed, Eric, at the suit
+ of Swanhild for the slaying of Atli the Earl. Swanhild sits here in
+ Coldback, for she hath seized thy lands. Saevuna, thy mother, died two
+ days ago in the hall of Middalhof, whither she went to speak with
+ Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gudruda! what of Gudruda?&rdquo; cried Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, Brighteyes: to-day she weds Ospakar Blacktooth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric covered his face with his hand. Presently he lifted it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art rich in evil tidings, nurse, though, it would seem, poor in all
+ besides. Tell me at what hour is the wedding-feast?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An hour after noon, Eric; but now Swanhild has ridden thither with her
+ company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then room must be found at Middalhof for one more guest,&rdquo; said Eric, and
+ laughed aloud. &ldquo;Go on!&mdash;pour out thy evil news and spare me not!&mdash;for
+ nothing has any more power to harm me now! Come hither, Skallagrim, and
+ see and hearken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim came and looked on the face of dead Saevuna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am outlawed at Swanhild&rsquo;s suit, Lambstail. My life lies in thy hand, if
+ so be thou wouldst take it! Hew off my head, if thou wilt, and bear it to
+ Gudruda the Fair&mdash;she will thank thee for the gift. Lay on,
+ Lambstail; lay on with that axe of thine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Child&rsquo;s talk!&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Child&rsquo;s talk, but man&rsquo;s work! Thou hast not heard the tale out. Swanhild
+ hath seized my lands and sits here at Coldback! And&mdash;what thinkest
+ thou, Skallagrim?&mdash;but now she has ridden a-guesting to the
+ marriage-feast of Ospakar Blacktooth with Gudruda the Fair! Swanhild at
+ Gudruda&rsquo;s wedding!&mdash;the eagle in the wild swan&rsquo;s nest! But there will
+ be another guest,&rdquo; and again he laughed aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Two</i> other guests,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More of thy tale, old nurse!&mdash;more of thy tale!&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;No
+ better didst thou ever tell me when, as a lad, I sat by thee, in the ingle
+ o&rsquo; winter nights&mdash;and the company is fitting to the tale!&rdquo; and he
+ pointed to dead Saevuna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the carline told on. She told how Hall of Lithdale had come out to
+ Iceland, and of the story that he bore to Gudruda, and of the giving of
+ the lock of hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did I say, lord?&rdquo; broke in Skallagrim&mdash;&ldquo;that in Hall thou hadst
+ let a weasel go who would live to nip thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Him I will surely live to shorten by a head,&rdquo; quoth Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, lord, this one for me&mdash;Ospakar for thee, Hall for me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As thou wilt, Baresark. Among so many there is room to pick and choose.
+ Tell on, nurse!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she told how Swanhild came out to Iceland, and, having won Ospakar
+ Blacktooth and Gizur to her side, had laid a suit against Eric at the
+ Thing, and there bore false witness against him, so that Brighteyes was
+ declared outlaw, being absent. She told, too, how Gudruda had betrothed
+ herself to Ospakar, and how Swanhild had moved down to Coldback and seized
+ the lands. Lastly she told of the rising of Saevuna from her deathbed, of
+ her going to Middalhof, of the words she spoke to Björn and Ospakar, and
+ of her death in the hall at Middalhof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When all was told, Eric stooped and kissed the cold brow of his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is little time to bury thee now, my mother,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and
+ perchance before six hours are sped there will be one to bury at thy side.
+ Nevertheless, thou shalt sit in a better place than this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he cut loose the cords that bound the body of Saevuna to the chair,
+ and, lifting it in his arms, bore it to the hall. There he set the corpse
+ in the high seat of the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We need not start yet a while, Skallagrim,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;if indeed thou
+ wouldst go a-guesting with me to Middalhof. Therefore let us eat and
+ drink, for there are deeds to do this day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they found meat and mead and ate and drank. Then Eric washed himself,
+ combed out his golden locks, and looked well to his harness and to
+ Whitefire&rsquo;s edge. Skallagrim also ground his great axe upon the whetstone
+ in the yard, singing as he ground. When all was ready, the horses were
+ caught, and Eric spoke to the carline:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken, nurse. If it may be that thou canst find any of our folk&mdash;and
+ perchance now that they see that Swanhild has ridden to Middalhof some one
+ of them will come down to spy&mdash;thou shalt say this to them. Thou
+ shalt say that, if Eric Brighteyes yet lives, he will be at the foot of
+ Mosfell to-morrow before midday, and if, for the sake of old days and
+ fellowship, they are minded to befriend a friendless man, let them come
+ thither with food, for by then food will be needed, and I will speak with
+ them. And now farewell,&rdquo; and Eric kissed her and went, leaving her
+ weeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it chanced, before another hour was sped, Jon, Eric&rsquo;s thrall, who had
+ stayed at home in Iceland, seeing Coldback empty, crept down from the
+ fells and looked in. The carline saw him, and told him these tidings. Then
+ he went thence to find the other men. Having found them he told them
+ Eric&rsquo;s words, and a great gladness came upon them when they learned that
+ Brighteyes still lived, and was in Iceland. Then they gathered food and
+ gear, and rode away to the foot of Mosfell that is now called Ericsfell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ospakar sat in the hall at Middalhof, near to the high seat. He was fully
+ armed, and a black helm with a raven&rsquo;s crest was on his head. For, though
+ he said nothing of it, not a little did he fear that Saevuna spoke sooth&mdash;that
+ her words would come true, and, before this day was done, he and Eric
+ should once more stand face to face. At his side sat Gudruda the Fair,
+ robed in white, a worked head-dress on her head, golden clasps upon her
+ breast and golden rings about her arms. Never had she been more beautiful
+ to see; but her face was whiter than her robes. She looked with loathing
+ on Blacktooth at her side, rough like a bear, and hideous as a troll. But
+ he looked on her with longing, and laughed from side to side of his great
+ mouth when he thought that at last he had got her for his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, if Eric would but come, faithless though he be!&mdash;if Eric would
+ but come!&rdquo; thought Gudruda; but no Eric came to save her. The guests
+ gathered fast, and presently Swanhild swept in with all her company,
+ wrapped about in her purple cloak. She came up to the high seat where
+ Gudruda sat, and bent the knee before her, looking on her with lovely
+ mocking face and hate in her blue eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greeting, Gudruda, my sister!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;When last we met I sat, Atli&rsquo;s
+ bride, where to-day thou sittest the bride of Ospakar. Then Eric
+ Brighteyes held thy hand, and little thou didst think of wedding Ospakar.
+ Now Eric is afar&mdash;so strangely do things come about&mdash;and
+ Blacktooth, Brighteyes&rsquo; foe, holds that fair hand of thine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda looked on her and turned whiter yet in her pain, but she answered
+ never a word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! no word for me, sister?&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;And yet it is through me
+ that thou comest to this glad hour. It is through me that thou art rid of
+ Eric, and it is I who have given thee to the arms of mighty Ospakar. No
+ word of thanks for so great a service!&mdash;fie on thee, Gudruda! fie!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Gudruda spoke: &ldquo;Strange tales are told of thee and Eric, Groa&rsquo;s
+ daughter! I have done with Eric, but I have done with thee also. Thou hast
+ thrust thyself here against my will and, if I may, I would see thy face no
+ more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wouldst thou see Eric&rsquo;s face, Gudruda?&mdash;say, wouldst see Eric&rsquo;s
+ face? I tell thee it is fair!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Gudruda answered nothing, and Swanhild fell back, laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the feast began, and men waxed merry. But ever Gudruda&rsquo;s heart grew
+ heavier, for in it echoed those words that Saevuna had spoken. Her eyes
+ were dim, and she seemed to see naught but the face of Eric as it had
+ looked when he came back to her that day on the brink of Goldfoss Falls
+ and she had thought him dead. Oh! what if he still loved her and were yet
+ true at heart? Swanhild mocked her!&mdash;what if this was a plot of
+ Swanhild&rsquo;s? Had not Swanhild plotted aforetime, and could a wolf cease
+ from ravening or a witch from witch-work? Nay, she had seen Eric&rsquo;s hair&mdash;that
+ he had sworn none save she should touch! Perchance he had been drugged,
+ and the hair shorn from him in his sleep? Too late to think! Of what use
+ was thought?&mdash;beside her sat Ospakar, in one short hour she would be
+ his. Ah! that she could see him dead&mdash;the troll who had trafficked
+ her to shame, the foe she had summoned in her wrath and jealousy! She had
+ done ill&mdash;she had fallen into Swanhild&rsquo;s snare, and now Swanhild came
+ to mock her!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The feast went on&mdash;cup followed cup. Now they poured the bride-cup!
+ Before her heart beat two hundred times she would be the wife of Ospakar!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blacktooth took the cup&mdash;pledged her in it, and drank deep. Then he
+ turned and strove to kiss her. But Gudruda shrank from him with horror in
+ her eyes, and all men wondered. Still she must drink the bridal cup. She
+ took it. Dimly she saw the upturned faces, faintly she heard the murmur of
+ a hundred voices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was that voice she caught above them all&mdash;there&mdash;without
+ the hall?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holding the cup in her hand, Gudruda bent forward, staring down the skali.
+ Then she cried aloud, pointing to the door, and the cup fell clattering
+ from her hand and rolled along the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men turned and looked. They saw this: there on the threshold stood a man,
+ glorious to look at, and from his winged helm of gold the rays of light
+ flashed through the dusky hall. The man was great and beautiful to see. He
+ had long yellow hair bound in about his girdle, and in his left hand he
+ held a pointed shield, in his right a spear, and at his thigh there hung a
+ mighty sword. Nor was he alone, for by his side, a broad axe on his
+ shoulder and shield in hand, stood another man, clad in black-hued mail&mdash;a
+ man well-nigh as broad and big, with hawk&rsquo;s eyes, eagle beak, and black
+ hair streaked with grey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment there was silence. Then a voice spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lo! here be the Gods Baldur and Thor!&mdash;come from Valhalla to grace
+ the marriage-feast!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the man with golden hair cried aloud in a voice that made the rafters
+ ring:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here are Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail, his thrall, come from
+ over sea to grace the feast, indeed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could have looked for no worse guests,&rdquo; said Björn, beneath his breath,
+ and rose to bid men thrust them out. But before he could speak, lo!
+ gold-helmed Eric and black-helmed Skallagrim were stalking up the length
+ of that great hall. Side by side they stalked, with faces fierce and cold;
+ nor stayed they till they stood before the high seat. Eric looked up and
+ round, and the light of his eyes was as the light of a sword. Men
+ marvelled at his greatness and his wonderful beauty, and to Gudruda he
+ seemed like a God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here I see faces that are known to me,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Greetings, comrades!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greetings, Brighteyes!&rdquo; shouted the Middalhof folk and the company of
+ Swanhild; but the carles of Ospakar laid hand on sword&mdash;they too knew
+ Eric. For still all men loved Eric, and the people of his quarter were
+ proud of the deeds he had done oversea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greeting, Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son!&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;Greeting, Ospakar
+ Blacktooth! Greeting, Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli&rsquo;s witch-wife&mdash;Groa&rsquo;s
+ witch-bairn! Greeting, Hall of Lithdale, Hall the liar&mdash;Hall who cut
+ the grapnel-chain! And to thee, sweet Bride, to thee Gudruda the Fair,
+ greeting!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Björn spoke: &ldquo;I will take no greeting from a shamed and outlawed man.
+ Get thee gone, Eric Brighteyes, and take thy wolf-hound with thee, lest
+ thou bidest here stiff and cold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak not so loud, rat, lest hound&rsquo;s fang worry thee!&rdquo; growled
+ Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric laughed aloud and cried&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Words must be said, and perchance men shall die, ere ever I leave this
+ hall, Björn!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW THE FEAST WENT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken all men!&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thrust him out!&rdquo; quoth Björn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, cut him down!&rdquo; said Ospakar, &ldquo;he is an outlawed man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Words first, then deeds,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim. &ldquo;Thou shalt have thy fill
+ of both, Blacktooth, before day is done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let Eric say his say,&rdquo; said Gudruda, lifting her head. &ldquo;He has been
+ doomed unheard, and it is my will that he shall say his say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What hast thou to do with Eric?&rdquo; snarled Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The bride-cup is not yet drunk, lord,&rdquo; she answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To thee, then, I will speak, lady,&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;How comes it that, being
+ betrothed to me, thou dost sit there the bride of Ospakar?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ask of Swanhild,&rdquo; said Gudruda in a low voice. &ldquo;Ask also of Hall of
+ Lithdale yonder, who brought me Swanhild&rsquo;s gift from Straumey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must ask much of Hall and he must answer much,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;What tale,
+ then, did he bring thee from Straumey?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He said this, Eric,&rdquo; Gudruda answered: &ldquo;that thou wast Swanhild&rsquo;s love;
+ that for Swanhild&rsquo;s sake thou hadst basely killed Atli the Good, and that
+ thou wast about to wed Swanhild&rsquo;s self and take the Earl&rsquo;s seat in
+ Orkneys.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And for what cause was I made outlaw at the Althing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For this cause, Eric,&rdquo; said Björn, &ldquo;that thou hadst dealt evilly with
+ Swanhild, bringing her to shame against her will, and thereafter that thou
+ hadst slain the Earl, her husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which, then, of these tales is true? for both cannot be true,&rdquo; said
+ Brighteyes. &ldquo;Speak, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou knowest well that the last is true,&rdquo; said Swanhild boldly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How then comes it that thou didst charge Hall with that message to
+ Gudruda? How then comes it that thou didst send her the lock of hair which
+ thou didst cozen me to give thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I charged Hall with no message, and I sent no lock of hair,&rdquo; Swanhild
+ answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand thou forward, Hall!&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and liar and coward though thou
+ art, dare not to speak other than the truth! Nay, look not at the door:
+ for, if thou stirrest, this spear shall find thee before thou hast gone a
+ pace!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Hall stood forward, trembling with fear, for he saw the eye of
+ Skallagrim watching him close, and while Lambstail watched, his fingers
+ toyed with the handle of his axe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is true, lord, that Swanhild charged me with that message which I gave
+ to the Lady Gudruda. Also she bade me give the lock of hair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And for this service thou didst take money, Hall?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, lord, she gave me money for my faring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And all the while thou knewest the tidings false?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hall made no reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Answer!&rdquo; thundered Eric&mdash;&ldquo;answer the truth, knave, or by every God
+ that passes the hundred gates I will not spare thee twice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so, lord,&rdquo; said Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou liest, fox!&rdquo; cried Swanhild, white with wrath and casting a fierce
+ look upon Hall. But men took no heed of Swanhild&rsquo;s words, for all eyes
+ were bent on Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it now your pleasure, comrades, that I should tell you the truth?&rdquo;
+ said Brighteyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most part of the company shouted &ldquo;Yea!&rdquo; but the men of Ospakar stood
+ silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak on, Eric,&rdquo; quoth Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is the truth, then: Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli&rsquo;s wife, has always
+ sought my love, and she has ever hated Gudruda whom I loved. From a child
+ she has striven to work mischief between us. Ay, and she did this, though
+ till now it has been hidden: she strove to murder Gudruda; it was on the
+ day that Skallagrim and I overcame Ospakar and his band on Horse-Head
+ Heights. She thrust Gudruda from the brink of Golden Falls while she sat
+ looking on the waters, and as she hung there I dragged her back. Is it not
+ so, Gudruda?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now men murmured and looked at Swanhild. But she shrank back, plucking at
+ her purple cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was for this cause,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;that Asmund, Swanhild&rsquo;s father, gave
+ her choice to wed Atli the Earl and pass over sea or to take her trial in
+ the Doom-Ring. She wedded Atli and went away. Afterwards, by witchcraft,
+ she brought my ship to wreck on Straumey&rsquo;s Isle&mdash;ay, she walked the
+ waters like a shape of light and lured us on to ruin, so that all were
+ drowned except Skallagrim and myself. Is it not so, Skallagrim?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so, lord. I saw her with my eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again folk murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we must sit in Atli&rsquo;s hall,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and there we dwelt last
+ winter. For a while Swanhild did no harm, till I feared her no more. But
+ some three months ago, I was left with her: and a man called Koll, Groa&rsquo;s
+ thrall, of whom ye know, came out from Iceland, bringing news of the death
+ of Asmund the priest, of Unna my cousin, and of Groa the witch. To these
+ ill-tidings Swanhild bribed him to add something. She bribed him to add
+ this: that thou, Gudruda, wast betrothed to Ospakar, and wouldst wed him
+ on last Yule Day. Moreover, he gave me a certain message from thee,
+ Gudruda, and, in token of its truth, the half of that coin which I broke
+ with thee long years ago. Say now, lady, didst thou send the coin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, never!&rdquo; cried Gudruda; &ldquo;many years ago I lost the half thou gavest
+ me, though I feared to tell thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perchance one stands there who found it,&rdquo; said Eric, pointing with his
+ spear at Swanhild. &ldquo;At the least I was deceived by it. Now the tale is
+ short. Swanhild mourned with me, and in my sorrow I mourned bitterly. Then
+ it was she asked a boon, that lock of mine, Gudruda, and, thinking thee
+ faithless, I gave it, holding all oaths broken. Then too, when I would
+ have left her, she drugged me with a witch-draught&mdash;ay, she drugged
+ me, and I woke to find myself false to my oath, false to Atli, and false
+ to thee, Gudruda. I cursed her and I left her, waiting for the Earl, to
+ tell him all. But Swanhild outwitted me. She told him that other tale of
+ shame that ye have heard, and brought Koll to him as witness of the tale.
+ Atli was deceived by her, and not until I had cut him down in anger at the
+ bitter words he spoke, calling me coward and niddering, did he know the
+ truth. But before he died he knew it; and he died, holding my hand and
+ bidding those about him find Koll and slay him. Is it not so, ye who were
+ Atli&rsquo;s men?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so, Eric!&rdquo; they cried; &ldquo;we heard it with our own ears, and we slew
+ Koll. But afterwards Swanhild brought is to believe that Earl Atli was
+ distraught when he spoke thus, and that things were indeed as she had
+ said.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again men murmured, and a strange light shone in Gudruda&rsquo;s eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Gudruda, thou hast heard all my story,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Say, dost thou
+ believe me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe thee, Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say then, wilt thou still wed yon Ospakar?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda looked on Blacktooth, then she looked at golden Eric and opened
+ her lips to speak. But before a word could pass them Ospakar rose in
+ wrath, laying his hand upon his sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thinkest thou thus to lure away my dove, outlaw? First I will see thee
+ food for crows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well spoken, Blacktooth,&rdquo; laughed Eric. &ldquo;I waited for such words from
+ thee. Thrice have we striven together&mdash;once out yonder in the snow,
+ once on Horse-Head Heights, and once by Westman Isles&mdash;and still we
+ live to tell the tale. Come down, Ospakar: come down from that soft seat
+ of thine and here and now let us put it to the proof who is the better
+ man. When we met before, the stake was Whitefire set against my eye. Now
+ the stake is our lives and fair Gudruda&rsquo;s hand. Talk no more, Ospakar, but
+ fall to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gudruda shall never wed thee, while I live!&rdquo; said Björn; &ldquo;thou art a
+ landless loon, a brawler, and an outlaw. Get thee gone, Eric, with thy
+ wolf-hound!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Squeak not so loud, rat&mdash;squeak not so loud, lest hound&rsquo;s fang worry
+ thee!&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whether I wed Gudruda or whether I wed her not is a matter that shall be
+ known in its season,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;For thy words, I say this: that it is
+ risky to hurl names at such as I am, Björn, lest perchance I answer them
+ with spear-thrusts. Thy answer, Ospakar! What need to wait? Thy answer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Ospakar looked at Brighteyes and grew afraid. He was a mighty man, but
+ he knew the weight of Eric&rsquo;s arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not fight with thee, carle,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;who hast naught to lose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then thou art coward and niddering!&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Ospakar <i>Niddering</i>
+ I name thee here before all men! What! thou couldst plot against me&mdash;thou
+ couldst waylay me, ten to one and two ships to one, but face to face with
+ me alone thou dost not dare to stand? Comrades, look on your lord!&mdash;look
+ at Ospakar the <i>Niddering!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the swarthy brow of Blacktooth grew red with rage, and his breath came
+ in great gasps. &ldquo;Ho, men!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;drive this knave away. Strip his
+ harness off him and whip him hence with rods.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let but a man stir towards me and this spear flies through thy heart,
+ Niddering,&rdquo; cried Eric. &ldquo;Gudruda, what thinkest thou of thy lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know this,&rdquo; said Gudruda, &ldquo;that I will not wed a man who is named
+ &lsquo;Niddering&rsquo; in the face of all and lifts no sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda spoke thus, because she was mad with love and fear and shame, and
+ she desired that Eric should stand face to face with Ospakar Blacktooth,
+ for thus, alone, she might perhaps be rid of Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such words do not come well from gentle lips,&rdquo; said Björn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it to be borne, brother,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, &ldquo;that the man who would
+ call me wife should be named Ospakar the Niddering? When that shame is
+ washed away, and then only, can I think on marriage. I will never be
+ Niddering&rsquo;s bride!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hearest, Ospakar Niddering?&rdquo; said Eric. Then he gave the spear in
+ his hand to Skallagrim, and, gripping Whitefire&rsquo;s hilt, he burst the
+ peace-strings, and tore it from the scabbard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the great sword shone on high like lightning leaping from a cloud, and
+ as it shone men shouted, &ldquo;<i>Ospakar! Ospakar Niddering!</i> Come, win
+ back Whitefire from Eric&rsquo;s hand, or be for ever shamed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blacktooth could endure this no more. He snatched sword and shield, and,
+ like a bear from a cave, like a wolf from his lair, rushed roaring from
+ his seat. On he came, and the ground shook beneath his bulk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At last, Niddering!&rdquo; cried Eric, and sprang to meet him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Back! all men, back!&rdquo; shouted Skallagrim, &ldquo;now we shall see blows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke the great swords flashed aloft and clanged upon the iron
+ shields. So heavy were the blows that fire leapt out from them. Ospakar
+ reeled back beneath the shock, and Eric was beaten to his knee. Now he was
+ up, but as he rushed, Ospakar struck again and swept away half of
+ Brighteyen&rsquo;s pointed shield so that it fell upon the floor. Eric smote
+ also, but Ospakar dropped his knee to earth and the sword hissed over him.
+ Blacktooth cut at Eric&rsquo;s legs; but Brighteyes sprang from the ground and
+ took no harm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now some cried, &ldquo;<i>Eric! Eric!</i>&rdquo; and some cried &ldquo;<i>Ospakar! Ospakar!</i>&rdquo;
+ for no one knew how the fight would go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda sat watching in the high seat, and as blows fell her colour came
+ and went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild drew near, watching also, and she desired in her fierce heart to
+ see Eric brought to shame and death, for, should he win, then Gudruda
+ would be rid of Ospakar. Now by her side stood Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, and
+ near to her was Björn. These two held their breath, for, if Eric
+ conquered, all their plans were brought to nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even as he sprang into the air, Eric smote down with all his strength. The
+ blow fell on Ospakar&rsquo;s shield. It shore through the shield and struck on
+ the shoulder beneath. But Blacktooth&rsquo;s byrnie was good, nor did the sword
+ bite into it. Still the stroke was so heavy that Ospakar staggered back
+ four paces beneath it, then fell upon the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now folk raised a shout of &ldquo;<i>Eric! Eric!</i>&rdquo; for it seemed that Ospakar
+ was sped. Brighteyes, too, cried aloud, then rushed forward. Now, as he
+ came, Swanhild whispered an eager word into the ear of Björn. By Björn&rsquo;s
+ foot lay that half of Eric&rsquo;s shield which had been shorn away by the sword
+ of Ospakar. Gudruda, watching, saw Björn push it with his shoe so that it
+ slid before the feet of Brighteyes. His right foot caught on it, he
+ stumbled heavily&mdash;stumbled again, then fell prone on his face, and,
+ as he fell, stretched out his sword hand to save himself, so that
+ Whitefire flew from his grasp. The blade struck its hilt against the
+ ground, then circled in the air and fixed itself, point downwards, in the
+ clay of the flooring. The hand of Ospakar rising from the ground smote
+ against the hilt of Whitefire. He saw it, with a shout he cast his own
+ sword away and clasped Whitefire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away circled the sword of Ospakar; and of that cast this strange thing is
+ told, false or true. Far in the corner of the hall lurked Thorunna, she
+ who had betrayed Skallagrim when he was named Ounound. She had come with a
+ heavy heart to Middalhof in the company of Ospakar; but when she saw
+ Skallagrim, her husband&mdash;whom she had betrayed, and who had turned
+ Baresark because of her wickedness&mdash;shame smote her, and she crept
+ away and hid herself behind the hangings of the hall. The sword sped along
+ point first, it rushed like a spear through the air. It fell on the
+ hangings, piercing them, piercing the heart of Thorunna, who cowered
+ behind them, so that with one cry she sank dead to earth, slain by her
+ lover&rsquo;s hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now when men saw that Ospakar once more held Whitefire in his hand&mdash;Whitefire
+ that Brighteyes had won from him&mdash;they called aloud that it was an
+ omen. The sword of Blacktooth had come back to Blacktooth and now Eric
+ would surely be slain of it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric sprang from the ground. He heard the shouts and saw Whitefire blazing
+ in Ospakar&rsquo;s hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now thou art weaponless, fly! Brighteyes; fly!&rdquo; cried some.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda&rsquo;s cheek grew white with fear, and for a moment Eric&rsquo;s heart failed
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fly not!&rdquo; roared Skallagrim. &ldquo;Björn tripped thee. Yet hast thou half a
+ shield!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ospakar rushed on, and Whitefire flickered over Eric&rsquo;s helm. Down it came
+ and shore one wing from the helm. Again it shone and fell, but Brighteyes
+ caught the blow on his broken shield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, while men waited to see him slain, Eric gave a great war-shout and
+ sprang forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art mad!&rdquo; shouted the folk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye shall see! Ye shall see!&rdquo; screamed Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again Ospakar smote and again Eric caught the blow; and behold! he struck
+ back, thrusting with the point of the shorn shield straight at the face of
+ Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Peck! Eagle; peck!</i>&rdquo; cried Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more Whitefire shone above him. Eric rushed in beneath the sword, and
+ with all his mighty strength thrust the buckler-point at Blacktooth&rsquo;s
+ face. It struck fair and full, and lo! the helm of Ospakar burst asunder.
+ He threw wide his giant arms, then fell as a pine falls upon the mountain
+ edge. He fell back, and he lay still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric, stooping over him, took Whitefire from his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW THE FEAST ENDED
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ For a moment there was silence in the hall, for men had known no such
+ fight as this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, do ye gape?&rdquo; laughed Skallagrim, pointing with the spear.
+ &ldquo;Dead is Ospakar!&mdash;slain by the swordless man! Eric Brighteyes hath
+ slain Ospakar Blacktooth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there went up such a shout as never was heard in the hall of
+ Middalhof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now when Gudruda knew that Ospakar was sped, she looked at Eric as he
+ rested, leaning on his sword, and her heart was filled with awe and love.
+ She sprang from her seat, and, coming to where Brighteyes stood, she
+ greeted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Welcome to Iceland, Eric!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Welcome, thou glory of the south!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild grew wild, for she saw that Eric was about to take Gudruda in
+ his arms and kiss her before all men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, Björn,&rdquo; she cried; &ldquo;wilt thou suffer that this outlaw, having slain
+ Ospakar, should lead Gudruda hence as wife?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He shall never do so while I live,&rdquo; cried Björn, nearly mad with rage.
+ &ldquo;This is my command, sister: that thou dost see Eric no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, Björn,&rdquo; answered Gudruda, &ldquo;did I dream, or did I indeed see thee
+ thrust the broken buckler before Eric&rsquo;s feet, so that he stumbled on it
+ and fell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That thou sawest, lady,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;for I saw it also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Björn grew white in his anger. He did not answer Gudruda, but called
+ aloud to his men to slay Eric and Skallagrim. Gizur called also to the
+ folk of Ospakar, and Swanhild to those who came with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Gudruda fled back to her seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric cried aloud also: &ldquo;Ye who love me, cleave to me. Suffer it not
+ that Brighteyes be cut down of northerners and outland men. Hear me,
+ Atli&rsquo;s folk; hear me, carles of Coldback and of Middalhof!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so greatly did many love Eric that half of the thralls of Björn, and
+ almost all of the company of Swanhild who had been Atli&rsquo;s shield-men and
+ Brighteyes&rsquo; comrades, drew swords, shouting &ldquo;Eric! Eric!&rdquo; But the carles
+ of Ospakar came on to make an end of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Björn saw, and, drawing sword, smote at Brighteyes, taking him unawares.
+ But Skallagrim caught the blow upon his axe, and before Björn could smite
+ again Whitefire was aloft and down fell Björn, dead!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was the end of Björn, Asmund&rsquo;s son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast squeaked thy last, rat! What did I tell thee?&rdquo; cried
+ Skallagrim. &ldquo;Take Björn&rsquo;s shield and back to back, lord, for here come
+ foes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There goes one,&rdquo; answered Eric, pointing to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Hall of Lithdale slunk through the doorway&mdash;Hall, the liar, who
+ cut the grapnel-chain&mdash;for he wished to see the last of Skallagrim.
+ But the Baresark still held Eric&rsquo;s spear in his hand. He whirled it aloft,
+ and it hissed through the air. The aim was good, for, as he crept away,
+ the spear struck Hall between neck and shoulder, pinning him to the
+ doorpost, and there the liar died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now the weasel is nailed to the beam,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;Hall of
+ Lithdale, what did I promise thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Guard thy head and my back,&rdquo; quoth Eric; &ldquo;blows fall!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now men smote at Eric and Skallagrim, nor did they spare to smite in turn.
+ And as foes fell before him, Eric stepped one pace forward towards the
+ door, and Skallagrim, who, back to back with him, held off those who
+ pressed behind, took one step rearwards. Thus, a foe for every step, they
+ won their way down the long hall. Fierce raged the fray around them, for,
+ made with hate and drink and the lust of fight, Swanhild&rsquo;s folk&mdash;Eric&rsquo;s
+ friends&mdash;remembering the words of Atli, fell on Ospakar&rsquo;s; and the
+ people of Björn fell on each other, brother on brother, and father on son&mdash;nor
+ might the fray be stayed. The boards were overthrown, dead men lay among
+ the meats and mead, and the blood of freeman, lord and thrall ran adown
+ the floor. Everywhere through the dusky hall glittered the sheen of
+ flashing swords and rose the clang of war. Darts clove the air like
+ tongues of flame, and the clamour of battle beat against the roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blinded of the Norns who brought these things to pass, men sought no mercy
+ and they gave none, but smote and slew till few were left to slay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And still Gudruda sat in her bride-seat, and, with eyes fixed in horror,
+ watched the waxing of the war. Near to her stood Swanhild, marking all
+ things with a fierce-set face, and calling down curses on her folk, who
+ one and all cried &ldquo;Eric! Eric!&rdquo; and swept the thralls of Ospakar as corn
+ is swept of the sickle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there, nigh to the door, pale of face and beautiful to see, golden
+ Eric clove his way, and with him went black Skallagrim. Terrible was the
+ flare of Whitefire as he flicked aloft like the levin in the cloud.
+ Terrible was the flare of Whitefire; but more terrible was the light of
+ Eric&rsquo;s eyes, for they seemed to flame in his head, and wherever that fire
+ fell it lighted men the way to death. Whitefire sung and flickered, and
+ crashed the axe of Skallagrim, and still through the press of war they won
+ their way. Now Gizur stands before them, spear aloft, and Whitefire leaps
+ up to meet him. Lo! he turns and flies. The coward son of Ospakar does not
+ seek the fate of Ospakar!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door is won. They stand without but little harmed, while women wail
+ aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To horse!&rdquo; cried Skallagrim; &ldquo;to horse, ere our luck fail us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no luck in this,&rdquo; gasped Eric; &ldquo;for I have slain many men, and
+ among them is Björn, the brother of her whom I would make my bride.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better one such fight than many brides,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, shaking his red
+ axe. &ldquo;We have won great glory this day, Brighteyes, and Ospakar is dead&mdash;slain
+ by a swordless man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric and Skallagrim ran to their horses, none hindering them, and,
+ mounting, rode towards Mosfell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All that evening and all the night they rode, and at morning they came
+ across the black sand to Mosfell slopes that are by the Hecla. Here they
+ rested, and, taking off their armour, washed themselves in the stream: for
+ they were very weary and foul with blood and wounds. When they had
+ finished washing and had buckled on their harness again, Skallagrim,
+ peering across the plain with his hawk&rsquo;s eyes, saw men riding fast towards
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Foes are soon afoot, lord,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I thought we had stayed their
+ hunger for a while.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would that I might stay mine,&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;I am weary, and unfit for
+ fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have still strength for one or two,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and then
+ good-night! But these are no foes. They are of the Coldback folk. The
+ carline has kept her word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric was glad, and presently six men, headed by Jon his thrall, the
+ same man who had watched on Mosfell when Eric went up to slay the
+ Baresark, rode to them and greeted them. &ldquo;Beggar women,&rdquo; said Jon, &ldquo;whom
+ they met at Ran River, had told them of the death of Ospakar, and of the
+ great slaying at Middalhof, and they would know if the tidings were true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is true, Jon,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but first give us food, if ye have it, for
+ we are hungered and spent. When we have eaten we will speak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they led up a pack-horse and from it took stockfish and smoked meat, of
+ which Eric and Skallagrim ate heartily, till their strength came back to
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric spoke. &ldquo;Comrades,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am an outlawed man, and, though I
+ have not sought it, much blood is on my head. Atli is dead at my hand;
+ Ospakar is dead at my hand; Björn the Priest, Asmund&rsquo;s son, is dead at my
+ hand, and with them many another man. Nor may the matter stay here, for
+ Gizur, Blacktooth&rsquo;s son, yet lives, and Björn has kin in the south, and
+ Swanhild will buy friends with gold, and all of these will set on me to
+ slay me, so that at the last I die by the sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No need for that,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;Our vengeance is wrought, and now,
+ as before, the sea is open, and I think that a welcome awaits us in
+ London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now Gudruda is widowed before she was fully wed,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;therefore I
+ bide an outlawed man here in Iceland. I go hence no more, though it be
+ death to stay, unless indeed Gudruda the Fair goes with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be death, then,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and the swords are forged that
+ we shall feel. The odds are too heavy, lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayhap,&rdquo; answered Eric. &ldquo;No man may flee his fate, and I shall not
+ altogether grieve when mine finds me. Hearken, comrades: I go up to
+ Mosfell height, and there I stay, till those be found who can drag me from
+ my hole. But this is my counsel to you: that ye leave me to my doom, for I
+ am an unlucky man who always chooses the wrong road.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will not I,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor we,&rdquo; said Eric&rsquo;s folk; &ldquo;Swanhild holds Coldback, and we are driven to
+ the fells. To the fells then we will go with thee, Eric Brighteyes, and
+ become cave-dwellers and outlaws for thy sake. Fear not, thou shalt still
+ find many friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not look for such a thing at your hands,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but stormy
+ waters show how the boat is built. May no bad luck come to you from your
+ good fellowship. And now let us to our nest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they caught the horses, and rode with Brighteyes up the steep side of
+ Mosfell, till at length they came to that secret dell which Skallagrim had
+ once shown to Eric. Here they turned the horses loose to feed, and, going
+ forward on foot, reached the dark and narrow pass that Brighteyes had trod
+ when he sought for the Baresark foe. Skallagrim led the way along it, then
+ came Eric and the rest. One by one they stepped on to the giddy point of
+ rock, and, catching at the birch-bush, entered the hole. So they gained
+ the platform and the great cave beyond; and they found that no man had set
+ foot there since the day when Eric had striven with Skallagrim. For there
+ on the rock, rotten with the weather, lay that haft of wood which
+ Brighteyes had hewed from the axe of Skallagrim, and in the cave were many
+ things beside as the Baresark had left them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they took up their dwelling in the cave, Eric, Skallagrim, and the six
+ Coldback men, and there they dwelt many months. But Eric sent out his men,
+ one at a time, and got together food and a store of sheepskins, and other
+ needful things. For he knew this well: that Gizur and Swanhild would
+ before long come up against them, and, if they could not take them by
+ force, would set themselves to watch the mountain-path and starve them
+ out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Middalhof the fight still raged
+ fiercely in the hall, and nothing but death might stay it. The minds of
+ men were mad, and they smote one another, and slew each other, till at
+ length of all that marriage company few were left unharmed, except Gizur,
+ Swanhild, and Gudruda. For the serving thralls and womenfolk had fled the
+ hall, and with them some peaceful men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Gudruda spoke as one in a dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Saevuna&rsquo;s prophecy was true,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;red was the marriage-feast of
+ Asmund my father, redder has been the marriage-feast of Ospakar! She saw
+ the hall of Middalhof one gore of blood, and lo! it is so; look upon thy
+ work, Swanhild,&rdquo; and she pointed to the piled-up dead&mdash;&ldquo;look upon thy
+ work, witch-sister, and grow fearful: for all this death is on thy head!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild laughed aloud. &ldquo;I think it a merry sight,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;The
+ marriage-feast of Asmund our father was red, and thy marriage-feast,
+ Gudruda, has been redder. Would that thy blood and the blood of Eric ran
+ with the blood of Björn and Ospakar! That tale must yet be told, Gudruda.
+ There shall be binding on of Hell-shoes at Middalhof, but I bind them not.
+ My task is still to come: for I will live to fasten the Hell-shoes on the
+ feet of Eric, and on thy feet, Gudruda! At the least, I have brought about
+ this much, that thou canst scarcely wed Eric the outlaw: for with his own
+ hand he slew Björn our brother, and because of this I count all that death
+ as nothing. Thou canst not mate with Brighteyes, lest the wide wounds of
+ Björn thy brother should take tongues and cry thy shame from sea to sea!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda made no answer, but sat as one carved in stone. Then Swanhild
+ spoke again:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us away to the north, Gizur; there to gather strength to make an end
+ of Eric. Say, wilt thou help us, Gudruda? The blood-feud for the death of
+ Björn is thine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye are enough to bring about the fall of one unfriended man,&rdquo; Gudruda
+ said. &ldquo;Go, and leave me with my sorrow and the dead. Nay! before thou
+ goest, listen, Swanhild, for there is that in my heart which tells me I
+ shall never look again upon thy face. From evil to evil thou hast ever
+ gone, Swanhild, and from evil to evil thou wilt go. It may well chance
+ that thy wickedness will win. It may well chance that thou wilt crown thy
+ crimes with my slaying and the slaying of the man who loves me. But I tell
+ thee this, traitress&mdash;murderess, as thou art&mdash;that here the tale
+ ends not. Not by death, Swanhild, shalt thou escape the deeds of life! <i>There</i>
+ they shall rise up against thee, and <i>there</i> every shame that thou
+ hast worked, every sin that thou hast sinned, and every soul that thou
+ hast brought to Hela&rsquo;s halls, shall come to haunt thee and to drive thee
+ on from age to age! That witchcraft which thou lovest shall mesh thee.
+ Shadows shall bewilder thee; from the bowl of empty longings thou shalt
+ drink and drink, and not be satisfied. Yea! lusts shall mock and madden
+ thee. Thou shalt ride the winds, thou shalt sail the seas, but thou shalt
+ find no harbour, and never shalt thou set foot upon a shore of peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on, Swanhild&mdash;dye those hands in blood&mdash;wade through the
+ river of shame! Seek thy desire, and finding, lose! Work thy evil, and
+ winning, fail! I yet shall triumph&mdash;I yet shall trample thee; and, in
+ a place to come, with Eric at my side, I shall make a mock of Swanhild the
+ murderess! Swanhild the liar, and the wanton, and the witch! Now get thee
+ gone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild heard. She looked up at Gudruda&rsquo;s face and it was alight as with
+ a fire. She strove to answer, but no words came. Then Groa&rsquo;s daughter
+ turned and went, and with her went Gizur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now women and thralls came in and drew out the wounded and those who still
+ breathed from among the dead, taking them to the temple. They bore away
+ the body of Ospakar also, but they left the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All night long Gudruda sat in the bride&rsquo;s seat. There she sat in the
+ silver summer midnight, looking on the slain who were strewn about the
+ great hall. All night she sat alone in the bride&rsquo;s seat thinking&mdash;ever
+ thinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How, then, would it end? There her brother Björn lay a-cold&mdash;Björn
+ the justly slain of Brighteyes; yet how could she wed the man who slew her
+ brother? From Ospakar she was divorced by death; from Eric she was
+ divorced by the blood of Björn her brother! How might she unravel this
+ tangled skein and float to weal upon this sea of death? All things went
+ amiss! The doom was on her! She had lived to an ill purpose&mdash;her love
+ had wrought evil! What availed it to have been born to be fair among women
+ and to have desired that which might not be? And she herself had brought
+ these things to pass&mdash;she had loosed the rock which crushed her! Why
+ had she hearkened to that false tale?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda sat on high in the bride&rsquo;s seat, asking wisdom of the piled-up
+ dead, while the cold blue shadows of the nightless night gathered over her
+ and them&mdash;gathered, and waned, and grew at last to the glare of day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC VENTURED DOWN TO MIDDALHOF AND WHAT HE FOUND
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Gizur went north to Swinefell, and Swanhild went with him. For now that
+ Ospakar was dead at Eric&rsquo;s hand, Gizur ruled in his place at Swinefell,
+ and was the greatest lord in all the north. He loved Swanhild, and desired
+ to make her his wife; but she played with him, talking darkly of what
+ might be. Swanhild was not minded to be the wife of any man, except of
+ Eric; to all others she was cold as the winter earth. Still, she fooled
+ Gizur as she had fooled Atli the Good, and he grew blind with love of her.
+ For still the beauty of Swanhild waxed as the moon waxes in the sky, and
+ her wicked eyes shone as the stars shine when the moon has set.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they came to Swinefell, and there Gizur buried Ospakar Blacktooth, his
+ father, with much state. He set him in a chamber of rock and timbers on a
+ mountain-top, whence he might see all the lands that once were his, and
+ built up a great mound of earth above him. To this day people tell that
+ here on Yule night black Ospakar bursts out, and golden Eric rides down
+ the blast to meet him. Then come the clang of swords, and groans, and the
+ sound of riven helms, till presently Brighteyes passes southward on the
+ wind, bearing in his hand the half of a cloven shield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Gizur bound the Hell-shoes on his father, and swore that he would
+ neither rest nor stay till Eric Brighteyes was dead and dead was
+ Skallagrim Lambstail. Then he gathered a great force of men and rode south
+ to Coldback, to the slaying of Eric, and with him went Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda sat alone in the haunted hall of Middalhof and brooded on her love
+ and on her fate. Eric, too, sat in Mosfell cave and brooded on his evil
+ chance. His heart was sick with sorrow, and there was little that he could
+ do except think about the past. He would not go to foray, after the
+ fashion of outlaws, and there was no need of this. For the talk of his
+ mighty deeds spread through the land, so that the people spoke of little
+ else. And the men of his quarter were so proud of these deeds of Eric&rsquo;s
+ that, though some of their kind had fallen at his hands in the great fight
+ of Middalhof and some at the hands of Skallagrim, yet they spoke of him as
+ men speak of a God. Moreover they brought him gifts of food and clothing
+ and arms, as many as his people could carry away, and laid them in a booth
+ that is on the plain near the foot of Mosfell, which thenceforth was named
+ Ericsfell. Further, they bade his thralls tell him that, if he wished it,
+ they would find him a good ship of war to take him from Iceland&mdash;ay,
+ and man it with loyal men and true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric thanked them through Jon his thrall, but answered that he wished to
+ die here in Iceland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, when Eric had sat two months and more in Mosfell cave and autumn was
+ coming, he learned that Gizur and Swanhild had moved down to Coldback, and
+ with them a great company of men who were sworn to slay him. He asked if
+ Gudruda the Fair had also gathered men for his slaying. They told him no;
+ that Gudruda stayed with her thralls and women at Middalhof, mourning for
+ Björn her brother. From these tidings Eric took some heart of hope: at the
+ least Gudruda laid no blood-feud against him. For he waited, thinking, if
+ indeed she yet loved him, that Gudruda would send him some word or token
+ of her love. But no word came, since between them ran the blood of Björn.
+ On the morrow of these tidings Skallagrim spoke to Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is my counsel, lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that we ride out by night and fall
+ on the folk of Gizur at Coldback, and burn the stead over them, putting
+ them to the sword. I am weary of sitting here like an eagle in a cage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such is no counsel of mine, Skallagrim,&rdquo; answered Brighteyes. &ldquo;I am weary
+ of sitting here, indeed; but I am yet more weary of bringing men to their
+ death. I will shed no more blood, unless it is to save my own head. When
+ the people of Gizur came to seek me on Mosfell, they shall find me here;
+ but I will not go to them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy heart is out of thee, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;thou wast not wont to
+ speak thus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Skallagrim,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;the heart is out of me. Yet I ride from
+ Mosfell to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whither, lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Middalhof, to have speech with Gudruda the Fair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Like enough, then, thou wilt be silent thereafter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It well may be,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Yet I will ride. I can bear this doubt no
+ longer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I shall come with thee,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As thou wilt,&rdquo; answered Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So at midday Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Mosfell in a storm of
+ rain. The rain was so heavy that those of Gizur&rsquo;s spies who watched the
+ mountain did not see them. All that day they rode and all the night, till
+ by morning they came to Middalhof. Eric told Skallagrim to stay with the
+ horses and let them feed, while he went on foot to see if by chance he
+ might get speech with Gudruda. This the Baresark did, though he grumbled
+ at the task, fearing lest Eric should be done to death, and he not there
+ to die with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric walked to within two bowshots of the house, then sat down in a
+ dell by the river, from the edge of which he could see those who passed in
+ and out. Presently his heart gave a leap, for there came out from the
+ woman&rsquo;s door a lady tall and beautiful to see, and with golden hair that
+ flowed about her breast. It was Gudruda, and he saw that she bore a napkin
+ in her hand. Then Eric knew, according to her custom on the warm mornings,
+ that she came alone to bathe in the river, as she had always done from a
+ child. It was her habit to bathe here in this place: for at the bottom of
+ the dell was a spot where reeds and bushes grew thick, and the water lay
+ in a basin of rock and was clear and still. For at this spot a hot spring
+ ran into the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric went down the dell, hid himself close in the bushes and waited, for
+ he feared to speak with Gudruda in the open field. A while passed, and
+ presently the shadow of the lady crept over the edge of the dell, then she
+ came herself in that beauty which since her day has not been known in
+ Iceland. Her face was sad and sweet, her dark and lovely eyes were sad. On
+ she came, till she stood within a spear&rsquo;s length of where Eric lay,
+ crouched in the bush, and looking at her through the hedge of reeds. Here
+ a flat rock overhung the water, and Gudruda sat herself on this rock, and,
+ shaking off her shoes, dipped her white feet in the water. Then suddenly
+ she threw aside her cloak, baring her arms, and, gazing upon the shadow of
+ her beauty in the mirror of the water, sighed and sighed again, while Eric
+ looked at her with a bursting heart, for as yet he could find no words to
+ say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now she spoke aloud. &ldquo;Of what use to be so fair?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Oh, wherefore
+ was I born so fair to bring death to many and sorrow on myself and him I
+ love?&rdquo; And she shook her golden hair about her arms of snow, and, holding
+ the napkin to her eyes, wept softly. But it seemed to Eric that between
+ her sobs she called upon his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric could no longer bear the sight of Gudruda weeping. While she
+ wept, hiding her eyes, he rose from behind the screen of reeds and stood
+ beside her in such fashion that his shadow fell upon her. She felt the
+ sunlight pass and looked up. Lo! it was no cloud, but the shape of Eric,
+ and the sun glittered on his golden helm and hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric!&rdquo; Gudruda cried; &ldquo;Eric!&rdquo; Then, remembering how she was attired,
+ snatching her cloak, she threw it about her arms and thrust her wet feet
+ into her shoes. &ldquo;Out upon thee!&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;is it not enough, then, that
+ thou shouldst break thy troth for Swanhild&rsquo;s sake, that thou shouldst slay
+ my brother and turn my hall to shambles? Wouldst now steal upon me thus!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methought that thou didst weep and call upon my name, Gudruda,&rdquo; he said
+ humbly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By what right art thou here to hearken to my words?&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Is
+ it, then, strange that I should speak the name of him who slew my brother?
+ Is it strange that I should weep over that brother whom thou didst slay?
+ Get thee gone, Brighteyes, before I call my folk to kill thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Call on, Gudruda. I set little price upon my life. I laid it in the hands
+ of chance when I came from Mosfell to speak with thee, and now I will pay
+ it down if so it pleases thee. Fear not, thy thralls shall have an easy
+ task: for I shall scarcely care to hold my own. Say, shall I call for
+ thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush! Speak not so loud! Folk may hear thee, Eric, and then thou wilt be
+ in danger&mdash;I would say that, then shall ill things be told of me,
+ because I am found with him who slew my brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I slew Ospakar too, Gudruda. Surely the death of him by whose side thou
+ didst sit as wife is more to thee than the death of Björn?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The bride-cup was not yet drunk, Eric; therefore I have no blood-feud for
+ Ospakar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it, then, thy will that I should go, lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, go!&mdash;go! Never let me see thy face again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brighteyes turned without a word. He took three paces and Gudruda watched
+ him as he went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric!&rdquo; she called. &ldquo;Eric! thou mayest not go yet: for at this hour the
+ thralls bring down the kine to milk, and they will see thee. Liest thou
+ hid here. I&mdash;I will go. For though, indeed, thou dost deserve to die,
+ I am not willing to bring thee to thy end&mdash;because of old friendship
+ I am not willing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If thou goest, I will go also,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Thralls or no thralls, I will
+ go, Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art cruel to drive me to such a choice, and I have a mind to give
+ thee to thy fate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As thou wilt,&rdquo; said Eric; but she made as though she did not hear his
+ words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;if we must stay here, it is better that we hide where
+ thou didst hide, lest some come upon thee.&rdquo; And she passed through the
+ screen of rushes and sat down in a grassy place beyond, and spoke again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, sit not near me; sit yonder. I would not touch thee, nor look upon
+ thee, who wast Swanhild&rsquo;s love, and didst slay Björn my brother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, Gudruda,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;did I not tell thee of the magic arts of
+ Swanhild? Did I not tell thee before all men yonder in the hall, and didst
+ thou not say that thou didst believe my words? Speak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is true,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherefore, then, dost thou taunt me with being Swanhild&rsquo;s love&mdash;with
+ being the love of her whom of all alive I hate the most&mdash;and whose
+ wicked guile has brought these sorrows on us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Gudruda did not answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And for this matter of the death of Björn at my hands, think, Gudruda:
+ was I to blame in it? Did not Björn thrust the cloven shield before my
+ feet, and thus give me into the hand of Ospakar? Did he not afterwards
+ smite at me from behind, and would he not have slain me if Skallagrim had
+ not caught the blow? Was I, then, to blame if I smote back and if the
+ sword flew home? Wilt thou let the needful deed rise up against our love?
+ Speak, Gudruda!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talk no more of love to me, Eric,&rdquo; she answered; &ldquo;the blood of Björn has
+ blotted out our love: it cries to me for vengeance. How may I speak of
+ love with him who slew my brother? Listen!&rdquo; she went on, looking on him
+ sidelong, as one who wished to look and yet not seem to see: &ldquo;here thou
+ must hide an hour, and, since thou wilt not sit in silence, speak no
+ tender words to me, for it is not fitting; but tell me of those deeds thou
+ didst in the south lands over sea, before thou wentest to woo Swanhild and
+ camest hither to kill my brother. For till then thou wast mine&mdash;till
+ then I loved thee&mdash;who now love thee not. Therefore I would hear of
+ the deeds of that Eric whom once I loved, before he became as one dead to
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heavy words, lady,&rdquo; said Eric&mdash;&ldquo;words to make death easy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak not so,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;it is unmanly thus to work upon my fears. Tell
+ me those tidings of which I ask.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Eric told her all his deeds, though he showed small boastfulness about
+ them. He told her how he had smitten the war-dragons of Ospakar, how he
+ had boarded the Raven and with Skallagrim slain those who sailed in her.
+ He told her also of his deeds in Ireland, and of how he took the viking
+ ships and came to London town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as he told, Gudruda listened as one who hung upon her lover&rsquo;s dying
+ words, and there was but one light in the world for her, the light of
+ Eric&rsquo;s eyes, and there was but one music, the music of his voice. Now she
+ looked upon him sidelong no longer, but with open eyes and parted lips she
+ drank in his words, and always, though she knew it not herself, she crept
+ closer to his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he told her how he had been greatly honoured of the King of England,
+ and of the battles he had fought in at his side. Lastly, Eric told her how
+ the King would have given him a certain great lady of royal blood in
+ marriage, and how Edmund had been angered because he would not stay in
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me of this lady,&rdquo; said Gudruda, quickly. &ldquo;Is she fair, and how is
+ she named?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is fair, and her name is Elfrida,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And didst thou have speech with her on this matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Somewhat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda drew herself away from Eric&rsquo;s side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was the purport of thy speech?&rdquo; she said, looking down. &ldquo;Speak
+ truly, Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It came to little,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I told her that there was one in
+ Iceland to whom I was betrothed, and to Iceland I must go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what said this Elfrida, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She said that I should get little luck at the hands of Gudruda the Fair.
+ Moreover, she asked, should my betrothed be faithless to me, or put me
+ from her, if I should come again to England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda looked him in the face and spoke. &ldquo;Say, Eric, is it in thy
+ mind to sail for England in the spring, if thou canst escape thy foes so
+ long?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric took counsel with himself, and in his love and doubt grew
+ guileful as he had never been before. For he knew well that Gudruda had
+ this weakness&mdash;she was a jealous woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since thou dost put me from thee, that is in my mind, lady,&rdquo; he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda heard. She thought on the great and beauteous Lady Elfrida, far
+ away in England, and of Eric walking at her side, and sorrow took hold of
+ her. She said no word, but fixed her dark eyes on Brighteyes&rsquo; face, and
+ lo! they filled with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric might not bear this sight, for his heart beat within him as though it
+ would burst the byrnie over it. Suddenly he stretched out his arms and
+ swept her to his breast. Soft and sweet he kissed her, again and yet
+ again, and she struggled not, though she wept a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is small blame to me,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;if thou dost hold me on thy
+ breast and kiss me, for thou art more strong than I. Björn must know this
+ if his dead eyes see aught. Yet for thee, Eric, it is the greatest shame
+ of all thy shames.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talk not, my sweet; talk not,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;but kiss thou me: for thou
+ knowest well that thou lovest me yet as I love thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the end of it was that Gudruda yielded and kissed him whom she had not
+ kissed for many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Loose me, Eric,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;I would speak with thee,&rdquo; and he loosed her,
+ though unwillingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken,&rdquo; she went on, hiding her fair face in her hands: &ldquo;it is true
+ that for life and death I love thee now as ever&mdash;how much thou mayest
+ never know. Though Björn be dead at thy hands, yet I love thee; but how I
+ may wed thee and not win the greatest shame, that I know not. I am sure of
+ one thing, that we may not bide here in Iceland. Now if, indeed, thou
+ lovest me, listen to my rede. Get thee back to Mosfell, Eric, and sit
+ there in safety through this winter, for they may not come at thee yonder
+ on Mosfell. Then, if thou art willing, in the spring I will make ready a
+ ship, for I have no ship now, and, moreover, it is too late to sail. Then,
+ perchance, leaving all my lands and goods, I will take thy hand, Eric, and
+ we will fare together to England, seeking such fortune as the Norns may
+ give us. What sayest thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say it is a good rede, and would that the spring were come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Eric, would that the spring were come. Our lot has been hard, and I
+ doubt much if things will go well with us at the last. And now thou must
+ hence, for presently the serving-women will come to seek me. Guard
+ thyself, Eric, as thou lovest me&mdash;guard thyself, and beware of
+ Swanhild!&rdquo; Then once more they kissed soft and long, and Eric went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Gudruda sat a while behind the screen of reeds, and was very happy for
+ a space. For it was as though the winter were past and summer shone upon
+ her heart again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW GUDRUDA WENT UP TO MOSFELL
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Eric walked warily till he came to the dell where he had left Skallagrim
+ and the horses. It was the same dell in which Groa had brewed the
+ poison-draught for Asmund the Priest and Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What news, lord?&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;Thou wast gone so long that I thought
+ of seeking thee. Hast thou seen Gudruda?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and this is the upshot of it, that in the spring we sail
+ for England and bid farewell to Iceland and our ill luck.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would, then, that it were spring,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, speaking Brighteyes&rsquo;
+ own words. &ldquo;Why not sail now and make an end?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gudruda has no ship and it is late to take the sea. Also I think that she
+ would let a time go by because of the blood-feud which she has against me
+ for the death of Björn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would rather risk these things than stay the winter through in
+ Iceland,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;it is long from now to spring, and yon wolf&rsquo;s
+ den is cold-lying in the dark months, as I know well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is light beyond the darkness,&rdquo; said Eric, and they rode away.
+ Everything went well with them till late at night they came to the slopes
+ of Mosfell. They were half asleep on their horses, being weary with much
+ riding, and the horses were weary also. Suddenly, Skallagrim, looking up,
+ caught the faint gleam of light from swords hidden behind some stones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Awake, lord!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;here are foes ahead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gizur&rsquo;s folk behind the stones heard his voice and came out from their
+ ambush. There were six of them, and they formed in line before the pair.
+ They were watching the mountain, for a rumour had reached them that Eric
+ was abroad, and, seeing him, they had hidden hastily behind the stones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now what counsel shall we take?&rdquo; said Eric, drawing Whitefire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have often stood against men more than six, and sometimes we have left
+ more men than six to mark where we stood,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim. &ldquo;It is my
+ counsel that we ride at them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it,&rdquo; said Eric, and he spurred his weary horse with his heels. Now
+ when the six saw Eric and Skallagrim charge on them boldly, they wavered,
+ and the end of it was that they broke and fled to either side before a
+ blow was struck. For it had come to this pass, so great was the terror of
+ the names of Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail, that no six men
+ dared to stand before them in open fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the path being clear they rode on up the slope. But when they had gone
+ a little way, Skallagrim turned his horse, and mocked those who had lain
+ in ambush, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye fight well, ye carles of Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son! Ye are heroes, surely!
+ Say now, mighty men, will ye stand there if I come down alone against
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At these words the men grew mad with wrath, and flung their spears.
+ Skallagrim caught one on his shield and it fell to the earth, but another
+ passed over his head and struck Eric on the left shoulder, near the neck,
+ making a deep wound. Feeling the spear fast in him, Eric grasped it with
+ his right hand, drew it forth, and turning, hurled it so hard, that the
+ man before it got his death from the blow, for his shield did not serve to
+ stay it. Then the rest fled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim bound up Eric&rsquo;s wound as well as he could, and they went on to
+ the cave. But when Eric&rsquo;s folk, watching above, saw the fight they ran
+ down and met him. Now the hurt was bad and Eric bled much; still, within
+ ten days it healed up for the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a little while after Eric&rsquo;s wound was skinned over, the snows set in
+ on Mosfell, and the days grew short and the nights long. Once Gizur&rsquo;s men
+ to the number of fifty came half way up the mountain to take it; but, when
+ they saw how strong the place was, they feared, and went back, and after
+ that returned no more, though they always watched the fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was very dark and lonesome there upon the fell. For a while Eric kept
+ in good heart, but as the days went by he grew troubled. For since he was
+ wounded this had come upon him, that he feared the dark, and the death of
+ Atli at his hand and Atli&rsquo;s words weighed more and more upon his mind.
+ They had no candles on the fell, yet, rather than stay in the blackness of
+ the cave, Eric would wrap sheepskins about him and sit by the edge of that
+ gulf down which the head of the Baresark had foretold his fall, and look
+ out at the wide plains and fells and ice-mountains, gleaming in the silver
+ shine of the Northern lights or in the white beams of the stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It chanced that Eric had bidden the men who stayed with him to build a
+ stone hut upon the flat space of rock before the cave, and to roof it with
+ turves. He had done this that work might keep them in heart, also that
+ they might have a place to store such goods as they had gathered. Now
+ there was one stone lying near that no two men of their number could move,
+ except Skallagrim and one other. One day, while it was light, Eric watched
+ these two rolling the stone along to where it must stand, and it was slow
+ work. Presently they stayed to rest. Then Eric came and putting his hands
+ beneath the stone, lifted, and while men wondered, he rolled the mass
+ alone, to where it should be set as the corner stone of the hut.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye are all children,&rdquo; he said, and laughed merrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, when we set our strength against thine, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim;
+ &ldquo;but look: the blood runs from thy neck&mdash;the spear-wound has broken
+ out afresh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So it is, surely,&rdquo; said Eric. Then he washed the wound and bound it up,
+ thinking little of the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But that night, according to his custom, Eric sat on the edge of the gulf
+ and looked at the winter lights as they played over Hecla&rsquo;s snows. He was
+ sad and heavy at heart, for he thought of Gudruda and wondered much if
+ they should live to wed. Remembering Atli&rsquo;s words, he had little faith in
+ his good luck. Now as Eric sat and thought, the bandage on his neck
+ slipped, so that the hurt bled, and the frost got hold of the wound and
+ froze it, and froze his long hair to it also, in such fashion that when he
+ went to the cave where all men slept, he could not loose his hair from the
+ sore, but lay down with it frozen to him. On the morrow the hair was caked
+ so fast about his neck that it could only be freed by shearing it. But
+ this Eric would not suffer. None, he said, should shear his hair, except
+ Gudruda. Thus he had sworn, and when he broke the oath misfortune had come
+ of it. He would break that vow no more, if it cost him his life. For
+ sorrow and his ill luck had taken so great a hold of Eric&rsquo;s mind that in
+ some ways he was scarcely himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it came to pass that he fell more and more sick, till at length he
+ could not rise from his bed in the cave, but lay there all day and night,
+ staring at the little light which pierced the gloom. Still, he would not
+ suffer that anyone should touch his hair. And when one stole upon him
+ sleeping, thinking so to cut it before he woke, and come at the wound,
+ suddenly he sat up and dealt the man such a buffet on the head that he
+ went near to death from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Skallagrim spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On this matter,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it seems that Brighteyes is mad. He will not
+ suffer that any touch his hair, except Gudruda, and yet, if his hair is
+ not shorn, he must die, for the wound will fester under it. Nor may we cut
+ it by strength, for then he will kill himself in struggling. It is come to
+ this then: either Gudruda must be brought hither or Eric will shortly
+ die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That may not be,&rdquo; they answered. &ldquo;How can the lady Gudruda come here
+ across the snows, even if she will come?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come she can, if she has the heart,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;though I put
+ little trust in women&rsquo;s hearts. Still, I ride down to Middalhof, and thou,
+ Jon, shalt go with me. For the rest, I charge you watch your lord; for, if
+ I come back and find anything amiss, that shall be the death of some, and
+ if I do not come back but perish on the road, yet I will haunt you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Jon liked not this task; still, for love of Eric and fear of
+ Skallagrim, he set out with the Baresark. They had a hard journey through
+ the snow-drifts and the dark, but on the third day they came to Middalhof,
+ knocked upon the door and entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it was supper-time, and people, sitting at meat, saw a great black
+ man, covered with snow and rime, stalk up the hall, and after him another
+ smaller man, who groaned with the cold, and they wondered at the sight.
+ Gudruda sat on the high seat and the firelight beat upon her face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who comes here?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One who would speak with thee, lady,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is Skallagrim the Baresark,&rdquo; said a man. &ldquo;He is an outlaw, let us
+ kill him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, it is Skallagrim,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;and if there is killing to be done,
+ why here&rsquo;s that which shall do it,&rdquo; and he drew out his axe and smiled
+ grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then all held their peace, for they feared the axe of Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I do not come for slaying or such child&rsquo;s play, I come
+ to speak a word in thine ear&mdash;but first I ask a cup of mead and a
+ morsel of food, for we have spent three days in the snows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they ate and drank. Then Gudruda bade the Baresark draw near and tell
+ her his tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;Eric, my lord, lies dying on Mosfell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda turned white as the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dying?&mdash;Eric lies dying?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Why, then, art thou here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For this cause, lady: I think that thou canst save him, if he is not
+ already sped.&rdquo; And he told her all the tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda thought a while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is a hard journey,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and it does not become a maid to
+ visit outlaws in their caves. Yet I am come to this, that I will die
+ before I shrink from anything that may save the life of Eric. When must we
+ ride, Skallagrim?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This night,&rdquo; said the Baresark. &ldquo;This night while the men sleep, for now
+ night and day are almost the same. The snow is deep and we have no time to
+ lose if we would find Brighteyes living.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we will ride to-night,&rdquo; answered Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Afterwards, when people slept, Gudruda the Fair summoned her women, and
+ bade them say to all who asked for her that she lay sick in bed. But she
+ called three trusty thralls, bidding them bring two pack-horses laden with
+ hay, food, drugs, candles made of sheep&rsquo;s fat, and other goods, and ride
+ with her. Then, all being ready, they rode away secretly up Stonefell,
+ Gudruda on her horse Blackmane, and the others on good geldings that had
+ been hay-fed in the yard, and by daylight they passed up Horse-Head
+ Heights. They slept two nights in the snow, and on the second night almost
+ perished there, for much soft snow fell. But afterwards came frost and a
+ bitter northerly wind and they passed on. Gudruda was a strong woman and
+ great of heart and will, and so it came about that on the third day she
+ reached Mosfell, weary but little harmed, though the fingers of her left
+ hand were frostbitten. They climbed the mountain, and when they came to
+ the dell where the horses were kept, certain of Eric&rsquo;s men met them and
+ their faces were sad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How goes it now with Brighteyes?&rdquo; said Skallagrim, for Gudruda could
+ scarcely speak because of doubt and cold. &ldquo;Is he dead, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; they answered, &ldquo;but like to die, for he is beside himself and raves
+ wildly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Push on,&rdquo; quoth Gudruda; &ldquo;push on, lest it be too late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they climbed the mountain on foot, won the pass and came to that giddy
+ point of rock where he must tread who would reach the platform that is
+ before the cave. Now since she had hung by her hands over Goldfoss gulf,
+ Gudruda had feared to tread upon a height with nothing to hold to.
+ Skallagrim went first, then called to her to follow. Thrice she looked,
+ and turned away, trembling, for the place was awful and the fall
+ bottomless. Then she spoke aloud to herself:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric did not fear to risk his life to save me when I hung over Golden
+ Falls; less, then, should I fear to risk mine to save him,&rdquo; and she
+ stepped boldly down upon the point. But when she stood there, over the
+ giddy height, shivers ran along her body, and her mind grew dark. She
+ clutched at the rock, gave one low cry and began to fall. Indeed she would
+ have fallen and been lost, had not Skallagrim, lying on his breast in the
+ narrow hole, stretched out his arms, caught her by the cloak and kirtle
+ and dragged her to him. Presently her senses came back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am safe!&rdquo; she gasped, &ldquo;but by a very little. Methinks that here in this
+ place I must live and die, for I can never tread yonder rock again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou shalt pass it safe enough, lady, with a rope round thee,&rdquo; said
+ Skallagrim, and led the way to the cave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gudruda entered, forgetting all things in her love of Eric. A great fire
+ of turf burned in the mouth of the cave to temper the bitter wind and
+ frost, and by its light Gudruda saw her love through the smoke-reek. He
+ lay upon a bed of skins at the far end of the cave and his bright grey
+ eyes were wild, his wan face was white, and now of a sudden it grew red
+ with fever, and then was white again. He had thrown the sheepskins from
+ his mighty chest, the bones of which stood out grimly. His long arms were
+ thrust through the locks of his golden hair, and on one side of his neck
+ the hair clung to him and it was but a black mass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He raved loudly in his madness. &ldquo;Touch me not, carles, touch me not; ye
+ think me spent and weak, but, by Thor! if ye touch my hair, I will loosen
+ the knees of some. Gudruda alone shall shear my hair: I have sworn and I
+ will keep the oath that I once broke. Give me snow! snow! my throat burns!
+ Heap snow on my head, I bid you. Ye will not? Ye mock me, thinking me
+ weak! Where, then, is Whitefire?&mdash;I have yet a deed to do! Who comes
+ yonder? Is it a woman&rsquo;s shape or is it but a smoke-wraith? &lsquo;Tis Swanhild
+ the Fatherless who walks the waters. Begone, Swanhild, thou witch! thou
+ hast worked evil enough upon me. Nay, it is not Swanhild, it is Elfrida;
+ lady, here in England I may not stay. In Iceland I am at home. Yea, yea,
+ things go crossly; perchance in this garden we may speak again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda could bear his words no longer, bur ran to him and knelt
+ beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peace, Eric!&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Peace! It is I, thy love. It is Gudruda,
+ who am come to thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned his head and looked upon her strangely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it is not Gudruda the Fair. She will have little to do
+ with outlaws, and this is too rough a place for her to come to. It is dark
+ also and Atli speaks in the darkness. If thou art Gudruda, give me a sign.
+ Why comest thou here and where is Skallagrim? Ah! that was a good fight&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Down among the ballast tumbling
+ Ospakar&rsquo;s shield-carles were rolled.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he should never have slain the steersman. The axe goes first and
+ Skallagrim follows after. Ha, ha! Ay, Swanhild, we&rsquo;ll mingle tears. Give
+ me the cup. Why, what is this? Thou art afire, a glory glows about thee,
+ and from thee floats a scent like the scent of the Iceland meads in May.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric! Eric!&rdquo; cried Gudruda, &ldquo;I am come to shear thy hair, as thou didst
+ swear that I alone should do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I know that thou art Gudruda,&rdquo; said the crazed man. &ldquo;Cut, cut; but
+ let not those knaves touch my head, lest I should slay them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Gudruda drew out her shears, and without more ado shore off
+ Brighteyes&rsquo; golden locks. It was no easy task, for they were thick as a
+ horse&rsquo;s mane, and glued to the wound. Yet when she had cut them, she
+ loosened the hair from the flesh with water which she heated upon the
+ fire. The wound was in a bad state and blue, still Eric never winced while
+ she dragged the hair from it. Then she washed the sore clean, and put
+ sweet ointment on it and covered it with napkins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This done, she gave Eric broth and he drank. Then, laying her hand upon
+ his head, she looked into his eyes and bade him sleep. And presently he
+ slept&mdash;which he had scarcely done for many days&mdash;slept like a
+ little child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric slept for a day and a night. But at that same hour of the evening,
+ when he had fallen asleep, Gudruda, watching him by the light of a taper
+ that was set upon a rock, saw him smile in his dreams. Presently he opened
+ his eyes and stared at the fire which glowed in the mouth of the cave, and
+ the great shadows that fell upon the rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Strange!&rdquo; she heard him murmur, &ldquo;it is very strange! but I dreamed I
+ slept, and that Gudruda the Fair leaned over me as I slept. Where, then,
+ is Skallagrim? Perhaps I am dead and that is Hela&rsquo;s fire,&rdquo; and he tried to
+ lift himself upon his arm, but fell back from faintness, for he was very
+ weak. Then Gudruda took his hand, and, leaning over him, spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, Eric!&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;that was no dream, for I am here. Thou hast been
+ sick to death, Eric; but now, if thou wilt rest, things shall go well with
+ thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Thou</i> art here?&rdquo; said Eric, turning his white face towards her. &ldquo;Do
+ I still dream, or how comest thou here to Mosfell, Gudruda?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I came through the snows, Eric, to cut thy hair, which clung to the
+ festering wound, for in thy madness thou wouldst not suffer anyone to
+ touch it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou camest through the snows&mdash;over the snows&mdash;to nurse me,
+ Gudruda? Thou must love me much then,&rdquo; and he was so weak that, as he
+ spoke, the tears rolled down Eric&rsquo;s cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Gudruda kissed him, weeping also, and, laying her face by his, bade
+ him be at peace, for she was there to watch him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW SWANHILD WON TIDINGS OF ERIC
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric&rsquo;s strength came back to him and his heart opened in the light of
+ Gudruda&rsquo;s eyes like a flower in the sunshine. For all day long she sat at
+ his side, holding his hand and talking to him, and they found much to say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But on the fifth day from the day of his awakening she spoke thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric, now I must go back to Middalhof. Thou art safe and it is not well
+ that I should stay here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not yet, Gudruda,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;leave me not yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, love, I must leave thee. The moon is bright, the sky has cleared,
+ and the snow is hard with frost and fit for the hoofs of horses. I must go
+ before more storms come. Listen now: in the second week of spring, if all
+ is well, I will send thee a messenger with words of token, then shalt thou
+ come down secretly to Middalhof, and there, Eric, we will be wed. Then, on
+ the next day, we will sail for England in a trading-ship that I shall get
+ ready, to seek our fortune there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be a good fortune if thou art by my side,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;so good
+ that I doubt greatly if I may find it, for I am Eric the Unlucky. Swanhild
+ must yet be reckoned with, Gudruda. Yes, thou art right: thou must go
+ hence, Gudruda, and swiftly, though it grieves me much to part with thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric called Skallagrim and bade him make things ready to ride down to
+ Middalhof with the Lady Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Skallagrim did swiftly, and afterwards Eric and Gudruda kissed and
+ parted, and they were sad at heart to part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now on the fifth day after the going of Gudruda, Skallagrim came back to
+ Mosfell somewhat cold and weary. And he told Eric, who could now walk and
+ grew strong again, that he and Jon had ridden with Gudruda the Fair to
+ Horse-Head Heights, seeing no man, and had left her there to go on with
+ her thralls. He had come back also seeing no one, for the weather was too
+ cold for the men of Gizur to watch the fell in the snows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda came safely to Middalhof, having been eleven days gone, and
+ found that few had visited the house, and that these had been told that
+ she lay sick abed. Her secret had been well kept, and, though Swanhild had
+ no lack of spies, many days went by before she learned that Gudruda had
+ gone up to Mosfell to nurse Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this Gudruda began to make ready for her flight from Iceland. She
+ called in the moneys that she had out at interest, and with them bought
+ from a certain chapman a good trading-ship which lay in its shed under the
+ shelter of Westman Isles. This ship she began to make ready for sea so
+ soon as the heart of the winter was broken, putting it about that she
+ intended to send her on a trading voyage to Scotland in the spring. And
+ also to give colour to this tale she bought many pelts and other goods,
+ such as chapmen deal in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the days passed on&mdash;not so badly for Gudruda, who strove to fill
+ their emptiness in making ready for the full and happy time; but for Eric
+ in his cave they were very heavy, for he could find nothing to do except
+ to sleep and eat, and think of Gudruda, whom he might not see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Swanhild also, sitting at Coldback, the days did not go well. She was
+ weary of the courting of Gizur, whom she played with as a cat plays with a
+ rat, and her heart was sick with love, hate, and jealousy. For she well
+ knew that Gudruda and Eric still clung to each other and found means of
+ greeting, if not of speech. At that time she wished to kill Eric if she
+ could, though she would rather kill Gudruda if she dared. Still, she could
+ not come at Eric, for her men feared to try the narrow way of Mosfell, and
+ when they met him in the open they fled before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently it came to her ears that Gudruda made a ship ready to sail to
+ Scotland on a trading voyage, and she was perplexed by this tale, for she
+ knew that Gudruda had no love of trading and never thought of gain. So she
+ set spies to watch the ship. Still, the slow days drew on, and at length
+ the air grew soft with spring, and flowers showed through the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric sat in his mountain nest waiting for tidings, and watched the nesting
+ eagles wheel about the cliffs. At length news came. For one morning, as he
+ rose, Skallagrim told him that a man wanted to speak with him. He had come
+ to the mountain in the darkness, and had lain in a dell till the breaking
+ of the light, for, now that the snows were melting, the men of Gizur and
+ Swanhild watched the ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric bade them bring the man to him. When he saw him he knew that he was a
+ thrall of Gudruda&rsquo;s and welcomed him heartily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What tidings?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, lord,&rdquo; said the thrall: &ldquo;Gudruda the Fair bids me say that she is
+ well and that the snows melt on the roof of Middalhof.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this was the signal word that had been agreed upon between Eric and
+ Gudruda, that she should send him when all was ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;ride back to Gudruda the Fair and say that Eric
+ Brighteyes is well, but on Hecla the snows melt not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this answer he meant that he would be with her presently, though the
+ thrall could make nothing of it. Then Skallagrim asked tidings of the man,
+ and learned that Swanhild was still at Middalhof, and with her Gizur, and
+ that they gave out that they wished to make an end of waiting and slay
+ Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First snare your bird, then wring his neck,&rdquo; laughed Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric did this: among his men were some who he knew were not willing
+ to sail from Iceland, and Jon, his thrall, was of them, for Jon did not
+ love the angry sea. He bade these bide a while on Mosfell and make fires
+ nightly on the platform of rock which is in front of the cave, that the
+ spies of Gizur and Swanhild might be deceived by them, and think that Eric
+ was still on the fell. Then, when they heard that he had sailed, they were
+ to come down and hide themselves with friends till Gizur and his following
+ rode north. But he told two of the men who would sail with him to make
+ ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night before the moon rose Eric said farewell to Jon and the others
+ who stayed on Mosfell, and rode away with Skallagrim and the two who went
+ with him. They passed the plain of black sand in safety, and so on to
+ Horse-Head Heights. Now at length, as the afternoon drew on to evening,
+ from Stonefell&rsquo;s crest they saw the Hall of Middalhof before them, and
+ Eric&rsquo;s heart swelled in his breast. Yet they must wait till darkness fell
+ before they dared enter the place, lest they should be seen and notice of
+ their coming should be carried to Gizur and Swanhild. And this came into
+ the mind of Eric, that of all the hours of his life that hour of waiting
+ was the longest. Scarcely, indeed, could Skallagrim hold him back from
+ going down the mountain side, he was so set on coming to Gudruda whom he
+ should wed that night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length the darkness fell, and they went on. Eric rode swiftly down the
+ rough mountain path, while Skallagrim and the two men followed grumbling,
+ for they feared that their horses would fall. At length they came to the
+ place, and riding into the yard, Eric sprang from his horse and strode to
+ the women&rsquo;s door. Now Gudruda stood in the porch, listening; and while he
+ was yet some way off, she heard the clang of Brighteyen&rsquo;s harness, and the
+ colour came and went upon her cheek. Then she turned and fled to the high
+ seat of the hall, and sat down there. Only two women were left in
+ Middalhof with her, and some thralls who tended the kine and horses. But
+ these slept, not in the hall, but in an outhouse. Gudruda had sent the
+ rest of her people down to the ship to help in the lading, for it was
+ given out that the vessel sailed on the morrow. She had done this that
+ there might be no talk of the coming of Eric to Middalhof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Brighteyes came to the porch, and, finding the door wide, walked in.
+ But Skallagrim and the men stayed without a while, and tended the horses.
+ A fire burned upon the centre hearth in the hall, and threw shadows on the
+ panelling. Eric walked on by its light, looking to left and right, but
+ seeing neither man nor woman. Then a great fear took him lest Gudruda
+ should be gone, or perhaps slain of Swanhild, Groa&rsquo;s daughter, and he
+ trembled at the thought. He stood by the fire, and Gudruda, watching from
+ the shadow of the high seat, saw the dull light glow upon his golden helm,
+ and a sigh of joy broke from her lips. Eric heard the sigh and looked, and
+ as he looked a stick of pitchy driftwood fell into the fire and flared up
+ fiercely. Then he saw. There, in the carved high seat, robed all in bridal
+ white, sat Gudruda the Fair, his love. Her golden hair flowed about her
+ breast, her white arms were stretched towards him, and on her sweet face
+ shone such a look of love as he had never seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Eric!</i>&rdquo; she whispered softly, and the breath of her voice ran down
+ the empty panelled hall, that from all sides seemed to answer, &ldquo;<i>Eric.</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly he drew near to her. He saw nothing but the glory of Gudruda&rsquo;s face
+ and the light shining on Gudruda&rsquo;s hair; he heard nothing save the sighing
+ of her breath; he knew nothing except that before him sat his fair bride,
+ won after many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now he had climbed the high seat, and now, wrapped in each other&rsquo;s arms,
+ they sat and gazed into each other&rsquo;s eyes, and lo! the air of the great
+ hall rolled round them a sea of glory, and sweet voices whispered in their
+ ears. Now Freya smiled upon them and led them through her gates of love,
+ and they were glad that they had been born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus then they were wed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the story tells that Swanhild spoke with Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, in the
+ house at Coldback.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tire of this slow play,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We have tarried here for many
+ weeks, and Atli&rsquo;s blood yet cries out for vengeance, and cries for
+ vengeance the blood of black Ospakar, thy father, and the blood of many
+ another, dead at great Eric&rsquo;s hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tire also,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;and I am much needed in the north. I say this
+ to thee, Swanhild, that, hadst thou not so strictly laid it on me that
+ Eric must die ere thou weddest me, I had flitted back to Swinefell before
+ now, and there bided my time to bring Brighteyes to his end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will never wed thee, Gizur, till Eric is dead,&rdquo; said Swanhild fiercely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How shall we come at him then?&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;We may not go up that
+ mountain path, for two men can hold it against all our strength, and folk
+ do not love to meet Eric and Skallagrim in a narrow way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The place has been badly watched,&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;I am sure of this,
+ that Eric has been down to Middalhof and seen Gudruda, my half-sister. She
+ is shameless, who still holds commune with him who slew her brother and my
+ husband. Death should be her reward, and I am minded to slay her because
+ of the shame that she has brought upon our blood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a deed which thou wilt do alone, then,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;for I will
+ have no hand in the murder of that fair maid&mdash;no, nor will any who
+ live in Iceland!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild glanced at him strangely. &ldquo;Hearken, Gizur!&rdquo; she said: &ldquo;Gudruda
+ makes a ship ready to sail with goods to Scotland and bring a cargo thence
+ before winter comes again. Now I find this strange, for never before did I
+ know Gudruda turn her thoughts to trading. I think that she has it in her
+ mind to sail from Iceland with this outlaw Eric, and seek a home over
+ seas, and that I will not bear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may be,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;and I should not be sorry to see the last of
+ Brighteyes, for I think that more men will die at his hand before he
+ stiffens in his barrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art cowardly-hearted, thou son of Ospakar!&rdquo; Swanhild said. &ldquo;Thou
+ sayest thou lovest me and wouldest win me to wife: I tell thee that there
+ is but one road to my arms, and it leads over the corpse of Eric. Now this
+ is my counsel: that we send the most of our men to watch that ship of
+ Gudruda&rsquo;s, and, when she lifts anchor, to board her and search, for she is
+ already bound for sea. Also among the people here I have a carle who was
+ born near Hecla, and he swears this to me, that, when he was a lad,
+ searching for an eagle&rsquo;s eyrie, he found a path by which Mosfell might be
+ climbed from the north, and that in the end he came to a large flat place,
+ and, looking over, saw that platform where Eric dwells with his thralls.
+ But he could not see the cave, because of the overhanging brow of the
+ rock. Now we will do this: thou and I, and the carle alone&mdash;no more,
+ for I do not wish that our search should be noised abroad&mdash;to-morrow
+ at the dawn we will ride away for Mosfell, and, passing under Hecla, come
+ round the mountain and see if this path may still be scaled. For, if so,
+ we will return with men and make an end of Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plan pleased Gizur, and he said that it should be so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So very early on the following morning Swanhild, having sent many men to
+ watch Gudruda&rsquo;s ship, rode away secretly with Gizur and the thrall, and
+ before it was again dawn they were on the northern slopes of Mosfell. It
+ was on this same night that Eric went down from the mountain to wed
+ Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a while the climbing was easy, but at length they came to a great wall
+ of rock, a hundred fathoms high, on which no fox might find a foothold,
+ nor anything that had not wings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here now is an end of our journey,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;and I only pray this,
+ that Eric may not ride round the mountain before we are down again.&rdquo; For
+ he did not know that Brighteyes already rode hard for Middalhof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; said the thrall, &ldquo;if only I can find the place by which, some
+ thirty summers ago, I won yonder rift, and through it the crest of the
+ fell,&rdquo; and he pointed to a narrow cleft in the face of the rock high above
+ their heads, that was clothed with grey moss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he moved to the right and searched, peering behind stones and
+ birch-bushes, till presently he held up his hand and whistled. They passed
+ along the slope and found him standing by a little stream of water which
+ welled from beneath a great rock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is the place,&rdquo; the man said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see no place,&rdquo; answered Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still, it is there, lady,&rdquo; and he climbed on to the rock, drawing her
+ after him. At the back of it was a hole, almost overgrown with moss. &ldquo;Here
+ is the path,&rdquo; he said again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then it is one that I have no mind to follow,&rdquo; answered Swanhild. &ldquo;Gizur,
+ go thou with the man and see if his tale is true. I will stay here till ye
+ come back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the thrall let himself down into the hole and Gizur went after him.
+ But Swanhild sat there in the shadow of the rock, her chin resting on her
+ hand, and waited. Presently, as she sat, she saw two men ride round the
+ base of the fell, and strike off to the right towards a turf-booth which
+ stood the half of an hour&rsquo;s ride away. Now Swanhild was the
+ keenest-sighted of all women of her day in Iceland, and when she looked at
+ these two men she knew one of them for Jon, Eric&rsquo;s thrall, and she knew
+ the horse also&mdash;it was a white horse with black patches, that Jon had
+ ridden for many years. She watched them go till they came to the booth,
+ and it seemed to her that they left their horses and entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild waited upon the side of the fell for nearly two hours in all.
+ Then, hearing a noise above her, she looked up, and there, black with dirt
+ and wet with water, was Gizur, and with him was the thrall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What luck, Gizur?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, Swanhild: Eric may hold Mosfell no more, for we have found a way to
+ bolt the fox.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is good news, then,&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;Say on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yonder hole, Swanhild, leads to the cleft above, having been cut through
+ the cliff by fire, or perhaps by water. Now up that cleft a man may climb,
+ though hardly, as by a difficult stair, till he comes to the flat crest of
+ the fell. Then, crossing the crest, on the further side, perhaps six
+ fathoms below him, he sees that space of rock where is Eric&rsquo;s cave; but he
+ cannot see the cave itself, because the brow of the cliff hangs over. And
+ so it is that, if any come from the cave on to the space of rock, it will
+ be an easy matter to roll stones upon them from above and crush them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now when Swanhild heard this she laughed aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric shall mock us no more,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and his might can avail nothing
+ against rocks rolled on him from above. Let us go back to Coldback and
+ summon men to make an end of Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they went on down the mountain till they came to the place where they
+ had hidden their horses. Then Swanhild remembered Jon and the other man
+ whom she had seen riding to the booth, and she told Gizur of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;we will snare these birds, and perchance they will
+ twitter tidings when we squeeze them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they turned and rode for the booth, and drawing near, they saw two
+ horses grazing without. Now they got off their horses, and creeping up to
+ the booth, looked in through the door which was ajar. And they saw this,
+ that one man sat on the ground with his back to the door, eating
+ stock-fish, while Jon made bundles of fish and meal ready to tie on the
+ horses. For it was here that those of his quarter who loved Eric brought
+ food to be carried by his men to the cave on Mosfell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild touched Gizur on the arm, pointing first to the man who sat
+ eating the fish and then to the spear in Gizur&rsquo;s hand. Gizur thought a
+ while, for he shrank from this deed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Swanhild whispered in his ear, &ldquo;Slay the man and seize the other; I
+ would learn tidings from him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Gizur cast the spear, and it passed through the man&rsquo;s heart, and he was
+ dead at once. Then he and the thrall leapt into the booth and threw
+ themselves on Jon, hurling him to the ground, and holding swords over him.
+ Now Jon was a man of small heart, and when he saw his plight and his
+ fellow dead he was afraid, and prayed for mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I spare thee, knave,&rdquo; said Swanhild, &ldquo;thou shalt do this: thou shalt
+ lead me up Mosfell to speak with Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I may not do that, lady,&rdquo; groaned Jon; &ldquo;for Eric is not on Mosfell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is he, then?&rdquo; asked Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Jon saw that he had said an unlucky thing, and answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I know not. Last night he rode from Mosfell with Skallagrim
+ Lambstail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou liest, knave,&rdquo; said Swanhild. &ldquo;Speak, or thou shalt be slain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Slay on,&rdquo; groaned Jon, glancing at the swords above him, and shutting his
+ eyes. For, though he feared much to die, he had no will to make known
+ Eric&rsquo;s plans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look not at the swords; thou shalt not die so easily. Hearken: speak, and
+ speak truly, or thou shalt seek Hela&rsquo;s lap after this fashion,&rdquo; and,
+ bending down, she whispered in his ear, then laughed aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Jon grew faint with fear; his lips turned blue, and his teeth
+ chattered at the thought of how he should be made to die. Still, he would
+ say nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Swanhild spoke to Gizur and the thrall, and bade them bind him with a
+ rope, tear the garments from him, and bring snow. They did this, and
+ pushed the matter to the drawing of knives. But when he saw the steel Jon
+ cried aloud that he would tell all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now thou takest good counsel,&rdquo; said Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then in his fear Jon told how Eric had gone down to Middalhof to wed
+ Gudruda, and thence to fly with her to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild was mad with wrath, for she had sooner died than that this
+ should come about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us away,&rdquo; she said to Gizur. &ldquo;But first kill this man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;I will not do that. He has told his tidings; let him
+ go free.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art chicken-hearted,&rdquo; said Swanhild, who, after the fashion of
+ witches, had no mercy in her. &ldquo;At the least, he shall not go hence to warn
+ Eric and Gudruda of our coming. If thou wilt not kill him, then bind him
+ and leave him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Jon was bound, and there in the booth he sat two days before anyone
+ came to loose him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whither away?&rdquo; said Gizur to Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Middalhof first,&rdquo; Swanhild answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW WENT THE BRIDAL NIGHT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric and Gudruda sat silent in the high seat of the hall at Middalhof
+ till they heard Skallagrim enter by the women&rsquo;s door. Then they came down
+ from the high seat, and stood hand in hand by the fire on the hearth.
+ Skallagrim greeted Gudruda, looking at her askance, for Skallagrim stood
+ in fear of women alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What counsel now, lord?&rdquo; said the Baresark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell us thy plans, Gudruda,&rdquo; said Eric, for as yet no word had passed
+ between them of what they should do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is my plan, Eric,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;First, that we eat; then that thy
+ men take horse and ride hence through the night to where the ship lies,
+ bearing word that we will be there at dawn when the tide serves, and
+ bidding the mate make everything ready for sailing. But thou and I and
+ Skallagrim will stay here till to-morrow is three hours old, and this
+ because I have tidings that Gizur&rsquo;s folk will search the ship to-night.
+ Now, when they search and do not find us, they will go away. Then, at the
+ dawning, thou and I and Skallagrim will row on board the ship as she lies
+ at anchor, and, slipping the cable, put to sea before they know we are
+ there, and so bid farewell to Swanhild and our woes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet it is a risk for us to sleep here alone,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is little danger,&rdquo; said Gudruda. &ldquo;Nearly all of Gizur&rsquo;s men watch
+ the ship; and I have learned this from a spy, that, two days ago, Gizur,
+ Swanhild, and one thrall rode from Coldback towards Mosfell, and they have
+ not come back yet. Moreover, the place is strong, and thou and Skallagrim
+ are here to guard it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it, then,&rdquo; answered Eric, for indeed he had little thought left for
+ anything, except Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this the women came in and set meat on the board, and all ate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, when they had eaten, Eric bade Skallagrim fill a cup, and bring it to
+ him as he sat on the high seat with Gudruda. Skallagrim did so; and then,
+ looking deep into each other&rsquo;s eyes, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair,
+ Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, drank the bride&rsquo;s cup.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are few guests to grace our marriage-feast, husband,&rdquo; said Gudruda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet shall our vows hold true, wife,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Brighteyes,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;in life and in death, now and for ever!&rdquo;
+ and they kissed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is time for us to be going, methinks,&rdquo; growled Skallagrim to those
+ about him. &ldquo;We are not wanted here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the men who were to go on to the ship rose, fetched their horses, and
+ rode away. Also they caught the horses of Skallagrim, Eric, and Gudruda,
+ saddled them and, slipping their bridles, made them fast in a shed in the
+ yard, giving them hay to eat. Afterwards Skallagrim barred the men&rsquo;s door
+ and the women&rsquo;s door, and, going to Gudruda, asked where he should stay
+ the night till it was time to ride for the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the store-chamber,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;for there is a shutter of which the
+ latch has gone. See that thou watch it well, Skallagrim; though I think
+ none will come to trouble thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know the place. It shall go badly with the head that looks through
+ yonder hole,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, glancing at his axe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda forgot this, that in the store-chamber were casks of strong
+ ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Gudruda told him to wake them when the morrow was two hours old, for
+ Eric had neither eyes nor words except for Gudruda alone, and Skallagrim
+ went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The women went also to their shut bed at the end of the hall, leaving
+ Brighteyes and Gudruda alone. Eric looked at her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where do I sleep to-night?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou sleepest with me, husband,&rdquo; she answered soft, &ldquo;for nothing, except
+ Death, shall come between us any more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Skallagrim went to the store-room, and sat down with his back against
+ a cask. His heart was heavy in him, for he boded no good of this marriage.
+ Moreover, he was jealous. Skallagrim loved but one thing in the world
+ truly, and that was Eric Brighteyes, his lord. Now he knew that henceforth
+ he must take a second place, and that for one thought which Eric gave to
+ him, he would give ten to Gudruda. Therefore Skallagrim was very sad at
+ heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A pest upon the women!&rdquo; he said to himself, &ldquo;for from them comes all
+ evil. Brighteyes owes his ill luck to Swanhild and this fair wife of his,
+ and that is scarcely done with yet. Well, well, &lsquo;tis nature; but would
+ that we were safe at sea! Had I my will, we had not slept here to-night.
+ But they are newly wed, and&mdash;well, &lsquo;tis nature! Better the bride
+ loves to lie abed than to ride the cold wolds and seek the common deck.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as Skallagrim grumbled, fear gathered in his heart, he knew not of
+ what. He began to think on trolls and goblins. It was dark in the
+ store-room, except for a little line of light that crept through the crack
+ of the shutter. At length he could bear the darkness and his thoughts no
+ longer, but, rising, threw the shutter wide and let the bright moonlight
+ pour into the chamber, whence he could see the hillside behind, and watch
+ the shadows of the clouds as they floated across it. Again Skallagrim sat
+ down against his cask, and as he sat it moved, and he heard the wash of
+ ale inside it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a good sound,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, and he turned and smelt at the
+ cask; &ldquo;aye, and a good smell, too! We tasted little ale yonder on Mosfell,
+ and we shall find less at sea.&rdquo; Again he looked at the cask. There was a
+ spigot in it, and lo! on the shelf stood horn cups.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It surely is on draught,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and now it will stand till it goes
+ sour. &lsquo;Tis a pity; but I will not drink. I fear ale&mdash;ale is another
+ man! No, I will not drink,&rdquo; and all the while his hand went up to the cups
+ upon the shelf. &ldquo;Eric is better lain yonder in Gudruda&rsquo;s chamber than I am
+ here alone with evil thoughts and trolls,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Why, what fish was
+ that we ate at supper? My throat is cracked with thirst! If there were
+ water now I&rsquo;d drink it, but I see none. Well, one cup to wish them joy!
+ There is no harm in a cup of ale,&rdquo; and he drew the spigot from the cask
+ and watched the brown drink flow into the cup. Then he lifted it to his
+ lips and drank, saying &ldquo;Skoll! skoll!&rdquo;[*] nor did he cease till the horn
+ was drained. &ldquo;This is wondrous good ale,&rdquo; said Skallagrim as he wiped his
+ grizzled beard. &ldquo;One more cup, and evil thoughts shall cease to haunt me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] &ldquo;Health! health!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again he filled, drank, sat down, and for a while was merry. But presently
+ the black thoughts came back into his mind. He rose, looked through the
+ shutter-hole to the hillside. He could see nothing on it except the
+ shadows of the clouds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trolls walk the winds to-night,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I feel them pulling at my
+ beard. One more cup to frighten them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drank another draught of ale and grew merry. Then ale called for ale,
+ and Skallagrim drained cup on cup, singing as he drained, till at last
+ heavy sleep overcame him, and he sank drunken on the ground there by the
+ barrel, while the brown ale trickled round him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair slept side by side, locked in
+ each other&rsquo;s arms. Presently Gudruda was wide awake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rouse thee, Eric,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I have dreamed an evil dream.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He awoke and kissed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, then, was thy dream, sweet?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;This is no hour for bad
+ dreams.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No hour for bad dreams, truly, husband; yet dreams do not weigh the hour
+ of their coming. I dreamed this: that I lay dead beside thee and thou
+ knewest it not, while Swanhild looked at thee and mocked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An evil dream, truly,&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but see, thou art not dead. Thou hast
+ thought too much on Swanhild of late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they slept once more, till presently Eric was wide awake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rouse thee, Gudruda,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I too have dreamed a dream, and it is
+ full of evil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, then, was thy dream, husband?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dreamed that Atli the Earl, whom I slew, stood by the bed. His face was
+ white, and white as snow was his beard, and blood from his great wound ran
+ down his byrnie. &lsquo;Eric Brighteyes,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;I am he whom thou didst
+ slay, and I come to tell thee this: that before the moon is young again
+ thou shalt lie stiff, with Hell-shoes on thy feet. Thou art Eric the
+ Unlucky! Take thy joy and say thy say to her who lies at thy side, for wet
+ and cold is the bed that waits thee and soon shall thy white lips be
+ dumb.&rsquo; Then he was gone, and lo! in his place stood Asmund, thy father,
+ and he also spoke to me, saying, &lsquo;Thou who dost lie in my bed and at my
+ daughter&rsquo;s side, know this: the words of Atli are true; but I add these to
+ them: ye shall die, yet is death but the gate of life and love and rest,&rsquo;
+ and he was gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gudruda shivered with fear, and crept closer to Eric&rsquo;s side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are surely fey, for the Norns speak with the voices of Atli and of
+ Asmund,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Oh, Eric! Eric! whither go we when we die? Will
+ Valhalla take thee, being so mighty a man, and must I away to Hela&rsquo;s
+ halls, where thou art not? Oh! that would be death indeed! Say, Eric,
+ whither do we go?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What said the voice of Asmund?&rdquo; answered Brighteyes. &ldquo;That death is but
+ the gate of life and love and rest. Hearken, Gudruda, my May! Odin does
+ not reign over all the world, for when I sat out yonder in England, a
+ certain holy man taught me of another God&mdash;a God who loves not
+ slaughter, a God who died that men might live for ever in peace with those
+ they love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is this God named, Eric?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They name Him the White Christ, and there are many who cling to Him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would that I knew this Christ, Eric. I am weary of death and blood and
+ evil deeds, such as are pleasing to our Gods. Oh, Eric, if I am taken from
+ thee, swear this to me: that thou wilt slay no more, save for thy life&rsquo;s
+ sake only.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I swear that, sweet,&rdquo; he made answer. &ldquo;For I too am weary of death and
+ blood, and desire peace most of all things. The world is sad, and sad have
+ been our days. Yet it is well to have lived, for through many heavy days
+ we have wandered to this happy night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, Eric, it is well to have lived; though I think that death draws on.
+ Now this is my counsel: that we rise, and that thou dost put on thy
+ harness and summon Skallagrim, so that, if evil comes, thou mayst meet it
+ armed. Surely I thought I heard a sound&mdash;yonder in the hall!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is little use in that,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;for things will befall as they
+ are fated. We may do nothing of our own will, I am sure of this, and it is
+ no good to struggle with the Norns. Yet I will rise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he kissed her, and made ready to leave the bed, when suddenly, as he
+ lingered, a great heaviness seized him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gudruda,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am pressed down with sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I am also, Eric,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;My eyes shut of themselves and I can
+ scarcely stir my limbs. Ah, Eric, we are fey indeed, and this is&mdash;death
+ that comes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perchance!&rdquo; he said, speaking heavily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric!&mdash;wake, Eric! Thou canst not move? Yet hearken to me&mdash;ah!
+ this weight of sleep! Thou lovest me, Eric!&mdash;is it not so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea,&rdquo; he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now and for ever thou lovest me&mdash;and wilt cleave to me always
+ wherever we go?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely, sweet. Oh, sweet, farewell!&rdquo; he said, and his voice sounded like
+ the voice of one who speaks across the water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!&mdash;my love&mdash;my love, farewell!&rdquo; she
+ answered very slowly, and together they sank into a sleep that was heavy
+ as death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, and Swanhild, Atli&rsquo;s widow, rode fast and hard
+ from Mosfell, giving no rest to their horses, and with them rode that
+ thrall who had showed the secret path to Gizur. They stayed a while on
+ Horse-Head Heights till the moon rose. Now one path led hence to the shore
+ that is against the Westmans, where Gudruda&rsquo;s ship lay bound. Then
+ Swanhild turned to the thrall. Her beautiful face was fierce and she had
+ said few words all this while, but in her heart raged a fire of hate and
+ jealousy which shone through her blue eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; she said to the thrall. &ldquo;Thou shalt ride hence to the bay where
+ the ship of Gudruda the Fair lies at anchor. Thou knowest where our folk
+ are in hiding. Thou shalt speak thus to them. Before it is dawn they must
+ take boats and board Gudruda&rsquo;s ship and search her. And, if they find
+ Eric, the outlaw, aboard, they shall slay him, if they may.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will be no easy task,&rdquo; said the thrall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if they find Gudruda they shall keep her prisoner. But if they find
+ neither the one nor the other, they shall do this: they shall drive the
+ crew ashore, killing as few as may be, and burn the ship.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is an ill deed thus to burn another&rsquo;s ship,&rdquo; said Gizur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good or ill, it shall be done,&rdquo; answered Swanhild fiercely. &ldquo;Thou art a
+ lawman, and well canst thou meet the suit; moreover Gudruda has wedded an
+ outlaw and shall suffer for her sin. Now go, and see thou tarry not, or
+ thy back shall pay the price.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man rode away swiftly. Then Gizur turned to Swanhild, asking:
+ &ldquo;Whither, then, go we?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have said to Middalhof.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is into the wolf&rsquo;s den, if Eric and Skallagrim are there,&rdquo; he
+ answered: &ldquo;I have little chance against the two of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nor against the one, Gizur. Why, if Eric&rsquo;s right hand were hewn from
+ him, and he stood unarmed, he would still slay thee with his left, as,
+ swordless, he slew Ospakar thy father. Yet I shall find a way to come at
+ him, if he is there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they rode on, and Gizur&rsquo;s heart was heavy for fear of Eric and
+ Skallagrim the Baresark. So fiercely did they ride that, within one hour
+ after midnight, they were at the stead of Middalhof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will leave the horses here in the field,&rdquo; said Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they leaped to earth and, tying the reins of the horses together, left
+ them to feed on the growing grass. Then they crept into the yard and
+ listened. Presently there came a sound of horses stamping in the far
+ corner of the yard. They went thither, and there they found a horse and
+ two geldings saddled, but with the bits slipped, and on the horse was such
+ a saddle as women use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda the Fair,&rdquo; whispered
+ Swanhild, naming the horses and laughing evilly&mdash;&ldquo;the birds are
+ within! Now to snare them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were it not best to meet them by the ship?&rdquo; asked Gizur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, thou fool; if once Eric and Skallagrim are back to back, and
+ Whitefire is aloft, how many shall be dead before they are down, thinkest
+ thou? We shall not find them sleeping twice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is shameful to slay sleeping men,&rdquo; said Gizur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are outlaws,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Hearken, Ospakar&rsquo;s son. Thou sayest
+ thou dost love me and wouldst wed me: know this, that if thou dost fail me
+ now, I will never look upon thy face again, but will name thee Niddering
+ in all men&rsquo;s ears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gizur loved Swanhild much, for she had thrown her glamour on him as
+ once she did on Atli, and he thought of her day and night. For there was
+ this strange thing about Swanhild that, though she was a witch and wicked,
+ being both fair and gentle she could lead all men, except Eric, to love
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But of men she loved Eric alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Gizur held his peace; but Swanhild spoke again:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be of no use to try the doors, for they are strong. Yet when I
+ was a child before now I have passed in and out the house at night by the
+ store-room casement. Follow me, Gizur.&rdquo; Then she crept along the shadow of
+ the wall, for she knew it every stone, till she came to the store-room,
+ and lo! the shutter stood open, and through it the moonlight poured into
+ the chamber. Swanhild lifted her head above the sill and looked, then
+ started back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Skallagrim lies asleep within.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pray the Gods he wake not!&rdquo; said Gizur beneath his breath, and turned to
+ go. But Swanhild caught him by the arm; then gently raised her head and
+ looked again, long and steadily. Presently she turned and laughed softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Things go well for us,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;the sot lies drunk. We have nothing to
+ fear from him. He lies drunk in a pool of ale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Gizur looked. The moonlight poured into the little room, and by it he
+ saw the great shape of Skallagrim. His head was thrown back, his mouth was
+ wide. He snored loudly in his drunken sleep, and all about him ran the
+ brown ale, for the spigot of the cask lay upon the floor. In his left hand
+ was a horn cup, but in his right he still grasped his axe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we must enter,&rdquo; said Swanhild. Gizur hung back, but she sprang upon
+ the sill lightly as a fox, and slid thence into the store-room. Then Gizur
+ must follow, and presently he stood beside her in the room, and at their
+ feet lay drunken Skallagrim. Gizur looked first at his sword, then on the
+ Baresark, and lastly at Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;touch him not. Perchance he would cry out&mdash;and
+ we seek higher game. He has that within him which will hold him fast for a
+ while. Follow where I shall lead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took his hand and, gliding through the doorway, passed along the
+ passage till she came to the great hall. Swanhild could see well in the
+ dark, and moreover she knew the road. Presently they stood in the empty
+ hall. The fire had burnt down, but two embers yet glowed upon the hearth,
+ like red and angry eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a while Swanhild stood still listening, but there was nothing to hear.
+ Then she drew near to the shut bed where Gudruda slept, and, with her ear
+ to the curtain, listened once more. Gizur came with her, and as he came
+ his foot struck against a bench and stirred it. Now Swanhild heard
+ murmured words and the sound of kisses. She started back, and fury filled
+ her heart. Gizur also heard the voice of Eric, saying: &ldquo;I will rise.&rdquo; Then
+ he would have fled, but Swanhild caught him by the arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;they shall soon sleep sound.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He felt her stretch out her arms and presently he saw this wonderful
+ thing: the eyes of Swanhild glowing in the darkness as the embers glowed
+ upon the hearth. Now they glowed brightly, so brightly that he could see
+ the outstretched arms and the hard white face beneath them, and now they
+ grew dim, of a sudden to shine bright again. And all the while she hissed
+ words through her clenched teeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus she hissed, fierce and low:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Gudruda, Sister mine, hearken and sleep!
+ By the bond of blood I bid thee sleep!&mdash;
+ By the strength that is in me I bid thee sleep!&mdash;
+ Sleep! sleep sound!
+
+ &ldquo;Eric Brighteyes, hearken and sleep!
+ By the bond of sin I charge thee sleep!&mdash;
+ By the blood of Atli I charge thee, sleep!&mdash;
+ Sleep! sleep sound!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Then thrice she tossed her hands aloft, saying:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;From love to sleep!
+ From sleep to death!
+ From death to Hela!
+ Say, lovers, where shall ye kiss again?&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Then the light went out of her eyes and she laughed low. And ever as she
+ whispered, the spoken words of the two in the shut bed grew fainter and
+ more faint, till at length they died away, and a silence fell upon the
+ place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast no cause to fear the sword of Eric, Gizur,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Nothing
+ will wake him now till daylight comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art awesome!&rdquo; answered Gizur, for he shook with fear. &ldquo;Look not on
+ me with those flaming eyes, I pray thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;the fire is out. Now to the work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What must we do, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Thou</i> must do this. Thou must enter and slay Eric.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I can not&mdash;that I will not!&rdquo; said Gizur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned and looked at him, and lo! her eyes began to flame again&mdash;upon
+ his eyes they seemed to burn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou wilt do as I bid thee,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;With Eric&rsquo;s sword thou shalt slay
+ Eric, else I will curse thee where thou art, and bring such evil on thee
+ as thou knowest not of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look not so, Swanhild,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Lead on&mdash;I come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they creep into the shut chamber of Gudruda. It is so dark that they
+ can see nothing, and nothing can they hear except the heavy breathing of
+ the sleepers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is to be told, that at this time Swanhild had it in her mind to kill,
+ not Eric but Gudruda, for thus she would smite the heart of Brighteyes.
+ Moreover, she loved Eric, and while he lived she might yet win him; but
+ Eric dead must be Eric lost. But on Gudruda she would be bitterly avenged&mdash;Gudruda,
+ who, for all her scheming, had yet been a wife to Eric!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they stand by the bed. Swanhild puts out her hand, draws down the
+ clothes, and feels the breast of Gudruda beneath, for Gudruda slept on the
+ outside of the bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she searches by the head of the bed and finds Whitefire which hung
+ there, and draws the sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here lies Eric, on the outside,&rdquo; she says to Gizur, &ldquo;and here is
+ Whitefire. Strike and strike home, leaving Whitefire in the wound.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gizur takes the sword and lifts it. He is sore at heart that he must do
+ such a coward deed; but the spell of Swanhild is upon him, and he may not
+ flinch from it. Then a thought takes him and he also puts down his hand to
+ feel. It lights upon Gudruda&rsquo;s golden hair, that hangs about her breast
+ and falls from the bed to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is woman&rsquo;s hair,&rdquo; he whispers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; Swanhild answers, &ldquo;it is Eric&rsquo;s hair. The hair of Eric is long, as
+ thou hast seen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now neither of them knows that Gudruda cut Eric&rsquo;s locks when he lay sick
+ on Mosfell, though Swanhild knows well that it is not Brighteyes whom she
+ bids Gizur slay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, lifts the sword, and the faint starlight
+ struggling into the chamber gathers and gleams upon the blade. Thrice he
+ lifts it, and thrice it draws it back. Then with an oath he strikes&mdash;and
+ drives it home with all his strength!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the bed beneath there comes one long sigh and a sound as of limbs
+ trembling against the bed-gear. Then all is still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is done!&rdquo; he says faintly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild puts down her hand once more. Lo! it is wet and warm. Then she
+ bends herself and looks, and behold! the dead eyes of Gudruda glare up
+ into her eyes. She can see them plainly, but none know what she read
+ there. At the least it was something that she loved not, for she reels
+ back against the panelling, then falls upon the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, while Gizur stands as one in a dream, she rises, saying: &ldquo;I am
+ avenged of the death of Atli. Let us hence!&mdash;ah! let us hence
+ swiftly! Give me thy hand, Gizur, for I am faint!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Gizur gives her his hand and they pass thence. Presently they stand in
+ the store-room, and there lies Skallagrim, still plunged in his drunken
+ sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Must I do more murder?&rdquo; asks Gizur hoarsely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; Swanhild says. &ldquo;I am sick with blood. Leave the knave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They pass out by the casement into the yard and so on till they find their
+ horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lift me, Gizur; I can no more,&rdquo; says Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lifts her to the saddle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whither away?&rdquo; he asks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Coldback, Gizur, and thence to cold Death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus did Gudruda, Eric&rsquo;s bride and Asmund&rsquo;s daughter, the fairest woman
+ who ever lived in Iceland, die on her marriage night by the hand of Gizur,
+ Ospakar&rsquo;s son, and through the hate and witchcraft of Swanhild the
+ Fatherless, her half-sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW THE DAWN CAME
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The dawn broke over Middalhof. Slowly the light gathered in the empty
+ hall, it crept slowly into the little chamber where Eric slept, and
+ Gudruda slept also with a deeper sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the two women came from their chamber at the far end of the hall, and
+ drew near the hearth, shivering, for the air was cold. They knelt by the
+ fire, blowing at the embers till the sticks they cast upon them crackled
+ to a blaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems that Gudruda is not yet gone,&rdquo; said one to the other. &ldquo;I thought
+ she should ride away with Eric before the dawn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Newly wed lie long abed!&rdquo; laughed the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am glad to see the blessed light,&rdquo; said the first woman, &ldquo;for last
+ night I dreamed that once again this hall ran red with blood, as at the
+ marriage-feast of Ospakar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; answered the other, &ldquo;it will be well for the south when Eric
+ Brighteyes and Gudruda are gone over sea, for their loves have brought
+ much bloodshed upon the land.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, indeed!&rdquo; sighed the first. &ldquo;Had Asmund the Priest never found Groa,
+ Ran&rsquo;s gift, singing by the sea, Valhalla had not been so full to-day.
+ Mindest thou the day he brought her here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I remember it well,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;though I was but a girl at the time.
+ Still, when I saw those dark eyes of hers&mdash;just such eyes as
+ Swanhild&rsquo;s!&mdash;I knew her for a witch, as all Finn women are. It is an
+ evil world: my husband is dead by the sword; dead are both my sons,
+ fighting for Eric; dead is Unna, Thorod&rsquo;s daughter; Asmund, my lord, is
+ dead, and dead is Björn; and now Gudruda the Fair, whom I have rocked to
+ sleep, leaves us to go over sea. I may not go with her, for my daughter&rsquo;s
+ sake; yet I almost wish that I too were dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will come soon enough,&rdquo; said the other, who was young and fair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the witch-sleep began to roll from Eric&rsquo;s heart, though his eyes were
+ not yet open. But the talk of the women echoed in his ears, and the words
+ &ldquo;<i>dead!</i>&rdquo; &ldquo;<i>dead!</i>&rdquo; &ldquo;<i>dead!</i>&rdquo; fell heavily on his
+ slumbering sense. At length he opened his eyes, only to shut them again,
+ because of a bright gleam of light that ran up and down something at his
+ side. Heavily he wondered what this might be, that shone so keen and
+ bright&mdash;that shone like a naked sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now he looked again. Yes, it was a sword which stood by him upon the bed,
+ and the golden hilt was like the hilt of Whitefire. He lifted up his hand
+ to touch it, thinking that he dreamed. Lo! his hand and arm were red!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he remembered, and the thought of Gudruda flashed through his heart.
+ He sat up, gazing down into the shadow at his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the women at the fire heard a sound as of a great man falling to
+ earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is that noise?&rdquo; said one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric leaping from his bed,&rdquo; answered the other. &ldquo;He has slept too long,
+ as we have also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they spoke the curtain of the shut bed was pushed away, and through it
+ staggered Eric in his night-gear, and lo! the left side of it was red. His
+ eyes were wide with horror, his mouth was open, and his face was white as
+ ice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stopped, looking at them, made as though to speak, and could not. Then,
+ while they shrank from him in terror, he turned, and, walking like a
+ drunken man, staggered from the hall down that passage which led to the
+ store-chamber. The door stood wide, the shutter was wide, and on the
+ floor, soaked in the dregs of ale, Skallagrim yet lay snoring, his axe in
+ one hand and a cup in the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric looked and understood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Awake, drunkard!&rdquo; he cried, in so terrible a voice that the room shook.
+ &ldquo;Awake, and look upon thy work!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim sat up, yawning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forsooth, my head swims,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Give me ale, I am thirsty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never wilt thou look on ale again, Skallagrim, when thou hast seen that
+ which I have to show!&rdquo; said Eric, in the same dread voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Skallagrim rose to his feet and gaped upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What means this, lord? Is it time to ride? and say! why is thy shirt red
+ with blood?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Follow me, drunkard, and look upon thy work!&rdquo; Eric said again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Skallagrim grew altogether sober, and grasping his axe, followed
+ after Brighteyes, sore afraid of what he might see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went down the passage, past the high seat of the hall, till they came
+ to the curtain of the shut bed; and after them followed the women. Eric
+ seized the curtain in his hand, rent it from its fastenings, and cast it
+ on the ground. Now the light flowed in and struck upon the bed. It fell
+ upon the bed, it fell upon Whitefire&rsquo;s hilt and ran along the blade, it
+ gleamed on a woman&rsquo;s snowy breast and golden hair, and shone in her
+ staring eyes&mdash;a woman who lay stiff and cold upon the bed, the great
+ sword fixed within her heart!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look upon thy work, drunkard!&rdquo; Eric cried again, while the women who
+ peeped behind sent their long wail of woe echoing down the panelled hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken!&rdquo; said Eric: &ldquo;while thou didst lie wallowing in thy swine&rsquo;s
+ sleep, foes crept across thy carcase, and this is their handiwork:&mdash;yonder
+ she lies who was my bride!&mdash;now is Gudruda the Fair a death-wife who
+ last night was my bride! This is thy work, drunkard! and now what meed for
+ thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim looked. Then he spoke in a hoarse slow voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What meed, lord? But one&mdash;death!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then with one hand he covered his eyes and with the other held out his axe
+ to Eric Brighteyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric took the axe, and while the women ran thence screaming, he whirled it
+ thrice about his head. Then he smote down towards the skull of Skallagrim,
+ but as he smote it seemed to him that a voice whispered in his ear: &ldquo;<i>Thy
+ oath!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;and he remembered that he had sworn to slay no more, save
+ for his own life&rsquo;s sake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mighty blow was falling and he might only do this&mdash;loose the axe
+ before it clove Skallagrim in twain. He loosed and away the great axe
+ flew. It passed over the head of Skallagrim, and sped like light across
+ the wide hall, till it crashed through the panelling on the further side,
+ and buried itself to the haft in the wall beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not for me to kill thee, drunkard! Go, die in thy drink!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I will kill myself!&rdquo; cried the Baresark, and, rushing across the
+ hall he tore the great axe from its bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;perhaps there is yet a deed for thee to do. Then thou
+ mayest die, if it pleases thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Skallagrim coming back, &ldquo;perchance there is still a deed to
+ do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, flinging down the axe, Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark fell upon
+ the floor and wept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric did not weep. Only he drew Whitefire from the heart of Gudruda
+ and looked at it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art a strange sword, Whitefire,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;who slayest both friend
+ and foe! Shame on thee, Whitefire! We swore our oath on thee, Whitefire,
+ and thou hast cut its chain! Now I am minded to shatter thee.&rdquo; And as Eric
+ looked on the great blade, lo! it hummed strangely in answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;First must thou be the death of some,&rsquo; thou sayest? Well, maybe,
+ Whitefire! But never yet didst thou drink so sweet a life as hers who now
+ lies dead, nor ever shalt again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he sheathed the sword, but neither then nor afterwards did he wipe
+ the blood of Gudruda from its blade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Last night a-marrying&mdash;to-day a-burying,&rdquo; said Eric, and he called
+ to the women to bring spades. Then, having clothed himself, he went to the
+ centre of the hall, and, brushing away the sand, broke the hard
+ clay-flooring, dealing great blows on it with an axe. Now Skallagrim,
+ seeing his purpose, came to him and took one of the spades, and together
+ they laboured in silence till they had dug a grave a fathom deep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;here, in thine own hall where thou wast born and
+ lived, Gudruda the Fair, thou shalt sleep at the last. And of Middalhof I
+ say this: that none shall live there henceforth. It shall be haunted and
+ accursed till the rafters rot and the walls fall in, making thy barrow,
+ Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this indeed came to pass, for none have lived in Middalhof since the
+ days of Gudruda the Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter. It has been ruined these many
+ years, and now it is but a pile of stones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the grave was dug, Eric washed himself and ate some food. Then he
+ went in to where Gudruda lay dead, and bade the women make her ready for
+ burial. This they did. When she was washed and clad in a clean white robe,
+ Eric came to her, and with his own hand bound the Hell-shoes on her feet
+ and closed her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was just then that a man came who said that the people of Gizur and of
+ Swanhild had burned Gudruda&rsquo;s ship, driving the crew ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is well,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;We need the ship no more; now hath she whom it
+ should bear wings with which to fly.&rdquo; Then he went in and sat down on the
+ bed by the body of Gudruda, while Skallagrim crouched on the ground
+ without, tearing at his beard and muttering. For the fierce heart of
+ Skallagrim was broken because of that evil which his drunkenness had
+ brought about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All day Eric sat thus, looking on his dead love&rsquo;s face, till the hour came
+ round when he and Gudruda had drunk the bride-cup. Then he rose and kissed
+ dead Gudruda on the lips, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not look to part with thee thus, sweet! It is sad that thou
+ shouldst have gone and left me here. Natheless, I shall soon follow on thy
+ path.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he called aloud:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art sober, drunkard?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim came and stood before him, saying nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take thou the feet of her whom thou didst bring to death, and I will take
+ her head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they lifted up Gudruda and bore her to the grave. Then Eric stood near
+ the grave, and, taking dead Gudruda in his arms, looked upon her face by
+ the light of the fire and of the candles that were set about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked thrice, then sang aloud:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Long ago, when swept the snow-blast,
+ Close we clung and plighted troth.
+ Many a year, through storm and sword-song,
+ Sore I strove to win thee, sweet!
+ But last night I held thee, Fairest,
+ Lock&rsquo;d, a wife, in lover&rsquo;s arms.
+ Now, Gudruda, in thy death-rest,
+ Sleep thou soft till Eric come!
+
+ &ldquo;Hence I go to wreak thy murder.
+ Hissing fire of flaming stead,
+ Groan of spear-carles, wail of women,
+ Soon shall startle through the night.
+ Then on Mosfell, Kirtle-Wearer,
+ Eric waits the face of Death.
+ Freed from weary life and sorrow,
+ Soon we&rsquo;ll kiss in Hela&rsquo;s halls!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Then he laid her in the grave, and, having shrouded a sheet over her, they
+ filled it in together, hiding Gudruda the Fair from the sight of men for
+ ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Afterwards Eric armed himself, and this Skallagrim did also. Then he
+ strode from the hall, and Skallagrim followed him. In the yard those
+ horses were still tied that should have carried them to the ship, and on
+ one was the saddle of Gudruda. She had ridden on this horse for many
+ years, and loved it much, for it would follow her like a dog. Eric looked
+ at him, then said aloud:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gudruda may need thee where she is, Blackmane,&rdquo; for so the horse was
+ named. &ldquo;At the least, none shall ride thee more!&rdquo; And he snatched the axe
+ from the hand of Skallagrim and slew the horse at a blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they rode away, heading for Coldback. The night was wild and windy,
+ and the sky dark with scudding clouds, through which the moon peeped out
+ at times. Eric looked up, then spoke to Skallagrim:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good night for burning, drunkard!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, lord; the flames will fly briskly,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How many, thinkest thou, walked over thee, drunkard, when thou didst lie
+ yonder in the ale?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not,&rdquo; groaned Skallagrim; &ldquo;but I found this in the soft earth
+ without: the print of a man&rsquo;s and a woman&rsquo;s feet; and this on the hill
+ side: the track of two horses ridden hard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gizur and Swanhild, drunkard,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Swanhild cast us into deep
+ sleep by witchcraft, and Gizur dealt the blow. Better for him that he had
+ never been born than that he has lived to deal that coward&rsquo;s blow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they rode on, and when midnight was a little while gone they came to
+ the stead at Coldback. Now this house was roofed with turves, and the
+ windows were barred so that none could pass through them. Also in the yard
+ were faggots of birch and a stack of hay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric and Skallagrim tied their horses in a dell that is to the north of
+ the stead and crept up to the house. All was still; but a fire burnt in
+ the hall, and, looking through a crack, Eric could see many men sleeping
+ about it. Then he made signs to Skallagrim and together, very silently,
+ they fetched hay and faggots, piling them against the north door of the
+ house, for the wind blew from the north. Now Eric spoke to Skallagrim,
+ bidding him stand, axe in hand, by the south door, and slay those who came
+ out when the reek began to smart them: but he went himself to fire the
+ pile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Brighteyes had made all things ready for the burning, it came into
+ his mind that, perhaps, Gizur and Swanhild were not in the house. But he
+ would not hold his hand for this, for he was mad with grief and rage. So
+ once more he prepared for the deed, when again he heard a voice in his ear&mdash;the
+ voice of Gudruda, and it seemed to say:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Thine oath, Eric! remember thine oath!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he turned and the rage went out of his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let them seek me on Mosfell,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I will not slay them secretly and
+ by reek, the innocent and the guilty together.&rdquo; And he strode round the
+ house to where Skallagrim stood at the south door, axe aloft and watching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does the fire burn, lord? I see no smoke,&rdquo; whispered Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I have made none. I will shed no more blood, except to save my life.
+ I leave vengeance to the Norns.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Skallagrim thought that Brighteyes was mad, but he dared say nothing.
+ So they went to their horses, and when they found them, Eric rode back to
+ the house. Presently they drew near, and Eric told Skallagrim to stay
+ where he was, and riding on to the house, smote heavy blows upon the door,
+ just as Skallagrim once had smitten, before Eric went up to Mosfell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild lay in her shut bed; but she could not sleep, because of what
+ she saw in the eyes of Gudruda. Little may she ever sleep again, for when
+ she shuts her eyes once more she sees that which was written in the dead
+ eyes of Gudruda. So, as she lay, she heard the blows upon the door, and
+ sprang frightened from her bed. Now there was tumult in the hall, for
+ every man rose to his feet in fear, searching for his weapons. Again the
+ loud knocks came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the ghost of Eric!&rdquo; cried one, for Gizur had given out that Eric
+ was dead at his hand in fair fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open!&rdquo; said Gizur, and they opened, and there, a little way from the
+ door, sat Brighteyes on a horse, great and shadowy to see, and behind him
+ was Skallagrim the Baresark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the ghost of Eric!&rdquo; they cried again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am no ghost,&rdquo; said Brighteyes. &ldquo;I am no ghost, ye men of Swanhild. Tell
+ me: is Gizur, the son of Ospakar, among you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gizur is here,&rdquo; said a voice; &ldquo;but he swore he slew thee last night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then he lied,&rdquo; quoth Eric. &ldquo;Gizur did not slay me&mdash;he murdered
+ Gudruda the Fair as she lay asleep at my side. See!&rdquo; and he drew Whitefire
+ from its scabbard and held it in the rays of the moon that now shone out
+ between the cloud rifts. &ldquo;Whitefire is red with Gudruda&rsquo;s blood&mdash;Gudruda
+ slaughtered in her sleep by Gizur&rsquo;s coward hand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now men murmured, for this seemed to them the most shameful of all deeds.
+ But Gizur, hearing, shrank back aghast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen again!&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;I was minded but now to burn you all as ye
+ slept&mdash;ay, the firing is piled against the door. Still, I held my
+ hand, for I have sworn to slay no more, except to save my life. Now I ride
+ hence to Mosfell. Thither let Gizur come, Gizur the murderer, and Swanhild
+ the witch, and with them all who will. There I will give them greeting,
+ and wipe away the blood of Gudruda from Whitefire&rsquo;s blade.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not, Eric,&rdquo; cried Swanhild, &ldquo;I will come, and there thou mayst kill
+ me, if thou canst.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Against thee, Swanhild,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;I lift no hand. Do thy worst, I
+ leave thee to thy fate and the vengeance of the Norns. I am no
+ woman-slayer. But to Gizur the murderer I say, come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he turned and went, and Skallagrim went with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Up, men, and cut Eric down!&rdquo; cried Gizur, seeking to cover his shame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no man stirred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC SENT AWAY HIS MEN FROM MOSFELL
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric and Skallagrim came to Mosfell in safety, and during all that
+ ride Brighteyes spoke no word. He rode in silence, and in silence
+ Skallagrim rode after him. The heart of Skallagrim was broken because of
+ the sorrow which his drunkenness had brought about, and the heart of Eric
+ was buried in Gudruda&rsquo;s grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Mosfell Eric found four of his own men, two of whom had been among
+ those that the people of Gizur and Swanhild had driven from Gudruda&rsquo;s ship
+ before they fired her. For no fight had been made on the ship. There also
+ he found Jon, who had been loosed from his bands in the booth by one who
+ heard his cries as he rode past. Now when Jon saw Brighteyes, he told him
+ all, and fell at Eric&rsquo;s feet and wept because he had betrayed him in his
+ fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric spoke no angry word to him. Stooping down he raised him, saying,
+ &ldquo;Thou wast never overstout of heart, Jon, and thou art scarcely to be
+ blamed because thou didst speak rather than die in torment, though perhaps
+ some had chosen so to die and not to speak. Now I am a luckless man, and
+ all things happen as they are fated, and the words of Atli come true, as
+ was to be looked for. The Norns, against whom none may stand, did but work
+ their will through thy mouth, Jon; so grieve no more for that which cannot
+ be undone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he turned away, but Jon wept long and loudly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night Eric slept well and dreamed no dreams. But on the morrow he
+ woke at dawn, and clothed himself and ate. Then he called his men
+ together, and with them Skallagrim. They came and stood before him, and
+ Eric, drawing Whitefire, leaned upon it and spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken, mates,&rdquo; he said: &ldquo;I know this, that my hours are short and death
+ draws on. My years have been few and evil, and I cannot read the purpose
+ of my life. She whom I loved has been slain by the witchcraft of Swanhild
+ and the coward hand of Gizur the murderer, and I go to seek her where she
+ waits. I am very glad to go, for now I have no more joy in life, being but
+ a luckless man; it is an ill world, friends, and all the ways are red with
+ blood. I have shed much blood, though but one life haunts me now at the
+ last, and that is the life of Atli the Earl, for he was no match for my
+ might and he is dead because of my sin. With my own blood I will wash away
+ the blood of Atli, and then I seek another place, leaving nothing but a
+ tale to be told in the ingle when fall the winter snows. For to this end
+ we all come at the last, and it matters little if it find us at midday or
+ at nightfall. We live in sorrow, we die in pain and darkness: for this is
+ the curse that the Gods have laid upon men and each must taste it in his
+ season. But I have sworn that no more men shall die for me. I will fight
+ the last great fight alone; for I know this: I shall not easily be
+ overcome, and with my fallen foes I will tread on Bifrost Bridge.
+ Therefore, farewell! When the bones of Eric Brighteyes lie in their
+ barrow, or are picked by ravens on the mountain side, Gizur will not
+ trouble to hunt out those who clung to him, if indeed Gizur shall live to
+ tell the tale. Nor need ye fear the hate of Swanhild, for she aims her
+ spears at me alone. Go, therefore, and when I am dead, do not forget me,
+ and do not seek to avenge me, for Death the avenger of all will find them
+ also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric&rsquo;s men heard and groaned aloud, saying that they would die with
+ him, for they loved Eric one and all. Only Skallagrim said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Brighteyes spoke again: &ldquo;Hear me, comrades. If ye will not go, my
+ blood will be on your heads, for I will ride out alone, and meet the men
+ of Gizur in the plain and fall there fighting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then one by one they crept away to seek their horses in the dell. And each
+ man as he went came to Eric and kissed his hand, then passed thence
+ weeping. Jon was the last to go, except Skallagrim only, and he was so
+ moved that he could not speak at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was this Jon who, in after years, when he was grown very old, wandered
+ from stead to stead telling the deeds of Eric Brighteyes, and always
+ finding a welcome because of his tale, till at length, as he journeyed, he
+ was overtaken by a snowstorm and buried in a drift. For Jon, who lacked
+ much, had this gift: he had a skald&rsquo;s tongue. Men have always held that it
+ was to the honour of Jon that he told the tale thus, hiding nothing,
+ seeing that some of it is against himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now when all had gone, Eric looked at Skallagrim, who still stood near
+ him, axe in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherefore goest thou not, drunkard?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Surely thou wilt find ale
+ and mead in the vales or oversea. Here there is none. Hasten! I would be
+ alone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the great body of Skallagrim shook with grief and shame, and the red
+ blood poured up beneath his dark sin. Then he spoke in a thick voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not think to live to hear such words from the lips of Eric
+ Brighteyes. They are well earned, yet it is unmanly of thee, lord, thus to
+ taunt one who loves thee. I would sooner die as Swanhild said yonder
+ thrall should die than live to listen to such words. I have sinned against
+ thee, indeed, and because of my sin my heart is broken. Hast thou, then,
+ never sinned that thou wouldst tear it living from my breast as eagles
+ tear a foundered horse? Think on thine own sins, Eric, and pity mine!
+ Taunt me thus once more or bid me go once more and I will go indeed! I
+ will go thus&mdash;on the edge of yonder gulf thou didst overcome me by
+ thy naked might, and there I swore fealty to thee, Eric Brighteyes. Many a
+ year have we wandered side by side, and, standing back to back, have
+ struck many a blow. I am minded to do this: to stand by thee in the last
+ great fight that draws on and to die there with thee. I have loved no
+ other man save thee, and I am too old to seek new lords. Yet, if still
+ thou biddest me, I will go thus. Where I swore my oath to thee, there I
+ will end it. For I will lay me down on the brink of yonder gulf, as once I
+ lay when thy hand was at my throat, and call out that thou art no more my
+ lord and I am no more thy thrall. Then I will roll into the depths
+ beneath, and by this death of shame thou shalt be freed of me, Eric
+ Brighteyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric looked at the great man&mdash;he looked long and sadly. Then he
+ spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Skallagrim Lambstail, thou hast a true heart. I too have sinned, and now
+ I put away thy sin, although Gudruda is dead through thee and I must die
+ because of thee. Stay by me if thou wilt and let us fall together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Skallagrim came to Eric, and, kneeling before him, took his hands and
+ kissed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I am once more a man,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and I know this: we two shall die
+ such a great death that it will be well to have lived to die it!&rdquo; and he
+ arose and shouted:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A! hai! A! hai! I see foes pass in pride!
+ A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!
+ Hear the song of the sword!
+ Whitefire is aloft&mdash;aloft!
+ Bare is the axe of the Baresark!
+ Croak, ye nesting ravens;
+ Flap your wings, ye eagles,
+ For bright is Mosfell&rsquo;s cave with blood!
+ Lap! lap! thou Grey Wolf,
+ Laugh aloud, Odin!
+
+ &ldquo;Laugh till shake the golden doors;
+ Heroes&rsquo; feet are set on Bifrost,
+ Open, ye hundred gates!
+ A! hai! A! hai! red runs the fray!
+ A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Then Skallagrim turned and went to clean his harness and the golden helm
+ of Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now at Coldback Gizur spoke with Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast brought the greatest shame upon me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for thou hast
+ caused me to slay a sleeping woman. Knowest thou that my own men will
+ scarcely speak with me? I have come to this evil pass, through love of
+ thee, that I have slain a sleeping woman!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not my fault that thou didst kill Gudruda,&rdquo; answered Swanhild;
+ &ldquo;surely I thought it was Eric whom thy sword pierced! I have not sought
+ thy love, Gizur, and I say this to thee: go, if thou wilt, and leave me
+ alone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gizur looked at her, and was minded to go; but, as Swanhild knew well,
+ she held him too fast in the net of her witcheries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would go, if I might go!&rdquo; answered Gizur; &ldquo;but I am bound to thee for
+ good or evil, since it is fated that I shall wed thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou wilt never wed me while Eric lives,&rdquo; said Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now she spoke thus truthfully, and by chance, as it were, not as driving
+ Gizur on to slay Eric&mdash;for, now that Gudruda was dead, she was in two
+ minds as to this matter, since, if she might, she still desired to take
+ Eric to herself&mdash;but meaning that while Eric lived she would wed no
+ other man. But Gizur took it otherwise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eric shall certainly die if I may bring it about,&rdquo; he answered, and went
+ to speak with his men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now all were gathered in the yard at Coldback, and that was a great
+ company. But their looks were heavy because of the shame that Gizur,
+ Ospakar&rsquo;s son, had brought upon them by the murder of Gudruda in her
+ sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hearken, comrades!&rdquo; said Gizur: &ldquo;great shame is come upon me because of a
+ deed that I have done unwittingly, for I aimed at the eagle Eric and I
+ have slain the swan Gudruda.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a certain old viking in the company, named Ketel, whom Gizur had
+ hired for the slaying of Eric, spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Man or woman, it is a niddering deed to kill folk in their sleep, Gizur!
+ It is murder, and no less, and small luck can be hoped for from the
+ stroke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gizur felt that his people looked on him askance and heavily, and knew
+ that it would be hard to show them that he was driven to this deed against
+ his will, and by the witchcraft of Swanhild. So, as was his nature, he
+ turned to guile for shelter, like a fox to his hole, and spoke to them
+ with the tongue of a lawman; for Gizur had great skill in speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That tale was not all true which Eric Brighteyes told you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;He
+ was mad with grief, and moreover it seems that he slept, and only woke to
+ find Gudruda dead. It came about thus: I stood with the lady Swanhild, and
+ was about to call aloud on Eric to arm himself and come forth and meet me
+ face to face&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, lord, methinks thou hadst never met another foe,&rdquo; quoth the viking
+ Ketel who had spoken first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When of a sudden,&rdquo; went on Gizur, taking no note of Ketel&rsquo;s words, &ldquo;one
+ clothed in white sprang from the bed and rushed on me. Then I, thinking
+ that it was Eric, lifted sword, not to smite, but to ward him away; but
+ the linen-wearer met the sword and fell down dead. Then I fled, fearing
+ lest men should wake and trap us, and that is all the tale. It was no
+ fault of mine if Gudruda died upon the sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus he spoke, but still men looked doubtfully upon him, for his eye was
+ the eye of a liar&mdash;and Eric, as they knew, did not lie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is hard to find the truth between lawman&rsquo;s brain and tongue,&rdquo; said the
+ old viking Ketel. &ldquo;Eric is no lawman, but a true man, and he sang another
+ song. I would slay Eric indeed, for between him and me there is a
+ blood-feud, since my brother died at his hand when, with Whitefire for a
+ crook, Brighteyes drove armed men like sheep down the hall of Middalhof&mdash;ay
+ and swordless, slew Ospakar. Yet I say that Eric is a true man, and,
+ whether or no thou art true, Gizur the Lawman, that thou knowest best&mdash;thou
+ and Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa&rsquo;s daughter. If thou didst slay Gudruda
+ as thou tellest, say, how come Gudruda&rsquo;s blood on Whitefire&rsquo;s blade? How
+ did it chance, Gizur, that thou heldest Whitefire in thy hand and not
+ thine own sword? Now I tell thee this: either thou shalt go up against
+ Eric and clear thyself by blows, or I leave thee; and methinks there are
+ others among this company who will do the same, for we have no wish to be
+ partners with murderers and their wickedness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, a good word!&rdquo; said many who stood by. &ldquo;Let Gizur go up with us to
+ Mosfell, and there stand face to face with Eric and clear himself by
+ blows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ask no more,&rdquo; said Gizur; &ldquo;we will ride to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But much more shalt thou get, liar,&rdquo; quoth Ketel to himself, &ldquo;for that
+ hour when thou lookest once again on Whitefire shall be thy last!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Gizur and Swanhild made ready to go up against Eric. That day they rode
+ away with a great company, a hundred and one in all, and this was their
+ plan. They sent six men with that thrall who had shown them the secret
+ path, bidding him guide them to the mountain-top. Then, when they were
+ come thither, and heard the shouts of those who sought to gain the
+ platform from the south, they were to watch till Eric and his folk came
+ out from the cave, and shoot them with arrows from above or crush them
+ with stones. But if perchance Eric left the platform and came to meet his
+ foes in the narrow pass, then they must let themselves down with ropes
+ from the height above, and, creeping after him round the rock, must smite
+ him in the back. Moreover, in secret, Gizur promised a great reward of ten
+ hundreds in silver to him who should kill Eric, for he did not long to
+ stand face to face with him alone. Swanhild also in secret made promise of
+ reward to those who should bring Eric to her, bound, but living; and she
+ bade them do this&mdash;to bear him down with shields and tie him with
+ ropes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they rode away, the seven who should climb the mountain from behind
+ going first, and on the morrow morning they crossed the sand and came to
+ Mosfell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM GREW FEY
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now the night came down upon Mosfell, and of all nights this was the
+ strangest. The air was quiet and heavy, yet no rain fell. It was so
+ silent, moreover, that, did a stone slip upon the mountain side or a horse
+ neigh far off on the plains, the sound of it crept up the fell and was
+ echoed from the crags.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric and Skallagrim sat together on the open space of rock that is before
+ the cave, and great heaviness and fear came into their hearts, so that
+ they had no desire to sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methinks the night is ghost-ridden,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and I am fey, for I grow
+ cold, and it seems to me that one strokes my hair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is ghost-ridden, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim. &ldquo;Trolls are abroad, and
+ the God-kind gather to see Eric die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a while they sat in silence, then suddenly the mountain heaved up
+ gently beneath them. Thrice it seemed to heave like a woman&rsquo;s breast, and
+ left them frightened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now the dwarf-folk come from their caves,&rdquo; quoth Skallagrim, &ldquo;and great
+ deeds may be looked for, since they are not drawn to the upper earth by a
+ little thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then once more they sat silent; and thick darkness came down upon the
+ mountain, hiding the stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look,&rdquo; said Eric of a sudden, and he pointed to Hecla.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim looked, and lo! the snowy dome of Hecla was aglow with a rosy
+ flame like the light of dawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Winter lights,&rdquo; said Lambstail, shuddering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Death lights!&rdquo; answered Eric. &ldquo;Look again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They looked, and behold! in the rosy glow there sat three giant forms of
+ fire, and their shapes were the shapes of women. Before them was a loom of
+ blackness that stretched from earth to sky, and they wove at it with
+ threads of flame. They were splendid and terrible to see. Their hair
+ streamed behind them like meteor flames, their eyes shone like lightning,
+ and their breasts gleamed like the polished bucklers of the gods. They
+ wove fiercely at the loom of blackness, and as they wove they sang. The
+ voice of the one was as the wind whistling through the pines; the voice of
+ the other was as the sound of rain hissing on deep waters; and the voice
+ of the third was as the moan of the sea. They wove fearfully and they sang
+ loudly, but what they sang might not be known. Now the web grew and the
+ woof grew, and a picture came upon the loom&mdash;a great picture written
+ in fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behold! it was the semblance of a storm-awakened sea, and a giant ship
+ fled before the gale&mdash;a dragon of war, and in the ship were piled the
+ corses of men, and on these lay another corse, as one lies upon a bed.
+ They looked, and the face of the corse grew bright. It was the face of
+ Eric, and his head rested upon the dead heart of Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clinging to each other, Eric and Skallagrim saw the sight of fear that was
+ written on the loom of the Norns. They saw it for a breath. Then, with a
+ laugh like the wail of wolves, the shapes of fire sprang up and rent the
+ web asunder. Then the first passed upward to the sky, the second southward
+ towards Middalhof, but the third swept over Mosfell, so that the
+ brightness of her flaming form shone on the rock where they sat by the
+ cave, and the lightning of her eyes was mirrored in the byrnie of
+ Skallagrim and on Eric&rsquo;s golden helm. She swept past, pointing downwards
+ as she went, and lo! she was gone, and once more darkness and silence lay
+ upon the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this sight was seen of Jon the thrall also, and he told it in his
+ story of the deeds of Eric. For Jon lay hid in a secret place on Mosfell,
+ waiting for tidings of what came to pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a while Eric and Skallagrim clung to each other. Then Skallagrim
+ spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have seen the Valkyries,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;we have seen the Norns&mdash;who are come to warn
+ us of our doom! We shall die to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At the least,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;we shall not die alone: we had a goodly
+ bed on yonder goblin ship, and all of our own slaying methinks. It is not
+ so ill to die thus, lord!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so ill!&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;and yet I am weary of blood and war, of glory
+ and of my strength. Now I desire rest alone. Light fire&mdash;I can bear
+ this darkness no longer; the marrow freezes in my bones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fire can be seen of foes,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It matters little now,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;we are feyfolk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Skallagrim lighted the fire, piling much brushwood and dry turf over
+ it, till presently it burnt up brightly, throwing light on all the space
+ of rock, and heavy shadows against the cliff behind. They sat thus a while
+ in the light of the flames, looking towards the deep gulf, till suddenly
+ there came a sound as of one who climbed the gulf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who comes now, climbing where no man may pass?&rdquo; cried Eric, seizing
+ Whitefire and springing to his feet. Presently he sank down again with
+ white face and staring eyes, and pointed at the edge of the cliff. And as
+ he pointed, the neck of a man rose in the shadow above the brink, and the
+ hands of a man grasped the rock. But there was no head on the neck. The
+ shape of the headless man drew itself slowly over the brink, it walked
+ slowly into the light towards the fire, then sat itself down in the glare
+ of the flames, which shrank away from it as from a draught of wind. Pale
+ with terror, Eric and Skallagrim looked on the headless thing and knew it.
+ It was the wraith of the Baresark that Brighteyes had slain&mdash;the
+ first of all the men he slew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is my mate, Eric, whom thou didst kill years ago and whose severed
+ head spoke with thee!&rdquo; gasped Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is he, sure enough!&rdquo; said Eric; &ldquo;but where may his head be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perchance the head will come,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim. &ldquo;He is an evil sight
+ to see, surely. Say, lord, shall I fall upon him, though I love not the
+ task?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Skallagrim, let him bide; he does but come to warn us of our fate.
+ Moreover, ghosts can only be laid in one way&mdash;by the hewing off of
+ the head and the laying of it at the thigh. But this one has no head to
+ hew.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now as he spoke the headless man turned his neck as though to look. Once
+ more there came the sound of feet and lo! men marched in from the darkness
+ on either side. Eric and Skallagrim looked up and knew them. They were
+ those of Ospakar&rsquo;s folk whom they had slain on Horse-Head Heights; all
+ their wounds were on them and in front of them marched Mord, Ospakar&rsquo;s
+ son. The ghosts gazed upon Eric and Skallagrim with cold dead eyes, then
+ they too sat down by the fire. Now once more there came the sound of feet,
+ and from every side men poured in who had died at the hands of Eric and
+ Skallagrim. First came those who fell on that ship of Ospakar&rsquo;s which Eric
+ sank by Westmans; then the crew of the Raven who had perished upon the
+ sea-path. Even as the man died, so did each ghost come. Some had been
+ drowned and their harness dripped water! Some had died of spear-thrusts
+ and the spears were yet fixed in their breasts! Some had fallen beneath
+ the flash of Whitefire and the weight of the axe of Skallagrim, and there
+ they sat, looking on their wide wounds!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came more and more. There were those whom Eric and Skallagrim had
+ slain upon the seas, those who had fallen before them in the English wars,
+ and all that company who had been drowned in the waters of the Pentland
+ Firth when the witchcraft of Swanhild had brought the Gudruda to her
+ wreck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now here we have a goodly crew,&rdquo; said Eric at length. &ldquo;Is it done,
+ thinkest thou, or will Mosfell send forth more dead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke the wraith of a grey-headed man drew near. He had but one arm,
+ for the other was hewn from him, and the byrnie on his left side was red
+ with blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Welcome, Earl Atli!&rdquo; cried Eric. &ldquo;Sit thou over against me, who to-morrow
+ shall be with thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ghost of the Earl seated itself and looked on Eric with sad eyes, but
+ it spake never a word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came another company, and at their head stalked black Ospakar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These be they who died at Middalhof,&rdquo; cried Eric. &ldquo;Welcome, Ospakar! that
+ marriage-feast of thine went ill!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now methinks we are overdone with trolls,&rdquo; said Skallagrim; &ldquo;but see!
+ here come more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, Hall of Lithdale came, and with him Koll the Half-witted, and
+ others. And so it went on till all the men whom Eric and Skallagrim had
+ slain, or who had died because of them, or at their side, were gathered in
+ deep ranks before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now it is surely done,&rdquo; said Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is yet a space,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, pointing to the other side of the
+ fire, &ldquo;and Hell holds many dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even as the words left his lips there came a noise of the galloping of
+ horse&rsquo;s hoofs, and one clad in white rode up. It was a woman, for her
+ golden hair flowed down about her white arms. Then she slid from the horse
+ and stood in the light of the fire, and behold! her white robe was red
+ with blood, a great sword was set in her heart, and the face and eyes were
+ the face and eyes of Gudruda the Fair, and the horse she rode was
+ Blackmane, that Eric had slain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now when Brighteyes saw her he gave a great cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greeting, sweet!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I am no longer afraid, since thou comest to
+ bear me company. Thou art dear to my sight&mdash;ay even in yon
+ death-sheet. Greeting, sweet, my May! I laid thee stiff and cold in the
+ earth at Middalhof, but, like a loving wife, thou hast burst thy bonds,
+ and art come to save me from the grip of trolls. Thou art welcome,
+ Gudruda, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter! Come, wife, sit thou at my side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ghost of Gudruda spake no word. She walked through the fire towards
+ him, and the flames went out beneath her feet, to burn up again when she
+ had passed. Then she sat down over against Eric and looked on him with
+ wide and tender eyes. Thrice he stretched out his arms to clasp her, but
+ thrice their strength left them and they fell back to his side. It was as
+ though they struck a wall of ice and were numbed by the bitter cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look, here are more,&rdquo; groaned Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric looked, and lo! the empty space to the left of the fire was
+ filled with shadowy shapes like shapes of mist. Amongst them was Gizur,
+ Ospakar&rsquo;s son, and many a man of his company. There, too, was Swanhild,
+ Groa&rsquo;s daughter, and a toad nestled in her breast. She looked with wide
+ eyes upon the eyes of dead Gudruda&rsquo;s ghost, that seemed not to see her,
+ and a stare of fear was set on her lovely face. Nor was this all; for
+ there, before that shadowy throng, stood two great shapes clad in their
+ harness, and one was the shape of Eric and one the shape of Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, being yet alive, did these two look upon their own wraiths!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eric and Skallagrim cried out aloud and their brains swam and their
+ senses left them, so that they swooned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they opened their eyes and life came back to them the fire was dead,
+ and it was day. Nor was there any sign of that company which had been
+ gathered on the rock before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Skallagrim,&rdquo; quoth Eric, &ldquo;it seems that I have dreamed a strange dream&mdash;a
+ most strange dream of Norns and trolls!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me thy dream, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Eric told all the vision, and the Baresark listened in silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was no dream, lord,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;for I myself have seen the same
+ things. Now this is in my mind, that yonder sun is the last that we shall
+ see, for we have beheld the death-shadows. All those who were gathered
+ here last night wait to welcome us on Bifrost Bridge. And the mist-shapes
+ who sat there, amongst whom our wraiths were numbered, are the shapes of
+ those who shall die in the great fight to-day. For days are fled and we
+ are sped!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would not have it otherwise,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;We have been greatly honoured
+ of the Gods, and of the ghost-kind that are around us and above us. Now
+ let us make ready to die as becomes men who have never turned back to
+ blow, for the end of the story should fit the beginning, and of us there
+ is a tale to tell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good word, lord,&rdquo; answered Skallagrim: &ldquo;I have struck few strokes to be
+ shamed of, and I do not fear to tread Bifrost Bridge in thy company. Now
+ we will wash ourselves and eat, so that our strength may be whole in us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they washed themselves with water, and ate merrily, and for the first
+ time for many months Eric was merry. For now that the end was at hand his
+ heart grew light within him. And when they had put the desire of food from
+ them, and buckled on their harness, they looked out from their mountain
+ height, and saw a cloud of dust rise in the desert plain of black sand
+ beneath, and through it the sheen of spears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here come those of whom, if there is truth in visions, some few shall
+ never go back again,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Now, what counsel hast thou, Skallagrim?
+ Where shall we meet them? Here on the space of rock, or yonder in the deep
+ way of the cliff?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My counsel is that we meet them here,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and cut them
+ down one by one as they try to turn the rock. They can scarcely come at us
+ to slay us here so long as our arms have strength to smite.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet they will come, though I know not how,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;for I am sure
+ of this, that our death lies before us. Here, then, we will meet them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the cloud of dust drew nearer, and they saw that this was a great
+ company which came up against them. At the foot of the fell the men stayed
+ and rested a while, and it was not till afternoon that they began to climb
+ the mountain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Night will be at hand before the game is played,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;See,
+ they climb slowly, saving their strength, and yonder among them is
+ Swanhild in a purple cloak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, night will be at hand, Skallagrim&mdash;a last long night! A hundred
+ to two&mdash;the odds are heavy; yet some shall wish them heavier. Now let
+ us bind on our helms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Gizur and his folk crept up the paths from below. Now that
+ thrall who knew the secret way had gone on with six chosen men, and
+ already they climbed the watercourse and drew near to the flat crest of
+ the fell. But Eric and Skallagrim knew nothing of this. So they sat down
+ by the turning place that is over the gulf and waited, singing of the
+ taking of the Raven and of the slaying in the stead at Middalhof, and
+ telling tales of deeds that they had done. And the thrall and his six men
+ climbed on till at length they gained the crest of the fell, and, looking
+ over, saw Eric and Skallagrim beneath them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The birds are in the snare, and hark! they sing,&rdquo; said the thrall; &ldquo;now
+ bring rocks and be silent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Gizur and his people, having learned that Eric and Skallagrim were
+ alone upon the mountain, pushed on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have not much to fear from two men,&rdquo; said Gizur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That we shall learn presently,&rdquo; answered Swanhild. &ldquo;I tell thee this,
+ that I saw strange sights last night, though I did not sleep. I may sleep
+ little now that Gudruda is dead, for that which I saw in her eyes haunts
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they went on, and the face of Gizur grew white with fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM FOUGHT THEIR LAST GREAT FIGHT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Now the thrall and those with him on the crest of the fell heard the
+ murmur of the company of Gizur and Swanhild as they won the mountain side,
+ though they could not see them because of the rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now it is time to begin and knock these birds from their perch,&rdquo; said the
+ thrall, &ldquo;for that is an awkward corner for our folk to turn with Whitefire
+ and the axe of Skallagrim waiting on the farther side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he balanced a great stone, as heavy as three men could lift, on the
+ brow of the rock, and aimed it. Then he pushed and let it go. It smote the
+ platform beneath with a crash, two fathoms behind the spot where Eric and
+ Skallagrim sat. Then it flew into the air, and, just as Brighteyes turned
+ at the sound, it struck the wings of his helm, and, bursting the straps,
+ tore the golden helm-piece from his head and carried it away into the gulf
+ beneath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skallagrim looked up and saw what had come about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They have gained the crest of the fell,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Now we must fly into
+ the cave or down the narrow way and hold it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Down the narrow way, then,&rdquo; said Eric, and while rocks, spears and arrows
+ rushed between and around them, they stepped on to the stone and won the
+ path beyond. It was clear, for Gizur&rsquo;s folk had not yet come, and they ran
+ nearly to the mouth of it, where there was a bend in the way, and stood
+ there side by side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou wast at death&rsquo;s door then, lord!&rdquo; said Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Head-piece is not head,&rdquo; answered Eric; &ldquo;but I wonder how they won the
+ crest of the fell. I have never heard tell of any path by which it might
+ be gained.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There they are at the least,&rdquo; said Skallagrim. &ldquo;Now this is my will, that
+ thou shouldst take my helm. I am Baresark and put little trust in harness,
+ but rather in my axe and strength alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not do that,&rdquo; said Eric. &ldquo;Listen: I hear them come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the tumult of voices and the tramp of feet grew clearer, and
+ after a while Gizur, Swanhild, and the men of their following turned the
+ corner of the narrow way, and lo! there before them&mdash;ay within three
+ paces of them&mdash;stood Eric and Skallagrim shoulder to shoulder, and
+ the light poured down upon them from above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were terrible to see, and the light shone brightly on Eric&rsquo;s golden
+ hair and Whitefire&rsquo;s flashing blade, and the shadows lay dark on the black
+ helm of Skallagrim and in the fierce black eyes beneath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Back surged Gizur and those with him. Skallagrim would have sprung upon
+ them, but Eric caught him by the arm, saying: &ldquo;A truce to thy Baresark
+ ways. Rush not and move not! Let us stand here till they overwhelm us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now those behind Gizur cried out to know what ailed them that they pushed
+ back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only this,&rdquo; said Gizur, &ldquo;that Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail
+ stand like two grey wolves and hold the narrow way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we shall have fighting worth the telling of,&rdquo; quoth Ketel the viking.
+ &ldquo;On, Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, and cut them down!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; said Swanhild; &ldquo;I will speak with Eric first,&rdquo; and, together with
+ Gizur and Ketel, she passed round the corner of the path and came face to
+ face with those who stood at bay there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now yield, Eric,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Foes are behind and before thee. Thou art
+ trapped, and hast little chance of life. Yield thee, I say, with thy black
+ wolf-hound, so perchance thou mayest find mercy even at the hands of her
+ whose husband thou didst wrong and slay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not my way to yield, lady,&rdquo; answered Eric, &ldquo;and still less
+ perchance is it the way of Skallagrim. Least of all will we yield to thee
+ who, after working many ills, didst throw me in a witch-sleep, and to him
+ who slew the wife sleeping at my side. Hearken, Swanhild: here we stand,
+ awaiting death, nor will we take mercy from thy hand. For know this, we
+ shall not die alone. Last night as we sat on Mosfell we saw the Norns
+ weave our web of fate upon their loom of darkness. They sat on Helca&rsquo;s
+ dome and wove their pictures in living flame, then rent the web and flew
+ upward and southward and westward, crying our doom to sky and earth and
+ sea. Last night as we sat by the fire on Mosfell all the company of the
+ dead were gathered round us&mdash;ay! and all the company of those who
+ shall die to-day. Thou wast there, Gizur the murderer, Ospakar&rsquo;s son! thou
+ wast there, Swanhild the witch, Groa&rsquo;s daughter! thou wast there, Ketel
+ Viking! with many another man; and there were we two also. Valkyries have
+ kissed us and death draws near. Therefore, talk no more, but come and make
+ an end. Greeting, Gizur, thou woman-murderer! Draw nigh! draw nigh! Out
+ sword! up shield! and on, thou son of Ospakar!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swanhild spoke no more, and Gizur had no word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On, Gizur! Eric calls thee,&rdquo; quoth Ketel Viking; but Gizur slunk back,
+ not forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Ketel grew mad with rage and shame. He called to the men, and they
+ drew near, as many as might, and looked doubtfully at the pair who stood
+ before them like rocks upon a plain. Eric laughed aloud and Skallagrim
+ gnawed the edge of his shield. Eric laughed aloud and the sound of his
+ laughter ran up the rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are but two,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;and ye are many! Is there never a pair among
+ you will stand face to face with a Baresark and a helmless man?&rdquo; and he
+ tossed Whitefire high into the air and caught it by the hilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Ketel and another man of his following sprang forward with an oath,
+ and their axes thundered loud on the shields of Eric and of Skallagrim.
+ But Whitefire flickered up and the axe of Skallagrim crashed, and at once
+ their knees were loosened, so that they sank down dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More men! more men!&rdquo; cried Eric. &ldquo;These were brave, but their might was
+ little. More men for the Grey Wolf&rsquo;s maw!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Swanhild lashed the folk with bitter words, and two of them sprang
+ on. They sprang on like hounds upon a deer at bay, and they rolled back as
+ gored hounds roll from the deer&rsquo;s horns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More men! more men!&rdquo; cried Eric. &ldquo;Here lie but four and a hundred press
+ behind. Now he shall win great honour who lays Brighteyes low and brings
+ down the helm of Skallagrim.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again two came on, but they found no luck, for presently they also were
+ down upon the bodies of those who went before. Now none could be found to
+ come up against the pair, for they fought like Baldur and Thor, and none
+ could touch them, and no harness might withstand the weight of their blows
+ that shore through shield and helm and byrnie, deep to the bone beneath.
+ Then Eric and Skallagrim leaned upon their weapons and mocked their foes,
+ while these cursed and tore their beards with rage and shame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it is to be told that when the thrall and those with him saw Eric and
+ Skallagrim had escaped their rocks and spears, they took counsel, and the
+ end of it was that they slid down a rope to the platform that is under the
+ crest of the fell. Thence, though they could see nothing, they could hear
+ the clang of blows and the shouts of those who fought and fell&mdash;ay!
+ and the mocking of Eric and of Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now it goes thus,&rdquo; said the thrall, who was a cunning man: &ldquo;Eric and
+ Skallagrim hold the narrow way and none can stand against them. This,
+ then, is my rede: that we turn the rock and take them in the back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His fellows thought this a good saying, and one by one they stood upon the
+ little rock and won the narrow way. They crept along this till they were
+ near to Eric and Skallagrim. Now Swanhild, looking up, saw them and
+ started. Skallagrim noted this and glanced over his shoulder, and that not
+ too soon, for, as he looked, the thrall lifted sword to smite the head of
+ Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a shout of &ldquo;Back to back!&rdquo; the Baresark swung round and ere ever the
+ sword might fall his axe was buried deep in the thrall&rsquo;s breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we must cut our path through them,&rdquo; said Skallagrim, &ldquo;and, if it may
+ be, win the space that is before the cave. Keep them off in front, and I
+ will mind these mannikins.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Gizur&rsquo;s folk, seeing what had come about, took heart and fell upon
+ Eric with a rush, and those who were with the dead thrall rushed at
+ Skallagrim, and there began such a fight as has not been known in Iceland.
+ But the way was so narrow that scarce more than one man could come to each
+ of them at a time. And so fierce and true were the blows of Eric and
+ Skallagrim that of those who came on few went back. Down they fell, and
+ where they fell they died, and for every man who died Eric and Skallagrim
+ won a pace towards the point of rock. Whitefire flamed so swift and swept
+ so wide that it seemed to Swanhild, watching, as though three swords were
+ aloft at once, and the axe of Skallagrim thundered down like the axe of a
+ woodman against a tree, and those groaned on whom it fell as groans a
+ falling tree. Now the shields of these twain were hewn through and
+ through, and cast away, and their blood ran from many wounds. Still, their
+ life was whole in them and they plied axe and sword with both hands. And
+ ever men fell, and ever, fighting hard, they drew nearer to the point of
+ rock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it was won, and now all the company that came with the thrall from
+ over the mountain brow were dead or sorely wounded at the hands of black
+ Skallagrim. Lo! one springs on Eric, and Gizur creeps behind him.
+ Whitefire leaps to meet the man and does not leap in vain; but Gizur
+ smites a coward blow at Eric&rsquo;s uncovered head, and wounds him sorely, so
+ that he falls to his knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I am smitten to the death, Skallagrim,&rdquo; cries Eric. &ldquo;Win the rock and
+ leave me.&rdquo; Yet he rises from his knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Skallagrim turns, red with blood and terrible to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis but a scratch. Climb thou the rock&mdash;I follow,&rdquo; he says, and,
+ screaming like a horse, with weapon aloft he leaps alone upon the foe.
+ They break before the Baresark rush; they break, they fall&mdash;they are
+ cloven by Baresark axe and trodden of Baresark feet! They roll back,
+ leaving the way clear&mdash;save for the dead. Then Skallagrim follows
+ Brighteyes to the rock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eric wipes the gore from his eyes and sees. Then, slowly, and with a
+ reeling brain, he steps down upon the giddy point. He goes near to
+ falling, yet does not fall, for now he lies upon the open space, and
+ creeps on hands and knees to the rock-wall that is by the cave, and sits
+ resting his back against it, Whitefire on his knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before he is there, Skallagrim staggers to his side with a rush.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now we have time to breathe, lord,&rdquo; he gasps. &ldquo;See, here is water,&rdquo; and
+ he takes a pitcher that stands by, and gives Eric to drink from the pool,
+ then drinks himself and pours the rest of the water on Eric&rsquo;s wound. Then
+ new life comes to them, and they both stand on their feet and win back
+ their breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have not done so badly!&rdquo; says Skallagrim, &ldquo;and we are still a match
+ for one or two. See, they come! Say, where shall we meet them, lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here,&rdquo; quoth Eric; &ldquo;I cannot stand well upon my legs without the help of
+ the rock. Now I am all unmeet for fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet shall this last stand of thine be sung of!&rdquo; says Skallagrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now finding none to stay them, the men of Gizur climb one by one upon the
+ rock and win the space that is beyond. Swanhild goes first of all, because
+ she knows well that Eric will not harm her, and after her come Gizur and
+ the others. But many do not come, for they will lift sword no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild draws near and looks on Eric and mocks him in the fierceness
+ of her heart and the rage of her wolf-love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; she says, &ldquo;now are Brighteyes dim eyes! What! weepest thou, Eric?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Swanhild,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;I weep tears of blood for those whom thou
+ hast brought to doom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She draws nearer and speaks low to him: &ldquo;Hearken, Eric. Yield thee! Thou
+ hast done enough for honour, and thou art not smitten to the death of
+ yonder cowardly hound. Yield and I will nurse thee back to health and bear
+ thee hence, and together we will forget our hates and woes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not twice may a man lie in a witch&rsquo;s bed,&rdquo; said Eric, &ldquo;and my troth is
+ plighted to other than thee, Swanhild.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is dead,&rdquo; says Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, she is dead, Swanhild; and I go to seek her amongst the dead&mdash;I
+ go to seek her and to find her!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the face of Swanhild grew fierce as the winter sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast put me away for the last time, Eric! Now thou shalt die, as I
+ have promised thee and as I promised Gudruda the Fair!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So shall I the more quickly find Gudruda and lose sight of thy evil face,
+ Swanhild the harlot! Swanhild the murderess! Swanhild the witch! For I
+ know this: thou shalt not escape!&mdash;thy doom draws on also!&mdash;and
+ haunted and accursed shalt thou be for ever! Fare thee well, Swanhild; we
+ shall meet no more, and the hour comes when thou shalt grieve that thou
+ wast ever born!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Swanhild turned and called to the folk: &ldquo;Come, cut down these outlaw
+ rogues and make an end. Come, cut them down, for night draws on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then once more the men of Gizur closed in upon them. Eric smote thrice and
+ thrice the blow went home, then he could smite no more, for his strength
+ was spent with toil and wounds, and he sank upon the ground. For a while
+ Skallagrim stood over him like a she-bear o&rsquo;er her young and held the mob
+ at bay. Then Gizur, watching, cast a spear at Eric. It entered his side
+ through a cleft in his byrnie and pierced him deep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sped, Skallagrim Lambstail,&rdquo; cried Eric in a loud voice, and all men
+ drew back to see giant Brighteyes die. Now his head fell against the rock
+ and his eyes closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Skallagrim, stooping, drew out the spear and kissed Eric on the
+ forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Iceland shall never see such
+ another man, and few have died so great a death. Tarry a while, lord;
+ tarry a while&mdash;I come&mdash;I come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then crying &ldquo;<i>Eric! Eric!</i>&rdquo; the Baresark fit took him, and once more
+ and for the last time Skallagrim rushed screaming upon the foe, and once
+ more they rolled to earth before him. To and fro he rushed, dealing great
+ blows, and ever as he went they stabbed and cut and thrust at his side and
+ back, for they dared not stand before him, till he bled from a hundred
+ wounds. Now, having slain three more men, and wounded two others,
+ Skallagrim might no more. He stood a moment swaying to and fro, then let
+ his axe drop, threw his arms high above him, and with one loud cry of &ldquo;<i>Eric!</i>&rdquo;
+ fell as a rock falls&mdash;dead upon the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eric was not yet gone. He opened his eyes and saw the death of
+ Skallagrim and smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well ended, Lambstail!&rdquo; he said in a faint voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lo!&rdquo; cried Gizur, &ldquo;yon outlawed hound still lives! Now I will do a
+ needful task and make an end of him, and so shall Ospakar&rsquo;s sword come
+ back to Ospakar&rsquo;s son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art wondrous brave now that the bear lies dying!&rdquo; said Swanhild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it seemed that Eric heard the words, for suddenly his might came back
+ to him, and he staggered to his knees and thence to his feet. Then, as
+ folk fall from him, with all his strength he whirls Whitefire round his
+ head till it shines like a wheel of fire. &ldquo;Thy service is done and thou
+ art clean of Gudruda&rsquo;s blood&mdash;go back to those who forged thee!&rdquo;
+ Brighteyes cries, and casts Whitefire from him towards the gulf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away speeds the great blade, flashing like lightning through the rays of
+ the setting sun, and behold! as men watch it is gone&mdash;gone in
+ mid-air!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since that day no such sword as Whitefire has been known in Iceland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now slay thou me, Gizur,&rdquo; says the dying Eric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gizur comes on with little eagerness, and Eric cries aloud:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Swordless I slew thy father!&mdash;swordless, shieldless, and wounded to
+ the death I will yet slay <i>thee</i>, Gizur the Murderer!&rdquo; and with a
+ loud cry he staggered towards him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gizur smites him with his sword, but Eric does not stay, and while men
+ wait and wonder, Brighteyes sweeps him into his great arms&mdash;ay,
+ sweeps him up, lifts him from the ground and reels on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eric reels on to the brink of the gulf. Gizur sees his purpose, struggles
+ and shrieks aloud. But the strength of the dying Eric is more than the
+ strength of Gizur. Now Brighteyes stands on the dizzy edge and the light
+ of the passing sun flames about his head. And now, bearing Gizur with him,
+ he hurls himself out into the gulf, and lo! the sun sinks!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men stand wondering, but Swanhild cries aloud:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobly done, Eric! nobly done! So I would have seen thee die who of all
+ men wast the first!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This then was the end of Eric Brighteyes the Unlucky, who of all warriors
+ that have lived in Iceland was the mightiest, the goodliest, and the best
+ beloved of women and of those who clung to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, on the morrow, Swanhild caused the body of Eric to be searched for in
+ the cleft, and there they found it, floating in water and with the dead
+ Gizur yet clasped in its bear-grip. Then she cleansed it and clothed it
+ again in its rent armour, and bound on the Hell-shoes, and it was carried
+ on horses to the sea-side, and with it were borne the bodies of Skallagrim
+ Lambstail the Baresark, Eric&rsquo;s thrall, and of all those men whom they had
+ slain in the last great fight on Mosfell, that is now named Ericsfell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Swanhild drew her long dragon of war, in which she had come from
+ Orkneys, from its shed over against Westman Isles, and in the centre of
+ the ship, she piled the bodies of the slain in the shape of a bed, and
+ lashed them fast. And on this bed she laid the corpse of Eric Brighteyes,
+ and the breast of black Skallagrim the Baresark was his pillow, and the
+ breast of Gizur, Ospakar&rsquo;s son, was his foot-rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she caused the sails to be hoisted, and went alone aboard the long
+ ship, the rails of which were hung with the shields of the dead men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when at evening the breeze freshened to a gale that blew from the
+ land, she cut the cable with her own hand, and the ship leapt forward like
+ a thing alive, and rushed out in the red light of the sunset towards the
+ open sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now ever the gale freshened and folk, standing on Westman Heights, saw the
+ long ship plunge past, dipping her prow beneath the waves and sending the
+ water in a rain of spray over the living Swanhild, over the dead Eric and
+ those he lay upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And by the head of Eric Brighteyes, her hair streaming on the wind, stood
+ Swanhild the Witch, clad in her purple cloak, and with rings of gold about
+ her throat and arms. She stood by Eric&rsquo;s head, swaying with the rush of
+ the ship, and singing so sweet and wild a song that men grew weak who
+ heard it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as the people watched, two white swans came down from the clouds and
+ sped on wide wings side by side over the vessel&rsquo;s mast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ship rushed on through the glow of sunset into the gathering night. On
+ sped the ship, but still Swanhild sung, and still the swans flew over her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gale grew fierce, and fiercer yet. The darkness gathered deep upon the
+ raging sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that ship was seen no more, and the death-song of Swanhild as she
+ passed to doom was never heard again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For swans and ship, and Swanhild, and dead Eric and his dead foes, were
+ lost in the wind and the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But far out on the sea a great flame of fire leapt up towards the sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this is the tale of Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur&rsquo;s son; of Gudruda the
+ Fair, Asmund&rsquo;s daughter; of Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli&rsquo;s wife, and of
+ Ounound, named Skallagrim Lambstail, the Baresark, Eric&rsquo;s thrall, all of
+ whom lived and died before Thangbrand, Wilibald&rsquo;s son, preached the White
+ Christ in Iceland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERIC BRIGHTEYES ***
+
+***** This file should be named 2721-h.htm or 2721-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/2/2721/
+
+Produced by John Bickers; Dagny; Emma Dudding; David Widger
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &ldquo;Project
+Gutenberg&rdquo;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&ldquo;the Foundation&rdquo;
+ or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; appears, or with which the phrase &ldquo;Project
+Gutenberg&rdquo; is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+&ldquo;Plain Vanilla ASCII&rdquo; or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original &ldquo;Plain Vanilla ASCII&rdquo; or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, &ldquo;Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.&rdquo;
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+&ldquo;Defects,&rdquo; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &ldquo;Right
+of Replacement or Refund&rdquo; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &lsquo;AS-IS&rsquo; WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm&rsquo;s
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation&rsquo;s EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state&rsquo;s laws.
+
+The Foundation&rsquo;s principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation&rsquo;s web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/old/2721.txt b/old/2721.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2ce34c3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/2721.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,12616 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Eric Brighteyes
+
+Author: H. Rider Haggard
+
+Release Date: March 31, 2006 [EBook #2721]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERIC BRIGHTEYES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Bickers; Dagny; Emma Dudding
+
+
+
+
+
+ERIC BRIGHTEYES
+
+by H. Rider Haggard
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+Madam,
+
+You have graciously conveyed to me the intelligence that during the
+weary weeks spent far from his home--in alternate hope and fear,
+in suffering and mortal trial--a Prince whose memory all men must
+reverence, the Emperor Frederick, found pleasure in the reading of my
+stories: that "they interested and fascinated him."
+
+While the world was watching daily at the bedside of your Majesty's
+Imperial husband, while many were endeavouring to learn courage in our
+supremest need from the spectacle of that heroic patience, a distant
+writer little knew that it had been his fortune to bring to such a
+sufferer an hour's forgetfulness of sorrow and pain.
+
+This knowledge, to an author, is far dearer than any praise, and it is
+in gratitude that, with your Majesty's permission, I venture to dedicate
+to you the tale of Eric Brighteyes.
+
+The late Emperor, at heart a lover of peace, though by duty a soldier of
+soldiers, might perhaps have cared to interest himself in a warrior of
+long ago, a hero of our Northern stock, whose days were spent in strife,
+and whose latest desire was Rest. But it may not be; like the Golden
+Eric of this Saga, and after a nobler fashion, he has passed through the
+Hundred Gates into the Valhalla of Renown.
+
+To you, then, Madam, I dedicate this book, a token, however slight and
+unworthy, of profound respect and sympathy.
+
+I am, Madam,
+
+Your Majesty's most obedient servant,
+
+H. Rider Haggard.
+
+November 17, 1889.
+
+To H.I.M. Victoria, Empress Frederick of Germany.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+"Eric Brighteyes" is a romance founded on the Icelandic Sagas. "What is
+a saga?" "Is it a fable or a true story?" The answer is not altogether
+simple. For such sagas as those of Burnt Njal and Grettir the Strong
+partake both of truth and fiction: historians dispute as to the
+proportions. This was the manner of the saga's growth: In the early days
+of the Iceland community--that republic of aristocrats--say, between the
+dates 900 and 1100 of our era, a quarrel would arise between two great
+families. As in the case of the Njal Saga, its cause, probably, was the
+ill doings of some noble woman. This quarrel would lead to manslaughter.
+Then blood called for blood, and a vendetta was set on foot that ended
+only with the death by violence of a majority of the actors in the drama
+and of large numbers of their adherents. In the course of the feud, men
+of heroic strength and mould would come to the front and perform deeds
+worthy of the iron age which bore them. Women also would help to
+fashion the tale, for good or ill, according to their natural gifts
+and characters. At last the tragedy was covered up by death and time,
+leaving only a few dinted shields and haunted cairns to tell of those
+who had played its leading parts.
+
+But its fame lived on in the minds of men. From generation to generation
+skalds wandered through the winter snows, much as Homer may have
+wandered in his day across the Grecian vales and mountains, to find a
+welcome at every stead, because of the old-time story they had to tell.
+Here, night after night, they would sit in the ingle and while away
+the weariness of the dayless dark with histories of the times when men
+carried their lives in their hands, and thought them well lost if there
+might be a song in the ears of folk to come. To alter the tale was one
+of the greatest of crimes: the skald must repeat it as it came to him;
+but by degrees undoubtedly the sagas did suffer alteration. The facts
+remained the same indeed, but around them gathered a mist of miraculous
+occurrences and legends. To take a single instance: the account of
+the burning of Bergthorsknoll in the Njal Saga is not only a piece of
+descriptive writing that for vivid, simple force and insight is scarcely
+to be matched out of Homer and the Bible, it is also obviously true. We
+feel as we read, that no man could have invented that story, though some
+great skald threw it into shape. That the tale is true, the writer of
+"Eric" can testify, for, saga in hand, he has followed every act of the
+drama on its very site. There he who digs beneath the surface of the
+lonely mound that looks across plain and sea to Westman Isles may still
+find traces of the burning, and see what appears to be the black sand
+with which the hands of Bergthora and her women strewed the earthen
+floor some nine hundred years ago, and even the greasy and clotted
+remains of the whey that they threw upon the flame to quench it. He may
+discover the places where Fosi drew up his men, where Skarphedinn died,
+singing while his legs were burnt from off him, where Kari leapt from
+the flaming ruin, and the dell in which he laid down to rest--at every
+step, in short, the truth of the narrative becomes more obvious. And yet
+the tale has been added to, for, unless we may believe that some human
+beings are gifted with second sight, we cannot accept as true the
+prophetic vision that came to Runolf, Thorstein's son; or that of Njal
+who, on the evening of the onslaught, like Theoclymenus in the Odyssey,
+saw the whole board and the meats upon it "one gore of blood."
+
+Thus, in the Norse romance now offered to the reader, the tale of Eric
+and his deeds would be true; but the dream of Asmund, the witchcraft of
+Swanhild, the incident of the speaking head, and the visions of Eric
+and Skallagrim, would owe their origin to the imagination of successive
+generations of skalds; and, finally, in the fifteenth or sixteenth
+century, the story would have been written down with all its
+supernatural additions.
+
+The tendency of the human mind--and more especially of the Norse
+mind--is to supply uncommon and extraordinary reasons for actions and
+facts that are to be amply accounted for by the working of natural
+forces. Swanhild would have needed no "familiar" to instruct her in her
+evil schemes; Eric would have wanted no love-draught to bring about his
+overthrow. Our common experience of mankind as it is, in opposition to
+mankind as we fable it to be, is sufficient to teach us that the passion
+of one and the human weakness of the other would suffice to these ends.
+The natural magic, the beauty and inherent power of such a woman
+as Swanhild, are things more forceful than any spell magicians have
+invented, or any demon they are supposed to have summoned to their
+aid. But no saga would be complete without the intervention of such
+extraneous forces: the need of them was always felt, in order to throw
+up the acts of heroes and heroines, and to invest their persons with
+an added importance. Even Homer felt this need, and did not scruple to
+introduce not only second sight, but gods and goddesses, and to bring
+their supernatural agency to bear directly on the personages of his
+chant, and that far more freely than any Norse sagaman. A word may be
+added in explanation of the appearances of "familiars" in the shapes
+of animals, an instance of which will be found in this story. It was
+believed in Iceland, as now by the Finns and Eskimo, that the passions
+and desires of sorcerers took visible form in such creatures as wolves
+or rats. These were called "sendings," and there are many allusions to
+them in the Sagas.
+
+Another peculiarity that may be briefly alluded to as eminently
+characteristic of the Sagas is their fatefulness. As we read we seem
+to hear the voice of Doom speaking continually. "_Things will happen as
+they are fated_": that is the keynote of them all. The Norse mind had
+little belief in free will, less even than we have to-day. Men and women
+were born with certain characters and tendencies, given to them in order
+that their lives should run in appointed channels, and their acts bring
+about an appointed end. They do not these things of their own desire,
+though their desires prompt them to the deeds: they do them because they
+must. The Norns, as they name Fate, have mapped out their path long and
+long ago; their feet are set therein, and they must tread it to the end.
+Such was the conclusion of our Scandinavian ancestors--a belief forced
+upon them by their intense realisation of the futility of human hopes
+and schemings, of the terror and the tragedy of life, the vanity of its
+desires, and the untravelled gloom or sleep, dreamless or dreamfull,
+which lies beyond its end.
+
+Though the Sagas are entrancing, both as examples of literature of which
+there is but little in the world and because of their living interest,
+they are scarcely known to the English-speaking public. This is easy
+to account for: it is hard to persuade the nineteenth century world to
+interest itself in people who lived and events that happened a thousand
+years ago. Moreover, the Sagas are undoubtedly difficult reading. The
+archaic nature of the work, even in a translation; the multitude of its
+actors; the Norse sagaman's habit of interweaving endless side-plots,
+and the persistence with which he introduces the genealogy and
+adventures of the ancestors of every unimportant character, are none of
+them to the taste of the modern reader.
+
+"Eric Brighteyes" therefore, is clipped of these peculiarities, and,
+to some extent, is cast in the form of the romance of our own day,
+archaisms being avoided as much as possible. The author will be
+gratified should he succeed in exciting interest in the troubled lives
+of our Norse forefathers, and still more so if his difficult experiment
+brings readers to the Sagas--to the prose epics of our own race. Too
+ample, too prolix, too crowded with detail, they cannot indeed vie in
+art with the epics of Greece; but in their pictures of life, simple and
+heroic, they fall beneath no literature in the world, save the Iliad and
+the Odyssey alone.
+
+
+
+
+
+ERIC BRIGHTEYES
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST FOUND GROA THE WITCH
+
+There lived a man in the south, before Thangbrand, Wilibald's son,
+preached the White Christ in Iceland. He was named Eric Brighteyes,
+Thorgrimur's son, and in those days there was no man like him for
+strength, beauty and daring, for in all these things he was the first.
+But he was not the first in good-luck.
+
+Two women lived in the south, not far from where the Westman Islands
+stand above the sea. Gudruda the Fair was the name of the one, and
+Swanhild, called the Fatherless, Groa's daughter, was the other. They
+were half-sisters, and there were none like them in those days, for they
+were the fairest of all women, though they had nothing in common except
+their blood and hate.
+
+Now of Eric Brighteyes, of Gudruda the Fair and of Swanhild the
+Fatherless, there is a tale to tell.
+
+These two fair women saw the light in the self-same hour. But Eric
+Brighteyes was their elder by five years. The father of Eric was
+Thorgrimur Iron-Toe. He had been a mighty man; but in fighting with a
+Baresark,[*] who fell upon him as he came up from sowing his wheat, his
+foot was hewn from him, so that afterwards he went upon a wooden leg
+shod with iron. Still, he slew the Baresark, standing on one leg and
+leaning against a rock, and for that deed people honoured him much.
+Thorgrimur was a wealthy yeoman, slow to wrath, just, and rich in
+friends. Somewhat late in life he took to wife Saevuna, Thorod's
+daughter. She was the best of women, strong in mind and second-sighted,
+and she could cover herself in her hair. But these two never loved each
+other overmuch, and they had but one child, Eric, who was born when
+Saevuna was well on in years.
+
+ [*] The Baresarks were men on whom a passing fury of battle
+ came; they were usually outlawed.
+
+The father of Gudruda was Asmund Asmundson, the Priest of Middalhof. He
+was the wisest and the wealthiest of all men who lived in the south
+of Iceland in those days, owning many farms and, also, two ships of
+merchandise and one long ship of war, and having much money out at
+interest. He had won his wealth by viking's work, robbing the English
+coasts, and black tales were told of his doings in his youth on the sea,
+for he was a "red-hand" viking. Asmund was a handsome man, with blue
+eyes and a large beard, and, moreover, was very skilled in matters of
+law. He loved money much, and was feared of all. Still, he had many
+friends, for as he aged he grew more kindly. He had in marriage Gudruda,
+the daughter of Bjoern, who was very sweet and kindly of nature, so that
+they called her Gudruda the Gentle. Of this marriage there were two
+children, Bjoern and Gudruda the Fair; but Bjoern grew up like his father
+in youth, strong and hard, and greedy of gain, while, except for her
+wonderful beauty, Gudruda was her mother's child alone.
+
+The mother of Swanhild the Fatherless was Groa the Witch. She was a
+Finn, and it is told of her that the ship on which she sailed, trying
+to run under the lee of the Westman Isles in a great gale from the
+north-east, was dashed to pieces on a rock, and all those on board of
+her were caught in the net of Ran[*] and drowned, except Groa herself,
+who was saved by her magic art. This at the least is true, that, as
+Asmund the Priest rode down by the sea-shore on the morning after the
+gale, seeking for some strayed horses, he found a beautiful woman,
+who wore a purple cloak and a great girdle of gold, seated on a rock,
+combing her black hair and singing the while; and, at her feet, washing
+to and fro in a pool, was a dead man. He asked whence she came, and she
+answered:
+
+"Out of the Swan's Bath."
+
+[*] The Norse goddess of the sea.
+
+Next, he asked her where were her kin. But, pointing to the dead man,
+she said that this alone was left of them.
+
+"Who was the man, then?" said Asmund the Priest.
+
+She laughed again and sang this song:--
+
+ Groa sails up from the Swan's Bath,
+ Death Gods grip the Dead Man's hand.
+ Look where lies her luckless husband,
+ Bolder sea-king ne'er swung sword!
+ Asmund, keep the kirtle-wearer,
+ For last night the Norns were crying,
+ And Groa thought they told of thee:
+ Yea, told of thee and babes unborn.
+
+"How knowest thou my name?" asked Asmund.
+
+"The sea-mews cried it as the ship sank, thine and others--and they
+shall be heard in story."
+
+"Then that is the best of luck," quoth Asmund; "but I think that thou
+art fey."[*]
+
+ [*] I.e. subject to supernatural presentiments, generally
+ connected with approaching doom.
+
+"Ay," she answered, "fey and fair."
+
+"True enough thou art fair. What shall we do with this dead man?"
+
+"Leave him in the arms of Ran. So may all husbands lie."
+
+They spoke no more with her at that time, seeing that she was a
+witchwoman. But Asmund took her up to Middalhof, and gave her a farm,
+and she lived there alone, and he profited much by her wisdom.
+
+
+Now it chanced that Gudruda the Gentle was with child, and when her time
+came she gave a daughter birth--a very fair girl, with dark eyes. On
+the same day, Groa the witchwoman brought forth a girl-child, and men
+wondered who was its father, for Groa was no man's wife. It was women's
+talk that Asmund the Priest was the father of this child also; but when
+he heard it he was angry, and said that no witchwoman should bear a
+bairn of his, howsoever fair she was. Nevertheless, it was still said
+that the child was his, and it is certain that he loved it as a man
+loves his own; but of all things, this is the hardest to know. When Groa
+was questioned she laughed darkly, as was her fashion, and said that she
+knew nothing of it, never having seen the face of the child's father,
+who rose out of the sea at night. And for this cause some thought him
+to have been a wizard or the wraith of her dead husband; but others said
+that Groa lied, as many women have done on such matters. But of all this
+talk the child alone remained and she was named Swanhild.
+
+Now, but an hour before the child of Gudruda the Gentle was born, Asmund
+went up from his house to the Temple, to tend the holy fire that burned
+night and day upon the altar. When he had tended the fire, he sat down
+upon the cross-benches before the shrine, and, gazing on the image of
+the Goddess Freya, he fell asleep and dreamed a very evil dream.
+
+He dreamed that Gudruda the Gentle bore a dove most beautiful to see,
+for all its feathers were of silver; but that Groa the Witch bore a
+golden snake. And the snake and the dove dwelt together, and ever the
+snake sought to slay the dove. At length there came a great white swan
+flying over Coldback Fell, and its tongue was a sharp sword. Now the
+swan saw the dove and loved it, and the dove loved the swan; but the
+snake reared itself, and hissed, and sought to kill the dove. But the
+swan covered her with his wings, and beat the snake away. Then he,
+Asmund, came out and drove away the swan, as the swan had driven the
+snake, and it wheeled high into the air and flew south, and the snake
+swam away also through the sea. But the dove drooped and now it was
+blind. Then an eagle came from the north, and would have taken the dove,
+but it fled round and round, crying, and always the eagle drew nearer
+to it. At length, from the south the swan came back, flying heavily, and
+about its neck was twined the golden snake, and with it came a raven.
+And it saw the eagle and loud it trumpeted, and shook the snake from it
+so that it fell like a gleam of gold into the sea. Then the eagle and
+the swan met in battle, and the swan drove the eagle down and broke it
+with his wings, and, flying to the dove, comforted it. But those in the
+house ran out and shot at the swan with bows and drove it away, but now
+he, Asmund, was not with them. And once more the dove drooped. Again the
+swan came back, and with it the raven, and a great host were gathered
+against them, and, among them, all of Asmund's kith and kin, and the men
+of his quarter and some of his priesthood, and many whom he did not know
+by face. And the swan flew at Bjoern his son, and shot out the sword of
+its tongue and slew him, and many a man it slew thus. And the raven,
+with a beak and claws of steel, slew also many a man, so that Asmund's
+kindred fled and the swan slept by the dove. But as it slept the golden
+snake crawled out of the sea, and hissed in the ears of men, and they
+rose up to follow it. It came to the swan and twined itself about its
+neck. It struck at the dove and slew it. Then the swan awoke and the
+raven awoke, and they did battle till all who remained of Asmund's
+kindred and people were dead. But still the snake clung about the swan's
+neck, and presently snake and swan fell into the sea, and far out on the
+sea there burned a flame of fire. And Asmund awoke trembling and left
+the Temple.
+
+Now as he went, a woman came running, and weeping as she ran.
+
+"Haste, haste!" she cried; "a daughter is born to thee, and Gudruda thy
+wife is dying!"
+
+"Is it so?" said Asmund; "after ill dreams ill tidings."
+
+Now in the bed-closet off the great hall of Middalhof lay Gudruda the
+Gentle and she was dying.
+
+"Art thou there, husband?" she said.
+
+"Even so, wife."
+
+"Thou comest in an evil hour, for it is my last. Now hearken. Take thou
+the new-born babe within thine arms and kiss it, and pour water over it,
+and name it with my name."
+
+This Asmund did.
+
+"Hearken, my husband. I have been a good wife to thee, though thou hast
+not been all good to me. But thus shalt thou atone: thou shalt swear
+that, though she is a girl, thou wilt not cast this bairn forth to
+perish, but wilt cherish and nurture her."
+
+"I swear it," he said.
+
+"And thou shalt swear that thou wilt not take the witchwoman Groa to
+wife, nor have anything to do with her, and this for thine own sake:
+for, if thou dost, she will be thy death. Dost thou swear?"
+
+"I swear it," he said.
+
+"It is well; but, husband, if thou dost break thine oath, either in the
+words or in the spirit of the words, evil shall overtake thee and all
+thy house. Now bid me farewell, for I die."
+
+He bent over her and kissed her, and it is said that Asmund wept in that
+hour, for after his fashion he loved his wife.
+
+"Give me the babe," she said, "that it may lie once upon my breast."
+
+They gave her the babe and she looked upon its dark eyes and said:
+
+"Fairest of women shalt thou be, Gudruda--fair as no woman in Iceland
+ever was before thee; and thou shalt love with a mighty love--and thou
+shalt lose--and, losing, thou shalt find again."
+
+Now, it is said that, as she spoke these words, her face grew bright as
+a spirit's, and, having spoken them, she fell back dead. And they laid
+her in earth, but Asmund mourned her much.
+
+But, when all was over and done, the dream that he had dreamed lay heavy
+on him. Now of all diviners of dreams Groa was the most skilled, and
+when Gudruda had been in earth seven full days, Asmund went to Groa,
+though doubtfully, because of his oath.
+
+He came to the house and entered. On a couch in the chamber lay Groa,
+and her babe was on her breast and she was very fair to see.
+
+"Greeting, lord!" she said. "What wouldest thou here?"
+
+"I have dreamed a dream, and thou alone canst read it."
+
+"That is as it may be," she answered. "It is true that I have some skill
+in dreams. At the least I will hear it."
+
+Then he unfolded it to her every word.
+
+"What wilt thou give me if I read thy dream?" she said.
+
+"What dost thou ask? Methinks I have given thee much."
+
+"Yea, lord," and she looked at the babe upon her breast. "I ask but a
+little thing: that thou shalt take this bairn in thy arms, pour water
+over it and name it."
+
+"Men will talk if I do this, for it is the father's part."
+
+"It is a little thing what men say: talk goes by as the wind. Moreover,
+thou shalt give them the lie in the child's name, for it shall be
+Swanhild the Fatherless. Nevertheless that is my price. Pay it if thou
+wilt."
+
+"Read me the dream and I will name the child."
+
+"Nay, first name thou the babe: for then no harm shall come to her at
+thy hands."
+
+So Asmund took the child, poured water over her, and named her.
+
+Then Groa spoke: "This lord, is the reading of thy dream, else my wisdom
+is at fault: The silver dove is thy daughter Gudruda, the golden snake
+is my daughter Swanhild, and these two shall hate one the other and
+strive against each other. But the swan is a mighty man whom both shall
+love, and, if he love not both, yet shall belong to both. And thou shalt
+send him away; but he shall return and bring bad luck to thee and thy
+house, and thy daughter shall be blind with love of him. And in the end
+he shall slay the eagle, a great lord from the north who shall seek to
+wed thy daughter, and many another shall he slay, by the help of that
+raven with the bill of steel who shall be with him. But Swanhild shall
+triumph over thy daughter Gudruda, and this man, and the two of them,
+shall die at her hands, and, for the rest, who can say? But this is
+true--that the mighty man shall bring all thy race to an end. See now, I
+have read thy rede."
+
+Then Asmund was very wroth. "Thou wast wise to beguile me to name thy
+bastard brat," he said; "else had I been its death within this hour."
+
+"This thou canst not do, lord, seeing that thou hast held it in thy
+arms," Groa answered, laughing. "Go rather and lay out Gudruda the Fair
+on Coldback Hill; so shalt thou make an end of the evil, for Gudruda
+shall be its very root. Learn this, moreover: that thy dream does not
+tell all, seeing that thou thyself must play a part in the fate. Go,
+send forth the babe Gudruda, and be at rest."
+
+"That cannot be, for I have sworn to cherish it, and with an oath that
+may not be broken."
+
+"It is well," laughed Groa. "Things will befall as they are fated; let
+them befall in their season. There is space for cairns on Coldback and
+the sea can shroud its dead!"
+
+And Asmund went thence, angered at heart.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+HOW ERIC TOLD HIS LOVE TO GUDRUDA IN THE SNOW ON COLDBACK
+
+Now, it must be told that, five years before the day of the death of
+Gudruda the Gentle, Saevuna, the wife of Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, gave birth
+to a son, at Coldback in the Marsh, on Ran River, and when his father
+came to look upon the child he called out aloud:
+
+"Here we have a wondrous bairn, for his hair is yellow like gold and his
+eyes shine bright as stars." And Thorgrimur named him Eric Brighteyes.
+
+Now, Coldback is but an hour's ride from Middalhof, and it chanced,
+in after years, that Thorgrimur went up to Middalhof, to keep the Yule
+feast and worship in the Temple, for he was in the priesthood of Asmund
+Asmundson, bringing the boy Eric with him. There also was Groa with
+Swanhild, for now she dwelt at Middalhof; and the three fair children
+were set together in the hall to play, and men thought it great sport to
+see them. Now, Gudruda had a horse of wood and would ride it while Eric
+pushed the horse along. But Swanhild smote her from the horse and called
+to Eric to make it move; but he comforted Gudruda and would not, and at
+that Swanhild was angry and lisped out:
+
+"Push thou must, if I will it, Eric."
+
+Then he pushed sideways and with such good will that Swanhild fell
+almost into the fire of the hearth, and, leaping up, she snatched a
+brand and threw it at Gudruda, firing her clothes. Men laughed at this;
+but Groa, standing apart, frowned and muttered witch-words.
+
+"Why lookest thou so darkly, housekeeper?" said Asmund; "the boy is
+bonny and high of heart."
+
+"Ah, he is bonny as no child is, and he shall be bonny all his
+life-days. Nevertheless, she shall not stand against his ill luck. This
+I prophesy of him: that women shall bring him to his end, and he shall
+die a hero's death, but not at the hand of his foes."
+
+
+And now the years went by peacefully. Groa dwelt with her daughter
+Swanhild up at Middalhof and was the love of Asmund Asmundson. But,
+though he forgot his oath thus far, yet he would never take her to wife.
+The witchwife was angered at this, and she schemed and plotted much
+to bring it about that Asmund should wed her. But still he would not,
+though in all things else she led him as it were by a halter.
+
+
+Twenty full years had gone by since Gudruda the Gentle was laid in
+earth; and now Gudruda the Fair and Swanhild the Fatherless were women
+too. Eric, too, was a man of five-and-twenty years, and no such man had
+lived in Iceland. For he was strong and great of stature, his hair was
+yellow as gold, and his grey eyes shone with the light of swords. He
+was gentle and loving as a woman, and even as a lad his strength was the
+strength of two men; and there were none in all the quarter who could
+leap or swim or wrestle against Eric Brighteyes. Men held him in honour
+and spoke well of him, though as yet he had done no deeds, but lived at
+home on Coldback, managing the farm, for now Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, his
+father, was dead. But women loved him much, and that was his bane--for
+of all women he loved but one, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter. He
+loved her from a child, and her alone till his day of death, and she,
+too, loved him and him only. For now Gudruda was a maid of maids, most
+beautiful to see and sweet to hear. Her hair, like the hair of Eric, was
+golden, and she was white as the snow on Hecla; but her eyes were large
+and dark, and black lashes drooped above them. For the rest she was tall
+and strong and comely, merry of face, yet tender, and the most witty of
+women.
+
+Swanhild also was very fair; she was slender, small of limb, and dark of
+hue, having eyes blue as the deep sea, and brown curling hair, enough
+to veil her to the knees, and a mind of which none knew the end, for,
+though she was open in her talk, her thoughts were dark and secret. This
+was her joy: to draw the hearts of men to her and then to mock them.
+She beguiled many in this fashion, for she was the cunningest girl in
+matters of love, and she knew well the arts of women, with which they
+bring men to nothing. Nevertheless she was cold at heart, and desired
+power and wealth greatly, and she studied magic much, of which her
+mother Groa also had a store. But Swanhild, too, loved a man, and that
+was the joint in her harness by which the shaft of Fate entered her
+heart, for that man was Eric Brighteyes, who loved her not. But she
+desired him so sorely that, without him, all the world was dark to
+her, and her soul but as a ship driven rudderless upon a winter
+night. Therefore she put out all her strength to win him, and bent her
+witcheries upon him, and they were not few nor small. Nevertheless they
+went by him like the wind, for he dreamed ever of Gudruda alone, and he
+saw no eyes but hers, though as yet they spoke no word of love one to
+the other.
+
+But Swanhild in her wrath took counsel with her mother Groa, though
+there was little liking between them; and, when she had heard the
+maiden's tale, Groa laughed aloud:
+
+"Dost think me blind, girl?" she said; "all of this I have seen, yea and
+foreseen, and I tell thee thou art mad. Let this yeoman Eric go and I
+will find thee finer fowl to fly at."
+
+"Nay, that I will not," quoth Swanhild: "for I love this man alone, and
+I would win him; and Gudruda I hate, and I would overthrow her. Give me
+of thy counsel."
+
+Groa laughed again. "Things must be as they are fated. This now is my
+rede: Asmund would turn Gudruda's beauty to account, and that man must
+be rich in friends and money who gets her to wife, and in this matter
+the mind of Bjoern is as the mind of his father. Now we will watch, and,
+when a good time chances, we will bear tales of Gudruda to Asmund and to
+her brother Bjoern, and swear that she oversteps her modesty with
+Eric. Then shall Asmund be wroth and drive Eric from Gudruda's side.
+Meanwhile, I will do this: In the north there dwells a man mighty in all
+things and blown up with pride. He is named Ospakar Blacktooth. His wife
+is but lately dead, and he has given out that he will wed the fairest
+maid in Iceland. Now, it is in my mind to send Koll the Half-witted, my
+thrall, whom Asmund gave to me, to Ospakar as though by chance. He is a
+great talker and very clever, for in his half-wits is more cunning than
+in the brains of most; and he shall so bepraise Gudruda's beauty that
+Ospakar will come hither to ask her in marriage; and in this fashion, if
+things go well, thou shalt be rid of thy rival, and I of one who looks
+scornfully upon me. But, if this fail, then there are two roads left
+on which strong feet may travel to their end; and of these, one is that
+thou shouldest win Eric away with thine own beauty, and that is not
+little. All men are frail, and I have a draught that will make the heart
+as wax; but yet the other path is surer."
+
+"And what is that path, my mother?"
+
+"It runs through blood to blackness. By thy side is a knife and in
+Gudruda's bosom beats a heart. Dead women are unmeet for love!"
+
+Swanhild tossed her head and looked upon the dark face of Groa her
+mother.
+
+"Methinks, with such an end to win, I should not fear to tread that
+path, if there be need, my mother."
+
+"Now I see thou art indeed my daughter. Happiness is to the bold. To
+each it comes in uncertain shape. Some love power, some wealth, and
+some--a man. Take that which thou lovest--I say, cut thy path to it and
+take it; else shall thy life be but a weariness: for what does it serve
+to win the wealth and power when thou lovest a man alone, or the man
+when thou dost desire gold and the pride of place? This is wisdom: to
+satisfy the longing of thy youth; for age creeps on apace and beyond is
+darkness. Therefore, if thou seekest this man, and Gudruda blocks thy
+path, slay her, girl--by witchcraft or by steel--and take him, and in
+his arms forget that thine own are red. But first let us try the
+easier plan. Daughter, I too hate this proud girl, who scorns me as her
+father's light-of-love. I too long to see that bright head of hers dull
+with the dust of death, or, at the least, those proud eyes weeping tears
+of shame as the man she hates leads her hence as a bride. Were it not
+for her I should be Asmund's wife, and, when she is gone, with thy
+help--for he loves thee much and has cause to love thee--this I may be
+yet. So in this matter, if in no other, let us go hand in hand and match
+our wits against her innocence."
+
+
+Now, Koll the Half-witted went upon his errand, and the time passed till
+it lacked but a month to Yule, and men sat indoors, for the season was
+dark and much snow fell. At length came frost, and with it a clear sky,
+and Gudruda, ceasing from her spinning in the hall, went to the woman's
+porch, and, looking out, saw that the snow was hard, and a great longing
+came upon her to breathe the fresh air, for there was still an hour of
+daylight. So she threw a cloak about her and walked forth, taking the
+road towards Coldback in the Marsh that is by Ran River. But Swanhild
+watched her till she was over the hill. Then she also took a cloak and
+followed on that path, for she always watched Gudruda.
+
+Gudruda walked on for the half of an hour or so, when she became aware
+that the clouds gathered in the sky, and that the air was heavy with
+snow to come. Seeing this she turned homewards, and Swanhild hid
+herself to let her pass. Now flakes floated down as big and soft as fifa
+flowers. Quicker and more quick they came till all the plain was one
+white maze of mist, but through it Gudruda walked on, and after her
+crept Swanhild, like a shadow. And now the darkness gathered and the
+snow fell thick and fast, covering up the track of her footsteps and she
+wandered from the path, and after her wandered Swanhild, being loath to
+show herself. For an hour or more Gudruda wandered and then she called
+aloud and her voice fell heavily against the cloak of snow. At the last
+she grew weary and frightened, and sat down upon a shelving rock whence
+the snow had slipped away. Now, a little way behind was another rock and
+there Swanhild sat, for she wished to be unseen of Gudruda. So some time
+passed, and Swanhild grew heavy as though with sleep, when of a sudden
+a moving thing loomed upon the snowy darkness. Then Gudruda leapt to her
+feet and called. A man's voice answered:
+
+"Who passes there?"
+
+"I, Gudruda, Asmund's daughter."
+
+The form came nearer; now Swanhild could hear the snorting of a horse,
+and now a man leapt from it, and that man was Eric Brighteyes.
+
+"Is it thou indeed, Gudruda!" he said with a laugh, and his great shape
+showed darkly on the snow mist.
+
+"Oh, is it thou, Eric?" she answered. "I was never more joyed to see
+thee; for of a truth thou dost come in a good hour. A little while and I
+had seen thee no more, for my eyes grow heavy with the death-sleep."
+
+"Nay, say not so. Art lost, then? Why, so am I. I came out to seek three
+horses that are strayed, and was overtaken by the snow. May they
+dwell in Odin's stables, for they have led me to thee. Art thou cold,
+Gudruda?"
+
+"But a little, Eric. Yea, there is place for thee here on the rock."
+
+So he sat down by her on the stone, and Swanhild crept nearer; for now
+all weariness had left her. But still the snow fell thick.
+
+"It comes into my mind that we two shall die here," said Gudruda
+presently.
+
+"Thinkest thou so?" he answered. "Well, I will say this, that I ask no
+better end."
+
+"It is a bad end for thee, Eric: to be choked in snow, and with all thy
+deeds to do."
+
+"It is a good end, Gudruda, to die at thy side, for so I shall die
+happy; but I grieve for thee."
+
+"Grieve not for me, Brighteyes, worse things might befall."
+
+He drew nearer to her, and now he put his arms about her and clasped her
+to his bosom; nor did she say him nay. Swanhild saw and lifted herself
+up behind them, but for a while she heard nothing but the beating of her
+heart.
+
+"Listen, Gudruda," Eric said at last. "Death draws near to us, and
+before it comes I would speak to thee, if speak I may."
+
+"Speak on," she whispers from his breast.
+
+"This I would say, then: that I love thee, and that I ask no better fate
+than to die in thy arms."
+
+"First shalt thou see me die in thine, Eric."
+
+"Be sure, if that is so, I shall not tarry for long. Oh! Gudruda, since
+I was a child I have loved thee with a mighty love, and now thou art all
+to me. Better to die thus than to live without thee. Speak, then, while
+there is time."
+
+"I will not hide from thee, Eric, that thy words are sweet in my ears."
+
+And now Gudruda sobs and the tears fall fast from her dark eyes.
+
+"Nay, weep not. Dost thou, then, love me?"
+
+"Ay, sure enough, Eric."
+
+"Then kiss me before we pass. A man should not die thus, and yet men
+have died worse."
+
+And so these two kissed, for the first time, out in the snow on
+Coldback, and that first kiss was long and sweet.
+
+Swanhild heard and her blood seethed within her as water seethes in
+a boiling spring when the fires wake beneath. She put her hand to her
+kirtle and gripped the knife at her side. She half drew it, then drove
+it back.
+
+"Cold kills as sure as steel," she said in her heart. "If I slay her I
+cannot save myself or him. Let us die in peace, and let the snow cover
+up our troubling." And once more she listened.
+
+"Ah, sweet," said Eric, "even in the midst of death there is hope of
+life. Swear to me, then, that if by chance we live thou wilt love me
+always as thou lovest me now."
+
+"Ay, Eric, I swear that and readily."
+
+"And swear, come what may, that thou wilt wed no man but me."
+
+"I swear, if thou dost remain true to me, that I will wed none but thee,
+Eric."
+
+"Then I am sure of thee."
+
+"Boast not overmuch, Eric: if thou dost live thy days are all before
+thee, and with times come trials."
+
+Now the snow whirled down faster and more thick, till these two, clasped
+heart to heart, were but a heap of white, and all white was the horse,
+and Swanhild was nearly buried.
+
+"Where go we when we die, Eric?" said Gudruda; "in Odin's house there is
+no place for maids, and how shall my feet fare without thee?"
+
+"Nay, sweet, my May, Valhalla shuts its gates to me, a deedless man; up
+Bifrost's rainbow bridge I may not travel, for I do not die with byrnie
+on breast and sword aloft. To Hela shall we go, and hand in hand."
+
+"Art thou sure, Eric, that men find these abodes? To say sooth, at times
+I misdoubt me of them."
+
+"I am not so sure but that I also doubt. Still, I know this: that where
+thou goest there I shall be, Gudruda."
+
+"Then things are well, and well work the Norns.[*] Still, Eric, of a
+sudden I grow fey: for it comes upon me that I shall not die to-night,
+but that, nevertheless, I shall die with thy arms about me, and at thy
+side. There, I see it on the snow! I lie by thee, sleeping, and one
+comes with hands outstretched and sleep falls from them like a mist--by
+Freya, it is Swanhild's self! Oh! it is gone."
+
+[*] The Northern Fates.
+
+"It was nothing, Gudruda, but a vision of the snow--an untimely dream
+that comes before the sleep. I grow cold and my eyes are heavy; kiss me
+once again."
+
+"It was no dream, Eric, and ever I doubt me of Swanhild, for I think she
+loves thee also, and she is fair and my enemy," says Gudruda, laying her
+snow-cold lips on his lips. "Oh, Eric, awake! awake! See, the snow is
+done."
+
+He stumbled to his feet and looked forth. Lo! out across the sky flared
+the wild Northern fires, throwing light upon the darkness.
+
+"Now it seems that I know the land," said Eric. "Look: yonder are Golden
+Falls, though we did not hear them because of the snow; and there, out
+at sea, loom the Westmans; and that dark thing is the Temple Hof, and
+behind it stands the stead. We are saved, Gudruda, and thus far indeed
+thou wast fey. Now rise, ere thy limbs stiffen, and I will set thee on
+the horse, if he still can run, and lead thee down to Middalhof before
+the witchlights fail us."
+
+"So it shall be, Eric."
+
+Now he led Gudruda to the horse--that, seeing its master, snorted and
+shook the snow from its coat, for it was not frozen--and set her on the
+saddle, and put his arm about her waist, and they passed slowly through
+the deep snow. And Swanhild, too, crept from her place, for her burning
+rage had kept the life in her, and followed after them. Many times she
+fell, and once she was nearly swallowed in a drift of snow and cried out
+in her fear.
+
+"Who called aloud?" said Eric, turning; "I thought I heard a voice."
+
+"Nay," answers Gudruda, "it was but a night-hawk screaming."
+
+Now Swanhild lay quiet in the drift, but she said in her heart:
+
+"Ay, a night-hawk that shall tear out those dark eyes of thine, mine
+enemy!"
+
+The two go on and at length they come to the banked roadway that runs
+past the Temple to Asmund's hall. Here Swanhild leaves them, and,
+climbing over the turf-wall into the home meadow, passes round the
+hall by the outbuildings and so comes to the west end of the house, and
+enters by the men's door unnoticed of any. For all the people, seeing
+a horse coming and a woman seated on it, were gathered in front of the
+hall. But Swanhild ran to that shut bed where she slept, and, closing
+the curtain, threw off her garments, shook the snow from her hair, and
+put on a linen kirtle. Then she rested a while, for she was weary, and,
+going to the kitchen, warmed herself at the fire.
+
+Meanwhile Eric and Gudruda came to the house and there Asmund greeted
+them well, for he was troubled in his heart about his daughter, and very
+glad to know her living, seeing that men had but now begun to search for
+her, because of the snow and the darkness.
+
+Now Gudruda told her tale, but not all of it, and Asmund bade Eric to
+the house. Then one asked about Swanhild, and Eric said that he had seen
+nothing of her, and Asmund was sad at this, for he loved Swanhild. But
+as he told all men to go and search, an old wife came and said that
+Swanhild was in the kitchen, and while the carline spoke she came into
+the hall, dressed in white, very pale, and with shining eyes and fair to
+see.
+
+"Where hast thou been, Swanhild?" said Asmund. "I thought certainly thou
+wast perishing with Gudruda in the snow, and now all men go to seek thee
+while the witchlights burn."
+
+"Nay, foster-father, I have been to the Temple," she answered, lying.
+"So Gudruda has but narrowly escaped the snow, thanks be to Brighteyes
+yonder! Surely I am glad of it, for we could ill spare our sweet
+sister," and, going up to her, she kissed her. But Gudruda saw that
+her eyes burned like fire and felt that her lips were cold as ice, and
+shrank back wondering.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+HOW ASMUND BADE ERIC TO HIS YULE-FEAST
+
+Now it was supper-time and men sat at meat while the women waited upon
+them. But as she went to and fro, Gudruda always looked at Eric, and
+Swanhild watched them both. Supper being over, people gathered round the
+hearth, and, having finished her service, Gudruda came and sat by Eric,
+so that her sleeve might touch his. They spoke no word, but there they
+sat and were happy. Swanhild saw and bit her lip. Now, she was seated by
+Asmund and Bjoern his son.
+
+"Look, foster-father," she said; "yonder sit a pretty pair!"
+
+"That cannot be denied," answered Asmund. "One may ride many days to see
+such another man as Eric Brighteyes, and no such maid as Gudruda flowers
+between Middalhof and London town, unless it be thou, Swanhild. Well, so
+her mother said that it should be, and without doubt she was foresighted
+at her death."
+
+"Nay, name me not with Gudruda, foster-father; I am but a grey goose
+by thy white swan. But these shall be well wed and that will be a good
+match for Eric."
+
+"Let not thy tongue run on so fast," said Asmund sharply. "Who told thee
+that Eric should have Gudruda?"
+
+"None told me, but in truth, having eyes and ears, I grew certain of
+it," said Swanhild. "Look at them now: surely lovers wear such faces."
+
+Now it chanced that Gudruda had rested her chin on her hand, and was
+gazing into Eric's eyes beneath the shadow of her hair.
+
+"Methinks my sister will look higher than to wed a simple yeoman, though
+he is large as two other men," said Bjoern with a sneer. Now Bjoern was
+jealous of Eric's strength and beauty, and did not love him.
+
+"Trust nothing that thou seest and little that thou hearest, girl," said
+Asmund, raising himself from thought: "so shall thy guesses be good.
+Eric, come here and tell us how thou didst chance on Gudruda in the
+snow."
+
+"I was not so ill seated but that I could bear to stay," grumbled Eric
+beneath his breath; but Gudruda said "Go."
+
+So he went and told his tale; but not all of it, for he intended to ask
+Gudruda in marriage on the morrow, though his heart prophesied no luck
+in the matter, and therefore he was not overswift with it.
+
+"In this thing thou hast done me and mine good service," said Asmund
+coldly, searching Eric's face with his blue eyes. "It had been said if
+my fair daughter had perished in the snow, for, know this: I would set
+her high in marriage, for her honour and the honour of my house, and so
+some rich and noble man had lost great joy. But take thou this gift in
+memory of the deed, and Gudruda's husband shall give thee another such
+upon the day that he makes her wife," and he drew a gold ring off his
+arm.
+
+Now Eric's knees trembled as he heard, and his heart grew faint as
+though with fear. But he answered clear and straight:
+
+"Thy gift had been better without thy words, ring-giver; but I pray thee
+to take it back, for I have done nothing to win it, though perhaps the
+time will come when I shall ask thee for a richer."
+
+"My gifts have never been put away before," said Asmund, growing angry.
+
+"This wealthy farmer holds the good gold of little worth. It is foolish
+to take fish to the sea, my father," sneered Bjoern.
+
+"Nay, Bjoern, not so," Eric answered: "but, as thou sayest, I am but a
+farmer, and since my father, Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, died things have not
+gone too well on Ran River. But at the least I am a free man, and I will
+take no gifts that I cannot repay worth for worth. Therefore I will not
+have the ring."
+
+"As thou wilt," said Asmund. "Pride is a good horse if thou ridest
+wisely," and he thrust the ring back upon his arm.
+
+Then people go to rest; but Swanhild seeks her mother, and tells her all
+that has befallen her, nor does Groa fail to listen.
+
+"Now I will make a plan," she says, "for these things have chanced well
+and Asmund is in a ripe humour. Eric shall come no more to Middalhof
+till Gudruda is gone hence, led by Ospakar Blacktooth."
+
+"And if Eric does not come here, how shall I see his face? for, mother,
+I long for the sight of it."
+
+"That is thy matter, thou lovesick fool. Know this: that if Eric comes
+hither and gets speech with Gudruda, there is an end of thy hopes; for,
+fair as thou art, she is too fair for thee, and, strong as thou art, in
+a way she is too strong. Thou hast heard how these two love, and such
+loves mock at the will of fathers. Eric will win his desire or die
+beneath the swords of Asmund and Bjoern, if such men can prevail against
+his might. Nay, the wolf Eric must be fenced from the lamb till he grows
+hungry. Then let him search the fold and make spoil of thee, for, when
+the best is gone, he will desire the good."
+
+"So be it, mother. As I sat crouched behind Gudruda in the snow at
+Coldback, I had half a mind to end her love-words with this knife, for
+so I should have been free of her."
+
+"Yes, and fast in the doom-ring, thou wildcat. The gods help this Eric,
+if thou winnest him. Nay, choose thy time and, if thou must strike,
+strike secretly and home. Remember also that cunning is mightier than
+strength, that lies pierce further than swords, and that witchcraft wins
+where honesty must fail. Now I will go to Asmund, and he shall be an
+angry man before to-morrow comes."
+
+Then Groa went to the shut bed where Asmund the Priest slept. He was
+sitting on the bed and asked her why she came.
+
+"For love of thee, Asmund, and thy house, though thou dost treat me ill,
+who hast profited so much by me and my foresight. Say now: wilt thou
+that this daughter of thine, Gudruda the Fair, should be the light May
+of yonder long-legged yeoman?"
+
+"That is not in my mind," said Asmund, stroking his beard.
+
+"Knowest thou, then, that this very day your white Gudruda sat on Eric's
+lap in the snow, while he fondled her to his heart's content?"
+
+"Most likely it was for warmth. Men do not dream on love in the hour of
+death. Who saw this?"
+
+"Swanhild, who was behind, and hid herself for shame, and therefore she
+held that these two must soon be wed! Ah, thou art foolish now, Asmund.
+Young blood makes light of cold or death. Art thou blind, or dost thou
+not see that these two turn on each other like birds at nesting-time?"
+
+"They might do worse," said Asmund, "for they are a proper pair, and it
+seems to me that each was born for each."
+
+"Then all goes well. Still, it is a pity to see so fair a maid cast like
+rotten bait upon the waters to hook this troutlet of a yeoman. Thou hast
+enemies, Asmund; thou art too prosperous, and there are many who hate
+thee for thy state and wealth. Were it not wise to use this girl of
+thine to build a wall about thee against the evil day?"
+
+"I have been more wont, housekeeper, to trust to my own arm than to
+bought friends. But tell me, for at the least thou art far-seeing, how
+may this be done? As things are, though I spoke roughly to him last
+night, I am inclined to let Eric Brighteyes take Gudruda. I have always
+loved the lad, and he will go far."
+
+"Listen, Asmund! Surely thou hast heard of Ospakar Blacktooth--the
+priest who dwells in the north?"
+
+"Ay, I have heard of him, and I know him; there is no man like him for
+ugliness, or strength, or wealth and power. We sailed together on
+a viking cruise many years ago, and he did things at which my blood
+turned, and in those days I had no chicken heart."
+
+"With time men change their temper. Unless I am mistaken, this Ospakar
+wishes above all to have Gudruda in marriage, for, now that everything
+is his, this alone is left for him to ask--the fairest woman in Iceland
+as a housewife. Think then, with Ospakar for a son-in-law, who is there
+that can stand against thee?"
+
+"I am not so sure of this matter, nor do I altogether trust thee, Groa.
+Of a truth it seems to me that thou hast some stake upon the race. This
+Ospakar is evil and hideous. It were a shame to give Gudruda over to him
+when she looks elsewhere. Knowest thou that I swore to love and cherish
+her, and how runs this with my oath? If Eric is not too rich, yet he is
+of good birth and kin, and, moreover, a man of men. If he take her good
+will come of it."
+
+"It is like thee, Asmund, always to mistrust those who spend their days
+in plotting for thy weal. Do as thou wilt: let Eric take this treasure
+of thine--for whom earls would give their state--and live to rue it. But
+I say this: if he have thy leave to roam here with his dove the matter
+will soon grow, for these two sicken each to each, and young blood is
+hot and ill at waiting, and it is not always snow-time. So betroth her
+or let him go. And now I have said."
+
+"Thy tongue runs too fast. The man is quite unproved and I will try him.
+To-morrow I will warn him from my door; then things shall go as they
+are fated. And now peace, for I weary of thy talk, and, moreover, it is
+false; for thou lackest one thing--a little honesty to season all thy
+craft. What fee has Ospakar paid thee, I wonder. Thou at least hadst
+never refused the gold ring to-night, for thou wouldst do much for
+gold."
+
+"And more for love, and most of all for hate," Groa said, and laughed
+aloud; nor did they speak more on this matter that night.
+
+Now, early in the morning Asmund rose, and, going to the hall, awoke
+Eric, who slept by the centre hearth, saying that he would talk with him
+without. Then Eric followed him to the back of the hall.
+
+"Say now, Eric," he said, when they stood in the grey light outside the
+house, "who was it taught thee that kisses keep out the cold on snowy
+days?"
+
+Now Eric reddened to his yellow hair, but he answered: "Who was it told
+thee, lord, that I tried this medicine?"
+
+"The snow hides much, but there are eyes that can pierce the snow. Nay,
+more, thou wast seen, and there's an end. Now know this--I like thee
+well, but Gudruda is not for thee; she is far above thee, who art but a
+deedless yeoman."
+
+"Then I love to no end," said Eric; "I long for one thing only, and that
+is Gudruda. It was in my mind to ask her in marriage of thee to-day."
+
+"Then, lad, thou hast thy answer before thou askest. Be sure of one
+thing: if but once again I find thee alone with Gudruda, it is my axe
+shall kiss thee and not her lips."
+
+"That may yet be put to the proof, lord," said Eric, and turned to seek
+his horse, when suddenly Gudruda came and stood between them, and his
+heart leapt at the sight of her.
+
+"Listen, Gudruda," Eric said. "This is thy father's word: that we two
+speak together no more."
+
+"Then it is an ill saying for us," said Gudruda, laying her hand upon
+her breast.
+
+"Saying good or ill, so it surely is, girl," answered Asmund. "No more
+shalt thou go a-kissing, in the snow or in the flowers."
+
+"Now I seem to hear Swanhild's voice," she said. "Well, such things have
+happened to better folk, and a father's wish is to a maid what the wind
+is to the grass. Still, the sun is behind the cloud and it will shine
+again some day. Till then, Eric, fare thee well!"
+
+"It is not thy will, lord," said Eric, "that I should come to thy
+Yule-feast as thou hast asked me these ten years past?"
+
+Now Asmund grew wroth, and pointed with his hand towards the great
+Golden Falls that thunder down the mountain named Stonefell that is
+behind Middalhof, and there are no greater water-falls in Iceland.
+
+"A man may take two roads, Eric, from Coldback to Middalhof, one by the
+bridle-path over Coldback and the other down Golden Falls; but I never
+knew traveller to choose this way. Now, I bid thee to my feast by the
+path over Golden Falls; and, if thou comest that way, I promise thee
+this: if thou livest I will greet thee well, and if I find thee dead
+in the great pool I will bind on thy Hell-shoes and lay thee to earth
+neighbourly fashion. But if thou comest by any other path, then my
+thralls shall cut thee down at my door." And he stroked his beard and
+laughed.
+
+Now Asmund spoke thus mockingly because he did not think it possible
+that any man should try the path of the Golden Falls.
+
+Eric smiled and said, "I hold thee to thy word, lord; perhaps I shall be
+thy guest at Yule."
+
+But Gudruda heard the thunder of the mighty Falls as the wind turned,
+and cried "Nay, nay--it were thy death!"
+
+Then Eric finds his horse and rides away across the snow.
+
+Now it must be told of Koll the Half-witted that at length he came to
+Swinefell in the north, having journeyed hard across the snow. Here
+Ospakar Blacktooth had his great hall, in which day by day a hundred men
+sat down to meat. Now Koll entered the hall when Ospakar was at supper,
+and looked at him with big eyes, for he had never seen so wonderful a
+man. He was huge in stature--his hair was black, and black his beard,
+and on his lower lip there lay a great black fang. His eyes were small
+and narrow, but his cheekbones were set wide apart and high, like
+those of a horse. Koll thought him an ill man to deal with and half a
+troll,[*] and grew afraid of his errand, since in Koll's half-wittedness
+there was much cunning--for it was a cloak in which he wrapped himself.
+But as Ospakar sat in the high seat, clothed in a purple robe, with
+his sword Whitefire on his knee, he saw Koll, and called out in a great
+voice:
+
+[*] An able-bodied Goblin.
+
+"Who is this red fox that creeps into my earth?"
+
+For, to look at, Koll was very like a fox.
+
+"My name is Koll the Half-witted, Groa's thrall, lord. Am I welcome
+here?" he answered.
+
+"That is as it may be. Why do they call thee half-witted?"
+
+"Because I love not work overmuch, lord."
+
+"Then all my thralls are fellow to thee. Say, what brings thee here?"
+
+"This lord. It was told among men down in the south that thou wouldst
+give a good gift to him who should discover to thee the fairest maid in
+Iceland. So I asked leave of my mistress to come on a journey and tell
+thee of her."
+
+"Then a lie was told thee. Still, I love to hear of fair maids, and seek
+one for a wife if she be but fair enough. So speak on, Koll the Fox, and
+lie not to me, I warn thee, else I will knock what wits are left there
+from that red head of thine."
+
+So Koll took up the tale and greatly bepraised Gudruda's beauty; nor
+in truth, for all his talk, could he praise it too much. He told of her
+dark eyes and the whiteness of her skin, of the nobleness of her shape
+and the gold of her hair, of her wit and gentleness, till at length
+Ospakar grew afire to see this flower of maids.
+
+"By Thor, thou Koll," he said, "if the girl be but half of what thou
+sayest, her luck is good, for she shall be wife to Ospakar. But if thou
+hast lied to me about her, beware! for soon there shall be a knave the
+less in Iceland."
+
+Now a man rose in the hall and said that Koll spoke truth, for he had
+seen Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter, and there was no maid like her
+in Iceland.
+
+"I will do this now," said Blacktooth. "To-morrow I will send a
+messenger to Middalhof, saying to Asmund the Priest that I purpose to
+visit him at the time of the Yule-feast; then I shall see if the girl
+pleases me. Meanwhile, Koll, take thou a seat among the thralls, and
+here is something for thy pains," and he took off the purple cloak and
+threw it to him.
+
+"Thanks to thee, Gold-scatterer," said Koll. "It is wise to go soon to
+Middalhof, for such a bloom as this maid does not lack a bee. There is
+a youngling in the south, named Eric Brighteyes, who loves Gudruda, and
+she, I think, loves him, though he is but a yeoman of small wealth and
+is only twenty-five years old."
+
+"Ho! ho!" laughed great Ospakar, "and I am forty-five. But let not this
+suckling cross my desire, lest men call him Eric Holloweyes!"
+
+
+Now the messenger of Ospakar came to Middalhof, and his words pleased
+Asmund and he made ready a great feast. And Swanhild smiled, but Gudruda
+was afraid.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+HOW ERIC CAME DOWN GOLDEN FALLS
+
+Now Ospakar rode up to Middalhof on the day before the Yule-feast. He
+was splendidly apparelled, and with him came his two sons, Gizur the
+Lawman and Mord, young men of promise, and many armed thralls and
+servants. Gudruda, watching at the women's door, saw his face in the
+moonlight and loathed him.
+
+"What thinkest thou of him who comes to seek thee in marriage,
+foster-sister?" asked Swanhild, watching at her side.
+
+"I think he is like a troll, and that, seek as he will, he shall not
+find me. I had rather lie in the pool beneath Golden Falls than in
+Ospakar's hall."
+
+"That shall be proved," said Swanhild. "At the least he is rich and
+noble, and the greatest of men in size. It would go hard with Eric were
+those arms about him."
+
+"I am not so sure of that," said Gudruda; "but it is not likely to be
+known."
+
+"Comes Eric to the feast by the road of Golden Falls, Gudruda?"
+
+"Nay, no man may try that path and live."
+
+"Then he will die, for Eric will risk it."
+
+Now Gudruda thought, and a great fire burned in her heart and shone
+through her eyes. "If Eric dies," she said, "on thee be his blood,
+Swanhild--on thee and that dark mother of thine, for ye have plotted to
+bring this evil on us. How have I harmed thee that thou shouldst deal
+thus with me?"
+
+Swanhild turned white and wicked-looking, for passion mastered her, and
+she gazed into Gudruda's face and answered: "How hast thou harmed me?
+Surely I will tell thee. Thy beauty has robbed me of Eric's love."
+
+"It would be better to prate of Eric's love when he had told it thee,
+Swanhild."
+
+"Thou hast robbed me and therefore I hate thee, and therefore I will
+deliver thee to Ospakar, whom thou dost loath--ay and yet win Brighteyes
+to myself. Am I not also fair and can I not also love, and shall I see
+thee snatch my joy? By the Gods, never! I will see thee dead, and Eric
+with thee, ere it shall be so! but first I will see thee shamed!"
+
+"Thy words are ill-suited to a maiden's lips, Swanhild! But of this be
+sure: I fear thee not, and shall never fear thee. And one thing I know
+well that, whether thou or I prevail, in the end thou shalt harvest the
+greatest shame, and in times to come men shall speak of thee with hatred
+and name thee by ill names. Moreover, Eric shall never love thee; from
+year to year he shall hate thee with a deeper hate, though it may well
+be that thou wilt bring ruin on him. And now I thank thee that thou
+hast told me all thy mind, showing me what indeed thou art!" And Gudruda
+turned scornfully upon her heel and walked away.
+
+Now Asmund the Priest went out into the courtyard, and meeting Ospakar
+Blacktooth, greeted him heartily, though he did not like his looks, and
+took him by the hand and led him to the hall, that was bravely decked
+with tapestries, and seated him by his side on the high seat. And
+Ospakar's thralls brought good gifts for Asmund, who thanked the giver
+well.
+
+Now it was supper time, and Gudruda came in, and after her walked
+Swanhild. Ospakar gazed hard at Gudruda and a great desire entered into
+him to make her his wife. But she passed coldly by, nor looked on him at
+all.
+
+"This, then, is that maid of thine of whom I have heard tell, Asmund? I
+will say this: fairer was never born of woman."
+
+Then men ate and Ospakar drank much ale, but all the while he stared at
+Gudruda and listened for her voice. But as yet he said nothing of what
+he came to seek, though all knew his errand. And his two sons, Gizur
+and Mord, stared also at Gudruda, for they thought her most wonderfully
+fair. But Gizur found Swanhild also fair.
+
+And so the night wore on till it was time to sleep.
+
+
+
+On this same day Eric rode up from his farm on Ran River and took his
+road along the brow of Coldback till he came to Stonefell. Now all along
+Coldback and Stonefell is a steep cliff facing to the south, that grows
+ever higher till it comes to that point where Golden River falls over
+it and, parting its waters below, runs east and west--the branch to the
+east being called Ran River and that to the west Laxa--for these two
+streams girdle round the rich plain of Middalhof, till at length they
+reach the sea. But in the midst of Golden River, on the edge of the
+cliff, a mass of rock juts up called Sheep-saddle, dividing the waters
+of the fall, and over this the spray flies, and in winter the ice
+gathers, but the river does not cover it. The great fall is thirty
+fathoms deep, and shaped like a horseshoe, of which the points lie
+towards Middalhof. Yet if he could but gain the Sheep-saddle rock that
+divides the midst of the waters, a strong and hardy man might climb down
+some fifteen fathoms of this depth and scarcely wet his feet.
+
+Now here at the foot of Sheep-saddle rock the double arches of waters
+meet, and fall in one torrent into the bottomless pool below. But, some
+three fathoms from this point of the meeting waters, and beneath
+it, just where the curve is deepest, a single crag, as large as a
+drinking-table and no larger, juts through the foam, and, if a man could
+reach it, he might leap from it some twelve fathoms, sheer into the
+spray-hidden pit beneath, there to sink or swim as it might befall. This
+crag is called Wolf's Fang.
+
+Now Eric stood for a long while on the edge of the fall and looked,
+measuring every thing with his eye. Then he went up above, where the
+river swirls down to the precipice, and looked again, for it is from
+this bank that the dividing island-rock Sheep-saddle must be reached.
+
+"A man may hardly do this thing; yet I will try it," he said to himself
+at last. "My honour shall be great for the feat, if I chance to live,
+and if I die--well, there is an end of troubling after maids and all
+other things."
+
+So he went home and sat silent that evening. Now, since Thorgrimur
+Iron-Toe's death, his housewife, Saevuna, Eric's mother, had grown dim
+of sight, and, though she peered and peered again from her seat in the
+ingle nook, she could not see the face of her son.
+
+"What ails thee, Eric, that thou sittest so silent? Was not the meat,
+then, to thy mind at supper?"
+
+"Yes, mother, the meat was well enough, though a little undersmoked."
+
+"Now I see that thou art not thyself, son, for thou hadst no meat, but
+only stock-fish--and I never knew a man forget his supper on the night
+of its eating, except he was distraught or deep in love."
+
+"Was it so?" said Brighteyes.
+
+"What troubles thee, Eric?--that sweet lass yonder?"
+
+"Ay, somewhat, mother."
+
+"What more, then?"
+
+"This, that I go down Golden Falls to-morrow, and I do not know how I
+may come from Sheep-saddle rock to Wolf's Fang crag and keep my life
+whole in me; and now, I pray thee, weary me not with words, for my brain
+is slow, and I must use it."
+
+When she heard this Saevuna screamed aloud, and threw herself before
+Eric, praying him to forgo his mad venture. But he would not listen
+to her, for he was slow to make up his mind, but, that being made up,
+nothing could change it. Then, when she learned that it was to get sight
+of Gudruda that he purposed thus to throw his life away, she was very
+angry and cursed her and all her kith and kin.
+
+"It is likely enough that thou wilt have cause to use such words before
+all this tale is told," said Eric; "nevertheless, mother, forbear to
+curse Gudruda, who is in no way to blame for these matters."
+
+"Thou art a faithless son," Saevuna said, "who wilt slay thyself
+striving to win speech with thy May, and leave thy mother childless."
+
+Eric said that it seemed so indeed, but he was plighted to it and the
+feat must be tried. Then he kissed her, and she sought her bed, weeping.
+
+
+
+Now it was the day of the Yule-feast, and there was no sun till one hour
+before noon. But Eric, having kissed his mother and bidden her farewell,
+called a thrall, Jon by name, and giving him a sealskin bag full of his
+best apparel, bade him ride to Middalhof and tell Asmund the Priest that
+Eric Brighteyes would come down Golden Falls an hour after mid-day, to
+join his feast; and thence go to the foot of the Golden Falls, to await
+him there. And the man went, wondering, for he thought his master mad.
+
+Then Eric took a good rope, and a staff tipped with iron, and, so soon
+as the light served, mounted his horse, forded Ran River, and rode along
+Coldback till he came to the lip of Golden Falls. Here he stayed a while
+till at length he saw many people streaming up the snow from Middalhof
+far beneath, and, among them, two women who by their stature should be
+Gudruda and Swanhild, and, near to them, a great man whom he did not
+know. Then he showed himself for a space on the brink of the gulf and
+turned his horse up stream. The sun shone bright upon the edge of
+the sky, but the frost bit like a sword. Still, he must strip off his
+garments, so that nothing remained on him except his sheepskin shoes,
+shirt and hose, and take the water. Now here the river runs mightily,
+and he must cross full thirty fathoms of the swirling water before he
+can reach Sheep-saddle, and woe to him if his foot slip on the boulders,
+for certainly he must be swept over the brink.
+
+Eric rested the staff against the stony bottom and, leaning his weight
+on it, took the stream, and he was so strong that it could not prevail
+against him till at length he was rather more than half-way across and
+the water swept above his shoulders. Now he was lifted from his feet
+and, letting the staff float, he swam for his life, and with such mighty
+strokes that he felt little of that icy cold. Down he was swept--now the
+lip of the fall was but three fathoms away on his left, and already
+the green water boiled beneath him. A fathom from him was the corner of
+Sheep-saddle. If he may grasp it, all is well; if not, he dies.
+
+Three great strokes and he held it. His feet were swept out over the
+brink of the fall, but he clung on grimly, and by the strength of his
+arms drew himself on to the rock and rested a while. Presently he stood
+up, for the cold began to nip him, and the people below became aware
+that he had swum the river above the fall and raised a shout, for the
+deed was great. Now Eric must begin to clamber down Sheep-saddle, and
+this was no easy task, for the rock is almost sheer, and slippery with
+ice, and on either side the waters rushed and thundered, throwing their
+blinding spray about him as they leapt to the depths beneath. He looked
+down, studying the rock; then, feeling that he grew afraid, made an end
+of doubt and, grasping a point with both hands, swung himself down his
+own length and more. Now for many minutes he climbed down Sheep-saddle,
+and the task was hard, for he was bewildered with the booming of the
+waters that bent out on either side of him like the arc of a bow, and
+the rock was very steep and slippery. Still, he came down all those
+fifteen fathoms and fell not, though twice he was near to falling, and
+the watchers below marvelled greatly at his hardihood.
+
+"He will be dashed to pieces where the waters meet," said Ospakar, "he
+can never gain Wolf's Fang crag beneath; and, if so it be that he come
+there and leaps to the pool, the weight of water will drive him down and
+drown him."
+
+"It is certainly so," quoth Asmund, "and it grieves me much; for it was
+my jest that drove him to this perilous adventure, and we cannot spare
+such a man as Eric Brighteyes."
+
+Now Swanhild turned white as death; but Gudruda said: "If great heart
+and strength and skill may avail at all, then Eric shall come safely
+down the waters."
+
+"Thou fool!" whispered Swanhild in her ear, "how can these help him? No
+troll could live in yonder cauldron. Dead is Eric, and thou art the bait
+that lured him to his death!"
+
+"Spare thy words," she answered; "as the Norns have ordered so it shall
+be."
+
+Now Eric stood at the foot of Sheep-saddle, and within an arm's length
+the mighty waters met, tossing their yellow waves and seething furiously
+as they leapt to the mist-hid gulf beneath. He bent over and looked
+through the spray. Three fathoms under him the rock Wolf's Fang split
+the waters, and thence, if he can come thither, he may leap sheer into
+the pool below. Now he unwound the rope that was about his middle, and
+made one end fast to a knob of rock--and this was difficult, for his
+hands were stiff with cold--and the other end he passed through his
+leathern girdle. Then Eric looked again, and his heart sank within him.
+How might he give himself to this boiling flood and not be shattered?
+But as he looked, lo! a rainbow grew upon the face of the water, and one
+end of it lit upon him, and the other, like a glory from the Gods, fell
+full upon Gudruda as she stood a little way apart, watching at the foot
+of Golden Falls.
+
+"Seest thou that," said Asmund to Groa, who was at his side, "the Gods
+build their Bifrost bridge between these two. Who now shall keep them
+asunder?"
+
+"Read the portent thus," she answered: "they shall be united, but not
+here. Yon is a Spirit bridge, and, see: the waters of Death foam and
+fall between them!"
+
+Eric, too, saw the omen and it seemed good to him, and all fear left his
+heart. Round about him the waters thundered, but amidst their roar he
+dreamed that he heard a voice calling:
+
+"Be of good cheer, Eric Brighteyes; for thou shalt live to do mightier
+deeds than this, and in guerdon thou shalt win Gudruda."
+
+So he paused no longer, but, shortening up the rope, pulled on it with
+all his strength, and then leapt out upon the arch of waters. They
+struck him and he was dashed out like a stone from a sling; again he
+fell against them and again was dashed away, so that his girdle burst.
+Eric felt it go and clung wildly to the rope and lo! with the inward
+swing, he fell on Wolf's Fang, where never a man has stood before and
+never a man shall stand again. Eric lay a little while on the rock till
+his breath came back to him, and he listened to the roar of the waters.
+Then, rising on his hands and knees, he crept to its point, for he could
+scarcely stand because of the trembling of the stone beneath the shock
+of the fall; and when the people below saw that he was not dead, they
+raised a great shout, and the sound of their voices came to him through
+the noise of the waters.
+
+Now, twelve fathoms beneath him was the surface of the pool; but he
+could not see it because of the wreaths of spray. Nevertheless, he must
+leap and that swiftly, for he grew cold. So of a sudden Eric stood up to
+his full height, and, with a loud cry and a mighty spring, bounded out
+from the point of Wolf's Fang far into the air, beyond the reach of the
+falling flood, and rushed headlong towards the gulf beneath. Now all men
+watching held their breath as his body travelled, and so great is the
+place and so high the leap that through the mist Eric seemed but as a
+big white stone hurled down the face of the arching waters.
+
+He was gone, and the watchers rushed down to the foot of the pool, for
+there, if he rose at all, he must pass to the shallows. Swanhild could
+look no more, but sank upon the ground. The face of Gudruda was set like
+a stone with doubt and anguish. Ospakar saw and read the meaning, and he
+said to himself: "Now Odin grant that this youngling rise not again! for
+the maid loves him dearly, and he is too much a man to be lightly swept
+aside."
+
+Eric struck the pool. Down he sank, and down and down--for the water
+falling from so far must almost reach the bottom of the pool before
+it can rise again--and he with it. Now he touched the bottom, but very
+gently, and slowly began to rise, and, as he rose, was carried along by
+the stream. But it was long before he could breathe, and it seemed to
+him that his lungs would burst. Still, he struggled up, striking great
+strokes with his legs.
+
+"Farewell to Eric," said Asmund, "he will rise no more now."
+
+But just as he spoke Gudruda pointed to something that gleamed, white
+and golden, beneath the surface of the current, and lo! the bright hair
+of Eric rose from the water, and he drew a great breath, shaking his
+head like a seal, and, though but feebly, struck out for the shallows
+that are at the foot of the pool. Now he found footing, but was swept
+over by the fierce current, and cut his forehead, and he carried that
+scar till his death. Again he rose, and with a rush gained the bank
+unaided and fell upon the snow.
+
+Now people gathered about him in silence and wondering, for none had
+known so great a deed. And presently Eric opened his eyes and looked up,
+and found the eyes of Gudruda fixed on his, and there was that in them
+which made him glad he had dared the path of Golden Falls.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+HOW ERIC WON THE SWORD WHITEFIRE
+
+Now Asmund the priest bent down, and Eric saw him and spoke:
+
+"Thou badest me to thy Yule-feast, lord, by yonder slippery road and I
+have come. Dost thou welcome me well?"
+
+"No man better," quoth Asmund. "Thou art a gallant man, though
+foolhardy; and thou hast done a deed that shall be told of while skalds
+sing and men live in Iceland."
+
+"Make place, my father," said Gudruda, "for Eric bleeds." And she loosed
+the kerchief from her neck and bound it about his wounded brow, and,
+taking the rich cloak from her body, threw it on his shoulders, and no
+man said her nay.
+
+Then they led him to the hall, where Eric clothed himself and rested,
+and he sent back the thrall Jon to Coldback, bidding him tell Saevuna,
+Eric's mother, that he was safe. But he was somewhat weak all that day,
+and the sound of waters roared in his ears.
+
+Now Ospakar and Groa were ill pleased at the turn things had taken; but
+all the others rejoiced much, for Eric was well loved of men and they
+had grieved if the waters had prevailed against his might. But Swanhild
+brooded bitterly, for Eric never turned to look on her.
+
+The hour of the feast drew on and, according to custom, it was held in
+the Temple, and thither went all men. When they were seated in the nave
+of the Hof, the fat ox that had been made ready for sacrifice was led in
+and dragged before the altar on which the holy fire burned. Now Asmund
+the Priest slew it, amid silence, before the figures of the Gods, and,
+catching its blood in the blood-bowl, sprinkled the altar and all
+the worshippers with the blood-twigs. Then the ox was cut up, and the
+figures of the almighty Gods were anointed with its molten fat and wiped
+with fair linen. Next the flesh was boiled in the cauldrons that were
+hung over fires lighted all down the nave, and the feast began.
+
+Now men ate, and drank much ale and mead, and all were merry. But
+Ospakar Blacktooth grew not glad, though he drank much, for he saw that
+the eyes of Gudruda ever watched Eric's face and that they smiled on
+each other. He was wroth at this, for he knew that the bait must be good
+and the line strong that should win this fair fish to his angle, and as
+he sat, unknowingly his fingers loosed the peace-strings of his sword
+Whitefire, and he half drew it, so that its brightness flamed in the
+firelight.
+
+"Thou hast a wondrous blade there, Ospakar!" said Asmund, "though this
+is no place to draw it. Whence came it? Methinks no such swords are
+fashioned now."
+
+"Ay, Asmund, a wondrous blade indeed. There is no other such in the
+world, for the dwarfs forged it of old, and he shall be unconquered who
+holds it aloft. This was King Odin's sword, and it is named Whitefire.
+Ralph the Red took it from King Eric's cairn in Norway, and he strove
+long with the Barrow-Dweller[*] before he wrenched it from his grasp.
+But my father won it and slew Ralph, though he had never done this had
+Whitefire been aloft against him. But Ralph the Red, being in drink when
+the ships met in battle, fought with an axe, and was slain by my father,
+and since then Whitefire has been the last light that many a chief's
+eyes have seen. Look at it, Asmund."
+
+[*] The ghost in the cairn.
+
+Now he drew the great sword, and men were astonished as it flashed
+aloft. Its hilt was of gold, and blue stones were set therein. It
+measured two ells and a half from crossbar to point, and so bright was
+the broad blade that no one could look on it for long, and all down its
+length ran runes.
+
+"A wondrous weapon, truly!" said Asmund. "How read the runes?"
+
+"I know not, nor any man--they are ancient."
+
+"Let me look at them," said Groa, "I am skilled in runes." Now she
+took the sword, and heaved it up, and looked at the runes and said, "A
+strange writing truly."
+
+"How runs it, housekeeper?" said Asmund.
+
+"Thus, lord, if my skill is not at fault:--
+
+ "Whitefire is my name--
+ Dwarf-folk forged me--
+ Odin's sword was I--
+ Eric's sword was I--
+ Eric's sword shall I be--
+ And where I fall there he must follow me."
+
+Now Gudruda looked at Eric Brighteyes wonderingly, and Ospakar saw it
+and became very angry.
+
+"Look not so, maiden," he said, "for it shall be another Eric than yon
+flapper-duck who holds Whitefire aloft, though it may very well chance
+that he shall feel its edge."
+
+Now Gudruda bit her lip, and Eric burned red to the brow and spoke:
+
+"It is ill, lord, to throw taunts like an angry woman. Thou art great
+and strong, yet I may dare a deed with thee."
+
+"Peace, boy! Thou canst climb a waterfall well, I gainsay it not; but
+beware ere thou settest up thyself against my strength. Say now, what
+game wilt thou play with Ospakar?"
+
+"I will go on holmgang with thee, byrnie-clad or baresark,[*] and fight
+thee with axe or sword, or I will wrestle with thee, and Whitefire
+yonder shall be the winner's prize."
+
+ [*] To a duel, usually fought, in mail or without it, on an
+ island--"holm"--within a circle of hazel-twigs.
+
+"Nay, I will have no bloodshed here at Middalhof," said Asmund sternly.
+"Make play with fists, or wrestle if ye will, for that were great sport
+to see; but weapons shall not be drawn."
+
+Now Ospakar grew mad with anger and drink--and he grinned like a dog,
+till men saw the red gums beneath his lips.
+
+"Thou wilt wrestle with me, youngling--with _me_ whom no man has ever so
+much as lifted from my feet? Good! I will lay thee on thy face and
+whip thee, and Whitefire shall be the stake--I swear it on the holy
+altar-ring; but what hast thou to set against the precious sword? Thy
+poor hovel and its lot of land shall be all too little."
+
+"I set my life on it; if I lose Whitefire let Whitefire slay me," said
+Eric.
+
+"Nay, that I will not have, and I am master here in this Temple," said
+Asmund. "Bethink thee of some other stake, Ospakar, or let the game be
+off."
+
+Now Ospakar gnawed his lip with his black fang and thought. Then he
+laughed aloud and spoke:
+
+"Bright is Whitefire and thou art named Brighteyes. See now: I set the
+great sword against thy right eye, and, if I win the match, it shall
+be mine to tear it out. Wilt thou play this game with me? If thy heart
+fails thee, let it go; but I will set no other stake against my good
+sword."
+
+"Eyes and limbs are a poor man's wealth," said Eric: "so be it. I stake
+my right eye against the sword Whitefire, and we will try the match
+to-morrow."
+
+"And to-morrow night thou shalt be called Eric One-eye," said
+Ospakar--at which some few of his thralls laughed.
+
+But most of the men did not laugh, for they thought this an ill game and
+a worst jest.
+
+Now the feast went on, and Asmund rose from his high seat in the centre
+of the nave, on the left hand looking down from the altar, and gave
+out the holy toasts. First men drank a full horn to Odin, praying for
+triumph on their foes. Then they drank to Frey, asking for plenty; to
+Thor, for strength in battle; to Freya, Goddess of Love (and to her Eric
+drank heartily); to the memory of the dead; and, last of all, to
+Bragi, God of all delight. When this cup was drunk, Asmund rose again,
+according to custom, and asked if none had an oath to swear as to some
+deed that should be done.
+
+For a while there was no answer, but presently Eric Brighteyes stood up.
+
+"Lord," he said, "I would swear an oath."
+
+"Set forth the matter, then," said Asmund.
+
+"It is this," quoth Eric. "On Mosfell mountain, over by Hecla, dwells a
+Baresark of whom all men have ill knowledge, for there are few whom he
+has not harmed. His name is Skallagrim; he is a mighty man and he has
+wrought much mischief in the south country, and brought many to their
+deaths and robbed more of their goods: for none can prevail against him.
+Still, I swear this, that, when the days lengthen, I will go up alone
+against him and challenge him to battle, and conquer him or fall."
+
+"Then, thou yellow-headed puppy-dog, thou shalt go with one eye against
+a Baresark with two," growled Ospakar.
+
+Men took no heed of his words, but shouted aloud, for Skallagrim had
+plagued them long, and there were none who dared to fight with him any
+more. Only Gudruda looked askance, for it seemed to her that Eric swore
+too fast. Nevertheless he went up to the altar, and, taking hold of the
+holy ring, he set his foot on the holy stone and swore his oath, while
+the feasters applauded, striking their cups upon the board.
+
+And after that the feast went merrily, till all men were drunk, except
+Asmund and Eric.
+
+Now Eric went to rest, but first he rubbed his limbs with the fat of
+seals, for he was still sore with the beating of the waters, and they
+must needs be supple on the morrow if he would keep his eye. Then he
+slept sound, and rose strong and well, and going to the stream behind
+the stead, bathed, and anointed his limbs afresh. But Ospakar did not
+sleep well, because of the ale that he had drunk. Now as Eric came back
+from bathing, in the dark of the morning, he met Gudruda, who watched
+for his coming, and, there being none to see, he kissed her often; but
+she chided him because of the match that he had made with Ospakar and
+the oath that he had sworn.
+
+"Surely," she said, "thou wilt lose thine eye, for this Ospakar is a
+giant, and strong as a troll; also he is merciless. Still, thou art a
+mighty man, and I shall love thee as well with one eye as with two. Oh!
+Eric, methought I should have died yesterday when thou didst leap from
+Wolf's Fang! My heart seemed to stop within me."
+
+"Yet I came safely to shore, sweetheart, and well does this kiss pay for
+all I did. And as for Ospakar, if but once I get these arms about him, I
+fear him little, or any man, and I covet that sword of his greatly. But
+we can talk more certainly of these things to-morrow."
+
+Now Gudruda clung to him and told him all that had befallen, and of the
+doings and words of Swanhild.
+
+"She honours me beyond my worth," he said, "who am in no way set on her,
+but on thee only, Gudruda."
+
+"Art thou so sure of that, Eric? Swanhild is fair and wise."
+
+"Ay and evil. When I love Swanhild, then thou mayest love Ospakar."
+
+"It is a bargain," she said, laughing. "Good luck go with thee in the
+wrestling," and with a kiss she left him, fearing lest she should be
+seen.
+
+Eric went back to the hall, and sat down by the centre hearth, for all
+men slept, being still heavy with drink, and presently Swanhild glided
+up to him, and greeted him.
+
+"Thou art greedy of deeds, Eric," she said. "Yesterday thou camest here
+by a path that no man has travelled, to-day thou dost wrestle with a
+giant for thine eye, and presently thou goest up against Skallagrim!"
+
+"It seems that this is true," said Eric.
+
+"Now all this thou doest for a woman who is the betrothed of another
+man."
+
+"All this I do for fame's sake, Swanhild. Moreover, Gudruda is betrothed
+to none."
+
+"Before another Yule-feast is spread, Gudruda shall be the wife of
+Ospakar."
+
+"That is yet to be seen, Swanhild."
+
+Now Swanhild stood silent for a while and then spoke: "Thou art a fool,
+Eric--yes, drunk with folly. Nothing but evil shall come to thee from
+this madness of thine. Forget it and pluck that which lies to thine
+hand," and she looked sweetly at him.
+
+"They call thee Swanhild the Fatherless," he answered, "but I think that
+Loki, the God of Guile, was thy father, for there is none to match thee
+in craft and evil-doing, and in beauty one only. I know thy plots well
+and all the sorrow that thou hast brought upon us. Still, each seeks
+honour after his own manner, so seek thou as thou wilt; but thou shalt
+find bitterness and empty days, and thy plots shall come back on thine
+own head--yes, even though they bring Gudruda and me to sorrow and
+death."
+
+Swanhild laughed. "A day shall dawn, Eric, when thou who dost hate me
+shalt hold me dear, and this I promise thee. Another thing I promise
+thee also: that Gudruda shall never call thee husband."
+
+But Eric did not answer, fearing lest in his anger he should say words
+that were better unspoken.
+
+Now men rose and sat down to meat, and all talked of the wrestling that
+should be. But in the morning Ospakar repented of the match, for it is
+truly said that _ale is another man_, and men do not like that in the
+morning which seemed well enough on yester eve. He remembered that he
+held Whitefire dear above all things, and that Eric's eye had no worth
+to him, except that the loss of it would spoil his beauty, so that
+perhaps Gudruda would turn from him. It would be very ill if he should
+chance to lose the play--though of this he had no fear, for he was
+held the strongest man in Iceland and the most skilled in all feats of
+strength--and, at the best, no fame is to be won from the overthrow of a
+deedless man, and the plucking out of his eye. Thus it came to pass that
+when he saw Eric he called to him in a big voice:
+
+"Hearken, thou Eric."
+
+"I hear thee, thou Ospakar," said Eric, mocking him, and people laughed;
+while Ospakar grinned angrily and said, "Thou must learn manners, puppy.
+Still, I shall find no honour in teaching thee in this wise. Last night
+we made a match in our cups, and I staked my sword Whitefire and thou
+thine eye. It would be bad that either of us should lose sword or eye;
+therefore, what sayest thou, shall we let it pass?"
+
+"Ay, Blacktooth, if thou fearest; but first pay thou forfeit of the
+sword."
+
+Now Ospakar grew very mad and shouted, "Thou wilt indeed stand against
+me in the ring! I will break thy back anon, youngster, and afterwards
+tear out thine eye before thou diest."
+
+"It may so befall," answered Eric, "but big words do not make big
+deeds."
+
+Presently the light came and thralls went out with spades and cleared
+away the snow in a circle two rods across, and brought dry sand and
+sprinkled it on the frozen turf, so that the wrestlers should not slip.
+And they piled the snow in a wall around the ring.
+
+But Groa came up to Ospakar and spoke to him apart.
+
+"Knowest thou, lord," she said, "that my heart bodes ill of this match?
+Eric is a mighty man, and, great though thou art, I think that thou
+shalt lout low before him."
+
+"It will be a bad business if I am overthrown by an untried man," said
+Ospakar, and was troubled in his mind, "and it would be evil moreover to
+lose the sword. For no price would I have it so."
+
+"What wilt thou give me, lord, if I bring thee victory?"
+
+"I will give thee two hundred in silver."
+
+"Ask no questions and it shall be so," said Groa.
+
+Now Eric was without, taking note of the ground in the ring, and
+presently Groa called to her the thrall Koll the Half-witted, whom she
+had sent to Swinefell.
+
+"See," she said, "yonder by the wall stand the wrestling shoes of Eric
+Brighteyes. Haste thee now and take grease, and rub the soles with it,
+then hold them in the heat of the fire, so that the fat sinks in. Do
+this swiftly and secretly, and I will give thee three pennies."
+
+Koll grinned, and did as he was bid, setting back the shoes just as
+they were before. Scarcely was the deed done when Eric came in, and made
+himself ready for the game, binding the greased shoes upon his feet, for
+he feared no trick.
+
+Now everybody went out to the ring, and Ospakar and Eric stripped
+for wrestling. They were clad in tight woollen jerkins and hose, and
+sheep-skin shoes were on their feet.
+
+They named Asmund master of the game, and his word must be law to both
+of them. Eric claimed that Asmund should hold the sword Whitefire that
+was at stake, but Ospakar gainsaid him, saying that if he gave Whitefire
+into Asmund's keeping, Eric must also give his eye--and about this they
+debated hotly. Now the matter was brought before Asmund as umpire, and
+he gave judgment for Eric, "for," he said, "if Eric yield up his eye
+into my hand, I can return it to his head no more if he should win; but
+if Ospakar gives me the good sword and conquers, it is easy for me to
+pass it back to him unharmed."
+
+Men said that this was a good judgment.
+
+Thus then was the arm-game set. Ospakar and Eric must wrestle thrice,
+and between each bout there would be a space while men could count a
+thousand. They might strike no blow at one another with hand, or head,
+or elbow, foot or knee; and it should be counted no fall if the haunch
+and the head of the fallen were not on the ground at the self-same time.
+He who suffered two falls should be adjudged conquered and lose his
+stake.
+
+Asmund called these rules aloud in the presence of witnesses, and
+Ospakar and Eric said that should bind them. Ospakar drew a small knife
+and gave it to his son Gizur to hold.
+
+"Thou shalt soon know, youngling, how steel tastes in the eyeball," he
+said.
+
+"We shall soon know many things," Eric answered.
+
+Now they drew off their cloaks and stood in the ring. Ospakar was great
+beyond the bigness of men and his arms were clothed with black hair
+like the limbs of a goat. Beneath the shoulder joint they were almost
+as thick as a girl's thigh. His legs also were mighty, and the muscles
+stood out upon him in knotty lumps. He seemed a very giant, and fierce
+as a Baresark, but still somewhat round about the body and heavy in
+movement.
+
+From him men looked at Eric.
+
+"Lo! Baldur and the Troll!" said Swanhild, and everybody laughed, since
+so it was indeed; for, if Ospakar was black and hideous as a troll, Eric
+was beautiful as Baldur, the loveliest of the Gods. He was taller than
+Ospakar by the half of a hand and as broad in the chest. Still, he was
+not yet come to his greatest strength, and, though his limbs were well
+knit, they seemed but as a child's against the limbs of Ospakar. But he
+was quick as a cat and lithe, his neck and arms were white as whey, and
+beneath his golden hair his bright eyes shone like spears.
+
+Now they stood face to face, with arms outstretched, waiting the word of
+Asmund. He gave it and they circled round each other with arms held low.
+Presently Ospakar made a rush and, seizing Eric about the middle, tried
+to lift him, but with no avail. Thrice he strove and failed, then Eric
+moved his foot and lo! it slipped upon the sanded turf. Again Eric moved
+and again he slipped, a third time and he slipped a third time, and
+before he could recover himself he was full on his back and fairly
+thrown.
+
+Gudruda saw and was sad at heart, and those around her said that it was
+easy to know how the game would end.
+
+"What said I?" quoth Swanhild, "that it would go badly with Eric were
+Ospakar's arms about him."
+
+"All is not done yet," answered Gudruda. "Methinks Eric's feet slipped
+most strangely, as though he stood on ice."
+
+But Eric was very sore at heart and could make nothing of this
+matter--for he was not overthrown by strength.
+
+He sat on the snow and Ospakar and his sons mocked him. But Gudruda drew
+near and whispered to him to be of good cheer, for fortune might yet
+change.
+
+"I think that I am bewitched," said Eric sadly: "my feet have no hold of
+the ground."
+
+Gudruda covered her eyes with her hand and thought. Presently she looked
+up quickly. "I seem to see guile here," she said. "Now look narrowly on
+thy shoes."
+
+He heard, and, loosening his shoe-string, drew a shoe from his foot and
+looked at the sole. The cold of the snow had hardened the fat, and there
+it was, all white upon the leather.
+
+Now Eric rose in wrath. "Methought," he cried, "that I dealt with men
+of honourable mind, not with cheating tricksters. See now! it is little
+wonder that I slipped, for grease has been set upon my shoes--and, by
+Thor! I will cleave the man who did it to the chin," and as he said it
+his eyes blazed so dreadfully that folk fell back from him. Asmund took
+the shoes and looked at them. Then he spoke:
+
+"Brighteyes tells the truth, and we have a sorry knave among us.
+Ospakar, canst thou clear thyself of this ill deed?"
+
+"I will swear on the holy ring that I know nothing of it, and if any man
+in my company has had a hand therein he shall die," said Ospakar.
+
+"That we will swear also," cried his sons Gizur and Mord.
+
+"This is more like a woman's work," said Gudruda, and she looked at
+Swanhild.
+
+"It is no work of mine," quoth Swanhild.
+
+"Then go and ask thy mother of it," answered Gudruda.
+
+Now all men cried aloud that this was the greatest shame, and that the
+match must be set afresh; only Ospakar bethought him of that two hundred
+in silver which he had promised to Groa, and looked around, but she was
+not there. Still, he gainsaid Eric in the matter of the match being set
+afresh.
+
+Then Eric cried out in his anger that he would let the game stand as it
+was, since Ospakar swore himself free of the shameful deed. Men thought
+this a mad saying, but Asmund said it should be so. Still, he swore
+in his heart that, even if he were worsted, Eric should not lose his
+eye--no not if swords were held aloft to take it. For of all tricks this
+seemed to him the very worst.
+
+Now Ospakar and Eric faced each other again in the ring, but this time
+the feet of Eric were bare.
+
+Ospakar rushed to get the upper hold, but Eric was too swift for him and
+sprang aside. Again he rushed, but Eric dropped and gripped him round
+the middle. Now they were face to face, hugging each other like bears,
+but moving little. For a time things went thus, while Ospakar strove to
+lift Eric, but in nowise could he stir him. Then of a sudden Eric put
+out his strength, and they staggered round the ring, tearing at each
+other till their jerkins were rent from them, leaving them almost bare
+to the waist. Suddenly, Eric seemed to give, and Ospakar put out his
+foot to trip him. But Brighteyes was watching. He caught the foot in
+the crook of his left leg, and threw his weight forward on the chest of
+Blacktooth. Backward he went, falling with the thud of a tree on snow,
+and there he lay on the ground, and Eric over him.
+
+Then men shouted "A fall! a fair fall!" and were very glad, for the
+fight seemed most uneven to them, and the wrestlers rolled asunder,
+breathing heavily.
+
+Gudruda threw a cloak over Eric's naked shoulders.
+
+"That was well done, Brighteyes," she said.
+
+"The game is still to play, sweet," he gasped, "and Ospakar is a mighty
+man. I threw him by skill, not by strength. Next time it must be by
+strength or not at all."
+
+Now breathing-time was done, and once more the two were face to face.
+Thrice Ospakar rushed, and thrice did Eric slip away, for he would waste
+Blacktooth's strength. Again Ospakar rushed, roaring like a bear, and
+fire seemed to come from his eyes, and the steam went up from him and
+hung upon the frosty air like the steam of a horse. This time Eric could
+not get away, but was swept up into that great grip, for Ospakar had the
+lower hold.
+
+"Now there is an end of Eric," said Swanhild.
+
+"The arrow is yet on the bow," answered Gudruda.
+
+Blacktooth put out his might and reeled round and round the ring,
+dragging Eric with him. This way and that he twisted, and time on time
+Eric's leg was lifted from the ground, but so he might not be thrown.
+Now they stood almost still, while men shouted madly, for no such
+wrestling had been known in the southlands. Grimly they hugged and
+strove: forsooth it was a mighty sight to see. Grimly they hugged, and
+their muscles strained and cracked, but they could stir each other no
+inch.
+
+Ospakar grew fearful, for he could make no play with this youngling.
+Black rage swelled in his heart. He ground his fangs, and thought on
+guile. By his foot gleamed the naked foot of Eric. Suddenly he stamped
+on it so fiercely that the skin burst.
+
+"Ill done! ill done!" folk cried; but in his pain Eric moved his foot.
+
+Lo! he was down, but not altogether down, for he did but sit upon his
+haunches, and still he clung to Blacktooth's thighs, and twined his legs
+about his ankles. Now with all his strength Ospakar strove to force the
+head of Brighteyes to the ground, but still he could not, for Eric clung
+to him like a creeper to a tree.
+
+"A losing game for Eric," said Asmund, and as he spoke Brighteyes was
+pressed back till his yellow hair almost swept the sand.
+
+Then the folk of Ospakar shouted in triumph, but Gudruda cried aloud:
+
+"Be not overthrown, Eric; loose thee and spring aside."
+
+Eric heard, and of a sudden loosed all his grip. He fell on his
+outspread hand, then, with a swing sideways and a bound, once more
+he stood upon his feet. Ospakar came at him like a bull made mad with
+goading, but he could no longer roar aloud. They closed and this time
+Eric had the better hold. For a while they struggled round and round
+till their feet tore the frozen turf, then once more they stood face
+to face. Now the two were almost spent; yet Blacktooth gathered up his
+strength and swung Eric from his feet, but he found them again. He grew
+mad with rage, and hugged him till Brighteyes was nearly pressed to
+death, and black bruises sprang upon the whiteness of his flesh. Ospakar
+grew mad, and madder yet, till at length in his fury he fixed his fangs
+in Eric's shoulder and bit till the blood spurted.
+
+"Ill kissed, thou rat!" gasped Eric, and with the pain and rush of
+blood, his strength came back to him. He shifted his grip swiftly, now
+his right hand was beneath the fork of Blacktooth's thigh and his left
+on the hollow of Blacktooth's back. Twice he lifted--twice the bulk of
+Ospakar rose from the ground--a third mighty lift--so mighty that the
+wrapping on Eric's forehead burst, and the blood streamed down his
+face--and lo! great Blacktooth flew in air. Up he flew, and backward he
+fell into the bank of snow, and was buried there almost to the knees.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WAS BETROTHED TO UNNA
+
+For a moment there was silence, for all that company was wonderstruck at
+the greatness of the deed. Then they cheered and cheered again, and to
+Eric it seemed that he slept, and the sound of shouting reached him but
+faintly, as though he heard through snow. Suddenly he woke and saw a
+man rush at him with axe aloft. It was Mord, Ospakar's son, mad at his
+father's overthrow. Eric sprang aside, or the blow had been his bane,
+and, as he sprang, smote with his fist, and it struck heavily on the
+head of Mord above the ear, so that the axe flew from his hand, and he
+fell senseless on his father in the snow.
+
+Now swords flashed out, and men ringed round Eric to guard him, and it
+came near to the spilling of blood, for the people of Ospakar gnashed
+their teeth to see so great a hero overthrown by a youngling, while the
+southern folk of Middalhof and Ran River rejoiced loudly, for Eric was
+dear to their hearts.
+
+"Down swords," cried Asmund the priest, "and haul yon carcass from the
+snow."
+
+This then they did, and Ospakar sat up, breathing in great gasps, the
+blood running from his mouth and ears, and he was an evil sight to see,
+for what with blood and snow and rage his face was like the face of the
+Swinefell Goblin.
+
+But Swanhild spoke in the ear of Gudruda:
+
+"Here," she said, looking at Eric, "we two have a man worth loving,
+foster-sister."
+
+"Ay," answered Gudruda, "worth and well worth!"
+
+Now Asmund drew near and before all men kissed Eric Brighteyes on the
+brow.
+
+"In sooth," he said, "thou art a mighty man, Eric, and the glory of the
+south. This I prophesy of thee: that thou shalt do deeds such as have
+not been done in Iceland. Thou hast ill been served, for a knave unknown
+greased thy shoes. Yon swarthy Ospakar, the most mighty of all men in
+Iceland, could not overthrow thee, though, like a wolf, he fastened his
+fangs in thee, and, like a coward, stamped upon thy naked foot. Take
+thou the great sword that thou hast won and wear it worthily."
+
+Now Eric took snow and wiped the blood from his brow. Then he grasped
+Whitefire and drew it from the scabbard, and high aloft flashed the
+war-blade. Thrice he wheeled it round his head, then sang aloud:
+
+ "Fast, yestermorn, down Golden Falls,
+ Fared young Eric to thy feast,
+ Asmund, father of Gudruda--
+ Maid whom much he longs to clasp.
+ But to-day on Giant Blacktooth
+ Hath he done a needful deed:
+ Hurling him in heaped-up snowdrift;
+ Winning Whitefire for his wage."
+
+And again he sang:
+
+ "Lord, if in very truth thou thinkest
+ Brighteyes is a man midst men,
+ Swear to him, the stalwart suitor,
+ Handsel of thy sweet maid's hand:
+ Whom, long loved, to win, down Goldfoss
+ Swift he sped through frost and foam;
+ Whom, to win, to troll-like Ogre,
+ He, 'gainst Whitefire, waged his eye."
+
+Men thought this well sung, and turned to hear Asmund's answer, nor must
+they wait long.
+
+"Eric," he said, "I will promise thee this, that if thou goest on as
+thou hast begun, I will give Gudruda in marriage to no other man."
+
+"That is good tidings, lord," said Eric.
+
+"This I say further: in a year I will give thee full answer according as
+to how thou dost bear thyself between now and then, for this is no light
+gift thou askest; also that, if ye will it, you twain may now plight
+troth, for the blame shall be yours if it is broken, and not mine, and I
+give thee my hand on it."
+
+Eric took his hand, and Gudruda heard her father's words and happiness
+shone in her dark eyes, and she grew faint for very joy. And now Eric
+turned to her, all torn and bloody from the fray, the great sword in his
+hand, and he spoke thus:
+
+"Thou hast heard thy father's words, Gudruda? Now it seems that there is
+no great need of troth-plighting between us two. Still, here before
+all men I ask thee, if thou dost love me and art willing to take me to
+husband?"
+
+Gudruda looked up into his face, and answered in a sweet, clear voice
+that could be heard by all:
+
+"Eric, I say to thee now, what I have said before, that I love thee
+alone of all men, and, if it be my father's wish, I will wed no other
+whilst thou dost remain true to me and hold me dear."
+
+"Those are good words," said Eric. "Now, in pledge of them, swear this
+troth of thine upon my sword that I have won."
+
+Gudruda smiled, and, taking great Whitefire in her hand, she said the
+words again, and, in pledge of them, kissed the bright blade.
+
+Then Eric took back the war-sword and spoke thus: "I swear that I will
+love thee, and thee only, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter, whom I
+have desired all my days; and, if I fail of this my oath, then our troth
+is at an end, and thou mayst wed whom thou wilt," and in turn he put his
+lips upon the sword, while Swanhild watched them do the oath.
+
+Now Ospakar was recovered from the fight, and he sat there upon the
+snow, with bowed head, for he knew well that he had won the greatest
+shame, and had lost both wife and sword. Black rage filled his heart as
+he listened, and he sprang to his feet.
+
+"I came hither, Asmund," he said, "to ask this maid of thine in
+marriage, and methinks that had been a good match for her and thee. But
+I have been overthrown by witchcraft of this man in a wrestling-bout,
+and thereby lost my good sword; and now I must seem to hear him
+betrothed to the maid before me."
+
+"Thou hast heard aright, Ospakar," said Asmund, "and thy wooing is soon
+sped. Get thee back whence thou camest and seek a wife in thine own
+quarter, for thou art unfit in age and aspect to have so sweet a maid.
+Moreover, here in the south we hold men of small account, however great
+and rich they be, who do not shame to seek to overcome a foe by foul
+means. With my own eyes I saw thee stamp on the naked foot of Eric,
+Thorgrimur's son; with my own eyes I saw thee, like a wolf, fasten that
+black fang of thine upon him--there is the mark of it; and, as for the
+matter of the greased shoes, thou knowest best what hand thou hadst in
+it."
+
+"I had no hand. If any did this thing, it was Groa the Witch, thy
+Finnish bedmate. For the rest, I was mad and know not what I did. But
+hearken, Asmund: ill shall befall thee and thy house, and I will ever
+be thy foe. Moreover, I will yet wed this maid of thine. And now, thou
+Eric, hearken also: I will have another game with thee. This one was
+but the sport of boys; when we meet again--and the time shall not be
+long--swords shall be aloft, and thou shalt learn the play of men. I
+tell thee that I will slay thee, and tear Gudruda, shrieking, from thy
+arms to be my wife! I tell thee that, with yonder good sword Whitefire,
+I will yet hew off thy head!"--and he choked and stopped.
+
+"Thou art much foam and little water," said Eric. "These things are
+easily put to proof. If thou willest it, to-morrow I will come with thee
+to a holmgang, and there we may set the twigs and finish what we have
+begun to-day."
+
+"I cannot do that, for thou hast my sword; and, till I am suited with
+another weapon, I may fight no holmgang. Still, fear not: we shall soon
+meet with weapons aloft and byrnie on breast."
+
+"Never too soon can the hour come, Blacktooth," said Eric, and turning
+on his heel, he limped to the hall to clothe himself afresh. On the
+threshold of the men's door he met Groa the Witch.
+
+"Thou didst put grease upon my shoes, carline and witch-hag that thou
+art," he said.
+
+"It is not true, Brighteyes."
+
+"There thou liest, and for all this I will repay thee. Thou art not yet
+the wife of Asmund, nor shalt be, for a plan comes into my head about
+it."
+
+Groa looked at him strangely. "If thou speakest so, take heed to thy
+meat and drink," she said. "I was not born among the Finns for nothing;
+and know, I am still minded to wed Asmund. For thy shoes, I would to the
+Gods that they were Hell-shoon, and that I was now binding them on thy
+dead feet."
+
+"Oh! the cat begins to spit," said Eric. "But know this: thou mayest
+grease my shoes--fit work for a carline!--but thou mayest never bind
+them on. Thou art a witch, and wilt come to the end of witches; and
+what thy daughter is, that I will not say," and he pushed past her and
+entered the hall.
+
+Presently Asmund came to seek Eric there, and prayed him to be gone to
+his stead on Ran River. The horses of Ospakar had strayed, and he must
+stop at Middalhof till they were found; but, if these two should abide
+under the same roof, bloodshed would come of it, and that Asmund knew.
+
+Eric said yea to this, and, when he had rested a while, he kissed
+Gudruda, and, taking a horse, rode away to Coldback, bearing the sword
+Whitefire with him, and for a time he saw no more of Ospakar.
+
+When he came there, his mother Saevuna greeted him as one risen from
+the dead, and hung about his neck. Then he told her all that had come
+to pass, and she thought it a marvellous story, and sorrowed that
+Thorgrimur, her husband, was not alive to know it. But Eric mused a
+while, and spoke.
+
+"Mother," he said, "now my uncle Thorod of Greenfell is dead, and his
+daughter, my cousin Unna, has no home. She is a fair woman and skilled
+in all things. It comes into my mind that we should bid her here to
+dwell with us."
+
+"Why, I thought thou wast betrothed to Gudruda the Fair," said Saevuna.
+"Wherefore, then, wouldst thou bring Unna hither?"
+
+"For this cause," said Eric; "because it seems that Asmund the Priest
+wearies of Groa the Witch, and would take another wife, and I wish to
+draw the bands between us tighter, if it may befall so."
+
+"Groa will take it ill," said Saevuna.
+
+"Things cannot be worse between us than they are now, therefore I do not
+fear Groa," he answered.
+
+"It shall be as thou wilt, son; to-morrow we will send to Unna and bid
+her here, if it pleases her to come."
+
+Now Ospakar stayed three more days at Middalhof, till his horses were
+found, and he was fit to travel, for Eric had shaken him sorely. But he
+had no words with Gudruda and few with Asmund. Still, he saw Swanhild,
+and she bid him to be of good cheer, for he should yet have Gudruda.
+For now that the maid had passed from him the mind of Ospakar was set
+in winning her. Bjoern also, Asmund's son, spoke words of good comfort
+to him, for he envied Eric his great fame, and he thought the match
+with Blacktooth would be good. And so at length Ospakar rode away to
+Swinefell with all his company; but Gizur, his son, left his heart
+behind.
+
+For Swanhild had not been idle this while. Her heart was sore, but she
+must follow her ill-nature, and so she had put out her woman's strength
+and beguiled Gizur into loving her. But she did not love him at all, and
+the temper of Asmund the Priest was so angry that Gizur dared not ask
+her in marriage. So nothing was said of the matter.
+
+
+Now Unna came to Coldback, to dwell with Saevuna, Eric's mother, and she
+was a fair and buxom woman. She had been once wedded, but within a month
+of her marriage her husband was lost at sea, this two years gone. At
+first Gudruda was somewhat jealous of this coming of Unna to Coldback;
+but Eric showed her what was in his mind, and she fell into the plan,
+for she hated and feared Groa greatly, and desired to be rid of her.
+
+Since this matter of the greasing of Eric's wrestling-shoes great
+loathing of Groa had come into Asmund's mind, and he bethought him often
+of those words that his wife Gudruda the Gentle spoke as she lay dying,
+and grieved that the oath which he swore then had in part been broken.
+He would have no more to do with Groa now, but he could not be rid of
+her; and, notwithstanding her evil doings, he still loved Swanhild. But
+Groa grew thin with spite and rage, and wandered about the place glaring
+with her great black eyes, and people hated her more and more.
+
+Now Asmund went to visit at Coldback, and there he saw Unna, and was
+pleased with her, for she was a blithe woman and a bonny. The end of it
+was that he asked her in marriage of Eric; at which Brighteyes was glad,
+but said that he must know Unna's mind. Unna hearkened, and did not
+say no, for though Asmund was somewhat gone in years, still he was an
+upstanding man, wealthy in lands, goods, and moneys out at interest, and
+having many friends. So they plighted troth, and the wedding-feast was
+to be in the autumn after hay-harvest. Now Asmund rode back to Middalhof
+somewhat troubled at heart, for these tidings must be told to Groa, and
+he feared her and her witchcraft. In the hall he found her, standing
+alone.
+
+"Where hast thou been, lord?" she asked.
+
+"At Coldback," he answered.
+
+"To see Unna, Eric's cousin, perchance?"
+
+"That is so."
+
+"What is Unna to thee, then, lord?"
+
+"This much, that after hay-harvest she will be my wife, and that is ill
+news for thee, Groa."
+
+Now Groa turned and grasped fiercely at the air with her thin hands. Her
+eyes started out, foam was on her lips, and she shook in her fury like
+a birch-tree in the wind, looking so evil that Asmund drew back a little
+way, saying:
+
+"Now a veil is lifted from thee and I see thee as thou art. Thou hast
+cast a glamour over me these many years, Groa, and it is gone."
+
+"Mayhap, Asmund Asmundson--mayhap, thou knowest me; but I tell thee that
+thou shalt see me in a worse guise before thou weddest Unna. What! have
+I borne the greatest shame, lying by thy side these many years, and
+shall I live to see a rival, young and fair, creep into my place with
+honour? That I will not while runes have power and spells can conjure
+the evil thing upon thee. I call down ruin on thee and thine--yea and
+on Brighteyes also, for he has brought this thing to pass. Death take ye
+all! May thy blood no longer run in mortal veins anywhere on the earth!
+Go down to Hela, Asmund, and be forgotten!" and she began to mutter
+runes swiftly.
+
+Now Asmund turned white with wrath. "Cease thy evil talk," he said, "or
+thou shalt be hurled as a witch into Goldfoss pool."
+
+"Into Goldfoss pool?--yea, there I may lie. I see it!--I seem to see
+this shape of mine rolling where the waters boil fiercest--but thine
+eyes shall never see it! _Thy_ eyes are shut, and shut are the eyes of
+Unna, for ye have gone before!--I do but follow after," and thrice Groa
+shrieked aloud, throwing up her arms, then fell foaming on the sanded
+floor.
+
+"An evil woman and a fey!" said Asmund as he called people to her. "It
+had been better for me if I had never seen her dark face."
+
+Now it is to be told that Groa lay beside herself for ten full days, and
+Swanhild nursed her. Then she found her sense again, and craved to see
+Asmund, and spoke thus to him:
+
+"It seems to me, lord, if indeed it be aught but a vision of my dreams,
+that before this sickness struck me I spoke mad and angry words against
+thee, because thou hast plighted troth to Unna, Thorod's daughter."
+
+"That is so, in truth," said Asmund.
+
+"I have to say this, then, lord: that most humbly I crave thy pardon for
+my ill words, and ask thee to put them away from thy mind. Sore heart
+makes sour speech, and thou knowest well that, howsoever great my
+faults, at least I have always loved thee and laboured for thee, and
+methinks that in some fashion thy fortunes are the debtor to my wisdom.
+Therefore when my ears heard that thou hadst of a truth put me away,
+and that another woman comes an honoured wife to rule in Middalhof, my
+tongue forgot its courtesy, and I spoke words that are of all words the
+farthest from my mind. For I know well that I grow old, and have put off
+that beauty with which I was adorned of yore, and that held thee to me.
+'_Carline_' Eric Brighteyes named me, and 'carline' I am--an old hag, no
+more! Now, forgive me, and, in memory of all that has been between us,
+let me creep to my place in the ingle and still watch and serve thee and
+thine till my service is outworn. Out of Ran's net I came to thee, and,
+if thou drivest me hence, I tell thee that I will lie down and die upon
+thy threshold, and when thou sinkest into eld surely the memory of it
+shall grieve thee."
+
+Thus she spoke and wept much, till Asmund's heart softened in him, and,
+though with a doubting mind, he said it should be as she willed.
+
+So Groa stayed on at Middalhof, and was lowly in her bearing and soft of
+speech.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+HOW ERIC WENT UP MOSFELL AGAINST SKALLAGRIM THE BARESARK
+
+Now Atli the Good, earl of the Orkneys, comes into the story.
+
+It chanced that Atli had sailed to Iceland in the autumn on a business
+about certain lands that had fallen to him in right of his mother Helga,
+who was an Icelander, and he had wintered west of Reyjanes. Spring being
+come, he wished to sail home, and, when his ship was bound, he put to
+sea full early in the year. But it chanced that bad weather came up from
+the south-east, with mist and rain, so he must needs beach his ship in a
+creek under shelter of the Westman Islands.
+
+Now Atli asked what people dwelt in these parts, and, when he heard the
+name of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, he was glad, for in old days he and
+Asmund had gone many a viking cruise together.
+
+"We will leave the ship here," he said, "till the weather clears, and go
+up to Middalhof to stay with Asmund."
+
+So they made the ship snug, and left men to watch her; but two of the
+company, with Earl Atli, rode up to Middalhof.
+
+It must be told of Atli that he was the best of the earls who lived in
+those days, and he ruled the Orkneys so well that men gave him a by-name
+and called him Atli the Good. It was said of him that he had never
+turned a poor man away unsuccoured, nor bowed his head before a strong
+man, nor drawn his sword without cause, nor refused peace to him who
+prayed it. He was sixty years old, but age had left few marks on
+him, except that of his long white beard. He was keen-eyed, and
+well-fashioned of form and face, a great warrior and the strongest of
+men. His wife was dead, leaving him no children, and this was a sorrow
+to him; but as yet he had taken no other wife, for he would say: "Love
+makes an old man blind," and "When age runs with youth, both shall
+fall," and again, "Mix grey locks and golden and spoil two heads." For
+this earl was a man of many wise sayings.
+
+Now Atli came to Middalhof just as men sat down to meat and, hearing the
+clatter of arms, all sprang to their feet, thinking that perhaps Ospakar
+had come again as he had promised. But when Asmund saw Atli he knew him
+at once, though they had not met for nearly thirty years, and he greeted
+him lovingly, and put him in the high seat, and gave place to his men
+upon the cross-benches. Atli told all his story, and Asmund bade him
+rest a while at Middalhof till the weather grew clearer.
+
+Now the Earl saw Swanhild and thought the maid wondrous fair, and so
+indeed she was, as she moved scornfully to and fro in her kirtle of
+white. Soft was her curling hair and deep were her dark blue eyes, and
+bent were her red lips as is a bow above her dimpled chin, and her teeth
+shone like pearls.
+
+"Is that fair maid thy daughter, Asmund," asked Atli.
+
+"She is named Swanhild the Fatherless," he answered, turning his face
+away.
+
+"Well," said Atli, looking sharply on him, "were the maid sprung from
+me, she would not long be called the 'Fatherless,' for few have such a
+daughter."
+
+"She is fair enough," said Asmund, "in all save temper, and that is bad
+to cross."
+
+"In every sword a flaw," answers Atli; "but what has an old man to do
+with young maids and their beauty?" and he sighed.
+
+"I have known younger men who would seem less brisk at bridals," said
+Asmund, and for that time they talked no more of the matter.
+
+Now, Swanhild heard something of this speech, and she guessed more; and
+it came into her mind that it would be the best of sport to make this
+old man love her, and then to mock him and say him nay. So she set
+herself to the task, as it ever was her wont, and she found it easy. For
+all day long, with downcast eyes and gentle looks, she waited upon the
+Earl, and now, at his bidding, she sang to him in a voice soft and low,
+and now she talked so wisely well that Atli thought no such maid had
+trod the earth before. But he checked himself with many learned saws,
+and on a day when the weather had grown fair, and they sat alone, he
+told her that his ship was bound for Orkney Isles.
+
+Then, as though by chance, Swanhild laid her white hand in his, and on a
+sudden looked deep into his eyes, and said with trembling lips, "Ah, go
+not yet, lord!--I pray thee, go not yet!"--and, turning, she fled away.
+
+But Atli was much moved, and he said to himself: "Now a strange thing
+is come to pass: a fair maid loves an old man; and yet, methinks, he
+who looks into those eyes sees deep waters," and he beat his brow and
+thought.
+
+But Swanhild in her chamber laughed till the tears ran from those same
+eyes, for she saw that the great fish was hooked and now the time had
+come to play him.
+
+For she did not know that it was otherwise fated.
+
+Gudruda, too, saw all these things and knew not how to read them, for
+she was of an honest mind, and could not understand how a woman may love
+a man as Swanhild loved Eric and yet make such play with other men,
+and that of her free will. For she guessed little of Swanhild's
+guilefulness, nor of the coldness of her heart to all save Eric; nor of
+how this was the only joy left to her: to make a sport of men and put
+them to grief and shame. Atli said to himself that he would watch this
+maid well before he uttered a word to Asmund, and he deemed himself very
+cunning, for he was wondrous cautious after the fashion of those about
+to fall. So he set himself to watching, and Swanhild set herself to
+smiling, and he told her tales of warfare and of daring, and she clasped
+her hands and said:
+
+"Was there ever such a man since Odin trod the earth?" And so it went
+on, till the serving-women laughed at the old man in love and the wit of
+her that mocked him.
+
+
+Now upon a day, Eric having made an end of sowing his corn, bethought
+himself of his vow to go up alone against Skallagrim the Baresark in his
+den on Mosfell over by Hecla. Now, this was a heavy task: for Skallagrim
+was held so mighty among men that none went up against him any more; and
+at times Eric thought of Gudruda, and sighed, for it was likely that
+she would be a widow before she was made a wife. Still, his oath must
+be fulfilled, and, moreover, of late Skallagrim having heard that a
+youngling named Eric Brighteyes had vowed to slay him single-handed,
+had made a mock of him in this fashion. For Skallagrim rode down
+to Coldback on Ran River and at night-time took a lamb from the fold.
+Holding the lamb beneath his arm, he drew near to the house and smote
+thrice on the door with his battle-axe, and they were thundering knocks.
+Then he leapt on to his horse and rode off a space and waited. Presently
+Eric came out, but half clad, a shield in one hand and Whitefire in the
+other, and, looking, by the bright moonlight he saw a huge black-bearded
+man seated on a horse, having a great axe in one hand and the lamb
+beneath his arm.
+
+"Who art thou?" roared Eric.
+
+"I am called Skallagrim, youngling," answered the man on the horse.
+"Many men have seen me once, none have wished to see me twice, and some
+few have never seen aught again. Now, it has been echoed in my ears that
+thou hast vowed a vow to go up Mosfell against Skallagrim the Baresark,
+and I am come hither to say that I will make thee right welcome. See,"
+and with his axe he cut off the lamb's tail on the pommel of his saddle:
+"of the flesh of this lamb of thine I will brew broth and of his skin I
+will make me a vest. Take thou this tail, and when thou fittest it on
+to the skin again, Skallagrim will own a lord," and he hurled the tail
+towards him.
+
+"Bide thou there till I can come to thee," shouted Eric; "it will spare
+me a ride to Mosfell."
+
+"Nay, nay. It is good for lads to take the mountain air," and Skallagrim
+turned his horse away, laughing.
+
+Eric watched Skallagrim vanish over the knoll, and then, though he was
+very angry, laughed also and went in. But first he picked up the tail,
+and on the morrow he skinned it.
+
+Now the time was come when the matter must be tried, and Eric bade
+farewell to Saevuna his mother, and Unna his cousin, and girt Whitefire
+round him and set upon his head a golden helm with wings on it. Then he
+found the byrnie which his father Thorgrimur had stripped, together with
+the helm, from that Baresark who cut off his leg--and this was a good
+piece, forged of the Welshmen--and he put it on his breast, and taking
+a stout shield of bull's hide studded with nails, rode away with one
+thrall, the strong carle named Jon.
+
+But the women misdoubted them much of this venture; nevertheless Eric
+might not be gainsayed.
+
+Now, the road to Mosfell runs past Middalhof and thither he came. Atli,
+standing at the men's door, saw him and cried aloud: "Ho! a mighty man
+comes here."
+
+Swanhild looked out and saw Eric, and he was a goodly sight in his
+war-gear. For now, week by week, he seemed to grow more fair and great,
+as the full strength of his manhood rose in him, like sap in the spring
+grass, and Gudruda was very proud of her lover. That night Eric stayed
+at Middalhof, and sat hand in hand with Gudruda and talked with Earl
+Atli. Now the heart of the old viking went out to Eric, and he took
+great delight in him and in his strength and deeds, and he longed much
+that the Gods had given him such a son.
+
+"I prophesy this of thee, Brighteyes," he cried: "that it shall go ill
+with this Baresark thou seekest--yes, and with all men who come within
+sweep of that great sword of thine. But remember this, lad: guard thy
+head with thy buckler, cut low beneath his shield, if he carries one,
+and mow the legs from him: for ever a Baresark rushes on, shield up."
+
+Eric thanked him for his good words and went to rest. But, before it
+was light, he rose, and Gudruda rose also and came into the hall, and
+buckled his harness on him with her own hands.
+
+"This is a sad task for me, Eric!" she sighed, "for how do I know that
+Baresark's hands shall not loose this helm of thine?"
+
+"That is as it may be, sweet," he said; "but I fear not the Baresark or
+any man. How goes it with Swanhild now?"
+
+"I know not. She makes herself sweet to that old Earl and he is fain of
+her, and that is beyond my sight."
+
+"I have seen as much," said Eric. "It will be well for us if he should
+wed her."
+
+"Ay, and ill for him; but it is to be doubted if that is in her mind."
+
+Now Eric kissed her soft and sweet, and went away, bidding her look for
+his return on the day after the morrow.
+
+Gudruda bore up bravely against her fears till he was gone, but then she
+wept a little.
+
+
+
+Now it is to be told that Eric and his thrall Jon rode hard up Stonefell
+and across the mountains and over the black sand, till, two hours before
+sunset, they came to the foot of Mosfell, having Hecla on their right.
+It is a grim mountain, grey with moss, standing alone in the desert
+plain; but between it and Hecla there is good grassland.
+
+"Here is the fox's earth. Now to start him," said Eric.
+
+He knows something of the path by which this fortress can be climbed
+from the south, and horses may be ridden up it for a space. So on they
+go, till at length they come to a flat place where water runs down the
+black rocks, and here Eric drank of the water, ate food, and washed his
+face and hands. This done, he bid Jon tend the horses--for hereabouts
+there is a little grass--and be watchful till he returned, since he
+must go up against Skallagrim alone. And there with a doubtful heart
+Jon stayed all that night. For of all that came to pass he saw but one
+thing, and that was the light of Whitefire as it flashed out high above
+him on the brow of the mountain when first Brighteyes smote at foe.
+
+Eric went warily up the Baresark path, for he would keep his breath in
+him, and the light shone redly on his golden helm. High he went, till at
+length he came to a pass narrow and dark and hedged on either side
+with sheer cliffs, such as two armed men might hold against a score.
+He peered down this path, but he saw no Baresark, though it was worn by
+Baresark feet. He crept along its length, moving like a sunbeam through
+the darkness of the pass, for the light gathered on his helm and sword,
+till suddenly the path turned and he was on the brink of a gulf that
+seemed to have no bottom, and, looking across and down, he could see Jon
+and the horses more than a hundred fathoms beneath. Now Eric must stop,
+for this path leads but into the black gulf. Also he was perplexed to
+know where Skallagrim had his lair. He crept to the brink and gazed.
+Then he saw that a point of rock jutted from the sheer face of the cliff
+and that the point was worn with the mark of feet.
+
+"Where Baresark passes, there may yeoman follow," said Eric and,
+sheathing Whitefire, without more ado, though he liked the task little,
+he grasped the overhanging rock and stepped down on to the point below.
+Now he was perched like an eagle over the dizzy gulf and his brain
+swam. Backward he feared to go, and forward he might not, for there was
+nothing but air. Beside him, growing from the face of the cliff, was a
+birch-bush. He grasped it to steady himself. It bent beneath his clutch,
+and then he saw, behind it, a hole in the rock through which a man could
+creep, and down this hole ran footmarks.
+
+"First through air like a bird; now through earth like a fox," said Eric
+and entered the hole. Doubling his body till his helm almost touched his
+knee he took three paces and lo! he stood on a great platform of rock,
+so large that a hall might be built on it, which, curving inwards,
+cannot be seen from the narrow pass. This platform, that is backed
+by the sheer cliff, looks straight to the south, and from it he could
+search the plain and the path that he had travelled, and there once more
+he saw Jon and the horses far below him.
+
+"A strong place, truly, and well chosen," said Eric and looked around.
+On the floor of the rock and some paces from him a turf fire still
+smouldered, and by it were sheep's bones, and beyond, in the face of the
+overhanging precipice, was the mouth of a cave.
+
+"The wolf is at home, or was but lately," said Eric; "now for his lair;"
+and with that he walked warily to the mouth of the cave and peered
+in. He could see nothing yet a while, but surely he heard a sound of
+snoring?
+
+Then he crept in, and, presently, by the red light of the burning
+embers, he saw a great black-bearded man stretched at length upon a rug
+of sheepskins, and by his side an axe.
+
+"Now it would be easy to make an end of this cave-dweller," thought
+Eric; "but that is a deed I will not do--no, not even to a Baresark--to
+slay him in his sleep," and therewith he stepped lightly to the side
+of Skallagrim, and was about to prick him with the point of Whitefire,
+when! as he did so, another man sat up behind Skallagrim.
+
+"By Thor! for two I did not bargain," said Eric, and sprang from the
+cave.
+
+Then, with a grunt of rage, that Baresark who was behind Skallagrim
+came out like a she-bear robbed of her whelps, and ran straight at Eric,
+sword aloft. Eric gives before him right to the edge of the cliff.
+Then the Baresark smites at him and Brighteyes catches the blow on his
+shield, and smites at him in turn so well and truly, that the head of
+the Baresark flies from his shoulders and spins along the ground, but
+his body, with outstretched arms yet gripping at the air, falls over the
+edge of the gulf sheer into the water, a hundred fathoms down. It was
+the flash that Whitefire made as it circled ere it smote that Jon saw
+while he waited in the dell upon the mountain side. But of the Baresark
+he saw nothing, for he passed down into the great fire-riven cleft and
+was never seen more, save once only, in a strange fashion that shall be
+told. This was the first man whom Brighteyes slew.
+
+Now the old tale tells that Eric cried aloud: "Little chance had this
+one," and that then a wonderful thing came to pass. For the head on the
+rock opened its eyes and answered:
+
+"Little chance indeed against thee, Eric Brighteyes. Still, I tell thee
+this: that where my body fell there thou shalt fall, and where it lies
+there thou shalt lie also."
+
+Now Eric was afraid, for he thought it a strange thing that a severed
+head should speak to him.
+
+"Here it seems I have to deal with trolls," he said; "but at the least,
+though he speak, this one shall strike no more," and he looked at the
+head, but it answered nothing.
+
+Now Skallagrim slept through it all and the light grew so dim that Eric
+thought it time to make an end this way or that. Therefore, he took
+the head of the slain man, though he feared to touch it, and rolled it
+swiftly into the cave, saying, "Now, being so glib of speech, go tell
+thy mate that Eric Brighteyes knocks at his door."
+
+Then came sounds as of a man rising, and presently Skallagrim rushed
+forth with axe aloft and his fellow's head in his left hand. He was
+clothed in nothing but a shirt and the skin of Eric's lamb was bound to
+his chest.
+
+"Where now is my mate?" he said. Then he saw Eric leaning on Whitefire,
+his golden helm ablaze with the glory of the passing sun.
+
+"It seems that thou holdest somewhat of him in thine hand, Skallagrim,
+and for the rest, go seek it in yonder rift."
+
+"Who art thou?" roared Skallagrim.
+
+"Thou mayest know me by this token," said Eric, and he threw towards him
+the skin of that lamb's tail which Skallagrim had lifted from Coldback.
+
+Now Skallagrim knew him and the Baresark fit came on. His eyes rolled,
+foam flew to his lips, his mouth grinned, and he was awesome to see. He
+let fall the head, and, swinging the great axe aloft, rushed at Eric.
+But Brighteyes is too swift for him. It would not be well to let that
+stroke fall, and it must go hard with aught it struck. He springs
+forward, he louts low and sweeps upwards with Whitefire. Skallagrim sees
+the sword flare and drops almost to his knee, guarding his head with the
+axe; but Whitefire strikes on the iron half of the axe and shears it in
+two, so that the axe-head falls to earth. Now the Baresark is weaponless
+but unharmed, and it would be an easy task to slay him as he rushes
+by. But it came into Eric's mind that it is an unworthy deed to slay
+a swordless man, and this came into his mind also, that he desired
+to match his naked might against a Baresark in his rage. So, in the
+hardihood of his youth and strength, he cast Whitefire aside, and crying
+"Come, try a fall with me, Baresark," rushed on Skallagrim.
+
+"Thou art mad," yells the Baresark, and they are at it hard. Now they
+grip and rend and tear. Ospakar was strong, but the Baresark strength
+of Skallagrim is more than the strength of Ospakar, and soon Brighteyes
+thinks longingly on Whitefire that he has cast aside. Eric is mighty
+beyond the might of men, but he can scarcely hold his own against this
+mad man, and very soon he knows that only one chance is left to him, and
+that is to cling to Skallagrim till the Baresark fit be passed and he is
+once more like other men. But this is easier to tell of than to do, and
+presently, strive as he will, Eric is on his back, and Skallagrim
+on him. But still he holds the Baresark as with bands of iron, and
+Skallagrim may not free his arms, though he strive furiously. Now they
+roll over and over on the rock, and the gloom gathers fast about them
+till presently Eric sees that they draw near to the brink of that mighty
+rift down which the severed head of the cave-dweller has foretold his
+fall.
+
+"Then we go together," says Eric, but the Baresark does not heed. Now
+they are on the very brink, and here as it chances, or as the Norns
+decree, a little rock juts up and this keeps them from falling. Eric is
+uppermost, and, strive as he will, Skallagrim may not turn him on his
+back again. Still, Brighteyes' strength may not endure very long, for he
+grows faint, and his legs slip slowly over the side of the rift till now
+he clings, as it were, by his ribs and shoulder-blades alone, that rub
+against the little rock. The light dies away, and Eric thinks on sweet
+Gudruda and makes ready to die also, when suddenly a last ray from the
+sun falls on the fierce face of Skallagrim, and lo! Brighteyes sees it
+change, for the madness goes out of it, and in a moment the Baresark
+becomes but as a child in his mighty grip.
+
+"Hold!" said Skallagrim, "I crave peace," and he loosed his clasp.
+
+"Not too soon, then," gasped Eric as, drawing his legs from over the
+brink of the rift, he gained his feet and, staggering to his sword,
+grasped it very thankfully.
+
+"I am fordone!" said Skallagrim; "come, drag me from this place, for I
+fall; or, if thou wilt, hew off my head."
+
+"I will not serve thee thus," said Eric. "Thou art a gallant foe," and
+he put out his hand and drew him into safety.
+
+For a while Skallagrim lay panting, then he gained his hands and knees
+and crawled to where Eric leaned against the rock.
+
+"Lord," he said, "give me thy hand."
+
+Eric stretched forth his left hand, wondering, and Skallagrim took
+it. He did not stretch out his right, for, fearing guile, he gripped
+Whitefire in it.
+
+"Lord," Skallagrim said again, "of all men who ever were, thou art
+the mightiest. Five other men had not stood before me in my rage, but,
+scorning thy weapon, thou didst overcome me in the noblest fashion, and
+by thy naked strength alone. Now hearken. Thou hast given me my life,
+and it is thine from this hour to the end. Here I swear fealty to thee.
+Slay me if thou wilt, or use me if thou wilt, but I think it will be
+better for thee to do this rather than that, for there is but one who
+has mastered me, and thou art he, and it is borne in upon my mind that
+thou wilt have need of my strength, and that shortly."
+
+"That may well be, Skallagrim," said Eric, "yet I put little trust in
+outlaws and cave-dwellers. How do I know, if I take thee to me, that
+thou wilt not murder me in my sleep, as it would have been easy for me
+to do by thee but now?"
+
+"What is it that runs from thy arm," asked Skallagrim.
+
+"Blood," said Eric.
+
+"Stretch out thine arm, lord."
+
+Eric did so, and the Baresark put his lips to the scratch and sucked the
+blood, then said:
+
+"In this blood of thine I pledge thee, Eric Brighteyes! May Valhalla
+refuse me and Hela take me; may I be hunted like a fox from earth to
+earth; may trolls torment me and wizards sport with me o' night; may my
+limbs shrivel and my heart turn to water; may my foes overtake me, and
+my bones be crushed across the doom-stone--if I fail in one jot from
+this my oath that I have sworn! I will guard thy back, I will smite
+thy enemies, thy hearthstone shall be my temple, thy honour my honour.
+Thrall am I of thine, and thrall I will be, and whiles thou wilt we will
+live one life, and, in the end, we will die one death."
+
+"It seems that in going to seek a foe I have found a friend," said Eric,
+"and it is likely enough that I shall need one. Skallagrim, Baresark and
+outlaw as thou art, I take thee at thy word. Henceforth, we are master
+and man and we will do many a deed side by side, and in token of it I
+lengthen thy name and call thee Skallagrim Lambstail. Now, if thou hast
+it, give me food and drink, for I am faint from that hug of thine, old
+bear."
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+HOW OSPAKAR BLACKTOOTH FOUND ERIC BRIGHTEYES AND SKALLAGRIM LAMBSTAIL ON
+HORSE-HEAD HEIGHTS
+
+Now Skallagrim led Eric to his cave and fed the fire and gave him flesh
+to eat and ale to drink. When he had eaten his fill Eric looked at the
+Baresark. He had black hair streaked with grey that hung down upon his
+shoulders. His nose was hooked like an eagle's beak, his beard was wild
+and his sunken eyes were keen as a hawk's. He was somewhat bent and not
+over tall, but of a mighty make, for his shoulders must pass many a door
+sideways.
+
+"Thou art a great man," said Eric, "and it is something to have overcome
+thee. Now tell me what turned thee Baresark."
+
+"A shameful deed that was done against me, lord. Ten years ago I was a
+yeoman of small wealth in the north. I had but one good thing, and that
+was the fairest housewife in those parts--Thorunna by name--and I loved
+her much, but we had no children. Now, not far from my stead is a
+place called Swinefell, and there dwells a mighty chief named Ospakar
+Blacktooth; he is an evil man and strong----"
+
+Eric started at the name and then bade Skallagrim take up the tale.
+
+"It chanced that Ospakar saw my wife Thorunna and would take her, but
+at first she did not listen. Then he promised her wealth and all good
+things, and she was weary of our hard way of life and hearkened. Still,
+she would not go away openly, for that had brought shame on her, but
+plotted with Ospakar that he should come and take her as though by
+force. So it came about, as I lay heavily asleep one night at Thorunna's
+side, having drunk somewhat too deeply of the autumn ale, that armed men
+seized me, bound me, and haled me from my bed. There were eight of them,
+and with them was Ospakar. Then Blacktooth bid Thorunna rise, clothe
+herself and come to be his May, and she made pretence to weep at this,
+but fell to it readily enough. Now she bound her girdle round her and to
+it a knife hung.
+
+"'Kill thyself, sweet,' I cried: 'death is better than shame.'
+
+"'Not so, husband,' she answered. 'It is true that I love but thee;
+yet a woman may find another love, but not another life,' and I saw
+her laugh through her mock tears. Now Ospakar rode in hot haste away
+to Swinefell and with him went Thorunna, but his men stayed a while and
+drank my ale, and, as they drank, they mocked me who was bound before
+them, and little by little all the truth was told of the doings of
+Ospakar and Thorunna my housewife, and I learned that it was she who had
+planned this sport. Then my eyes grew dark and I drew near to death from
+very shame and bitterness. But of a sudden something leaped up in my
+heart, fire raged before my eyes and voices in my ears called on to war
+and vengeance. I was Baresark--and like hay bands I burst my cords. My
+axe hung on the wainscot. I snatched it thence, and of what befell I
+know this alone, that, when the madness passed, eight men lay stretched
+out before me, and all the place was but a gore of blood.
+
+"'Then I drew the dead together and piled drinking tables over them, and
+benches, and turf, and anything else that would burn, and put cod's
+oil on the pile, and fired the stead above them, so that the tale went
+abroad that all these men were burned in their cups, and I with them.
+
+"'But I took the name of Skallagrim and swore an oath against all men,
+ay, and women too, and away I went to the wood-folk and worked much
+mischief, for I spared few, and so on to Mosfell. Here I have stayed
+these five years, awaiting the time when I shall find Ospakar and
+Thorunna the harlot, and I have fought many men, but, till thou camest
+up against me, none could stand before my might."
+
+"A strange tale, truly," said Eric; "but now hearken thou to a stranger,
+for of a truth it seems that we have not come together by chance,"
+and he told him of Gudruda and the wrestling and of the overthrow of
+Blacktooth, and showed him Whitefire which he won out of the hand of
+Ospakar.
+
+Skallagrim listened and laughed aloud. "Surely," he said, "this is the
+work of the Norns. See, lord, thou and I will yet smite this Ospakar. He
+has taken my wife and he would take thy betrothed. Let it be! Let it be!
+Ah, would that I had been there to see the wrestling--Ospakar had never
+risen from his snow-bed. But there is time left to us, and I shall yet
+see his head roll along the dust. Thou hast his goodly sword and with it
+thou shalt sweep Blacktooth's head from his shoulders--or perchance that
+shall be my lot," and with this Skallagrim sprang up, gnashing his teeth
+and clutching at the air.
+
+"Peace," said Eric. "Blacktooth is not here. Save thy rage until it can
+run along thy sword and strike him."
+
+"Nay, not here, nor yet so far off, lord. Hearken: I know this Ospakar.
+If he has set eyes of longing on Gudruda, Asmund's daughter, he will not
+rest one hour till he have her or is slain; and if he has set eyes of
+hate on thee--then take heed to thy going and spy down every path before
+thy feet tread it. Soon shall the matter come on for judgment and even
+now Odin's Valkyries[*] choose their own."
+
+ [*] The "corse-choosing sisters" who were bidden by Odin to
+ single out those warriors whose hour had come to die in
+ battle and win Valhalla.
+
+"It is well, then," said Eric.
+
+"Yea, lord, it is well, for we two have little to fear from any six men,
+if so be that they fall on us in fair fight. But I do not altogether
+like thy tale. Too many women are mixed up in it, and women stab in the
+back. A man may deal with swords aloft, but not with tricks, and lies,
+and false women's witchery. It was a woman who greased thy wrestling
+soles; mayhap it will be a woman that binds on thy Hell-shoes when all
+is done--ay! and who makes them ready for thy feet."
+
+"Of women, as of men," answered Eric, "there is this to be said, that
+some are good and some evil."
+
+"Yes, lord, and this also, that the evil ones plot the ill of their
+evil, but the good do it of their blind foolishness. Forswear women and
+so shalt thou live happy and die in honour--cherish them and live in
+wretchedness and die an outcast."
+
+"Thy talk is foolish," said Eric. "Birds must to the air, the sea to
+the shore, and man must to woman. As things are so let them be, for they
+will soon seem as though they had never been. I had rather kiss my dear
+and die, if so it pleases me to do, than kiss her not and live, for at
+the last the end will be one end, and kisses are sweet!"
+
+"That is a good saying," said Skallagrim, and they fell asleep side by
+side and Eric had no fear.
+
+Now they awoke and the light was already full, for they were weary and
+their sleep had been heavy.
+
+Hard by the mouth of the cave is a little well of water that gathers
+there from the rocks above and in this Eric washed himself. Then
+Skallagrim showed him the cave and the goodly store of arms that he had
+won from those whom he had slain and robbed.
+
+"A wondrous place, truly," said Eric, "and well fitted to the uses of
+such a chapman[*] as thou art; but, say, how didst thou find it?"
+
+[*] Merchant.
+
+"I followed him who was here before me and gave him choice--to go, or to
+fight for the stronghold. But he needs must fight and that was his bane,
+for I slew him."
+
+"Who was that, then," asked Eric, "whose head lies yonder?"
+
+"A cave-dweller, lord, whom I took to me because of the lonesomeness
+of the winter tide. He was an evil man, for though it is good to be
+Baresark from time to time, yet to dwell with one who is always Baresark
+is not good, and thou didst a needful deed in smiting his head from
+him--and now let it go to find its trunk," and he rolled it over the
+edge of the great rift.
+
+"Knowest thou, Skallagrim, that this head spoke to me after it had left
+the man's shoulders, saying that where its body fell there I should
+fall, and where it lay there I should lie also?"
+
+"Then, lord, that is likely to be thy doom, for this man was
+foresighted, and, but the night before last, as we rode out to seek
+sheep, he felt his head, and said that, before the sun sank again, a
+hundred fathoms of air should link it to his shoulders."
+
+"It may be so," answered Eric. "I thought as I lay in thy grip yonder
+that the fate was near. And now arm thyself, and take such goods as thou
+needest, and let us hence, for that thrall of mine who waits me yonder
+will think thou hast been too mighty for me."
+
+Skallagrim went to the edge of the rift and searched the plain with his
+hawk eyes.
+
+"No need to hasten, lord," he said. "See yonder rides thy thrall across
+the black sand, and with him goes thy horse. Surely he thought thou
+camest no more down the path by which thou wentest up, and it is not
+thrall's work to seek Skallagrim in his lair and ask for tidings."
+
+"Wolves take him for a fool!" said Eric in anger. "He will ride to
+Middalhof and sing my death-song, and that will sound sadly in some
+ears."
+
+"It is pleasant, lord," said Skallagrim, "when good tidings dog the
+heels of bad, and womenfolk can spare some tears and be little poorer. I
+have horses in a secret dell that I will show thee, and on them we will
+ride hence to Middalhof--and there thou must claim peace for me."
+
+"It is well," said Eric; "now arm thyself, for if thou goest with me
+thou must make an end of thy Baresark ways, or keep them for the hour of
+battle."
+
+"I will do thy bidding, lord," said Skallagrim. Then he entered the cave
+and set a plain black steel helm upon his black locks, and a black chain
+byrnie about his breast. He took the great axe-head also and fitted to
+it the half of another axe that lay among the weapons. Then he drew out
+a purse of money and a store of golden rings, and set them in a bag of
+otter skin, and buckled it about him. But the other goods he wrapped
+up in skins and hid behind some stones which were at the bottom of the
+cave--purposing to come another time and fetch them.
+
+Then they went forth by that same perilous path which Eric had trod, and
+Skallagrim showed him how he might pass the rock in safety.
+
+"A rough road this," said Eric as he gained the deep cleft.
+
+"Yea, lord, and, till thou camest, one that none but wood-folk have
+trodden."
+
+"I would tread it no more," said Eric again, "and yet that fellow thief
+of thine said that I should die here," and for a while his heart was
+heavy.
+
+Now Skallagrim Lambstail led him by secret paths to a dell rich in
+grass, that is hid in the round of the mountain, and here three good
+horses were at feed. Then, going to a certain rock, he brought out bits
+and saddles, and they caught the horses, and, mounting them, rode away
+from Mosfell.
+
+
+
+Now Eric and his henchman Skallagrim the Baresark rode four hours and
+saw nobody, till at length they came to the brow of a hill that is named
+Horse-Head Heights, and, crossing it, found themselves almost in the
+midst of a score of armed men who were about to mount their horses.
+
+"Now we have company," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Yes, and bad company," answered Eric, "for yonder I spy Ospakar
+Blacktooth, and Gizur and Mord his sons, ay and others. Down, and back
+to back, for they will show us little gentleness."
+
+Then they sprang to earth and took their stand upon a mound of rising
+ground--and the men rode towards them.
+
+"I shall soon know what thy fellowship is worth," said Eric.
+
+"Fear not, lord," answered Skallagrim. "Hold thou thy head and I will
+hold thy back. We are met in a good hour."
+
+"Good or ill, it is likely to be a short one. Hearken thou: if thou
+must turn Baresark when swords begin to flash, at the least stand and be
+Baresark where thou art, for if thou rushest on the foe, my back will be
+naked and I must soon be sped."
+
+"It shall be as thou sayest, lord."
+
+Now men rode round them, but at first they did not know Eric, because of
+the golden helm that hid his face in shadow.
+
+"Who are ye?" called Ospakar.
+
+"I think that thou shouldst know me, Blacktooth," Eric answered, "for
+I set thee heels up in the snow but lately--or, at the least, thou wilt
+know this," and he drew great Whitefire.
+
+"Thou mayest know me also, Ospakar," cried the Baresark. "Skallagrim,
+men called me, Lambstail, Eric Brighteyes calls me, but once thou didst
+call me Ounound. Say, lord, what tidings of Thorunna?"
+
+Now Ospakar shook his sword, laughing. "I came out to seek one foe, and
+I have found two," he cried. "Hearken, Eric: when thou art slain I go
+hence to burn and kill at Middalhof. Shall I bear thy head as keepsake
+from thee to Gudruda? For thee, Ounound, I thought thee dead; but, being
+yet alive, Thorunna, my sweet love, sends thee this," and he hurled a
+spear at him with all his might.
+
+But Skallagrim catches the spear as it flies and hurls it back. It
+strikes right on the shield of Ospakar and pierces it, ay and the
+byrnie, and the shoulder that is beneath the byrnie, so that Blacktooth
+was made unmeet for fight, and howled with pain and rage.
+
+"Go, bid Thorunna draw that splinter forth," says Skallagrim, "and heal
+the hole with kisses."
+
+Now Ospakar, writhing with his hurt, shouts to his men to slay the two
+of them, and then the fight begins.
+
+One rushes at Eric and smites at him with an axe. The blow falls on his
+shield, and shears off the side of it, then strikes the byrnie beneath,
+but lightly. In answer Eric sweeps low at him with Whitefire, and cuts
+his leg from under him between knee and thigh, and he falls and dies.
+
+Another rushes in. Down flashes Whitefire before he can smite, and
+the carle's shield is cloven through. Then he chooses to draw back and
+fights no more that day.
+
+Skallagrim slays a man, and wounds another sore. A tall chief with a red
+scar on his face comes at Brighteyes. Twice he feints at the head while
+Eric watches, then lowers the sword beneath the cover of his shield,
+and sweeps suddenly at Eric's legs. Brighteyes leaps high into the air,
+smiting downward with Whitefire as he leaps, and presently that chief is
+dead, shorn through shoulder to breast.
+
+Now Skallagrim slays another man, and grows Baresark. He looks so fierce
+that men fall back from him.
+
+Two rush on Eric, one from either side. The sword of him on the right
+falls on his shield and sinks in, but Brighteyes twists the shorn shield
+so strongly that the sword is wrenched from the smiter's hand. Now
+the other sword is aloft above him, and that had been Eric's bane, but
+Skallagrim glances round and sees it about to fall. He has no time to
+turn, but dashes the hammer of his axe backward. It falls full on the
+swordsman's head, and the head is shattered.
+
+"That was well done," says Eric as the sword goes down.
+
+"Not so ill but it might be worse," growls Skallagrim.
+
+Presently all men drew back from those two, for they have had enough of
+Whitefire and the Baresark's axe.
+
+Ospakar sits on his horse, his shield pinned to his shoulder and curses
+aloud.
+
+"Close in, you cowards!" he yells, "close in and cut them down!" but no
+man stirs.
+
+Then Eric mocks them. "There are but two of us," he says, "will no man
+try a game with me? Let it not be sung that twenty were overcome of
+two."
+
+Now Ospakar's son Mord hears, and he grows mad with rage. He holds his
+shield aloft and rushes on. But Gizur the Lawman does not come, for
+Gizur was a coward.
+
+Skallagrim turns to meet Mord, but Eric says:--
+
+"This one for me, comrade," and steps forward.
+
+Mord strikes a mighty blow. Eric's shield is all shattered and cannot
+stay it. It crashes through and falls full on the golden helm, beating
+Brighteyes to his knee. Now he is up again and blows fall thick and
+fast. Mord is a strong man, unwearied, and skilled in war, and Eric's
+arms grow faint and his strength sinks low. Mord smites again and wounds
+him somewhat on the shoulder.
+
+Eric throws aside his cloven shield and, shouting, plies Whitefire with
+both arms. Mord gives before him, then rushes and smites; Eric leaps
+aside. Again he rushes and lo! Brighteyes has dropped his point, and it
+stands a full span through the back of Mord, and instantly that was his
+bane.
+
+Now men rush to their horses, mount in hot haste and ride away,
+crying that these are trolls whom they have to do with here, not men.
+Skallagrim sees, and the Baresark fit takes him sore. With axe aloft he
+charges after them, screaming as he comes. There is one man, the same
+whom he had wounded. He cannot mount easily, and when the Baresark comes
+he still lies on the neck of his horse. The great axe wheels on high and
+falls, and it is told of this stroke that it was so mighty that man and
+horse sank dead beneath it, cloven through and through. Then the fit
+leaves Skallagrim and he walks back, and they are alone with the dead
+and dying.
+
+Eric leans on Whitefire and speaks:
+
+"Get thee gone, Skallagrim Lambstail!" he said; "get thee gone!"
+
+"It shall be as thou wilt, lord," answered the Baresark; "but I have not
+befriended thee so ill that thou shouldst fear for blows to come."
+
+"I will keep no man with me who puts my word aside, Skallagrim. What did
+I bid thee? Was it not that thou shouldst have done with the Baresark
+ways, and where thou stoodest there thou shouldst bide? and see: thou
+didst forget my word swiftly! Now get thee gone!"
+
+"It is true, lord," he said. "He who serves must serve wholly," and
+Skallagrim turned to seek his horse.
+
+"Stay," said Eric; "thou art a gallant man and I forgive thee: but
+cross my will no more. We have slain several men and Ospakar goes hence
+wounded. We have got honour, and they loss and the greatest shame.
+Nevertheless, ill shall come of this to me, for Ospakar has many friends
+and will set a law-suit on foot against me at the Althing,[*] and thou
+didst draw the first blood."
+
+ [*] The annual assembly of free men which, in Iceland,
+ performed the functions of a Parliament and Supreme Court of
+ Law.
+
+"Would that the spear had gone more home," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Ospakar's time is not yet," answered Eric; "still, he has something by
+which to bear us in mind."
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+HOW SWANHILD DEALT WITH GUDRUDA
+
+Now Jon, Eric's thrall, watched all night on Mosfell, but saw nothing
+except the light of Whitefire as it smote the Baresark's head from his
+shoulders. He stayed there till daylight, much afraid; then, making sure
+that Eric was slain, Jon rode hard and fast for Middalhof, whither he
+came at evening.
+
+Gudruda was watching by the women's door. She strained her eyes towards
+Mosfell to catch the light gleaming on Eric's golden helm, and presently
+it gleamed indeed, white not red.
+
+"See," said Swanhild at her side, "Eric comes!"
+
+"Not Eric, but his thrall," answered Gudruda, "to tell us that Eric is
+sped."
+
+They waited in silence while Jon galloped towards them.
+
+"What news of Brighteyes?" cried Swanhild.
+
+"Little need to ask," said Gudruda, "look at his face."
+
+Now Jon told his tale and Gudruda listened, clinging to the door post.
+But Swanhild cursed him for a coward, so that he shrank before her eyes.
+
+Gudruda turned and walked into the hall and her face was like the face
+of death. Men saw her, and Asmund asked why she wore so strange a mien.
+Then Gudruda sang this song:
+
+ "Up to Mosfell, battle eager,
+ Rode helmed Brighteyen to the fray.
+ Back from Mosfell, battle shunning.
+ Slunk yon coward thrall I ween.
+ Now shall maid Gudruda never
+ Know a husband's dear embrace;
+ Widowed is she--sunk in sorrow,
+ Eric treads Valhalla's halls!"
+
+And with this she walked from the stead, looking neither to the right
+nor to the left.
+
+"Let the maid be," said Atli the Earl. "Grief fares best alone. But my
+heart is sore for Eric. It should go ill with that Baresark if I might
+get a grip of him."
+
+"That I will have before summer is gone," said Asmund, for the death of
+Eric seemed to him the worst of sorrows.
+
+Gudruda walked far, and, crossing Laxa by the stepping stones, climbed
+Stonefell till she came to the head of Golden Falls, for, like a
+stricken thing, she desired to be alone in her grief. But Swanhild saw
+her and followed, coming on her as she sat watching the water thunder
+down the mighty cleft. Presently Swanhild's shadow fell athwart her, and
+Gudruda looked up.
+
+"What wouldst thou with me, Swanhild?" she asked. "Art thou come to mock
+my grief?"
+
+"Nay, foster-sister, for then I must mock my own. I come to mix my tears
+with thine. See, we loved Eric, thou and I, and Eric is dead. Let our
+hate be buried in his grave, whence neither may draw him back."
+
+Gudruda looked upon her coldly, for nothing could stir her now.
+
+"Get thee gone," she said. "Weep thine own tears and leave me to weep
+mine. Not with thee will I mourn Eric."
+
+Swanhild frowned and bit her lip. "I will not come to thee with words
+of peace a second time, my rival," she said. "Eric is dead, but my hate
+that was born of Eric's love for thee lives on and grows, and its flower
+shall be thy death, Gudruda!"
+
+"Now that Brighteyes is dead, I would fain follow on his path: so, if
+thou listest, throw the gates wide," Gudruda answered, and heeded her no
+more.
+
+Swanhild went, but not far. On the further side of a knoll of grass she
+flung herself to earth and grieved as her fierce heart might. She shed
+no tears, but sat silently, looking with empty eyes adown the past, and
+onward to the future, and finding no good therein.
+
+But Gudruda wept as the weight of her loss pressed in upon her--wept
+heavy silent tears and cried in her heart to Eric who was gone--cried to
+death to come upon her and bring her sleep or Eric.
+
+So she sat and so she grieved till, quite outworn with sorrow, sleep
+stole upon her and she dreamed. Gudruda dreamed that she was dead
+and that she sat nigh to the golden door that is in Odin's house at
+Valhalla, by which the warriors pass and repass for ever. There she
+sat from age to age, listening to the thunder of ten thousand thousand
+tramping feet, and watching the fierce faces of the chosen as they
+marched out in armies to do battle in the meads. And as she sat, at
+length a one-eyed man, clad in gleaming garments, drew near and spoke to
+her. He was glorious to look on, and old, and she knew him for Odin the
+Allfather.
+
+"Whom seekest thou, maid Gudruda?" he asked, and the voice he spoke with
+was the voice of waters.
+
+"I seek Eric Brighteyes," she answered, "who passed hither a thousand
+years ago, and for love of whom I am heart-broken."
+
+"Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur's son?" quoth Odin. "I know him well;
+no brisker warrior enters at Valhalla's doors, and none shall do more
+service at the coming of grey wolf Fenrir.[*] Pass on and leave him to
+his glory and his God."
+
+[*] The foe destined to bring destruction on the Norse gods.
+
+Then, in her dream, she wept sore, and prayed of Odin by the name of
+Freya that he would give Eric to her for a little space.
+
+"What wilt thou pay, then, maid Gudruda?" said Odin.
+
+"My life," she answered.
+
+"Good," he said; "for a night Eric shall be thine. Then die, and let thy
+death be his cause of death." And Odin sang this song:
+
+ "Now, corse-choosing Daughters, hearken
+ To the dread Allfather's word:
+ When the gale of spears' breath gathers
+ Count not Eric midst the slain,
+ Till Brighteyen once hath slumbered,
+ Wedded, at Gudruda's side--
+ Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;
+ Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!"
+
+And Gudruda awoke, but in her ears the mighty waters still seemed to
+speak with Odin's voice, saying:
+
+ "Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;
+ Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!"
+
+She awoke from that fey sleep, and looked upwards, and lo! before her,
+with shattered shield and all besmeared with war's red rain, stood
+gold-helmed Eric. There he stood, great and beautiful to see, and she
+looked on him trembling and amazed.
+
+"Is it indeed thou, Eric, or is it yet my dream?" she said.
+
+"I am no dream, surely," said Eric; "but why lookest thou thus on me,
+Gudruda?"
+
+She rose slowly. "Methought," she said, "methought that thou wast dead
+at the hand of Skallagrim." And with a great cry she fell into his arms
+and lay there sobbing.
+
+It was a sweet sight thus to see Gudruda the Fair, her head of gold
+pillowed on Eric's war-stained byrnie, her dark eyes afloat with tears
+of joy; but not so thought Swanhild, watching. She shook in jealous
+rage, then crept away, and hid herself where she could see no more, lest
+she should be smitten with madness.
+
+"Whence camest thou? ah! whence camest thou?" said Gudruda. "I thought
+thee dead, my love; but now I dreamed that I prayed Odin, and he spared
+thee to me for a little."
+
+"Well, and that he hath, though hardly," and he told her all that had
+happened, and how, as he rode with Skallagrim, who yet sat yonder on
+his horse, he caught sight of a woman seated on the grass and knew the
+colour of the cloak.
+
+Then Gudruda kissed him for very joy, and they were happy each with
+each--for of all things that are sweet on earth, there is nothing more
+sweet than this: to find him we loved, and thought dead and cold, alive
+and at our side.
+
+And so they talked and were very glad with the gladness of youth and
+love, till Eric said he must on to Middalhof before the light failed,
+for he could not come on horseback the way that Gudruda took, but must
+ride round the shoulder of the hill; and, moreover, he was spent with
+toil and hunger, and Skallagrim grew weary of waiting.
+
+"Go!" said Gudruda; "I will be there presently!"
+
+So he kissed her and went, and Swanhild saw the kiss and saw him go.
+
+"Well, lord," said Skallagrim, "hast thou had thy fill of kissing?"
+
+"Not altogether," answered Eric.
+
+They rode a while in silence.
+
+"I thought the maid seemed very fair!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"There are women less favoured, Skallagrim."
+
+"Rich bait for mighty fish!" said Skallagrim. "This I tell thee: that,
+strive as thou mayest against thy fate, that maid will be thy bane and
+mine also."
+
+"Things foredoomed will happen," said Eric; "but if thou fearest a maid,
+the cure is easy: depart from my company."
+
+"Who was the other?" asked the Baresark--"she who crept and peered,
+listened, then crept back again, hid her face in her hands, and talked
+with a grey wolf that came to her like a dog?"
+
+"That must have been Swanhild," said Eric, "but I did not see her. Ever
+does she hide like a rat in the thatch, and as for the wolf, he must
+be her Familiar; for, like Groa, her mother, Swanhild plays much with
+witchcraft. Now I will away back to Gudruda, for my heart misdoubts me
+of this matter. Stay thou here till I come, Lambstail!" And Eric turns
+and gallops back to the head of Goldfoss.
+
+
+
+When Eric left her, Gudruda drew yet nearer to the edge of the mighty
+falls, and seated herself on their very brink. Her breast was full
+of joy, and there she sat and let the splendour of the night and the
+greatness of the rushing sounds sink into her heart. Yonder shone the
+setting sun, poised, as it were, on Westman's distant peaks, and here
+sped the waters, and by that path Eric had come back to her. Yea, and
+there on Sheep-saddle was the road that he had trod down Goldfoss; and
+but now he had slain one Baresark and won another to be his thrall, and
+they two alone had smitten the company of Ospakar, and come thence
+with honour and but little harmed. Surely no such man as Eric had ever
+lived--none so fair and strong and tender; and she was right happy in
+his love! She stretched out her arms towards him whom but an hour gone
+she had thought dead, but who had lived to come back to her with honour,
+and blessed his beloved name, and laughed aloud in her joyousness of
+heart, calling:
+
+"_Eric! Eric!_"
+
+But Swanhild, creeping behind her, did not laugh. She heard Gudruda's
+voice and guessed Gudruda's gladness, and jealousy arose within her and
+rent her. Should this fair rival like to take her joy from her?
+
+"_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what sayest thou?_"
+
+See, now, if Gudruda were gone, if she rolled a corpse into those
+boiling waters, Eric might yet be hers; or, if he was not hers, yet
+Gudruda's he could never be.
+
+"_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy counsel?_"
+
+Right on the brink of the great gulf sat Gudruda. One stroke and all
+would be ended. Eric had gone; there was no eye to see--none save the
+Grey Wolf's; there was no tongue to tell the deed that might be done.
+Who could call her to account? The Gods! Who were the Gods? What were
+the Gods? Were they not dreams? There were no Gods save the Gods of
+Evil--the Gods she knew and communed with.
+
+"_Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy rede?_"
+
+There sat Gudruda, laughing in the triumph of her joy, with the
+sunset-glow shining on her beauty, and there, behind her, Swanhild
+crept--crept like a fox upon his sleeping prey.
+
+Now she is there--
+
+"_I hear thee, Grey Wolf! Back to my breast, Grey Wolf!_"
+
+Surely Gudruda heard something? She half turned her head, then again
+fell to calling aloud to the waters:
+
+"Eric! beloved Eric!--ah! is there ever a light like the light of thine
+eyes--is there ever a joy like the joy of thy kiss?"
+
+Swanhild heard, and her springs of mercy froze. Hate and fury entered
+into her. She rose upon her knees and gathered up her strength:
+
+"Seek, then, thy joy in Goldfoss," she cried aloud, and with all her
+force she thrust.
+
+Gudruda fell a fathom or more, then, with a cry, she clutched wildly at
+a little ledge of rock, and hung there, her feet resting on the shelving
+bank. Thirty fathoms down swirled and poured and rolled the waters
+of the Golden Falls. A fathom above, red in the red light of evening,
+lowered the pitiless face of Swanhild. Gudruda looked beneath her and
+saw. Pale with agony she looked up and saw, but she said naught.
+
+"Let go, my rival; let go!" cried Swanhild: "there is none to help thee,
+and none to tell thy tale. Let go, I say, and seek thy marriage-bed in
+Goldfoss!"
+
+But Gudruda clung on and gazed upwards with white face and piteous eyes.
+
+"What! art thou so fain of a moment's life?" said Swanhild. "Then I will
+save thee from thyself, for it must be ill to suffer thus!" and she ran
+to seek a rock. Now she finds one and, staggering beneath its weight
+to the brink of the gulf, peers over. Still Gudruda hangs. Space yawns
+beneath her, the waters roar in her ears, the red sky glows above. She
+sees Swanhild come and shrieks aloud.
+
+Eric is there, though Swanhild hears him not, for the sound of his
+horse's galloping feet is lost in the roar of waters. But that cry comes
+to his ears, he sees the poised rock, and all grows clear to him.
+He leaps from his horse, and even as she looses the stone, clutches
+Swanhild's kirtle and hurls her back. The rock bounds sideways and
+presently is lost in the waters.
+
+Eric looks over. He sees Gudruda's white face gleaming in the gloom.
+Down he leaps upon the ledge, though this is no easy thing.
+
+"Hold fast! I come; hold fast!" he cries.
+
+"I can no more," gasps Gudruda, and one hand slips.
+
+Eric grasps the rock and, stretching downward, grips her wrist; just as
+her hold loosens he grips it, and she swings loose, her weight hanging
+on his arm.
+
+Now he must needs lift her up and that with one hand, for the ledge is
+narrow and he dare not loose his hold of the rock above. She swings
+over the great gulf and she is senseless as one dead. He gathers all his
+mighty strength and lifts. His feet slip a little, then catch, and once
+more Gudruda swings. The sweat bursts out upon his forehead and his
+blood drums through him. Now it must be, or not at all. Again he lifts
+and his muscles strain and crack, and she lies beside him on the narrow
+ledge!
+
+All is not yet done. The brink of the cleft is the height of a man above
+him. There he must lay her, for he may not leave her to find aid, lest
+she should wake and roll into the chasm. Loosing his hold of the cliff,
+he turns, facing the rock, and, bending over Gudruda, twists his hands
+in her kirtle below the breast and above the knee. Then once more Eric
+puts out his might and draws her up to the level of his breast, and
+rests. Again with all his force he lifts her above the crest of his helm
+and throws her forward, so that now she lies upon the brink of the great
+cliff. He almost falls backward at the effort, but, clutching the rock,
+he saves himself, and with a struggle gains her side, and lies there,
+panting like a wearied hound of chase.
+
+Of all trials of strength that ever were put upon his might, Eric was
+wont to say, this lifting of Gudruda was the greatest; for she was no
+light woman, and there was little to stand on and almost nothing to
+cling to.
+
+Presently Brighteyes rose and peered at Gudruda through the gloom. She
+still swooned. Then he gazed about him--but Swanhild, the witchgirl, was
+gone.
+
+Then he took Gudruda in his arms, and, leading the horse, stumbled
+through the darkness, calling on Skallagrim. The Baresark answered, and
+presently his large form was seen looming in the gloom.
+
+Eric told his tale in few words.
+
+"The ways of womankind are evil," said Skallagrim; "but of all the deeds
+that I have known done at their hands, this is the worst. It had been
+well to hurl the wolf-witch from the cliff."
+
+"Ay, well," said Eric; "but that song must yet be sung."
+
+Now dimly lighted of the rising moon by turns they bore Gudruda down the
+mountain side, till at length, utterly fordone, they saw the fires of
+Middalhof.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+HOW ASMUND SPOKE WITH SWANHILD
+
+Now as the days went, though Atli's ship was bound for sea, she did not
+sail, and it came about that the Earl sank ever deeper in the toils
+of Swanhild. He called to mind many wise saws, but these availed him
+little: for when Love rises like the sun, wisdom melts like the mists.
+So at length it came to this, that on the day of Eric's coming back,
+Atli went to Asmund the Priest, and asked him for the hand of Swanhild
+the Fatherless in marriage. Asmund heard and was glad, for he knew well
+that things went badly between Swanhild and Gudruda, and it seemed good
+to him that seas should be set between them. Nevertheless, he thought it
+honest to warn the Earl that Swanhild was apart from other women.
+
+"Thou dost great honour, earl, to my foster-daughter and my house," he
+said. "Still, it behoves me to move gently in this matter. Swanhild is
+fair, and she shall not go hence a wife undowered. But I must tell thee
+this: that her ways are dark and secret, and strange and fiery are her
+moods, and I think that she will bring evil on the man who weds her.
+Now, I love thee, Atli, were it only for our youth's sake, and thou art
+not altogether fit to mate with such a maid, for age has met thee on thy
+way. For, as thou wouldst say, youth draws to youth as the tide to the
+shore, and falls away from eld as the wave from the rock. Think, then:
+is it well that thou shouldst take her, Atli?"
+
+"I have thought much and overmuch," answered the Earl, stroking his grey
+beard; "but ships old and new drive before a gale."
+
+"Ay, Atli, and the new ship rides, where the old one founders."
+
+"A true rede, a heavy rede, Asmund; yet I am minded to sail this sea,
+and, if it sink me--well, I have known fair weather! Great longing has
+got hold of me, and I think the maid looks gently on me, and that things
+may yet go well between us. I have many things to give such as women
+love. At the least, if thou givest me thy good word, I will risk it,
+Asmund: for the bold thrower sometimes wins the stake. Only I say this,
+that, if Swanhild is unwilling, let there be an end of my wooing, for I
+do not wish to take a bride who turns from my grey hairs."
+
+Asmund said that it should be so, and they made an end of talking just
+as the light faded.
+
+Now Asmund went out seeking Swanhild, and presently he met her near the
+stead. He could not see her face, and that was well, for it was not good
+to look on, but her mien was wondrous wild.
+
+"Where hast thou been, Swanhild?" he asked.
+
+"Mourning Eric Brighteyes," she made answer.
+
+"It is meeter for Gudruda to mourn over Eric than for thee, for her loss
+is heavy," Asmund said sternly. "What hast thou to do with Eric?"
+
+"Little, or much; or all--read it as thou wilt, foster-father. Still,
+all wept for are not lost, nor all who are lost wept for."
+
+"Little do I know of thy dark redes," said Asmund. "Where is Gudruda
+now?"
+
+"High is she or low, sleeping or perchance awakened: naught reck I. She
+also mourned for Eric, and we went nigh to mingling tears--near together
+were brown curls and golden," and she laughed aloud.
+
+"Thou art surely fey, thou evil girl!" said Asmund.
+
+"Ay, foster-father, fey: yet is this but the first of my feydom. Here
+starts the road that I must travel, and my feet shall be red ere the
+journey's done."
+
+"Leave thy dark talk," said Asmund, "for to me it is as the wind's
+song, and listen: a good thing has befallen thee--ay, good beyond thy
+deserving."
+
+"Is it so? Well, I stand greatly in need of good. What is thy tidings,
+foster-father?"
+
+"This: Atli the Earl asks thee in marriage, and he is a mighty man, well
+honoured in his own land, and set higher, moreover, than I had looked
+for thee."
+
+"Ay," answered Swanhild, "set like the snow above the fells, set in the
+years that long are dead. Nay, foster-father, this white-bearded
+dotard is no mate for me. What! shall I mix my fire with his frost, my
+breathing youth with the creeping palsy of his age? Never! If Swanhild
+weds she weds not so, for it is better to go maiden to the grave than
+thus to shrink and wither at the touch of eld. Now is Atli's wooing
+sped, and there's an end."
+
+Asmund heard and grew wroth, for the matter seemed strange to him; nor
+are maidens wont thus to put aside the word of those set over them.
+
+"There is no end," he said; "I will not be answered thus by a girl who
+lives upon my bounty. It is my rede that thou weddest Atli, or else thou
+goest hence. I have loved thee, and for that love's sake I have borne
+thy wickedness, thy dark secret ways, and evil words; but I will be
+crossed no more by thee, Swanhild."
+
+"Thou wouldst drive me hence with Groa my mother, though perchance thou
+hast yet more reason to hold me dear, foster-father. Fear not: I will
+go--perhaps further than thou thinkest," and once more Swanhild laughed,
+and passed from him into the darkness.
+
+But Asmund stood looking after her. "Truly," he said in his heart, "ill
+deeds are arrows that pierce him who shot them. I have sowed evilly, and
+now I reap the harvest. What means she with her talk of Gudruda and the
+rest?"
+
+Now as he thought, he saw men and horses draw near, and one man, whose
+helm gleamed in the moonlight, bore something in his arms.
+
+"Who passes?" he called.
+
+"Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda, Asmund's daughter,"
+answered a voice; "who art thou?"
+
+Then Asmund the Priest sprang forward, most glad at heart, for he never
+thought to see Eric again.
+
+"Welcome, and thrice welcome art thou, Eric," he cried; "for, know, we
+deemed thee dead."
+
+"I have lately gone near to death, lord," said Eric, for he knew the
+voice; "but I am hale and whole, though somewhat weary."
+
+"What has come to pass, then?" asked Asmund, "and why holdest thou
+Gudruda in thy arms? Is the maid dead?"
+
+"Nay, she does but swoon. See, even now she stirs," and as he spake
+Gudruda awoke, shuddering, and with a little cry threw her arms about
+the neck of Eric.
+
+He set her down and comforted her, then once more turned to Asmund:
+
+"Three things have come about," he said. "First, I have slain one
+Baresark, and won another to be my thrall, and for him I crave thy
+peace, for he has served me well. Next, we two were set upon by Ospakar
+Blacktooth and his fellowship, and, fighting for our hands, have wounded
+Ospakar, slain Mord his son, and six other men of his following."
+
+"That is good news and bad," said Asmund, "since Ospakar will ask a
+great weregild[*] for these men, and thou wilt be outlawed, Eric."
+
+[*] The penalty for manslaying.
+
+"That may happen, lord. There is time enough to think of it. Now there
+are other tidings to tell. Coming to the head of Goldfoss I found
+Gudruda, my betrothed, mourning my death, and spoke with her. Afterwards
+I left her, and presently returned again, to see her hanging over the
+gulf, and Swanhild hurling rocks upon her to crush her."
+
+"These are tidings in truth," said Asmund--"such tidings as my heart
+feared! Is this true, Gudruda?"
+
+"It is true, my father," answered Gudruda, trembling. "As I sat on the
+brink of Goldfoss, Swanhild crept behind me and thrust me into the gulf.
+There I clung above the waters, and she brought a rock to hurl upon me,
+when suddenly I saw Eric's face, and after that my mind left me and I
+can tell no more."
+
+Now Asmund grew as one mad. He plucked at his beard and stamped on the
+ground. "Maid though she be," he cried, "yet shall Swanhild's back be
+broken on the Stone of Doom for a witch and a murderess, and her body
+hurled into the pool of faithless women, and the earth will be well rid
+of her!"
+
+Now Gudruda looked up and smiled: "It would be ill to wreak such a
+vengeance on her, father," she said; "and this would also bring the
+greatest shame on thee, and all our house. I am saved, by the mercy
+of the Gods and the might of Eric's arm, and this is my counsel: that
+nothing be told of this tale, but that Swanhild be sent away where she
+can harm us no more."
+
+"She must be sent to the grave, then," said Asmund, and fell to
+thinking. Presently he spoke again: "Bid yon man fall back, I would
+speak with you twain," and Skallagrim went grumbling.
+
+"Hearken now, Eric and Gudruda: only an hour ago hath Atli the Good
+asked Swanhild of me in marriage. But now I met Swanhild here, and her
+mien was wild. Still, I spoke of the matter to her, and she would have
+none of it. Now, this is my counsel: that choice be given to Swanhild,
+either that she go hence Atli's wife, or take her trial in the
+Doom-ring."
+
+"That will be bad for the Earl then," said Eric. "Methinks he is too
+good a man to be played on thus."
+
+"_Bairn first, then friend_," answered Asmund.
+
+"Now I will tell thee something that, till this hour, I have hidden from
+all, for it is my shame. This Swanhild is my daughter, and therefore I
+have loved her and put away her evil deeds, and she is half-sister
+to thee, Gudruda. See, then, how sore is my straight, who must avenge
+daughter upon daughter."
+
+"Knows thy son Bjoern of this?" asked Eric.
+
+"None knew it till this hour, except Groa and I."
+
+"Yet I have feared it long, father," said Gudruda, "and therefore I have
+also borne with Swanhild, though she hates me much and has striven hard
+to draw my betrothed from me. Now thou canst only take one counsel,
+and it is: to give choice to Swanhild of these two things, though it is
+unworthy that Atli should be deceived, and at the best little good can
+come of it."
+
+"Yet it must be done, for honour is often slain of heavy need," said
+Asmund. "But we must first swear this Baresark thrall of thine, though
+little faith lives in Baresark's breast."
+
+Now Eric called to Skallagrim and charged him strictly that he should
+tell nothing of Swanhild, and of the wolf that he saw by her, and of how
+Gudruda was found hanging over the gulf.
+
+"Fear not," growled the Baresark, "my tongue is now my master's. What
+is it to me if women do their wickedness one on another? Let them
+work magic, hate and slay by stealth, so shall evil be lessened in the
+world."
+
+"Peace!" said Eric; "if anything of this passes thy lips thou art no
+longer a thrall of mine, and I give thee up to the men of thy quarter."
+
+"And I cleave that wolf's head of thine down to thy hawk's eyes; but,
+otherwise, I give thee peace, and will hold thee from harm, wood-dweller
+as thou art," said Asmund.
+
+The Baresark laughed: "My hands will hold my head against ten such
+mannikins as thou art, Priest. There was never but one man who might
+overcome me in fair fight and there he stands, and his bidding is my
+law. So waste no words and make not niddering threats against greater
+folk," and he slouched back to his horse.
+
+"A mighty man and a rough," said Asmund, looking after him; "I like his
+looks little."
+
+"Natheless a strong in battle," quoth Eric; "had he not been at my back
+some six hours gone, by now the ravens had torn out these eyes of mine.
+Therefore, for my sake, bear with him."
+
+Asmund said it should be so, and then they passed on to the stead.
+
+Here Eric stripped off his harness, washed, and bound up his wounds.
+Then, followed by Skallagrim, axe in hand, he came into the hall as men
+made ready to sit at meat. Now the tale of the mighty deeds that he
+had done, except that of the saving of Gudruda, had gone abroad, and as
+Brighteyes came all men rose and with one voice shouted till the roof of
+the great hall rocked:
+
+"_Welcome, Eric Brighteyes, thou glory of the south!_"
+
+Only Bjoern, Asmund's son, bit his hand, and did not shout, for he hated
+Eric because of the fame that he had won.
+
+Brighteyes stood still till the clamour died, then said:
+
+"Much noise for little deeds, brethren. It is true that I overthrew the
+Mosfell Baresarks. See, here is one," and he turned to Skallagrim; "I
+strangled him in my arms on Mosfell's brink, and that was something of
+a deed. Then he swore fealty to me, and we are blood-brethren now, and
+therefore I ask peace for him, comrades--even from those whom he has
+wronged or whose kin he has slain. I know this, that when thereafter we
+stood back to back and met the company of Ospakar Blacktooth, who
+came to slay us--ay, and Asmund also, and bear away Gudruda to be his
+wife--he warred right gallantly, till seven of their band lay stiff on
+Horse-Head Heights, overthrown of us, and among them Mord, Blacktooth's
+son; and Ospakar himself went thence sore smitten of this Skallagrim.
+Therefore, for my sake, do no harm to this man who was Baresark, but now
+is my thrall; and, moreover, I beg the aid and friendship of all men of
+this quarter in those suits that will be laid against me at the Althing
+for these slayings, which I hereby give out as done by my hand, and by
+the hand of Skallagrim Lambstail, the Baresark."
+
+At these words all men shouted again; but Atli the Earl sprang from the
+high seat where Asmund had placed him, and, coming to Eric, kissed him,
+and, drawing a gold chain from his neck, flung it about the neck of
+Eric, crying:
+
+"Thou art a glorious man, Eric Brighteyes. I thought the world had no
+more of such a breed. Listen to my bidding: come thou to the earldom in
+Orkneys and be a son to me, and I will give thee all good gifts, and,
+when I die, thou shalt sit in my seat after me."
+
+But Eric thought of Swanhild, who must go from Iceland as wife to Atli,
+and answered:
+
+"Thou doest me great honour, Earl, but this may not be. Where the fir
+is planted, there it must grow and fall. Iceland I love, and I will stay
+here among my own people till I am driven away."
+
+"That may well happen, then," said Atli, "for be sure Ospakar and his
+kin will not let the matter of these slayings rest, and I think that
+it will not avail thee much that thou smotest for thine own hand. Then,
+come thou and be my man."
+
+"Where the Norns lead there I must follow," said Eric, and sat down to
+meat. Skallagrim sat down also at the side-bench; but men shrank from
+him, and he glowered on them in answer.
+
+Presently Gudruda entered, and she seemed pale and faint.
+
+When he had done eating, Eric drew Gudruda on to his knee, and she sat
+there, resting her golden head upon his breast. But Swanhild did not
+come into the hall, though ever Earl Atli sought her dark face and
+lovely eyes of blue, and he wondered greatly how his wooing had sped.
+Still, at this time he spoke no more of it to Asmund.
+
+Now Skallagrim drank much ale, and glared about him fiercely; for he
+had this fault, that at times he was drunken. In front of him were two
+thralls of Asmund's; they were brothers, and large-made men, and they
+watched Asmund's sheep upon the fells in winter. These two also grew
+drunk and jeered at Skallagrim, asking him what atonement he would make
+for those ewes of Asmund's that he had stolen last Yule, and how it came
+to pass that he, a Baresark, had been overthrown of an unarmed man.
+
+Skallagrim bore their gibes for a space as he drank on, but suddenly
+he rose and rushed at them, and, seizing a man's throat in either hand,
+thrust them to the ground beneath him and nearly choked them there.
+
+Then Eric ran down the hall, and, putting out his strength, tore the
+Baresark from them.
+
+"This then is thy peacefulness, thou wolf!" Eric cried. "Thou art
+drunk!"
+
+"Ay," growled Skallagrim, "ale is many a man's doom."
+
+"Have a care that it is not thine and mine, then!" said Eric. "Go,
+sleep; and know that, if I see thee thus once more, I see thee not
+again."
+
+
+
+But after this men jeered no more at Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric's
+thrall.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+HOW SWANHILD BID FAREWELL TO ERIC
+
+Now all this while Asmund sat deep in thought; but when, at length, men
+were sunk in sleep, he took a candle of fat and passed to the shut bed
+where Swanhild slept alone. She lay on her bed, and her curling hair was
+all about her. She was awake, for the light gleamed in her blue eyes,
+and on a naked knife that was on the bed beside her, half hidden by her
+hair.
+
+"What wouldst thou, foster-father?" she asked, rising in the couch.
+Asmund closed the curtains, then looked at her sternly and spoke in a
+low voice:
+
+"Thou art fair to be so vile a thing, Swanhild," he said. "Who now
+would have dreamed that heart of thine could talk with goblins and with
+were-wolves--that those eyes of thine could bear to look on murder and
+those white hands find strength to do the sin?"
+
+She held up her shapely arms and, looking on them, laughed. "Would that
+they had been fashioned in a stronger mould," she said. "May they wither
+in their woman's weakness! else had the deed been done outright. Now my
+crime is as heavy upon me and nothing gained by it. Say what fate for
+me, foster-father--the Stone of Doom and the pool where faithless women
+lie? Ah, then might Gudruda laugh indeed, and I will not live to hear
+that laugh. See," and she gripped the dagger at her side: "along this
+bright edge runs the path to peace and freedom, and, if need be, I will
+tread it."
+
+"Be silent," said Asmund. "This Gudruda, my daughter, whom thou wouldst
+have foully done to death, is thine own sister, and it is she who,
+pitying thee, hath pleaded for thy life."
+
+"I will naught of her pity who have no pity," she answered; "and this
+I say to thee who art my father: shame be on thee who hast not dared to
+own thy child!"
+
+"Hadst thou not been my child, Swanhild, and had I not loved thee
+secretly as my child, be sure of this, I had long since driven thee
+hence; for my eyes have been open to much that I have not seemed to see.
+But at length thy wickedness has overcome my love, and I will see thy
+face no more. Listen: none have heard of this shameful deed of thine
+save those who saw it, and their tongues are sealed. Now I give thee
+choice: wed Atli and go, or stand in the Doom-ring and take thy fate."
+
+"Have I not said, father, while death may be sought otherwise, that I
+will never do this last? Nor will I do the first. I am not all of the
+tame breed of you Iceland folk--other and quicker blood runs in my
+veins; nor will I be sold in marriage to a dotard as a mare is sold at a
+market. I have answered."
+
+"Fool! think again, for I go not back upon my word. Wed Atli or die--by
+thy own hand, if thou wilt--there I will not gainsay thee; or, if thou
+fearest this, then anon in the Doom-ring."
+
+Now Swanhild covered her eyes with her hands and shook the long hair
+about her face, and she seemed wondrous fair to Asmund the Priest who
+watched. And as she sat thus, it came into her mind that marriage is
+not the end of a young maid's life--that old husbands have been known to
+die, and that she might rule this Atli and his earldom and become a rich
+and honoured woman, setting her sails in such fashion that when the wind
+turned it would fill them. Otherwise she must die--ay, die shamed and
+leave Gudruda with her love.
+
+Suddenly she slipped from the bed to the floor of the chamber, and,
+clasping the knees of Asmund, looked up through the meshes of her hair,
+while tears streamed from her beautiful eyes:
+
+"I have sinned," she sobbed--"I have sinned greatly against thee and my
+sister. Hearken: I was mad with love of Eric, whom from a child I have
+turned to, and Gudruda is fairer than I and she took him from me. Most
+of all was I mad this night when I wrought the deed of shame, for ill
+things counselled me--things that I did not call; and oh, I thank the
+Gods--if there are Gods--that Gudruda died not at my hand. See now,
+father, I put this evil from me and tear Eric from my heart," and she
+made as though she rent her bosom--"I will wed Atli, and be a good
+housewife to him, and I crave but this of Gudruda: that she forgive me
+her wrong; for it was not done of my will, but of my madness, and of the
+driving of those whom my mother taught me to know."
+
+Asmund listened and the springs of his love thawed within him. "Now thou
+dost take good counsel," he said, "and of this be sure, that so long as
+thou art in that mood none shall harm thee; and for Gudruda, she is the
+most gentle of women, and it may well be that she will put away thy sin.
+So weep no more, and have no more dealings with thy Finnish witchcraft,
+but sleep; and to-morrow I will bear thy word to Atli, for his ship is
+bound and thou must swiftly be made a wife."
+
+He went out, bearing the light with him; but Swanhild rose from the
+ground and sat on the edge of the bed, staring into the darkness and
+shuddering from time to time.
+
+"I shall soon be made his wife," she murmured, "who would be but one
+man's wife--and methinks I shall soon be made a widow also. Thou wilt
+have me, dotard--take me and thy fate! Well, well; better to wed an Earl
+than to be shamed and stretched across the Doom-stone. Oh, weak arms
+that failed me at my need, no more will I put trust in you! When next I
+wound, it shall be with the tongue; when next I strive to slay, it shall
+be by another's hand. Curses on thee, thou ill counseller of darkness,
+who didst betray me at the last! Is it for this that I worshipped thee
+and swore the oath?"
+
+
+
+The morning came, and at the first light Asmund sought the Earl. His
+heart was heavy because of the guile that his tongue must practise, and
+his face was dark as a winter dawn.
+
+"What news, Asmund?" asked Atli. "_Early tidings are bad tidings_, so
+runs the saw, and thy looks give weight to it."
+
+"Not altogether bad, Earl. Swanhild gives herself to thee."
+
+"Of her own will, Asmund?"
+
+"Ay, of her own will. But I have warned thee of her temper."
+
+"Her temper! Little hangs to a maid's temper. Once a wife and it
+will melt in softness like the snow when summer comes. These are glad
+tidings, comrade, and methinks I grow young again beneath the breath of
+them. Why art thou so glum then?"
+
+"There is something that must yet be told of Swanhild," said Asmund.
+"She is called the Fatherless, but, if thou wilt have the truth, why
+here it is for thee--she is my daughter, born out of wedlock, and I know
+not how that will please thee."
+
+Atli laughed aloud, and his bright eyes shone in his wrinkled face. "It
+pleases me well, Asmund, for then the maid is sprung from a sound stock.
+The name of the Priest of Middalhof is famous far south of Iceland; and
+never that Iceland bred a comelier girl. Is that all?"
+
+"One more thing, Earl. This I charge thee: watch thy wife, and hold her
+back from witchcraft and from dealings with evil things and trolls of
+darkness. She is of Finnish blood and the women of the Finns are much
+given to such wicked work."
+
+"I set little store by witchwork, goblins and their kin," said Atli. "I
+doubt me much of their power, and I shall soon wean Swanhild from such
+ways, if indeed she practise them."
+
+Then they fell to talking of Swanhild's dower, and that was not small.
+Afterwards Asmund sought Eric and Gudruda, and told them what had come
+to pass, and they were glad at the news, though they grieved for Atli
+the Earl. And when Swanhild met Gudruda, she came to her humbly, and
+humbly kissed her hand, and with tears craved pardon of her evil doing,
+saying that she had been mad; nor did Gudruda withhold it, for of all
+women she was the gentlest and most forgiving. But to Eric, Swanhild
+said nothing.
+
+The wedding-feast must be held on the third day from this, for Atli
+would sail on that same day, since his people wearied of waiting and his
+ship might lie bound no longer. Blithe was Atli the Earl, and Swanhild
+was all changed, for now she seemed the gentlest of maids, and, as
+befitted one about to be made a wife, moved through the house with soft
+words and downcast eyes. But Skallagrim, watching her, bethought him of
+the grey wolf that he had seen by Goldfoss, and this seemed not well to
+him.
+
+"It would be bad now," he said to Eric, as they rode to Coldback, "to
+stand in yon old earl's shoes. This woman's weather has changed too
+fast, and after such a calm there'll come a storm indeed. I am now
+minded of Thorunna, for she went just so the day before she gave herself
+to Ospakar, and me to shame and bonds."
+
+"Talk not of the raven till you hear his croak," said Eric.
+
+"He is on the wing, lord," answered Skallagrim.
+
+Now Eric came to Coldback in the Marsh, and Saevuna his mother and Unna,
+Thorod's daughter, the betrothed of Asmund, were glad to welcome him;
+for the tidings of his mighty deeds and of the overthrow of Ospakar
+and the slaying of Mord were noised far and wide. But at Skallagrim
+Lambstail they looked askance. Still, when they heard of those things
+that he had wrought on Horse-Head Heights, they welcomed him for his
+deed's sake.
+
+Eric sat two nights at Coldback, and on the second day Saevuna his
+mother and Unna rode thence with their servants to the wedding-feast of
+Swanhild the Fatherless. But Eric stopped at Coldback that night, saying
+that he would be at Middalhof within two hours of sunrise, for he must
+talk with a shepherd who came from the fells.
+
+Saevuna and her company came to Middalhof and was asked, first by
+Gudruda, then by Swanhild, why Brighteyes tarried. She answered that he
+would be there early on the morrow. Next morning, before it was light,
+Eric girded on Whitefire, took horse and rode from Coldback alone, for
+he would not bring Skallagrim, fearing lest he should get drunk at the
+feast and shed some man's blood.
+
+It was Swanhild's wedding-day; but she greeted it with little
+lightsomeness of heart, and her eyes knew no sleep that night, though
+they were heavy with tears.
+
+At the first light she rose, and, gliding from the house, walked through
+the heavy dew down the path by which Eric must draw near, for she
+desired to speak with him. Gudruda also rose a while after, though she
+did not know this, and followed on the same path, for she would greet
+her lover at his coming.
+
+Now three furlongs or more from the stead stood a vetch stack, and
+Swanhild waited on the further side of this stack. Presently she heard
+a sound of singing come from behind the shoulder of the fell and of the
+tramp of a horse's hoofs. Then she saw the golden wings of Eric's
+helm all ablaze with the sunlight as he rode merrily along, and great
+bitterness laid hold of her that Eric could be of such a joyous mood on
+the day when she who loved him must be made the wife of another man.
+
+Presently he was before her, and Swanhild stepped from the shadow of the
+stack and laid her hand upon his horse's bridle.
+
+"Eric," she said humbly and with bowed head, "Gudruda sleeps yet. Canst
+thou, then, find time to hearken to my words?"
+
+He frowned and said: "Methinks, Swanhild, it would be better if thou
+gavest thy words to him who is thy lord."
+
+She let the bridle-rein drop from her hands. "I am answered," she said;
+"ride on."
+
+Now pity stirred in Eric's heart, for Swanhild's mien was most heavy,
+and he leaped down from his horse. "Nay," he said, "speak on, if thou
+hast anything to tell me."
+
+"I have this to tell thee, Eric; that now, before we part for ever, I am
+come to ask thy pardon for my ill-doing--ay, and to wish all joy to thee
+and thy fair love," and she sobbed and choked.
+
+"Speak no more of it, Swanhild," he said, "but let thy good deeds cover
+up the ill, which are not small; so thou shalt be happy."
+
+She looked at him strangely, and her face was white with pain.
+
+"How then are we so differently fashioned that thou, Eric, canst prate
+to me of happiness when my heart is racked with grief? Oh, Eric, I blame
+thee not, for thou hast not wrought this evil on me willingly; but I
+say this: that my heart is dead, as I would that I were dead. See those
+flowers: they smell sweet--for me they have no odour. Look on the light
+leaping from Coldback to the sea, from the sea to Westman Isles, and
+from the Westman crown of rocks far into the wide heavens above. It is
+beautiful, is it not? Yet I tell thee, Eric, that now to my eyes howling
+winter darkness is every whit as fair. Joy is dead within me, music's
+but a jangled madness in my ears, food hath no savour on my tongue, my
+youth is sped ere my dawn is day. Nothing is left to me, Eric, save this
+fair body that thou didst scorn, and the dreams which I may gather from
+my hours of scanty sleep, and such shame as befalls a loveless bride."
+
+"Speak not so, Swanhild," he said, and clasped her by the hand, for,
+though he loathed her wickedness, being soft-hearted and but young, it
+grieved him to hear her words and see the anguish of her mind. For it is
+so with men, that they are easily moved by the pleading of a fair woman
+who loves them, even though they love her not.
+
+"Yea, I will speak out all my mind before I seal it up for ever. See,
+Eric, this is my state and thou hast set this crown of sorrow on my
+brows: and thou comest singing down the fell, and I go weeping o'er the
+sea! I am not all so ill at heart. It was love of thee that drove me
+down to sin, as love of thee might otherwise have lifted me to holiness.
+But, loving thee as thou seest, this day I wed a dotard, and go his
+chattel and his bride across the sea, and leave thee singing on the
+fell, and by thy side her who is my foe. Thou hast done great deeds,
+Brighteyes, and still greater shalt thou do; yet but as echoes they
+shall reach my ears. Thou wilt be to me as one dead, for it is Gudruda's
+to bind the byrnie on thy breast when thou goest forth to war, and hers
+to loose the winged helm from thy brow when thou returnest, battle-worn
+and conquering."
+
+Now Swanhild ceased, and choked with grief; then spoke again:
+
+"So now farewell; doubtless I weary thee, and--Gudruda waits. Nay, look
+not on my foolish tears: they are the heritage of woman, of naught else
+is she sure! While I live, Eric, morn by morn the thought of thee shall
+come to wake me as the sun wakes yon snowy peak, and night by night
+thy memory shall pass as at eve he passes from the valleys, but to dawn
+again in dreams. For, Eric, 'tis thee I wed to-day--at heart I am thy
+bride, thine and thine only; and when shalt thou find a wife who holds
+thee so dear as that Swanhild whom once thou knewest? So now farewell!
+Yes, this time thou shalt kiss away my tears; then let them stream for
+ever. Thus, Eric! and thus! and thus! do I take farewell of thee."
+
+And now she clung about his neck, gazing on him with great dewy eyes
+till things grew strange and dim, and he must kiss her if only for her
+love and tender beauty's sake. And so he kissed, and it chanced that
+as they clung thus, Gudruda, passing by this path to give her betrothed
+greeting, came upon them and stood astonished. Then she turned and,
+putting her hands to her head, fled back swiftly to the stead, and
+waited there, great anger burning in her heart; for Gudruda had this
+fault, that she was very jealous.
+
+Now Eric and Swanhild did not see her, and presently they parted, and
+Swanhild wiped her eyes and glided thence.
+
+As she drew near the stead she found Gudruda watching.
+
+"Where hast thou been, Swanhild?" she said.
+
+"To bid farewell to Brighteyes, Gudruda."
+
+"Then thou art foolish, for doubtless he thrust thee from him."
+
+"Nay, Gudruda, he drew me to him. Hearken, I say, thou sister. Vex me
+not, for I go my ways and thou goest thine. Thou art strong and fair,
+and hitherto thou hast overcome me. But I am also fair, and, if I find
+space to strike in, I also have a show of strength. Pray thou that I
+find not space, Gudruda. Now is Eric thine. Perchance one day he may be
+mine. It lies in the lap of the Norns."
+
+"Fair words from Atli's bride," mocked Gudruda.
+
+"Ay, Atli's bride, but never Atli's love!" said Swanhild, and swept on.
+
+A while after Eric rode up. He was shamefaced and vexed at heart,
+because he had yielded thus to Swanhild's beauty, and been melted by her
+tender words and kissed her. Then he saw Gudruda, and at the sight of
+her all thought of Swanhild passed from him, for he loved Gudruda and
+her alone. He leapt down from his horse and ran to her. But, drawn to
+her full height, she stood with dark flashing eyes and fair face set in
+anger.
+
+Still, he would have greeted her loverwise; but she lifted her hand and
+waved him back, and fear took hold of him.
+
+"What now, Gudruda?" he asked, faltering.
+
+"What now, Eric?" she answered, faltering not. "Hast seen Swanhild?"
+
+"Yea, I have seen Swanhild. She came to bid farewell to me. What of it?"
+
+"What of it? Why '_thus! and thus! and thus!_' didst thou bid farewell
+to Atli's bride. Ay, 'thus and thus,' with clinging lips and twined
+arms. Warm and soft was thy farewell kiss to her who would have slain
+me, Brighteyes!"
+
+"Gudruda, thou speakest truth, though how thou sawest I know not. Think
+no ill of it, and scourge me not with words, for, sooth to say, I was
+melted by her grief and the music of her talk."
+
+"It is shame to thee so to speak of her whom but now thou heldest in
+thine arms. By the grief and the music of the talk of her who would have
+murdered me thou wast melted into kisses, Eric!--for I saw it with these
+eyes. Knowest thou what I am minded to say to thee? It is this: 'Go
+hence and see me no more;' for I have little wish to cleave to such
+a feather-man, to one so blown about by the first breath of woman's
+tempting."
+
+"Yet, methinks, Gudruda, I have withstood some such winds. I tell thee
+that, hadst thou been in my place, thyself hadst yielded to Swanhild and
+kissed her in farewell, for she was more than woman in that hour."
+
+"Nay, Eric, I am no weak man to be led astray thus. Yet she is more than
+woman--troll is she also, that I know; but less than man art thou, Eric,
+thus to fall before her who hates me. Time may come when she shall woo
+thee after a stronger sort, and what wilt thou say to her then, thou who
+art so ready with thy kisses?"
+
+"I will withstand her, Gudruda, for I love thee only, and this is well
+known to thee."
+
+"Truly I know thou lovest me, Eric; but tell me of what worth is this
+love of man that eyes of beauty and tongue of craft may so readily
+bewray? I doubt me of thee, Eric!"
+
+"Nay, doubt me not, Gudruda. I love thee alone, but I grew soft as wax
+beneath her pleading. My heart consented not, yet I did consent. I have
+no more to say."
+
+Now Gudruda looked on him long and steadfastly. "Thy plight is sorry,
+Eric," she said, "and this once I forgive thee. Look to it that thou
+givest me no more cause to doubt thee, for then I shall remember how
+thou didst bid farewell to Swanhild."
+
+"I will give none," he answered, and would have embraced her; but this
+she would not suffer then, nor for many days after, for she was angry
+with him. But with Swanhild she was still more angry, though she said
+nothing of it. That Swanhild had tried to murder her, Gudruda could
+forgive, for there she had failed; but not that she had won Eric to kiss
+her, for in this she had succeeded well.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+HOW ERIC WAS OUTLAWED AND SAILED A-VIKING
+
+Now the marriage-feast went on, and Swanhild, draped in white and girt
+about with gold, sat by Atli's side upon the high seat. He was fain of
+her and drew her to him, but she looked at him with cold calm eyes in
+which hate lurked. The feast was done, and all the company rode to the
+sea strand, where the Earl's ship lay at anchor. They came there, and
+Swanhild kissed Asmund, and talked a while with Groa, her mother,
+and bade farewell to all men. But she bade no farewell to Eric and to
+Gudruda.
+
+"Why sayest thou no word to these two?" asked Atli, her husband.
+
+"For this reason, Earl," she answered, "because ere long we three shall
+meet again; but I shall see Asmund, my father, and Groa, my mother, no
+more."
+
+"That is an ill saying, wife," said Atli. "Methinks thou dost foretell
+their doom."
+
+"Mayhap! And now I will add to my redes, for I foretell _thy_ doom also:
+it is not yet, but it draws on."
+
+Then Atli bethought him of many wise saws, but spoke no more, for it
+seemed to him this was a strange bride that he had wed.
+
+They hauled the anchor home, shook out the great sail, and passed away
+into the evening night. But while land could still be seen, Swanhild
+stood near the helm, gazing with her blue eyes upon the lessening coast.
+Then she passed to the hold, and shut herself in alone, and there she
+stayed, saying that she was sick, till at length, after a fair voyage of
+twenty days, they made the Orkney Islands.
+
+But all this pleased Atli wondrous ill, yet he dared not cross her mood.
+
+
+
+Now, in Iceland the time drew on when men must ride to the Althing, and
+notice was given to Eric Brighteyes of many suits that were laid against
+him, in that he had brought Mord, Ospakar's son, to his death, dealing
+him a brain or a body or a marrow wound, and others of that company.
+But no suits were laid against Skallagrim, for he was already outlaw.
+Therefore he must go in hiding, for men were out to slay him, and this
+he did unwillingly, at Eric's bidding. Asmund took up Eric's case, for
+he was the most famous of all lawmen in that day, and when thirteen full
+weeks of summer were done, they two rode to the Thing, and with them a
+great company of men of their quarter.
+
+Now, men go up to the Loegberg, and there came Ospakar, though he was
+not yet healed of his wound, and all his company, and laid their suits
+against Eric by the mouth of Gizur the Lawman, Ospakar's son. The
+pleadings were long and cunning on either side; but the end of it was
+that Ospakar brought it about, by the help of his friends--and of
+these had many--that Eric must go into outlawry for three years. But no
+weregild was to be paid to Ospakar and his men for those who had been
+killed, and no atonement for the great wound that Skallagrim Lambstail
+gave him, or for the death of Mord, his son, inasmuch as Eric fought for
+his own hand to save his life.
+
+The party of Ospakar were ill pleased at this finding, and Eric was not
+over glad, for it was little to his mind that he should sail a-warring
+across the seas, while Gudruda sat at home in Iceland. Still, there was
+no help for the matter.
+
+Now Ospakar spoke with his company, and the end of it was that he called
+on them to take their weapons and avenge themselves by their own
+might. Asmund and Eric, seeing this, mustered their army of freemen and
+thralls. There were one hundred and five of them, all stout men; but
+Ospakar Blacktooth's band numbered a hundred and thirty-three, and they
+stood with their backs to the Raven's Rift.
+
+"Now I would that Skallagrim was here to guard my back," said Eric, "for
+before this fight is done few will left standing to tell its tale."
+
+"It is a sad thing," said Asmund, "that so many men must die because
+some men are now dead."
+
+"A very sad thing," said Eric, and took this counsel. He stalked alone
+towards the ranks of Ospakar and called in a loud voice, saying:
+
+"It would be grievous that so many warriors should fall in such a
+matter. Now hearken, you company of Ospakar Blacktooth! If there be any
+two among you who will dare to match their might against my single sword
+in holmgang, here I, Eric Brighteyes, stand and wait them. It is better
+that one man, or perchance three men, should fall, than that anon so
+many should roll in the dust. What say ye?"
+
+Now all those who watched called out that this was a good offer and a
+manly one, though it might turn out ill for Eric; but Ospakar answered:
+
+"Were I but well of my wound I alone would cut that golden comb of
+thine, thou braggart; as it is, be sure that two shall be found."
+
+"Who is the braggart?" answered Eric. "He who twice has learned the
+weight of this arm and yet boasts his strength, or I who stand craving
+that two should come against me? Get thee hence, Ospakar; get thee home
+and bid Thorunna, thy leman, whom thou didst beguile from that Ounound
+who now is named Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark, nurse thee whole
+of the wound her husband gave thee. Be sure we shall yet stand face to
+face, and that combs shall be cut then, combs black or golden. Nurse
+thee! nurse thee! cease thy prating--get thee home, and bid Thorunna
+nurse thee; but first name thou the two who shall stand against me in
+holmgang in Oxara's stream."
+
+Folk laughed aloud while Eric mocked, but Ospakar gnashed his teeth with
+rage. Still, he named the two mightiest men in his company, bidding them
+take up their swords against Brighteyes. This, indeed, they were loth
+to do; still, because of the shame that they must get if they hung
+back, and for fear of the wrath of Ospakar, they made ready to obey his
+bidding.
+
+Then all men passed down to the bank of Oxara, and, on the other side,
+people came from their booths and sat upon the slope of All Man's Raft,
+for it was a new thing that one man should fight two in holmgang.
+
+Now Eric crossed to the island where holmgangs are fought to this day,
+and after him came the two chosen, flourishing their swords bravely, and
+taking counsel how one should rush at his face, while the other passed
+behind his back and spitted him, as woodfolk spit a lamb. Eric drew
+Whitefire and leaned on it, waiting for the word, and all the women held
+him to be wondrous fair as, clad in his byrnie and his golden helm,
+he leaned thus on Whitefire. Presently the word was given, and Eric,
+standing not to defend himself as they deemed he surely would, whirled
+Whitefire round his helm and rushed headlong on his foes, shield aloft.
+
+The great carles saw the light that played on Whitefire's edge and the
+other light that burned in Eric's eyes, and terror got hold of them. Now
+he was almost come, and Whitefire sprang aloft like a tongue of flame.
+Then they stayed no more, but, running one this way and one that, cast
+themselves into the flood and swam for the river-edge. Now from either
+bank rose up a roar of laughter, that grew and grew, till it echoed
+against the lava rifts and scared the ravens from their nests.
+
+Eric, too, stopped his charge and laughed aloud; then walked back to
+where Asmund stood, unarmed, to second him in the holmgang.
+
+"I can get little honour from such champions as these," he said.
+
+"Nay," answered Asmund, "thou hast got the greatest honour, and they,
+and Ospakar, such shame as may not be wiped out."
+
+Now when Blacktooth saw what had come to pass, he well-nigh choked,
+and fell from his horse in fury. Still, he could find no stomach for
+fighting, but, mustering his company, rode straightway from the Thing
+home again to Swinefell. But he caused those two whom he had put up
+to do battle with Eric to be set upon with staves and driven from
+his following, and the end of it was that they might stay no more in
+Iceland, but took ship and sailed south, and now they are out of the
+story.
+
+On the next day, Asmund, and with him Eric and all their men, rode back
+to Middalhof. Gudruda greeted Eric well, and for the first time since
+Swanhild went away she kissed him. Moreover, she wept bitterly when she
+learned that he must go into outlawry, while she must bide at home.
+
+"How shall the days pass by, Eric?" she said, "when thou art far, and I
+know not where thou art, nor how it goes with thee, nor if thou livest
+or art already dead?"
+
+"In sooth I cannot say, sweet," he answered; "but of this I am sure
+that, wheresoever I am, yet more weary shall be my hours."
+
+"Three years," she went on--"three long, cold years, and no sight of
+thee, and perchance no tidings from thee, till mayhap I learn that thou
+art in that land whence tidings cannot come. Oh, it would be better to
+die than to part thus."
+
+"Well I wot that it is better to die than to live, and better never to
+have been born than to live and die," answered Eric sadly. "Here, it
+would seem, is nothing but hate and strife, weariness and bitter envy
+to fret away our strength, and at last, if we come so far, sorrowful age
+and death, and thereafter we know not what. Little of good do we find to
+our hands, and much of evil; nor know I for what ill-doing these burdens
+are laid upon us. Yet must we needs breathe such an air as is blown
+about us, Gudruda, clasping at this happiness which is given, though we
+may not hold it. At the worst, the game will soon be played, and others
+will stand where we have stood, and strive as we have striven, and fail
+as we have failed, and so on, till man has worked out his doom, and the
+Gods cease from their wrath, or Ragnarroek come upon them, and they too
+are lost in the jaws of grey wolf Fenrir."
+
+"Men may win one good thing, and that is fame, Eric."
+
+"Nay, Gudruda, what is it to win fame? Is it not to raise up foes, as it
+were, from the very soil, who, made with secret hate, seek to stab us
+in the back? Is it not to lose peace, and toil on from height to height
+only to be hurled down at last? Happy, then, is the man whom fame flies
+from, for hers is a deadly gift."
+
+"Yet there is one thing left that thou hast not numbered, Eric, and
+it is love--for love is to our life what the sun is to the world, and,
+though it seems to set in death, yet it may rise again. We are happy,
+then, in our love, for there are many who live their lives and do not
+find it."
+
+So these two, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair, talked sadly, for
+their hearts were heavy, and on them lay the shadow of sorrows that were
+to come.
+
+"Say, sweet," said Eric at length, "wilt thou that I go not into
+banishment? Then I must fall into outlawry, and my life will be in the
+hands of him who may take it; yet I think that my foes will find it hard
+to come by while my strength remains, and at the worst I do but turn to
+meet the fate that dogs me."
+
+"Nay, that I will not suffer, Brighteyes. Now we will go to my father,
+and he shall give thee his dragon of war--she is a good vessel--and thou
+shalt man her with the briskest men of our quarter: for there are many
+who will be glad to fare abroad with thee, Eric. Soon she shall be bound
+and thou shalt sail at once, Eric: for the sooner thou art gone the
+sooner the three years will be sped, and thou shalt come back to me.
+But, oh! that I might go with thee."
+
+Now Gudruda and Eric went to Asmund and spoke of this matter.
+
+"I desired," he answered, "that thou, Eric, shouldst bide here in
+Iceland till after harvest, for it is then that I would take Unna,
+Thorod's daughter, to wife, and it was meet that thou shouldst sit at
+the wedding-feast and give her to me."
+
+"Nay, father, let Eric go," said Gudruda, "for well begun is, surely,
+half done. He must remain three years in outlawry: add thou no day to
+them, for, if he stays here for long, I know this: that I shall find no
+heart to let him go, and, if go he must, then I shall go with him."
+
+"That may never be," said Asmund; "thou art too young and fair to sail
+a-viking down the sea-path. Hearken, Eric: I give thee the good ship,
+and now we will go about to find stout men to man her."
+
+"That is a good gift," said Eric; and afterwards they rode to the
+seashore and overhauled the vessel as she lay in her shed. She was a
+great dragon of war, long and slender, and standing high at stem and
+prow. She was fashioned of oak, all bolted together with iron, and at
+her prow was a gilded dragon most wonderfully carved.
+
+Eric looked on her and his eyes brightened.
+
+"Here rests a wave-horse that shall bear a viking well," he said.
+
+"Ay," answered Asmund, "of all the things I own this ship is the very
+best. She is so swift that none may catch her, and she can almost go
+about in her own length. That gale must be heavy that shall fill her,
+with thee to steer; yet I give her to thee freely, Eric, and thou shalt
+do great deeds with this my gift, and, if things go well, she shall come
+back to this shore at last, and thou in her."
+
+"Now I will name this war-gift with a new name," said Eric. "'Gudruda,'
+I name her: for, as Gudruda here is the fairest of all women, so is this
+the fairest of all war-dragons."
+
+"So be it," said Asmund.
+
+Then they rode back to Middalhof, and now Eric Brighteyes let it be
+known that he needed men to sail the seas with him. Nor did he ask in
+vain, for, when it was told that Eric went a-viking, so great was his
+fame grown, that many a stout yeoman and many a great-limbed carle
+reached down sword and shield and came up to Middalhof to put their
+hands in his. For mate, he took a certain man named Hall of Lithdale,
+and this because Bjoern asked it, for Hall was a friend to Bjoern, and he
+had, moreover, great skill in all manner of seamanship, and had often
+sailed the Northern Seas--ay, and round England to the coast of France.
+
+But when Gudruda saw this man, she did not like him, because of his
+sharp face, uncanny eyes, and smooth tongue, and she prayed Eric to have
+nothing to do with him.
+
+"It is too late now to talk of that," said Eric. "Hall is a well-skilled
+man, and, for the rest, fear not: I will watch him."
+
+"Then evil will come of it," said Gudruda.
+
+Skallagrim also liked Hall little, nor did Hall love Skallagrim and his
+great axe.
+
+At length all were gathered; they were fifty in number and it is said
+that no such band of men ever took ship from Iceland.
+
+Now the great dragon was bound and her faring goods were aboard of her,
+for Eric must sail on the morrow, if the wind should be fair. All day
+long he stalked to and fro among his men; he would trust nothing to
+others, and there was no sword or shield in his company but he himself
+had proved it. All day long he stalked, and at his back went Skallagrim
+Lambstail, axe on shoulder, for he would never leave Eric if he had his
+will, and they were a mighty pair.
+
+At length all was ready and men sat down to the faring-feast in the hall
+at Middalhof, and that was a great feast. Eric's folk were gathered on
+the side-benches, and by the high seat at Asmund's side sat Brighteyes,
+and near to him where Bjoern, Asmund's son, Gudruda, Unna, Asmund's
+betrothed, and Saevuna, Eric's mother. For this had been settled between
+Asmund and Eric, that his mother Saevuna, who was some somewhat sunk in
+age, should flit from Coldback and come with Unna to dwell at Middalhof.
+But Eric set a trusty grieve to dwell at Coldback and mind the farm.
+
+When the faring-toasts had been drunk, Eric spoke to Asmund and said: "I
+fear one thing, lord, and it is that when I am gone Ospakar will trouble
+thee. Now, I pray you all to beware of Blacktooth, for, though the hound
+is whipped, he can still bite, and it seems that he has not yet put
+Gudruda from his mind."
+
+Now Bjoern had sat silently, thinking much and drinking more, for he
+loved Eric less than ever on this day when he saw how all men did him
+honour and mourned his going, and his father not the least of them.
+
+"Methinks it is thou, Eric," he said, "whom Ospakar hates, and thee on
+whom he would work his vengeance, and that for no light cause."
+
+"When bad fortune sits in thy neighbour's house, she knocks upon thy
+door, Bjoern. Gudruda, thy sister, is my betrothed, and thou art a party
+to this feud," said Eric. "Therefore it becomes thee better to hold her
+honour and thy own against this Northlander, than to gird at me for that
+in which I have no blame."
+
+Bjoern grew wroth at these words. "Prate not to me," he said. "Thou art
+an upstart who wouldst teach their duty to thy betters--ay, puffed up
+with light-won fame, like a feather on the breeze. But I say this: the
+breeze shall fail, and thou shalt fall upon the goose's back once more.
+And I say this also, that, had I my will, Gudruda should wed Ospakar:
+for he is a mighty chief, and not a long-legged carle, outlawed for
+man-slaying."
+
+Now Eric sprang from his seat and laid hand upon the hilt of Whitefire,
+while men murmured in the hall, for they held this an ill speech of
+Bjoern's.
+
+"In thee, it seems, I have no friend," said Eric, "and hadst thou been
+any other man than Gudruda's brother, forsooth thou shouldst answer for
+thy mocking words. This I tell thee, Bjoern, that, wert thou twice her
+brother, if thou plottest with Ospakar when I am gone, thou shalt pay
+dearly for it when I come back again. I know thy heart well: it is
+cunning and greedy of gain, and filled with envy as a cask with ale;
+yet, if thou lovest to feel it beating in thy breast, strive not to work
+me mischief and to put Gudruda from me."
+
+Now Bjoern sprang up also and drew his sword, for he was white with rage;
+but Asmund his father cried, "Peace!" in a great voice.
+
+"Peace!" he said. "Be seated, Eric, and take no heed of this foolish
+talk. And for thee, Bjoern, art thou the Priest of Middalhof, and
+Gudruda's father, or am I? It has pleased me to betroth Brighteyes to
+Gudruda, and it pleased me not to betroth her to Ospakar, and that is
+enough for thee. For the rest, Ospakar would have slain Eric, not he
+Ospakar, therefore Eric's hands are clean. Though thou art my son, I say
+this, that, if thou workest ill to Eric when he is over sea, thou shalt
+rightly learn the weight of Whitefire: it is a niddering deed to plot
+against an absent man."
+
+Eric sat down, but Bjoern strode scowling from the hall, and, taking
+horse, rode south; nor did he and Eric meet again till three years had
+come and gone, and then they met but once.
+
+"Maggots shall be bred of that fly, nor shall they lack flesh to feed
+on," said Skallagrim in Eric's ears as he watched Bjoern pass. But Eric
+bade him be silent, and turned to Gudruda.
+
+"Look not so sad, sweet," he said, "for hasty words rise like the foam
+on mead and pass as soon. It vexes Bjoern that thy father has given me
+the good ship: but his anger will soon pass, or, at the very worst, I
+fear him not while thou art true to me."
+
+"Then thou hast little to fear, Eric," she answered. "Look now on thy
+hair: it grows long as a woman's, and that is ill, for at sea the salt
+will hang to it. Say, shall I cut it for thee?"
+
+"Yes, Gudruda."
+
+So she cut his yellow locks, and one of them lay upon her heart for many
+a day.
+
+"Now thou shalt swear to me," she whispered in his ear, "that no other
+man or woman shall cut thy hair till thou comest back to me and I clip
+it again."
+
+"That I swear, and readily," he answered. "I will go long-haired like a
+girl for thy sake, Gudruda."
+
+He spoke low, but Koll the Half-witted, Groa's thrall, heard this oath
+and kept it in his mind.
+
+
+
+Very early on the morrow all men rose, and, taking horse, rode once more
+to the seaside, till they came to that shed where the Gudruda lay.
+
+Then, when the tide was high, Eric's company took hold of the black
+ship's thwarts, and at his word dragged her with might and main. She
+ran down the greased blocks and sped on quivering to the sea, and as her
+dragon-prow dipped in the water people cheered aloud.
+
+Now Eric must bid farewell to all, and this he did with a brave heart
+till at the last he came to Saevuna, his mother, and Gudruda, his dear
+love.
+
+"Farewell, son," said the old dame; "I have little hope that these eyes
+shall look again upon that bonny face of thine, yet I am well paid for
+my birth-pains, for few have borne such a man as thou. Think of me at
+times, for without me thou hadst never been. Be not led astray of women,
+nor lead them astray, or ill shall overtake thee. Be not quarrelsome
+because of thy great might, for there is a stronger than the strongest.
+Spare a fallen foe, and take not a poor man's goods or a brave man's
+sword; but, when thou smitest, smite home. So shalt thou win honour,
+and, at the last, peace, that is more than honour."
+
+Eric thanked her for her counsel, and kissed her, then turned to
+Gudruda, who stood, white and still, plucking at her golden girdle.
+
+"What can I say to thee?" he asked.
+
+"Say nothing, but go," she answered: "go before I weep."
+
+"Weep not, Gudruda, or thou wilt unman me. Say, thou wilt think on me?"
+
+"Ay, Eric, by day and by night."
+
+"And thou wilt be true to me?"
+
+"Ay, till death and after, for so long as thou cleavest to me I will
+cleave to thee. I will first die rather than betray thee. But of thee I
+am not so sure. Perchance thou mayest find Swanhild in thy journeyings
+and crave more kisses of her?"
+
+"Anger me not, Gudruda! thou knowest well that I hate Swanhild more than
+any other woman. When I kiss her again, then thou mayst wed Ospakar."
+
+"Speak not so rashly, Eric," she said, and as she spoke Skallagrim drew
+near.
+
+"If thou lingerest here, lord, the tide will serve us little round
+Westmans," he said, eyeing Gudruda as it were with jealousy.
+
+"I come," said Eric. "Gudruda, fare thee well!"
+
+She kissed him and clung to him, but did not answer, for she could not
+speak.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+HOW HALL THE MATE CUT THE GRAPNEL CHAIN
+
+Gudruda bent her head like a drooping flower, and presently sank to
+earth, for her knees would bear her weight no more; but Eric marched to
+the lip of the sea, his head held high and laughing merrily to hide his
+pain of heart. Here stood Asmund, who gripped him by both hands, and
+kissed him on the brow, bidding him good luck.
+
+"I know not whether we shall meet again," he said; "but, if my hours
+be sped before thou returnest, this I charge thee: that thou mindest
+Gudruda well, for she is the sweetest of all women that I have known,
+and I hold her the most dear."
+
+"Fear not for that, lord," said Eric; "and I pray thee this, that, if
+I come back no more, as well may happen, do not force Gudruda into
+marriage, if she wills it not, and I think she will have little leaning
+that way. And I say this also: do not count overmuch on Bjoern thy son,
+for he has no loyal heart; and beware of Groa, who was thy housekeeper,
+for she loves not that Unna should take her place and more. And now I
+thank thee for many good things, and farewell."
+
+"Farewell, my son," said Asmund, "for in this hour thou seemest as a son
+to me."
+
+Eric turned to enter the sea and wade to the vessel, but Skallagrim
+caught him in his arms as though he were but a child, and, wading into
+the surf till the water covered his waistbelt, bore him to the vessel
+and lifted him up so that Eric reached the bulwarks with his hands.
+
+Then they loosed the cable and got out the oars and soon were dancing
+over the sea. Presently the breeze caught them, and they set the great
+sail and sped away like a gull towards the Westman Isles. But Gudruda
+sat on the shore watching till, at length, the light faded from Eric's
+golden helm as he stood upon the poop, and the world grew dark to her.
+
+
+
+Now Ospakar Blacktooth had news of this sailing and took counsel of
+Gizur his son, and the end of it was that they made ready two great
+ships, dragons of war, and, placing sixty fighting men in each of them,
+sailed round the Iceland coast to the Westmans and waited there to
+waylay Eric. They had spies on the land, and from them they learned of
+Brighteyes' coming, and sailed out to meet him in the channel between
+the greater and the lesser islands, where they knew that he must pass.
+
+Now it drew towards evening when Eric rowed down this channel, for the
+wind had fallen and he desired to be clear at sea. Presently, as the
+Gudruda came near to the mouth of the channel, that had high cliffs on
+either hand, Eric saw two long dragons of war--for their bulwarks were
+shield-hung--glide from the cover of the island and take their station
+side by side between him and the open sea.
+
+"Now here are vikings," said Eric to Skallagrim.
+
+"Now here is Ospakar Blacktooth," answered Skallagrim, "for well I know
+that raven banner of his. This is a good voyage, for we must seek but a
+little while before we come to fighting."
+
+Eric bade the men lay on their oars, and spoke:
+
+"Before us is Ospakar Blacktooth in two great dragons, and he is here to
+cut us off. Now two choices are left to us: one is to bout ship and run
+before him, and the other to row on and give him battle. What say ye,
+comrades?"
+
+Hall of Lithdale, the mate, answered, saying:
+
+"Let us go back, lest we die. The odds are too great, Eric."
+
+But a man among the crew cried out, "When thou didst go on holmgang at
+Thingvalla, Eric, Ospakar's two chosen champions stood before thee,
+yet at Whitefire's flash they skurried through the water like startled
+ducks. It was an omen, for so shall his great ships fly when we swoop on
+them." Then the others shouted:
+
+"Ay, ay! Never let it be said that we fled from Ospakar--fie on thy
+woman's talk, Hall!"
+
+"Then we are all of one mind, save Hall only," said Eric. "Let us put
+Ospakar to the proof." And while men shouted "Yea!" he turned to speak
+with Skallagrim. The Baresark was gone, for, wasting no breath in words,
+already he was fixing the long shields on the bulwark rail.
+
+The men busked on their harness and made them fit for fight, and, when
+all was ready, Eric mounted the poop, and with him Skallagrim, and bade
+the rowers give way. The Gudruda leapt forward and rushed on towards
+Ospakar's ships. Now they saw that these were bound together with a
+cable and yet they must go betwixt them.
+
+Eric ran forward to the prow, and with him Skallagrim, and called aloud
+to a great man who stood upon the ship to starboard, wearing a black
+helm with raven's wings:
+
+"Who art thou that bars the sea against me?"
+
+"I am named Ospakar Blacktooth," answered the great man.
+
+"And what must we lose at thy hands, Ospakar?"
+
+"But one thing--your lives!" answered Blacktooth.
+
+"Thrice have we stood face to face, Ospakar," said Eric, "and it seems
+that hitherto thou hast won no great glory. Now it shall be proved if
+thy luck has bettered."
+
+"Art yet healed, lord, of that prick in the shoulder which thou camest
+by on Horse-Head Heights?" roared Skallagrim.
+
+For answer, Ospakar seized a spear and hurled it straight at Eric, and
+it had been his death had he not caught it in his hand as it flew. Then
+he cast it back, and that so mightily that it sped right through the
+shield of Ospakar and was the bane of a man who stood beside him.
+
+"A gift for a gift!" laughed Eric. On rushed the Gudruda, but now the
+cable was strained six fathoms from her bow that held together the ships
+of Ospakar and it was too strong for breaking. Eric looked and saw. Then
+he drew Whitefire, and while all men wondered, leaped over the prow of
+the ship and, clasping the golden dragon's head with his arm, set his
+feet upon its claws and waited. On sped the ship and spears flew thick
+and fast about him, but there Brighteyes hung. Now the Gudruda's bow
+caught the great rope and strained it taut and, as it rose beneath her
+weight, Eric smote swift and strong with Whitefire and clove it in two,
+so that the severed ends fell with a splash into the quiet water.
+
+Eric sprang back to deck while stones and spears hissed about him.
+
+"That was well done, lord," said Skallagrim; "now we shall be snugly
+berthed."
+
+"In oars and out grappling-irons," shouted Eric.
+
+Up rose the rowers, and their war-gear rattled as they rose. They drew
+in the long oars, and not before it was time, for now the Gudruda forced
+her way between the two dragons of Ospakar and lay with her bow to their
+sterns. Then with a shout Eric's men cast the irons and soon the ships
+were locked fast and the fight began. The spears flew thick, and on
+either side some got their death before them. Then the men of that
+vessel, named the Raven, which was to larboard of the Gudruda, made
+ready to board. On they came with a rush, and were driven back, though
+hardly, for they were many, and those who stood against them few. Again
+they came, scrambling over the bulwarks, and this time a score of them
+leapt aboard. Eric turned from the fight against the dragon of Ospakar
+and saw it. Then, with Skallagrim, he rushed to meet the boarders as
+they swarmed along the hold, and naught might they withstand the axe and
+sword.
+
+Through and through them swept the mighty pair, now Whitefire flashed,
+and now the great axe fell, and at every stroke a man lay dead
+or wounded. Six of the boarders turned to fly, but just then the
+grappling-iron broke and their ship drifted out with the tide towards
+the open sea, and presently no man of that twenty was left alive.
+
+Now the men of the ship of Ospakar and of the Gudruda pressed each other
+hard. Thrice did Ospakar strive to come aboard and thrice he was pushed
+back. Eric was ever where he was most needed, and with him Skallagrim,
+for these two threw themselves from side to side, and were now here and
+now there, so that it seemed as though there were not one golden helm
+and one black, but rather four on board the Gudruda.
+
+Eric looked and saw that the other ship was drawing round, though
+somewhat slowly, to come alongside of them once more.
+
+"Now we must make an end of Ospakar, else our hands will be overfull,"
+he said, and therewith sprang up upon the bulwarks and after him many
+men. Once they were driven back, but came on again, and now they thrust
+all Ospakar's men before them and passed up his ship on both boards. By
+the mast stood Ospakar and with him Gizur his son, and Eric strove to
+come to him. But many men were between them, and he could not do this.
+
+Presently, while the fight yet went on hotly and men fell fast,
+Brighteyes felt the dragon of Ospakar strike, and, looking, saw that
+they had drifted with the send of the tide on to the rocks of the
+island. There was a great hole in the hull amidships and the water
+rushed in fast.
+
+"Back! men; back!" he cried, and all his folk that were unhurt, ran, and
+leapt on board the Gudruda; but Ospakar and his men sprang into the sea
+and swam for the shore. Then Skallagrim cut loose the grappling-irons
+with his axe, and that not too soon, for, scarcely had they pushed
+clear with great toil when the long warship slipped from the rock and
+foundered, taking many dead and wounded men with her.
+
+Now Ospakar and some of his people stood safe upon the rocks, and Eric
+called to him in mockery, bidding him come aboard the Gudruda.
+
+Ospakar made no answer, but stood gnawing his hand, while the water ran
+from him. Only Gizur his son cursed them aloud.
+
+Eric was greatly minded to follow them, and land and fight them there;
+but he might not do this, because of the rocks and of the other dragon,
+that hung about them, fearing to come on and yet not willing to go back.
+
+"We will have her, at the least," said Eric, and bade the rowers get out
+their oars.
+
+Now, when the men on board the other ship saw the Gudruda drawing on,
+they took to their oars at once and rowed swiftly for the sea, and at
+this a great roar of laughter went down Eric's ship.
+
+"They shall not slip from us so easily," said Eric; "give way, comrades,
+and after them."
+
+But the men were much wearied with fighting, and the decks were all
+cumbered with dead and wounded, so that by the time that the Gudruda had
+put about, and come to the mouth of the waterway, Ospakar's vessel
+had shaken out her sails and caught the wind, that now blew strong off
+shore, and sped away six furlongs or more from Eric's prow.
+
+"Now we shall see how the Gudruda sails," said Eric, and they spread
+their canvas and gave chase.
+
+Then Eric bade men clear the decks of the dead, and tend the wounded. He
+had lost seven men slain outright, and three were wounded, one to death.
+But on board the ship there lay of Ospakar's force twenty and three dead
+men.
+
+When all were cast into the sea, men ate and rested.
+
+"We have not done so badly," said Eric to Skallagrim.
+
+"We shall do better yet," said Skallagrim to Eric; "rather had I seen
+Ospakar's head lying in the scuppers than those of all his carles; for
+he may get more men, but never another head!"
+
+Now the wind freshened till by midnight it blew strongly. The mate Hall
+came to Eric and said:
+
+"The Gudruda dips her nose deep in Ran's cup. Say, Eric, shall we
+shorten sail?"
+
+"Nay," answered Eric, "keep her full and bail. Where yonder Raven flies,
+my Sea-stag must follow," and he pointed to the warship that rode the
+waves before them.
+
+After midnight clouds came up, with rain, and hid the face of the
+night-sun and the ship they sought. The wind blew ever harder, till at
+length, when the rain had passed and the clouds lifted, there was much
+water in the hold and the bailers could hardly stand at their work.
+
+Men murmured, and Hall the mate murmured most of all; but still Eric
+held on, for there, not two furlongs ahead of them, rode the dragon of
+Ospakar. But now, being afraid of the wind and sea, she had lowered
+her sail somewhat, and made as though she would put about and run for
+Iceland.
+
+"That she may not do," called Eric to Skallagrim, "if once she rolls
+side on to those seas Ran has her, for she must fill and sink."
+
+"So they hold, lord," answered Skallagrim; "see, once more she runs!"
+
+"Ay, but we run faster--she is outsailed. Up, men, up: for presently the
+fight begins."
+
+"It is bad to join battle in such a sea," quoth Hall.
+
+"Good or bad," growled Skallagrim, "do thou thy lord's bidding," and he
+half lifted up his axe.
+
+The mate said no more, for he misdoubted him of Skallagrim Lambstail and
+his axe.
+
+Then men made ready for the fray as best they might, and stood, sword in
+hand and drenched with foam, clinging to the bulwarks of the Gudruda as
+she wallowed through the seas.
+
+Eric went aft to the helm and seized it. Now but a length ahead
+Ospakar's ship laboured on beneath her small sail, but the Gudruda
+rushed towards her with all canvas set and at every leap plunged her
+golden dragon beneath the surf and shook the water from her foredeck.
+
+"Make ready the grapnel!" shouted Eric through the storm. Skallagrim
+seized the iron and stood by. Now the Gudruda rushed alongside the
+Raven, and Eric steered so skilfully that there was a fathom space, and
+no more, between the ships.
+
+Skallagrim cast the iron well and truly, so that it hooked and held. On
+sped the Gudruda and the cable tautened--now her stern kissed the bow of
+Ospakar's ship, as though she was towing her, and thus for a space they
+travelled through the seas.
+
+Eric's folk shouted and strove to cast spears; but they did this but
+ill, because of the rocking of the vessel. As for Ospakar's men, they
+clung to their bulwarks and did nothing, for all the heart was out of
+them between fear of Eric and terror of the sea. Eric called to a man to
+hold the helm, and Skallagrim crept aft to where he stood.
+
+"What counsel shall we take now?" said Eric, and as he spoke a sea broke
+over them--for the gale was strong.
+
+"Board them and make an end," answered Skallagrim.
+
+"Rough work; still, we will try it," said Eric, "for we may not lie thus
+for long, and I am loath to leave them."
+
+Then Eric called for men to follow him, and many answered, creeping as
+best they might to where he stood.
+
+"Thou art mad, Eric," said Hall the mate; "cut loose and let us drive,
+else we shall both founder, and that is a poor tale to tell."
+
+Eric took no heed, but, watching his chance, leapt on to the bows of the
+Raven, and after him leapt Skallagrim. Even as he did so, a great sea
+came and swept past and over them, so that half the ship was hid for
+foam. Now, Hall the mate stood near to the grapnel cable, and, fearing
+lest they should sink, out of the cowardice of his heart, he let his
+axe fall upon the chain, and severed it so swiftly that no man saw
+him, except Skallagrim only. Forward sprang the Gudruda, freed from her
+burden, and rushed away before the wind, leaving Eric and Skallagrim
+alone upon the Raven's prow.
+
+"Now we are in an evil plight," said Eric, "the cable has parted!"
+
+"Ay," answered Skallagrim, "and that losel Hall hath parted it! I saw
+his axe fall."
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+HOW ERIC DREAMED A DREAM
+
+Now, when the men of Ospakar, who were gathered on the poop of the
+Raven, saw what had come about, they shouted aloud and made ready to
+slay the pair. But Eric and Skallagrim clambered to the mast and got
+their backs against it, and swiftly made themselves fast with a rope, so
+that they might not fall with the rolling of the ship. Then the people
+of Ospakar came on to cut them down.
+
+But this was no easy task, for they might scarcely stand, and they could
+not shoot with the bow. Moreover, Eric and Skallagrim, being bound
+to the mast, had the use of both hands and were minded to die hard.
+Therefore Ospakar's folks got but one thing by their onslaught, and
+that was death, for three of their number fell beneath the long sweep
+of Whitefire, and one bowed before the axe of Skallagrim. Then they drew
+back and strove to throw spears at these two, but they flew wide because
+of the rolling of the vessel. One spear struck the mast near the head of
+Skallagrim. He drew it out, and, waiting till the ship steadied herself
+in the trough of the sea, hurled it at a knot of Ospakar's thralls, and
+a man got his death from it. After that they threw no more spears.
+
+Thence once more the crew came on with swords and axes, but
+faint-heartedly, and the end of it was that they lost some more men dead
+and wounded and fell back again.
+
+Skallagrim mocked at them with bitter words, and one of them, made mad
+by his scoffing, cast a heavy ballast-stone at him. It fell upon his
+shoulder and numbed him.
+
+"Now I am unmeet for fight, lord," said Skallagrim, "for my right arm is
+dead and I can scarcely hold my axe."
+
+"That is ill, then," said Eric, "for we have little help, except from
+each other, and I, too, am well-nigh spent. Well, we have done a great
+deed and now it is time to rest."
+
+"My left arm is yet whole, lord, and I can make shift for a while with
+it. Cut loose the cord before they bait us to death, and let us rush
+upon these wolves and fall fighting."
+
+"A good counsel," said Eric, "and a quick end; but stay a while: what
+plan have they now?"
+
+Now the men of Ospakar, having little heart left in them for such work
+as this, had taken thought together.
+
+"We have got great hurt, and little honour," said the mate. "There are
+but nineteen of us left alive, and that is scarcely enough to work the
+ship, and it seems that we shall be fewer before Eric Brighteyes and
+Skallagrim Lambstail lie quiet by yonder mast. They are mighty men,
+indeed, and it would be better, methinks, to deal with them by craft,
+rather than by force."
+
+The sailors said that this was a good word, for they were weary of the
+sight of Whitefire as he flamed on high and the sound of the axe of
+Skallagrim as it crashed through helm and byrnie; and as fear crept in
+valour fled out.
+
+"This is my rede, then," said the mate: "that we go to them and give
+them peace, and lay them in bonds, swearing that we will put them ashore
+when we are come back to Iceland. But when we have them fast, as they
+sleep at night, we will creep on them and hurl them into the sea, and
+afterwards we will say that we slew them fighting."
+
+"A shameful deed!" said a man.
+
+"Then go thou up against them," answered the mate. "If we slay them
+not, then shall this tale be told against us throughout Iceland: that a
+ship's company were worsted by two men, and we may not live beneath that
+dishonour."
+
+The man held his peace, and the mate, laying down his arms, crept
+forward alone, towards the mast, just as Eric and Skallagrim were about
+to cut themselves loose and rush on them.
+
+"What wouldest thou?" shouted Eric. "Has it gone so well with you with
+arms that ye are minded to come up against us bearing none?"
+
+"It has gone ill, Eric," said the mate, "for ye twain are too mighty for
+us. We have lost many men, and we shall lose more ere ye are laid low.
+Therefore we make you this offer: that you lay down your weapons and
+suffer yourselves to be bound till such time as we touch land, where we
+will set you ashore, and give you your arms again. Meanwhile, we will
+deal with you in friendly fashion, giving you of the best we have; nor
+will we set foot any suit against you for those of our number whom ye
+two have slain."
+
+"Wherefore then should we be bound?" said Eric.
+
+"For this reason only: that we dare not leave you free within our ship.
+Now choose, and, if ye will, take peace, which we swear by all the Gods
+we will keep towards you, and, if ye will not, then we will bear you
+down with beams and sails and stones, and slay you."
+
+"What thinkest thou, Skallagrim?" said Eric beneath his breath.
+
+"I think that I find little faith in yon carle's face," answered
+Skallagrim. "Still, I am unfit to fight, and thy strength is spent, so
+it seems that we must lie low if we would rise again. They can scarcely
+be so base as to do murder having handselled peace to us."
+
+"I am not so sure of that," said Eric; "still, starving beggars must eat
+bones. Hearken thou: we take the terms, trusting to your honour; and I
+say this: that ye shall get shame and death if ye depart from them to
+harm us."
+
+"Have no fear, lord," said the mate, "we are true men."
+
+"That we shall look to your deeds to learn," said Eric, laying down his
+sword and shield.
+
+Skallagrim did likewise, though with no good grace. Then men came with
+strong cords and bound them fast hand and foot, handling them fearsomely
+as men handle a live bear in a net. Then they led them forward to the
+prow.
+
+As they went Eric looked up. Yonder, twenty furlongs and more away,
+sailed the Gudruda.
+
+"This is good fellowship," said Skallagrim, "thus to leave us in the
+trap."
+
+"Nay," answered Eric. "They cannot put about in such a sea, and
+doubtless also they think us dead. Nevertheless, if ever it comes about
+that Hall and I stand face to face again, there will be need for me to
+think of gentleness."
+
+"I shall think little thereon," growled Skallagrim.
+
+Now they were come to the prow, and there was a half deck under which
+they were set, out of reach of the wind and water. In the deck was a
+stout iron ring, and the men made them fast with ropes to it, so that
+they might move but little, and they set their helms and weapons behind
+them in such fashion that they could not come at them. Then they flung
+cloaks about them, and brought them food and drink, of which they stood
+much in need, and treated them well in every way. But for all this
+Skallagrim trusted them no more.
+
+"We are new-hooked, lord," he said, "and they give us line. Presently
+they will haul us in."
+
+"Evil comes soon enough," answered Eric, "no need to run to greet
+it," and he fell to thinking of Gudruda, and of the day's deeds, till
+presently he dropped asleep, for he was very weary.
+
+
+
+Now it chanced that as Eric slept he dreamed a dream so strong and
+strange that it seemed to live within him. He dreamed that he slept
+there beneath the Raven's deck, and that a rat came and whispered spells
+into his ear. Then he dreamed that Swanhild glided towards him, walking
+on the stormy seas. He saw her afar, and she came swiftly, and ever the
+sea grew smooth before her feet, nor did the wind so much as stir her
+hair. Presently she stood by him in the ship, and, bending over him,
+touched him on the shoulder, saying:
+
+"Awake, Eric Brighteyes! Awake! awake!"
+
+It seemed to him that he awoke and said "What tidings, Swanhild?" and
+that she answered:
+
+"Ill tidings, Eric--so ill that I am come hither from Straumey[*] to
+tell of them--ay, come walking on the seas. Had Gudruda done so much,
+thinkest thou?"
+
+[*] Stroma, the southernmost of the Orkneys.
+
+"Gudruda is no witch," he said in his dream.
+
+"Nay, but I am a witch, and it is well for thee, Eric. Ay, I am a witch.
+Now do I seem to sleep at Atli's side, and lo! here I stand by thine,
+and I must journey back again many a league before another day be
+born--ay, many a league, and all for love of thee, Eric! Hearken, for
+not long may the spell endure. I have seen this by my magic: that these
+men who bound thee come even now to take thee, sleeping, and cast thee
+and thy thrall into the deep, there to drown."
+
+"If it is fated it will befall," he said in his dream.
+
+"Nay, it shall not befall. Put forth all thy might and burst thy bonds.
+Then fetch Whitefire; cut away the bonds of Skallagrim, and give him his
+axe and shield. This done, cover yourselves with your cloaks, and wait
+till ye hear the murderers come. Then rise and rush upon them, the two
+of you, and they shall melt before your might. I have journeyed over the
+great deep to tell thee this, Eric! Had Gudruda done as much, thinkest
+thou?"
+
+And it seemed to him that the wraith of Swanhild kissed him on the brow,
+sighed and vanished, bearing the rat in her bosom.
+
+
+
+Eric awoke suddenly, just as though he had never slept, and looked
+around. He knew by the lowness of the sun that it was far into the
+night, and that he had slept for many hours. They were alone beneath
+the deck, and far aft, beyond the mast, as the vessel rose upon the
+waves--for the sea was still rough, though the wind had fallen--Eric
+saw the mate of the Raven talking earnestly with some men of his crew.
+Skallagrim snored beside him.
+
+"Awake!" Eric said in his ear, "awake and listen!"
+
+He yawned and roused himself. "What now, lord?" he said.
+
+"This," said Eric, and he told him the dream that he had dreamed.
+
+"That was a fey dream," said Skallagrim, "and now we must do as the
+wraith bade thee."
+
+"Easy to say, but hard to do," quoth Eric; "this is a great rope that
+holds us, and a strong."
+
+"Yes, it is great and strong; still, we must burst it."
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim were made fast in this fashion: their hands were
+bound behind them, and their legs were lashed above the feet and above
+the knee. Moreover, a thick cord was fixed about the waist of each, and
+this cord was passed through the iron ring and knotted there. But it
+chanced that beneath the hollows of their knees ran an oaken beam, which
+held the forepart of the dragon together.
+
+"We may try this," said Eric: "to set our feet against the beam and
+strain with all our strength upon the rope; though I think that no two
+men can part it."
+
+"We shall know that presently," said Skallagrim, gathering up his legs.
+
+Then they set their feet against the beam and pulled till it groaned;
+but, though the rope gave somewhat, it would not break. They rested a
+while, then strained again till the sweat burst out upon them and the
+rope cut into their flesh, but still it would not part.
+
+"We have found our match," said Eric.
+
+"That is not altogether proved yet," answered the Baresark. "Many a
+shield is riven at the third stroke."
+
+So once again they set their feet against the beam, and put out all
+their strength.
+
+"The ring bends," gasped Eric. "Now, when the roll of the ship throws
+our weight to leeward, in the name of Thor pull!"
+
+They waited, then put out their might, and lo! though the rope did not
+break, the iron ring burst asunder and they rolled upon the deck.
+
+"Well pulled, truly," said Skallagrim as he struggled to his haunches:
+"I am marked about the middle with rope-twists for many a day to come,
+that I will swear. What next, lord?"
+
+"Whitefire," answered Eric.
+
+Now, their arms were piled a fathom or more from where they sat, and
+right in the prow of the ship. Hither, then, they must crawl upon their
+knees, and this was weary work, for ever as the ship rolled they fell,
+and could in no wise save themselves from hurt. Eric was bleeding at the
+brow, and bloody was the hooked nose of Skallagrim, before they came to
+where Whitefire was. At length they reached the sword, and pushed aside
+the bucklers that were over it with their heads. The great war-blade was
+sheathed, and Eric must needs lie upon his breast and draw the weapon
+somewhat with his teeth.
+
+"This is an ill razor to shave with," he said, rising, for the keen
+blade had cut his chin.
+
+"So some have thought and perchance more shall think," answered
+Skallagrim. "Now set the rope on the edge and rub."
+
+This they did, and presently the thick cord that bound them was in two.
+Then Eric knelt upon the deck and pressed the bonds that bound his legs
+upon the blade, and after him Skallagrim. They were free now, except for
+their hands, and it was no easy thing to cut away the bonds upon their
+wrists. It was done thus: Skallagrim sat upon the deck, and Eric pushed
+the sword between his fingers with his feet. Then the Baresark rose,
+holding the sword, and Eric, turning back to back with him, fretted the
+cords upon his wrists against the blade. Twice he cut himself, but the
+third time the cord parted and he was free. He stretched his arms,
+for they were stiff; then took Whitefire and cut away the bonds of
+Skallagrim.
+
+"How goes it with that hurt of thine?" he asked.
+
+"Better than I had thought," answered Skallagrim; "the soreness has come
+out with the bruise."
+
+"That is good news," said Eric, "for methinks, unless Swanhild walked
+the seas for nothing, thou wilt soon need thine arms."
+
+"They have never failed me yet," said Skallagrim and took his axe and
+shield. "What counsel now?"
+
+"This, Skallagrim: that we lie down as we were, and put the cloaks about
+us as though we were yet in bonds. Then, if these knaves come, we can
+take them unawares as they think to take us."
+
+So they went again to where they had been bound, and lay down upon their
+shields and weapons, drawing cloaks over them. Scarcely had they done
+this and rested a while, when they saw the mate and all the crew coming
+along both boards towards them. They bore no weapons in their hands.
+
+"None too soon did Swanhild walk," said Eric; "now we shall learn their
+purpose. Be thou ready to leap forth when I give the word."
+
+"Ay, lord," answered Skallagrim as he worked his stiff arms to and fro.
+"In such matters few have thought me backward."
+
+"What news, friends?" cried Eric as the men drew near.
+
+"Bad news for thee, Brighteyes," answered the mate, "and that Baresark
+thrall of thine, for we must loose your bands."
+
+"That is good news, then," said Eric, "for our limbs are numb and dead
+because of the nipping of the cords. Is land in sight?"
+
+"Nay, nor will be for thee, Eric."
+
+"How now, friend? how now? Sure, having handselled peace to us, ye mean
+no harm towards two unarmed men?"
+
+"We swore to do you no harm, nor will we, Eric; this only will we do:
+deliver you, bound, to Ran, and leave her to deal with you as she may."
+
+"Bethink you, sirs," said Eric: "this is a cruel deed and most unmanly.
+We yielded to you in faith--will ye break your troth?"
+
+"War has no troth," he answered, "ye are too great to let slip between
+our fingers. Shall it be said of us that two men overcame us all?"
+
+"Mayhap!" murmured Skallagrim beneath his breath.
+
+"Oh, sirs, I beseech you," said Eric; "I am young, and there is a maid
+who waits me out in Iceland, and it is hard to die," and he made as
+though he wept, while Skallagrim laughed within his sleeve, for it was
+strange to see Eric feigning fear.
+
+But the men mocked aloud.
+
+"This is the great man," they cried, "this is that Eric of whose deeds
+folk sing! Look! he weeps like a child when he sees the water. Drag him
+forth and away with him into the sea!"
+
+"Little need for that," cried Eric, and lo! the cloaks about him and
+Skallagrim flew aside. Out they came with a roar; they came out as
+a she-bear from her cave, and high above Brighteyes' golden curls
+Whitefire shone in the pale light, and nigh to it shone the axe of
+Skallagrim. Whitefire flared aloft, then down he fell and sought the
+false heart of the mate. The great axe of Skallagrim shone and was lost
+in the breast of the carle who stood before him.
+
+"Trolls!" shrieked one. "Here are trolls!" and turned to fly. But again
+Whitefire was up and that man flew not far--one pace, and no more. Then
+they fled screaming and after them came axe and sword. They fled, they
+fell, they leaped into the sea, till none were left to fall and leap,
+for they had no time or heart to find or draw their weapons, and
+presently Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail stood alone upon the
+deck--alone with the dead.
+
+"Swanhild is a wise witch," gasped Eric, "and, whatever ill she has
+done, I will remember this to her honour."
+
+"Little good comes of witchcraft," answered Skallagrim, wiping his brow:
+"to-day it works for our hands, to-morrow it shall work against them."
+
+"To the helm," said Eric; "the ship yaws and comes side on to the seas."
+
+Skallagrim sprang to the tiller and put his strength on it, and but just
+in time, for one big sea came aboard them and left much water in the
+hold.
+
+"We owe this to thy Baresark ways," said Eric. "Hadst thou not slain the
+steersman we had not filled with water."
+
+"True, lord," answered Skallagrim; "but when once my axe is aloft, it
+seems to fly of itself, till nothing is left before it. What course
+now?"
+
+"The same on which the Gudruda was laid. Perhaps, if we may endure till
+we come to the Farey Isles,[*] we shall find her in harbour there."
+
+[*] The Faroes.
+
+"There is not much chance of that," said Skallagrim; "still, the wind is
+fair, and we fly fast before it."
+
+Then they lashed the tiller and set to bailing. They bailed long, and it
+was heavy work, but they rid the ship of much water. After that they ate
+food, for it was now morning, and it came on to blow yet more strongly.
+
+For three days and three nights it blew thus, and the Raven sped along
+before the gale. All this time, turn and turn about, Eric and Skallagrim
+stood at the helm and tended the sails. They had little time to eat, and
+none to sleep. They were so hard pressed also, and must harbour their
+strength so closely, that the bodies of the dead men yet cumbered the
+hold. Thus they grew very weary and like to fall from faintness, but
+still they held the Raven on her course. In the beginning of the fourth
+night a great sea struck the good ship so that she quivered from stem to
+stern.
+
+"Methinks I hear water bubbling up," said Skallagrim in a hoarse voice.
+
+Eric climbed down into the well and lifted the bottom planks, and
+there beneath them was a leak through which the water spouted in a thin
+stream. He stopped up the rent as best he might with garments from the
+dead men, and placed ballast stones upon them, then clambered on to the
+deck again.
+
+"Our hours are short now," he said, "the water rushes in apace."
+
+"Well, it is time to rest," said Skallagrim; "but see, lord!" and he
+pointed ahead. "What land is that?"
+
+"It must be the Fareys," answered Eric; "now, if we can but keep afloat
+for three hours more, we may yet die ashore."
+
+After this the wind began to fall, but still there was enough to drive
+the Raven on swiftly.
+
+And ever the water gained in the hold.
+
+Now they were not far from land, for ahead of them the bleak hills
+towered up, shining in the faint midnight light, and between the hills
+was a cleft that seemed to be a fjord. Another hour passed, and they
+were no more than ten furlongs from the mouth of the fjord, when
+suddenly the wind fell, and they were in calm water under shelter of the
+land. They went amidships and looked. The hold was half full of water,
+and in it floated the bodies of Ospakar's men.
+
+"She has not long to live," said Skallagrim, "but we may still be saved
+if the boat is not broken."
+
+Now aft, near the tiller, a small boat was bound on the half deck of the
+Raven. They went to it and looked; it was whole, with oars lashed in
+it, but half full of water, which they must bail out. This they did as
+swiftly as they might; then they cut the little boat loose, and, having
+made it fast with a rope, lifted it over the side-rail and let it fall
+into the sea, and that was no great way, for the Raven had sunk deep.
+It fell on an even keel, and Eric let himself down the rope into it and
+called to Skallagrim to follow.
+
+"Bide a while, lord," he answered; "there is that which I would bring
+with me."
+
+For a space Eric waited and then called aloud, "Swift! thou fool; swift!
+the ship sinks!"
+
+And as he called, Skallagrim came, and his arms were full of swords and
+byrnies, and red rings of gold that he had found time to gather from the
+dead and out of the cabin.
+
+"Throw all aside and come," said Eric, laying on to the oars, for the
+Raven wallowed before she sank.
+
+"There is yet time, lord, and the gear is good," answered Skallagrim,
+and one by one he threw pieces down into the boat. As the last fell the
+Raven sank to her bulwarks. Then Skallagrim stepped from the sinking
+deck into the boat, and cut the cord, not too soon.
+
+Eric gave way with all his strength, and, as he pulled, when he was no
+more than five fathoms from her, the Raven vanished with a huge swirl.
+
+"Hold still," he said, "or we shall follow."
+
+Round spun the boat in the eddy, she was sucked down till the water
+trickled over her gunwale, and for a moment they knew not if they were
+lost or saved. Eric held his breath and watched, then slowly the boat
+lifted her nose, and they were safe from the whirlpool of the lost
+dragon.
+
+"Greed is many a man's bane," said Eric, "and it was nearly thine and
+mine, Skallagrim."
+
+"I had no heart to leave the good gear," he answered; "and thou seest,
+lord, it is safe and we with it."
+
+Then they got the boat's head round slowly into the mouth of the fjord,
+pausing now and again to rest, for their strength was spent. For two
+hours they rowed down a gulf, as it were, and on either side of them
+were barren hills. At length the water-way opened out into a great
+basin, and there, on the further side of the basin, they saw green
+slopes running down to the water's edge, strewn with white stock-fish
+set to dry in the wind and sun, and above the slopes a large hall, and
+about it booths. Moreover, they saw a long dragon of war at anchor near
+the shore. For a while they rowed on, easing now and again. Then Eric
+spoke to Skallagrim.
+
+"What thinkest thou of yonder ship, Lambstail?"
+
+"I think this, lord: that she is fashioned wondrous like to the
+Gudruda."
+
+"That is in my mind also," said Eric, "and our fortune is good if it is
+she."
+
+They rowed on again, and presently a ray from the sun came over the
+hills--for now it was three hours past midnight--and, the ship having
+swung a little with the tide, lit upon her prow, and lo! there gleamed
+the golden dragon of the Gudruda.
+
+"This is a strange thing," said Eric.
+
+"Ay, lord, a strange and a merry, for now I shall talk with Hall the
+mate," and the Baresark smiled grimly.
+
+"Thou shalt do no hurt to Hall," said Eric. "I am lord here, and I must
+judge."
+
+"Thy will is my will," said Skallagrim; "but if my will were thine, he
+would hang on the mast till sea-birds nested amidst his bones."
+
+Now they were close to the ship, but they could see no man. Skallagrim
+would have called aloud, but Eric bade him hold his peace.
+
+"Either they are dead, and thy calling cannot wake them, or perchance
+they sleep and will wake of themselves. We will row under the stern,
+and, having made fast, climb aboard and see with our own eyes."
+
+This, then, they did as silently as might be, and saw that the Gudruda
+had not been handled gently by the winds and waves, for her shield rail
+was washed away. This they found also, that all men lay deep in sleep.
+Now, amidships a fire still burned, and by it was food. They came there
+and ate of the food, of which they had great need. Then they took two
+cloaks that lay on the deck, and, throwing them about them, warmed
+themselves over the fire: for they were cold and wet, ay, and utterly
+outworn.
+
+As they sat thus warming themselves, a man of the crew awoke and saw
+them, and being amazed, at once called to his fellows, saying that two
+giants were aboard, warming themselves at the fire. Now men sprang up,
+and, seizing their weapons, ran towards them, and among them was Hall
+the mate.
+
+Then suddenly Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail threw aside the
+cloaks and stood up. They were gaunt and grim to see. Their cheeks were
+hollow and their eyes stared wide with want of sleep. Thick was their
+harness with brine, and open wounds gaped upon their faces and their
+hands. Men saw and fell back in fear, for they held them to be wizards
+risen from the sea in the shapes of Eric and the Baresark.
+
+Then Eric sang this song:
+
+ "Swift and sure across the Swan's Bath
+ Sped Sea-stag on Raven's track,
+ Heav'd Ran's breast in raging billows,
+ Stream'd gale-banners through the sky!
+ Yet did Eric the war-eager
+ Leap with Baresark-mate aboard,
+ Fierce their onset on the foemen!
+ Wherefore brake the grapnel-chain?"
+
+Hall heard and slunk back, for now he saw that these were indeed Eric
+and Skallagrim come up alive from the sea, and that they knew his
+baseness.
+
+Eric looked at him and sang again:
+
+ "Swift away sped ship Gudruda,
+ Left her lord in foeman's ring;
+ Brighteyes back to back with Baresark
+ Held his head 'gainst mighty odds.
+ Down amidst the ballast tumbling,
+ Ospakar's shield-carles were rolled.
+ Holy peace at length they handselled,
+ Eric must in bonds be laid!
+
+ "Came the Grey Rat, came the Earl's wife,
+ Came the witch-word from afar;
+ Cag'd wolves roused them, and with struggling
+ Tore their fetter from its hold.
+ Now they watch upon their weapons;
+ Now they weep and pray for life;
+ Now they leap forth like a torrent--
+ Swept away in foeman's strength!
+
+ "Then alone upon the Raven
+ Three long days they steer and sail,
+ Till the waters, welling upwards,
+ Wash dead men about their feet.
+ Fails the gale and sinks the dragon,
+ Barely may they win the boat:
+ Safe they stand on ship Gudruda--
+ Say, who cut the grapnel-chain?"
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+HOW ERIC DWELT IN LONDON TOWN
+
+Men stood astonished, but Hall the mate slunk back.
+
+"Hold, comrade," said Eric, "I have something to say that songs cannot
+carry. Hearken, my shield-mates: we swore to be true to each other,
+even to death: is it not so? What then shall be said of that man who cut
+loose the Gudruda and left us two to die at the foeman's hand?"
+
+"Who was the man?" asked a voice.
+
+"That man was Hall of Lithdale," said Eric.
+
+"It is false!" said Hall, gathering up his courage; "the cable parted
+beneath the straining of the ship, and afterwards we could not put about
+because of the great sea."
+
+"Thou art false!" roared Skallagrim. "With my eyes I saw thee let thine
+axe fall upon the cable. Liar art thou and dastard! Thou art jealous
+also of Brighteyes thy lord, and this was in thy mind: to let him die
+upon the Raven and then to bind his shoes upon thy cowardly feet. Though
+none else saw, I saw; and I say this: that if I may have my will, I will
+string thee, living, to the prow in that same cable till gulls tear out
+thy fox-heart!"
+
+Now Hall grew very white and his knees trembled beneath him. "It is
+true," he said, "that I cut the chain, but not from any thought of evil.
+Had I not cut it the vessel must have sunk and all been lost."
+
+"Did we not swear, Hall," said Eric sternly, "together to fight and
+together to fall--together to fare and, if need be, together to cease
+from faring, and dost thou read the oath thus? Say, mates, what
+reward shall be paid to this man for his good fellowship to us and his
+tenderness for your lives?"
+
+As with one voice the men answered "_Death!_"
+
+"Thou hearest, Hall?" said Eric. "Yet I would deal more gently with one
+to whom I swore fellowship so lately. Get thee gone from our company,
+and let us see thy cur's face no more. Get thee gone, I say, before I
+repent of my mercy."
+
+Then amidst a loud hooting, Hall took his weapons and without a word
+slunk into the boat of the Raven that lay astern, and rowed ashore; nor
+did Eric see his face for many months.
+
+"Thou hast done foolishly, lord, to let that weasel go," said
+Skallagrim, "for he will live to nip thy hand."
+
+"For good or evil, he is gone," said Eric, "and now I am worn out and
+desire to sleep."
+
+
+
+After this Eric and Skallagrim rested three full days, and they were so
+weary that they were awake for little of this time. But on the third day
+they rose up, strong and well, except for their hurts and soreness. Then
+they told the men of that which had come to pass, and all wondered at
+their might and hardihood. To them indeed Eric seemed as a God, for few
+such deeds as his had been told of since the God-kind were on earth.
+
+But Brighteyes thought little of his deeds, and much of Gudruda. At
+times also he thought of Swanhild, and of that witch-dream she sent him:
+for it was wonderful to him that she should have saved him thus from
+Ran's net.
+
+Eric was heartily welcomed by the Earl of the Farey Isles, for, when he
+heard his deeds, he made a feast in his honour, and set him in the high
+seat. It was a great feast, but Skallagrim became drunk at it and ran
+down the chamber, axe aloft, roaring for Hall of Lithdale.
+
+This angered Eric much and he would scarcely speak to Skallagrim for
+many days, though the great Baresark slunk about after him like his
+shadow, or a whipped hound at its master's heel, and at length humbled
+his pride so far as to ask pardon for his fault.
+
+"I grant it for thy deeds' sake," said Eric shortly; "but this is upon
+my mind: that thou wilt err thus again, and it shall be my cause of
+death--ay, and that of many more."
+
+"First may my bones be white," said Skallagrim.
+
+"They shall be white thereafter," answered Eric.
+
+At Fareys Eric shipped twelve good men and true, to take the seats of
+those who had been slain by Ospakar's folk. Afterwards, when the wounded
+were well of their hurts (except one man who died), and the Gudruda was
+made fit to take the sea again, Brighteyes bade farewell to the Earl of
+those Isles, who gave him a good cloak and a gold ring at parting, and
+sailed away.
+
+
+
+Now it were too long to tell of all the deeds that Eric and his men
+did. Never, so scalds sing, was there a viking like him for strength
+and skill and hardihood, and, in those days, no such war-dragon as the
+Gudruda had been known upon the sea. Wherever Eric joined battle, and
+that was in many places, he conquered, for none prevailed against him,
+till at last foes would fly before the terror of his name, and earls and
+kings would send from far craving the aid of his hands. Withal he was
+the best and gentlest of men. It is said of Eric that in all his days he
+did no base deed, nor hurt the weak, nor refused peace to him who prayed
+it, nor lifted sword against prisoner or wounded foe. From traders
+he would take a toll of their merchandise only and let them go, and
+whatever gains he won he would share equally, asking no larger part than
+the meanest of his band. All men loved Eric, and even his foes gave him
+honour and spoke well of him. Now that Hall of Lithdale was gone, there
+was no man among his mates who would not have passed to death for him,
+for they held him dearer than their lives. Women, too, loved him much;
+but his heart was set upon Gudruda, and he seldom turned to look on
+them.
+
+The first summer of his outlawry Eric warred along the coast of Ireland,
+but in the winter he came to Dublin, and for a while served in the
+body-guard of the king of that town, who held him in honour, and would
+have had him stay there. But Eric would not bide there, and next spring,
+the Gudruda being ready for sea, he sailed for the shores of England.
+There he gave battle to two vikings' ships of war, and took them after
+a hard fight. It was in this fight that Skallagrim Lambstail was wounded
+almost to death. For when, having taken one ship, Eric boarded the other
+with but few men, he was driven back and fell over a beam, and would
+have been slain, had not Skallagrim thrown himself across his body,
+taking on his own back that blow of a battle-axe which was aimed at
+Eric's head. This was a great wound, for the axe shore through the steel
+of the byrnie and sank into the flesh. But when Eric's men saw their
+lord down, and Skallagrim, as they deemed, dead athwart him, they made
+so fierce a rush that the foemen fell before them like leaves before
+a winter gale, and the end of it was that the vikings prayed peace of
+Eric. Skallagrim lay sick for many days, but he was hard to kill, and
+Eric nursed him back to life. After this these two loved each other as
+brother loves twin brother, and they could scarcely bear to be apart.
+But other people did not love Skallagrim, nor he them.
+
+Eric sailed on up the Thames to London, bringing the viking ships with
+him, and he delivered their captains bound to Edmund, Edward's son,
+the king who was called Edmund the Magnificent. These captains the King
+hung, for they had wrought damage to his ships.
+
+Eric found much favour with the King, and, indeed, his fame had
+gone before him. So when he came into the court, bravely clad, with
+Skallagrim at his back, who was now almost recovered of his wound, the
+King called out to him to draw near, saying that he desired to look on
+the bravest viking and most beauteous man who sailed the seas, and on
+that fierce Baresark whom men called "Eric's Death-shadow."
+
+So Eric came forward up the long hall that was adorned with things more
+splendid than ever his eyes had seen, and stood before the King. With
+him came Skallagrim, driving the two captive viking chiefs before him
+with his axe, as a flesher drives lambs. Now, during these many months
+Brighteyes had grown yet more great in girth and glorious to look on
+than he was before. Moreover, his hair was now so long that it flowed
+like a flood of gold down towards his girdle, for since Gudruda trimmed
+it no shears had come near his head, and his locks grew fast as a
+woman's. The King looked at him and was astonished.
+
+"Of a truth," he said, "men have not lied about thee, Icelander, nor
+concerning that great wolf-hound of thine," and he pointed at Skallagrim
+with his sword of state. "Never saw I such a man;" and he bade all the
+mightiest men of his body-guard stand forward that he might measure them
+against Eric. But Brighteyes was an inch taller than the tallest, and
+measured half a span more round the chest than the biggest.
+
+"What wouldest thou of me, Icelander?" asked the King.
+
+"This, lord," said Eric: "to serve thee a while, and all my men with
+me."
+
+"That is an offer that few would turn from," answered the King. "Thou
+shalt go into my body-guard, and, if I have my will, thou shalt be near
+me in battle, and thy wolf-dog also."
+
+Eric said that he asked no better, and thereafter he went up with Edmund
+the King to make war on the Danes of Mercia, and he and Skallagrim did
+great deeds before the eyes of the Englishmen.
+
+That winter Eric and his company came back to London, and abode with
+the King in much state and honour. Now, there was a certain lady of
+the court named Elfrida. She was both fair and wealthy, the sweetest of
+women, and of royal blood by her mother's side. So soon as her eyes fell
+on Eric she loved him, and no one thing did she desire more than to
+be his wife. But Brighteyes kept aloof from her, for he loved Gudruda
+alone; and so the winter wore away, and in the spring he went away
+warring, nor did he come back till autumn was at hand.
+
+The Lady Elfrida sat at a window when Eric rode through London Town
+in the King's following, and as he passed she threw him a wreath of
+flowers. The King saw it and laughed.
+
+"My cold kinswoman seems to melt before those bright eyes of thine,
+Icelander," he said, "as my foes melt before Whitefire's flame. Well, I
+could wish her a worse mate," and he looked on him strangely.
+
+Eric bowed, but made no answer.
+
+That night, as they sat at meat in the palace, the Lady Elfrida, being
+bidden in jest of Edmund the King to fill the cup of the bravest, passed
+down the board, and, before all men, poured wine into Eric's cup, and,
+as she did so, welcomed him back with short sweet words.
+
+Eric grew red as dawn, and thanked her graciously; but after the feast
+he spoke with Skallagrim, asking him of the Gudruda, and when she could
+be ready to take the sea.
+
+"In ten days, lord," said Skallagrim; "but stay we not here with the
+King this winter? It is late to sail."
+
+"Nay," said Eric, "we bide not here. I would winter this year in Fareys,
+for they are the nighest place to Iceland that I may reach. Next summer
+my three years of outlawry are over, and I would fare back homewards."
+
+"Now, I see the shadow of a woman's hand," said Skallagrim. "It is very
+late to face the northern seas, and we may sail to Iceland from London
+in the spring."
+
+"It is my will that we should sail," answered Eric.
+
+"Past Orkneys runs the road to Fareys," said Skallagrim, "and in Orkneys
+sits a hawk to whom the Lady Elfrida is but a dove. In faring from ill
+we may hap on worse."
+
+"It is my will that we sail," said Eric stubbornly.
+
+"As thou wilt, and as the King wills," answered Skallagrim.
+
+On the morrow Eric went in before the King, and craved a boon.
+
+"There is little that thou canst ask, Brighteyes," said the King, "that
+I will not give thee, for, by my troth, I hold thee dear."
+
+"I am come back to seek no great thing, lord," answered Eric, "but this
+only: leave to bid thee farewell. I would wend homeward."
+
+"Say, Eric," said the King, "have I not dealt well with thee?"
+
+"Well, and overwell, lord."
+
+"Why, then, wouldst thou leave me? I have this in my mind--to bring thee
+to great honour. See, now, there is a fair lady in this court, and in
+her veins runs blood that even an Iceland viking might be proud to mate
+with. She has great lands, and, mayhap, she shall have more. Canst thou
+not find a home on them, thinkest thou, Brighteyes?"
+
+"In Iceland only I am at home, lord," said Eric.
+
+Then the King was wroth, and bade him begone when it pleased him, and
+Eric bowed before him and went out.
+
+Two days afterwards, while Eric was walking in the Palace gardens he met
+the Lady Elfrida face to face. She held white flowers in her hand, and
+she was fair to see and pale as the flowers she bore.
+
+He greeted her, and, after a while, she spoke to him in a gentle voice:
+"They say that thou goest from England, Brighteyes?" she said.
+
+"Yes, lady; I go," he answered.
+
+She looked on him once and twice and then burst out weeping. "Why goest
+thou hence to that cold land of thine?" she sobbed--"that hateful land
+of snow and ice! Is not England good enough for thee?"
+
+"I am at home there, lady, and there my mother waits me."
+
+"'There thy mother waits thee,' Eric?--say, does a maid called Gudruda
+the Fair wait thee there also?"
+
+"There is such a maid in Iceland," said Eric.
+
+"Yes; I know it--I know it all," she answered, drying her tears, and
+of a sudden growing cold and proud; "Eric, thou art betrothed to this
+Gudruda; and, for thy welfare, somewhat overfaithful to thy troth. For
+hearken, Eric Brighteyes. I know this: that little luck shall come
+to thee from the maid Gudruda. It would become me ill to say more;
+nevertheless, this is true--that here, in England, good fortune waits
+thy hand, and there in Iceland such fortune as men mete to their foes.
+Knowest thou this?"
+
+Eric looked at her and answered: "Lady," he said, "men are not born of
+their own will, they live and do little that they will, they do and go,
+perchance, whither they would not. Yet it may happen to a man that one
+meets him whose hand he fain would hold, if it be but for an hour's
+travel over icy ways; and it is better to hold that hand for this short
+hour than to wend his life through at a stranger's side."
+
+"Perhaps there is wisdom in thy folly," said the Lady Elfrida. "Still, I
+tell thee this: that no good luck waits thee there in Iceland."
+
+"It well may be," said Eric: "my days have been stormy, and the gale is
+still brewing. But it is a poor heart that fears the storm. Better to
+sink; for, coward or hero, all must sink at last."
+
+"Say, Eric," said the lady, "if that hand thou dost desire to hold is
+lost to thee, what then?"
+
+"If that hand is cold in death, then henceforth I wend my ways alone."
+
+"And if it be held of another hand than thine?"
+
+"Then I will journey back to England, lady, and here in this fair garden
+I may crave speech of thee again."
+
+They looked one on another. "Fare thee well, Eric!" said the Lady
+Elfrida. "Here in this garden we may talk again; and, if we talk no
+more--why, fare thee well! Days come and go; the swallow takes flight
+at winter, and lo! at spring it twitters round the eaves. And if it come
+not again, then farewell to that swallow. The world is a great house,
+Eric, and there is room for many swallows. But alas! for her who is left
+desolate--alas, alas!" And she turned and went.
+
+It is told of this lady Elfrida that she became very wealthy and was
+much honoured for her gentleness and wisdom, and that, when she was old,
+she built a great church and named it Ericskirk. It is also told that,
+though many sought her in marriage, she wedded none.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+HOW SWANHILD WALKED THE SEAS
+
+Within two days afterwards, the Gudruda being bound for sea, Eric went
+up to bid farewell to the King. But Edmund was so angry with him because
+of his going that he would not see him. Thereon Eric took horse and rode
+down sadly from the Palace to the river-bank where the Gudruda lay. But
+when he was about to give the word to get out the oars, the King himself
+rode up, and with him men bearing costly gifts. Eric went ashore to
+speak with him.
+
+"I am angry with thee, Brighteyes," said Edmund, "yet it is not in my
+heart to let thee go without words and gifts of farewell. This only I
+ask of thee now, that, if things go not well with thee there, out in
+Iceland, thou wilt come back to me."
+
+"I will--that I promise thee, King," said Eric, "for I shall never find
+a better lord."
+
+"Nor I a braver servant," said the King. Then he gave him the gifts and
+kissed him before all men. To Skallagrim also he gave a good byrnie of
+Welsh steel coloured black.
+
+Then Eric went aboard again and dropped down the river with the tide.
+
+For five days all went well with them, the sea being calm and the winds
+light and favourable. But on the fifth night, as they sailed slowly
+along the coasts of East Anglia over against Yarmouth sands, the moon
+rose red and ringed and the sea fell dead calm.
+
+"Yonder hangs a storm-lamp, lord," said Skallagrim, pointing to the
+angry moon. "We shall soon be bailing, for the autumn gales draw near."
+
+"Wait till they come, then speak," said Eric. "Thou croakest ever like a
+raven."
+
+"And ravens croak before foul weather," answered Skallagrim, and just as
+he spoke a sudden gust of wind came up from the south-east and laid the
+Gudruda over. After this it came on to blow, and so fiercely that
+for whole days and nights their clothes were scarcely dry. They ran
+northwards before the storm and still northward, sighting no land and
+seeing no stars. And ever as they scudded on the gale grew fiercer, till
+at length the men were worn out with bailing and starved with wet and
+cold. Three of their number also were washed away by the seas, and all
+were in sorry plight.
+
+It was the fourth night of the gale. Eric stood at the helm, and by
+him Skallagrim. They were alone, for their comrades were spent and lay
+beneath decks, waiting for death. The ship was half full of water, but
+they had no more strength to bail. Eric seemed grim and gaunt in the
+white light of the moon, and his long hair streamed about him wildly.
+Grimmer yet was Skallagrim as he clung to the shield-rail and stared
+across the deep.
+
+"She rolls heavily, lord," he shouted, "and the water gains fast."
+
+"Can the men bail no more?" asked Eric.
+
+"Nay, they are outworn and wait for death."
+
+"They need not wait long," said Eric. "What do they say of me?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+Then Eric groaned aloud. "It was my stubbornness that brought us to this
+pass," he said; "I care little for myself, but it is ill that all should
+die for one man's folly."
+
+"Grieve not, lord," answered Skallagrim, "that is the world's way, and
+there are worse things than to drown. Listen! methinks I hear the roar
+of breakers yonder," and he pointed to the left.
+
+"Breakers they surely are," said Eric. "Now the end is near. But see, is
+not that land looming up on the right, or is it cloud?"
+
+"It is land," said Skallagrim, "and I am sure of this, that we run into
+a firth. Look, the seas boil like a hot spring. Hold on thy course,
+lord, perchance we may yet steer between rocks and land. Already the
+wind falls and the current lessens the seas."
+
+"Ay," said Eric, "already the fog and rain come up," and he pointed
+ahead where dense clouds gathered in the shape of a giant, whose head
+reached to the skies and moved towards them, hiding the moon.
+
+Skallagrim looked, then spoke: "Now here, it seems, is witchwork. Say,
+lord, hast thou ever seen mist travel against wind as it travels now?"
+
+"Never before," said Eric, and as he spoke the light of the moon went
+out.
+
+
+
+Swanhild, Atli's wife, sat in beauty in her bower on Straumey Isle and
+looked with wide eyes towards the sea. It was midnight. None stirred in
+Atli's hall, but still Swanhild looked out towards the sea.
+
+Now she turned and spoke into the darkness, for there was no light in
+the bower save the light of her great eyes.
+
+"Art thou there?" she said. "I have summoned thee thrice in the words
+thou knowest. Say, Toad, art there?"
+
+"Ay, Swanhild the Fatherless! Swanhild, Groa's daughter! Witch-mother's
+witch-child! I am here. What is thy will with me?" piped a thin voice
+like the voice of a dying babe.
+
+Swanhild shuddered a little and her eyes grew brighter--as bright as the
+eyes of a cat.
+
+"This first," she said: "that thou show thyself. Hideous as thou art, I
+had rather see thee, than speak with thee seeing thee not."
+
+"Mock not my form, lady," answered the thin voice, "for it is as thou
+dost fashion it in thy thought. To the good I am fair as day; to the
+evil, foul as their heart. _Toad_ thou didst call me: look, now I come
+as a toad!"
+
+Swanhild looked, and behold! a ring of the darkness grew white with
+light, and in it crouched a thing hideous to see. It was shaped as a
+great spotted toad, and on it was set a hag's face, with white locks
+hanging down on either side. Its eyes were blood-red and sunken, black
+were its fangs, and its skin was dead yellow. It grinned horribly as
+Swanhild shrank from it, then spoke again:
+
+"_Grey Wolf_ thou didst call me once, Swanhild, when thou wouldst have
+thrust Gudruda down Goldfoss gulf, and as a grey wolf I came, and gave
+thee counsel that thou tookest but ill. _Rat_ didst thou call me once,
+when thou wouldst save Brighteyes from the carles of Ospakar, and as a
+rat I came and in thy shape I walked the seas. _Toad_ thou callest me
+now, and as a toad I creep about thy feet. Name thy will, Swanhild,
+and I will name my price. But be swift, for there are other fair ladies
+whose wish I must do ere dawn."
+
+"Thou art hideous to look on!" said Swanhild, placing her hand before
+her eyes.
+
+"Say not so, lady; say not so. Look at this face of mine. Knowest thou
+it not? It is thy mother's--dead Groa lent it me. I took it from where
+she lies; and my toad's skin I drew from thy spotted heart, Swanhild,
+and more hideous than I am shalt thou be in a day to come, as once I was
+more fair than thou art to-day."
+
+Swanhild opened her lips to shriek, but no sound came.
+
+"Troll," she whispered, "mock me not with lies, but hearken to my
+bidding: where sails Eric now?"
+
+"Look out into the night, lady, and thou shalt see."
+
+Swanhild looked, and the ways of the darkness opened before her
+witch-sight. There at the mouth of Pentland Firth the Gudruda laboured
+heavily in the great seas, and by the tiller stood Eric, and with him
+Skallagrim.
+
+"Seest thou thy love?" asked the Familiar.
+
+"Yea," she answered, "full clearly; he is worn with wind and sea, but
+more glorious than aforetime, and his hair is long. Say, what shall
+befall him if thou aidest not?"
+
+"This, that he shall safely pass the Firth, for the gale falls, and come
+safely to Fareys, and from Fareys isles to Gudruda's arms."
+
+"And what canst thou do, Goblin?"
+
+"This: I can lure Eric's ship to wreck, and give his comrades, all
+save Skallagrim, to Ran's net, and bring him to thy arms, Swanhild,
+witch-mother's witch-child!"
+
+She hearkened. Her breast heaved and her eyes flashed.
+
+"And thy price, Toad?"
+
+"_Thou_ art the price, lady," piped the goblin. "Thou shalt give thyself
+to me when thy day is done, and merrily will we sisters dwell in Hela's
+halls, and merrily for ever will we fare about the earth o' nights,
+doing such tasks as this task of thine, Swanhild, and working wicked woe
+till the last woe is worked on us. Art thou content?"
+
+Swanhild thought. Twice her breath went from her lips in great sighs.
+Then she stood, pale and silent.
+
+"Safely shall he sail the Firth," piped the thin voice. "Safely shall he
+sit in Fareys. Safely shall he lie in white Gudruda's arms--_hee! hee!_
+Think of it, lady!"
+
+Then Swanhild shook like a birth-tree in the gale, and her face grew
+ashen.
+
+"I am content," she said.
+
+"_Hee! hee!_ Brave lady! She is content! Ah, we sisters shall be merry.
+Hearken: if I aid thee thus I may do no more. Thrice has the night-owl
+come at thy call--now it must wing away. Yet things will be as I have
+said; thine own wisdom shall guide the rest. Ere morn Brighteyes shall
+stand in Atli's hall, ere spring he will be thy love, and ere autumn
+Gudruda shall sit on the high seat in the hall of Middalhof the bride of
+Ospakar. Draw nigh, give me thine arm, sister, that blood may seal our
+bargain."
+
+Swanhild drew near the toad, and, shuddering, stretched out her arm,
+and then and there the red blood ran, and there they sealed their
+sisterhood. And as the nameless deed was wrought, it seemed to Swanhild
+as though fire shot through her veins, and fire surged before her eyes,
+and in the fire a shape passed up weeping.
+
+"It is done, Blood-sister," piped the voice; "now I must away in thy
+form to be about thy tasks. Seat thee here before me--so. Now lay thy
+brow upon my brow--fear not, it was thy mother's--life on death! curling
+locks on corpse hair! See, so we change--we change. Now thou art the
+Death-toad and I am Swanhild, Atli's wife, who shall be Eric's love."
+
+Then Swanhild knew that her beauty had entered into the foulness of the
+toad, and the foulness of the toad into her beauty, for there before her
+stood her own shape and here she crouched a toad upon the floor.
+
+"Away to work, away!" said a soft low voice, her own voice speaking from
+her own body that stood before her, and lo! it was gone.
+
+But Swanhild crouched, in the shape of a hag-headed toad, upon the
+ground in her bower of Atli's hall, and felt wickedness and evil
+longings and hate boil and seethe within her heart. She looked out
+through her sunken horny eyes and she seemed to see strange sights. She
+saw Atli, her lord, dead upon the grass. She saw a woman asleep, and
+above her flashed a sword. She saw the hall of Middalhof red with blood.
+She saw a great gulf in a mountain's heart, and men fell down it. And,
+last, she saw a war-ship sailing fast out on the sea, afire, and vanish
+there.
+
+Now the witch-hag who wore Swanhild's loveliness stood upon the cliffs
+of Straumey and tossed her white arms towards the north.
+
+"Come, fog! come, sleet!" she cried. "Come, fog! come, sleet! Put out
+the moon and blind the eyes of Eric!" And as she called, the fog rose up
+like a giant and stretched his arms from shore to shore.
+
+"Move, fog! beat, rain!" she cried. "Move and beat against the gale, and
+blind the eyes of Eric!"
+
+And the fog moved on against the wind, and with it sleet and rain.
+
+"Now I am afeared," said Eric to Skallagrim, as they stood in darkness
+upon the ship: "the gale blows from behind us, and yet the mist drives
+fast in our faces. What comes now?"
+
+"This is witch-work, lord," answered Skallagrim, "and in such things
+no counsel can avail. Hold the tiller straight and drive on, say I.
+Methinks the gale lessens more and more."
+
+So they did for a little while, and all around them sounded the roar of
+breakers. Darker grew the sky and darker yet, till at the last, though
+they stood side by side, they could not see each other's shapes.
+
+"This is strange sailing," said Eric. "I hear the roar of breakers as it
+were beneath the prow."
+
+"Lash the helm, lord, and let us go forward. If there are breakers,
+perhaps we shall see their foam through the blackness," said Skallagrim.
+
+Eric did so, and they crept forward on the starboard board right to the
+prow of the ship, and there Skallagrim peered into the fog and sleet.
+
+"Lord," he whispered presently, and his voice shook strangely, "what is
+that yonder on the waters? Seest thou aught?"
+
+Eric stared and said, "By Odin! I see a shape of light like to the
+shape of a woman; it walks upon the waters towards us and the mist melts
+before it, and the sea grows calm beneath its feet."
+
+"I see that also!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"She comes nigh!" gasped Eric. "See how swift she comes! By the dead,
+it is Swanhild's shape! Look, Skallagrim! look how her eyes flame!--look
+how her hair streams upon the wind!"
+
+"It is Swanhild, and we are fey!" quoth Skallagrim, and they ran back to
+the helm, where Skallagrim sank upon the deck in fear.
+
+"See, Skallagrim, she glides before the Gudruda's beak! she glides
+backwards and she points yonder--there to the right! Shall I put the
+helm down and follow her?"
+
+"Nay, lord, nay; set no faith in witchcraft or evil will befall us."
+
+As he spoke a great gust of wind shook the ship, the music of the
+breakers roared in their ears, and the gleaming shape upon the waters
+tossed its arms wildly and pointed to the right.
+
+"The breakers call ahead," said Eric. "The shape points yonder, where
+I hear no sound of sea. Once before, thou mindest, Swanhild walked the
+waves to warn us and thereby saved us from the men of Ospakar. Ever she
+swore she loved me; now she is surely come in love to save us and all
+our comrades. Say, shall I put about? Look: once more she waves her arms
+and points," and as he spoke he gripped the helm.
+
+"I have no rede, lord," said Skallagrim, "and I love not witch-work. We
+can die but once, and death is all around; be it as thou wilt."
+
+Eric put down the helm with all his might. The good ship answered, and
+her timbers groaned loudly, as though in woe, when the strain of the sea
+struck her abeam. Then once more she flew fast across the waters, and
+fast before her glided the wraith of Swanhild. Now it pointed here and
+now there, and as it pointed so Eric shaped his course. For a while
+the noise of breakers lessened, but now again came a thunder, like the
+thunder of waves smiting on a cliff, and about the sides of the Gudruda
+the waves hissed like snakes.
+
+Suddenly the Shape threw up its arms and seemed to sink beneath the
+waves, while a sound like the sound of a great laugh went up from sea to
+sky.
+
+"Now here is the end," said Skallagrim, "and we are lured to doom."
+
+Ere ever the words had passed his lips the ship struck, and so fiercely
+that they were rolled upon the deck. Suddenly the sky grew clear, the
+moon shone out, and before them were cliffs and rocks, and behind them
+a great wave rushed on. From the hold of the ship there came a cry, for
+now their comrades were awake and they knew that death was here.
+
+Eric gripped Skallagrim round the middle and looked aft. On rushed the
+wave, no such wave had he ever seen. Now it struck and the Gudruda burst
+asunder beneath the blow.
+
+But Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail were lifted on its crest
+and knew no more.
+
+
+
+Swanhild, crouching in hideous guise upon the ground in the bower of
+Atli's hall, looked upon the visions that passed before her. Suddenly a
+woman's shape, her own shape, was there.
+
+"It is done, Blood-sister," said a voice, her own voice. "Merrily I
+walked the waves, and oh, merry was the cry of Eric's folk when Ran
+caught them in her net! Be thyself, again, Blood-sister--be fair as thou
+art foul; then arise, wake Atli thy lord, and go down to the sea's lip
+by the southern cliffs and see what thou shalt find. We shall meet no
+more till all this game is played and another game is set," and the
+shape of Swanhild crouched upon the floor before the hag-headed toad
+muttering "Pass! pass!"
+
+Then Swanhild felt her flesh come back to her, and as it grew upon her
+so the shape of the Death-headed toad faded away.
+
+"Farewell, Blood-sister!" piped a voice; "make merry as thou mayest, but
+merrier shall be our nights when thou hast gone a-sailing with Eric on
+the sea. Farewell! farewell! _Were-wolf_ thou didst call me once, and
+as a wolf I came. _Rat_ thou didst call me once, and as a rat I came.
+_Toad_ didst thou call me once, and as a toad I came. Say, at the last,
+what wilt thou call me and in what shape shall I come, Blood-sister?
+Till then farewell!"
+
+
+
+And all was gone and all was still.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WEDDED UNNA, THOROD'S DAUGHTER
+
+Now the story goes back to Iceland.
+
+When Brighteyes was gone, for a while Gudruda the Fair moved sadly about
+the stead, like one new-widowed. Then came tidings. Men told how Ospakar
+Blacktooth had waylaid Eric on the seas with two long ships, dragons of
+war, and how Eric had given him battle and sunk one dragon with great
+loss to Ospakar. They told also how Blacktooth's other dragon, the
+Raven, had sailed away before the wind, and Eric had sailed after it in
+a rising gale. But of what befell these ships no news came for many a
+month, and it was rumoured that this had befallen them--that both had
+sunk in the gale, and that Eric was dead.
+
+But Gudruda would not believe this. When Asmund the Priest, her father,
+asked her why she did not believe it, she answered that, had Eric been
+dead, her heart would surely have spoken to her of it. To this Asmund
+said that it might be so.
+
+Hay-harvest being done, Asmund made ready for his wedding with Unna,
+Thorod's daughter and Eric's cousin.
+
+Now it was agreed that the marriage-feast should be held at Middalhof;
+for Asmund wished to ask a great company to the wedding, and there was
+no place at Coldback to hold so many. Also some of the kin of Thorod,
+Unna's father, were bidden to the feast from the east and north. At
+length all was prepared and the guests came in great companies, for no
+such feast had been made in this quarter for many years.
+
+On the eve of the marriage Asmund spoke with Groa. The witch-wife had
+borne herself humbly since she was recovered from her sickness. She
+passed about the stead like a rat at night, speaking few words and
+with downcast eyes. She was busy also making all things ready for the
+feasting.
+
+Now as Asmund went up the hall seeing that everything was in order, Groa
+drew near to him and touched him gently on the shoulder.
+
+"Are things to thy mind, lord?" she said.
+
+"Yes, Groa," he answered, "more to my mind than to thine I fear."
+
+"Fear not, lord; thy will is my will."
+
+"Say, Groa, is it thy wish to bide here in Middalhof when Unna is my
+housewife?"
+
+"It is my wish to serve thee as aforetime," she answered softly, "if so
+be that Unna wills it."
+
+"That is her desire," said Asmund and went his ways.
+
+But Groa stood looking after him and her face was fierce and evil.
+
+"While bane has virtue, while runes have power, and while hand has
+cunning, never, Unna, shalt thou take my place at Asmund's side! Out
+of the water I came to thee, Asmund; into the water I go again. Unquiet
+shall I lie there--unquiet shall I wend through Hela's halls; but Unna
+shall rest at Asmund's side--in Asmund's cairn!"
+
+Then again she moved about the hall, making all things ready for the
+feast. But at midnight, when the light was low and folk slept, Groa
+rose, and, veiled in a black robe, with a basket in her hand, passed
+like a shadow through the mists that hang about the river's edge, and
+in silence, always looking behind her, like one who fears a hidden foe,
+culled flowers of noisome plants that grow in the marsh. Her basket
+being filled, she passed round the stead to a hidden dell upon the
+mountain side. Here a man stood waiting, and near him burned a fire
+of turf. In his hand he held an iron-pot. It was Koll the Half-witted,
+Groa's thrall.
+
+"Are all things ready, Koll?" she said.
+
+"Yes," he answered; "but I like not these tasks of thine, mistress. Say
+now, what wouldst thou do with the fire and the pot?"
+
+"This, then, Koll. I would brew a love-potion for Asmund the Priest as
+he has bidden me to do."
+
+"I have done many an ill deed for thee, mistress, but of all of them I
+love this the least," said the thrall, doubtfully.
+
+"I have done many a good deed for thee, Koll. It was I who saved thee
+from the Doom-stone, seeming to prove thee innocent--ay, even when thy
+back was stretched on it, because thou hadst slain a man in his sleep.
+Is it not so?"
+
+"Yea, mistress."
+
+"And yet thou wast guilty, Koll. And I have given thee many good gifts,
+is it not so?"
+
+"Yes, it is so."
+
+"Listen then: serve me this once and I will give thee one last gift--thy
+freedom, and with it two hundred in silver."
+
+Koll's eyes glistened. "What must I do, mistress?"
+
+"To-day at the wedding-feast it will be thy part to pour the cups while
+Asmund calls the toasts. Last of all, when men are merry, thou wilt mix
+that cup in which Asmund shall pledge Unna his wife and Unna must pledge
+Asmund. Now, when thou hast poured, thou shalt pass the cup to me, as I
+stand at the foot of the high seat, waiting to give the bride greeting
+on behalf of the serving-women of the household. Thou shalt hand the
+cup to me as though in error, and that is but a little thing to ask of
+thee."
+
+"A little thing indeed," said Koll, staring at her, and pulling with his
+hand at his red hair, "yet I like it not. What if I say no, mistress?"
+
+"Say no or speak of this and I will promise thee one thing only, thou
+knave, and it is, before winter comes, that the crows shall pick thy
+bones! Now, brave me, if thou darest," and straightway Groa began to
+mutter some witch-words.
+
+"Nay," said Koll, holding up his hand as though to ward away a blow.
+"Curse me not: I will do as thou wilt. But when shall I touch the two
+hundred in silver?"
+
+"I will give thee half before the feast begins, and half when it is
+ended, and with it freedom to go where thou wilt. And now leave me, and
+on thy life see that thou fail me not."
+
+"I have never failed thee yet," said Koll, and went his ways.
+
+Now Groa set the pot upon the fire, and, placing in it the herbs that
+she had gathered, poured water on them. Presently they began to boil and
+as they boiled she stirred them with a peeled stick and muttered spells
+over them. For long she sat in that dim and lonely place stirring the
+pot and muttering spells, till at length the brew was done.
+
+She lifted the pot from the fire and smelt at it. Then drawing a phial
+from her robe she poured out the liquor and held it to the sky. The
+witch-water was white as milk, but presently it grew clear. She looked
+at it, then smiled evilly.
+
+"Here is a love-draught for a queen--ah, a love-draught for a queen!"
+she said, and, still smiling, she placed the phial in her breast.
+
+Then, having scattered the fire with her foot, Groa took the pot and
+threw it into a deep pool of water, where it could not be found readily,
+and crept back to the stead before men were awake.
+
+
+
+Now the day wore on and all the company were gathered at the
+marriage-feast to the number of nearly two hundred. Unna sat in the high
+seat, and men thought her a bonny bride, and by her side sat Asmund the
+Priest. He was a hale, strong man to look on, though he had seen some
+three-score winters; but his mien was sad, and his heart heavy. He drank
+cup after cup to cheer him, but all without avail. For his thought sped
+back across the years and once more he seemed to see the face of Gudruda
+the Gentle as she lay dying, and to hear her voice when she foretold
+evil to him if he had aught to do with Groa the Witch-wife. And now it
+seemed to him that the evil was at hand, though whence it should come he
+knew not. He looked up. There Groa moved along the hall, ministering to
+the guests; but he saw as she moved that her eyes were always fixed,
+now on him and now on Unna. He remembered that curse also which Groa had
+called down upon him when he had told her that he was betrothed to
+Unna, and his heart grew cold with fear. "Now I will change my counsel,"
+Asmund said to himself: "Groa shall not stay here in this stead, for
+I will look no longer on that dark face of hers. She goes hence
+to-morrow."
+
+Not far from Asmund sat Bjoern, his son. As Gudruda the Fair, his sister,
+brought him mead he caught her by the sleeve, whispering in her ear.
+"Methinks our father is sad. What weighs upon his heart?"
+
+"I know not," said Gudruda, but as she spoke she looked first on Asmund,
+then at Groa.
+
+"It is ill that Groa should stop here," whispered Bjoern again.
+
+"It is ill," answered Gudruda, and glided away.
+
+Asmund saw their talk and guessed its purport. Rousing himself he
+laughed aloud and called to Koll the Half-witted to pour the cups that
+he might name the toasts.
+
+Koll filled, and, as Asmund called the toasts one by one, Koll handed
+the cups to him. Asmund drank deep of each, till at length his sorrow
+passed from him, and, together with all who sat there, he grew merry.
+
+Last of all came the toast of the bride's cup. But before Asmund called
+it, the women of the household drew near the high seat to welcome Unna,
+when she should have drunk. Gudruda stood foremost, and Groa was next to
+her.
+
+Now Koll filled as before, and it was a great cup of gold that he
+filled.
+
+Asmund rose to call the toast, and with him all who were in the hall.
+Koll brought up the cup, and handed it, not to Asmund, but to Groa; but
+there were few who noted this, for all were listening to Asmund's toast
+and most of the guests were somewhat drunken.
+
+"The cup," cried Asmund--"give me the cup that I may drink."
+
+Then Groa started forward, and as she did so she seemed to stumble,
+so that for a moment her robe covered up the great bride-cup. Then she
+gathered herself together slowly, and, smiling, passed up the cup.
+
+Asmund lifted it to his lips and drank deep. Then he turned and gave it
+to Unna his wife, but before she drank he kissed her on the lips.
+
+Now while all men shouted such a welcome that the hall shook, and as
+Unna, smiling, drank from the cup, the eyes of Asmund fell upon Groa
+who stood beneath him, and lo! her eyes seemed to flame and her face was
+hideous as the face of a troll.
+
+Asmund grew white and put his hand to his head, as though to think, then
+cried aloud:
+
+"Drink not, Unna! the draught is drugged!" and he struck at the vessel
+with his hand.
+
+He smote it indeed, and so hard that it flew from her hand far down the
+hall.
+
+But Unna had already drunk deep.
+
+"The draught is drugged!" Asmund cried, and pointed to Groa, while all
+men stood silent, not knowing what to do.
+
+"The draught is drugged!" he cried a third time, "and that witch has
+drugged it!" And he began to tear at his breast.
+
+Then Groa laughed so shrilly that men trembled to hear her.
+
+"Yes, lord," she screamed, "the draught is drugged, and Groa the
+Witch-wife hath drugged it! Ay, tear thy heart out, Asmund, and Unna,
+grow thou white as snow--soon, if my medicine has virtue, thou shalt be
+whiter yet! Hearken all men. Asmund the Priest is Swanhild's father,
+and for many a year I have been Asmund's mate. What did I tell thee,
+lord?--that I would see the two of you dead ere Unna should take my
+place!--ay, and on Gudruda the Fair, thy daughter, and Bjoern thy son,
+and Eric Brighteyes, Gudruda's love, and many another man--on them too
+shall my curse fall! Tear thy heart out, Asmund! Unna, grow thou
+white as snow! The draught is drugged and Groa, Ran's gift! Groa the
+Witch-Wife! Groa, Asmund's love! hath drugged it!"
+
+And ere ever a man might lift a hand to stay her Groa glided past the
+high seat and was gone.
+
+For a space all stood silent. Asmund ceased clutching at his breast.
+Rising he spoke heavily:
+
+"Now I learn that sin is a stone to smite him who hurled it. Gudruda the
+Gentle spoke sooth when she warned me against this woman. _New wed, new
+dead!_ Unna, fare thee well!"
+
+And straightway Asmund fell down and died there by the high seat in his
+own hall.
+
+Unna gazed at him with ashen face. Then, plucking at her bosom she
+sprang from the dais and rushed along the hall, screaming. Men made way
+for her, and at the door she also fell dead.
+
+
+
+This then was the end of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, and Unna, Thorod's
+daughter, Eric's cousin, his new-made wife.
+
+
+
+For a moment there was silence in the hall. But before the echoes of
+Unna's screams had died away, Bjoern cried aloud:
+
+"The witch! where is the witch?"
+
+Then with a yell of rage, men leaped to their feet, seizing their
+weapons, and rushed from the stead. Out they ran. There, on the
+hill-side far above them, a black shape climbed and leapt swiftly. They
+gave tongue like dogs set upon a wolf and sped up the hill.
+
+They gained the crest of the hill, and now they were at Goldfoss brink.
+Lo! the witch-wife had crossed the bed of the torrent, for little rain
+had fallen and the river was low. She stood on Sheep-saddle, the water
+running from her robes. On Sheep-saddle she stood and cursed them.
+
+Bjoern took a bow and set a shaft upon the string. He drew it and the
+arrow sung through the air and smote her, speeding through her heart.
+With a cry Groa threw up her arms.
+
+Then down she plunged. She fell on Wolf's Fang, where Eric once had
+stood and, bouncing thence, rushed to the boiling deeps below and was no
+more seen for ever.
+
+Thus, then, did Asmund the Priest wed Unna, Thorod's daughter, and this
+was the end of the feasting.
+
+Thereafter Bjoern, Asmund's son, ruled at Middalhof, and was Priest in
+his place. He sought for Koll the Half-witted to kill him, but Koll took
+the fells, and after many months he found passage in a ship that was
+bound for Scotland.
+
+Now Bjoern was a hard man and a greedy. He was no friend to Eric
+Brighteyes, and always pressed it on Gudruda that she should wed Ospakar
+Blacktooth. But to this counsel Gudruda would not listen, for day and
+night she thought upon her love. Next summer there came tidings that
+Eric was safe in Ireland, and men spoke of his deeds, and of how he and
+Skallagrim had swept the ship of Ospakar single-handed. Now after these
+tidings, for a while Gudruda walked singing through the meads, and no
+flower that grew in them was half so fair as she.
+
+That summer also Ospakar Blacktooth met Bjoern, Asmund's son, at the
+Thing, and they talked much together in secret.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+HOW EARL ATLI FOUND ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM ON THE SOUTHERN ROCKS OF
+STRAUMEY ISLE
+
+Swanhild, robed in white, as though new risen from sleep, stood, candle
+in hand, by the bed of Atli the Earl, her lord, crying "Awake!"
+
+"What passes now?" said Atli, lifting himself upon his arm. "What
+passes, Swanhild, and why dost thou ever wander alone at nights, looking
+so strangely? I love not thy dark witch-ways, Swanhild, and I was wed to
+thee in an ill hour, wife who art no wife."
+
+"In an ill hour indeed, Earl Atli," she answered, "an ill hour for thee
+and me, for, as thou hast said, eld and youth are strange yokefellows
+and pull different paths. Arise now, Earl, for I have dreamed a dream."
+
+"Tell it to me on the morrow, then," quoth Atli; "there is small
+joyousness in thy dreams, that always point to evil, and I must bear
+enough evil of late."
+
+"Nay, lord, my rede may not be put aside so. Listen now: I have
+dreamed that a great dragon of war has been cast away upon Straumey's
+south-western rocks. The cries of those who drowned rang in my ears. But
+I thought that some came living to the shore, and lie there senseless,
+to perish of the cold. Arise, therefore, take men and go down to the
+rocks."
+
+"I will go at daybreak," said Atli, letting his head fall upon the
+pillow. "I have little faith in such visions, and it is too late for
+ships of war to try the passage of the Firth."
+
+"Arise, I say," answered Swanhild sternly, "and do my bidding, else I
+will myself go to search the rocks."
+
+Then Atli rose grumbling, and shook the heavy sleep from his eyes:
+for of all living folk he most feared Swanhild his wife. He donned his
+garments, threw a thick cloak about him, and, going to the hall where
+men snored around the dying fires, for the night was bitter, he awoke
+some of them. Now among those men whom he called was Hall of Lithdale,
+Hall the mate who had cut the grapnel-chain. For this Hall, fearing to
+return to Iceland, had come hither saying that he had been wounded off
+Fareys, in the great fight between Eric and Ospakar's men, and left
+there to grow well of his hurt or die. Then Atli, not knowing that the
+carle lied, had bid him welcome for Eric's sake, for he still loved Eric
+above all men.
+
+But Hall loved not labour and nightfarings to search for shipwrecked
+men of whom the Lady Swanhild had chanced to dream. So he turned himself
+upon his side and slept again. Still, certain of Atli's folk rose at his
+bidding, and they went together down to the south-western rocks.
+
+But Swanhild, a cloak thrown over her night-gear, sat herself in the
+high seat of the hall and fixing her eyes, now upon the dying fires and
+now upon the blood-marks in her arm, waited in silence. The night was
+cold and windy, but the moon shone bright, and by its light Atli and his
+people made their way to the south-western rocks, on which the sea beat
+madly.
+
+"What lies yonder?" said Atli, pointing to some black things that lay
+beneath them upon the rock, cast there by the waves. A man climbed down
+the cliff's side that is here as though it were cut in steps, and then
+cried aloud:
+
+"A ship's mast, new broken, lord."
+
+"It seems that Swanhild dreams true," muttered Atli; "but I am sure of
+this: that none have come ashore alive in such a sea."
+
+Presently the man who searched the rocks below cried aloud again:
+
+"Here lie two great men, locked in each other's arms. They seem to be
+dead."
+
+Now all the men climb down the slippery rocks as best they may, though
+the spray wets them, and with them goes Atli. The Earl is a brisk man,
+though old in years, and he comes first to where the two lie. He who
+was undermost lay upon his back, but his face is hid by the thick golden
+hair that flowed across it.
+
+"Man's body indeed, but woman's locks," said Atli as he put out his hand
+and drew the hair away, so that the light of the moon fell on the face
+beneath.
+
+He looked, then staggered back against the rock.
+
+"By Thor!" he cried, "here lies the corpse of Eric Brighteyes!" and Atli
+wrung his hands and wept, for he loved Eric much.
+
+"Be not so sure that the men are dead, Earl," said one, "I thought I saw
+yon great carle move but now."
+
+"He is Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric's Death-shadow," said Atli again. "Up
+with them, lads--see, yonder lies a plank--and away to the hall. I will
+give twenty in silver to each of you if Eric lives," and he unclasped
+his cloak and threw it over both of them.
+
+Then with much labour they loosed the grip of the two men one from the
+other, and they set Skallagrim on the plank. But eight men bore Eric up
+the cliff between them, and the task was not light, though the Earl held
+his head, from which the golden hair hung like seaweed from a rock.
+
+At length they came to the hall and carried them in. Swanhild, seeing
+them come, moved down from the high seat.
+
+"Bring lamps, and pile up the fires," cried Atli. "A strange thing has
+come to pass, Swanhild, and thou dost dream wisely, indeed, for here
+we have Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail. They were locked like
+lovers in each other's arms, but I know not if they are dead or living."
+
+Now Swanhild started and came on swiftly. Had the Familiar tricked her
+and had she paid the price for nothing? Was Eric taken from Gudruda and
+given to her indeed--but given dead? She bent over him, gazing keenly on
+his face. Then she spoke.
+
+"He is not dead but senseless. Bring dry clothes, and make water hot,"
+and, kneeling down, she loosed Eric's helm and harness and ungirded
+Whitefire from his side.
+
+For long Swanhild and Atli tended Eric at one fire, and the serving
+women tended Skallagrim at the other. Presently there came a cry that
+Skallagrim stirred, and Atli with others ran to see. At this moment also
+the eyes of Eric were unsealed, and Swanhild saw them looking at her
+dimly from beneath. Moved to it by her passion and her joy that he yet
+lived, Swanhild let her face fall till his was hidden in her unbound
+hair, and kissed him upon the lips. Eric shut his eyes again, sighing
+heavily, and presently he was asleep. They bore him to a bed and heaped
+warm wrappings upon him. At daybreak he woke, and Atli, who sat watching
+at his side, gave him hot mead to drink.
+
+"Do I dream?" said Eric, "or is it Earl Atli who tends me, and did I but
+now see the face of Swanhild bending over me?"
+
+"It is no dream, Eric, but the truth. Thou hast been cast away here on
+my isle of Straumey."
+
+"And Skallagrim--where is Skallagrim?"
+
+"Skallagrim lives--fear not!"
+
+"And my comrades, how went it with them?"
+
+"But ill, Eric. Ran has them all. Now sleep!"
+
+Eric groaned aloud. "I had rather died also than live to hear such heavy
+tidings," he said. "Witch-work! witch-work! and that fair witch-face
+wrought it." And once again he slept, nor did he wake till the sun was
+high. But Atli could make nothing of his words.
+
+
+
+When Swanhild left the side of Eric she met Hall of Lithdale face to
+face and his looks were troubled.
+
+"Say, lady," he asked, "will Brighteyes live?"
+
+"Grieve not, Hall," she answered, "Eric will surely live and he will be
+glad to find a messmate here to greet him, having left so many yonder,"
+and she pointed to the sea.
+
+"I shall not be glad," said Hall, letting his eyes fall.
+
+"Why not, Hall? Fearest thou Skallagrim? or hast thou done ill by Eric?"
+
+"Ay, lady, I fear Skallagrim, for he swore to slay me, and that kind
+of promise he ever keeps. Also, if the truth must out, I have not dealt
+altogether well with Eric, and of all men I least wish to talk with
+him."
+
+"Speak on," she said.
+
+Then, being forced to it, Hall told her something of the tale of the
+cutting of the cable, being careful to put another colour on it.
+
+"Now it seems that thou art a coward, Hall," Swanhild said when he had
+done, "and I scarcely looked for that in thee," for she had not been
+deceived by the glozing of his speech. "It will be bad for thee to
+meet Eric and Skallagrim, and this is my counsel: that thou goest hence
+before they wake, for they will sit this winter here in Atli's hall."
+
+"And whither shall I go, lady?"
+
+Swanhild gazed on him, and as she did so a dark thought came into her
+heart: here was a knave who might serve her ends.
+
+"Hall," she said, "thou art an Icelander, and I have known of thee from
+a child, and therefore I wish to serve thee in thy strait, though thou
+deservest it little. See now, Atli the Earl has a farm on the mainland
+not two hours' ride from the sea. Thither thou shalt go, if thou art
+wise, and thou shalt sit there this winter and be hidden from Eric and
+Skallagrim. Nay, thank me not, but listen: it may chance that I shall
+have a service for thee to do before spring is come."
+
+"Lady, I shall wait upon thy word," said Hall.
+
+"Good. Now, so soon as it is light, I will find a man to sail with thee
+across the Firth, for the sea falls, and bear my message to the steward
+at Atli's farm. Also if thou needest faring-money thou shalt have it.
+Farewell."
+
+Thus then did Hall fly before Eric and Skallagrim.
+
+
+
+On the morrow Eric and Skallagrim arose, sick and bruised indeed, but
+not at all harmed, and went down to the shore. There they found many
+dead men of their company, but never a one in whom the breath of life
+remained.
+
+Skallagrim looked at Eric and spoke: "Last night the mist came up
+against the wind: last night we saw Swanhild's wraith upon the waves,
+and there is the path it showed, and there"--and he pointed to the dead
+men--"is the witch-seed's flower. Now to-day we sit in Atli's hall and
+here we must stay this winter at Swanhild's side, and in all this there
+lies a riddle that I cannot read."
+
+But Eric shook his head, making no answer. Then, leaving Skallagrim with
+the dead, he turned, and striding back alone towards the hall, sat down
+on a rock in the home meadows and, covering his face with his hands,
+wept for his comrades.
+
+As he wept Swanhild came to him, for she had seen him from afar, and
+touched him gently on the arm.
+
+"Why weepest thou, Eric?" she said.
+
+"I weep for the dead, Swanhild," he answered.
+
+"Weep not for the dead--they are at peace; if thou must weep, weep for
+the living. Nay, weep not at all; rejoice rather that thou art here to
+mourn. Hast thou no word of greeting for me who have not heard thy voice
+these many months?"
+
+"How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who would never have seen thy face
+again if I might have had my will? Knowest thou that yesternight, as we
+laboured in yonder Firth, we saw a shape walking the waters to lead
+us to our doom? How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who art a witch and
+evil?"
+
+"And knowest thou, Eric, that yesternight I woke from sleep, having
+dreamed that thou didst lie upon the shore, and thus I saved thee alive,
+as perchance I have saved thee aforetime? If thou didst see a shape
+walking the waters it was that shape which led thee here. Hadst thou
+sailed on, not only those thou mournest, but Skallagrim and thou thyself
+had now been numbered with the lost."
+
+"Better so than thus," said Brighteyes. "Knowest thou also, Swanhild,
+that when last night my life came back again in Atli's hall, methought
+that Atli's wife leaned over me and kissed me on the lips? That was an
+ill dream, Swanhild."
+
+"Some had found it none so ill, Eric," she made answer, looking on him
+strangely. "Still, it was but a dream. Thou didst dream that Atli's wife
+breathed back the breath of life into thy pale lips--be sure of it thou
+didst but dream. Ah, Eric, fear me no more; forget the evil that I have
+wrought in the blindness and folly of my youth. Now things are otherwise
+with me. Now I am a wedded wife and faithful hearted to my lord. Now, if
+I still love thee, it is with a sister's love. Therefore forget my
+sins, remember only that as children we played upon the Iceland fells.
+Remember that, as boy and girl, we rode along the marshes, while the
+sea-mews clamoured round our heads. The world is cold, Eric, and few
+are the friends we find in it; many are already gone, and soon the
+friendless dark draws near. So put me not away, my brother and my
+friend; but, for a little space, whilst thou art here in Atli's hall,
+let us walk hand in hand as we walked long years ago in Iceland,
+gathering up the fifa-bloom, and watching the midnight shadows creep up
+the icy joekul's crest."
+
+Thus Swanhild spoke to him most sweetly, in a low voice of music, while
+the tears gathered in her eyes, talking ever of Iceland that he loved,
+and of days long dead, till Eric's heart softened in him.
+
+"Almost do I believe thee, Swanhild," he said, stretching out his hand;
+"but I know thus: that thou art never twice in the same mood, and that
+is beyond my measuring. Thou hast done much evil and thou hast striven
+to do more; also I love not those who seem to walk the seas o' nights.
+Still, hold thou to this last saying of thine and there shall be peace
+between us while I bide here."
+
+She touched his hand humbly and turned to go. But as she went Eric spoke
+again: "Say, Swanhild, hast thou tidings from Iceland yonder? I have
+heard no word of Asmund or of Gudruda for two long years and more."
+
+She stood still, and a dark shadow that he could not see flitted across
+her face.
+
+"I have few tidings, Eric," she said, turning, "and those few, if I may
+trust them, bad enough. For this is the rumour that I have heard:
+that Asmund the Priest, my father, is dead; that Groa, my mother, is
+dead--how, I know not; and, lastly, that Gudruda the Fair, thy love, is
+betrothed to Ospakar Blacktooth and weds him in the spring."
+
+Now Eric sprang up with an oath and grasped the hilt of Whitefire. Then
+he sat down again upon the stone and covered his face with his hands.
+
+"Grieve not, Eric," she said gently; "I put no faith in this news, for
+rumour, like the black-backed gull, often changes colour in its flight
+across the seas. Also I had it but at fifth hand. I am sure of this, at
+least, that Gudruda will never forsake thee without a cause."
+
+"It shall go ill with Ospakar if this be true," said Eric, smiling
+grimly, "for Whitefire is yet left me and with it one true friend."
+
+"Run not to meet the evil, Eric. Thou shalt come to Iceland with the
+summer flowers and find Gudruda faithful and yet fairer than of yore.
+Knowest thou that Hall of Lithdale, who was thy mate, has sat here these
+two months? He is gone but this morning, I know not whither, leaving a
+message that he returns no more."
+
+"He did well to go," said Eric, and he told her how Hall had cut the
+cable.
+
+"Ay, well indeed," answered Swanhild. "Had Atli known this he would have
+scourged Hall hence with rods of seaweed. And now, Eric, I desire to
+ask thee one more thing: why wearest thou thy hair long like a woman's?
+Indeed, few women have such hair as thine is now."
+
+"For this cause, Swanhild: I swore to Gudruda that none should cut my
+hair till she cut it once more. It is a great burden to me surely, for
+never did hair grow so fast and strong as mine, and once in a fray I was
+held fast by it and went near to the losing of my life. Still, I will
+keep the oath even if it grows on to my feet," and he laughed a little
+and shook back his golden locks.
+
+Swanhild smiled also and, turning, went. But when her face was hidden
+from him she smiled no more.
+
+"As I live," she said in her heart, "before spring rains fall I again
+will cause thee to break this oath, Eric. Ay, I will cut a lock of that
+bright hair of thine and send it for a love-token to Gudruda."
+
+But Eric still sat upon the rock thinking. Swanhild had set an evil seed
+of doubt in his heart, and already it put forth roots. What if the
+tale were true? What if Gudruda had given herself to Ospakar? Well, if
+so--she should soon be a widow, that he swore.
+
+Then he rose, and stalked grimly towards the hall.
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+HOW KOLL THE HALF-WITTED BROUGHT TIDINGS FROM ICELAND
+
+Presently as Eric walked he met Atli the Earl seeking him. Atli greeted
+him.
+
+"I have seen strange things, Eric," he said, "but none more strange than
+this coming of thine and the manner of it. Swanhild is foresighted, and
+that was a doom-dream of hers."
+
+"I think her foresighted also," said Eric. "And now, Earl, knowest thou
+this: that little good can come to thee at the hands of one whom thou
+hast saved from the sea."
+
+"I set no faith in such old wives' tales," answered Atli. "Here thou art
+come, and it is my will that thou shouldest sit here. At the least, I
+will give thee no help to go hence."
+
+"Then we must bide in Straumey, it seems," said Eric: "for of all my
+goods and gear this alone is left me," and he looked at Whitefire.
+
+"Thou hast still a gold ring or two upon thy arm," answered the Earl,
+laughing. "But surely, Eric, thou wouldst not begone?"
+
+"I know not, Earl. Listen: it is well that I should be plain with thee.
+Once, before thou didst wed Swanhild, she had another mind."
+
+"I have heard something of that, and I have guessed more, Brighteyes;
+but methinks Swanhild is little given to gadding now. She is as cold as
+ice, and no good wife for any man," and Atli sighed, "'Snow melts not if
+sun shines not,' so runs the saw. Thou art an honest man, Eric, and no
+whisperer in the ears of others' wives."
+
+"I am not minded indeed to do thee such harm, Earl, but this thou
+knowest: that woman's guile and beauty are swords few shields can brook.
+Now I have spoken--and they are hard words to speak--be it as thou
+wilt."
+
+"It is my will that thou shouldest sit here this winter, Eric. Had I my
+way, indeed, never wouldest thou sit elsewhere. Listen: things have
+not gone well with me of late. Age hath a grip of me, and foes rise up
+against one who has no sons. That was an ill marriage, too, which I made
+with Swanhild yonder: for she loves me not, and I have found no luck
+since first I saw her face. Moreover, it is in my mind that my days
+are almost sped. Swanhild has already foretold my death, and, as thou
+knowest well, she is foresighted. So I pray thee, Eric, bide thou here
+while thou mayest, for I would have thee at my side."
+
+"It shall be as thou wilt, Earl," said Eric.
+
+
+
+So Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail sat that winter in the hall
+of Atli the Earl at Straumey. For many weeks all things went well and
+Eric forgot his fears. Swanhild was gentle to him and kindly. She loved
+much to talk with him, even of Gudruda her rival; but no word of love
+passed her lips. Nevertheless, she did but bide her time, for when she
+struck she determined to strike home. Atli and Eric were ever side by
+side, and Eric gave the Earl much good counsel. He promised to do this
+also, for now, being simple-minded, his doubts had passed and he had
+no more fear of Swanhild. On the mainland lived a certain chief who had
+seized large lands of Atli's, and held them for a year or more. Now Eric
+gave his word that, before he sailed for Iceland in the early summer, he
+would go up against this man and drive him from the lands, if he could.
+For Brighteyes might not come to Iceland till hard upon midsummer, when
+his three years of outlawry were spent.
+
+The winter wore away and the spring came. Then Atli gathered his men
+and went with Eric in boats to where the chief dwelt who held his lands.
+There they fell on him and there was a fierce fight. But in the end the
+man was slain by Skallagrim, and Eric did great deeds, as was his wont.
+Now in this fray Eric was wounded in the foot by a spear, so that he
+must be borne back to Straumey, and he lay there in the hall for many
+days. Swanhild nursed him, and most days he sat talking with her in her
+bower.
+
+When Eric was nearly healed of his hurt, the Earl went with all his
+people to a certain island of the Orkneys to gather scat[*] that was
+unpaid, and Skallagrim went with him. But Eric did not go, because of
+his hurt, fearing lest the wound should open if he walked overmuch. Thus
+it came to pass that, except for some women, he was left almost alone
+with Swanhild.
+
+[*] Tribute.
+
+Now, when Atli had been gone three days, it chanced on an afternoon that
+Swanhild heard how a man from Iceland sought speech with her. She bade
+them bring him in to where she was alone in her bower, for Eric was not
+there, having gone down to the sea to fish.
+
+The man came and she knew him at once for Koll the Half-witted, who
+had been her mother Groa's thrall. On his shoulders was the cloak that
+Ospakar Blacktooth had given him; it was much torn now, and he had a
+worn and hungry look.
+
+"Whence comest thou, Koll?" she asked, "and what are thy tidings?"
+
+"From Scotland last, lady, where I sat this winter; before that, from
+Iceland. As for my tidings, they are heavy, if thou hast not heard them.
+Asmund the Priest is dead, and dead is Unna his wife, poisoned by thy
+mother, Groa, at their marriage-feast. Dead, too, is thy mother, Groa.
+Bjoern, Asmund's son, shot her with an arrow, and she lies in Goldfoss
+pool."
+
+Now Swanhild hid her face for a while in her hands. Then she lifted it
+and it was white to see. "Speakest thou truth, fox? If thou liest, this
+I swear to thee--thy tongue shall be dragged from thee by the roots!"
+
+"I speak the truth, lady," he answered. But still he spoke not all the
+truth, for he said nothing of the part which he had played in the deaths
+of Asmund and Unna. Then he told her of the manner of their end.
+
+Swanhild listened silently--then said:
+
+"What news of Gudruda, Asmund's daughter? Is she wed?"
+
+"Nay, lady. Folk spoke of her and Ospakar, that was all."
+
+"Hearken, Koll," said Swanhild, "bearing such heavy tidings, canst thou
+not weight the ship a little more? Eric Brighteyes is here. Canst thou
+not swear to him that, when thou didst leave Iceland it was said without
+question that Gudruda had betrothed herself to Ospakar, and that the
+wedding-feast was set for this last Yule? Thou hast a hungry look, Koll,
+and methinks that things have not gone altogether well with thee of
+late. Now, if thou canst so charge thy memory, thou shalt lose little
+by it. But, if thou canst not, then thou goest hence from Straumey with
+never a luck-penny in thy purse, and never a sup to stay thy stomach
+with."
+
+Now of all things Koll least desired to be sent from Straumey; for,
+though Swanhild did not know it, he was sought for on the mainland as a
+thief.
+
+"That I may do, lady," he said, looking at her cunningly. "Now I
+remember that Gudruda the Fair charged me with a certain message for
+Eric Brighteyes, if I should chance to see him as I journeyed."
+
+Then Swanhild, Atli's wife, and Koll the Half-witted talked long and
+earnestly together.
+
+
+
+At nightfall Eric came in from his fishing. His heart was light, for
+the time drew near when he should sail for home, and he did not think on
+evil. For now he feared Swanhild no longer, and, no fresh tidings having
+come from Iceland about Ospakar and Gudruda, he had almost put the
+matter from his mind. On he walked to the hall, limping somewhat from
+his wound, but singing as he came, and bearing his fish slung upon a
+pole.
+
+At the men's door of the hall a woman stood waiting. She told Eric that
+the lady Swanhild would speak with him in her bower. Thither he went and
+knocked. Getting no answer he knocked again, then entered.
+
+Swanhild sat on a couch. She was weeping, and her hair fell about her
+face.
+
+"What now, Swanhild?" he said.
+
+She looked up heavily. "Ill news for thee and me, Eric. Koll, who was
+my mother's thrall, has come hither from Iceland, and these are
+his tidings: that Asmund is dead, and Unna, thy cousin, Thorod of
+Greenfell's daughter, is dead, and my mother Groa is dead also."
+
+"Heavy tidings, truly!" said Eric; "and what of Gudruda, is she also
+dead?"
+
+"Nay, Eric she is wed--wed to Ospakar."
+
+Now Eric reeled against the wall, clutching it, and for a space all
+things swam round him. "Where is this Koll?" he gasped. "Send me Koll
+hither."
+
+Presently he came, and Eric questioned him coldly and calmly. But Koll
+could lie full well. It is said that in his day there was no one in
+Iceland who could lie so well as Koll the Half-witted. He told Eric how
+it was said that Gudruda was plighted to Ospakar, and how the match had
+been agreed on at the Althing in the summer that was gone (and indeed
+there had been some such talk), and how that the feast was to be at
+Middalhof on last Yule Day.
+
+"Is that all thy tidings?" said Eric. "If so, I give no heed to them:
+for ever, Koll, I have known thee for a liar!"
+
+"Nay, Eric, it is not all," answered Koll. "As it chanced, two days
+before the ship in which I sailed was bound, I saw Gudruda the Fair.
+Then she asked me whither I was going, and I told her that I would
+journey to London, where men said thou wert, and asked her if she would
+send a message. Then she alighted from her horse, Blackmane, and spoke
+with me apart. 'Koll,' she said, 'it well may happen that thou wilt see
+Eric Brighteyes in London town. Now, if thou seest him, I charge thee
+straightly tell him this. Tell him that my father is dead, and my
+brother Bjoern, who rules in his place, is a hard man, and has ever urged
+me on to wed Ospakar, till at last, having no choice, I have consented
+to it. And say to Eric that I grieve much and sorely, and that, though
+we twain should never meet more, yet I shall always hold his memory
+dear.'"
+
+"It is not like Gudruda to speak thus," said Eric: "she had ever a stout
+heart and these are craven words. Koll, I hold that thou liest; and, if
+indeed I find it so, I'll wring the head from off thee!"
+
+"Nay, Eric, I lie not. Wherefore should I lie? Hearken: thou hast not
+heard all my tale. When the lady Gudruda had made an end of speaking
+she drew something from her breast and gave it me, saying: 'Give this to
+Eric, in witness of my words.'"
+
+"Show me the token," said Eric.
+
+Now, many years ago, when they were yet boy and girl, it chanced that
+Eric had given to Gudruda the half of an ancient gold piece that he
+had found upon the shore. He had given her half, and half he had kept,
+wearing it next his heart. But he knew not this, for she feared to tell
+him, that Gudruda had lost her half. Nor indeed had she lost it, for
+Swanhild had taken the love-token and hidden it away. Now she brought it
+forth for Koll to build his lies upon.
+
+Then Koll drew out the half-piece from a leather purse and passed it to
+him. Eric plunged his hand into his breast and found his half. He placed
+the two side by side, while Swanhild watched him. Lo! they fitted well.
+
+Then Eric laughed aloud, a hard and bitter laugh. "There will be
+slaying," he cried, "before all this tale is told. Take thy fee and
+begone, thou messenger of ill," and he cast the broken piece at Koll.
+"For once thou hast spoken the truth."
+
+Koll stooped, found the gold and went, leaving Brighteyes and Swanhild
+face to face.
+
+He hid his brow in his arms and groaned aloud. Softly Swanhild crept up
+to him--softly she drew his hands away, holding them between her own.
+
+"Heavy tidings, Eric," she said, "heavy tidings for thee and me! She is
+a murderess who gave me birth and she has slain my own father--my father
+and thy cousin Unna also. Gudruda is a traitress, a traitress fair and
+false. I did ill to be born of such a woman; thou didst ill to put thy
+faith in such a woman. Together let us weep, for our woe is equal."
+
+"Ay, let us weep together," Eric answered. "Nay, why should we weep?
+Together let us be merry, for we know the worst. All words are said--all
+hopes are sped! Let us be merry, then, for now we have no more tidings
+to fear."
+
+"Ay," Swanhild answered, looking on him darkly, "we will be merry and
+laugh our sorrows down. Ah! thou foolish Eric, under what unlucky star
+wast thou born that thou knewest not true from false?" and she called
+the serving-women, bidding them bring food and wine.
+
+Now Eric sat alone with Swanhild in her bower and made pretence to eat.
+But he could eat little, though he drank deep of the southern wine.
+Close beside him sat Swanhild, filling his cup. She was wondrous fair
+that night, and it seemed to Eric that her eyes gleamed like stars.
+Sweetly she spoke also and wisely. She told strange tales and she sang
+strange songs, and ever her eyes shone more and more, and ever she crept
+closer to him. Eric's brain was afire, though his heart was cold and
+dead. He laughed loud and mightily, he told great tales of deeds that he
+had done, growing boastful in his folly, and still Swanhild's eyes shone
+more and more, and still she crept closer, wooing him in many ways.
+
+Now of a sudden Eric thought of his friend, Earl Atli, and his mind grew
+clear.
+
+"This may not be, Swanhild," he said. "Yet I would that I had loved thee
+from the first, and not the false Gudruda: for, with all thy dark ways,
+at least thou art better than she."
+
+"Thou speakest wisely, Eric," Swanhild answered, though she meant not
+that he should go. "The Norns have appointed us an evil fate, giving
+me as wife to an old man whom I do not love, and thee for a lover to a
+woman who has betrayed thee. Ah, Eric Brighteyes, thou foolish Eric! why
+knewest thou not the false from the true while yet there was time?
+Now are all words said and all things done--nor can they be undone. Go
+hence, Eric, ere ill come of it; but, before thou goest, drink one cup
+of parting, and then farewell."
+
+And she slipped from him and filled the cup, mixing in it a certain
+love-portion that she had made ready.
+
+"Give it me that I may swear an oath on it," said Eric.
+
+Swanhild gave him the cup and stood before him, watching him.
+
+"Hearken," he said: "I swear this, that before snow falls again in
+Iceland I will see Ospakar dead at my feet or lie dead at the feet of
+Ospakar."
+
+"Well spoken, Eric," Swanhild answered. "Now, before thou drinkest,
+grant me one little boon. It is but a woman's fancy, and thou canst
+scarce deny me. The years will be long when thou art gone, for from this
+night it is best that we should meet no more, and I would keep something
+of thee to call back thy memory and the memories of our youth when thou
+hast passed away and I grow old."
+
+"What wouldst have then, Swanhild? I have nothing left to give, except
+Whitefire alone."
+
+"I do not ask Whitefire, Eric, though Whitefire shall kiss the gift. I
+ask nothing but one tress of that golden hair of thine."
+
+"Once I swore that none should touch my hair again except Gudruda's
+self."
+
+"It will grow long, then, Eric, for now Gudruda tends black locks and
+thinks little on golden. Broken are all oaths."
+
+Eric groaned. "All oaths are broken in sooth," he said. "Have then thy
+will;" and, loosing the peace-strings, he drew Whitefire from its sheath
+and gave her the great war-sword.
+
+Swanhild took it by the hilt, and, lifting a tress of Eric's yellow
+hair, she shore through it deftly with Whitefire's razor-edge, smiling
+as she shore. With the same war-blade on which Eric and Gudruda had
+pledged their troth, did Swanhild cut the locks that Eric had sworn no
+hand should clip except Gudruda's.
+
+He took back the sword and sheathed it, and, knotting the long tress,
+Swanhild hid it in her bosom.
+
+"Now drink the cup, Eric," she said--"pledge me and go."
+
+Eric drank to the dregs and cast the cup down, and lo! all things
+changed to him, for his blood was afire, and seas seemed to roll within
+his brain. Only before him stood Swanhild like a shape of light and
+glory, and he thought that she sang softly over him, always drawing
+nearer, and that with her came a scent of flowers like the scent of the
+Iceland meads in May.
+
+"All oaths are broken, Eric," she murmured, "all oaths are broken
+indeed, and now must new oaths be sworn. For cut is thy golden hair,
+Brighteyes, and not by Gudruda's hand!"
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+HOW ERIC WAS NAMED ANEW
+
+Eric dreamed. He dreamed that Gudruda stood by him looking at him with
+soft, sad eyes, while with her hand she pointed to his hair, and spake.
+
+"Thou hast done ill, Eric," she seemed to say. "Thou hast done ill to
+doubt me; and now thou art for ever shamed, for thou hast betrayed Atli,
+thy friend. Thou hast broken thy oath, and therefore hast thou fallen
+into this pit; for when Swanhild shore that lock of thine, my watching
+Spirit passed, leaving thee to Swanhild and thy fate. Now, I tell thee
+this: that shame shall lead to shame, and many lives shall pay forfeit
+for thy sin, Eric."
+
+Eric awoke, thinking that this was indeed an evil dream which he had
+dreamed. He woke, and lo! by him was Swanhild, Atli's wife. He looked
+upon her beauty, and fear and shame crept into his heart, for now he
+knew that it was no dream, but he was lost indeed. He looked again at
+Swanhild, and hatred and loathing of her shook him. She had overcome
+him by her arts; that cup was drugged which he had drunk, and he was mad
+with grief. Yes, she had played upon his woe like a harper on a harp,
+and now he was ashamed--now he had betrayed his friend who loved him!
+Had Whitefire been to his hand at that moment, Eric had surely slain
+himself. But the great sword was not there, for it hung in Swanhild's
+bower. Eric groaned aloud, and Swanhild turned at the sound. But he
+sprang away and stood over her, cursing her.
+
+"Thou witch!" he cried, "what hast thou done? What didst thou mix in
+that cup yestre'en? Thou hast brought me to this that I have betrayed
+Atli, my friend--Atli, thy lord, who left thee in my keeping!"
+
+He seemed so terrible in his woe and rage that Swanhild shrank from him,
+and, throwing her hair about her face, peeped at him through its meshes
+as once she had peeped at Asmund.
+
+"It is like a man," she said, gathering up her courage and her wit;
+"'tis like a man, having won my love, now to turn upon me and upbraid
+me. Fie upon thee, Eric! thou hast dealt ill with me to bring me to
+this."
+
+Now Eric ceased his raving, and spoke more calmly.
+
+"Well thou knowest the truth, Swanhild," he said.
+
+"Hearken, Eric," she answered. "Let this be secret between us. Atli is
+old, and methinks that not for long shall he bide here in Straumey.
+Soon he will die; it is upon my mind that he soon will die, and, being
+childless, his lands and goods pass to me. Then, Eric, thou shalt sit in
+Atli's hall, and in all honour shall Atli's wife become thy bride."
+
+Eric listened coldly. "I can well believe," he said, "that thou hast it
+in mind to slay thy lord, for all evil is in thy heart, Swanhild. Now
+know this: that if in honour or dishonour my lips touch that fair face
+of thine again, may the limbs rot from thy trunk, and may I lie a log
+for ever in the halls of Hela! If ever my eyes of their own will look
+again upon thy beauty, may I go blind and beg my meat from homestead
+to homestead! If ever my tongue whisper word of love into thy ears, may
+dumbness seize it, and may it wither to the root!"
+
+Swanhild heard and sank upon the ground before him, her head bowed
+almost to her feet.
+
+"Now, Swanhild, fare thee well," said Eric. "Living or dead, may I never
+see thy face again!"
+
+She gazed up through her falling hair; her face was wild and white, and
+her eyes glowed in it as live embers glow in the ashes of burnt wood.
+
+"We are not so easily parted, Eric," she said. "Not for this came I to
+witchcraft and to sin. Thou fool! hast thou never heard that, of all the
+foes a man may have, none is so terrible as the woman he has scorned?
+Thou shalt learn this lesson, Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur's son: for
+here we have but the beginning of the tale. For its end, I will write it
+in runes of blood."
+
+"Write on," said Eric. "Thou canst do no worse than thou hast done," and
+he passed thence.
+
+For a while Swanhild crouched upon the ground, brooding in silence. Then
+she rose, and, throwing up her arms, wept aloud.
+
+"Is it for this that I have sold my soul to the Hell-hag?" she cried.
+"Is it for this that I have become a witch, and sunk so low as I sank
+last night--to be scorned, to be hated, to be betrayed? Now Eric will
+go to Atli and tell this tale. Nay, there I will be beforehand with him,
+and with another story--an ancient wile of women truly, but one that
+never yet has failed them, nor ever will. And then for vengeance! I will
+see thee dead, Eric, and dead will I see Gudruda at thy side! Afterwards
+let darkness come--ay, though the horror rides it! Swift!--I must be
+swift!"
+
+
+
+Eric passed into Swanhild's bower, and, finding Whitefire, bore it
+thence. On the table was food. He took it. Then, going to the place
+where he was wont to sleep, he armed himself, girding his byrnie on his
+breast and his golden helm upon his head, and taking shield and spear
+in his hand. Then he passed out. By the men's door he found some women
+spreading fish in the sun. Eric greeted them, saying that when the Earl
+came back, for he was to come on that morning, he would find him on the
+south-western rocks nigh to where the Gudruda sank. This he begged of
+them to tell Atli, for he desired speech with him.
+
+The women wondered that Brighteyes should go forth thus and fully armed,
+but, holding that he had some deed to do, they said nothing.
+
+Eric came to the rocks, and there he sat all day long looking on the
+sea, and grieving so bitterly that he thought his heart would burst
+within him. For of all the days of Eric's life this was the heaviest,
+except one other only.
+
+But Swanhild, going to her bower, caused Koll the Half-witted to be
+summoned. To him she spoke long and earnestly, and they made a shameful
+plot together. Then she bade Koll watch for Atli's coming and, when he
+saw the Earl leave his boats, to run to him and say that she would speak
+with him.
+
+After this Swanhild sent a man across the firth to the stead where Hall
+of Lithdale sat, bidding him to come to her at speed.
+
+When the afternoon grew towards the evening, Koll, watching, saw the
+boats of Atli draw to the landing-place. Then he went down, and, going
+to the Earl, bowed before him:
+
+"What wouldst thou, fellow, and who art thou?" asked Atli.
+
+"I am a man from Iceland; perchance, lord, thou sawest me in Asmund's
+hall at Middalhof. I am sent here by the Lady Swanhild to say that she
+desires speech with thee, and that at once." Then, seeing Skallagrim,
+Koll fled back to the house, for he feared Skallagrim.
+
+Now Atli was uneasy in his mind, and, saying nothing, he hurried up to
+the hall, and through it into Swanhild's bower.
+
+There she sat on a couch, her eyes red with weeping, and her curling
+hair unbound.
+
+"What now, Swanhild?" he asked. "Why lookest thou thus?"
+
+"Why look I thus, my lord?" she answered heavily. "Because I have to
+tell thee that which I cannot find words to fit," and she ceased.
+
+"Speak on," he said. "Is aught wrong with Eric?"
+
+Then Swanhild drew near and told him a false tale.
+
+When it was done for a moment or so Atli stood still, and grew white
+beneath his ruddy skin, white as his beard. Then he staggered back
+against the wainscoting of the bower.
+
+"Woman, thou liest!" he said. "Never will I believe so vile a thing of
+Eric Brighteyes, whom I have loved."
+
+"Would that I could not believe it!" she answered. "Would that I could
+think it was but an evil dream! But alas! Nay, I will prove it. Suffer
+that I summon Koll, the Icelander, who was my mother's thrall--Groa
+who now is dead, for I have that tidings also. He saw something of this
+thing, and he will bear me witness."
+
+"Call the man," said Atli sternly.
+
+So Koll was summoned, and told his lies with a bold face. He was so well
+taught, and so closely did his story tally with that of Swanhild, that
+Atli could find no flaw in it.
+
+"Now I am sure, Swanhild, that thou speakest truth," said the Earl when
+Koll had gone. "And now also I have somewhat to say to this Eric. For
+thee, rest thyself; that which cannot be mended must be borne," and he
+went out.
+
+
+
+Now, when Skallagrim came to the house he asked for Eric. The women
+told him that Brighteyes had gone down to the sea, fully armed, in the
+morning, and had not returned.
+
+"Then there must be fighting toward, and that I am loth to miss," said
+Skallagrim, and, axe aloft, he started for the south-western rocks at a
+run. Skallagrim came to the rocks. There he found Eric, sitting in his
+harness, looking out across the sea. The evening was wet and windy; the
+rain beat upon him as he sat, but Eric took no heed.
+
+"What seekest thou, lord?" asked the Baresark.
+
+"Rest," said Eric, "and I find none."
+
+"Thou seekest rest helm on head and sword in hand? This is a strange
+thing, truly!"
+
+"Stranger things have been Skallagrim. Wouldst thou hear a tale?" and he
+told him all.
+
+"What said I?" asked Skallagrim. "We had fared better in London town.
+Flying from the dove thou hast found the falcon."
+
+"I have found the falcon, comrade, and she has pecked out my eyes. Now I
+would speak with Atli, and then I go hence."
+
+"Hence go the twain of us, lord. The Earl will be here presently
+and rough words will fly in this rough weather. Is Whitefire sharp,
+Brighteyes?"
+
+"Whitefire was sharp enough to shear my hair, Skallagrim; but if Atli
+would strike let him lay on. Whitefire will not be aloft for him."
+
+"That we shall see," said Skallagrim. "At least, if thou art harmed
+because of this loose quean, my axe will be aloft."
+
+"Keep thou thine axe in its place," said Eric, and as he spoke Atli
+came, and with him many men.
+
+Eric rose and turned to meet the Earl, looking on him with sad eyes. For
+Atli, his face was as the face of a trapped wolf, for he was mad with
+rage at the shame that had been put upon him and the ill tale that
+Swanhild had told of Eric's dealings with her.
+
+"It seems that the Earl has heard of these tidings," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Then I shall be spared the telling of them," answered Eric.
+
+Now they stood face to face; Atli leaned upon his drawn sword, and his
+wrath was so fierce that for a while he could not speak. At length he
+found words.
+
+"See ye that man, comrades?" he said, pointing at Eric with the sword.
+"He has been my guest these many months. He has sat in my hall and eaten
+of my bread, and I have loved him as a son. And wot ye how he has
+repaid me? He has put me to the greatest shame, me and my wife the Lady
+Swanhild, whom I left in his guard--to such shame, indeed, that I cannot
+speak it."
+
+"True words, Earl," said Eric, while folk murmured and handled their
+swords.
+
+"True, but not all the truth," growled Skallagrim. "Methinks the Earl
+has heard a garbled tale."
+
+"True words, thyself thou sayest it," went on Atli "thou hound that I
+saved from the sea! 'Ran's gift, Hela's gift,' so runs the saw, and now
+from Ran to Hela thou shalt go, thou mishandler of defenceless women!"
+
+"Here is somewhat of which I know nothing," said Eric.
+
+"And here is something of which thou shalt know," answered Atli, and he
+shook his sword before Eric's eyes. "Guard thyself!"
+
+"Nay, Earl; thou art old, and I have done the wrong--I may not fight
+with thee."
+
+"Art thou a coward also?" said the Earl.
+
+"Some have deemed otherwise," said Eric, "but it is true that heavy
+heart makes weak hand. Nevertheless this is my rede. With thee are ten
+men. Stand thou aside and let them fall on me till I am slain."
+
+"The odds are too heavy even for thee," said Skallagrim. "Back to back,
+lord, as we have stood aforetime, and let us play this game together."
+
+"Not so," cried Atli, "this shame is mine, and I have sworn to Swanhild
+that I will wipe it out in Eric's blood. Stand thou before me and draw!"
+
+Then Eric drew Whitefire and raised his shield. Atli the Earl rushed at
+him and smote a great two-handed blow. Eric caught it on his shield and
+suffered no harm; but he would not smite back.
+
+Atli dropped his point. "Niddering art thou, and coward to the last!" he
+cried. "See, men, Eric Brighteyes fears to fight. I am not come to this
+that I will cut down a man who is too faint-hearted to give blow for
+blow. This is my word: take ye your spear-shafts and push this coward to
+the shore. Then put him in a boat and drive him hence."
+
+Now Eric grew red as the red light of sunset, for his manhood might not
+bear this.
+
+"Take shield," he said, "and, Earl, on thine own head be thy blood, for
+none shall live to call Eric niddering and coward."
+
+Atli laughed in his folly and his rage. He took a shield, and, once more
+springing on Brighteyes, struck a great blow.
+
+Eric parried, then whirled Whitefire on high and smote--once and once
+only! Down rushed the bright blade like a star through the night. Sword
+and shield did Atli lift to catch the blow. Through shield it sheared,
+and arm that held the shield, through byrnie mail and deep into Earl
+Atli's side. He fell prone to earth, while men held their breath,
+wondering at the greatness of that stroke.
+
+But Eric leaned on Whitefire and looked at the old Earl upon the rock.
+
+"Now, Atli, thou hast had thy way," he said, "and methinks things are
+worse than they were before. But I will say this: would that I lay there
+and thou stoodest to watch me die, for as lief would I have slain my
+father as thee, Earl Atli. There lies Swanhild's work!"
+
+Atli gazed upwards into Eric's sad eyes and, while he gazed so, his rage
+left him, and of a sudden a light brake upon his mind, as even then the
+light of the setting sun brake through the driving mist.
+
+"Eric," he said, "draw near and speak with me ere I am sped. Methinks
+that I have been beguiled and that thou didst not do this thing that
+Swanhild said and Koll bore witness to."
+
+"What did Swanhild say, then, Earl Atli?"
+
+The Earl told him.
+
+"It was to be looked for from her," said Eric, "though I never thought
+of it. Now hearken!" and he told him all.
+
+Atli groaned aloud. "I know this now, Eric," he said: "that thou
+speakest truth, and once more I have been deceived. Eric, I forgive thee
+all, for no man may fight against woman's witchcraft, and witch's wine.
+Swanhild is evil to the heart. Yet, Eric, I lay this doom upon thee--I
+do not lay it of my own will, for I would not harm thee, whom I love,
+but because of the words that the Norns put in my mouth, for now I am
+fey in this the hour of my death. Thou hast sinned, and that thou didst
+sin against thy will shall avail thee nothing, for of thy sin fate shall
+fashion a handle to the spear which pierces thee. Henceforth thou art
+accursed. For I tell thee that this wicked woman Swanhild shall drag
+thee down to death, and worse than death, and with thee those thou
+lovest. By witchcraft she brought thee to Straumey, by lies she laid me
+here before thee. Now by hate and might and cruel deeds shall she bring
+thee to lie more low than I do. For, Eric, thou art bound to her, and
+thou shalt never loose the bond!"
+
+Atli ceased a while, then spoke again more faintly:
+
+"Hearken, comrades," he cried; "my strength is well-nigh spent. Ye
+shall swear four things to me--that ye will give Eric Brighteyes and
+Skallagrim Lambstail safe passage from Straumey. That ye will tell
+Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa's daughter and Atli's wife, that, at last,
+I know her for what she is--a murderess, a harlot, a witch and a liar;
+and that I forgive Eric whom she tricked, but that her I hate and spit
+upon. That ye will slay Koll the Half-witted, Groa's thrall, who came
+hither about two days gone, since by his lies he hath set an edge upon
+this sword of falsehood. That ye will raise no blood-feud against Eric
+for this my slaying, for I goaded him to the deed. Do ye swear?"
+
+"We swear," said the men.
+
+"Then farewell! And to thee farewell, also, Eric Brighteyes! Now take
+my hand and hold it while I die. Behold! I give thee a new name, and by
+that name thou shalt be called in story. I name thee _Eric the Unlucky_.
+Of all tales that are told, thine shall be the greatest. A mighty stroke
+that was of thine--a mighty stroke! Farewell!"
+
+Then his head fell back upon the rock and Earl Atli died. And as he died
+the last rays of light went out of the sky.
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+HOW HALL OF LITHDALE TOOK TIDINGS TO ICELAND
+
+Now on the same night that Atli died at the hand of Eric, Swanhild spake
+with Hall of Lithdale, whom she had summoned from the mainland. She bade
+him do this: take passage in a certain ship that should sail for Iceland
+on the morrow from the island that is called Westra, and there tell all
+these tidings of the ill-doings of Eric and of the slaying of Atli by
+his hand.
+
+"Thou shalt say this," she went on, "that Eric had been my love for
+long, but that at length the matter came to the ears of Atli, the Earl.
+Then, holding this the greatest shame, he went on holmgang with Eric and
+was slain by him. This shalt thou add to thy tale also, that presently
+Eric and I will wed, and that Eric shall rule as Earl in Orkneys. Now
+these tidings must soon come to the ears of Gudruda the Fair, and she
+will send for thee, and question thee straightly concerning them, and
+thou shalt tell her the tale as thou toldest it at first. Then thou
+shalt give Gudruda this packet, which I send her as a gift, saying, that
+I bade her remember a certain oath which Eric took as to the cutting of
+his hair. And when she sees that which is within the packet is somewhat
+stained, tell her that is but the blood of Atli that is upon it, as his
+blood is upon Eric's hands. Now remember thou this, Hall, that if thou
+fail in the errand thy life shall pay forfeit, for presently I will also
+come to Iceland and hear how thou hast sped."
+
+Then Swanhild gave him faring-money and gifts of wadmal and gold rings,
+promising that he should have so much again when she came to Iceland.
+
+Hall said that he would do all these things, and went at once; nor did
+he fail in his tasks.
+
+
+
+Atli being dead, Eric loosed his hand and called to the men to take up
+his body and bear it to the hall. This they did. Eric stood and watched
+them till they were lost in the darkness.
+
+"Whither now, lord?" said Skallagrim.
+
+"It matters little," said Eric. "What is thy counsel?"
+
+"This is my counsel. That we take ship and sail back to the King in
+London. There we will tell all this tale. It is a far cry from Straumey
+to London town, and there we shall sit in peace, for the King will
+think little of the slaying of an Orkney Earl in a brawl about a woman.
+Mayhap, too, the Lady Elfrida will not set great store by it. Therefore,
+I say, let us fare back to London."
+
+"In but one place am I at home, and that is Iceland," said Eric.
+"Thither I will go, Skallagrim, though it be but to miss friend from
+stead and bride from bed. At the least I shall find Ospakar there."
+
+"Listen, lord!" said Skallagrim. "Was it not my rede that we should bide
+this winter through in London? Thou wouldst none of it, and what
+came about? Our ship is sunk, gone are our comrades, thine honour is
+tarnished, and dead is thy host at thine own hand. Yet I say all is not
+lost. Let us hence south, and see no more of Swanhild, of Gudruda, of
+Bjoern and Ospakar. So shall we break the spell. But if thou goest to
+Iceland, I am sure of this: that the evil fate which Atli foretold will
+fall on thee, and the days to come shall be even more unlucky than the
+days that have been."
+
+"It may be so," said Eric. "Methinks, indeed, it will be so. Henceforth
+I am Eric the Unlucky. I will go back to Iceland and there play out
+the game. I care little if I live or am slain--I have no more joy in my
+life. I stand alone, like a fir upon a mountain-top, and every wind from
+heaven and every storm of hail and snow beats upon my head. But I say to
+thee, Skallagrim: go thy road, and leave a luckless man to his ill fate.
+Otherwise it shall be thine also. Good friend hast thou been to me; now
+let us part and wend south and north. The King will be glad to greet
+thee yonder in London, Lambstail."
+
+"But one severing shall we know, lord," said Skallagrim, "and that shall
+be sword's work, nor will it be for long. It is ill to speak such words
+as these of the parting of lord and thrall. Bethink thee of the oath I
+swore on Mosfell. Let us go north, since it is thy will: in fifty years
+it will count for little which way we wended from the Isles."
+
+So they went together down to the shore, and, finding a boat and men who
+as yet knew nothing of what had chanced to Atli, they sailed across the
+firth at the rising of the moon.
+
+Two days afterwards they found a ship at Wick that was bound for Fareys,
+and sailed in her, Eric buying a passage with the half of a gold ring
+that the King had given him in London.
+
+Here at Fareys they sat a month or more; but not in the Earl's hall as
+when Eric came with honour in the Gudruda, but in a farmer's stead.
+For the tale of Eric's dealings with Atli and Atli's wife had reached
+Fareys, and the Earl there had been a friend of Atli's. Moreover,
+Eric was now a poor man, having neither ship nor goods, nor friends.
+Therefore all looked coldly on him, though they wondered at his beauty
+and his might. Still, they dared not to speak ill or make a mock of him;
+for, two men having done so, were nearly slain of Skallagrim, who seized
+the twain by the throat, one in either hand, and dashed their heads
+together. After that men said little.
+
+They sat there a month, till at length a chapman put in at Fareys, bound
+for Iceland, and they took passage with him, Eric paying the other half
+of his gold ring for ship-room. The chapman was not willing to give them
+place at first, for he, too, had heard the tale; but Skallagrim offered
+him choice, either to do so or to go on holmgang with him. Then the
+chapman gave them passage.
+
+
+
+Now it is told that when his thralls and house-carles bore the corpse of
+Atli the Earl to his hall in Straumey, Swanhild met it and wept over it.
+And when the spokesman among them stood forward and told her those words
+that Atli had bidden them to say to her, sparing none, she spoke thus:
+
+"My lord was distraught and weak with loss of blood when he spoke thus.
+The tale I told him was true, and now Eric has added to his sin by
+shedding the blood of him whom he wronged so sorely."
+
+And thereafter she spoke so sweetly and with so much gentleness, craft,
+and wisdom that, though they still doubted them, all men held her words
+weighty. For Swanhild had this art, that she could make the false sound
+true in the ears of men and the true sound false.
+
+Still, being mindful of their oath, they hunted for Koll and found
+him. And when the thrall knew that they would slay him he ran thence
+screaming. Nor did Swanhild lift a hand to save his life, for she
+desired that Koll should die, lest he should bear witness against her.
+Away he ran towards the cliffs, and after him sped Atli's house-carles,
+till he came to the great cliffs that edge in the sea. Now they were
+close upon him and their swords were aloft. Then, sooner than know the
+kiss of steel, the liar leapt from the cliffs and was crushed, dying
+miserably on the rocks below. This was the end of Koll the Half-witted,
+Groa's thrall.
+
+Swanhild sat in Straumey for a while, and took all Atli's heritage into
+her keeping, for he had no male kin; nor did any say her nay. Also she
+called in the moneys that he had out at interest, and that was a great
+sum, for Atli was a careful and a wealthy man. Then Swanhild made ready
+to go to Iceland. Atli had a great dragon of war, and she manned that
+ship and filled it with stores and all things needful. This done, she
+set stewards and grieves over the Orkney lands and farms, and, when the
+Earl was six weeks dead, she sailed for Iceland, giving out that she
+went thither to set a blood-suit on foot against Eric for the death of
+Atli, her lord. There she came in safety just as folk rode to the Thing.
+
+
+
+Now Hall of Lithdale came to Iceland and told his tale of the doings
+of Eric and the death of Atli. Oft and loud he told it, and soon people
+gossiped of it in field and fair and stead. Bjoern, Asmund's son, heard
+this talk and sent for Hall. To him also Hall told the tale.
+
+"Now," said Bjoern, "we will go to my sister Gudruda the Fair, and learn
+how she takes these tidings."
+
+So they went in to where Gudruda sat spinning in the hall, singing as
+she span.
+
+"Greeting, Gudruda," said Bjoern; "say, hast thou tidings of Eric
+Brighteyes, thy betrothed?"
+
+"I have no tidings," said Gudruda.
+
+"Then here is one who brings them."
+
+Now for the first time Gudruda the Fair saw Hall of Lithdale. Up she
+sprang. "Thou hast tidings of Eric, Hall? Ah! thou art welcome, for no
+tidings have come of him for many a month. Speak on," and she pressed
+her hand against her heart and leaned towards him.
+
+"My tidings are ill, lady."
+
+"Is Eric dead? Say not that my love is dead!"
+
+"He is worse than dead," said Hall. "He is shamed."
+
+"There thou liest, Hall," she answered. "Shame and Eric are things
+apart."
+
+"Mayst thou think so when thou hast heard my tale, lady," said Hall,
+"for I am sad at heart to speak it of one who was my mate."
+
+"Speak on, I say," answered Gudruda, in such a voice that Hall shrank
+from her. "Speak on; but of this I warn thee: that if in one word thou
+liest, that shall be thy death when Eric comes."
+
+Now Hall was afraid, thinking of the axe of Skallagrim. Still, he might
+not go back upon his word. So he began at the beginning, telling the
+story of how he was wounded in the fight with Ospakar's ships and left
+Farey isles, and how he came thence to Scotland and sat in Atli's hall
+on Orkneys. Then he told how the Gudruda was wrecked on Straumey,
+and, of all aboard, Eric and Skallagrim alone were saved because of
+Swanhild's dream.
+
+"Herein I see witch-work," said Gudruda.
+
+Then Hall told that Eric became Swanhild's love, but of the other tale
+which Swanhild had whispered to Atli he said nothing. For he knew that
+Gudruda would not believe this, and, moreover, if it were so, Swanhild
+had not sent the token which he should give.
+
+"It may well be," said Gudruda, proudly; "Swanhild is fair and light
+of mind. Perchance she led Brighteyes into this snare." But, though
+she spoke thus, bitter jealousy and anger burned in her breast and she
+remembered the sight which she had seen when Eric and Swanhild met on
+the morn of Atli's wedding.
+
+Then Hall told of the slaying of Atli the Good by Eric, but he said
+nothing of the Earl's dying words, nor of how he goaded Brighteyes with
+his bitter words.
+
+"It was an ill deed in sooth," said Gudruda, "for Eric to slay an old
+man whom he had wronged. Still, it may chance that he was driven to it
+for his own life's sake."
+
+Then Hall said that he had seen Swanhild after Atli's slaying, and that
+she had told him that she and Eric should wed shortly, and that Eric
+would rule in Orkneys by her side.
+
+Gudruda asked if that was all his tale.
+
+"Yes, lady," answered Hall, "that is all my tale, for after that I
+sailed and know not what happened. But I am charged to give something
+to thee, and that by the Lady Swanhild. She bade me say this also: that,
+when thou lookest on the gift, thou shouldst think on a certain oath
+which Eric took as to the cutting of his hair." And he drew a linen
+packet from his breast and gave it to her.
+
+Thrice Gudruda looked on it, fearing to open it. Then, seeing the smile
+of mockery on Bjoern's cold face, she took the shears that hung at her
+side and cut the thread with them. And as she cut, a lock of golden hair
+rose from the packet, untwisting itself like a living snake. The lock
+was long, and its end was caked with gore.
+
+"Whose hair is this?" said Gudruda, though she knew the hair well.
+
+"Eric's hair," said Hall, "that Swanhild cut from his head with Eric's
+sword."
+
+Now Gudruda put her hand to her bosom. She drew out a satchel, and from
+the satchel a lock of yellow hair. Side by side she placed the locks,
+looking first at one and then at the other.
+
+"This is Eric's hair in sooth," she said--"Eric's hair that he swore
+none but I should cut! Eric's hair that Swanhild shore with Whitefire
+from Eric's head--Whitefire whereon we plighted troth! Say now, whose
+blood is this that stains the hair of Eric?"
+
+"It is Atli's blood, whom Eric first dishonoured and then slew with his
+own hand," answered Hall.
+
+Now there burned a fire on the hearth, for the day was cold. Gudruda the
+Fair stood over the fire and with either hand she let the two locks of
+Eric's hair fall upon the embers. Slowly they twisted up and burned. She
+watched them burn, then she threw up her hands and with a great cry fled
+from the hall.
+
+Bjoern and Hall of Lithdale looked on each other.
+
+"Thou hadst best go hence!" said Bjoern; "and of this I warn thee, Hall,
+though I hold thy tidings good, that, if thou hast spoken one false
+word, that will be thy death. For then it would be better for thee to
+face all the wolves in Iceland than to stand before Eric in his rage."
+
+Again Hall bethought himself of the axe of Skallagrim, and he went out
+heavily.
+
+
+
+That day a messenger came from Gudruda to Bjoern, saying that she would
+speak with him. He went to where she sat alone upon her bed. Her face
+was white as death, and her dark eyes glowed.
+
+"Eric has dealt badly with thee, sister, to bring thee to this sorrow,"
+said Bjoern.
+
+"Speak no evil of Eric to me," Gudruda answered. "The evil that he has
+done will be paid back to him; there is little need for thee to heap
+words upon his head. Hearken, Bjoern my brother: is it yet thy will that
+I should wed Ospakar Blacktooth?"
+
+"That is my will, surely. There is no match in Iceland as this Ospakar,
+and I should win many friends by it."
+
+"Do this then, Bjoern. Send messengers to Swinefell and say to Ospakar
+that if he would still wed Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter, let
+him come to Middalhof when folk ride from the Thing and he shall not go
+hence alone. Nay, I have done. Now, I pray thee speak no more to me of
+Eric or of Ospakar. Of the one I have seen and heard enough, and of the
+other I shall hear and see enough in the years that are to come."
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+HOW ERIC CAME HOME AGAIN
+
+Swanhild made a good passage from the Orkneys, and was in Iceland
+thirty-five days before Eric and Skallagrim set foot there. But she did
+not land by Westman Isles, for she had no wish to face Gudruda at
+that time, but by Reyjaness. Now she rode thence with her company to
+Thingvalla, for here all men were gathered for the Thing. At first
+people hung aloof from her, notwithstanding her wealth and beauty; but
+Swanhild knew well how to win the hearts of men. For now she told the
+same story of Eric that she had told to Atli, and there were none to say
+her nay. So it came to pass that she was believed, and Eric Brighteyes
+held to be shamed indeed. Now, too, she set a suit on foot against Eric
+for the death of Atli at his hand, claiming that sentence of the greater
+outlawry should be passed against him, and that his lands at Coldback in
+the Marsh on Ran River should be given, half to her in atonement for the
+Earl's death, and half to the men of Eric's quarter.
+
+On the day of the opening of the Thing Ospakar Blacktooth came from the
+north, and with him his son Gizur and a great company of men. Ospakar
+was blithe, for from the Thing he should ride to Middalhof, there to wed
+Gudruda the Fair. Then Swanhild clad herself in beautiful attire, and,
+taking men with her, went to the booth of Ospakar.
+
+Blacktooth sat in his booth and by him sat Gizur his son the Lawman.
+When he saw a beauteous lady, very richly clad, enter the booth he did
+not know who it might be. But Gizur knew her well, for he could never
+put Swanhild from his mind.
+
+"Lo! here comes Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's widow," said Gizur,
+flushing red with joy at the sight of her.
+
+Then Ospakar greeted her heartily, and made place for her by him at the
+top of the booth.
+
+"Ospakar Blacktooth," she said, "I am come to ask this of thee: that
+thou shalt befriend me in the suit which I have against Eric Brighteyes
+for the slaying of Earl Atli, my husband."
+
+"Thou couldst have come to no man who is more willing," said Ospakar,
+"for, if thou hast something against Eric, I have yet more."
+
+"I would ask this, too, Ospakar: that thy son Gizur should take up my
+suit and plead it; for I know well that he is the most skilful of all
+lawmen."
+
+"I will do that," said Gizur, his eyes yet fixed upon her face.
+
+"I looked for no less from thee," said Swanhild, "and be sure of
+this, that thou shalt not plead for nothing," and she glanced at him
+meaningly. Then she set out her case with a lying tongue, and afterwards
+went back to her booth, glad at heart. For now she learned that Hall had
+not failed in his errand, seeing that Gudruda was about to wed Ospakar.
+
+Gizur gave warning of the blood-suit, and the end of it was that, though
+he had no notice and was not there to answer to the charge, against all
+right and custom Eric was declared outlaw and his lands were given, half
+to Swanhild and half to the men of his quarter. For now all held that
+Swanhild's was a true tale, and Eric the most shameful of men, and
+therefore they were willing to stretch the law against him. Also, being
+absent, he had few friends, and those men of small account; whereas
+Ospakar, who backed Swanhild's suit, was the most powerful of the
+northern chiefs, as Gizur was the most skilled lawman in Iceland.
+Moreover, Bjoern the Priest, Asmund's son, was among the judges, and,
+though Swanhild's tale seemed strange to him after that which he had
+heard from Hall of Lithdale, he loved Eric little. He feared also that
+if Eric came a free man to Iceland before Gudruda was wed to Ospakar,
+her love would conquer her anger, for he could see well that she still
+loved Brighteyes. Therefore he strove with might and main that Eric
+should be brought in guilty, nor did he fail in this.
+
+So the end of it was that Eric Brighteyes was outlawed, his lands
+declared forfeit, and his head a wolf's head, to be taken by him who
+might, should he set foot in Iceland.
+
+Thereafter, the Althing being ended, Bjoern, Gizur, and Ospakar, with all
+their company, rode away to Middalhof to sit at the marriage-feast. But
+Swanhild and her folk went by sea in the long war-ship to Westmans. For
+this was her plan: to seize on Coldback and to sit there for a while,
+till she saw if Eric came out to Iceland. Also she desired to see the
+wedding of Ospakar and Gudruda, for she had been bidden to it by Bjoern,
+her half-brother.
+
+Now Ospakar came to Middalhof, and found Gudruda waiting his coming.
+
+She stood in the great hall, pale and cold as April snow, and greeted
+him courteously. But when he would have kissed her, she shrank from him,
+for now he was more hideous in her sight than he had ever been, and she
+loathed him in her heart.
+
+That night there was feasting in the hall, and at the feast Gudruda
+heard that Eric had been made outlaw. Then she spoke:
+
+"This is an ill deed, thus to judge an absent man."
+
+"Say, Gudruda," said Bjoern in her ear, "hast thou not also judged Eric
+who is absent?"
+
+She turned her head and spoke no more of Eric; but Bjoern's words fixed
+themselves in her heart like arrows. The tale was strange to her, for it
+seemed that Eric had been made outlaw at Swanhild's suit, and yet
+Eric was Swanhild's love: for Swanhild's self had sent the lock of
+Brighteyes' hair by Hall, saying that he was her love and soon would wed
+her. How, then, did Swanhild bring a suit against him who should be her
+husband? Moreover, she heard that Swanhild sailed down to Coldback, and
+was bidden to the marriage-feast, that should be on the third day from
+now. Could it be, then, when all was said and done, that Eric was less
+faithless than she deemed? Gudruda's heart stood still and the blood
+rushed to her brow when she thought on it. Also, even if it were so, it
+was now too late. And surely it was not so, for had not Eric been made
+outlaw? Men were not made outlaw for a little thing. Nay, she would meet
+her fate, and ask no more of Eric and his doings.
+
+On the morrow, as Gudruda sat in her chamber, it was told her that
+Saevuna, Thorgrimur's widow and Eric's mother, had come from Coldback to
+speak with her. For, after the death of Asmund and of Unna, Saevuna had
+moved back to Coldback on the Marsh.
+
+"Nay, how can this be?" said Gudruda astonished, for she knew well that
+Saevuna was now both blind and bed-ridden.
+
+"She has been borne here in a chair," said the woman who told her, "and
+that is a strange sight to see."
+
+At first Gudruda was minded to say her nay; but her heart softened, and
+she bade them bring Saevuna in. Presently she came, being set in a chair
+upon the shoulders of four men. She was white to see, for sickness had
+aged her much, and she stared about her with sightless eyes. But she was
+still tall and straight, and her face was stern to look on. To Gudruda
+it seemed like that of Eric when he was angered.
+
+"Am I nigh to Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter?" asked Saevuna.
+"Methinks I hear her breathe."
+
+"I am here, mother," said Gudruda. "What is thy will with me?"
+
+"Set down, carles, and begone!" quoth Saevuna; "that which I have to say
+I would say alone. When I summon you, come."
+
+The carles set down the chair upon the floor and went.
+
+"Gudruda," said the dame, "I am risen from my deathbed, and I have
+caused myself to be borne on my last journey here across the meads, that
+I may speak with thee and warn thee. I hear that thou hast put away my
+son, Eric Brighteyes, to whom thou art sworn in marriage, and art about
+to give thyself to Ospakar Blacktooth. I hear also that thou hast done
+this deed because a certain man, Hall of Lithdale--whom from his youth
+up I have known for a liar and a knave, and whom thou thyself didst
+mistrust in years gone by--has come hither to Iceland from Orkneys,
+bearing a tale of Eric's dealings with thy half-sister Swanhild. This I
+hear, further: that Swanhild, Atli's widow, hath come out to Iceland and
+laid a suit against Eric for the slaying of Atli the Earl, her husband,
+and that Eric has been outlawed and his lands at Coldback are forfeit.
+Tell me now, Gudruda, Asmund's daughter, if these tales be true?"
+
+"The tales are true, mother," said Gudruda.
+
+"Then hearken to me, girl. Eric sprang from my womb, who of all living
+men is the best and first, as he is the bravest and most strong. I have
+reared this Eric from a babe and I know his heart well. Now I tell thee
+this, that, whatever Eric has done or left undone, naught of dishonour
+is on his hands. Mayhap Swanhild has deceived him--thou art a woman, and
+thou knowest well the arts which women have, and the strength that Freya
+gives them. Well thou knowest, also, of what breed this Swanhild came;
+and perchance thou canst remember how she dealt with thee, and with what
+mind she looked on Eric. Perchance thou canst remember how she plotted
+against thee and Eric--ay, how she thrust thee from Goldfoss brink.
+Say, then, wilt thou take her word? Wilt thou take the word of this
+witch-daughter of a witch? Wilt thou not think on Groa, her mother, and
+of Groa's dealings with thy father, and with Unna my kinswoman? As the
+mother is, so shall the daughter be. Wilt thou cast Eric aside, and that
+unheard?"
+
+"There is no more room for doubt, mother," said Gudruda. "I have proof
+of this: that Eric has forsaken me."
+
+"So thou thinkest, child; but I tell thee that thou art wrong! Eric
+loves thee now as he loved thee aforetime, and will love thee always."
+
+"Would that I could believe it!" said Gudruda. "If I could believe that
+Eric still loved me--ay, even though he had been faithless to me--I
+would die ere I wed Ospakar!"
+
+"Thou art foolish, Gudruda, and thou shalt rue thy folly bitterly. I
+am outworn, and death draws near to me--far from me now are hates and
+loves, hopes and fears; but I know this: that woman is mad who, loving a
+man, weds where she loves not. Shame shall be her portion and bitterness
+her bread. Unhappy shall she live, and when she comes to die, but as a
+wilderness--but as the desolate winter snow, shall be the record of her
+days!"
+
+Now Gudruda wept aloud. "What is done is done," she cried; "the
+bridegroom sits within the hall--the bride awaits him in the bower. What
+is done is done--I may hope no more to be saved from Ospakar."
+
+"What is done is done, yet it can be brought to nothing; but soon that
+shall be done which may never be undone! Gudruda, fare thee well!
+Never shall I listen to thy voice again. I hold thee shameless, thou
+unfaithful woman, who in thy foolish jealousy art ready to sell thyself
+to the arms of one thou hatest! Ho! carles; come hither. Bear me hence!"
+
+Now the men came in and took up Saevuna's chair. Gudruda watched them
+bear her forth. Then suddenly she sprang from her seat and ran after her
+into the hall, weeping bitterly.
+
+Now as Saevuna, Eric's mother, was carried out she was met by Ospakar
+and Bjoern.
+
+"Stay," said Bjoern. "What does this carline here?--and why weeps
+Gudruda, my sister?"
+
+The men halted. "Who calls me 'carline'?" said Saevuna. "Is the voice I
+hear the voice of Bjoern, Asmund's son?"
+
+"It is my voice, truly," said Bjoern, "and I would know this--and this
+would Ospakar, who stands at my side, know also--why thou comest here,
+carline? and why Gudruda weeps?"
+
+"Gudruda weeps because she has good cause to weep, Bjoern. She weeps
+because she has betrayed her love, Eric Brighteyes, my son, and is about
+to be sold in marriage--to be sold to thee, Ospakar Blacktooth, like a
+heifer at a fair."
+
+Then Bjoern grew angry and cursed Saevuna, nor did Ospakar spare to add
+his ill words. But the old dame sat in her chair, listening silently
+till all their curses were spent.
+
+"Ye are evil, the twain of you," she said, "and ye have told lies of
+Eric, my son; and ye have taken his bride for lust and greed, playing on
+the jealous folly of a maid like harpers on a harp. Now I tell you
+this, Bjoern and Ospakar! My blind eyes are opened and I see this hall
+of Middalhof, and lo! it is but a gore of blood! Blood flows upon
+the board--blood streams along the floor, and ye--ye twain!--lie
+dead thereon, and about your shapes are shrouds, and on her feet are
+Hell-shoon! Eric comes and Whitefire is aloft, and no more shall ye
+stand before him whom ye have slandered than stands the birch before the
+lightning stroke! Eric comes! I see his angry eyes--I see his helm flash
+in the door-place! Red was that marriage-feast at which sat Unna, my
+kinswoman, and Asmund, thy father--redder shall be the feast where sit
+Gudruda, thy sister, and Ospakar! The wolf howls at thy door, Bjoern! the
+grave-worm opens his mouth! trolls run to and fro upon thy threshold,
+and the ghosts of men speed Hellwards! Ill were the deeds of Groa--worse
+shall be the deeds of Groa's daughter! Red is thy hall with blood,
+Bjoern!--for Whitefire is aloft and--_I tell thee Eric comes!_"--and with
+one great cry she fell back--dead.
+
+Now they stood amazed, and trembling in their fear.
+
+"Saevuna hath spoken strange words," said Bjoern.
+
+"Shall we be frightened by a dead hag?" quoth Ospakar, drawing his
+breath again. "Fellows, bear this carrion forth, or we fling it to the
+dogs."
+
+Then the men tied the body of Saevuna, Thorgrimur's widow, Eric's
+mother, fast in the chair, and bore it thence. But when at length
+they came to Coldback, they found that Swanhild was there with all her
+following, and had driven Eric's grieve and his folk to the fells. But
+one old carline, who had been nurse to Eric, was left there, and she sat
+wailing in an outhouse, being too weak to move.
+
+Then the men set down the corpse of Saevuna in the outhouse, and, having
+told all their tale to the carline, they fled also.
+
+That night passed, and passed the morrow; but on the next day at dawn
+Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail landed near Westman Isles. They
+had made a bad passage from Fareys, having been beat about by contrary
+winds; but at length they came safe and well to land.
+
+Now this was the day of the marriage-feast of Gudruda the Fair and
+Ospakar; but Eric knew nothing of these tidings.
+
+"Where to now, lord?" said Skallagrim.
+
+"To Coldback first, to see my mother, if she yet lives, and to learn
+tidings of Gudruda. Then as it may chance."
+
+Near to the beach was a yeoman's house. Thither they went to hire
+horses; but none were in the house, for all had gone to Gudruda's
+marriage-feast. In the home meadow ran two good horses, and in the
+outhouses were saddles and bridles. They caught the horses, saddled them
+and rode for Coldback. When they had ridden for something over an hour
+they came to the crest of a height whence they could see Coldback in the
+Marsh.
+
+Eric drew rein and looked, and his heart swelled within him at the sight
+of the place where he was born. But as he looked he saw a great train of
+people ride away from Coldback towards Middalhof--and in the company a
+woman wearing a purple cloak.
+
+"Now what may this mean?" said Eric.
+
+"Ride on and we shall learn," answered Skallagrim.
+
+So they rode on, and as they rode Eric's breast grew heavy with fear.
+Now they passed up the banked way through the home meadows of the house,
+but they could see no one; and now they were at the door. Down sprang
+Eric and walked into the hall. But none were there to greet him, though
+a fire yet burned upon the earth. Only a gaunt hound wandered about the
+hall, and, seeing him, sprang towards him, growling. Eric knew him for
+his old wolf-hound, and called him by his name. The dog listened, then
+ran up and smelt his hands, and straightway howled with joy and leapt
+upon him. For a while he leapt thus, while Eric stared around him
+wondering and sad at heart. Then the dog ran to the door and stopped,
+whining. Eric followed after him. The hound passed through the entrance,
+and across the yard till he came to an outhouse. Here the dog stopped
+and scratched at the door, still whining. Eric thrust it open. Lo! there
+before him sat Saevuna, his mother, dead in a chair, and at her feet
+crouched the carline--she who had been Eric's nurse.
+
+Now he grasped the door-posts to steady himself, and his shadow fell
+upon the white face of his mother and the old carline at her feet.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+HOW ERIC WAS A GUEST AT THE WEDDING-FEAST OF GUDRUDA THE FAIR
+
+Eric looked, but said nothing.
+
+"Who art thou?" whined the carline, gazing up at him with tear-blinded
+eyes. But Eric's face was in the shadow, and she only saw the glint of
+his golden hair and the flash of the golden helm. For Eric could not
+speak yet a while.
+
+"Art thou one of the Swanhild's folk, come to drive me hence with the
+rest? Good sir, I cannot go to the fells, my limbs are too weak. Slay
+me, if thou wilt, but drive me not from this," and she pointed to the
+corpse. "Say now, will thou not help me to give it burial? It is unmeet
+that she who in her time had husband, and goods, and son, should lie
+unburied like a dead cow on the fells. I have still a hundred in silver,
+if I might but come at it. It is hidden, sir, and I will pay thee if
+thou wilt help me to bury her. These old hands are too feeble to dig a
+grave, nor could I bear her there alone if it were dug. Thou wilt not
+help me?--then may thine own mother's bones lie uncovered, and be picked
+of gulls and ravens. Oh, that Eric Brighteyes would come home again! Oh,
+that Eric was here! there is work to do and never a man to do it."
+
+Now Eric gave a great sob and cried, "Nurse, nurse! knowest thou me not!
+_I_ am Eric Brighteyes."
+
+She uttered a loud cry, and, clasping him by the knees, looked up into
+his face.
+
+"Thanks be to Odin! Thou art Eric--Eric come home again! But alas, thou
+hast come too late!"
+
+"What has happened, then?" said Eric.
+
+"What has happened? All evil things. Thou art outlawed, Eric, at the
+suit of Swanhild for the slaying of Atli the Earl. Swanhild sits here in
+Coldback, for she hath seized thy lands. Saevuna, thy mother, died
+two days ago in the hall of Middalhof, whither she went to speak with
+Gudruda."
+
+"Gudruda! what of Gudruda?" cried Eric.
+
+"This, Brighteyes: to-day she weds Ospakar Blacktooth."
+
+Eric covered his face with his hand. Presently he lifted it.
+
+"Thou art rich in evil tidings, nurse, though, it would seem, poor in
+all besides. Tell me at what hour is the wedding-feast?"
+
+"An hour after noon, Eric; but now Swanhild has ridden thither with her
+company."
+
+"Then room must be found at Middalhof for one more guest," said
+Eric, and laughed aloud. "Go on!--pour out thy evil news and spare
+me not!--for nothing has any more power to harm me now! Come hither,
+Skallagrim, and see and hearken."
+
+Skallagrim came and looked on the face of dead Saevuna.
+
+"I am outlawed at Swanhild's suit, Lambstail. My life lies in thy hand,
+if so be thou wouldst take it! Hew off my head, if thou wilt, and
+bear it to Gudruda the Fair--she will thank thee for the gift. Lay on,
+Lambstail; lay on with that axe of thine."
+
+"Child's talk!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"Child's talk, but man's work! Thou hast not heard the tale out.
+Swanhild hath seized my lands and sits here at Coldback! And--what
+thinkest thou, Skallagrim?--but now she has ridden a-guesting to the
+marriage-feast of Ospakar Blacktooth with Gudruda the Fair! Swanhild at
+Gudruda's wedding!--the eagle in the wild swan's nest! But there will be
+another guest," and again he laughed aloud.
+
+"_Two_ other guests," said Skallagrim.
+
+"More of thy tale, old nurse!--more of thy tale!" quoth Eric. "No better
+didst thou ever tell me when, as a lad, I sat by thee, in the ingle o'
+winter nights--and the company is fitting to the tale!" and he pointed
+to dead Saevuna.
+
+Then the carline told on. She told how Hall of Lithdale had come out to
+Iceland, and of the story that he bore to Gudruda, and of the giving of
+the lock of hair.
+
+"What did I say, lord?" broke in Skallagrim--"that in Hall thou hadst
+let a weasel go who would live to nip thee?"
+
+"Him I will surely live to shorten by a head," quoth Eric.
+
+"Nay, lord, this one for me--Ospakar for thee, Hall for me!"
+
+"As thou wilt, Baresark. Among so many there is room to pick and choose.
+Tell on, nurse!"
+
+Then she told how Swanhild came out to Iceland, and, having won Ospakar
+Blacktooth and Gizur to her side, had laid a suit against Eric at the
+Thing, and there bore false witness against him, so that Brighteyes was
+declared outlaw, being absent. She told, too, how Gudruda had betrothed
+herself to Ospakar, and how Swanhild had moved down to Coldback and
+seized the lands. Lastly she told of the rising of Saevuna from her
+deathbed, of her going to Middalhof, of the words she spoke to Bjoern and
+Ospakar, and of her death in the hall at Middalhof.
+
+When all was told, Eric stooped and kissed the cold brow of his mother.
+
+"There is little time to bury thee now, my mother," he said, "and
+perchance before six hours are sped there will be one to bury at thy
+side. Nevertheless, thou shalt sit in a better place than this."
+
+Then he cut loose the cords that bound the body of Saevuna to the chair,
+and, lifting it in his arms, bore it to the hall. There he set the
+corpse in the high seat of the hall.
+
+"We need not start yet a while, Skallagrim," said Eric, "if indeed thou
+wouldst go a-guesting with me to Middalhof. Therefore let us eat and
+drink, for there are deeds to do this day."
+
+So they found meat and mead and ate and drank. Then Eric washed himself,
+combed out his golden locks, and looked well to his harness and
+to Whitefire's edge. Skallagrim also ground his great axe upon the
+whetstone in the yard, singing as he ground. When all was ready, the
+horses were caught, and Eric spoke to the carline:
+
+"Hearken, nurse. If it may be that thou canst find any of our folk--and
+perchance now that they see that Swanhild has ridden to Middalhof some
+one of them will come down to spy--thou shalt say this to them. Thou
+shalt say that, if Eric Brighteyes yet lives, he will be at the foot of
+Mosfell to-morrow before midday, and if, for the sake of old days and
+fellowship, they are minded to befriend a friendless man, let them come
+thither with food, for by then food will be needed, and I will speak
+with them. And now farewell," and Eric kissed her and went, leaving her
+weeping.
+
+As it chanced, before another hour was sped, Jon, Eric's thrall, who had
+stayed at home in Iceland, seeing Coldback empty, crept down from the
+fells and looked in. The carline saw him, and told him these tidings.
+Then he went thence to find the other men. Having found them he told
+them Eric's words, and a great gladness came upon them when they learned
+that Brighteyes still lived, and was in Iceland. Then they gathered
+food and gear, and rode away to the foot of Mosfell that is now called
+Ericsfell.
+
+
+
+Ospakar sat in the hall at Middalhof, near to the high seat. He was
+fully armed, and a black helm with a raven's crest was on his head.
+For, though he said nothing of it, not a little did he fear that Saevuna
+spoke sooth--that her words would come true, and, before this day was
+done, he and Eric should once more stand face to face. At his side
+sat Gudruda the Fair, robed in white, a worked head-dress on her head,
+golden clasps upon her breast and golden rings about her arms. Never had
+she been more beautiful to see; but her face was whiter than her robes.
+She looked with loathing on Blacktooth at her side, rough like a bear,
+and hideous as a troll. But he looked on her with longing, and laughed
+from side to side of his great mouth when he thought that at last he had
+got her for his own.
+
+"Ah, if Eric would but come, faithless though he be!--if Eric would
+but come!" thought Gudruda; but no Eric came to save her. The guests
+gathered fast, and presently Swanhild swept in with all her company,
+wrapped about in her purple cloak. She came up to the high seat where
+Gudruda sat, and bent the knee before her, looking on her with lovely
+mocking face and hate in her blue eyes.
+
+"Greeting, Gudruda, my sister!" she said. "When last we met I sat,
+Atli's bride, where to-day thou sittest the bride of Ospakar. Then
+Eric Brighteyes held thy hand, and little thou didst think of wedding
+Ospakar. Now Eric is afar--so strangely do things come about--and
+Blacktooth, Brighteyes' foe, holds that fair hand of thine."
+
+Gudruda looked on her and turned whiter yet in her pain, but she
+answered never a word.
+
+"What! no word for me, sister?" said Swanhild. "And yet it is through me
+that thou comest to this glad hour. It is through me that thou art rid
+of Eric, and it is I who have given thee to the arms of mighty Ospakar.
+No word of thanks for so great a service!--fie on thee, Gudruda! fie!"
+
+Then Gudruda spoke: "Strange tales are told of thee and Eric, Groa's
+daughter! I have done with Eric, but I have done with thee also. Thou
+hast thrust thyself here against my will and, if I may, I would see thy
+face no more."
+
+"Wouldst thou see Eric's face, Gudruda?--say, wouldst see Eric's face? I
+tell thee it is fair!"
+
+But Gudruda answered nothing, and Swanhild fell back, laughing.
+
+Now the feast began, and men waxed merry. But ever Gudruda's heart grew
+heavier, for in it echoed those words that Saevuna had spoken. Her eyes
+were dim, and she seemed to see naught but the face of Eric as it had
+looked when he came back to her that day on the brink of Goldfoss Falls
+and she had thought him dead. Oh! what if he still loved her and were
+yet true at heart? Swanhild mocked her!--what if this was a plot of
+Swanhild's? Had not Swanhild plotted aforetime, and could a wolf cease
+from ravening or a witch from witch-work? Nay, she had seen Eric's
+hair--that he had sworn none save she should touch! Perchance he had
+been drugged, and the hair shorn from him in his sleep? Too late to
+think! Of what use was thought?--beside her sat Ospakar, in one short
+hour she would be his. Ah! that she could see him dead--the troll who
+had trafficked her to shame, the foe she had summoned in her wrath and
+jealousy! She had done ill--she had fallen into Swanhild's snare, and
+now Swanhild came to mock her!
+
+The feast went on--cup followed cup. Now they poured the bride-cup!
+Before her heart beat two hundred times she would be the wife of
+Ospakar!
+
+Blacktooth took the cup--pledged her in it, and drank deep. Then he
+turned and strove to kiss her. But Gudruda shrank from him with horror
+in her eyes, and all men wondered. Still she must drink the bridal cup.
+She took it. Dimly she saw the upturned faces, faintly she heard the
+murmur of a hundred voices.
+
+What was that voice she caught above them all--there--without the hall?
+
+Holding the cup in her hand, Gudruda bent forward, staring down the
+skali. Then she cried aloud, pointing to the door, and the cup fell
+clattering from her hand and rolled along the ground.
+
+Men turned and looked. They saw this: there on the threshold stood a
+man, glorious to look at, and from his winged helm of gold the rays of
+light flashed through the dusky hall. The man was great and beautiful to
+see. He had long yellow hair bound in about his girdle, and in his left
+hand he held a pointed shield, in his right a spear, and at his thigh
+there hung a mighty sword. Nor was he alone, for by his side, a broad
+axe on his shoulder and shield in hand, stood another man, clad in
+black-hued mail--a man well-nigh as broad and big, with hawk's eyes,
+eagle beak, and black hair streaked with grey.
+
+For a moment there was silence. Then a voice spoke:
+
+"Lo! here be the Gods Baldur and Thor!--come from Valhalla to grace the
+marriage-feast!"
+
+Then the man with golden hair cried aloud in a voice that made the
+rafters ring:
+
+"Here are Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail, his thrall, come
+from over sea to grace the feast, indeed!"
+
+"I could have looked for no worse guests," said Bjoern, beneath his
+breath, and rose to bid men thrust them out. But before he could speak,
+lo! gold-helmed Eric and black-helmed Skallagrim were stalking up the
+length of that great hall. Side by side they stalked, with faces fierce
+and cold; nor stayed they till they stood before the high seat. Eric
+looked up and round, and the light of his eyes was as the light of a
+sword. Men marvelled at his greatness and his wonderful beauty, and to
+Gudruda he seemed like a God.
+
+"Here I see faces that are known to me," said Eric. "Greetings,
+comrades!"
+
+"Greetings, Brighteyes!" shouted the Middalhof folk and the company of
+Swanhild; but the carles of Ospakar laid hand on sword--they too knew
+Eric. For still all men loved Eric, and the people of his quarter were
+proud of the deeds he had done oversea.
+
+"Greeting, Bjoern, Asmund's son!" quoth Eric. "Greeting, Ospakar
+Blacktooth! Greeting, Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's witch-wife--Groa's
+witch-bairn! Greeting, Hall of Lithdale, Hall the liar--Hall who cut
+the grapnel-chain! And to thee, sweet Bride, to thee Gudruda the Fair,
+greeting!"
+
+Now Bjoern spoke: "I will take no greeting from a shamed and outlawed
+man. Get thee gone, Eric Brighteyes, and take thy wolf-hound with thee,
+lest thou bidest here stiff and cold."
+
+"Speak not so loud, rat, lest hound's fang worry thee!" growled
+Skallagrim.
+
+But Eric laughed aloud and cried--
+
+"Words must be said, and perchance men shall die, ere ever I leave this
+hall, Bjoern!"
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+HOW THE FEAST WENT
+
+"Hearken all men!" said Eric.
+
+"Thrust him out!" quoth Bjoern.
+
+"Nay, cut him down!" said Ospakar, "he is an outlawed man."
+
+"Words first, then deeds," answered Skallagrim. "Thou shalt have thy
+fill of both, Blacktooth, before day is done."
+
+"Let Eric say his say," said Gudruda, lifting her head. "He has been
+doomed unheard, and it is my will that he shall say his say."
+
+"What hast thou to do with Eric?" snarled Ospakar.
+
+"The bride-cup is not yet drunk, lord," she answered.
+
+"To thee, then, I will speak, lady," quoth Eric. "How comes it that,
+being betrothed to me, thou dost sit there the bride of Ospakar?"
+
+"Ask of Swanhild," said Gudruda in a low voice. "Ask also of Hall of
+Lithdale yonder, who brought me Swanhild's gift from Straumey."
+
+"I must ask much of Hall and he must answer much," said Eric. "What
+tale, then, did he bring thee from Straumey?"
+
+"He said this, Eric," Gudruda answered: "that thou wast Swanhild's love;
+that for Swanhild's sake thou hadst basely killed Atli the Good, and
+that thou wast about to wed Swanhild's self and take the Earl's seat in
+Orkneys."
+
+"And for what cause was I made outlaw at the Althing?"
+
+"For this cause, Eric," said Bjoern, "that thou hadst dealt evilly with
+Swanhild, bringing her to shame against her will, and thereafter that
+thou hadst slain the Earl, her husband."
+
+"Which, then, of these tales is true? for both cannot be true," said
+Brighteyes. "Speak, Swanhild."
+
+"Thou knowest well that the last is true," said Swanhild boldly.
+
+"How then comes it that thou didst charge Hall with that message to
+Gudruda? How then comes it that thou didst send her the lock of hair
+which thou didst cozen me to give thee?"
+
+"I charged Hall with no message, and I sent no lock of hair," Swanhild
+answered.
+
+"Stand thou forward, Hall!" said Eric, "and liar and coward though thou
+art, dare not to speak other than the truth! Nay, look not at the door:
+for, if thou stirrest, this spear shall find thee before thou hast gone
+a pace!"
+
+Now Hall stood forward, trembling with fear, for he saw the eye of
+Skallagrim watching him close, and while Lambstail watched, his fingers
+toyed with the handle of his axe.
+
+"It is true, lord, that Swanhild charged me with that message which I
+gave to the Lady Gudruda. Also she bade me give the lock of hair."
+
+"And for this service thou didst take money, Hall?"
+
+"Ay, lord, she gave me money for my faring."
+
+"And all the while thou knewest the tidings false?"
+
+Hall made no reply.
+
+"Answer!" thundered Eric--"answer the truth, knave, or by every God that
+passes the hundred gates I will not spare thee twice!"
+
+"It is so, lord," said Hall.
+
+"Thou liest, fox!" cried Swanhild, white with wrath and casting a fierce
+look upon Hall. But men took no heed of Swanhild's words, for all eyes
+were bent on Eric.
+
+"Is it now your pleasure, comrades, that I should tell you the truth?"
+said Brighteyes.
+
+The most part of the company shouted "Yea!" but the men of Ospakar stood
+silent.
+
+"Speak on, Eric," quoth Gudruda.
+
+"This is the truth, then: Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's wife, has
+always sought my love, and she has ever hated Gudruda whom I loved. From
+a child she has striven to work mischief between us. Ay, and she did
+this, though till now it has been hidden: she strove to murder Gudruda;
+it was on the day that Skallagrim and I overcame Ospakar and his band
+on Horse-Head Heights. She thrust Gudruda from the brink of Golden Falls
+while she sat looking on the waters, and as she hung there I dragged her
+back. Is it not so, Gudruda?"
+
+"It is so," said Gudruda.
+
+Now men murmured and looked at Swanhild. But she shrank back, plucking
+at her purple cloak.
+
+"It was for this cause," said Eric, "that Asmund, Swanhild's father,
+gave her choice to wed Atli the Earl and pass over sea or to take her
+trial in the Doom-Ring. She wedded Atli and went away. Afterwards, by
+witchcraft, she brought my ship to wreck on Straumey's Isle--ay, she
+walked the waters like a shape of light and lured us on to ruin, so
+that all were drowned except Skallagrim and myself. Is it not so,
+Skallagrim?"
+
+"It is so, lord. I saw her with my eyes."
+
+Again folk murmured.
+
+"Then we must sit in Atli's hall," said Eric, "and there we dwelt last
+winter. For a while Swanhild did no harm, till I feared her no more.
+But some three months ago, I was left with her: and a man called Koll,
+Groa's thrall, of whom ye know, came out from Iceland, bringing news
+of the death of Asmund the priest, of Unna my cousin, and of Groa the
+witch. To these ill-tidings Swanhild bribed him to add something. She
+bribed him to add this: that thou, Gudruda, wast betrothed to Ospakar,
+and wouldst wed him on last Yule Day. Moreover, he gave me a certain
+message from thee, Gudruda, and, in token of its truth, the half of that
+coin which I broke with thee long years ago. Say now, lady, didst thou
+send the coin?"
+
+"Nay, never!" cried Gudruda; "many years ago I lost the half thou gavest
+me, though I feared to tell thee."
+
+"Perchance one stands there who found it," said Eric, pointing with his
+spear at Swanhild. "At the least I was deceived by it. Now the tale is
+short. Swanhild mourned with me, and in my sorrow I mourned bitterly.
+Then it was she asked a boon, that lock of mine, Gudruda, and, thinking
+thee faithless, I gave it, holding all oaths broken. Then too, when
+I would have left her, she drugged me with a witch-draught--ay, she
+drugged me, and I woke to find myself false to my oath, false to Atli,
+and false to thee, Gudruda. I cursed her and I left her, waiting for
+the Earl, to tell him all. But Swanhild outwitted me. She told him
+that other tale of shame that ye have heard, and brought Koll to him as
+witness of the tale. Atli was deceived by her, and not until I had cut
+him down in anger at the bitter words he spoke, calling me coward and
+niddering, did he know the truth. But before he died he knew it; and
+he died, holding my hand and bidding those about him find Koll and slay
+him. Is it not so, ye who were Atli's men?"
+
+"It is so, Eric!" they cried; "we heard it with our own ears, and we
+slew Koll. But afterwards Swanhild brought is to believe that Earl Atli
+was distraught when he spoke thus, and that things were indeed as she
+had said."
+
+Again men murmured, and a strange light shone in Gudruda's eyes.
+
+"Now, Gudruda, thou hast heard all my story," said Eric. "Say, dost thou
+believe me?"
+
+"I believe thee, Eric."
+
+"Say then, wilt thou still wed yon Ospakar?"
+
+Gudruda looked on Blacktooth, then she looked at golden Eric and opened
+her lips to speak. But before a word could pass them Ospakar rose in
+wrath, laying his hand upon his sword.
+
+"Thinkest thou thus to lure away my dove, outlaw? First I will see thee
+food for crows."
+
+"Well spoken, Blacktooth," laughed Eric. "I waited for such words from
+thee. Thrice have we striven together--once out yonder in the snow, once
+on Horse-Head Heights, and once by Westman Isles--and still we live
+to tell the tale. Come down, Ospakar: come down from that soft seat of
+thine and here and now let us put it to the proof who is the better man.
+When we met before, the stake was Whitefire set against my eye. Now the
+stake is our lives and fair Gudruda's hand. Talk no more, Ospakar, but
+fall to it."
+
+"Gudruda shall never wed thee, while I live!" said Bjoern; "thou art a
+landless loon, a brawler, and an outlaw. Get thee gone, Eric, with thy
+wolf-hound!"
+
+"Squeak not so loud, rat--squeak not so loud, lest hound's fang worry
+thee!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"Whether I wed Gudruda or whether I wed her not is a matter that shall
+be known in its season," said Eric. "For thy words, I say this: that it
+is risky to hurl names at such as I am, Bjoern, lest perchance I answer
+them with spear-thrusts. Thy answer, Ospakar! What need to wait? Thy
+answer!"
+
+Now Ospakar looked at Brighteyes and grew afraid. He was a mighty man,
+but he knew the weight of Eric's arm.
+
+"I will not fight with thee, carle," he said, "who hast naught to lose."
+
+"Then thou art coward and niddering!" said Eric. "Ospakar _Niddering_ I
+name thee here before all men! What! thou couldst plot against me--thou
+couldst waylay me, ten to one and two ships to one, but face to face
+with me alone thou dost not dare to stand? Comrades, look on your
+lord!--look at Ospakar the _Niddering!_"
+
+Now the swarthy brow of Blacktooth grew red with rage, and his breath
+came in great gasps. "Ho, men!" he cried, "drive this knave away. Strip
+his harness off him and whip him hence with rods."
+
+"Let but a man stir towards me and this spear flies through thy heart,
+Niddering," cried Eric. "Gudruda, what thinkest thou of thy lord?"
+
+"I know this," said Gudruda, "that I will not wed a man who is named
+'Niddering' in the face of all and lifts no sword."
+
+Gudruda spoke thus, because she was mad with love and fear and shame,
+and she desired that Eric should stand face to face with Ospakar
+Blacktooth, for thus, alone, she might perhaps be rid of Ospakar.
+
+"Such words do not come well from gentle lips," said Bjoern.
+
+"Is it to be borne, brother," answered Gudruda, "that the man who would
+call me wife should be named Ospakar the Niddering? When that shame is
+washed away, and then only, can I think on marriage. I will never be
+Niddering's bride!"
+
+"Thou hearest, Ospakar Niddering?" said Eric. Then he gave the spear
+in his hand to Skallagrim, and, gripping Whitefire's hilt, he burst the
+peace-strings, and tore it from the scabbard.
+
+Now the great sword shone on high like lightning leaping from a cloud,
+and as it shone men shouted, "_Ospakar! Ospakar Niddering!_ Come, win
+back Whitefire from Eric's hand, or be for ever shamed!"
+
+Blacktooth could endure this no more. He snatched sword and shield, and,
+like a bear from a cave, like a wolf from his lair, rushed roaring from
+his seat. On he came, and the ground shook beneath his bulk.
+
+"At last, Niddering!" cried Eric, and sprang to meet him.
+
+"Back! all men, back!" shouted Skallagrim, "now we shall see blows."
+
+As he spoke the great swords flashed aloft and clanged upon the iron
+shields. So heavy were the blows that fire leapt out from them. Ospakar
+reeled back beneath the shock, and Eric was beaten to his knee. Now he
+was up, but as he rushed, Ospakar struck again and swept away half of
+Brighteyen's pointed shield so that it fell upon the floor. Eric smote
+also, but Ospakar dropped his knee to earth and the sword hissed over
+him. Blacktooth cut at Eric's legs; but Brighteyes sprang from the
+ground and took no harm.
+
+Now some cried, "_Eric! Eric!_" and some cried "_Ospakar! Ospakar!_" for
+no one knew how the fight would go.
+
+Gudruda sat watching in the high seat, and as blows fell her colour came
+and went.
+
+Swanhild drew near, watching also, and she desired in her fierce heart
+to see Eric brought to shame and death, for, should he win, then Gudruda
+would be rid of Ospakar. Now by her side stood Gizur, Ospakar's son,
+and near to her was Bjoern. These two held their breath, for, if Eric
+conquered, all their plans were brought to nothing.
+
+Even as he sprang into the air, Eric smote down with all his strength.
+The blow fell on Ospakar's shield. It shore through the shield and
+struck on the shoulder beneath. But Blacktooth's byrnie was good, nor
+did the sword bite into it. Still the stroke was so heavy that Ospakar
+staggered back four paces beneath it, then fell upon the ground.
+
+Now folk raised a shout of "_Eric! Eric!_" for it seemed that Ospakar
+was sped. Brighteyes, too, cried aloud, then rushed forward. Now, as he
+came, Swanhild whispered an eager word into the ear of Bjoern. By Bjoern's
+foot lay that half of Eric's shield which had been shorn away by the
+sword of Ospakar. Gudruda, watching, saw Bjoern push it with his shoe so
+that it slid before the feet of Brighteyes. His right foot caught on it,
+he stumbled heavily--stumbled again, then fell prone on his face,
+and, as he fell, stretched out his sword hand to save himself, so that
+Whitefire flew from his grasp. The blade struck its hilt against the
+ground, then circled in the air and fixed itself, point downwards, in
+the clay of the flooring. The hand of Ospakar rising from the ground
+smote against the hilt of Whitefire. He saw it, with a shout he cast his
+own sword away and clasped Whitefire.
+
+Away circled the sword of Ospakar; and of that cast this strange thing
+is told, false or true. Far in the corner of the hall lurked Thorunna,
+she who had betrayed Skallagrim when he was named Ounound. She had come
+with a heavy heart to Middalhof in the company of Ospakar; but when she
+saw Skallagrim, her husband--whom she had betrayed, and who had turned
+Baresark because of her wickedness--shame smote her, and she crept away
+and hid herself behind the hangings of the hall. The sword sped along
+point first, it rushed like a spear through the air. It fell on the
+hangings, piercing them, piercing the heart of Thorunna, who cowered
+behind them, so that with one cry she sank dead to earth, slain by her
+lover's hand.
+
+
+
+Now when men saw that Ospakar once more held Whitefire in his
+hand--Whitefire that Brighteyes had won from him--they called aloud that
+it was an omen. The sword of Blacktooth had come back to Blacktooth and
+now Eric would surely be slain of it!
+
+Eric sprang from the ground. He heard the shouts and saw Whitefire
+blazing in Ospakar's hand.
+
+"Now thou art weaponless, fly! Brighteyes; fly!" cried some.
+
+Gudruda's cheek grew white with fear, and for a moment Eric's heart
+failed him.
+
+"Fly not!" roared Skallagrim. "Bjoern tripped thee. Yet hast thou half a
+shield!"
+
+Ospakar rushed on, and Whitefire flickered over Eric's helm. Down it
+came and shore one wing from the helm. Again it shone and fell, but
+Brighteyes caught the blow on his broken shield.
+
+Then, while men waited to see him slain, Eric gave a great war-shout and
+sprang forward.
+
+"Thou art mad!" shouted the folk.
+
+"Ye shall see! Ye shall see!" screamed Skallagrim.
+
+Again Ospakar smote and again Eric caught the blow; and behold! he
+struck back, thrusting with the point of the shorn shield straight at
+the face of Ospakar.
+
+"_Peck! Eagle; peck!_" cried Skallagrim.
+
+Once more Whitefire shone above him. Eric rushed in beneath the
+sword, and with all his mighty strength thrust the buckler-point at
+Blacktooth's face. It struck fair and full, and lo! the helm of Ospakar
+burst asunder. He threw wide his giant arms, then fell as a pine falls
+upon the mountain edge. He fell back, and he lay still.
+
+But Eric, stooping over him, took Whitefire from his hand.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+HOW THE FEAST ENDED
+
+For a moment there was silence in the hall, for men had known no such
+fight as this.
+
+"Why, then, do ye gape?" laughed Skallagrim, pointing with the spear.
+"Dead is Ospakar!--slain by the swordless man! Eric Brighteyes hath
+slain Ospakar Blacktooth!"
+
+Then there went up such a shout as never was heard in the hall of
+Middalhof.
+
+Now when Gudruda knew that Ospakar was sped, she looked at Eric as he
+rested, leaning on his sword, and her heart was filled with awe and
+love. She sprang from her seat, and, coming to where Brighteyes stood,
+she greeted him.
+
+"Welcome to Iceland, Eric!" she said. "Welcome, thou glory of the
+south!"
+
+Now Swanhild grew wild, for she saw that Eric was about to take Gudruda
+in his arms and kiss her before all men.
+
+"Say, Bjoern," she cried; "wilt thou suffer that this outlaw, having
+slain Ospakar, should lead Gudruda hence as wife?"
+
+"He shall never do so while I live," cried Bjoern, nearly mad with rage.
+"This is my command, sister: that thou dost see Eric no more."
+
+"Say, Bjoern," answered Gudruda, "did I dream, or did I indeed see thee
+thrust the broken buckler before Eric's feet, so that he stumbled on it
+and fell?"
+
+"That thou sawest, lady," said Skallagrim; "for I saw it also."
+
+Now Bjoern grew white in his anger. He did not answer Gudruda, but called
+aloud to his men to slay Eric and Skallagrim. Gizur called also to the
+folk of Ospakar, and Swanhild to those who came with her.
+
+Then Gudruda fled back to her seat.
+
+But Eric cried aloud also: "Ye who love me, cleave to me. Suffer it not
+that Brighteyes be cut down of northerners and outland men. Hear me,
+Atli's folk; hear me, carles of Coldback and of Middalhof!"
+
+And so greatly did many love Eric that half of the thralls of Bjoern, and
+almost all of the company of Swanhild who had been Atli's shield-men and
+Brighteyes' comrades, drew swords, shouting "Eric! Eric!" But the carles
+of Ospakar came on to make an end of him.
+
+Bjoern saw, and, drawing sword, smote at Brighteyes, taking him unawares.
+But Skallagrim caught the blow upon his axe, and before Bjoern could
+smite again Whitefire was aloft and down fell Bjoern, dead!
+
+That was the end of Bjoern, Asmund's son.
+
+"Thou hast squeaked thy last, rat! What did I tell thee?" cried
+Skallagrim. "Take Bjoern's shield and back to back, lord, for here come
+foes."
+
+"There goes one," answered Eric, pointing to the door.
+
+Now Hall of Lithdale slunk through the doorway--Hall, the liar, who cut
+the grapnel-chain--for he wished to see the last of Skallagrim. But the
+Baresark still held Eric's spear in his hand. He whirled it aloft, and
+it hissed through the air. The aim was good, for, as he crept away,
+the spear struck Hall between neck and shoulder, pinning him to the
+doorpost, and there the liar died.
+
+"Now the weasel is nailed to the beam," said Skallagrim. "Hall of
+Lithdale, what did I promise thee?"
+
+"Guard thy head and my back," quoth Eric; "blows fall!"
+
+Now men smote at Eric and Skallagrim, nor did they spare to smite in
+turn. And as foes fell before him, Eric stepped one pace forward towards
+the door, and Skallagrim, who, back to back with him, held off those
+who pressed behind, took one step rearwards. Thus, a foe for every step,
+they won their way down the long hall. Fierce raged the fray around
+them, for, made with hate and drink and the lust of fight, Swanhild's
+folk--Eric's friends--remembering the words of Atli, fell on Ospakar's;
+and the people of Bjoern fell on each other, brother on brother, and
+father on son--nor might the fray be stayed. The boards were overthrown,
+dead men lay among the meats and mead, and the blood of freeman, lord
+and thrall ran adown the floor. Everywhere through the dusky hall
+glittered the sheen of flashing swords and rose the clang of war. Darts
+clove the air like tongues of flame, and the clamour of battle beat
+against the roof.
+
+Blinded of the Norns who brought these things to pass, men sought no
+mercy and they gave none, but smote and slew till few were left to slay.
+
+And still Gudruda sat in her bride-seat, and, with eyes fixed in horror,
+watched the waxing of the war. Near to her stood Swanhild, marking all
+things with a fierce-set face, and calling down curses on her folk, who
+one and all cried "Eric! Eric!" and swept the thralls of Ospakar as corn
+is swept of the sickle.
+
+And there, nigh to the door, pale of face and beautiful to see, golden
+Eric clove his way, and with him went black Skallagrim. Terrible was
+the flare of Whitefire as he flicked aloft like the levin in the cloud.
+Terrible was the flare of Whitefire; but more terrible was the light
+of Eric's eyes, for they seemed to flame in his head, and wherever that
+fire fell it lighted men the way to death. Whitefire sung and flickered,
+and crashed the axe of Skallagrim, and still through the press of war
+they won their way. Now Gizur stands before them, spear aloft, and
+Whitefire leaps up to meet him. Lo! he turns and flies. The coward son
+of Ospakar does not seek the fate of Ospakar!
+
+The door is won. They stand without but little harmed, while women wail
+aloud.
+
+"To horse!" cried Skallagrim; "to horse, ere our luck fail us!"
+
+"There is no luck in this," gasped Eric; "for I have slain many men, and
+among them is Bjoern, the brother of her whom I would make my bride."
+
+"Better one such fight than many brides," said Skallagrim, shaking his
+red axe. "We have won great glory this day, Brighteyes, and Ospakar is
+dead--slain by a swordless man!"
+
+
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim ran to their horses, none hindering them, and,
+mounting, rode towards Mosfell.
+
+All that evening and all the night they rode, and at morning they came
+across the black sand to Mosfell slopes that are by the Hecla. Here they
+rested, and, taking off their armour, washed themselves in the stream:
+for they were very weary and foul with blood and wounds. When they had
+finished washing and had buckled on their harness again, Skallagrim,
+peering across the plain with his hawk's eyes, saw men riding fast
+towards them.
+
+"Foes are soon afoot, lord," he said. "I thought we had stayed their
+hunger for a while."
+
+"Would that I might stay mine," quoth Eric. "I am weary, and unfit for
+fight."
+
+"I have still strength for one or two," said Skallagrim, "and then
+good-night! But these are no foes. They are of the Coldback folk. The
+carline has kept her word."
+
+Then Eric was glad, and presently six men, headed by Jon his thrall,
+the same man who had watched on Mosfell when Eric went up to slay the
+Baresark, rode to them and greeted them. "Beggar women," said Jon, "whom
+they met at Ran River, had told them of the death of Ospakar, and of
+the great slaying at Middalhof, and they would know if the tidings were
+true."
+
+"It is true, Jon," said Eric; "but first give us food, if ye have it,
+for we are hungered and spent. When we have eaten we will speak."
+
+So they led up a pack-horse and from it took stockfish and smoked meat,
+of which Eric and Skallagrim ate heartily, till their strength came back
+to them.
+
+Then Eric spoke. "Comrades," he said, "I am an outlawed man, and, though
+I have not sought it, much blood is on my head. Atli is dead at my hand;
+Ospakar is dead at my hand; Bjoern the Priest, Asmund's son, is dead at
+my hand, and with them many another man. Nor may the matter stay here,
+for Gizur, Blacktooth's son, yet lives, and Bjoern has kin in the south,
+and Swanhild will buy friends with gold, and all of these will set on me
+to slay me, so that at the last I die by the sword."
+
+"No need for that," said Skallagrim. "Our vengeance is wrought, and
+now, as before, the sea is open, and I think that a welcome awaits us in
+London."
+
+"Now Gudruda is widowed before she was fully wed," said Eric, "therefore
+I bide an outlawed man here in Iceland. I go hence no more, though it be
+death to stay, unless indeed Gudruda the Fair goes with me."
+
+"It will be death, then," said Skallagrim, "and the swords are forged
+that we shall feel. The odds are too heavy, lord."
+
+"Mayhap," answered Eric. "No man may flee his fate, and I shall not
+altogether grieve when mine finds me. Hearken, comrades: I go up to
+Mosfell height, and there I stay, till those be found who can drag me
+from my hole. But this is my counsel to you: that ye leave me to my
+doom, for I am an unlucky man who always chooses the wrong road."
+
+"That will not I," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Nor we," said Eric's folk; "Swanhild holds Coldback, and we are driven
+to the fells. To the fells then we will go with thee, Eric Brighteyes,
+and become cave-dwellers and outlaws for thy sake. Fear not, thou shalt
+still find many friends."
+
+"I did not look for such a thing at your hands," said Eric; "but stormy
+waters show how the boat is built. May no bad luck come to you from your
+good fellowship. And now let us to our nest."
+
+Then they caught the horses, and rode with Brighteyes up the steep
+side of Mosfell, till at length they came to that secret dell which
+Skallagrim had once shown to Eric. Here they turned the horses loose to
+feed, and, going forward on foot, reached the dark and narrow pass that
+Brighteyes had trod when he sought for the Baresark foe. Skallagrim led
+the way along it, then came Eric and the rest. One by one they stepped
+on to the giddy point of rock, and, catching at the birch-bush, entered
+the hole. So they gained the platform and the great cave beyond; and
+they found that no man had set foot there since the day when Eric had
+striven with Skallagrim. For there on the rock, rotten with the weather,
+lay that haft of wood which Brighteyes had hewed from the axe of
+Skallagrim, and in the cave were many things beside as the Baresark had
+left them.
+
+So they took up their dwelling in the cave, Eric, Skallagrim, and the
+six Coldback men, and there they dwelt many months. But Eric sent out
+his men, one at a time, and got together food and a store of sheepskins,
+and other needful things. For he knew this well: that Gizur and Swanhild
+would before long come up against them, and, if they could not take them
+by force, would set themselves to watch the mountain-path and starve
+them out.
+
+
+
+When Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Middalhof the fight still raged
+fiercely in the hall, and nothing but death might stay it. The minds of
+men were mad, and they smote one another, and slew each other, till
+at length of all that marriage company few were left unharmed, except
+Gizur, Swanhild, and Gudruda. For the serving thralls and womenfolk had
+fled the hall, and with them some peaceful men.
+
+Then Gudruda spoke as one in a dream.
+
+"Saevuna's prophecy was true," she said, "red was the marriage-feast of
+Asmund my father, redder has been the marriage-feast of Ospakar! She saw
+the hall of Middalhof one gore of blood, and lo! it is so; look upon thy
+work, Swanhild," and she pointed to the piled-up dead--"look upon thy
+work, witch-sister, and grow fearful: for all this death is on thy
+head!"
+
+Swanhild laughed aloud. "I think it a merry sight," she cried. "The
+marriage-feast of Asmund our father was red, and thy marriage-feast,
+Gudruda, has been redder. Would that thy blood and the blood of Eric
+ran with the blood of Bjoern and Ospakar! That tale must yet be told,
+Gudruda. There shall be binding on of Hell-shoes at Middalhof, but I
+bind them not. My task is still to come: for I will live to fasten the
+Hell-shoes on the feet of Eric, and on thy feet, Gudruda! At the least,
+I have brought about this much, that thou canst scarcely wed Eric the
+outlaw: for with his own hand he slew Bjoern our brother, and because
+of this I count all that death as nothing. Thou canst not mate with
+Brighteyes, lest the wide wounds of Bjoern thy brother should take
+tongues and cry thy shame from sea to sea!"
+
+Gudruda made no answer, but sat as one carved in stone. Then Swanhild
+spoke again:
+
+"Let us away to the north, Gizur; there to gather strength to make an
+end of Eric. Say, wilt thou help us, Gudruda? The blood-feud for the
+death of Bjoern is thine."
+
+"Ye are enough to bring about the fall of one unfriended man," Gudruda
+said. "Go, and leave me with my sorrow and the dead. Nay! before thou
+goest, listen, Swanhild, for there is that in my heart which tells me I
+shall never look again upon thy face. From evil to evil thou hast ever
+gone, Swanhild, and from evil to evil thou wilt go. It may well chance
+that thy wickedness will win. It may well chance that thou wilt crown
+thy crimes with my slaying and the slaying of the man who loves me. But
+I tell thee this, traitress--murderess, as thou art--that here the tale
+ends not. Not by death, Swanhild, shalt thou escape the deeds of life!
+_There_ they shall rise up against thee, and _there_ every shame that
+thou hast worked, every sin that thou hast sinned, and every soul that
+thou hast brought to Hela's halls, shall come to haunt thee and to drive
+thee on from age to age! That witchcraft which thou lovest shall mesh
+thee. Shadows shall bewilder thee; from the bowl of empty longings thou
+shalt drink and drink, and not be satisfied. Yea! lusts shall mock and
+madden thee. Thou shalt ride the winds, thou shalt sail the seas, but
+thou shalt find no harbour, and never shalt thou set foot upon a shore
+of peace.
+
+"Go on, Swanhild--dye those hands in blood--wade through the river of
+shame! Seek thy desire, and finding, lose! Work thy evil, and winning,
+fail! I yet shall triumph--I yet shall trample thee; and, in a place
+to come, with Eric at my side, I shall make a mock of Swanhild the
+murderess! Swanhild the liar, and the wanton, and the witch! Now get
+thee gone!"
+
+Swanhild heard. She looked up at Gudruda's face and it was alight
+as with a fire. She strove to answer, but no words came. Then Groa's
+daughter turned and went, and with her went Gizur.
+
+
+
+Now women and thralls came in and drew out the wounded and those who
+still breathed from among the dead, taking them to the temple. They bore
+away the body of Ospakar also, but they left the rest.
+
+
+
+All night long Gudruda sat in the bride's seat. There she sat in the
+silver summer midnight, looking on the slain who were strewn about the
+great hall. All night she sat alone in the bride's seat thinking--ever
+thinking.
+
+How, then, would it end? There her brother Bjoern lay a-cold--Bjoern the
+justly slain of Brighteyes; yet how could she wed the man who slew
+her brother? From Ospakar she was divorced by death; from Eric she was
+divorced by the blood of Bjoern her brother! How might she unravel this
+tangled skein and float to weal upon this sea of death? All things went
+amiss! The doom was on her! She had lived to an ill purpose--her love
+had wrought evil! What availed it to have been born to be fair among
+women and to have desired that which might not be? And she herself had
+brought these things to pass--she had loosed the rock which crushed her!
+Why had she hearkened to that false tale?
+
+Gudruda sat on high in the bride's seat, asking wisdom of the piled-up
+dead, while the cold blue shadows of the nightless night gathered over
+her and them--gathered, and waned, and grew at last to the glare of day.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+HOW ERIC VENTURED DOWN TO MIDDALHOF AND WHAT HE FOUND
+
+Gizur went north to Swinefell, and Swanhild went with him. For now that
+Ospakar was dead at Eric's hand, Gizur ruled in his place at Swinefell,
+and was the greatest lord in all the north. He loved Swanhild, and
+desired to make her his wife; but she played with him, talking darkly of
+what might be. Swanhild was not minded to be the wife of any man, except
+of Eric; to all others she was cold as the winter earth. Still, she
+fooled Gizur as she had fooled Atli the Good, and he grew blind with
+love of her. For still the beauty of Swanhild waxed as the moon waxes in
+the sky, and her wicked eyes shone as the stars shine when the moon has
+set.
+
+Now they came to Swinefell, and there Gizur buried Ospakar Blacktooth,
+his father, with much state. He set him in a chamber of rock and timbers
+on a mountain-top, whence he might see all the lands that once were his,
+and built up a great mound of earth above him. To this day people tell
+that here on Yule night black Ospakar bursts out, and golden Eric rides
+down the blast to meet him. Then come the clang of swords, and groans,
+and the sound of riven helms, till presently Brighteyes passes southward
+on the wind, bearing in his hand the half of a cloven shield.
+
+So Gizur bound the Hell-shoes on his father, and swore that he would
+neither rest nor stay till Eric Brighteyes was dead and dead was
+Skallagrim Lambstail. Then he gathered a great force of men and rode
+south to Coldback, to the slaying of Eric, and with him went Swanhild.
+
+
+
+Gudruda sat alone in the haunted hall of Middalhof and brooded on her
+love and on her fate. Eric, too, sat in Mosfell cave and brooded on his
+evil chance. His heart was sick with sorrow, and there was little that
+he could do except think about the past. He would not go to foray, after
+the fashion of outlaws, and there was no need of this. For the talk of
+his mighty deeds spread through the land, so that the people spoke of
+little else. And the men of his quarter were so proud of these deeds of
+Eric's that, though some of their kind had fallen at his hands in the
+great fight of Middalhof and some at the hands of Skallagrim, yet they
+spoke of him as men speak of a God. Moreover they brought him gifts of
+food and clothing and arms, as many as his people could carry away,
+and laid them in a booth that is on the plain near the foot of Mosfell,
+which thenceforth was named Ericsfell. Further, they bade his thralls
+tell him that, if he wished it, they would find him a good ship of war
+to take him from Iceland--ay, and man it with loyal men and true.
+
+Eric thanked them through Jon his thrall, but answered that he wished to
+die here in Iceland.
+
+
+
+Now, when Eric had sat two months and more in Mosfell cave and autumn
+was coming, he learned that Gizur and Swanhild had moved down to
+Coldback, and with them a great company of men who were sworn to slay
+him. He asked if Gudruda the Fair had also gathered men for his slaying.
+They told him no; that Gudruda stayed with her thralls and women at
+Middalhof, mourning for Bjoern her brother. From these tidings Eric took
+some heart of hope: at the least Gudruda laid no blood-feud against him.
+For he waited, thinking, if indeed she yet loved him, that Gudruda would
+send him some word or token of her love. But no word came, since between
+them ran the blood of Bjoern. On the morrow of these tidings Skallagrim
+spoke to Eric.
+
+"This is my counsel, lord," he said, "that we ride out by night and fall
+on the folk of Gizur at Coldback, and burn the stead over them, putting
+them to the sword. I am weary of sitting here like an eagle in a cage."
+
+"Such is no counsel of mine, Skallagrim," answered Brighteyes. "I am
+weary of sitting here, indeed; but I am yet more weary of bringing men
+to their death. I will shed no more blood, unless it is to save my own
+head. When the people of Gizur came to seek me on Mosfell, they shall
+find me here; but I will not go to them."
+
+"Thy heart is out of thee, lord," said Skallagrim; "thou wast not wont
+to speak thus."
+
+"Ay, Skallagrim," said Eric, "the heart is out of me. Yet I ride from
+Mosfell to-day."
+
+"Whither, lord?"
+
+"To Middalhof, to have speech with Gudruda the Fair."
+
+"Like enough, then, thou wilt be silent thereafter."
+
+"It well may be," said Eric. "Yet I will ride. I can bear this doubt no
+longer."
+
+"Then I shall come with thee," said Skallagrim.
+
+"As thou wilt," answered Eric.
+
+So at midday Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Mosfell in a storm of
+rain. The rain was so heavy that those of Gizur's spies who watched the
+mountain did not see them. All that day they rode and all the night,
+till by morning they came to Middalhof. Eric told Skallagrim to stay
+with the horses and let them feed, while he went on foot to see if by
+chance he might get speech with Gudruda. This the Baresark did, though
+he grumbled at the task, fearing lest Eric should be done to death, and
+he not there to die with him.
+
+Now Eric walked to within two bowshots of the house, then sat down in a
+dell by the river, from the edge of which he could see those who passed
+in and out. Presently his heart gave a leap, for there came out from the
+woman's door a lady tall and beautiful to see, and with golden hair
+that flowed about her breast. It was Gudruda, and he saw that she bore a
+napkin in her hand. Then Eric knew, according to her custom on the warm
+mornings, that she came alone to bathe in the river, as she had always
+done from a child. It was her habit to bathe here in this place: for at
+the bottom of the dell was a spot where reeds and bushes grew thick, and
+the water lay in a basin of rock and was clear and still. For at this
+spot a hot spring ran into the river.
+
+Eric went down the dell, hid himself close in the bushes and waited, for
+he feared to speak with Gudruda in the open field. A while passed, and
+presently the shadow of the lady crept over the edge of the dell, then
+she came herself in that beauty which since her day has not been known
+in Iceland. Her face was sad and sweet, her dark and lovely eyes were
+sad. On she came, till she stood within a spear's length of where Eric
+lay, crouched in the bush, and looking at her through the hedge of
+reeds. Here a flat rock overhung the water, and Gudruda sat herself
+on this rock, and, shaking off her shoes, dipped her white feet in the
+water. Then suddenly she threw aside her cloak, baring her arms, and,
+gazing upon the shadow of her beauty in the mirror of the water, sighed
+and sighed again, while Eric looked at her with a bursting heart, for as
+yet he could find no words to say.
+
+Now she spoke aloud. "Of what use to be so fair?" she said. "Oh,
+wherefore was I born so fair to bring death to many and sorrow on myself
+and him I love?" And she shook her golden hair about her arms of snow,
+and, holding the napkin to her eyes, wept softly. But it seemed to Eric
+that between her sobs she called upon his name.
+
+Now Eric could no longer bear the sight of Gudruda weeping. While she
+wept, hiding her eyes, he rose from behind the screen of reeds and stood
+beside her in such fashion that his shadow fell upon her. She felt the
+sunlight pass and looked up. Lo! it was no cloud, but the shape of Eric,
+and the sun glittered on his golden helm and hair.
+
+"Eric!" Gudruda cried; "Eric!" Then, remembering how she was attired,
+snatching her cloak, she threw it about her arms and thrust her wet feet
+into her shoes. "Out upon thee!" she said; "is it not enough, then, that
+thou shouldst break thy troth for Swanhild's sake, that thou shouldst
+slay my brother and turn my hall to shambles? Wouldst now steal upon me
+thus!"
+
+"Methought that thou didst weep and call upon my name, Gudruda," he said
+humbly.
+
+"By what right art thou here to hearken to my words?" she answered.
+"Is it, then, strange that I should speak the name of him who slew my
+brother? Is it strange that I should weep over that brother whom thou
+didst slay? Get thee gone, Brighteyes, before I call my folk to kill
+thee!"
+
+"Call on, Gudruda. I set little price upon my life. I laid it in the
+hands of chance when I came from Mosfell to speak with thee, and now I
+will pay it down if so it pleases thee. Fear not, thy thralls shall have
+an easy task: for I shall scarcely care to hold my own. Say, shall I
+call for thee?"
+
+"Hush! Speak not so loud! Folk may hear thee, Eric, and then thou wilt
+be in danger--I would say that, then shall ill things be told of me,
+because I am found with him who slew my brother?"
+
+"I slew Ospakar too, Gudruda. Surely the death of him by whose side thou
+didst sit as wife is more to thee than the death of Bjoern?"
+
+"The bride-cup was not yet drunk, Eric; therefore I have no blood-feud
+for Ospakar."
+
+"Is it, then, thy will that I should go, lady?"
+
+"Yes, go!--go! Never let me see thy face again!"
+
+Brighteyes turned without a word. He took three paces and Gudruda
+watched him as he went.
+
+"Eric!" she called. "Eric! thou mayest not go yet: for at this hour the
+thralls bring down the kine to milk, and they will see thee. Liest thou
+hid here. I--I will go. For though, indeed, thou dost deserve to die, I
+am not willing to bring thee to thy end--because of old friendship I am
+not willing!"
+
+"If thou goest, I will go also," said Eric. "Thralls or no thralls, I
+will go, Gudruda."
+
+"Thou art cruel to drive me to such a choice, and I have a mind to give
+thee to thy fate."
+
+"As thou wilt," said Eric; but she made as though she did not hear his
+words.
+
+"Now," she said, "if we must stay here, it is better that we hide where
+thou didst hide, lest some come upon thee." And she passed through the
+screen of rushes and sat down in a grassy place beyond, and spoke again.
+
+"Nay, sit not near me; sit yonder. I would not touch thee, nor look upon
+thee, who wast Swanhild's love, and didst slay Bjoern my brother."
+
+"Say, Gudruda," said Eric, "did I not tell thee of the magic arts of
+Swanhild? Did I not tell thee before all men yonder in the hall, and
+didst thou not say that thou didst believe my words? Speak."
+
+"That is true," said Gudruda.
+
+"Wherefore, then, dost thou taunt me with being Swanhild's love--with
+being the love of her whom of all alive I hate the most--and whose
+wicked guile has brought these sorrows on us?"
+
+But Gudruda did not answer.
+
+"And for this matter of the death of Bjoern at my hands, think, Gudruda:
+was I to blame in it? Did not Bjoern thrust the cloven shield before my
+feet, and thus give me into the hand of Ospakar? Did he not afterwards
+smite at me from behind, and would he not have slain me if Skallagrim
+had not caught the blow? Was I, then, to blame if I smote back and if
+the sword flew home? Wilt thou let the needful deed rise up against our
+love? Speak, Gudruda!"
+
+"Talk no more of love to me, Eric," she answered; "the blood of Bjoern
+has blotted out our love: it cries to me for vengeance. How may I speak
+of love with him who slew my brother? Listen!" she went on, looking on
+him sidelong, as one who wished to look and yet not seem to see: "here
+thou must hide an hour, and, since thou wilt not sit in silence, speak
+no tender words to me, for it is not fitting; but tell me of those
+deeds thou didst in the south lands over sea, before thou wentest to woo
+Swanhild and camest hither to kill my brother. For till then thou wast
+mine--till then I loved thee--who now love thee not. Therefore I would
+hear of the deeds of that Eric whom once I loved, before he became as
+one dead to me."
+
+"Heavy words, lady," said Eric--"words to make death easy."
+
+"Speak not so," she said; "it is unmanly thus to work upon my fears.
+Tell me those tidings of which I ask."
+
+So Eric told her all his deeds, though he showed small boastfulness
+about them. He told her how he had smitten the war-dragons of Ospakar,
+how he had boarded the Raven and with Skallagrim slain those who sailed
+in her. He told her also of his deeds in Ireland, and of how he took the
+viking ships and came to London town.
+
+And as he told, Gudruda listened as one who hung upon her lover's dying
+words, and there was but one light in the world for her, the light of
+Eric's eyes, and there was but one music, the music of his voice. Now
+she looked upon him sidelong no longer, but with open eyes and parted
+lips she drank in his words, and always, though she knew it not herself,
+she crept closer to his side.
+
+Then he told her how he had been greatly honoured of the King of
+England, and of the battles he had fought in at his side. Lastly, Eric
+told her how the King would have given him a certain great lady of royal
+blood in marriage, and how Edmund had been angered because he would not
+stay in England.
+
+"Tell me of this lady," said Gudruda, quickly. "Is she fair, and how is
+she named?"
+
+"She is fair, and her name is Elfrida," said Eric.
+
+"And didst thou have speech with her on this matter?"
+
+"Somewhat."
+
+Now Gudruda drew herself away from Eric's side.
+
+"What was the purport of thy speech?" she said, looking down. "Speak
+truly, Eric."
+
+"It came to little," he answered. "I told her that there was one in
+Iceland to whom I was betrothed, and to Iceland I must go."
+
+"And what said this Elfrida, then?"
+
+"She said that I should get little luck at the hands of Gudruda the
+Fair. Moreover, she asked, should my betrothed be faithless to me, or
+put me from her, if I should come again to England."
+
+Now Gudruda looked him in the face and spoke. "Say, Eric, is it in thy
+mind to sail for England in the spring, if thou canst escape thy foes so
+long?"
+
+Now Eric took counsel with himself, and in his love and doubt grew
+guileful as he had never been before. For he knew well that Gudruda had
+this weakness--she was a jealous woman.
+
+"Since thou dost put me from thee, that is in my mind, lady," he
+answered.
+
+Gudruda heard. She thought on the great and beauteous Lady Elfrida, far
+away in England, and of Eric walking at her side, and sorrow took hold
+of her. She said no word, but fixed her dark eyes on Brighteyes' face,
+and lo! they filled with tears.
+
+Eric might not bear this sight, for his heart beat within him as though
+it would burst the byrnie over it. Suddenly he stretched out his arms
+and swept her to his breast. Soft and sweet he kissed her, again and yet
+again, and she struggled not, though she wept a little.
+
+"It is small blame to me," she whispered, "if thou dost hold me on thy
+breast and kiss me, for thou art more strong than I. Bjoern must know
+this if his dead eyes see aught. Yet for thee, Eric, it is the greatest
+shame of all thy shames."
+
+"Talk not, my sweet; talk not," said Eric, "but kiss thou me: for thou
+knowest well that thou lovest me yet as I love thee."
+
+Now the end of it was that Gudruda yielded and kissed him whom she had
+not kissed for many years.
+
+"Loose me, Eric," she said; "I would speak with thee," and he loosed
+her, though unwillingly.
+
+"Hearken," she went on, hiding her fair face in her hands: "it is true
+that for life and death I love thee now as ever--how much thou mayest
+never know. Though Bjoern be dead at thy hands, yet I love thee; but how
+I may wed thee and not win the greatest shame, that I know not. I am
+sure of one thing, that we may not bide here in Iceland. Now if, indeed,
+thou lovest me, listen to my rede. Get thee back to Mosfell, Eric, and
+sit there in safety through this winter, for they may not come at thee
+yonder on Mosfell. Then, if thou art willing, in the spring I will make
+ready a ship, for I have no ship now, and, moreover, it is too late to
+sail. Then, perchance, leaving all my lands and goods, I will take thy
+hand, Eric, and we will fare together to England, seeking such fortune
+as the Norns may give us. What sayest thou?"
+
+"I say it is a good rede, and would that the spring were come."
+
+"Ay, Eric, would that the spring were come. Our lot has been hard, and I
+doubt much if things will go well with us at the last. And now thou
+must hence, for presently the serving-women will come to seek me.
+Guard thyself, Eric, as thou lovest me--guard thyself, and beware of
+Swanhild!" Then once more they kissed soft and long, and Eric went.
+
+But Gudruda sat a while behind the screen of reeds, and was very happy
+for a space. For it was as though the winter were past and summer shone
+upon her heart again.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+HOW GUDRUDA WENT UP TO MOSFELL
+
+Eric walked warily till he came to the dell where he had left Skallagrim
+and the horses. It was the same dell in which Groa had brewed the
+poison-draught for Asmund the Priest and Unna, Thorod's daughter.
+
+"What news, lord?" said Skallagrim. "Thou wast gone so long that I
+thought of seeking thee. Hast thou seen Gudruda?"
+
+"Ay," said Eric, "and this is the upshot of it, that in the spring we
+sail for England and bid farewell to Iceland and our ill luck."
+
+"Would, then, that it were spring," said Skallagrim, speaking
+Brighteyes' own words. "Why not sail now and make an end?"
+
+"Gudruda has no ship and it is late to take the sea. Also I think that
+she would let a time go by because of the blood-feud which she has
+against me for the death of Bjoern."
+
+"I would rather risk these things than stay the winter through in
+Iceland," said Skallagrim, "it is long from now to spring, and yon
+wolf's den is cold-lying in the dark months, as I know well."
+
+"There is light beyond the darkness," said Eric, and they rode away.
+Everything went well with them till late at night they came to the
+slopes of Mosfell. They were half asleep on their horses, being weary
+with much riding, and the horses were weary also. Suddenly, Skallagrim,
+looking up, caught the faint gleam of light from swords hidden behind
+some stones.
+
+"Awake, lord!" he cried, "here are foes ahead."
+
+Gizur's folk behind the stones heard his voice and came out from their
+ambush. There were six of them, and they formed in line before the pair.
+They were watching the mountain, for a rumour had reached them that Eric
+was abroad, and, seeing him, they had hidden hastily behind the stones.
+
+"Now what counsel shall we take?" said Eric, drawing Whitefire.
+
+"We have often stood against men more than six, and sometimes we have
+left more men than six to mark where we stood," answered Skallagrim. "It
+is my counsel that we ride at them!"
+
+"So be it," said Eric, and he spurred his weary horse with his heels.
+Now when the six saw Eric and Skallagrim charge on them boldly, they
+wavered, and the end of it was that they broke and fled to either side
+before a blow was struck. For it had come to this pass, so great was the
+terror of the names of Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail, that no
+six men dared to stand before them in open fight.
+
+So the path being clear they rode on up the slope. But when they had
+gone a little way, Skallagrim turned his horse, and mocked those who had
+lain in ambush, saying:
+
+"Ye fight well, ye carles of Gizur, Ospakar's son! Ye are heroes,
+surely! Say now, mighty men, will ye stand there if I come down alone
+against you?"
+
+At these words the men grew mad with wrath, and flung their spears.
+Skallagrim caught one on his shield and it fell to the earth, but
+another passed over his head and struck Eric on the left shoulder,
+near the neck, making a deep wound. Feeling the spear fast in him, Eric
+grasped it with his right hand, drew it forth, and turning, hurled it so
+hard, that the man before it got his death from the blow, for his shield
+did not serve to stay it. Then the rest fled.
+
+Skallagrim bound up Eric's wound as well as he could, and they went on
+to the cave. But when Eric's folk, watching above, saw the fight they
+ran down and met him. Now the hurt was bad and Eric bled much; still,
+within ten days it healed up for the time.
+
+But a little while after Eric's wound was skinned over, the snows set
+in on Mosfell, and the days grew short and the nights long. Once Gizur's
+men to the number of fifty came half way up the mountain to take it;
+but, when they saw how strong the place was, they feared, and went back,
+and after that returned no more, though they always watched the fell.
+
+It was very dark and lonesome there upon the fell. For a while Eric kept
+in good heart, but as the days went by he grew troubled. For since he
+was wounded this had come upon him, that he feared the dark, and the
+death of Atli at his hand and Atli's words weighed more and more upon
+his mind. They had no candles on the fell, yet, rather than stay in the
+blackness of the cave, Eric would wrap sheepskins about him and sit by
+the edge of that gulf down which the head of the Baresark had foretold
+his fall, and look out at the wide plains and fells and ice-mountains,
+gleaming in the silver shine of the Northern lights or in the white
+beams of the stars.
+
+It chanced that Eric had bidden the men who stayed with him to build a
+stone hut upon the flat space of rock before the cave, and to roof it
+with turves. He had done this that work might keep them in heart, also
+that they might have a place to store such goods as they had gathered.
+Now there was one stone lying near that no two men of their number could
+move, except Skallagrim and one other. One day, while it was light, Eric
+watched these two rolling the stone along to where it must stand, and it
+was slow work. Presently they stayed to rest. Then Eric came and putting
+his hands beneath the stone, lifted, and while men wondered, he rolled
+the mass alone, to where it should be set as the corner stone of the
+hut.
+
+"Ye are all children," he said, and laughed merrily.
+
+"Ay, when we set our strength against thine, lord," answered Skallagrim;
+"but look: the blood runs from thy neck--the spear-wound has broken out
+afresh."
+
+"So it is, surely," said Eric. Then he washed the wound and bound it up,
+thinking little of the matter.
+
+But that night, according to his custom, Eric sat on the edge of the
+gulf and looked at the winter lights as they played over Hecla's snows.
+He was sad and heavy at heart, for he thought of Gudruda and wondered
+much if they should live to wed. Remembering Atli's words, he had little
+faith in his good luck. Now as Eric sat and thought, the bandage on his
+neck slipped, so that the hurt bled, and the frost got hold of the wound
+and froze it, and froze his long hair to it also, in such fashion that
+when he went to the cave where all men slept, he could not loose his
+hair from the sore, but lay down with it frozen to him. On the morrow
+the hair was caked so fast about his neck that it could only be freed by
+shearing it. But this Eric would not suffer. None, he said, should shear
+his hair, except Gudruda. Thus he had sworn, and when he broke the oath
+misfortune had come of it. He would break that vow no more, if it cost
+him his life. For sorrow and his ill luck had taken so great a hold of
+Eric's mind that in some ways he was scarcely himself.
+
+So it came to pass that he fell more and more sick, till at length
+he could not rise from his bed in the cave, but lay there all day and
+night, staring at the little light which pierced the gloom. Still, he
+would not suffer that anyone should touch his hair. And when one stole
+upon him sleeping, thinking so to cut it before he woke, and come at the
+wound, suddenly he sat up and dealt the man such a buffet on the head
+that he went near to death from it.
+
+Then Skallagrim spoke.
+
+"On this matter," he said, "it seems that Brighteyes is mad. He will not
+suffer that any touch his hair, except Gudruda, and yet, if his hair is
+not shorn, he must die, for the wound will fester under it. Nor may we
+cut it by strength, for then he will kill himself in struggling. It is
+come to this then: either Gudruda must be brought hither or Eric will
+shortly die."
+
+"That may not be," they answered. "How can the lady Gudruda come here
+across the snows, even if she will come?"
+
+"Come she can, if she has the heart," said Skallagrim, "though I put
+little trust in women's hearts. Still, I ride down to Middalhof, and
+thou, Jon, shalt go with me. For the rest, I charge you watch your lord;
+for, if I come back and find anything amiss, that shall be the death of
+some, and if I do not come back but perish on the road, yet I will haunt
+you."
+
+Now Jon liked not this task; still, for love of Eric and fear of
+Skallagrim, he set out with the Baresark. They had a hard journey
+through the snow-drifts and the dark, but on the third day they came to
+Middalhof, knocked upon the door and entered.
+
+Now it was supper-time, and people, sitting at meat, saw a great black
+man, covered with snow and rime, stalk up the hall, and after him
+another smaller man, who groaned with the cold, and they wondered at
+the sight. Gudruda sat on the high seat and the firelight beat upon her
+face.
+
+"Who comes here?" she said.
+
+"One who would speak with thee, lady," answered Skallagrim.
+
+"Here is Skallagrim the Baresark," said a man. "He is an outlaw, let us
+kill him!"
+
+"Ay, it is Skallagrim," he answered, "and if there is killing to be
+done, why here's that which shall do it," and he drew out his axe and
+smiled grimly.
+
+Then all held their peace, for they feared the axe of Skallagrim.
+
+"Lady," he said, "I do not come for slaying or such child's play, I come
+to speak a word in thine ear--but first I ask a cup of mead and a morsel
+of food, for we have spent three days in the snows."
+
+So they ate and drank. Then Gudruda bade the Baresark draw near and tell
+her his tale.
+
+"Lady," said he, "Eric, my lord, lies dying on Mosfell."
+
+Gudruda turned white as the snow.
+
+"Dying?--Eric lies dying?" she said. "Why, then, art thou here?"
+
+"For this cause, lady: I think that thou canst save him, if he is not
+already sped." And he told her all the tale.
+
+Now Gudruda thought a while.
+
+"This is a hard journey," she said, "and it does not become a maid to
+visit outlaws in their caves. Yet I am come to this, that I will die
+before I shrink from anything that may save the life of Eric. When must
+we ride, Skallagrim?"
+
+"This night," said the Baresark. "This night while the men sleep, for
+now night and day are almost the same. The snow is deep and we have no
+time to lose if we would find Brighteyes living."
+
+"Then we will ride to-night," answered Gudruda.
+
+Afterwards, when people slept, Gudruda the Fair summoned her women, and
+bade them say to all who asked for her that she lay sick in bed. But she
+called three trusty thralls, bidding them bring two pack-horses laden
+with hay, food, drugs, candles made of sheep's fat, and other goods,
+and ride with her. Then, all being ready, they rode away secretly
+up Stonefell, Gudruda on her horse Blackmane, and the others on good
+geldings that had been hay-fed in the yard, and by daylight they passed
+up Horse-Head Heights. They slept two nights in the snow, and on
+the second night almost perished there, for much soft snow fell. But
+afterwards came frost and a bitter northerly wind and they passed on.
+Gudruda was a strong woman and great of heart and will, and so it
+came about that on the third day she reached Mosfell, weary but little
+harmed, though the fingers of her left hand were frostbitten. They
+climbed the mountain, and when they came to the dell where the horses
+were kept, certain of Eric's men met them and their faces were sad.
+
+"How goes it now with Brighteyes?" said Skallagrim, for Gudruda could
+scarcely speak because of doubt and cold. "Is he dead, then?"
+
+"Nay," they answered, "but like to die, for he is beside himself and
+raves wildly."
+
+"Push on," quoth Gudruda; "push on, lest it be too late."
+
+So they climbed the mountain on foot, won the pass and came to that
+giddy point of rock where he must tread who would reach the platform
+that is before the cave. Now since she had hung by her hands over
+Goldfoss gulf, Gudruda had feared to tread upon a height with nothing to
+hold to. Skallagrim went first, then called to her to follow. Thrice she
+looked, and turned away, trembling, for the place was awful and the fall
+bottomless. Then she spoke aloud to herself:
+
+"Eric did not fear to risk his life to save me when I hung over Golden
+Falls; less, then, should I fear to risk mine to save him," and she
+stepped boldly down upon the point. But when she stood there, over the
+giddy height, shivers ran along her body, and her mind grew dark. She
+clutched at the rock, gave one low cry and began to fall. Indeed she
+would have fallen and been lost, had not Skallagrim, lying on his breast
+in the narrow hole, stretched out his arms, caught her by the cloak and
+kirtle and dragged her to him. Presently her senses came back.
+
+"I am safe!" she gasped, "but by a very little. Methinks that here
+in this place I must live and die, for I can never tread yonder rock
+again."
+
+"Thou shalt pass it safe enough, lady, with a rope round thee," said
+Skallagrim, and led the way to the cave.
+
+Gudruda entered, forgetting all things in her love of Eric. A great fire
+of turf burned in the mouth of the cave to temper the bitter wind and
+frost, and by its light Gudruda saw her love through the smoke-reek. He
+lay upon a bed of skins at the far end of the cave and his bright grey
+eyes were wild, his wan face was white, and now of a sudden it grew red
+with fever, and then was white again. He had thrown the sheepskins from
+his mighty chest, the bones of which stood out grimly. His long arms
+were thrust through the locks of his golden hair, and on one side of his
+neck the hair clung to him and it was but a black mass.
+
+He raved loudly in his madness. "Touch me not, carles, touch me not;
+ye think me spent and weak, but, by Thor! if ye touch my hair, I will
+loosen the knees of some. Gudruda alone shall shear my hair: I have
+sworn and I will keep the oath that I once broke. Give me snow! snow! my
+throat burns! Heap snow on my head, I bid you. Ye will not? Ye mock me,
+thinking me weak! Where, then, is Whitefire?--I have yet a deed to do!
+Who comes yonder? Is it a woman's shape or is it but a smoke-wraith?
+'Tis Swanhild the Fatherless who walks the waters. Begone, Swanhild,
+thou witch! thou hast worked evil enough upon me. Nay, it is not
+Swanhild, it is Elfrida; lady, here in England I may not stay. In
+Iceland I am at home. Yea, yea, things go crossly; perchance in this
+garden we may speak again!"
+
+Now Gudruda could bear his words no longer, bur ran to him and knelt
+beside him.
+
+"Peace, Eric!" she whispered. "Peace! It is I, thy love. It is Gudruda,
+who am come to thee."
+
+He turned his head and looked upon her strangely.
+
+"No, no," he said, "it is not Gudruda the Fair. She will have little to
+do with outlaws, and this is too rough a place for her to come to. It is
+dark also and Atli speaks in the darkness. If thou art Gudruda, give
+me a sign. Why comest thou here and where is Skallagrim? Ah! that was a
+good fight--
+
+ "Down among the ballast tumbling
+ Ospakar's shield-carles were rolled.
+
+"But he should never have slain the steersman. The axe goes first and
+Skallagrim follows after. Ha, ha! Ay, Swanhild, we'll mingle tears. Give
+me the cup. Why, what is this? Thou art afire, a glory glows about thee,
+and from thee floats a scent like the scent of the Iceland meads in
+May."
+
+"Eric! Eric!" cried Gudruda, "I am come to shear thy hair, as thou didst
+swear that I alone should do."
+
+"Now I know that thou art Gudruda," said the crazed man. "Cut, cut; but
+let not those knaves touch my head, lest I should slay them."
+
+Then Gudruda drew out her shears, and without more ado shore off
+Brighteyes' golden locks. It was no easy task, for they were thick as
+a horse's mane, and glued to the wound. Yet when she had cut them, she
+loosened the hair from the flesh with water which she heated upon the
+fire. The wound was in a bad state and blue, still Eric never winced
+while she dragged the hair from it. Then she washed the sore clean, and
+put sweet ointment on it and covered it with napkins.
+
+This done, she gave Eric broth and he drank. Then, laying her hand upon
+his head, she looked into his eyes and bade him sleep. And presently
+he slept--which he had scarcely done for many days--slept like a little
+child.
+
+Eric slept for a day and a night. But at that same hour of the evening,
+when he had fallen asleep, Gudruda, watching him by the light of a taper
+that was set upon a rock, saw him smile in his dreams. Presently he
+opened his eyes and stared at the fire which glowed in the mouth of the
+cave, and the great shadows that fell upon the rocks.
+
+"Strange!" she heard him murmur, "it is very strange! but I dreamed I
+slept, and that Gudruda the Fair leaned over me as I slept. Where, then,
+is Skallagrim? Perhaps I am dead and that is Hela's fire," and he tried
+to lift himself upon his arm, but fell back from faintness, for he was
+very weak. Then Gudruda took his hand, and, leaning over him, spoke:
+
+"Hush, Eric!" she said; "that was no dream, for I am here. Thou hast
+been sick to death, Eric; but now, if thou wilt rest, things shall go
+well with thee."
+
+"_Thou_ art here?" said Eric, turning his white face towards her. "Do I
+still dream, or how comest thou here to Mosfell, Gudruda?"
+
+"I came through the snows, Eric, to cut thy hair, which clung to the
+festering wound, for in thy madness thou wouldst not suffer anyone to
+touch it."
+
+"Thou camest through the snows--over the snows--to nurse me, Gudruda?
+Thou must love me much then," and he was so weak that, as he spoke, the
+tears rolled down Eric's cheeks.
+
+Then Gudruda kissed him, weeping also, and, laying her face by his, bade
+him be at peace, for she was there to watch him.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+HOW SWANHILD WON TIDINGS OF ERIC
+
+Now Eric's strength came back to him and his heart opened in the light
+of Gudruda's eyes like a flower in the sunshine. For all day long she
+sat at his side, holding his hand and talking to him, and they found
+much to say.
+
+But on the fifth day from the day of his awakening she spoke thus:
+
+"Eric, now I must go back to Middalhof. Thou art safe and it is not well
+that I should stay here."
+
+"Not yet, Gudruda," he said; "leave me not yet."
+
+"Yes, love, I must leave thee. The moon is bright, the sky has cleared,
+and the snow is hard with frost and fit for the hoofs of horses. I must
+go before more storms come. Listen now: in the second week of spring,
+if all is well, I will send thee a messenger with words of token, then
+shalt thou come down secretly to Middalhof, and there, Eric, we will be
+wed. Then, on the next day, we will sail for England in a trading-ship
+that I shall get ready, to seek our fortune there."
+
+"It will be a good fortune if thou art by my side," said Eric, "so
+good that I doubt greatly if I may find it, for I am Eric the Unlucky.
+Swanhild must yet be reckoned with, Gudruda. Yes, thou art right: thou
+must go hence, Gudruda, and swiftly, though it grieves me much to part
+with thee."
+
+Then Eric called Skallagrim and bade him make things ready to ride down
+to Middalhof with the Lady Gudruda.
+
+This Skallagrim did swiftly, and afterwards Eric and Gudruda kissed and
+parted, and they were sad at heart to part.
+
+Now on the fifth day after the going of Gudruda, Skallagrim came back
+to Mosfell somewhat cold and weary. And he told Eric, who could now walk
+and grew strong again, that he and Jon had ridden with Gudruda the Fair
+to Horse-Head Heights, seeing no man, and had left her there to go on
+with her thralls. He had come back also seeing no one, for the weather
+was too cold for the men of Gizur to watch the fell in the snows.
+
+
+
+Now Gudruda came safely to Middalhof, having been eleven days gone, and
+found that few had visited the house, and that these had been told that
+she lay sick abed. Her secret had been well kept, and, though Swanhild
+had no lack of spies, many days went by before she learned that Gudruda
+had gone up to Mosfell to nurse Eric.
+
+After this Gudruda began to make ready for her flight from Iceland. She
+called in the moneys that she had out at interest, and with them bought
+from a certain chapman a good trading-ship which lay in its shed under
+the shelter of Westman Isles. This ship she began to make ready for sea
+so soon as the heart of the winter was broken, putting it about that she
+intended to send her on a trading voyage to Scotland in the spring. And
+also to give colour to this tale she bought many pelts and other goods,
+such as chapmen deal in.
+
+Thus the days passed on--not so badly for Gudruda, who strove to fill
+their emptiness in making ready for the full and happy time; but for
+Eric in his cave they were very heavy, for he could find nothing to do
+except to sleep and eat, and think of Gudruda, whom he might not see.
+
+For Swanhild also, sitting at Coldback, the days did not go well. She
+was weary of the courting of Gizur, whom she played with as a cat plays
+with a rat, and her heart was sick with love, hate, and jealousy. For
+she well knew that Gudruda and Eric still clung to each other and found
+means of greeting, if not of speech. At that time she wished to kill
+Eric if she could, though she would rather kill Gudruda if she dared.
+Still, she could not come at Eric, for her men feared to try the narrow
+way of Mosfell, and when they met him in the open they fled before him.
+
+Presently it came to her ears that Gudruda made a ship ready to sail to
+Scotland on a trading voyage, and she was perplexed by this tale, for
+she knew that Gudruda had no love of trading and never thought of gain.
+So she set spies to watch the ship. Still, the slow days drew on, and
+at length the air grew soft with spring, and flowers showed through the
+snow.
+
+Eric sat in his mountain nest waiting for tidings, and watched the
+nesting eagles wheel about the cliffs. At length news came. For one
+morning, as he rose, Skallagrim told him that a man wanted to speak with
+him. He had come to the mountain in the darkness, and had lain in a dell
+till the breaking of the light, for, now that the snows were melting,
+the men of Gizur and Swanhild watched the ways.
+
+Eric bade them bring the man to him. When he saw him he knew that he was
+a thrall of Gudruda's and welcomed him heartily.
+
+"What tidings?" he asked.
+
+"This, lord," said the thrall: "Gudruda the Fair bids me say that she is
+well and that the snows melt on the roof of Middalhof."
+
+Now this was the signal word that had been agreed upon between Eric and
+Gudruda, that she should send him when all was ready.
+
+"Good," said Eric, "ride back to Gudruda the Fair and say that Eric
+Brighteyes is well, but on Hecla the snows melt not."
+
+By this answer he meant that he would be with her presently, though the
+thrall could make nothing of it. Then Skallagrim asked tidings of the
+man, and learned that Swanhild was still at Middalhof, and with her
+Gizur, and that they gave out that they wished to make an end of waiting
+and slay Eric.
+
+"First snare your bird, then wring his neck," laughed Skallagrim.
+
+Then Eric did this: among his men were some who he knew were not willing
+to sail from Iceland, and Jon, his thrall, was of them, for Jon did not
+love the angry sea. He bade these bide a while on Mosfell and make fires
+nightly on the platform of rock which is in front of the cave, that the
+spies of Gizur and Swanhild might be deceived by them, and think that
+Eric was still on the fell. Then, when they heard that he had sailed,
+they were to come down and hide themselves with friends till Gizur and
+his following rode north. But he told two of the men who would sail with
+him to make ready.
+
+That night before the moon rose Eric said farewell to Jon and the others
+who stayed on Mosfell, and rode away with Skallagrim and the two who
+went with him. They passed the plain of black sand in safety, and so
+on to Horse-Head Heights. Now at length, as the afternoon drew on to
+evening, from Stonefell's crest they saw the Hall of Middalhof before
+them, and Eric's heart swelled in his breast. Yet they must wait till
+darkness fell before they dared enter the place, lest they should be
+seen and notice of their coming should be carried to Gizur and Swanhild.
+And this came into the mind of Eric, that of all the hours of his life
+that hour of waiting was the longest. Scarcely, indeed, could Skallagrim
+hold him back from going down the mountain side, he was so set on coming
+to Gudruda whom he should wed that night.
+
+At length the darkness fell, and they went on. Eric rode swiftly down
+the rough mountain path, while Skallagrim and the two men followed
+grumbling, for they feared that their horses would fall. At length they
+came to the place, and riding into the yard, Eric sprang from his
+horse and strode to the women's door. Now Gudruda stood in the porch,
+listening; and while he was yet some way off, she heard the clang of
+Brighteyen's harness, and the colour came and went upon her cheek. Then
+she turned and fled to the high seat of the hall, and sat down there.
+Only two women were left in Middalhof with her, and some thralls who
+tended the kine and horses. But these slept, not in the hall, but in an
+outhouse. Gudruda had sent the rest of her people down to the ship to
+help in the lading, for it was given out that the vessel sailed on the
+morrow. She had done this that there might be no talk of the coming of
+Eric to Middalhof.
+
+Now Brighteyes came to the porch, and, finding the door wide, walked
+in. But Skallagrim and the men stayed without a while, and tended the
+horses. A fire burned upon the centre hearth in the hall, and threw
+shadows on the panelling. Eric walked on by its light, looking to left
+and right, but seeing neither man nor woman. Then a great fear took
+him lest Gudruda should be gone, or perhaps slain of Swanhild, Groa's
+daughter, and he trembled at the thought. He stood by the fire, and
+Gudruda, watching from the shadow of the high seat, saw the dull light
+glow upon his golden helm, and a sigh of joy broke from her lips. Eric
+heard the sigh and looked, and as he looked a stick of pitchy driftwood
+fell into the fire and flared up fiercely. Then he saw. There, in the
+carved high seat, robed all in bridal white, sat Gudruda the Fair,
+his love. Her golden hair flowed about her breast, her white arms were
+stretched towards him, and on her sweet face shone such a look of love
+as he had never seen.
+
+"_Eric!_" she whispered softly, and the breath of her voice ran down the
+empty panelled hall, that from all sides seemed to answer, "_Eric._"
+
+Slowly he drew near to her. He saw nothing but the glory of Gudruda's
+face and the light shining on Gudruda's hair; he heard nothing save the
+sighing of her breath; he knew nothing except that before him sat his
+fair bride, won after many years.
+
+Now he had climbed the high seat, and now, wrapped in each other's arms,
+they sat and gazed into each other's eyes, and lo! the air of the great
+hall rolled round them a sea of glory, and sweet voices whispered in
+their ears. Now Freya smiled upon them and led them through her gates of
+love, and they were glad that they had been born.
+
+Thus then they were wed.
+
+
+
+Now the story tells that Swanhild spoke with Gizur, Ospakar's son, in
+the house at Coldback.
+
+"I tire of this slow play," she said. "We have tarried here for many
+weeks, and Atli's blood yet cries out for vengeance, and cries for
+vengeance the blood of black Ospakar, thy father, and the blood of many
+another, dead at great Eric's hand."
+
+"I tire also," said Gizur, "and I am much needed in the north. I say
+this to thee, Swanhild, that, hadst thou not so strictly laid it on me
+that Eric must die ere thou weddest me, I had flitted back to Swinefell
+before now, and there bided my time to bring Brighteyes to his end."
+
+"I will never wed thee, Gizur, till Eric is dead," said Swanhild
+fiercely.
+
+"How shall we come at him then?" he answered. "We may not go up that
+mountain path, for two men can hold it against all our strength, and
+folk do not love to meet Eric and Skallagrim in a narrow way."
+
+"The place has been badly watched," said Swanhild. "I am sure of this,
+that Eric has been down to Middalhof and seen Gudruda, my half-sister.
+She is shameless, who still holds commune with him who slew her brother
+and my husband. Death should be her reward, and I am minded to slay her
+because of the shame that she has brought upon our blood."
+
+"That is a deed which thou wilt do alone, then," said Gizur, "for I will
+have no hand in the murder of that fair maid--no, nor will any who live
+in Iceland!"
+
+Swanhild glanced at him strangely. "Hearken, Gizur!" she said: "Gudruda
+makes a ship ready to sail with goods to Scotland and bring a cargo
+thence before winter comes again. Now I find this strange, for never
+before did I know Gudruda turn her thoughts to trading. I think that she
+has it in her mind to sail from Iceland with this outlaw Eric, and seek
+a home over seas, and that I will not bear."
+
+"It may be," said Gizur, "and I should not be sorry to see the last of
+Brighteyes, for I think that more men will die at his hand before he
+stiffens in his barrow."
+
+"Thou art cowardly-hearted, thou son of Ospakar!" Swanhild said. "Thou
+sayest thou lovest me and wouldest win me to wife: I tell thee that
+there is but one road to my arms, and it leads over the corpse of Eric.
+Now this is my counsel: that we send the most of our men to watch that
+ship of Gudruda's, and, when she lifts anchor, to board her and search,
+for she is already bound for sea. Also among the people here I have a
+carle who was born near Hecla, and he swears this to me, that, when
+he was a lad, searching for an eagle's eyrie, he found a path by which
+Mosfell might be climbed from the north, and that in the end he came
+to a large flat place, and, looking over, saw that platform where Eric
+dwells with his thralls. But he could not see the cave, because of the
+overhanging brow of the rock. Now we will do this: thou and I, and the
+carle alone--no more, for I do not wish that our search should be
+noised abroad--to-morrow at the dawn we will ride away for Mosfell, and,
+passing under Hecla, come round the mountain and see if this path may
+still be scaled. For, if so, we will return with men and make an end of
+Brighteyes."
+
+This plan pleased Gizur, and he said that it should be so.
+
+So very early on the following morning Swanhild, having sent many men to
+watch Gudruda's ship, rode away secretly with Gizur and the thrall, and
+before it was again dawn they were on the northern slopes of Mosfell.
+It was on this same night that Eric went down from the mountain to wed
+Gudruda.
+
+For a while the climbing was easy, but at length they came to a great
+wall of rock, a hundred fathoms high, on which no fox might find a
+foothold, nor anything that had not wings.
+
+"Here now is an end of our journey," said Gizur, "and I only pray this,
+that Eric may not ride round the mountain before we are down again." For
+he did not know that Brighteyes already rode hard for Middalhof.
+
+"Not so," said the thrall, "if only I can find the place by which, some
+thirty summers ago, I won yonder rift, and through it the crest of the
+fell," and he pointed to a narrow cleft in the face of the rock high
+above their heads, that was clothed with grey moss.
+
+Then he moved to the right and searched, peering behind stones and
+birch-bushes, till presently he held up his hand and whistled. They
+passed along the slope and found him standing by a little stream of
+water which welled from beneath a great rock.
+
+"Here is the place," the man said.
+
+"I see no place," answered Swanhild.
+
+"Still, it is there, lady," and he climbed on to the rock, drawing her
+after him. At the back of it was a hole, almost overgrown with moss.
+"Here is the path," he said again.
+
+"Then it is one that I have no mind to follow," answered Swanhild.
+"Gizur, go thou with the man and see if his tale is true. I will stay
+here till ye come back."
+
+Then the thrall let himself down into the hole and Gizur went after him.
+But Swanhild sat there in the shadow of the rock, her chin resting on
+her hand, and waited. Presently, as she sat, she saw two men ride round
+the base of the fell, and strike off to the right towards a turf-booth
+which stood the half of an hour's ride away. Now Swanhild was the
+keenest-sighted of all women of her day in Iceland, and when she looked
+at these two men she knew one of them for Jon, Eric's thrall, and she
+knew the horse also--it was a white horse with black patches, that Jon
+had ridden for many years. She watched them go till they came to the
+booth, and it seemed to her that they left their horses and entered.
+
+Swanhild waited upon the side of the fell for nearly two hours in all.
+Then, hearing a noise above her, she looked up, and there, black with
+dirt and wet with water, was Gizur, and with him was the thrall.
+
+"What luck, Gizur?" she asked.
+
+"This, Swanhild: Eric may hold Mosfell no more, for we have found a way
+to bolt the fox."
+
+"That is good news, then," said Swanhild. "Say on."
+
+"Yonder hole, Swanhild, leads to the cleft above, having been cut
+through the cliff by fire, or perhaps by water. Now up that cleft a man
+may climb, though hardly, as by a difficult stair, till he comes to the
+flat crest of the fell. Then, crossing the crest, on the further side,
+perhaps six fathoms below him, he sees that space of rock where is
+Eric's cave; but he cannot see the cave itself, because the brow of the
+cliff hangs over. And so it is that, if any come from the cave on to the
+space of rock, it will be an easy matter to roll stones upon them from
+above and crush them."
+
+Now when Swanhild heard this she laughed aloud.
+
+"Eric shall mock us no more," she said, "and his might can avail nothing
+against rocks rolled on him from above. Let us go back to Coldback and
+summon men to make an end of Brighteyes."
+
+So they went on down the mountain till they came to the place where they
+had hidden their horses. Then Swanhild remembered Jon and the other man
+whom she had seen riding to the booth, and she told Gizur of them.
+
+"Now," she said, "we will snare these birds, and perchance they will
+twitter tidings when we squeeze them."
+
+So they turned and rode for the booth, and drawing near, they saw two
+horses grazing without. Now they got off their horses, and creeping up
+to the booth, looked in through the door which was ajar. And they saw
+this, that one man sat on the ground with his back to the door, eating
+stock-fish, while Jon made bundles of fish and meal ready to tie on the
+horses. For it was here that those of his quarter who loved Eric brought
+food to be carried by his men to the cave on Mosfell.
+
+Now Swanhild touched Gizur on the arm, pointing first to the man who sat
+eating the fish and then to the spear in Gizur's hand. Gizur thought a
+while, for he shrank from this deed.
+
+Then Swanhild whispered in his ear, "Slay the man and seize the other; I
+would learn tidings from him."
+
+So Gizur cast the spear, and it passed through the man's heart, and he
+was dead at once. Then he and the thrall leapt into the booth and threw
+themselves on Jon, hurling him to the ground, and holding swords over
+him. Now Jon was a man of small heart, and when he saw his plight and
+his fellow dead he was afraid, and prayed for mercy.
+
+"If I spare thee, knave," said Swanhild, "thou shalt do this: thou shalt
+lead me up Mosfell to speak with Eric."
+
+"I may not do that, lady," groaned Jon; "for Eric is not on Mosfell."
+
+"Where is he, then?" asked Swanhild.
+
+Now Jon saw that he had said an unlucky thing, and answered:
+
+"Nay, I know not. Last night he rode from Mosfell with Skallagrim
+Lambstail."
+
+"Thou liest, knave," said Swanhild. "Speak, or thou shalt be slain."
+
+"Slay on," groaned Jon, glancing at the swords above him, and shutting
+his eyes. For, though he feared much to die, he had no will to make
+known Eric's plans.
+
+"Look not at the swords; thou shalt not die so easily. Hearken: speak,
+and speak truly, or thou shalt seek Hela's lap after this fashion," and,
+bending down, she whispered in his ear, then laughed aloud.
+
+Now Jon grew faint with fear; his lips turned blue, and his teeth
+chattered at the thought of how he should be made to die. Still, he
+would say nothing.
+
+Then Swanhild spoke to Gizur and the thrall, and bade them bind him with
+a rope, tear the garments from him, and bring snow. They did this, and
+pushed the matter to the drawing of knives. But when he saw the steel
+Jon cried aloud that he would tell all.
+
+"Now thou takest good counsel," said Swanhild.
+
+Then in his fear Jon told how Eric had gone down to Middalhof to wed
+Gudruda, and thence to fly with her to England.
+
+Now Swanhild was mad with wrath, for she had sooner died than that this
+should come about.
+
+"Let us away," she said to Gizur. "But first kill this man."
+
+"Nay," said Gizur, "I will not do that. He has told his tidings; let him
+go free."
+
+"Thou art chicken-hearted," said Swanhild, who, after the fashion of
+witches, had no mercy in her. "At the least, he shall not go hence to
+warn Eric and Gudruda of our coming. If thou wilt not kill him, then
+bind him and leave him."
+
+So Jon was bound, and there in the booth he sat two days before anyone
+came to loose him.
+
+"Whither away?" said Gizur to Swanhild.
+
+"To Middalhof first," Swanhild answered.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+HOW WENT THE BRIDAL NIGHT
+
+Now Eric and Gudruda sat silent in the high seat of the hall at
+Middalhof till they heard Skallagrim enter by the women's door. Then
+they came down from the high seat, and stood hand in hand by the fire
+on the hearth. Skallagrim greeted Gudruda, looking at her askance, for
+Skallagrim stood in fear of women alone.
+
+"What counsel now, lord?" said the Baresark.
+
+"Tell us thy plans, Gudruda," said Eric, for as yet no word had passed
+between them of what they should do.
+
+"This is my plan, Eric," she answered. "First, that we eat; then that
+thy men take horse and ride hence through the night to where the ship
+lies, bearing word that we will be there at dawn when the tide serves,
+and bidding the mate make everything ready for sailing. But thou and
+I and Skallagrim will stay here till to-morrow is three hours old,
+and this because I have tidings that Gizur's folk will search the ship
+to-night. Now, when they search and do not find us, they will go away.
+Then, at the dawning, thou and I and Skallagrim will row on board the
+ship as she lies at anchor, and, slipping the cable, put to sea before
+they know we are there, and so bid farewell to Swanhild and our woes."
+
+"Yet it is a risk for us to sleep here alone," said Eric.
+
+"There is little danger," said Gudruda. "Nearly all of Gizur's men watch
+the ship; and I have learned this from a spy, that, two days ago, Gizur,
+Swanhild, and one thrall rode from Coldback towards Mosfell, and they
+have not come back yet. Moreover, the place is strong, and thou and
+Skallagrim are here to guard it."
+
+"So be it, then," answered Eric, for indeed he had little thought left
+for anything, except Gudruda.
+
+After this the women came in and set meat on the board, and all ate.
+
+Now, when they had eaten, Eric bade Skallagrim fill a cup, and bring it
+to him as he sat on the high seat with Gudruda. Skallagrim did so; and
+then, looking deep into each other's eyes, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda
+the Fair, Asmund's daughter, drank the bride's cup.
+
+"There are few guests to grace our marriage-feast, husband," said
+Gudruda.
+
+"Yet shall our vows hold true, wife," said Eric.
+
+"Ay, Brighteyes," she answered, "in life and in death, now and for
+ever!" and they kissed.
+
+"It is time for us to be going, methinks," growled Skallagrim to those
+about him. "We are not wanted here."
+
+Then the men who were to go on to the ship rose, fetched their horses,
+and rode away. Also they caught the horses of Skallagrim, Eric, and
+Gudruda, saddled them and, slipping their bridles, made them fast in a
+shed in the yard, giving them hay to eat. Afterwards Skallagrim barred
+the men's door and the women's door, and, going to Gudruda, asked where
+he should stay the night till it was time to ride for the sea.
+
+"In the store-chamber," she answered, "for there is a shutter of which
+the latch has gone. See that thou watch it well, Skallagrim; though I
+think none will come to trouble thee."
+
+"I know the place. It shall go badly with the head that looks through
+yonder hole," said Skallagrim, glancing at his axe.
+
+Now Gudruda forgot this, that in the store-chamber were casks of strong
+ale.
+
+Then Gudruda told him to wake them when the morrow was two hours old,
+for Eric had neither eyes nor words except for Gudruda alone, and
+Skallagrim went.
+
+The women went also to their shut bed at the end of the hall, leaving
+Brighteyes and Gudruda alone. Eric looked at her.
+
+"Where do I sleep to-night?" he asked.
+
+"Thou sleepest with me, husband," she answered soft, "for nothing,
+except Death, shall come between us any more."
+
+Now Skallagrim went to the store-room, and sat down with his back
+against a cask. His heart was heavy in him, for he boded no good of this
+marriage. Moreover, he was jealous. Skallagrim loved but one thing in
+the world truly, and that was Eric Brighteyes, his lord. Now he knew
+that henceforth he must take a second place, and that for one thought
+which Eric gave to him, he would give ten to Gudruda. Therefore
+Skallagrim was very sad at heart.
+
+"A pest upon the women!" he said to himself, "for from them comes all
+evil. Brighteyes owes his ill luck to Swanhild and this fair wife of
+his, and that is scarcely done with yet. Well, well, 'tis nature; but
+would that we were safe at sea! Had I my will, we had not slept here
+to-night. But they are newly wed, and--well, 'tis nature! Better the
+bride loves to lie abed than to ride the cold wolds and seek the common
+deck."
+
+Now, as Skallagrim grumbled, fear gathered in his heart, he knew not
+of what. He began to think on trolls and goblins. It was dark in the
+store-room, except for a little line of light that crept through the
+crack of the shutter. At length he could bear the darkness and his
+thoughts no longer, but, rising, threw the shutter wide and let the
+bright moonlight pour into the chamber, whence he could see the hillside
+behind, and watch the shadows of the clouds as they floated across it.
+Again Skallagrim sat down against his cask, and as he sat it moved, and
+he heard the wash of ale inside it.
+
+"That is a good sound," said Skallagrim, and he turned and smelt at
+the cask; "aye, and a good smell, too! We tasted little ale yonder on
+Mosfell, and we shall find less at sea." Again he looked at the cask.
+There was a spigot in it, and lo! on the shelf stood horn cups.
+
+"It surely is on draught," he said; "and now it will stand till it goes
+sour. 'Tis a pity; but I will not drink. I fear ale--ale is another man!
+No, I will not drink," and all the while his hand went up to the cups
+upon the shelf. "Eric is better lain yonder in Gudruda's chamber than I
+am here alone with evil thoughts and trolls," he said. "Why, what fish
+was that we ate at supper? My throat is cracked with thirst! If there
+were water now I'd drink it, but I see none. Well, one cup to wish them
+joy! There is no harm in a cup of ale," and he drew the spigot from the
+cask and watched the brown drink flow into the cup. Then he lifted it to
+his lips and drank, saying "Skoll! skoll!"[*] nor did he cease till the
+horn was drained. "This is wondrous good ale," said Skallagrim as he
+wiped his grizzled beard. "One more cup, and evil thoughts shall cease
+to haunt me."
+
+[*] "Health! health!"
+
+Again he filled, drank, sat down, and for a while was merry. But
+presently the black thoughts came back into his mind. He rose, looked
+through the shutter-hole to the hillside. He could see nothing on it
+except the shadows of the clouds.
+
+"Trolls walk the winds to-night," he said. "I feel them pulling at my
+beard. One more cup to frighten them."
+
+He drank another draught of ale and grew merry. Then ale called for ale,
+and Skallagrim drained cup on cup, singing as he drained, till at last
+heavy sleep overcame him, and he sank drunken on the ground there by the
+barrel, while the brown ale trickled round him.
+
+
+
+Now Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair slept side by side, locked in
+each other's arms. Presently Gudruda was wide awake.
+
+"Rouse thee, Eric," she said, "I have dreamed an evil dream."
+
+He awoke and kissed her.
+
+"What, then, was thy dream, sweet?" he said. "This is no hour for bad
+dreams."
+
+"No hour for bad dreams, truly, husband; yet dreams do not weigh the
+hour of their coming. I dreamed this: that I lay dead beside thee and
+thou knewest it not, while Swanhild looked at thee and mocked."
+
+"An evil dream, truly," said Eric; "but see, thou art not dead. Thou
+hast thought too much on Swanhild of late."
+
+Now they slept once more, till presently Eric was wide awake.
+
+"Rouse thee, Gudruda," he said, "I too have dreamed a dream, and it is
+full of evil."
+
+"What, then, was thy dream, husband?" she asked.
+
+"I dreamed that Atli the Earl, whom I slew, stood by the bed. His face
+was white, and white as snow was his beard, and blood from his great
+wound ran down his byrnie. 'Eric Brighteyes,' he said, 'I am he whom
+thou didst slay, and I come to tell thee this: that before the moon is
+young again thou shalt lie stiff, with Hell-shoes on thy feet. Thou art
+Eric the Unlucky! Take thy joy and say thy say to her who lies at thy
+side, for wet and cold is the bed that waits thee and soon shall thy
+white lips be dumb.' Then he was gone, and lo! in his place stood
+Asmund, thy father, and he also spoke to me, saying, 'Thou who dost lie
+in my bed and at my daughter's side, know this: the words of Atli are
+true; but I add these to them: ye shall die, yet is death but the gate
+of life and love and rest,' and he was gone."
+
+Now Gudruda shivered with fear, and crept closer to Eric's side.
+
+"We are surely fey, for the Norns speak with the voices of Atli and
+of Asmund," she said. "Oh, Eric! Eric! whither go we when we die? Will
+Valhalla take thee, being so mighty a man, and must I away to Hela's
+halls, where thou art not? Oh! that would be death indeed! Say, Eric,
+whither do we go?"
+
+"What said the voice of Asmund?" answered Brighteyes. "That death is but
+the gate of life and love and rest. Hearken, Gudruda, my May! Odin does
+not reign over all the world, for when I sat out yonder in England,
+a certain holy man taught me of another God--a God who loves not
+slaughter, a God who died that men might live for ever in peace with
+those they love."
+
+"How is this God named, Eric?"
+
+"They name Him the White Christ, and there are many who cling to Him."
+
+"Would that I knew this Christ, Eric. I am weary of death and blood and
+evil deeds, such as are pleasing to our Gods. Oh, Eric, if I am taken
+from thee, swear this to me: that thou wilt slay no more, save for thy
+life's sake only."
+
+"I swear that, sweet," he made answer. "For I too am weary of death and
+blood, and desire peace most of all things. The world is sad, and sad
+have been our days. Yet it is well to have lived, for through many heavy
+days we have wandered to this happy night."
+
+"Yea, Eric, it is well to have lived; though I think that death draws
+on. Now this is my counsel: that we rise, and that thou dost put on thy
+harness and summon Skallagrim, so that, if evil comes, thou mayst meet
+it armed. Surely I thought I heard a sound--yonder in the hall!"
+
+"There is little use in that," said Eric, "for things will befall as
+they are fated. We may do nothing of our own will, I am sure of this,
+and it is no good to struggle with the Norns. Yet I will rise."
+
+So he kissed her, and made ready to leave the bed, when suddenly, as he
+lingered, a great heaviness seized him.
+
+"Gudruda," he said, "I am pressed down with sleep."
+
+"That I am also, Eric," she said. "My eyes shut of themselves and I can
+scarcely stir my limbs. Ah, Eric, we are fey indeed, and this is--death
+that comes!"
+
+"Perchance!" he said, speaking heavily.
+
+"Eric!--wake, Eric! Thou canst not move? Yet hearken to me--ah! this
+weight of sleep! Thou lovest me, Eric!--is it not so?"
+
+"Yea," he answered.
+
+"Now and for ever thou lovest me--and wilt cleave to me always wherever
+we go?"
+
+"Surely, sweet. Oh, sweet, farewell!" he said, and his voice sounded
+like the voice of one who speaks across the water.
+
+"Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!--my love--my love, farewell!" she answered
+very slowly, and together they sank into a sleep that was heavy as
+death.
+
+
+
+Now Gizur, Ospakar's son, and Swanhild, Atli's widow, rode fast and hard
+from Mosfell, giving no rest to their horses, and with them rode that
+thrall who had showed the secret path to Gizur. They stayed a while on
+Horse-Head Heights till the moon rose. Now one path led hence to the
+shore that is against the Westmans, where Gudruda's ship lay bound. Then
+Swanhild turned to the thrall. Her beautiful face was fierce and she had
+said few words all this while, but in her heart raged a fire of hate and
+jealousy which shone through her blue eyes.
+
+"Listen," she said to the thrall. "Thou shalt ride hence to the bay
+where the ship of Gudruda the Fair lies at anchor. Thou knowest where
+our folk are in hiding. Thou shalt speak thus to them. Before it is dawn
+they must take boats and board Gudruda's ship and search her. And, if
+they find Eric, the outlaw, aboard, they shall slay him, if they may."
+
+"That will be no easy task," said the thrall.
+
+"And if they find Gudruda they shall keep her prisoner. But if they find
+neither the one nor the other, they shall do this: they shall drive the
+crew ashore, killing as few as may be, and burn the ship."
+
+"It is an ill deed thus to burn another's ship," said Gizur.
+
+"Good or ill, it shall be done," answered Swanhild fiercely. "Thou art
+a lawman, and well canst thou meet the suit; moreover Gudruda has wedded
+an outlaw and shall suffer for her sin. Now go, and see thou tarry not,
+or thy back shall pay the price."
+
+The man rode away swiftly. Then Gizur turned to Swanhild, asking:
+"Whither, then, go we?"
+
+"I have said to Middalhof."
+
+"That is into the wolf's den, if Eric and Skallagrim are there," he
+answered: "I have little chance against the two of them."
+
+"Nay, nor against the one, Gizur. Why, if Eric's right hand were hewn
+from him, and he stood unarmed, he would still slay thee with his left,
+as, swordless, he slew Ospakar thy father. Yet I shall find a way to
+come at him, if he is there."
+
+Then they rode on, and Gizur's heart was heavy for fear of Eric and
+Skallagrim the Baresark. So fiercely did they ride that, within one hour
+after midnight, they were at the stead of Middalhof.
+
+"We will leave the horses here in the field," said Swanhild.
+
+So they leaped to earth and, tying the reins of the horses together,
+left them to feed on the growing grass. Then they crept into the yard
+and listened. Presently there came a sound of horses stamping in the far
+corner of the yard. They went thither, and there they found a horse and
+two geldings saddled, but with the bits slipped, and on the horse was
+such a saddle as women use.
+
+"Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda the Fair," whispered
+Swanhild, naming the horses and laughing evilly--"the birds are within!
+Now to snare them."
+
+"Were it not best to meet them by the ship?" asked Gizur.
+
+"Nay, thou fool; if once Eric and Skallagrim are back to back, and
+Whitefire is aloft, how many shall be dead before they are down,
+thinkest thou? We shall not find them sleeping twice."
+
+"It is shameful to slay sleeping men," said Gizur.
+
+"They are outlaws," she answered. "Hearken, Ospakar's son. Thou sayest
+thou dost love me and wouldst wed me: know this, that if thou dost
+fail me now, I will never look upon thy face again, but will name thee
+Niddering in all men's ears."
+
+Now Gizur loved Swanhild much, for she had thrown her glamour on him as
+once she did on Atli, and he thought of her day and night. For there
+was this strange thing about Swanhild that, though she was a witch and
+wicked, being both fair and gentle she could lead all men, except Eric,
+to love her.
+
+But of men she loved Eric alone.
+
+Then Gizur held his peace; but Swanhild spoke again:
+
+"It will be of no use to try the doors, for they are strong. Yet when
+I was a child before now I have passed in and out the house at night
+by the store-room casement. Follow me, Gizur." Then she crept along the
+shadow of the wall, for she knew it every stone, till she came to the
+store-room, and lo! the shutter stood open, and through it the moonlight
+poured into the chamber. Swanhild lifted her head above the sill and
+looked, then started back.
+
+"Hush!" she said, "Skallagrim lies asleep within."
+
+"Pray the Gods he wake not!" said Gizur beneath his breath, and turned
+to go. But Swanhild caught him by the arm; then gently raised her head
+and looked again, long and steadily. Presently she turned and laughed
+softly.
+
+"Things go well for us," she said; "the sot lies drunk. We have nothing
+to fear from him. He lies drunk in a pool of ale."
+
+Then Gizur looked. The moonlight poured into the little room, and by
+it he saw the great shape of Skallagrim. His head was thrown back, his
+mouth was wide. He snored loudly in his drunken sleep, and all about him
+ran the brown ale, for the spigot of the cask lay upon the floor. In his
+left hand was a horn cup, but in his right he still grasped his axe.
+
+"Now we must enter," said Swanhild. Gizur hung back, but she sprang upon
+the sill lightly as a fox, and slid thence into the store-room. Then
+Gizur must follow, and presently he stood beside her in the room, and at
+their feet lay drunken Skallagrim. Gizur looked first at his sword, then
+on the Baresark, and lastly at Swanhild.
+
+"Nay," she whispered, "touch him not. Perchance he would cry out--and we
+seek higher game. He has that within him which will hold him fast for a
+while. Follow where I shall lead."
+
+She took his hand and, gliding through the doorway, passed along the
+passage till she came to the great hall. Swanhild could see well in the
+dark, and moreover she knew the road. Presently they stood in the
+empty hall. The fire had burnt down, but two embers yet glowed upon the
+hearth, like red and angry eyes.
+
+For a while Swanhild stood still listening, but there was nothing to
+hear. Then she drew near to the shut bed where Gudruda slept, and, with
+her ear to the curtain, listened once more. Gizur came with her, and
+as he came his foot struck against a bench and stirred it. Now Swanhild
+heard murmured words and the sound of kisses. She started back, and fury
+filled her heart. Gizur also heard the voice of Eric, saying: "I will
+rise." Then he would have fled, but Swanhild caught him by the arm.
+
+"Fear not," she whispered, "they shall soon sleep sound."
+
+He felt her stretch out her arms and presently he saw this wonderful
+thing: the eyes of Swanhild glowing in the darkness as the embers glowed
+upon the hearth. Now they glowed brightly, so brightly that he could see
+the outstretched arms and the hard white face beneath them, and now
+they grew dim, of a sudden to shine bright again. And all the while she
+hissed words through her clenched teeth.
+
+Thus she hissed, fierce and low:
+
+ "Gudruda, Sister mine, hearken and sleep!
+ By the bond of blood I bid thee sleep!--
+ By the strength that is in me I bid thee sleep!--
+ Sleep! sleep sound!
+
+ "Eric Brighteyes, hearken and sleep!
+ By the bond of sin I charge thee sleep!--
+ By the blood of Atli I charge thee, sleep!--
+ Sleep! sleep sound!"
+
+Then thrice she tossed her hands aloft, saying:
+
+ "From love to sleep!
+ From sleep to death!
+ From death to Hela!
+ Say, lovers, where shall ye kiss again?"
+
+Then the light went out of her eyes and she laughed low. And ever as she
+whispered, the spoken words of the two in the shut bed grew fainter and
+more faint, till at length they died away, and a silence fell upon the
+place.
+
+"Thou hast no cause to fear the sword of Eric, Gizur," she said.
+"Nothing will wake him now till daylight comes."
+
+"Thou art awesome!" answered Gizur, for he shook with fear. "Look not on
+me with those flaming eyes, I pray thee!"
+
+"Fear not," she said, "the fire is out. Now to the work."
+
+"What must we do, then?"
+
+"_Thou_ must do this. Thou must enter and slay Eric."
+
+"That I can not--that I will not!" said Gizur.
+
+She turned and looked at him, and lo! her eyes began to flame
+again--upon his eyes they seemed to burn.
+
+"Thou wilt do as I bid thee," she said. "With Eric's sword thou shalt
+slay Eric, else I will curse thee where thou art, and bring such evil on
+thee as thou knowest not of."
+
+"Look not so, Swanhild," he said. "Lead on--I come."
+
+Now they creep into the shut chamber of Gudruda. It is so dark that they
+can see nothing, and nothing can they hear except the heavy breathing of
+the sleepers.
+
+This is to be told, that at this time Swanhild had it in her mind
+to kill, not Eric but Gudruda, for thus she would smite the heart of
+Brighteyes. Moreover, she loved Eric, and while he lived she might yet
+win him; but Eric dead must be Eric lost. But on Gudruda she would be
+bitterly avenged--Gudruda, who, for all her scheming, had yet been a
+wife to Eric!
+
+Now they stand by the bed. Swanhild puts out her hand, draws down the
+clothes, and feels the breast of Gudruda beneath, for Gudruda slept on
+the outside of the bed.
+
+Then she searches by the head of the bed and finds Whitefire which hung
+there, and draws the sword.
+
+"Here lies Eric, on the outside," she says to Gizur, "and here is
+Whitefire. Strike and strike home, leaving Whitefire in the wound."
+
+Gizur takes the sword and lifts it. He is sore at heart that he must do
+such a coward deed; but the spell of Swanhild is upon him, and he may
+not flinch from it. Then a thought takes him and he also puts down his
+hand to feel. It lights upon Gudruda's golden hair, that hangs about her
+breast and falls from the bed to the ground.
+
+"Here is woman's hair," he whispers.
+
+"No," Swanhild answers, "it is Eric's hair. The hair of Eric is long, as
+thou hast seen."
+
+Now neither of them knows that Gudruda cut Eric's locks when he lay sick
+on Mosfell, though Swanhild knows well that it is not Brighteyes whom
+she bids Gizur slay.
+
+Then Gizur, Ospakar's son, lifts the sword, and the faint starlight
+struggling into the chamber gathers and gleams upon the blade. Thrice he
+lifts it, and thrice it draws it back. Then with an oath he strikes--and
+drives it home with all his strength!
+
+From the bed beneath there comes one long sigh and a sound as of limbs
+trembling against the bed-gear. Then all is still.
+
+"It is done!" he says faintly.
+
+Swanhild puts down her hand once more. Lo! it is wet and warm. Then she
+bends herself and looks, and behold! the dead eyes of Gudruda glare up
+into her eyes. She can see them plainly, but none know what she read
+there. At the least it was something that she loved not, for she reels
+back against the panelling, then falls upon the floor.
+
+Presently, while Gizur stands as one in a dream, she rises, saying:
+"I am avenged of the death of Atli. Let us hence!--ah! let us hence
+swiftly! Give me thy hand, Gizur, for I am faint!"
+
+So Gizur gives her his hand and they pass thence. Presently they stand
+in the store-room, and there lies Skallagrim, still plunged in his
+drunken sleep.
+
+"Must I do more murder?" asks Gizur hoarsely.
+
+"Nay," Swanhild says. "I am sick with blood. Leave the knave."
+
+They pass out by the casement into the yard and so on till they find
+their horses.
+
+"Lift me, Gizur; I can no more," says Swanhild.
+
+He lifts her to the saddle.
+
+"Whither away?" he asks.
+
+"To Coldback, Gizur, and thence to cold Death."
+
+
+
+Thus did Gudruda, Eric's bride and Asmund's daughter, the fairest woman
+who ever lived in Iceland, die on her marriage night by the hand of
+Gizur, Ospakar's son, and through the hate and witchcraft of Swanhild
+the Fatherless, her half-sister.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+HOW THE DAWN CAME
+
+The dawn broke over Middalhof. Slowly the light gathered in the empty
+hall, it crept slowly into the little chamber where Eric slept, and
+Gudruda slept also with a deeper sleep.
+
+Now the two women came from their chamber at the far end of the hall,
+and drew near the hearth, shivering, for the air was cold. They knelt
+by the fire, blowing at the embers till the sticks they cast upon them
+crackled to a blaze.
+
+"It seems that Gudruda is not yet gone," said one to the other. "I
+thought she should ride away with Eric before the dawn."
+
+"Newly wed lie long abed!" laughed the other.
+
+"I am glad to see the blessed light," said the first woman, "for last
+night I dreamed that once again this hall ran red with blood, as at the
+marriage-feast of Ospakar."
+
+"Ah," answered the other, "it will be well for the south when Eric
+Brighteyes and Gudruda are gone over sea, for their loves have brought
+much bloodshed upon the land."
+
+"Well, indeed!" sighed the first. "Had Asmund the Priest never found
+Groa, Ran's gift, singing by the sea, Valhalla had not been so full
+to-day. Mindest thou the day he brought her here?"
+
+"I remember it well," she answered, "though I was but a girl at the
+time. Still, when I saw those dark eyes of hers--just such eyes as
+Swanhild's!--I knew her for a witch, as all Finn women are. It is an
+evil world: my husband is dead by the sword; dead are both my sons,
+fighting for Eric; dead is Unna, Thorod's daughter; Asmund, my lord, is
+dead, and dead is Bjoern; and now Gudruda the Fair, whom I have rocked
+to sleep, leaves us to go over sea. I may not go with her, for my
+daughter's sake; yet I almost wish that I too were dead."
+
+"That will come soon enough," said the other, who was young and fair.
+
+
+
+Now the witch-sleep began to roll from Eric's heart, though his eyes
+were not yet open. But the talk of the women echoed in his ears, and
+the words "_dead!_" "_dead!_" "_dead!_" fell heavily on his slumbering
+sense. At length he opened his eyes, only to shut them again, because
+of a bright gleam of light that ran up and down something at his
+side. Heavily he wondered what this might be, that shone so keen and
+bright--that shone like a naked sword.
+
+Now he looked again. Yes, it was a sword which stood by him upon the
+bed, and the golden hilt was like the hilt of Whitefire. He lifted up
+his hand to touch it, thinking that he dreamed. Lo! his hand and arm
+were red!
+
+Then he remembered, and the thought of Gudruda flashed through his
+heart. He sat up, gazing down into the shadow at his side.
+
+
+
+Presently the women at the fire heard a sound as of a great man falling
+to earth.
+
+"What is that noise?" said one.
+
+"Eric leaping from his bed," answered the other. "He has slept too long,
+as we have also."
+
+As they spoke the curtain of the shut bed was pushed away, and through
+it staggered Eric in his night-gear, and lo! the left side of it was
+red. His eyes were wide with horror, his mouth was open, and his face
+was white as ice.
+
+He stopped, looking at them, made as though to speak, and could not.
+Then, while they shrank from him in terror, he turned, and, walking like
+a drunken man, staggered from the hall down that passage which led to
+the store-chamber. The door stood wide, the shutter was wide, and on the
+floor, soaked in the dregs of ale, Skallagrim yet lay snoring, his axe
+in one hand and a cup in the other.
+
+Eric looked and understood.
+
+"Awake, drunkard!" he cried, in so terrible a voice that the room shook.
+"Awake, and look upon thy work!"
+
+Skallagrim sat up, yawning.
+
+"Forsooth, my head swims," he said. "Give me ale, I am thirsty."
+
+"Never wilt thou look on ale again, Skallagrim, when thou hast seen that
+which I have to show!" said Eric, in the same dread voice.
+
+Then Skallagrim rose to his feet and gaped upon him.
+
+"What means this, lord? Is it time to ride? and say! why is thy shirt
+red with blood?"
+
+"Follow me, drunkard, and look upon thy work!" Eric said again.
+
+Then Skallagrim grew altogether sober, and grasping his axe, followed
+after Brighteyes, sore afraid of what he might see.
+
+They went down the passage, past the high seat of the hall, till they
+came to the curtain of the shut bed; and after them followed the women.
+Eric seized the curtain in his hand, rent it from its fastenings, and
+cast it on the ground. Now the light flowed in and struck upon the bed.
+It fell upon the bed, it fell upon Whitefire's hilt and ran along the
+blade, it gleamed on a woman's snowy breast and golden hair, and shone
+in her staring eyes--a woman who lay stiff and cold upon the bed, the
+great sword fixed within her heart!
+
+"Look upon thy work, drunkard!" Eric cried again, while the women who
+peeped behind sent their long wail of woe echoing down the panelled
+hall.
+
+"Hearken!" said Eric: "while thou didst lie wallowing in thy
+swine's sleep, foes crept across thy carcase, and this is their
+handiwork:--yonder she lies who was my bride!--now is Gudruda the Fair a
+death-wife who last night was my bride! This is thy work, drunkard! and
+now what meed for thee?"
+
+Skallagrim looked. Then he spoke in a hoarse slow voice:
+
+"What meed, lord? But one--death!"
+
+Then with one hand he covered his eyes and with the other held out his
+axe to Eric Brighteyes.
+
+Eric took the axe, and while the women ran thence screaming, he whirled
+it thrice about his head. Then he smote down towards the skull of
+Skallagrim, but as he smote it seemed to him that a voice whispered in
+his ear: "_Thy oath!_"--and he remembered that he had sworn to slay no
+more, save for his own life's sake.
+
+The mighty blow was falling and he might only do this--loose the axe
+before it clove Skallagrim in twain. He loosed and away the great axe
+flew. It passed over the head of Skallagrim, and sped like light across
+the wide hall, till it crashed through the panelling on the further
+side, and buried itself to the haft in the wall beyond.
+
+"It is not for me to kill thee, drunkard! Go, die in thy drink!"
+
+"Then I will kill myself!" cried the Baresark, and, rushing across the
+hall he tore the great axe from its bed.
+
+"Hold!" said Eric; "perhaps there is yet a deed for thee to do. Then
+thou mayest die, if it pleases thee."
+
+"Ay," said Skallagrim coming back, "perchance there is still a deed to
+do!"
+
+And, flinging down the axe, Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark fell upon
+the floor and wept.
+
+But Eric did not weep. Only he drew Whitefire from the heart of Gudruda
+and looked at it.
+
+"Thou art a strange sword, Whitefire," he said, "who slayest both friend
+and foe! Shame on thee, Whitefire! We swore our oath on thee, Whitefire,
+and thou hast cut its chain! Now I am minded to shatter thee." And as
+Eric looked on the great blade, lo! it hummed strangely in answer.
+
+"'First must thou be the death of some,' thou sayest? Well, maybe,
+Whitefire! But never yet didst thou drink so sweet a life as hers who
+now lies dead, nor ever shalt again."
+
+Then he sheathed the sword, but neither then nor afterwards did he wipe
+the blood of Gudruda from its blade.
+
+"Last night a-marrying--to-day a-burying," said Eric, and he called to
+the women to bring spades. Then, having clothed himself, he went to
+the centre of the hall, and, brushing away the sand, broke the hard
+clay-flooring, dealing great blows on it with an axe. Now Skallagrim,
+seeing his purpose, came to him and took one of the spades, and together
+they laboured in silence till they had dug a grave a fathom deep.
+
+"Here," said Eric, "here, in thine own hall where thou wast born and
+lived, Gudruda the Fair, thou shalt sleep at the last. And of Middalhof
+I say this: that none shall live there henceforth. It shall be haunted
+and accursed till the rafters rot and the walls fall in, making thy
+barrow, Gudruda."
+
+Now this indeed came to pass, for none have lived in Middalhof since the
+days of Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter. It has been ruined these
+many years, and now it is but a pile of stones.
+
+
+
+When the grave was dug, Eric washed himself and ate some food. Then he
+went in to where Gudruda lay dead, and bade the women make her ready
+for burial. This they did. When she was washed and clad in a clean white
+robe, Eric came to her, and with his own hand bound the Hell-shoes on
+her feet and closed her eyes.
+
+It was just then that a man came who said that the people of Gizur and
+of Swanhild had burned Gudruda's ship, driving the crew ashore.
+
+"It is well," said Eric. "We need the ship no more; now hath she whom
+it should bear wings with which to fly." Then he went in and sat down on
+the bed by the body of Gudruda, while Skallagrim crouched on the ground
+without, tearing at his beard and muttering. For the fierce heart of
+Skallagrim was broken because of that evil which his drunkenness had
+brought about.
+
+All day Eric sat thus, looking on his dead love's face, till the hour
+came round when he and Gudruda had drunk the bride-cup. Then he rose and
+kissed dead Gudruda on the lips, saying:
+
+"I did not look to part with thee thus, sweet! It is sad that thou
+shouldst have gone and left me here. Natheless, I shall soon follow on
+thy path."
+
+Then he called aloud:
+
+"Art sober, drunkard?"
+
+Skallagrim came and stood before him, saying nothing.
+
+"Take thou the feet of her whom thou didst bring to death, and I will
+take her head."
+
+So they lifted up Gudruda and bore her to the grave. Then Eric stood
+near the grave, and, taking dead Gudruda in his arms, looked upon her
+face by the light of the fire and of the candles that were set about.
+
+He looked thrice, then sang aloud:
+
+ "Long ago, when swept the snow-blast,
+ Close we clung and plighted troth.
+ Many a year, through storm and sword-song,
+ Sore I strove to win thee, sweet!
+ But last night I held thee, Fairest,
+ Lock'd, a wife, in lover's arms.
+ Now, Gudruda, in thy death-rest,
+ Sleep thou soft till Eric come!
+
+ "Hence I go to wreak thy murder.
+ Hissing fire of flaming stead,
+ Groan of spear-carles, wail of women,
+ Soon shall startle through the night.
+ Then on Mosfell, Kirtle-Wearer,
+ Eric waits the face of Death.
+ Freed from weary life and sorrow,
+ Soon we'll kiss in Hela's halls!"
+
+Then he laid her in the grave, and, having shrouded a sheet over her,
+they filled it in together, hiding Gudruda the Fair from the sight of
+men for ever.
+
+Afterwards Eric armed himself, and this Skallagrim did also. Then he
+strode from the hall, and Skallagrim followed him. In the yard those
+horses were still tied that should have carried them to the ship, and
+on one was the saddle of Gudruda. She had ridden on this horse for
+many years, and loved it much, for it would follow her like a dog. Eric
+looked at him, then said aloud:
+
+"Gudruda may need thee where she is, Blackmane," for so the horse was
+named. "At the least, none shall ride thee more!" And he snatched the
+axe from the hand of Skallagrim and slew the horse at a blow.
+
+Then they rode away, heading for Coldback. The night was wild and windy,
+and the sky dark with scudding clouds, through which the moon peeped out
+at times. Eric looked up, then spoke to Skallagrim:
+
+"A good night for burning, drunkard!"
+
+"Ay, lord; the flames will fly briskly," answered Skallagrim.
+
+"How many, thinkest thou, walked over thee, drunkard, when thou didst
+lie yonder in the ale?"
+
+"I know not," groaned Skallagrim; "but I found this in the soft earth
+without: the print of a man's and a woman's feet; and this on the hill
+side: the track of two horses ridden hard."
+
+"Gizur and Swanhild, drunkard," said Eric. "Swanhild cast us into deep
+sleep by witchcraft, and Gizur dealt the blow. Better for him that he
+had never been born than that he has lived to deal that coward's blow!"
+
+
+
+Then they rode on, and when midnight was a little while gone they came
+to the stead at Coldback. Now this house was roofed with turves, and the
+windows were barred so that none could pass through them. Also in the
+yard were faggots of birch and a stack of hay.
+
+Eric and Skallagrim tied their horses in a dell that is to the north of
+the stead and crept up to the house. All was still; but a fire burnt in
+the hall, and, looking through a crack, Eric could see many men sleeping
+about it. Then he made signs to Skallagrim and together, very silently,
+they fetched hay and faggots, piling them against the north door of the
+house, for the wind blew from the north. Now Eric spoke to Skallagrim,
+bidding him stand, axe in hand, by the south door, and slay those who
+came out when the reek began to smart them: but he went himself to fire
+the pile.
+
+When Brighteyes had made all things ready for the burning, it came into
+his mind that, perhaps, Gizur and Swanhild were not in the house. But he
+would not hold his hand for this, for he was mad with grief and rage. So
+once more he prepared for the deed, when again he heard a voice in his
+ear--the voice of Gudruda, and it seemed to say:
+
+"_Thine oath, Eric! remember thine oath!_"
+
+Then he turned and the rage went out of his heart.
+
+"Let them seek me on Mosfell," he said, "I will not slay them secretly
+and by reek, the innocent and the guilty together." And he strode round
+the house to where Skallagrim stood at the south door, axe aloft and
+watching.
+
+"Does the fire burn, lord? I see no smoke," whispered Skallagrim.
+
+"Nay, I have made none. I will shed no more blood, except to save my
+life. I leave vengeance to the Norns."
+
+Now Skallagrim thought that Brighteyes was mad, but he dared say
+nothing. So they went to their horses, and when they found them,
+Eric rode back to the house. Presently they drew near, and Eric told
+Skallagrim to stay where he was, and riding on to the house, smote heavy
+blows upon the door, just as Skallagrim once had smitten, before Eric
+went up to Mosfell.
+
+Now Swanhild lay in her shut bed; but she could not sleep, because of
+what she saw in the eyes of Gudruda. Little may she ever sleep again,
+for when she shuts her eyes once more she sees that which was written in
+the dead eyes of Gudruda. So, as she lay, she heard the blows upon the
+door, and sprang frightened from her bed. Now there was tumult in the
+hall, for every man rose to his feet in fear, searching for his weapons.
+Again the loud knocks came.
+
+"It is the ghost of Eric!" cried one, for Gizur had given out that Eric
+was dead at his hand in fair fight.
+
+"Open!" said Gizur, and they opened, and there, a little way from the
+door, sat Brighteyes on a horse, great and shadowy to see, and behind
+him was Skallagrim the Baresark.
+
+"It is the ghost of Eric!" they cried again.
+
+"I am no ghost," said Brighteyes. "I am no ghost, ye men of Swanhild.
+Tell me: is Gizur, the son of Ospakar, among you?"
+
+"Gizur is here," said a voice; "but he swore he slew thee last night."
+
+"Then he lied," quoth Eric. "Gizur did not slay me--he murdered Gudruda
+the Fair as she lay asleep at my side. See!" and he drew Whitefire from
+its scabbard and held it in the rays of the moon that now shone out
+between the cloud rifts. "Whitefire is red with Gudruda's blood--Gudruda
+slaughtered in her sleep by Gizur's coward hand!"
+
+Now men murmured, for this seemed to them the most shameful of all
+deeds. But Gizur, hearing, shrank back aghast.
+
+"Listen again!" said Eric. "I was minded but now to burn you all as ye
+slept--ay, the firing is piled against the door. Still, I held my hand,
+for I have sworn to slay no more, except to save my life. Now I ride
+hence to Mosfell. Thither let Gizur come, Gizur the murderer, and
+Swanhild the witch, and with them all who will. There I will give them
+greeting, and wipe away the blood of Gudruda from Whitefire's blade."
+
+"Fear not, Eric," cried Swanhild, "I will come, and there thou mayst
+kill me, if thou canst."
+
+"Against thee, Swanhild," said Eric, "I lift no hand. Do thy worst,
+I leave thee to thy fate and the vengeance of the Norns. I am no
+woman-slayer. But to Gizur the murderer I say, come."
+
+Then he turned and went, and Skallagrim went with him.
+
+"Up, men, and cut Eric down!" cried Gizur, seeking to cover his shame.
+
+But no man stirred.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+HOW ERIC SENT AWAY HIS MEN FROM MOSFELL
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim came to Mosfell in safety, and during all
+that ride Brighteyes spoke no word. He rode in silence, and in silence
+Skallagrim rode after him. The heart of Skallagrim was broken because
+of the sorrow which his drunkenness had brought about, and the heart of
+Eric was buried in Gudruda's grave.
+
+On Mosfell Eric found four of his own men, two of whom had been among
+those that the people of Gizur and Swanhild had driven from Gudruda's
+ship before they fired her. For no fight had been made on the ship.
+There also he found Jon, who had been loosed from his bands in the booth
+by one who heard his cries as he rode past. Now when Jon saw Brighteyes,
+he told him all, and fell at Eric's feet and wept because he had
+betrayed him in his fear.
+
+But Eric spoke no angry word to him. Stooping down he raised him,
+saying, "Thou wast never overstout of heart, Jon, and thou art scarcely
+to be blamed because thou didst speak rather than die in torment, though
+perhaps some had chosen so to die and not to speak. Now I am a luckless
+man, and all things happen as they are fated, and the words of Atli come
+true, as was to be looked for. The Norns, against whom none may stand,
+did but work their will through thy mouth, Jon; so grieve no more for
+that which cannot be undone."
+
+Then he turned away, but Jon wept long and loudly.
+
+That night Eric slept well and dreamed no dreams. But on the morrow
+he woke at dawn, and clothed himself and ate. Then he called his men
+together, and with them Skallagrim. They came and stood before him, and
+Eric, drawing Whitefire, leaned upon it and spoke:
+
+"Hearken, mates," he said: "I know this, that my hours are short and
+death draws on. My years have been few and evil, and I cannot read the
+purpose of my life. She whom I loved has been slain by the witchcraft of
+Swanhild and the coward hand of Gizur the murderer, and I go to seek
+her where she waits. I am very glad to go, for now I have no more joy in
+life, being but a luckless man; it is an ill world, friends, and all
+the ways are red with blood. I have shed much blood, though but one life
+haunts me now at the last, and that is the life of Atli the Earl, for he
+was no match for my might and he is dead because of my sin. With my own
+blood I will wash away the blood of Atli, and then I seek another place,
+leaving nothing but a tale to be told in the ingle when fall the winter
+snows. For to this end we all come at the last, and it matters little if
+it find us at midday or at nightfall. We live in sorrow, we die in pain
+and darkness: for this is the curse that the Gods have laid upon men
+and each must taste it in his season. But I have sworn that no more men
+shall die for me. I will fight the last great fight alone; for I know
+this: I shall not easily be overcome, and with my fallen foes I will
+tread on Bifrost Bridge. Therefore, farewell! When the bones of Eric
+Brighteyes lie in their barrow, or are picked by ravens on the mountain
+side, Gizur will not trouble to hunt out those who clung to him, if
+indeed Gizur shall live to tell the tale. Nor need ye fear the hate of
+Swanhild, for she aims her spears at me alone. Go, therefore, and when
+I am dead, do not forget me, and do not seek to avenge me, for Death the
+avenger of all will find them also."
+
+Now Eric's men heard and groaned aloud, saying that they would die with
+him, for they loved Eric one and all. Only Skallagrim said nothing.
+
+Then Brighteyes spoke again: "Hear me, comrades. If ye will not go, my
+blood will be on your heads, for I will ride out alone, and meet the men
+of Gizur in the plain and fall there fighting."
+
+Then one by one they crept away to seek their horses in the dell. And
+each man as he went came to Eric and kissed his hand, then passed thence
+weeping. Jon was the last to go, except Skallagrim only, and he was so
+moved that he could not speak at all.
+
+It was this Jon who, in after years, when he was grown very old,
+wandered from stead to stead telling the deeds of Eric Brighteyes, and
+always finding a welcome because of his tale, till at length, as he
+journeyed, he was overtaken by a snowstorm and buried in a drift. For
+Jon, who lacked much, had this gift: he had a skald's tongue. Men have
+always held that it was to the honour of Jon that he told the tale thus,
+hiding nothing, seeing that some of it is against himself.
+
+
+
+Now when all had gone, Eric looked at Skallagrim, who still stood near
+him, axe in hand.
+
+"Wherefore goest thou not, drunkard?" he said. "Surely thou wilt find
+ale and mead in the vales or oversea. Here there is none. Hasten! I
+would be alone!"
+
+Now the great body of Skallagrim shook with grief and shame, and the red
+blood poured up beneath his dark sin. Then he spoke in a thick voice:
+
+"I did not think to live to hear such words from the lips of Eric
+Brighteyes. They are well earned, yet it is unmanly of thee, lord, thus
+to taunt one who loves thee. I would sooner die as Swanhild said yonder
+thrall should die than live to listen to such words. I have sinned
+against thee, indeed, and because of my sin my heart is broken. Hast
+thou, then, never sinned that thou wouldst tear it living from my breast
+as eagles tear a foundered horse? Think on thine own sins, Eric, and
+pity mine! Taunt me thus once more or bid me go once more and I will go
+indeed! I will go thus--on the edge of yonder gulf thou didst
+overcome me by thy naked might, and there I swore fealty to thee, Eric
+Brighteyes. Many a year have we wandered side by side, and, standing
+back to back, have struck many a blow. I am minded to do this: to stand
+by thee in the last great fight that draws on and to die there with
+thee. I have loved no other man save thee, and I am too old to seek new
+lords. Yet, if still thou biddest me, I will go thus. Where I swore my
+oath to thee, there I will end it. For I will lay me down on the brink
+of yonder gulf, as once I lay when thy hand was at my throat, and call
+out that thou art no more my lord and I am no more thy thrall. Then I
+will roll into the depths beneath, and by this death of shame thou shalt
+be freed of me, Eric Brighteyes."
+
+Eric looked at the great man--he looked long and sadly. Then he spoke:
+
+"Skallagrim Lambstail, thou hast a true heart. I too have sinned, and
+now I put away thy sin, although Gudruda is dead through thee and I must
+die because of thee. Stay by me if thou wilt and let us fall together."
+
+Then Skallagrim came to Eric, and, kneeling before him, took his hands
+and kissed them.
+
+"Now I am once more a man," he said, "and I know this: we two shall die
+such a great death that it will be well to have lived to die it!" and he
+arose and shouted:
+
+ "A! hai! A! hai! I see foes pass in pride!
+ A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!
+ Hear the song of the sword!
+ Whitefire is aloft--aloft!
+ Bare is the axe of the Baresark!
+ Croak, ye nesting ravens;
+ Flap your wings, ye eagles,
+ For bright is Mosfell's cave with blood!
+ Lap! lap! thou Grey Wolf,
+ Laugh aloud, Odin!
+
+ "Laugh till shake the golden doors;
+ Heroes' feet are set on Bifrost,
+ Open, ye hundred gates!
+ A! hai! A! hai! red runs the fray!
+ A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!"
+
+Then Skallagrim turned and went to clean his harness and the golden helm
+of Eric.
+
+
+
+Now at Coldback Gizur spoke with Swanhild.
+
+"Thou hast brought the greatest shame upon me," he said, "for thou hast
+caused me to slay a sleeping woman. Knowest thou that my own men will
+scarcely speak with me? I have come to this evil pass, through love of
+thee, that I have slain a sleeping woman!"
+
+"It was not my fault that thou didst kill Gudruda," answered Swanhild;
+"surely I thought it was Eric whom thy sword pierced! I have not sought
+thy love, Gizur, and I say this to thee: go, if thou wilt, and leave me
+alone!"
+
+Now Gizur looked at her, and was minded to go; but, as Swanhild knew
+well, she held him too fast in the net of her witcheries.
+
+"I would go, if I might go!" answered Gizur; "but I am bound to thee for
+good or evil, since it is fated that I shall wed thee."
+
+"Thou wilt never wed me while Eric lives," said Swanhild.
+
+Now she spoke thus truthfully, and by chance, as it were, not as driving
+Gizur on to slay Eric--for, now that Gudruda was dead, she was in two
+minds as to this matter, since, if she might, she still desired to take
+Eric to herself--but meaning that while Eric lived she would wed no
+other man. But Gizur took it otherwise.
+
+"Eric shall certainly die if I may bring it about," he answered, and
+went to speak with his men.
+
+Now all were gathered in the yard at Coldback, and that was a great
+company. But their looks were heavy because of the shame that Gizur,
+Ospakar's son, had brought upon them by the murder of Gudruda in her
+sleep.
+
+"Hearken, comrades!" said Gizur: "great shame is come upon me because of
+a deed that I have done unwittingly, for I aimed at the eagle Eric and I
+have slain the swan Gudruda."
+
+Then a certain old viking in the company, named Ketel, whom Gizur had
+hired for the slaying of Eric, spoke:
+
+"Man or woman, it is a niddering deed to kill folk in their sleep,
+Gizur! It is murder, and no less, and small luck can be hoped for from
+the stroke."
+
+Now Gizur felt that his people looked on him askance and heavily, and
+knew that it would be hard to show them that he was driven to this deed
+against his will, and by the witchcraft of Swanhild. So, as was his
+nature, he turned to guile for shelter, like a fox to his hole, and
+spoke to them with the tongue of a lawman; for Gizur had great skill in
+speech.
+
+"That tale was not all true which Eric Brighteyes told you," he said.
+"He was mad with grief, and moreover it seems that he slept, and only
+woke to find Gudruda dead. It came about thus: I stood with the lady
+Swanhild, and was about to call aloud on Eric to arm himself and come
+forth and meet me face to face----"
+
+"Then, lord, methinks thou hadst never met another foe," quoth the
+viking Ketel who had spoken first.
+
+"When of a sudden," went on Gizur, taking no note of Ketel's words, "one
+clothed in white sprang from the bed and rushed on me. Then I, thinking
+that it was Eric, lifted sword, not to smite, but to ward him away; but
+the linen-wearer met the sword and fell down dead. Then I fled, fearing
+lest men should wake and trap us, and that is all the tale. It was no
+fault of mine if Gudruda died upon the sword."
+
+Thus he spoke, but still men looked doubtfully upon him, for his eye was
+the eye of a liar--and Eric, as they knew, did not lie.
+
+"It is hard to find the truth between lawman's brain and tongue," said
+the old viking Ketel. "Eric is no lawman, but a true man, and he sang
+another song. I would slay Eric indeed, for between him and me there is
+a blood-feud, since my brother died at his hand when, with Whitefire
+for a crook, Brighteyes drove armed men like sheep down the hall of
+Middalhof--ay and swordless, slew Ospakar. Yet I say that Eric is a
+true man, and, whether or no thou art true, Gizur the Lawman, that thou
+knowest best--thou and Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa's daughter. If thou
+didst slay Gudruda as thou tellest, say, how come Gudruda's blood on
+Whitefire's blade? How did it chance, Gizur, that thou heldest Whitefire
+in thy hand and not thine own sword? Now I tell thee this: either thou
+shalt go up against Eric and clear thyself by blows, or I leave thee;
+and methinks there are others among this company who will do the same,
+for we have no wish to be partners with murderers and their wickedness."
+
+"Ay, a good word!" said many who stood by. "Let Gizur go up with us to
+Mosfell, and there stand face to face with Eric and clear himself by
+blows."
+
+"I ask no more," said Gizur; "we will ride to-night."
+
+"But much more shalt thou get, liar," quoth Ketel to himself, "for that
+hour when thou lookest once again on Whitefire shall be thy last!"
+
+
+
+So Gizur and Swanhild made ready to go up against Eric. That day they
+rode away with a great company, a hundred and one in all, and this was
+their plan. They sent six men with that thrall who had shown them the
+secret path, bidding him guide them to the mountain-top. Then, when they
+were come thither, and heard the shouts of those who sought to gain the
+platform from the south, they were to watch till Eric and his folk came
+out from the cave, and shoot them with arrows from above or crush them
+with stones. But if perchance Eric left the platform and came to meet
+his foes in the narrow pass, then they must let themselves down with
+ropes from the height above, and, creeping after him round the rock,
+must smite him in the back. Moreover, in secret, Gizur promised a great
+reward of ten hundreds in silver to him who should kill Eric, for he did
+not long to stand face to face with him alone. Swanhild also in secret
+made promise of reward to those who should bring Eric to her, bound, but
+living; and she bade them do this--to bear him down with shields and tie
+him with ropes.
+
+
+
+So they rode away, the seven who should climb the mountain from behind
+going first, and on the morrow morning they crossed the sand and came to
+Mosfell.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM GREW FEY
+
+Now the night came down upon Mosfell, and of all nights this was the
+strangest. The air was quiet and heavy, yet no rain fell. It was so
+silent, moreover, that, did a stone slip upon the mountain side or a
+horse neigh far off on the plains, the sound of it crept up the fell and
+was echoed from the crags.
+
+Eric and Skallagrim sat together on the open space of rock that is
+before the cave, and great heaviness and fear came into their hearts, so
+that they had no desire to sleep.
+
+"Methinks the night is ghost-ridden," said Eric, "and I am fey, for I
+grow cold, and it seems to me that one strokes my hair."
+
+"It is ghost-ridden, lord," answered Skallagrim. "Trolls are abroad, and
+the God-kind gather to see Eric die."
+
+For a while they sat in silence, then suddenly the mountain heaved up
+gently beneath them. Thrice it seemed to heave like a woman's breast,
+and left them frightened.
+
+"Now the dwarf-folk come from their caves," quoth Skallagrim, "and great
+deeds may be looked for, since they are not drawn to the upper earth by
+a little thing."
+
+Then once more they sat silent; and thick darkness came down upon the
+mountain, hiding the stars.
+
+"Look," said Eric of a sudden, and he pointed to Hecla.
+
+Skallagrim looked, and lo! the snowy dome of Hecla was aglow with a rosy
+flame like the light of dawn.
+
+"Winter lights," said Lambstail, shuddering.
+
+"Death lights!" answered Eric. "Look again!"
+
+They looked, and behold! in the rosy glow there sat three giant forms of
+fire, and their shapes were the shapes of women. Before them was a loom
+of blackness that stretched from earth to sky, and they wove at it with
+threads of flame. They were splendid and terrible to see. Their
+hair streamed behind them like meteor flames, their eyes shone like
+lightning, and their breasts gleamed like the polished bucklers of the
+gods. They wove fiercely at the loom of blackness, and as they wove they
+sang. The voice of the one was as the wind whistling through the pines;
+the voice of the other was as the sound of rain hissing on deep waters;
+and the voice of the third was as the moan of the sea. They wove
+fearfully and they sang loudly, but what they sang might not be known.
+Now the web grew and the woof grew, and a picture came upon the loom--a
+great picture written in fire.
+
+Behold! it was the semblance of a storm-awakened sea, and a giant ship
+fled before the gale--a dragon of war, and in the ship were piled the
+corses of men, and on these lay another corse, as one lies upon a bed.
+They looked, and the face of the corse grew bright. It was the face of
+Eric, and his head rested upon the dead heart of Skallagrim.
+
+Clinging to each other, Eric and Skallagrim saw the sight of fear that
+was written on the loom of the Norns. They saw it for a breath. Then,
+with a laugh like the wail of wolves, the shapes of fire sprang up
+and rent the web asunder. Then the first passed upward to the sky, the
+second southward towards Middalhof, but the third swept over Mosfell, so
+that the brightness of her flaming form shone on the rock where they sat
+by the cave, and the lightning of her eyes was mirrored in the byrnie of
+Skallagrim and on Eric's golden helm. She swept past, pointing downwards
+as she went, and lo! she was gone, and once more darkness and silence
+lay upon the earth.
+
+Now this sight was seen of Jon the thrall also, and he told it in
+his story of the deeds of Eric. For Jon lay hid in a secret place on
+Mosfell, waiting for tidings of what came to pass.
+
+
+
+For a while Eric and Skallagrim clung to each other. Then Skallagrim
+spoke.
+
+"We have seen the Valkyries," he said.
+
+"Nay," answered Eric, "we have seen the Norns--who are come to warn us
+of our doom! We shall die to-morrow."
+
+"At the least," said Skallagrim, "we shall not die alone: we had a
+goodly bed on yonder goblin ship, and all of our own slaying methinks.
+It is not so ill to die thus, lord!"
+
+"Not so ill!" said Eric; "and yet I am weary of blood and war, of glory
+and of my strength. Now I desire rest alone. Light fire--I can bear this
+darkness no longer; the marrow freezes in my bones."
+
+"Fire can be seen of foes," said Skallagrim.
+
+"It matters little now," said Eric, "we are feyfolk."
+
+So Skallagrim lighted the fire, piling much brushwood and dry turf over
+it, till presently it burnt up brightly, throwing light on all the space
+of rock, and heavy shadows against the cliff behind. They sat thus a
+while in the light of the flames, looking towards the deep gulf, till
+suddenly there came a sound as of one who climbed the gulf.
+
+"Who comes now, climbing where no man may pass?" cried Eric, seizing
+Whitefire and springing to his feet. Presently he sank down again with
+white face and staring eyes, and pointed at the edge of the cliff. And
+as he pointed, the neck of a man rose in the shadow above the brink, and
+the hands of a man grasped the rock. But there was no head on the neck.
+The shape of the headless man drew itself slowly over the brink, it
+walked slowly into the light towards the fire, then sat itself down in
+the glare of the flames, which shrank away from it as from a draught of
+wind. Pale with terror, Eric and Skallagrim looked on the headless
+thing and knew it. It was the wraith of the Baresark that Brighteyes had
+slain--the first of all the men he slew.
+
+"It is my mate, Eric, whom thou didst kill years ago and whose severed
+head spoke with thee!" gasped Skallagrim.
+
+"It is he, sure enough!" said Eric; "but where may his head be?"
+
+"Perchance the head will come," answered Skallagrim. "He is an evil
+sight to see, surely. Say, lord, shall I fall upon him, though I love
+not the task?"
+
+"Nay, Skallagrim, let him bide; he does but come to warn us of our fate.
+Moreover, ghosts can only be laid in one way--by the hewing off of the
+head and the laying of it at the thigh. But this one has no head to
+hew."
+
+Now as he spoke the headless man turned his neck as though to look.
+Once more there came the sound of feet and lo! men marched in from the
+darkness on either side. Eric and Skallagrim looked up and knew them.
+They were those of Ospakar's folk whom they had slain on Horse-Head
+Heights; all their wounds were on them and in front of them marched
+Mord, Ospakar's son. The ghosts gazed upon Eric and Skallagrim with cold
+dead eyes, then they too sat down by the fire. Now once more there came
+the sound of feet, and from every side men poured in who had died at the
+hands of Eric and Skallagrim. First came those who fell on that ship of
+Ospakar's which Eric sank by Westmans; then the crew of the Raven who
+had perished upon the sea-path. Even as the man died, so did each ghost
+come. Some had been drowned and their harness dripped water! Some had
+died of spear-thrusts and the spears were yet fixed in their breasts!
+Some had fallen beneath the flash of Whitefire and the weight of the axe
+of Skallagrim, and there they sat, looking on their wide wounds!
+
+Then came more and more. There were those whom Eric and Skallagrim had
+slain upon the seas, those who had fallen before them in the English
+wars, and all that company who had been drowned in the waters of the
+Pentland Firth when the witchcraft of Swanhild had brought the Gudruda
+to her wreck.
+
+"Now here we have a goodly crew," said Eric at length. "Is it done,
+thinkest thou, or will Mosfell send forth more dead?"
+
+As he spoke the wraith of a grey-headed man drew near. He had but one
+arm, for the other was hewn from him, and the byrnie on his left side
+was red with blood.
+
+"Welcome, Earl Atli!" cried Eric. "Sit thou over against me, who
+to-morrow shall be with thee."
+
+The ghost of the Earl seated itself and looked on Eric with sad eyes,
+but it spake never a word.
+
+Then came another company, and at their head stalked black Ospakar.
+
+"These be they who died at Middalhof," cried Eric. "Welcome, Ospakar!
+that marriage-feast of thine went ill!"
+
+"Now methinks we are overdone with trolls," said Skallagrim; "but see!
+here come more."
+
+As he spoke, Hall of Lithdale came, and with him Koll the Half-witted,
+and others. And so it went on till all the men whom Eric and Skallagrim
+had slain, or who had died because of them, or at their side, were
+gathered in deep ranks before them.
+
+"Now it is surely done," said Eric.
+
+"There is yet a space," said Skallagrim, pointing to the other side of
+the fire, "and Hell holds many dead."
+
+Even as the words left his lips there came a noise of the galloping of
+horse's hoofs, and one clad in white rode up. It was a woman, for her
+golden hair flowed down about her white arms. Then she slid from the
+horse and stood in the light of the fire, and behold! her white robe
+was red with blood, a great sword was set in her heart, and the face and
+eyes were the face and eyes of Gudruda the Fair, and the horse she rode
+was Blackmane, that Eric had slain.
+
+Now when Brighteyes saw her he gave a great cry.
+
+"Greeting, sweet!" he said. "I am no longer afraid, since thou comest to
+bear me company. Thou art dear to my sight--ay even in yon death-sheet.
+Greeting, sweet, my May! I laid thee stiff and cold in the earth at
+Middalhof, but, like a loving wife, thou hast burst thy bonds, and art
+come to save me from the grip of trolls. Thou art welcome, Gudruda,
+Asmund's daughter! Come, wife, sit thou at my side."
+
+The ghost of Gudruda spake no word. She walked through the fire towards
+him, and the flames went out beneath her feet, to burn up again when she
+had passed. Then she sat down over against Eric and looked on him with
+wide and tender eyes. Thrice he stretched out his arms to clasp her, but
+thrice their strength left them and they fell back to his side. It was
+as though they struck a wall of ice and were numbed by the bitter cold.
+
+"Look, here are more," groaned Skallagrim.
+
+Then Eric looked, and lo! the empty space to the left of the fire was
+filled with shadowy shapes like shapes of mist. Amongst them was Gizur,
+Ospakar's son, and many a man of his company. There, too, was Swanhild,
+Groa's daughter, and a toad nestled in her breast. She looked with wide
+eyes upon the eyes of dead Gudruda's ghost, that seemed not to see her,
+and a stare of fear was set on her lovely face. Nor was this all; for
+there, before that shadowy throng, stood two great shapes clad in their
+harness, and one was the shape of Eric and one the shape of Skallagrim.
+
+Thus, being yet alive, did these two look upon their own wraiths!
+
+Then Eric and Skallagrim cried out aloud and their brains swam and their
+senses left them, so that they swooned.
+
+
+
+When they opened their eyes and life came back to them the fire was
+dead, and it was day. Nor was there any sign of that company which had
+been gathered on the rock before them.
+
+"Skallagrim," quoth Eric, "it seems that I have dreamed a strange
+dream--a most strange dream of Norns and trolls!"
+
+"Tell me thy dream, lord," said Skallagrim.
+
+So Eric told all the vision, and the Baresark listened in silence.
+
+"It was no dream, lord," said Skallagrim, "for I myself have seen the
+same things. Now this is in my mind, that yonder sun is the last that
+we shall see, for we have beheld the death-shadows. All those who were
+gathered here last night wait to welcome us on Bifrost Bridge. And the
+mist-shapes who sat there, amongst whom our wraiths were numbered, are
+the shapes of those who shall die in the great fight to-day. For days
+are fled and we are sped!"
+
+"I would not have it otherwise," said Eric. "We have been greatly
+honoured of the Gods, and of the ghost-kind that are around us and above
+us. Now let us make ready to die as becomes men who have never turned
+back to blow, for the end of the story should fit the beginning, and of
+us there is a tale to tell."
+
+"A good word, lord," answered Skallagrim: "I have struck few strokes to
+be shamed of, and I do not fear to tread Bifrost Bridge in thy company.
+Now we will wash ourselves and eat, so that our strength may be whole in
+us."
+
+So they washed themselves with water, and ate merrily, and for the first
+time for many months Eric was merry. For now that the end was at hand
+his heart grew light within him. And when they had put the desire of
+food from them, and buckled on their harness, they looked out from their
+mountain height, and saw a cloud of dust rise in the desert plain of
+black sand beneath, and through it the sheen of spears.
+
+"Here come those of whom, if there is truth in visions, some few
+shall never go back again," said Eric. "Now, what counsel hast thou,
+Skallagrim? Where shall we meet them? Here on the space of rock, or
+yonder in the deep way of the cliff?"
+
+"My counsel is that we meet them here," said Skallagrim, "and cut them
+down one by one as they try to turn the rock. They can scarcely come at
+us to slay us here so long as our arms have strength to smite."
+
+"Yet they will come, though I know not how," answered Eric, "for I am
+sure of this, that our death lies before us. Here, then, we will meet
+them."
+
+Now the cloud of dust drew nearer, and they saw that this was a great
+company which came up against them. At the foot of the fell the men
+stayed and rested a while, and it was not till afternoon that they began
+to climb the mountain.
+
+"Night will be at hand before the game is played," said Skallagrim.
+"See, they climb slowly, saving their strength, and yonder among them is
+Swanhild in a purple cloak."
+
+"Ay, night will be at hand, Skallagrim--a last long night! A hundred to
+two--the odds are heavy; yet some shall wish them heavier. Now let us
+bind on our helms."
+
+
+
+Meanwhile Gizur and his folk crept up the paths from below. Now that
+thrall who knew the secret way had gone on with six chosen men, and
+already they climbed the watercourse and drew near to the flat crest of
+the fell. But Eric and Skallagrim knew nothing of this. So they sat down
+by the turning place that is over the gulf and waited, singing of the
+taking of the Raven and of the slaying in the stead at Middalhof, and
+telling tales of deeds that they had done. And the thrall and his six
+men climbed on till at length they gained the crest of the fell, and,
+looking over, saw Eric and Skallagrim beneath them.
+
+"The birds are in the snare, and hark! they sing," said the thrall; "now
+bring rocks and be silent."
+
+But Gizur and his people, having learned that Eric and Skallagrim were
+alone upon the mountain, pushed on.
+
+"We have not much to fear from two men," said Gizur.
+
+"That we shall learn presently," answered Swanhild. "I tell thee this,
+that I saw strange sights last night, though I did not sleep. I may
+sleep little now that Gudruda is dead, for that which I saw in her eyes
+haunts me."
+
+Then they went on, and the face of Gizur grew white with fear.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM FOUGHT THEIR LAST GREAT FIGHT
+
+Now the thrall and those with him on the crest of the fell heard the
+murmur of the company of Gizur and Swanhild as they won the mountain
+side, though they could not see them because of the rocks.
+
+"Now it is time to begin and knock these birds from their perch," said
+the thrall, "for that is an awkward corner for our folk to turn with
+Whitefire and the axe of Skallagrim waiting on the farther side."
+
+So he balanced a great stone, as heavy as three men could lift, on the
+brow of the rock, and aimed it. Then he pushed and let it go. It smote
+the platform beneath with a crash, two fathoms behind the spot where
+Eric and Skallagrim sat. Then it flew into the air, and, just as
+Brighteyes turned at the sound, it struck the wings of his helm, and,
+bursting the straps, tore the golden helm-piece from his head and
+carried it away into the gulf beneath.
+
+Skallagrim looked up and saw what had come about.
+
+"They have gained the crest of the fell," he cried. "Now we must fly
+into the cave or down the narrow way and hold it."
+
+"Down the narrow way, then," said Eric, and while rocks, spears and
+arrows rushed between and around them, they stepped on to the stone and
+won the path beyond. It was clear, for Gizur's folk had not yet come,
+and they ran nearly to the mouth of it, where there was a bend in the
+way, and stood there side by side.
+
+"Thou wast at death's door then, lord!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"Head-piece is not head," answered Eric; "but I wonder how they won the
+crest of the fell. I have never heard tell of any path by which it might
+be gained."
+
+"There they are at the least," said Skallagrim. "Now this is my will,
+that thou shouldst take my helm. I am Baresark and put little trust in
+harness, but rather in my axe and strength alone."
+
+"I will not do that," said Eric. "Listen: I hear them come."
+
+Presently the tumult of voices and the tramp of feet grew clearer, and
+after a while Gizur, Swanhild, and the men of their following turned
+the corner of the narrow way, and lo! there before them--ay within three
+paces of them--stood Eric and Skallagrim shoulder to shoulder, and the
+light poured down upon them from above.
+
+They were terrible to see, and the light shone brightly on Eric's golden
+hair and Whitefire's flashing blade, and the shadows lay dark on the
+black helm of Skallagrim and in the fierce black eyes beneath.
+
+Back surged Gizur and those with him. Skallagrim would have sprung upon
+them, but Eric caught him by the arm, saying: "A truce to thy Baresark
+ways. Rush not and move not! Let us stand here till they overwhelm us."
+
+Now those behind Gizur cried out to know what ailed them that they
+pushed back.
+
+"Only this," said Gizur, "that Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail
+stand like two grey wolves and hold the narrow way."
+
+"Now we shall have fighting worth the telling of," quoth Ketel the
+viking. "On, Gizur, Ospakar's son, and cut them down!"
+
+"Hold!" said Swanhild; "I will speak with Eric first," and, together
+with Gizur and Ketel, she passed round the corner of the path and came
+face to face with those who stood at bay there.
+
+"Now yield, Eric," she cried. "Foes are behind and before thee. Thou
+art trapped, and hast little chance of life. Yield thee, I say, with thy
+black wolf-hound, so perchance thou mayest find mercy even at the hands
+of her whose husband thou didst wrong and slay."
+
+"It is not my way to yield, lady," answered Eric, "and still less
+perchance is it the way of Skallagrim. Least of all will we yield to
+thee who, after working many ills, didst throw me in a witch-sleep, and
+to him who slew the wife sleeping at my side. Hearken, Swanhild: here
+we stand, awaiting death, nor will we take mercy from thy hand. For know
+this, we shall not die alone. Last night as we sat on Mosfell we saw
+the Norns weave our web of fate upon their loom of darkness. They sat on
+Helca's dome and wove their pictures in living flame, then rent the web
+and flew upward and southward and westward, crying our doom to sky
+and earth and sea. Last night as we sat by the fire on Mosfell all the
+company of the dead were gathered round us--ay! and all the company
+of those who shall die to-day. Thou wast there, Gizur the murderer,
+Ospakar's son! thou wast there, Swanhild the witch, Groa's daughter!
+thou wast there, Ketel Viking! with many another man; and there were we
+two also. Valkyries have kissed us and death draws near. Therefore, talk
+no more, but come and make an end. Greeting, Gizur, thou woman-murderer!
+Draw nigh! draw nigh! Out sword! up shield! and on, thou son of
+Ospakar!"
+
+Swanhild spoke no more, and Gizur had no word.
+
+"On, Gizur! Eric calls thee," quoth Ketel Viking; but Gizur slunk back,
+not forward.
+
+Then Ketel grew mad with rage and shame. He called to the men, and they
+drew near, as many as might, and looked doubtfully at the pair who stood
+before them like rocks upon a plain. Eric laughed aloud and Skallagrim
+gnawed the edge of his shield. Eric laughed aloud and the sound of his
+laughter ran up the rocks.
+
+"We are but two," he cried, "and ye are many! Is there never a pair
+among you will stand face to face with a Baresark and a helmless man?"
+and he tossed Whitefire high into the air and caught it by the hilt.
+
+Then Ketel and another man of his following sprang forward with an oath,
+and their axes thundered loud on the shields of Eric and of Skallagrim.
+But Whitefire flickered up and the axe of Skallagrim crashed, and at
+once their knees were loosened, so that they sank down dead.
+
+"More men! more men!" cried Eric. "These were brave, but their might was
+little. More men for the Grey Wolf's maw!"
+
+Then Swanhild lashed the folk with bitter words, and two of them sprang
+on. They sprang on like hounds upon a deer at bay, and they rolled back
+as gored hounds roll from the deer's horns.
+
+"More men! more men!" cried Eric. "Here lie but four and a hundred press
+behind. Now he shall win great honour who lays Brighteyes low and brings
+down the helm of Skallagrim."
+
+Again two came on, but they found no luck, for presently they also were
+down upon the bodies of those who went before. Now none could be found
+to come up against the pair, for they fought like Baldur and Thor, and
+none could touch them, and no harness might withstand the weight of
+their blows that shore through shield and helm and byrnie, deep to the
+bone beneath. Then Eric and Skallagrim leaned upon their weapons and
+mocked their foes, while these cursed and tore their beards with rage
+and shame.
+
+Now it is to be told that when the thrall and those with him saw Eric
+and Skallagrim had escaped their rocks and spears, they took counsel,
+and the end of it was that they slid down a rope to the platform that is
+under the crest of the fell. Thence, though they could see nothing, they
+could hear the clang of blows and the shouts of those who fought and
+fell--ay! and the mocking of Eric and of Skallagrim.
+
+"Now it goes thus," said the thrall, who was a cunning man: "Eric and
+Skallagrim hold the narrow way and none can stand against them. This,
+then, is my rede: that we turn the rock and take them in the back."
+
+His fellows thought this a good saying, and one by one they stood upon
+the little rock and won the narrow way. They crept along this till they
+were near to Eric and Skallagrim. Now Swanhild, looking up, saw them and
+started. Skallagrim noted this and glanced over his shoulder, and that
+not too soon, for, as he looked, the thrall lifted sword to smite the
+head of Eric.
+
+With a shout of "Back to back!" the Baresark swung round and ere ever
+the sword might fall his axe was buried deep in the thrall's breast.
+
+"Now we must cut our path through them," said Skallagrim, "and, if it
+may be, win the space that is before the cave. Keep them off in front,
+and I will mind these mannikins."
+
+Now Gizur's folk, seeing what had come about, took heart and fell upon
+Eric with a rush, and those who were with the dead thrall rushed at
+Skallagrim, and there began such a fight as has not been known in
+Iceland. But the way was so narrow that scarce more than one man could
+come to each of them at a time. And so fierce and true were the blows of
+Eric and Skallagrim that of those who came on few went back. Down they
+fell, and where they fell they died, and for every man who died Eric
+and Skallagrim won a pace towards the point of rock. Whitefire flamed so
+swift and swept so wide that it seemed to Swanhild, watching, as though
+three swords were aloft at once, and the axe of Skallagrim thundered
+down like the axe of a woodman against a tree, and those groaned on whom
+it fell as groans a falling tree. Now the shields of these twain were
+hewn through and through, and cast away, and their blood ran from many
+wounds. Still, their life was whole in them and they plied axe and sword
+with both hands. And ever men fell, and ever, fighting hard, they drew
+nearer to the point of rock.
+
+Now it was won, and now all the company that came with the thrall from
+over the mountain brow were dead or sorely wounded at the hands of
+black Skallagrim. Lo! one springs on Eric, and Gizur creeps behind him.
+Whitefire leaps to meet the man and does not leap in vain; but Gizur
+smites a coward blow at Eric's uncovered head, and wounds him sorely, so
+that he falls to his knee.
+
+"Now I am smitten to the death, Skallagrim," cries Eric. "Win the rock
+and leave me." Yet he rises from his knee.
+
+Then Skallagrim turns, red with blood and terrible to see.
+
+"'Tis but a scratch. Climb thou the rock--I follow," he says, and,
+screaming like a horse, with weapon aloft he leaps alone upon the foe.
+They break before the Baresark rush; they break, they fall--they are
+cloven by Baresark axe and trodden of Baresark feet! They roll back,
+leaving the way clear--save for the dead. Then Skallagrim follows
+Brighteyes to the rock.
+
+Now Eric wipes the gore from his eyes and sees. Then, slowly, and with
+a reeling brain, he steps down upon the giddy point. He goes near to
+falling, yet does not fall, for now he lies upon the open space, and
+creeps on hands and knees to the rock-wall that is by the cave, and sits
+resting his back against it, Whitefire on his knee.
+
+Before he is there, Skallagrim staggers to his side with a rush.
+
+"Now we have time to breathe, lord," he gasps. "See, here is water,"
+and he takes a pitcher that stands by, and gives Eric to drink from
+the pool, then drinks himself and pours the rest of the water on Eric's
+wound. Then new life comes to them, and they both stand on their feet
+and win back their breath.
+
+"We have not done so badly!" says Skallagrim, "and we are still a match
+for one or two. See, they come! Say, where shall we meet them, lord?"
+
+"Here," quoth Eric; "I cannot stand well upon my legs without the help
+of the rock. Now I am all unmeet for fight."
+
+"Yet shall this last stand of thine be sung of!" says Skallagrim.
+
+Now finding none to stay them, the men of Gizur climb one by one upon
+the rock and win the space that is beyond. Swanhild goes first of all,
+because she knows well that Eric will not harm her, and after her come
+Gizur and the others. But many do not come, for they will lift sword no
+more.
+
+Now Swanhild draws near and looks on Eric and mocks him in the
+fierceness of her heart and the rage of her wolf-love.
+
+"Now," she says, "now are Brighteyes dim eyes! What! weepest thou,
+Eric?"
+
+"Ay, Swanhild," he answered, "I weep tears of blood for those whom thou
+hast brought to doom."
+
+She draws nearer and speaks low to him: "Hearken, Eric. Yield thee! Thou
+hast done enough for honour, and thou art not smitten to the death of
+yonder cowardly hound. Yield and I will nurse thee back to health and
+bear thee hence, and together we will forget our hates and woes."
+
+"Not twice may a man lie in a witch's bed," said Eric, "and my troth is
+plighted to other than thee, Swanhild."
+
+"She is dead," says Swanhild.
+
+"Yes, she is dead, Swanhild; and I go to seek her amongst the dead--I go
+to seek her and to find her!"
+
+But the face of Swanhild grew fierce as the winter sea.
+
+"Thou hast put me away for the last time, Eric! Now thou shalt die, as I
+have promised thee and as I promised Gudruda the Fair!"
+
+"So shall I the more quickly find Gudruda and lose sight of thy evil
+face, Swanhild the harlot! Swanhild the murderess! Swanhild the witch!
+For I know this: thou shalt not escape!--thy doom draws on also!--and
+haunted and accursed shalt thou be for ever! Fare thee well, Swanhild;
+we shall meet no more, and the hour comes when thou shalt grieve that
+thou wast ever born!"
+
+Now Swanhild turned and called to the folk: "Come, cut down these outlaw
+rogues and make an end. Come, cut them down, for night draws on."
+
+Then once more the men of Gizur closed in upon them. Eric smote thrice
+and thrice the blow went home, then he could smite no more, for his
+strength was spent with toil and wounds, and he sank upon the ground.
+For a while Skallagrim stood over him like a she-bear o'er her young
+and held the mob at bay. Then Gizur, watching, cast a spear at Eric. It
+entered his side through a cleft in his byrnie and pierced him deep.
+
+"I am sped, Skallagrim Lambstail," cried Eric in a loud voice, and all
+men drew back to see giant Brighteyes die. Now his head fell against the
+rock and his eyes closed.
+
+Then Skallagrim, stooping, drew out the spear and kissed Eric on the
+forehead.
+
+"Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!" he said. "Iceland shall never see such
+another man, and few have died so great a death. Tarry a while, lord;
+tarry a while--I come--I come!"
+
+Then crying "_Eric! Eric!_" the Baresark fit took him, and once more
+and for the last time Skallagrim rushed screaming upon the foe, and
+once more they rolled to earth before him. To and fro he rushed, dealing
+great blows, and ever as he went they stabbed and cut and thrust at his
+side and back, for they dared not stand before him, till he bled from
+a hundred wounds. Now, having slain three more men, and wounded two
+others, Skallagrim might no more. He stood a moment swaying to and fro,
+then let his axe drop, threw his arms high above him, and with one loud
+cry of "_Eric!_" fell as a rock falls--dead upon the dead.
+
+But Eric was not yet gone. He opened his eyes and saw the death of
+Skallagrim and smiled.
+
+"Well ended, Lambstail!" he said in a faint voice.
+
+"Lo!" cried Gizur, "yon outlawed hound still lives! Now I will do a
+needful task and make an end of him, and so shall Ospakar's sword come
+back to Ospakar's son."
+
+"Thou art wondrous brave now that the bear lies dying!" said Swanhild.
+
+Now it seemed that Eric heard the words, for suddenly his might came
+back to him, and he staggered to his knees and thence to his feet. Then,
+as folk fall from him, with all his strength he whirls Whitefire round
+his head till it shines like a wheel of fire. "Thy service is done and
+thou art clean of Gudruda's blood--go back to those who forged thee!"
+Brighteyes cries, and casts Whitefire from him towards the gulf.
+
+Away speeds the great blade, flashing like lightning through the rays of
+the setting sun, and behold! as men watch it is gone--gone in mid-air!
+
+Since that day no such sword as Whitefire has been known in Iceland.
+
+"Now slay thou me, Gizur," says the dying Eric.
+
+Gizur comes on with little eagerness, and Eric cries aloud:
+
+"Swordless I slew thy father!--swordless, shieldless, and wounded to the
+death I will yet slay _thee_, Gizur the Murderer!" and with a loud cry
+he staggered towards him.
+
+Gizur smites him with his sword, but Eric does not stay, and while men
+wait and wonder, Brighteyes sweeps him into his great arms--ay, sweeps
+him up, lifts him from the ground and reels on.
+
+Eric reels on to the brink of the gulf. Gizur sees his purpose,
+struggles and shrieks aloud. But the strength of the dying Eric is more
+than the strength of Gizur. Now Brighteyes stands on the dizzy edge and
+the light of the passing sun flames about his head. And now, bearing
+Gizur with him, he hurls himself out into the gulf, and lo! the sun
+sinks!
+
+Men stand wondering, but Swanhild cries aloud:
+
+"Nobly done, Eric! nobly done! So I would have seen thee die who of all
+men wast the first!"
+
+
+
+This then was the end of Eric Brighteyes the Unlucky, who of all
+warriors that have lived in Iceland was the mightiest, the goodliest,
+and the best beloved of women and of those who clung to him.
+
+Now, on the morrow, Swanhild caused the body of Eric to be searched for
+in the cleft, and there they found it, floating in water and with
+the dead Gizur yet clasped in its bear-grip. Then she cleansed it and
+clothed it again in its rent armour, and bound on the Hell-shoes, and it
+was carried on horses to the sea-side, and with it were borne the bodies
+of Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark, Eric's thrall, and of all those
+men whom they had slain in the last great fight on Mosfell, that is now
+named Ericsfell.
+
+Then Swanhild drew her long dragon of war, in which she had come from
+Orkneys, from its shed over against Westman Isles, and in the centre of
+the ship, she piled the bodies of the slain in the shape of a bed,
+and lashed them fast. And on this bed she laid the corpse of Eric
+Brighteyes, and the breast of black Skallagrim the Baresark was his
+pillow, and the breast of Gizur, Ospakar's son, was his foot-rest.
+
+Then she caused the sails to be hoisted, and went alone aboard the long
+ship, the rails of which were hung with the shields of the dead men.
+
+And when at evening the breeze freshened to a gale that blew from the
+land, she cut the cable with her own hand, and the ship leapt forward
+like a thing alive, and rushed out in the red light of the sunset
+towards the open sea.
+
+Now ever the gale freshened and folk, standing on Westman Heights,
+saw the long ship plunge past, dipping her prow beneath the waves and
+sending the water in a rain of spray over the living Swanhild, over the
+dead Eric and those he lay upon.
+
+And by the head of Eric Brighteyes, her hair streaming on the wind,
+stood Swanhild the Witch, clad in her purple cloak, and with rings of
+gold about her throat and arms. She stood by Eric's head, swaying with
+the rush of the ship, and singing so sweet and wild a song that men grew
+weak who heard it.
+
+Now, as the people watched, two white swans came down from the clouds
+and sped on wide wings side by side over the vessel's mast.
+
+The ship rushed on through the glow of sunset into the gathering night.
+On sped the ship, but still Swanhild sung, and still the swans flew over
+her.
+
+The gale grew fierce, and fiercer yet. The darkness gathered deep upon
+the raging sea.
+
+Now that ship was seen no more, and the death-song of Swanhild as she
+passed to doom was never heard again.
+
+For swans and ship, and Swanhild, and dead Eric and his dead foes, were
+lost in the wind and the night.
+
+But far out on the sea a great flame of fire leapt up towards the sky.
+
+
+
+Now this is the tale of Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur's son; of Gudruda
+the Fair, Asmund's daughter; of Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's wife,
+and of Ounound, named Skallagrim Lambstail, the Baresark, Eric's thrall,
+all of whom lived and died before Thangbrand, Wilibald's son, preached
+the White Christ in Iceland.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERIC BRIGHTEYES ***
+
+***** This file should be named 2721.txt or 2721.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/2/2721/
+
+Produced by John Bickers; Dagny; Emma Dudding; David Widger
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/2721.zip b/old/2721.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5a62945
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/2721.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/ericb10.txt b/old/ericb10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6ecfa36
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/ericb10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,12698 @@
+Project Gutenberg Etext of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+#12 in our series by H. Rider Haggard
+
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check
+the copyright laws for your country before posting these files!!
+
+Please take a look at the important information in this header.
+We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an
+electronic path open for the next readers. Do not remove this.
+
+*It must legally be the first thing seen when opening the book.*
+In fact, our legal advisors said we can't even change margins.
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations*
+
+Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and
+further information is included below. We need your donations.
+
+
+Title: Eric Brighteyes
+
+Author: H. Rider Haggard
+
+July, 2001 [Etext #2721]
+[Yes, we are about one year ahead of schedule]
+
+Project Gutenberg Etext of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+*****This file should be named ericb10.txt or ericb10.zip******
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, ericb11.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, ericb10a.txt
+
+
+Etext prepared by John Bickers, jbickers@ihug.co.nz
+Dagny, dagnyj@hotmail.com
+and Emma Dudding, emma_302@hotmail.com
+
+Project Gutenberg Etexts are usually created from multiple editions,
+all of which are in the Public Domain in the United States, unless a
+copyright notice is included. Therefore, we usually do NOT keep any
+of these books in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+We are now trying to release all our books one month in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+
+Please note: neither this list nor its contents are final till
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so. To be sure you have an
+up to date first edition [xxxxx10x.xxx] please check file sizes
+in the first week of the next month. Since our ftp program has
+a bug in it that scrambles the date [tried to fix and failed] a
+look at the file size will have to do, but we will try to see a
+new copy has at least one byte more or less.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour this year as we release thirty-six text
+files per month, or 432 more Etexts in 1999 for a total of 2000+
+If these reach just 10% of the computerized population, then the
+total should reach over 200 billion Etexts given away this year.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
+Files by December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000 = 1 Trillion]
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only ~5% of the present number of computer users.
+
+At our revised rates of production, we will reach only one-third
+of that goal by the end of 2001, or about 3,333 Etexts unless we
+manage to get some real funding; currently our funding is mostly
+from Michael Hart's salary at Carnegie-Mellon University, and an
+assortment of sporadic gifts; this salary is only good for a few
+more years, so we are looking for something to replace it, as we
+don't want Project Gutenberg to be so dependent on one person.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+
+All donations should be made to "Project Gutenberg/CMU": and are
+tax deductible to the extent allowable by law. (CMU = Carnegie-
+Mellon University).
+
+For these and other matters, please mail to:
+
+Project Gutenberg
+P. O. Box 2782
+Champaign, IL 61825
+
+When all other email fails. . .try our Executive Director:
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+hart@pobox.com forwards to hart@prairienet.org and archive.org
+if your mail bounces from archive.org, I will still see it, if
+it bounces from prairienet.org, better resend later on. . . .
+
+We would prefer to send you this information by email.
+
+******
+
+To access Project Gutenberg etexts, use any Web browser
+to view http://promo.net/pg. This site lists Etexts by
+author and by title, and includes information about how
+to get involved with Project Gutenberg. You could also
+download our past Newsletters, or subscribe here. This
+is one of our major sites, please email hart@pobox.com,
+for a more complete list of our various sites.
+
+To go directly to the etext collections, use FTP or any
+Web browser to visit a Project Gutenberg mirror (mirror
+sites are available on 7 continents; mirrors are listed
+at http://promo.net/pg).
+
+Mac users, do NOT point and click, typing works better.
+
+Example FTP session:
+
+ftp metalab.unc.edu
+login: anonymous
+password: your@login
+cd pub/docs/books/gutenberg
+cd etext90 through etext99 or etext00 through etext01, etc.
+dir [to see files]
+get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files]
+GET GUTINDEX.?? [to get a year's listing of books, e.g., GUTINDEX.99]
+GET GUTINDEX.ALL [to get a listing of ALL books]
+
+***
+
+**Information prepared by the Project Gutenberg legal advisor**
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you can distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-
+tm etexts, is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor
+Michael S. Hart through the Project Gutenberg Association at
+Carnegie-Mellon University (the "Project"). Among other
+things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext
+under the Project's "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] the Project (and any other party you may receive this
+etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold the Project, its directors,
+officers, members and agents harmless from all liability, cost
+and expense, including legal fees, that arise directly or
+indirectly from any of the following that you do or cause:
+[1] distribution of this etext, [2] alteration, modification,
+or addition to the etext, or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word pro-
+ cessing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the etext (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Project of 20% of the
+ net profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Association/Carnegie-Mellon
+ University" within the 60 days following each
+ date you prepare (or were legally required to prepare)
+ your annual (or equivalent periodic) tax return.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions in money, time,
+scanning machines, OCR software, public domain etexts, royalty
+free copyright licenses, and every other sort of contribution
+you can think of. Money should be paid to "Project Gutenberg
+Association / Carnegie-Mellon University".
+
+We are planning on making some changes in our donation structure
+in 2000, so you might want to email me, hart@pobox.com beforehand.
+
+
+
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+Etext prepared by John Bickers, jbickers@ihug.co.nz
+Dagny, dagnyj@hotmail.com
+and Emma Dudding, emma_302@hotmail.com
+
+
+
+
+
+Eric Brighteyes
+
+by H. Rider Haggard
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+ Madam,
+
+ You have graciously conveyed to me the intelligence that during
+ the weary weeks spent far from his home--in alternate hope and
+ fear, in suffering and mortal trial--a Prince whose memory all men
+ must reverence, the Emperor Frederick, found pleasure in the
+ reading of my stories: that "they interested and fascinated him."
+
+ While the world was watching daily at the bedside of your
+ Majesty's Imperial husband, while many were endeavouring to learn
+ courage in our supremest need from the spectacle of that heroic
+ patience, a distant writer little knew that it had been his
+ fortune to bring to such a sufferer an hour's forgetfulness of
+ sorrow and pain.
+
+ This knowledge, to an author, is far dearer than any praise, and
+ it is in gratitude that, with your Majesty's permission, I venture
+ to dedicate to you the tale of Eric Brighteyes.
+
+ The late Emperor, at heart a lover of peace, though by duty a
+ soldier of soldiers, might perhaps have cared to interest himself
+ in a warrior of long ago, a hero of our Northern stock, whose days
+ were spent in strife, and whose latest desire was Rest. But it may
+ not be; like the Golden Eric of this Saga, and after a nobler
+ fashion, he has passed through the Hundred Gates into the Valhalla
+ of Renown.
+
+ To you, then, Madam, I dedicate this book, a token, however slight
+ and unworthy, of profound respect and sympathy.
+
+I am, Madam,
+Your Majesty's most obedient servant,
+H. Rider Haggard.
+
+ November 17, 1889.
+ To H.I.M. Victoria, Empress Frederick of Germany.
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+"Eric Brighteyes" is a romance founded on the Icelandic Sagas. "What
+is a saga?" "Is it a fable or a true story?" The answer is not
+altogether simple. For such sagas as those of Burnt Njal and Grettir
+the Strong partake both of truth and fiction: historians dispute as to
+the proportions. This was the manner of the saga's growth: In the
+early days of the Iceland community--that republic of aristocrats--
+say, between the dates 900 and 1100 of our era, a quarrel would arise
+between two great families. As in the case of the Njal Saga, its
+cause, probably, was the ill doings of some noble woman. This quarrel
+would lead to manslaughter. Then blood called for blood, and a
+vendetta was set on foot that ended only with the death by violence of
+a majority of the actors in the drama and of large numbers of their
+adherents. In the course of the feud, men of heroic strength and mould
+would come to the front and perform deeds worthy of the iron age which
+bore them. Women also would help to fashion the tale, for good or ill,
+according to their natural gifts and characters. At last the tragedy
+was covered up by death and time, leaving only a few dinted shields
+and haunted cairns to tell of those who had played its leading parts.
+
+But its fame lived on in the minds of men. From generation to
+generation skalds wandered through the winter snows, much as Homer may
+have wandered in his day across the Grecian vales and mountains, to
+find a welcome at every stead, because of the old-time story they had
+to tell. Here, night after night, they would sit in the ingle and
+while away the weariness of the dayless dark with histories of the
+times when men carried their lives in their hands, and thought them
+well lost if there might be a song in the ears of folk to come. To
+alter the tale was one of the greatest of crimes: the skald must
+repeat it as it came to him; but by degrees undoubtedly the sagas did
+suffer alteration. The facts remained the same indeed, but around them
+gathered a mist of miraculous occurrences and legends. To take a
+single instance: the account of the burning of Bergthorsknoll in the
+Njal Saga is not only a piece of descriptive writing that for vivid,
+simple force and insight is scarcely to be matched out of Homer and
+the Bible, it is also obviously true. We feel as we read, that no man
+could have invented that story, though some great skald threw it into
+shape. That the tale is true, the writer of "Eric" can testify, for,
+saga in hand, he has followed every act of the drama on its very site.
+There he who digs beneath the surface of the lonely mound that looks
+across plain and sea to Westman Isles may still find traces of the
+burning, and see what appears to be the black sand with which the
+hands of Bergthora and her women strewed the earthen floor some nine
+hundred years ago, and even the greasy and clotted remains of the whey
+that they threw upon the flame to quench it. He may discover the
+places where Fosi drew up his men, where Skarphedinn died, singing
+while his legs were burnt from off him, where Kari leapt from the
+flaming ruin, and the dell in which he laid down to rest--at every
+step, in short, the truth of the narrative becomes more obvious. And
+yet the tale has been added to, for, unless we may believe that some
+human beings are gifted with second sight, we cannot accept as true
+the prophetic vision that came to Runolf, Thorstein's son; or that of
+Njal who, on the evening of the onslaught, like Theoclymenus in the
+Odyssey, saw the whole board and the meats upon it "one gore of
+blood."
+
+Thus, in the Norse romance now offered to the reader, the tale of Eric
+and his deeds would be true; but the dream of Asmund, the witchcraft
+of Swanhild, the incident of the speaking head, and the visions of
+Eric and Skallagrim, would owe their origin to the imagination of
+successive generations of skalds; and, finally, in the fifteenth or
+sixteenth century, the story would have been written down with all its
+supernatural additions.
+
+The tendency of the human mind--and more especially of the Norse mind
+--is to supply uncommon and extraordinary reasons for actions and
+facts that are to be amply accounted for by the working of natural
+forces. Swanhild would have needed no "familiar" to instruct her in
+her evil schemes; Eric would have wanted no love-draught to bring about
+his overthrow. Our common experience of mankind as it is, in
+opposition to mankind as we fable it to be, is sufficient to teach us
+that the passion of one and the human weakness of the other would
+suffice to these ends. The natural magic, the beauty and inherent
+power of such a woman as Swanhild, are things more forceful than any
+spell magicians have invented, or any demon they are supposed to have
+summoned to their aid. But no saga would be complete without the
+intervention of such extraneous forces: the need of them was always
+felt, in order to throw up the acts of heroes and heroines, and to
+invest their persons with an added importance. Even Homer felt this
+need, and did not scruple to introduce not only second sight, but gods
+and goddesses, and to bring their supernatural agency to bear directly
+on the personages of his chant, and that far more freely than any
+Norse sagaman. A word may be added in explanation of the appearances
+of "familiars" in the shapes of animals, an instance of which will be
+found in this story. It was believed in Iceland, as now by the Finns
+and Eskimo, that the passions and desires of sorcerers took visible
+form in such creatures as wolves or rats. These were called
+"sendings," and there are many allusions to them in the Sagas.
+
+Another peculiarity that may be briefly alluded to as eminently
+characteristic of the Sagas is their fatefulness. As we read we seem
+to hear the voice of Doom speaking continually. "/Things will happen
+as they are fated/": that is the keynote of them all. The Norse mind
+had little belief in free will, less even than we have to-day. Men and
+women were born with certain characters and tendencies, given to them
+in order that their lives should run in appointed channels, and their
+acts bring about an appointed end. They do not these things of their
+own desire, though their desires prompt them to the deeds: they do
+them because they must. The Norns, as they name Fate, have mapped out
+their path long and long ago; their feet are set therein, and they
+must tread it to the end. Such was the conclusion of our Scandinavian
+ancestors--a belief forced upon them by their intense realisation of
+the futility of human hopes and schemings, of the terror and the
+tragedy of life, the vanity of its desires, and the untravelled gloom
+or sleep, dreamless or dreamfull, which lies beyond its end.
+
+Though the Sagas are entrancing, both as examples of literature of
+which there is but little in the world and because of their living
+interest, they are scarcely known to the English-speaking public. This
+is easy to account for: it is hard to persuade the nineteenth century
+world to interest itself in people who lived and events that happened
+a thousand years ago. Moreover, the Sagas are undoubtedly difficult
+reading. The archaic nature of the work, even in a translation; the
+multitude of its actors; the Norse sagaman's habit of interweaving
+endless side-plots, and the persistence with which he introduces the
+genealogy and adventures of the ancestors of every unimportant
+character, are none of them to the taste of the modern reader.
+
+"Eric Brighteyes" therefore, is clipped of these peculiarities, and,
+to some extent, is cast in the form of the romance of our own day,
+archaisms being avoided as much as possible. The author will be
+gratified should he succeed in exciting interest in the troubled lives
+of our Norse forefathers, and still more so if his difficult
+experiment brings readers to the Sagas--to the prose epics of our own
+race. Too ample, too prolix, too crowded with detail, they cannot
+indeed vie in art with the epics of Greece; but in their pictures of
+life, simple and heroic, they fall beneath no literature in the world,
+save the Iliad and the Odyssey alone.
+
+
+
+
+
+ERIC BRIGHTEYES
+
+
+
+I
+
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST FOUND GROA THE WITCH
+
+There lived a man in the south, before Thangbrand, Wilibald's son,
+preached the White Christ in Iceland. He was named Eric Brighteyes,
+Thorgrimur's son, and in those days there was no man like him for
+strength, beauty and daring, for in all these things he was the first.
+But he was not the first in good-luck.
+
+Two women lived in the south, not far from where the Westman Islands
+stand above the sea. Gudruda the Fair was the name of the one, and
+Swanhild, called the Fatherless, Groa's daughter, was the other. They
+were half-sisters, and there were none like them in those days, for
+they were the fairest of all women, though they had nothing in common
+except their blood and hate.
+
+Now of Eric Brighteyes, of Gudruda the Fair and of Swanhild the
+Fatherless, there is a tale to tell.
+
+These two fair women saw the light in the self-same hour. But Eric
+Brighteyes was their elder by five years. The father of Eric was
+Thorgrimur Iron-Toe. He had been a mighty man; but in fighting with a
+Baresark,[*] who fell upon him as he came up from sowing his wheat,
+his foot was hewn from him, so that afterwards he went upon a wooden
+leg shod with iron. Still, he slew the Baresark, standing on one leg
+and leaning against a rock, and for that deed people honoured him
+much. Thorgrimur was a wealthy yeoman, slow to wrath, just, and rich
+in friends. Somewhat late in life he took to wife Saevuna, Thorod's
+daughter. She was the best of women, strong in mind and second-
+sighted, and she could cover herself in her hair. But these two never
+loved each other overmuch, and they had but one child, Eric, who was
+born when Saevuna was well on in years.
+
+[*] The Baresarks were men on whom a passing fury of battle came; they
+ were usually outlawed.
+
+The father of Gudruda was Asmund Asmundson, the Priest of Middalhof.
+He was the wisest and the wealthiest of all men who lived in the south
+of Iceland in those days, owning many farms and, also, two ships of
+merchandise and one long ship of war, and having much money out at
+interest. He had won his wealth by viking's work, robbing the English
+coasts, and black tales were told of his doings in his youth on the
+sea, for he was a "red-hand" viking. Asmund was a handsome man, with
+blue eyes and a large beard, and, moreover, was very skilled in
+matters of law. He loved money much, and was feared of all. Still, he
+had many friends, for as he aged he grew more kindly. He had in
+marriage Gudruda, the daughter of Bjrn, who was very sweet and kindly
+of nature, so that they called her Gudruda the Gentle. Of this
+marriage there were two children, Bjrn and Gudruda the Fair; but
+Bjrn grew up like his father in youth, strong and hard, and greedy of
+gain, while, except for her wonderful beauty, Gudruda was her mother's
+child alone.
+
+The mother of Swanhild the Fatherless was Groa the Witch. She was a
+Finn, and it is told of her that the ship on which she sailed, trying
+to run under the lee of the Westman Isles in a great gale from the
+north-east, was dashed to pieces on a rock, and all those on board of
+her were caught in the net of Ran[*] and drowned, except Groa herself,
+who was saved by her magic art. This at the least is true, that, as
+Asmund the Priest rode down by the sea-shore on the morning after the
+gale, seeking for some strayed horses, he found a beautiful woman, who
+wore a purple cloak and a great girdle of gold, seated on a rock,
+combing her black hair and singing the while; and, at her feet,
+washing to and fro in a pool, was a dead man. He asked whence she
+came, and she answered:
+
+"Out of the Swan's Bath."
+
+[*] The Norse goddess of the sea.
+
+Next, he asked her where were her kin. But, pointing to the dead man,
+she said that this alone was left of them.
+
+"Who was the man, then?" said Asmund the Priest.
+
+She laughed again and sang this song:--
+
+ Groa sails up from the Swan's Bath,
+ Death Gods grip the Dead Man's hand.
+ Look where lies her luckless husband,
+ Bolder sea-king ne'er swung sword!
+ Asmund, keep the kirtle-wearer,
+ For last night the Norns were crying,
+ And Groa thought they told of thee:
+ Yea, told of thee and babes unborn.
+
+"How knowest thou my name?" asked Asmund.
+
+"The sea-mews cried it as the ship sank, thine and others--and they
+shall be heard in story."
+
+"Then that is the best of luck," quoth Asmund; "but I think that thou
+art fey."[*]
+
+[*] I.e. subject to supernatural presentiments, generally connected
+ with approaching doom.
+
+"Ay," she answered, "fey and fair."
+
+"True enough thou art fair. What shall we do with this dead man?"
+
+"Leave him in the arms of Ran. So may all husbands lie."
+
+They spoke no more with her at that time, seeing that she was a
+witchwoman. But Asmund took her up to Middalhof, and gave her a farm,
+and she lived there alone, and he profited much by her wisdom.
+
+
+
+Now it chanced that Gudruda the Gentle was with child, and when her
+time came she gave a daughter birth--a very fair girl, with dark eyes.
+On the same day, Groa the witchwoman brought forth a girl-child, and
+men wondered who was its father, for Groa was no man's wife. It was
+women's talk that Asmund the Priest was the father of this child also;
+but when he heard it he was angry, and said that no witchwoman should
+bear a bairn of his, howsoever fair she was. Nevertheless, it was
+still said that the child was his, and it is certain that he loved it
+as a man loves his own; but of all things, this is the hardest to
+know. When Groa was questioned she laughed darkly, as was her fashion,
+and said that she knew nothing of it, never having seen the face of
+the child's father, who rose out of the sea at night. And for this
+cause some thought him to have been a wizard or the wraith of her dead
+husband; but others said that Groa lied, as many women have done on
+such matters. But of all this talk the child alone remained and she
+was named Swanhild.
+
+Now, but an hour before the child of Gudruda the Gentle was born,
+Asmund went up from his house to the Temple, to tend the holy fire
+that burned night and day upon the altar. When he had tended the fire,
+he sat down upon the cross-benches before the shrine, and, gazing on
+the image of the Goddess Freya, he fell asleep and dreamed a very evil
+dream.
+
+He dreamed that Gudruda the Gentle bore a dove most beautiful to see,
+for all its feathers were of silver; but that Groa the Witch bore a
+golden snake. And the snake and the dove dwelt together, and ever the
+snake sought to slay the dove. At length there came a great white swan
+flying over Coldback Fell, and its tongue was a sharp sword. Now the
+swan saw the dove and loved it, and the dove loved the swan; but the
+snake reared itself, and hissed, and sought to kill the dove. But the
+swan covered her with his wings, and beat the snake away. Then he,
+Asmund, came out and drove away the swan, as the swan had driven the
+snake, and it wheeled high into the air and flew south, and the snake
+swam away also through the sea. But the dove drooped and now it was
+blind. Then an eagle came from the north, and would have taken the
+dove, but it fled round and round, crying, and always the eagle drew
+nearer to it. At length, from the south the swan came back, flying
+heavily, and about its neck was twined the golden snake, and with it
+came a raven. And it saw the eagle and loud it trumpeted, and shook
+the snake from it so that it fell like a gleam of gold into the sea.
+Then the eagle and the swan met in battle, and the swan drove the
+eagle down and broke it with his wings, and, flying to the dove,
+comforted it. But those in the house ran out and shot at the swan with
+bows and drove it away, but now he, Asmund, was not with them. And
+once more the dove drooped. Again the swan came back, and with it the
+raven, and a great host were gathered against them, and, among them,
+all of Asmund's kith and kin, and the men of his quarter and some of
+his priesthood, and many whom he did not know by face. And the swan
+flew at Bjrn his son, and shot out the sword of its tongue and slew
+him, and many a man it slew thus. And the raven, with a beak and claws
+of steel, slew also many a man, so that Asmund's kindred fled and the
+swan slept by the dove. But as it slept the golden snake crawled out
+of the sea, and hissed in the ears of men, and they rose up to follow
+it. It came to the swan and twined itself about its neck. It struck at
+the dove and slew it. Then the swan awoke and the raven awoke, and
+they did battle till all who remained of Asmund's kindred and people
+were dead. But still the snake clung about the swan's neck, and
+presently snake and swan fell into the sea, and far out on the sea
+there burned a flame of fire. And Asmund awoke trembling and left the
+Temple.
+
+Now as he went, a woman came running, and weeping as she ran.
+
+"Haste, haste!" she cried; "a daughter is born to thee, and Gudruda
+thy wife is dying!"
+
+"Is it so?" said Asmund; "after ill dreams ill tidings."
+
+Now in the bed-closet off the great hall of Middalhof lay Gudruda the
+Gentle and she was dying.
+
+"Art thou there, husband?" she said.
+
+"Even so, wife."
+
+"Thou comest in an evil hour, for it is my last. Now hearken. Take
+thou the new-born babe within thine arms and kiss it, and pour water
+over it, and name it with my name."
+
+This Asmund did.
+
+"Hearken, my husband. I have been a good wife to thee, though thou
+hast not been all good to me. But thus shalt thou atone: thou shalt
+swear that, though she is a girl, thou wilt not cast this bairn forth
+to perish, but wilt cherish and nurture her."
+
+"I swear it," he said.
+
+"And thou shalt swear that thou wilt not take the witchwoman Groa to
+wife, nor have anything to do with her, and this for thine own sake:
+for, if thou dost, she will be thy death. Dost thou swear?"
+
+"I swear it," he said.
+
+"It is well; but, husband, if thou dost break thine oath, either in
+the words or in the spirit of the words, evil shall overtake thee and
+all thy house. Now bid me farewell, for I die."
+
+He bent over her and kissed her, and it is said that Asmund wept in
+that hour, for after his fashion he loved his wife.
+
+"Give me the babe," she said, "that it may lie once upon my breast."
+
+They gave her the babe and she looked upon its dark eyes and said:
+
+"Fairest of women shalt thou be, Gudruda--fair as no woman in Iceland
+ever was before thee; and thou shalt love with a mighty love--and thou
+shalt lose--and, losing, thou shalt find again."
+
+Now, it is said that, as she spoke these words, her face grew bright
+as a spirit's, and, having spoken them, she fell back dead. And they
+laid her in earth, but Asmund mourned her much.
+
+But, when all was over and done, the dream that he had dreamed lay
+heavy on him. Now of all diviners of dreams Groa was the most skilled,
+and when Gudruda had been in earth seven full days, Asmund went to
+Groa, though doubtfully, because of his oath.
+
+He came to the house and entered. On a couch in the chamber lay Groa,
+and her babe was on her breast and she was very fair to see.
+
+"Greeting, lord!" she said. "What wouldest thou here?"
+
+"I have dreamed a dream, and thou alone canst read it."
+
+"That is as it may be," she answered. "It is true that I have some
+skill in dreams. At the least I will hear it."
+
+Then he unfolded it to her every word.
+
+"What wilt thou give me if I read thy dream?" she said.
+
+"What dost thou ask? Methinks I have given thee much."
+
+"Yea, lord," and she looked at the babe upon her breast. "I ask but a
+little thing: that thou shalt take this bairn in thy arms, pour water
+over it and name it."
+
+"Men will talk if I do this, for it is the father's part."
+
+"It is a little thing what men say: talk goes by as the wind.
+Moreover, thou shalt give them the lie in the child's name, for it
+shall be Swanhild the Fatherless. Nevertheless that is my price. Pay
+it if thou wilt."
+
+"Read me the dream and I will name the child."
+
+"Nay, first name thou the babe: for then no harm shall come to her at
+thy hands."
+
+So Asmund took the child, poured water over her, and named her.
+
+Then Groa spoke: "This lord, is the reading of thy dream, else my
+wisdom is at fault: The silver dove is thy daughter Gudruda, the
+golden snake is my daughter Swanhild, and these two shall hate one the
+other and strive against each other. But the swan is a mighty man whom
+both shall love, and, if he love not both, yet shall belong to both.
+And thou shalt send him away; but he shall return and bring bad luck
+to thee and thy house, and thy daughter shall be blind with love of
+him. And in the end he shall slay the eagle, a great lord from the
+north who shall seek to wed thy daughter, and many another shall he
+slay, by the help of that raven with the bill of steel who shall be
+with him. But Swanhild shall triumph over thy daughter Gudruda, and
+this man, and the two of them, shall die at her hands, and, for the
+rest, who can say? But this is true--that the mighty man shall bring
+all thy race to an end. See now, I have read thy rede."
+
+Then Asmund was very wroth. "Thou wast wise to beguile me to name thy
+bastard brat," he said; "else had I been its death within this hour."
+
+"This thou canst not do, lord, seeing that thou hast held it in thy
+arms," Groa answered, laughing. "Go rather and lay out Gudruda the
+Fair on Coldback Hill; so shalt thou make an end of the evil, for
+Gudruda shall be its very root. Learn this, moreover: that thy dream
+does not tell all, seeing that thou thyself must play a part in the
+fate. Go, send forth the babe Gudruda, and be at rest."
+
+"That cannot be, for I have sworn to cherish it, and with an oath that
+may not be broken."
+
+"It is well," laughed Groa. "Things will befall as they are fated; let
+them befall in their season. There is space for cairns on Coldback and
+the sea can shroud its dead!"
+
+And Asmund went thence, angered at heart.
+
+
+
+II
+
+HOW ERIC TOLD HIS LOVE TO GUDRUDA IN THE SNOW ON COLDBACK
+
+Now, it must be told that, five years before the day of the death of
+Gudruda the Gentle, Saevuna, the wife of Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, gave
+birth to a son, at Coldback in the Marsh, on Ran River, and when his
+father came to look upon the child he called out aloud:
+
+"Here we have a wondrous bairn, for his hair is yellow like gold and
+his eyes shine bright as stars." And Thorgrimur named him Eric
+Brighteyes.
+
+Now, Coldback is but an hour's ride from Middalhof, and it chanced, in
+after years, that Thorgrimur went up to Middalhof, to keep the Yule
+feast and worship in the Temple, for he was in the priesthood of
+Asmund Asmundson, bringing the boy Eric with him. There also was Groa
+with Swanhild, for now she dwelt at Middalhof; and the three fair
+children were set together in the hall to play, and men thought it
+great sport to see them. Now, Gudruda had a horse of wood and would
+ride it while Eric pushed the horse along. But Swanhild smote her from
+the horse and called to Eric to make it move; but he comforted Gudruda
+and would not, and at that Swanhild was angry and lisped out:
+
+"Push thou must, if I will it, Eric."
+
+Then he pushed sideways and with such good will that Swanhild fell
+almost into the fire of the hearth, and, leaping up, she snatched a
+brand and threw it at Gudruda, firing her clothes. Men laughed at
+this; but Groa, standing apart, frowned and muttered witch-words.
+
+"Why lookest thou so darkly, housekeeper?" said Asmund; "the boy is
+bonny and high of heart."
+
+"Ah, he is bonny as no child is, and he shall be bonny all his life-
+days. Nevertheless, she shall not stand against his ill luck. This I
+prophesy of him: that women shall bring him to his end, and he shall
+die a hero's death, but not at the hand of his foes."
+
+
+
+And now the years went by peacefully. Groa dwelt with her daughter
+Swanhild up at Middalhof and was the love of Asmund Asmundson. But,
+though he forgot his oath thus far, yet he would never take her to
+wife. The witchwife was angered at this, and she schemed and plotted
+much to bring it about that Asmund should wed her. But still he would
+not, though in all things else she led him as it were by a halter.
+
+
+
+Twenty full years had gone by since Gudruda the Gentle was laid in
+earth; and now Gudruda the Fair and Swanhild the Fatherless were women
+too. Eric, too, was a man of five-and-twenty years, and no such man
+had lived in Iceland. For he was strong and great of stature, his hair
+was yellow as gold, and his grey eyes shone with the light of swords.
+He was gentle and loving as a woman, and even as a lad his strength
+was the strength of two men; and there were none in all the quarter
+who could leap or swim or wrestle against Eric Brighteyes. Men held
+him in honour and spoke well of him, though as yet he had done no
+deeds, but lived at home on Coldback, managing the farm, for now
+Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, his father, was dead. But women loved him much,
+and that was his bane--for of all women he loved but one, Gudruda the
+Fair, Asmund's daughter. He loved her from a child, and her alone till
+his day of death, and she, too, loved him and him only. For now
+Gudruda was a maid of maids, most beautiful to see and sweet to hear.
+Her hair, like the hair of Eric, was golden, and she was white as the
+snow on Hecla; but her eyes were large and dark, and black lashes
+drooped above them. For the rest she was tall and strong and comely,
+merry of face, yet tender, and the most witty of women.
+
+Swanhild also was very fair; she was slender, small of limb, and dark
+of hue, having eyes blue as the deep sea, and brown curling hair,
+enough to veil her to the knees, and a mind of which none knew the
+end, for, though she was open in her talk, her thoughts were dark and
+secret. This was her joy: to draw the hearts of men to her and then to
+mock them. She beguiled many in this fashion, for she was the
+cunningest girl in matters of love, and she knew well the arts of
+women, with which they bring men to nothing. Nevertheless she was cold
+at heart, and desired power and wealth greatly, and she studied magic
+much, of which her mother Groa also had a store. But Swanhild, too,
+loved a man, and that was the joint in her harness by which the shaft
+of Fate entered her heart, for that man was Eric Brighteyes, who loved
+her not. But she desired him so sorely that, without him, all the
+world was dark to her, and her soul but as a ship driven rudderless
+upon a winter night. Therefore she put out all her strength to win
+him, and bent her witcheries upon him, and they were not few nor
+small. Nevertheless they went by him like the wind, for he dreamed
+ever of Gudruda alone, and he saw no eyes but hers, though as yet they
+spoke no word of love one to the other.
+
+But Swanhild in her wrath took counsel with her mother Groa, though
+there was little liking between them; and, when she had heard the
+maiden's tale, Groa laughed aloud:
+
+"Dost think me blind, girl?" she said; "all of this I have seen, yea
+and foreseen, and I tell thee thou art mad. Let this yeoman Eric go
+and I will find thee finer fowl to fly at."
+
+"Nay, that I will not," quoth Swanhild: "for I love this man alone,
+and I would win him; and Gudruda I hate, and I would overthrow her.
+Give me of thy counsel."
+
+Groa laughed again. "Things must be as they are fated. This now is my
+rede: Asmund would turn Gudruda's beauty to account, and that man must
+be rich in friends and money who gets her to wife, and in this matter
+the mind of Bjrn is as the mind of his father. Now we will watch,
+and, when a good time chances, we will bear tales of Gudruda to Asmund
+and to her brother Bjrn, and swear that she oversteps her modesty
+with Eric. Then shall Asmund be wroth and drive Eric from Gudruda's
+side. Meanwhile, I will do this: In the north there dwells a man
+mighty in all things and blown up with pride. He is named Ospakar
+Blacktooth. His wife is but lately dead, and he has given out that he
+will wed the fairest maid in Iceland. Now, it is in my mind to send
+Koll the Half-witted, my thrall, whom Asmund gave to me, to Ospakar as
+though by chance. He is a great talker and very clever, for in his
+half-wits is more cunning than in the brains of most; and he shall so
+bepraise Gudruda's beauty that Ospakar will come hither to ask her in
+marriage; and in this fashion, if things go well, thou shalt be rid of
+thy rival, and I of one who looks scornfully upon me. But, if this
+fail, then there are two roads left on which strong feet may travel to
+their end; and of these, one is that thou shouldest win Eric away with
+thine own beauty, and that is not little. All men are frail, and I
+have a draught that will make the heart as wax; but yet the other path
+is surer."
+
+"And what is that path, my mother?"
+
+"It runs through blood to blackness. By thy side is a knife and in
+Gudruda's bosom beats a heart. Dead women are unmeet for love!"
+
+Swanhild tossed her head and looked upon the dark face of Groa her
+mother.
+
+"Methinks, with such an end to win, I should not fear to tread that
+path, if there be need, my mother."
+
+"Now I see thou art indeed my daughter. Happiness is to the bold. To
+each it comes in uncertain shape. Some love power, some wealth, and
+some--a man. Take that which thou lovest--I say, cut thy path to it
+and take it; else shall thy life be but a weariness: for what does it
+serve to win the wealth and power when thou lovest a man alone, or the
+man when thou dost desire gold and the pride of place? This is wisdom:
+to satisfy the longing of thy youth; for age creeps on apace and
+beyond is darkness. Therefore, if thou seekest this man, and Gudruda
+blocks thy path, slay her, girl--by witchcraft or by steel--and take
+him, and in his arms forget that thine own are red. But first let us
+try the easier plan. Daughter, I too hate this proud girl, who scorns
+me as her father's light-of-love. I too long to see that bright head
+of hers dull with the dust of death, or, at the least, those proud
+eyes weeping tears of shame as the man she hates leads her hence as a
+bride. Were it not for her I should be Asmund's wife, and, when she is
+gone, with thy help--for he loves thee much and has cause to love thee
+--this I may be yet. So in this matter, if in no other, let us go hand
+in hand and match our wits against her innocence."
+
+
+
+Now, Koll the Half-witted went upon his errand, and the time passed
+till it lacked but a month to Yule, and men sat indoors, for the
+season was dark and much snow fell. At length came frost, and with it
+a clear sky, and Gudruda, ceasing from her spinning in the hall, went
+to the woman's porch, and, looking out, saw that the snow was hard,
+and a great longing came upon her to breathe the fresh air, for there
+was still an hour of daylight. So she threw a cloak about her and
+walked forth, taking the road towards Coldback in the Marsh that is by
+Ran River. But Swanhild watched her till she was over the hill. Then
+she also took a cloak and followed on that path, for she always
+watched Gudruda.
+
+Gudruda walked on for the half of an hour or so, when she became aware
+that the clouds gathered in the sky, and that the air was heavy with
+snow to come. Seeing this she turned homewards, and Swanhild hid
+herself to let her pass. Now flakes floated down as big and soft as
+fifa flowers. Quicker and more quick they came till all the plain was
+one white maze of mist, but through it Gudruda walked on, and after
+her crept Swanhild, like a shadow. And now the darkness gathered and
+the snow fell thick and fast, covering up the track of her footsteps
+and she wandered from the path, and after her wandered Swanhild, being
+loath to show herself. For an hour or more Gudruda wandered and then
+she called aloud and her voice fell heavily against the cloak of snow.
+At the last she grew weary and frightened, and sat down upon a
+shelving rock whence the snow had slipped away. Now, a little way
+behind was another rock and there Swanhild sat, for she wished to be
+unseen of Gudruda. So some time passed, and Swanhild grew heavy as
+though with sleep, when of a sudden a moving thing loomed upon the
+snowy darkness. Then Gudruda leapt to her feet and called. A man's
+voice answered:
+
+"Who passes there?"
+
+"I, Gudruda, Asmund's daughter."
+
+The form came nearer; now Swanhild could hear the snorting of a horse,
+and now a man leapt from it, and that man was Eric Brighteyes.
+
+"Is it thou indeed, Gudruda!" he said with a laugh, and his great
+shape showed darkly on the snow mist.
+
+"Oh, is it thou, Eric?" she answered. "I was never more joyed to see
+thee; for of a truth thou dost come in a good hour. A little while and
+I had seen thee no more, for my eyes grow heavy with the death-sleep."
+
+"Nay, say not so. Art lost, then? Why, so am I. I came out to seek
+three horses that are strayed, and was overtaken by the snow. May they
+dwell in Odin's stables, for they have led me to thee. Art thou cold,
+Gudruda?"
+
+"But a little, Eric. Yea, there is place for thee here on the rock."
+
+So he sat down by her on the stone, and Swanhild crept nearer; for now
+all weariness had left her. But still the snow fell thick.
+
+"It comes into my mind that we two shall die here," said Gudruda
+presently.
+
+"Thinkest thou so?" he answered. "Well, I will say this, that I ask no
+better end."
+
+"It is a bad end for thee, Eric: to be choked in snow, and with all
+thy deeds to do."
+
+"It is a good end, Gudruda, to die at thy side, for so I shall die
+happy; but I grieve for thee."
+
+"Grieve not for me, Brighteyes, worse things might befall."
+
+He drew nearer to her, and now he put his arms about her and clasped
+her to his bosom; nor did she say him nay. Swanhild saw and lifted
+herself up behind them, but for a while she heard nothing but the
+beating of her heart.
+
+"Listen, Gudruda," Eric said at last. "Death draws near to us, and
+before it comes I would speak to thee, if speak I may."
+
+"Speak on," she whispers from his breast.
+
+"This I would say, then: that I love thee, and that I ask no better
+fate than to die in thy arms."
+
+"First shalt thou see me die in thine, Eric."
+
+"Be sure, if that is so, I shall not tarry for long. Oh! Gudruda,
+since I was a child I have loved thee with a mighty love, and now thou
+art all to me. Better to die thus than to live without thee. Speak,
+then, while there is time."
+
+"I will not hide from thee, Eric, that thy words are sweet in my
+ears."
+
+And now Gudruda sobs and the tears fall fast from her dark eyes.
+
+"Nay, weep not. Dost thou, then, love me?"
+
+"Ay, sure enough, Eric."
+
+"Then kiss me before we pass. A man should not die thus, and yet men
+have died worse."
+
+And so these two kissed, for the first time, out in the snow on
+Coldback, and that first kiss was long and sweet.
+
+Swanhild heard and her blood seethed within her as water seethes in a
+boiling spring when the fires wake beneath. She put her hand to her
+kirtle and gripped the knife at her side. She half drew it, then drove
+it back.
+
+"Cold kills as sure as steel," she said in her heart. "If I slay her I
+cannot save myself or him. Let us die in peace, and let the snow cover
+up our troubling." And once more she listened.
+
+"Ah, sweet," said Eric, "even in the midst of death there is hope of
+life. Swear to me, then, that if by chance we live thou wilt love me
+always as thou lovest me now."
+
+"Ay, Eric, I swear that and readily."
+
+"And swear, come what may, that thou wilt wed no man but me."
+
+"I swear, if thou dost remain true to me, that I will wed none but
+thee, Eric."
+
+"Then I am sure of thee."
+
+"Boast not overmuch, Eric: if thou dost live thy days are all before
+thee, and with times come trials."
+
+Now the snow whirled down faster and more thick, till these two,
+clasped heart to heart, were but a heap of white, and all white was
+the horse, and Swanhild was nearly buried.
+
+"Where go we when we die, Eric?" said Gudruda; "in Odin's house there
+is no place for maids, and how shall my feet fare without thee?"
+
+"Nay, sweet, my May, Valhalla shuts its gates to me, a deedless man;
+up Bifrost's rainbow bridge I may not travel, for I do not die with
+byrnie on breast and sword aloft. To Hela shall we go, and hand in
+hand."
+
+"Art thou sure, Eric, that men find these abodes? To say sooth, at
+times I misdoubt me of them."
+
+"I am not so sure but that I also doubt. Still, I know this: that
+where thou goest there I shall be, Gudruda."
+
+"Then things are well, and well work the Norns.[*] Still, Eric, of a
+sudden I grow fey: for it comes upon me that I shall not die to-night,
+but that, nevertheless, I shall die with thy arms about me, and at thy
+side. There, I see it on the snow! I lie by thee, sleeping, and one
+comes with hands outstretched and sleep falls from them like a mist--
+by Freya, it is Swanhild's self! Oh! it is gone."
+
+[*] The Northern Fates.
+
+"It was nothing, Gudruda, but a vision of the snow--an untimely dream
+that comes before the sleep. I grow cold and my eyes are heavy; kiss
+me once again."
+
+"It was no dream, Eric, and ever I doubt me of Swanhild, for I think
+she loves thee also, and she is fair and my enemy," says Gudruda,
+laying her snow-cold lips on his lips. "Oh, Eric, awake! awake! See,
+the snow is done."
+
+He stumbled to his feet and looked forth. Lo! out across the sky
+flared the wild Northern fires, throwing light upon the darkness.
+
+"Now it seems that I know the land," said Eric. "Look: yonder are
+Golden Falls, though we did not hear them because of the snow; and
+there, out at sea, loom the Westmans; and that dark thing is the
+Temple Hof, and behind it stands the stead. We are saved, Gudruda, and
+thus far indeed thou wast fey. Now rise, ere thy limbs stiffen, and I
+will set thee on the horse, if he still can run, and lead thee down to
+Middalhof before the witchlights fail us."
+
+"So it shall be, Eric."
+
+Now he led Gudruda to the horse--that, seeing its master, snorted and
+shook the snow from its coat, for it was not frozen--and set her on
+the saddle, and put his arm about her waist, and they passed slowly
+through the deep snow. And Swanhild, too, crept from her place, for
+her burning rage had kept the life in her, and followed after them.
+Many times she fell, and once she was nearly swallowed in a drift of
+snow and cried out in her fear.
+
+"Who called aloud?" said Eric, turning; "I thought I heard a voice."
+
+"Nay," answers Gudruda, "it was but a night-hawk screaming."
+
+Now Swanhild lay quiet in the drift, but she said in her heart:
+
+"Ay, a night-hawk that shall tear out those dark eyes of thine, mine
+enemy!"
+
+The two go on and at length they come to the banked roadway that runs
+past the Temple to Asmund's hall. Here Swanhild leaves them, and,
+climbing over the turf-wall into the home meadow, passes round the
+hall by the outbuildings and so comes to the west end of the house,
+and enters by the men's door unnoticed of any. For all the people,
+seeing a horse coming and a woman seated on it, were gathered in front
+of the hall. But Swanhild ran to that shut bed where she slept, and,
+closing the curtain, threw off her garments, shook the snow from her
+hair, and put on a linen kirtle. Then she rested a while, for she was
+weary, and, going to the kitchen, warmed herself at the fire.
+
+Meanwhile Eric and Gudruda came to the house and there Asmund greeted
+them well, for he was troubled in his heart about his daughter, and
+very glad to know her living, seeing that men had but now begun to
+search for her, because of the snow and the darkness.
+
+Now Gudruda told her tale, but not all of it, and Asmund bade Eric to
+the house. Then one asked about Swanhild, and Eric said that he had
+seen nothing of her, and Asmund was sad at this, for he loved
+Swanhild. But as he told all men to go and search, an old wife came
+and said that Swanhild was in the kitchen, and while the carline spoke
+she came into the hall, dressed in white, very pale, and with shining
+eyes and fair to see.
+
+"Where hast thou been, Swanhild?" said Asmund. "I thought certainly
+thou wast perishing with Gudruda in the snow, and now all men go to
+seek thee while the witchlights burn."
+
+"Nay, foster-father, I have been to the Temple," she answered, lying.
+"So Gudruda has but narrowly escaped the snow, thanks be to Brighteyes
+yonder! Surely I am glad of it, for we could ill spare our sweet
+sister," and, going up to her, she kissed her. But Gudruda saw that
+her eyes burned like fire and felt that her lips were cold as ice, and
+shrank back wondering.
+
+
+
+III
+
+HOW ASMUND BADE ERIC TO HIS YULE-FEAST
+
+Now it was supper-time and men sat at meat while the women waited upon
+them. But as she went to and fro, Gudruda always looked at Eric, and
+Swanhild watched them both. Supper being over, people gathered round
+the hearth, and, having finished her service, Gudruda came and sat by
+Eric, so that her sleeve might touch his. They spoke no word, but
+there they sat and were happy. Swanhild saw and bit her lip. Now, she
+was seated by Asmund and Bjrn his son.
+
+"Look, foster-father," she said; "yonder sit a pretty pair!"
+
+"That cannot be denied," answered Asmund. "One may ride many days to
+see such another man as Eric Brighteyes, and no such maid as Gudruda
+flowers between Middalhof and London town, unless it be thou,
+Swanhild. Well, so her mother said that it should be, and without
+doubt she was foresighted at her death."
+
+"Nay, name me not with Gudruda, foster-father; I am but a grey goose
+by thy white swan. But these shall be well wed and that will be a good
+match for Eric."
+
+"Let not thy tongue run on so fast," said Asmund sharply. "Who told
+thee that Eric should have Gudruda?"
+
+"None told me, but in truth, having eyes and ears, I grew certain of
+it," said Swanhild. "Look at them now: surely lovers wear such faces."
+
+Now it chanced that Gudruda had rested her chin on her hand, and was
+gazing into Eric's eyes beneath the shadow of her hair.
+
+"Methinks my sister will look higher than to wed a simple yeoman,
+though he is large as two other men," said Bjrn with a sneer. Now
+Bjrn was jealous of Eric's strength and beauty, and did not love him.
+
+"Trust nothing that thou seest and little that thou hearest, girl,"
+said Asmund, raising himself from thought: "so shall thy guesses be
+good. Eric, come here and tell us how thou didst chance on Gudruda in
+the snow."
+
+"I was not so ill seated but that I could bear to stay," grumbled Eric
+beneath his breath; but Gudruda said "Go."
+
+So he went and told his tale; but not all of it, for he intended to
+ask Gudruda in marriage on the morrow, though his heart prophesied no
+luck in the matter, and therefore he was not overswift with it.
+
+"In this thing thou hast done me and mine good service," said Asmund
+coldly, searching Eric's face with his blue eyes. "It had been said if
+my fair daughter had perished in the snow, for, know this: I would set
+her high in marriage, for her honour and the honour of my house, and
+so some rich and noble man had lost great joy. But take thou this gift
+in memory of the deed, and Gudruda's husband shall give thee another
+such upon the day that he makes her wife," and he drew a gold ring off
+his arm.
+
+Now Eric's knees trembled as he heard, and his heart grew faint as
+though with fear. But he answered clear and straight:
+
+"Thy gift had been better without thy words, ring-giver; but I pray
+thee to take it back, for I have done nothing to win it, though
+perhaps the time will come when I shall ask thee for a richer."
+
+"My gifts have never been put away before," said Asmund, growing
+angry.
+
+"This wealthy farmer holds the good gold of little worth. It is
+foolish to take fish to the sea, my father," sneered Bjrn.
+
+"Nay, Bjrn, not so," Eric answered: "but, as thou sayest, I am but a
+farmer, and since my father, Thorgrimur Iron-Toe, died things have not
+gone too well on Ran River. But at the least I am a free man, and I
+will take no gifts that I cannot repay worth for worth. Therefore I
+will not have the ring."
+
+"As thou wilt," said Asmund. "Pride is a good horse if thou ridest
+wisely," and he thrust the ring back upon his arm.
+
+Then people go to rest; but Swanhild seeks her mother, and tells her
+all that has befallen her, nor does Groa fail to listen.
+
+"Now I will make a plan," she says, "for these things have chanced
+well and Asmund is in a ripe humour. Eric shall come no more to
+Middalhof till Gudruda is gone hence, led by Ospakar Blacktooth."
+
+"And if Eric does not come here, how shall I see his face? for,
+mother, I long for the sight of it."
+
+"That is thy matter, thou lovesick fool. Know this: that if Eric comes
+hither and gets speech with Gudruda, there is an end of thy hopes;
+for, fair as thou art, she is too fair for thee, and, strong as thou
+art, in a way she is too strong. Thou hast heard how these two love,
+and such loves mock at the will of fathers. Eric will win his desire
+or die beneath the swords of Asmund and Bjrn, if such men can prevail
+against his might. Nay, the wolf Eric must be fenced from the lamb
+till he grows hungry. Then let him search the fold and make spoil of
+thee, for, when the best is gone, he will desire the good."
+
+"So be it, mother. As I sat crouched behind Gudruda in the snow at
+Coldback, I had half a mind to end her love-words with this knife, for
+so I should have been free of her."
+
+"Yes, and fast in the doom-ring, thou wildcat. The gods help this
+Eric, if thou winnest him. Nay, choose thy time and, if thou must
+strike, strike secretly and home. Remember also that cunning is
+mightier than strength, that lies pierce further than swords, and that
+witchcraft wins where honesty must fail. Now I will go to Asmund, and
+he shall be an angry man before to-morrow comes."
+
+Then Groa went to the shut bed where Asmund the Priest slept. He was
+sitting on the bed and asked her why she came.
+
+"For love of thee, Asmund, and thy house, though thou dost treat me
+ill, who hast profited so much by me and my foresight. Say now: wilt
+thou that this daughter of thine, Gudruda the Fair, should be the
+light May of yonder long-legged yeoman?"
+
+"That is not in my mind," said Asmund, stroking his beard.
+
+"Knowest thou, then, that this very day your white Gudruda sat on
+Eric's lap in the snow, while he fondled her to his heart's content?"
+
+"Most likely it was for warmth. Men do not dream on love in the hour
+of death. Who saw this?"
+
+"Swanhild, who was behind, and hid herself for shame, and therefore
+she held that these two must soon be wed! Ah, thou art foolish now,
+Asmund. Young blood makes light of cold or death. Art thou blind, or
+dost thou not see that these two turn on each other like birds at
+nesting-time?"
+
+"They might do worse," said Asmund, "for they are a proper pair, and
+it seems to me that each was born for each."
+
+"Then all goes well. Still, it is a pity to see so fair a maid cast
+like rotten bait upon the waters to hook this troutlet of a yeoman.
+Thou hast enemies, Asmund; thou art too prosperous, and there are many
+who hate thee for thy state and wealth. Were it not wise to use this
+girl of thine to build a wall about thee against the evil day?"
+
+"I have been more wont, housekeeper, to trust to my own arm than to
+bought friends. But tell me, for at the least thou art far-seeing, how
+may this be done? As things are, though I spoke roughly to him last
+night, I am inclined to let Eric Brighteyes take Gudruda. I have
+always loved the lad, and he will go far."
+
+"Listen, Asmund! Surely thou hast heard of Ospakar Blacktooth--the
+priest who dwells in the north?"
+
+"Ay, I have heard of him, and I know him; there is no man like him for
+ugliness, or strength, or wealth and power. We sailed together on a
+viking cruise many years ago, and he did things at which my blood
+turned, and in those days I had no chicken heart."
+
+"With time men change their temper. Unless I am mistaken, this Ospakar
+wishes above all to have Gudruda in marriage, for, now that everything
+is his, this alone is left for him to ask--the fairest woman in
+Iceland as a housewife. Think then, with Ospakar for a son-in-law, who
+is there that can stand against thee?"
+
+"I am not so sure of this matter, nor do I altogether trust thee,
+Groa. Of a truth it seems to me that thou hast some stake upon the
+race. This Ospakar is evil and hideous. It were a shame to give
+Gudruda over to him when she looks elsewhere. Knowest thou that I
+swore to love and cherish her, and how runs this with my oath? If Eric
+is not too rich, yet he is of good birth and kin, and, moreover, a man
+of men. If he take her good will come of it."
+
+"It is like thee, Asmund, always to mistrust those who spend their
+days in plotting for thy weal. Do as thou wilt: let Eric take this
+treasure of thine--for whom earls would give their state--and live to
+rue it. But I say this: if he have thy leave to roam here with his
+dove the matter will soon grow, for these two sicken each to each, and
+young blood is hot and ill at waiting, and it is not always snow-time.
+So betroth her or let him go. And now I have said."
+
+"Thy tongue runs too fast. The man is quite unproved and I will try
+him. To-morrow I will warn him from my door; then things shall go as
+they are fated. And now peace, for I weary of thy talk, and, moreover,
+it is false; for thou lackest one thing--a little honesty to season
+all thy craft. What fee has Ospakar paid thee, I wonder. Thou at least
+hadst never refused the gold ring to-night, for thou wouldst do much
+for gold."
+
+"And more for love, and most of all for hate," Groa said, and laughed
+aloud; nor did they speak more on this matter that night.
+
+Now, early in the morning Asmund rose, and, going to the hall, awoke
+Eric, who slept by the centre hearth, saying that he would talk with
+him without. Then Eric followed him to the back of the hall.
+
+"Say now, Eric," he said, when they stood in the grey light outside
+the house, "who was it taught thee that kisses keep out the cold on
+snowy days?"
+
+Now Eric reddened to his yellow hair, but he answered: "Who was it
+told thee, lord, that I tried this medicine?"
+
+"The snow hides much, but there are eyes that can pierce the snow.
+Nay, more, thou wast seen, and there's an end. Now know this--I like
+thee well, but Gudruda is not for thee; she is far above thee, who art
+but a deedless yeoman."
+
+"Then I love to no end," said Eric; "I long for one thing only, and
+that is Gudruda. It was in my mind to ask her in marriage of thee
+to-day."
+
+"Then, lad, thou hast thy answer before thou askest. Be sure of one
+thing: if but once again I find thee alone with Gudruda, it is my axe
+shall kiss thee and not her lips."
+
+"That may yet be put to the proof, lord," said Eric, and turned to
+seek his horse, when suddenly Gudruda came and stood between them, and
+his heart leapt at the sight of her.
+
+"Listen, Gudruda," Eric said. "This is thy father's word: that we two
+speak together no more."
+
+"Then it is an ill saying for us," said Gudruda, laying her hand upon
+her breast.
+
+"Saying good or ill, so it surely is, girl," answered Asmund. "No more
+shalt thou go a-kissing, in the snow or in the flowers."
+
+"Now I seem to hear Swanhild's voice," she said. "Well, such things
+have happened to better folk, and a father's wish is to a maid what
+the wind is to the grass. Still, the sun is behind the cloud and it
+will shine again some day. Till then, Eric, fare thee well!"
+
+"It is not thy will, lord," said Eric, "that I should come to thy
+Yule-feast as thou hast asked me these ten years past?"
+
+Now Asmund grew wroth, and pointed with his hand towards the great
+Golden Falls that thunder down the mountain named Stonefell that is
+behind Middalhof, and there are no greater water-falls in Iceland.
+
+"A man may take two roads, Eric, from Coldback to Middalhof, one by
+the bridle-path over Coldback and the other down Golden Falls; but I
+never knew traveller to choose this way. Now, I bid thee to my feast
+by the path over Golden Falls; and, if thou comest that way, I promise
+thee this: if thou livest I will greet thee well, and if I find thee
+dead in the great pool I will bind on thy Hell-shoes and lay thee to
+earth neighbourly fashion. But if thou comest by any other path, then
+my thralls shall cut thee down at my door." And he stroked his beard
+and laughed.
+
+Now Asmund spoke thus mockingly because he did not think it possible
+that any man should try the path of the Golden Falls.
+
+Eric smiled and said, "I hold thee to thy word, lord; perhaps I shall
+be thy guest at Yule."
+
+But Gudruda heard the thunder of the mighty Falls as the wind turned,
+and cried "Nay, nay--it were thy death!"
+
+Then Eric finds his horse and rides away across the snow.
+
+Now it must be told of Koll the Half-witted that at length he came to
+Swinefell in the north, having journeyed hard across the snow. Here
+Ospakar Blacktooth had his great hall, in which day by day a hundred
+men sat down to meat. Now Koll entered the hall when Ospakar was at
+supper, and looked at him with big eyes, for he had never seen so
+wonderful a man. He was huge in stature--his hair was black, and black
+his beard, and on his lower lip there lay a great black fang. His eyes
+were small and narrow, but his cheekbones were set wide apart and
+high, like those of a horse. Koll thought him an ill man to deal with
+and half a troll,[*] and grew afraid of his errand, since in Koll's
+half-wittedness there was much cunning--for it was a cloak in which he
+wrapped himself. But as Ospakar sat in the high seat, clothed in a
+purple robe, with his sword Whitefire on his knee, he saw Koll, and
+called out in a great voice:
+
+[*] An able-bodied Goblin.
+
+"Who is this red fox that creeps into my earth?"
+
+For, to look at, Koll was very like a fox.
+
+"My name is Koll the Half-witted, Groa's thrall, lord. Am I welcome
+here?" he answered.
+
+"That is as it may be. Why do they call thee half-witted?"
+
+"Because I love not work overmuch, lord."
+
+"Then all my thralls are fellow to thee. Say, what brings thee here?"
+
+"This lord. It was told among men down in the south that thou wouldst
+give a good gift to him who should discover to thee the fairest maid
+in Iceland. So I asked leave of my mistress to come on a journey and
+tell thee of her."
+
+"Then a lie was told thee. Still, I love to hear of fair maids, and
+seek one for a wife if she be but fair enough. So speak on, Koll the
+Fox, and lie not to me, I warn thee, else I will knock what wits are
+left there from that red head of thine."
+
+So Koll took up the tale and greatly bepraised Gudruda's beauty; nor
+in truth, for all his talk, could he praise it too much. He told of
+her dark eyes and the whiteness of her skin, of the nobleness of her
+shape and the gold of her hair, of her wit and gentleness, till at
+length Ospakar grew afire to see this flower of maids.
+
+"By Thor, thou Koll," he said, "if the girl be but half of what thou
+sayest, her luck is good, for she shall be wife to Ospakar. But if
+thou hast lied to me about her, beware! for soon there shall be a
+knave the less in Iceland."
+
+Now a man rose in the hall and said that Koll spoke truth, for he had
+seen Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter, and there was no maid like
+her in Iceland.
+
+"I will do this now," said Blacktooth. "To-morrow I will send a
+messenger to Middalhof, saying to Asmund the Priest that I purpose to
+visit him at the time of the Yule-feast; then I shall see if the girl
+pleases me. Meanwhile, Koll, take thou a seat among the thralls, and
+here is something for thy pains," and he took off the purple cloak and
+threw it to him.
+
+"Thanks to thee, Gold-scatterer," said Koll. "It is wise to go soon to
+Middalhof, for such a bloom as this maid does not lack a bee. There is
+a youngling in the south, named Eric Brighteyes, who loves Gudruda,
+and she, I think, loves him, though he is but a yeoman of small wealth
+and is only twenty-five years old."
+
+"Ho! ho!" laughed great Ospakar, "and I am forty-five. But let not
+this suckling cross my desire, lest men call him Eric Holloweyes!"
+
+
+
+Now the messenger of Ospakar came to Middalhof, and his words pleased
+Asmund and he made ready a great feast. And Swanhild smiled, but
+Gudruda was afraid.
+
+
+
+IV
+
+HOW ERIC CAME DOWN GOLDEN FALLS
+
+Now Ospakar rode up to Middalhof on the day before the Yule-feast. He
+was splendidly apparelled, and with him came his two sons, Gizur the
+Lawman and Mord, young men of promise, and many armed thralls and
+servants. Gudruda, watching at the women's door, saw his face in the
+moonlight and loathed him.
+
+"What thinkest thou of him who comes to seek thee in marriage, foster-
+sister?" asked Swanhild, watching at her side.
+
+"I think he is like a troll, and that, seek as he will, he shall not
+find me. I had rather lie in the pool beneath Golden Falls than in
+Ospakar's hall."
+
+"That shall be proved," said Swanhild. "At the least he is rich and
+noble, and the greatest of men in size. It would go hard with Eric
+were those arms about him."
+
+"I am not so sure of that," said Gudruda; "but it is not likely to be
+known."
+
+"Comes Eric to the feast by the road of Golden Falls, Gudruda?"
+
+"Nay, no man may try that path and live."
+
+"Then he will die, for Eric will risk it."
+
+Now Gudruda thought, and a great fire burned in her heart and shone
+through her eyes. "If Eric dies," she said, "on thee be his blood,
+Swanhild--on thee and that dark mother of thine, for ye have plotted
+to bring this evil on us. How have I harmed thee that thou shouldst
+deal thus with me?"
+
+Swanhild turned white and wicked-looking, for passion mastered her,
+and she gazed into Gudruda's face and answered: "How hast thou harmed
+me? Surely I will tell thee. Thy beauty has robbed me of Eric's love."
+
+"It would be better to prate of Eric's love when he had told it thee,
+Swanhild."
+
+"Thou hast robbed me and therefore I hate thee, and therefore I will
+deliver thee to Ospakar, whom thou dost loath--ay and yet win
+Brighteyes to myself. Am I not also fair and can I not also love, and
+shall I see thee snatch my joy? By the Gods, never! I will see thee
+dead, and Eric with thee, ere it shall be so! but first I will see
+thee shamed!"
+
+"Thy words are ill-suited to a maiden's lips, Swanhild! But of this be
+sure: I fear thee not, and shall never fear thee. And one thing I know
+well that, whether thou or I prevail, in the end thou shalt harvest
+the greatest shame, and in times to come men shall speak of thee with
+hatred and name thee by ill names. Moreover, Eric shall never love
+thee; from year to year he shall hate thee with a deeper hate, though
+it may well be that thou wilt bring ruin on him. And now I thank thee
+that thou hast told me all thy mind, showing me what indeed thou art!"
+And Gudruda turned scornfully upon her heel and walked away.
+
+Now Asmund the Priest went out into the courtyard, and meeting Ospakar
+Blacktooth, greeted him heartily, though he did not like his looks,
+and took him by the hand and led him to the hall, that was bravely
+decked with tapestries, and seated him by his side on the high seat.
+And Ospakar's thralls brought good gifts for Asmund, who thanked the
+giver well.
+
+Now it was supper time, and Gudruda came in, and after her walked
+Swanhild. Ospakar gazed hard at Gudruda and a great desire entered
+into him to make her his wife. But she passed coldly by, nor looked on
+him at all.
+
+"This, then, is that maid of thine of whom I have heard tell, Asmund?
+I will say this: fairer was never born of woman."
+
+Then men ate and Ospakar drank much ale, but all the while he stared
+at Gudruda and listened for her voice. But as yet he said nothing of
+what he came to seek, though all knew his errand. And his two sons,
+Gizur and Mord, stared also at Gudruda, for they thought her most
+wonderfully fair. But Gizur found Swanhild also fair.
+
+And so the night wore on till it was time to sleep.
+
+
+
+On this same day Eric rode up from his farm on Ran River and took his
+road along the brow of Coldback till he came to Stonefell. Now all
+along Coldback and Stonefell is a steep cliff facing to the south,
+that grows ever higher till it comes to that point where Golden River
+falls over it and, parting its waters below, runs east and west--the
+branch to the east being called Ran River and that to the west Lax--
+for these two streams girdle round the rich plain of Middalhof, till
+at length they reach the sea. But in the midst of Golden River, on the
+edge of the cliff, a mass of rock juts up called Sheep-saddle,
+dividing the waters of the fall, and over this the spray flies, and in
+winter the ice gathers, but the river does not cover it. The great
+fall is thirty fathoms deep, and shaped like a horseshoe, of which the
+points lie towards Middalhof. Yet if he could but gain the Sheep-
+saddle rock that divides the midst of the waters, a strong and hardy
+man might climb down some fifteen fathoms of this depth and scarcely
+wet his feet.
+
+Now here at the foot of Sheep-saddle rock the double arches of waters
+meet, and fall in one torrent into the bottomless pool below. But,
+some three fathoms from this point of the meeting waters, and beneath
+it, just where the curve is deepest, a single crag, as large as a
+drinking-table and no larger, juts through the foam, and, if a man
+could reach it, he might leap from it some twelve fathoms, sheer into
+the spray-hidden pit beneath, there to sink or swim as it might
+befall. This crag is called Wolf's Fang.
+
+Now Eric stood for a long while on the edge of the fall and looked,
+measuring every thing with his eye. Then he went up above, where the
+river swirls down to the precipice, and looked again, for it is from
+this bank that the dividing island-rock Sheep-saddle must be reached.
+
+"A man may hardly do this thing; yet I will try it," he said to
+himself at last. "My honour shall be great for the feat, if I chance
+to live, and if I die--well, there is an end of troubling after maids
+and all other things."
+
+So he went home and sat silent that evening. Now, since Thorgrimur
+Iron-Toe's death, his housewife, Saevuna, Eric's mother, had grown dim
+of sight, and, though she peered and peered again from her seat in the
+ingle nook, she could not see the face of her son.
+
+"What ails thee, Eric, that thou sittest so silent? Was not the meat,
+then, to thy mind at supper?"
+
+"Yes, mother, the meat was well enough, though a little undersmoked."
+
+"Now I see that thou art not thyself, son, for thou hadst no meat, but
+only stock-fish--and I never knew a man forget his supper on the night
+of its eating, except he was distraught or deep in love."
+
+"Was it so?" said Brighteyes.
+
+"What troubles thee, Eric?--that sweet lass yonder?"
+
+"Ay, somewhat, mother."
+
+"What more, then?"
+
+"This, that I go down Golden Falls to-morrow, and I do not know how I
+may come from Sheep-saddle rock to Wolf's Fang crag and keep my life
+whole in me; and now, I pray thee, weary me not with words, for my
+brain is slow, and I must use it."
+
+When she heard this Saevuna screamed aloud, and threw herself before
+Eric, praying him to forgo his mad venture. But he would not listen to
+her, for he was slow to make up his mind, but, that being made up,
+nothing could change it. Then, when she learned that it was to get
+sight of Gudruda that he purposed thus to throw his life away, she was
+very angry and cursed her and all her kith and kin.
+
+"It is likely enough that thou wilt have cause to use such words
+before all this tale is told," said Eric; "nevertheless, mother,
+forbear to curse Gudruda, who is in no way to blame for these
+matters."
+
+"Thou art a faithless son," Saevuna said, "who wilt slay thyself
+striving to win speech with thy May, and leave thy mother childless."
+
+Eric said that it seemed so indeed, but he was plighted to it and the
+feat must be tried. Then he kissed her, and she sought her bed,
+weeping.
+
+
+
+Now it was the day of the Yule-feast, and there was no sun till one
+hour before noon. But Eric, having kissed his mother and bidden her
+farewell, called a thrall, Jon by name, and giving him a sealskin bag
+full of his best apparel, bade him ride to Middalhof and tell Asmund
+the Priest that Eric Brighteyes would come down Golden Falls an hour
+after mid-day, to join his feast; and thence go to the foot of the
+Golden Falls, to await him there. And the man went, wondering, for he
+thought his master mad.
+
+Then Eric took a good rope, and a staff tipped with iron, and, so soon
+as the light served, mounted his horse, forded Ran River, and rode
+along Coldback till he came to the lip of Golden Falls. Here he stayed
+a while till at length he saw many people streaming up the snow from
+Middalhof far beneath, and, among them, two women who by their stature
+should be Gudruda and Swanhild, and, near to them, a great man whom he
+did not know. Then he showed himself for a space on the brink of the
+gulf and turned his horse up stream. The sun shone bright upon the
+edge of the sky, but the frost bit like a sword. Still, he must strip
+off his garments, so that nothing remained on him except his sheepskin
+shoes, shirt and hose, and take the water. Now here the river runs
+mightily, and he must cross full thirty fathoms of the swirling water
+before he can reach Sheep-saddle, and woe to him if his foot slip on
+the boulders, for certainly he must be swept over the brink.
+
+Eric rested the staff against the stony bottom and, leaning his weight
+on it, took the stream, and he was so strong that it could not prevail
+against him till at length he was rather more than half-way across and
+the water swept above his shoulders. Now he was lifted from his feet
+and, letting the staff float, he swam for his life, and with such
+mighty strokes that he felt little of that icy cold. Down he was swept
+--now the lip of the fall was but three fathoms away on his left, and
+already the green water boiled beneath him. A fathom from him was the
+corner of Sheep-saddle. If he may grasp it, all is well; if not, he
+dies.
+
+Three great strokes and he held it. His feet were swept out over the
+brink of the fall, but he clung on grimly, and by the strength of his
+arms drew himself on to the rock and rested a while. Presently he
+stood up, for the cold began to nip him, and the people below became
+aware that he had swum the river above the fall and raised a shout,
+for the deed was great. Now Eric must begin to clamber down Sheep-
+saddle, and this was no easy task, for the rock is almost sheer, and
+slippery with ice, and on either side the waters rushed and thundered,
+throwing their blinding spray about him as they leapt to the depths
+beneath. He looked down, studying the rock; then, feeling that he grew
+afraid, made an end of doubt and, grasping a point with both hands,
+swung himself down his own length and more. Now for many minutes he
+climbed down Sheep-saddle, and the task was hard, for he was
+bewildered with the booming of the waters that bent out on either side
+of him like the arc of a bow, and the rock was very steep and
+slippery. Still, he came down all those fifteen fathoms and fell not,
+though twice he was near to falling, and the watchers below marvelled
+greatly at his hardihood.
+
+"He will be dashed to pieces where the waters meet," said Ospakar, "he
+can never gain Wolf's Fang crag beneath; and, if so it be that he come
+there and leaps to the pool, the weight of water will drive him down
+and drown him."
+
+"It is certainly so," quoth Asmund, "and it grieves me much; for it
+was my jest that drove him to this perilous adventure, and we cannot
+spare such a man as Eric Brighteyes."
+
+Now Swanhild turned white as death; but Gudruda said: "If great heart
+and strength and skill may avail at all, then Eric shall come safely
+down the waters."
+
+"Thou fool!" whispered Swanhild in her ear, "how can these help him?
+No troll could live in yonder cauldron. Dead is Eric, and thou art the
+bait that lured him to his death!"
+
+"Spare thy words," she answered; "as the Norns have ordered so it
+shall be."
+
+Now Eric stood at the foot of Sheep-saddle, and within an arm's length
+the mighty waters met, tossing their yellow waves and seething
+furiously as they leapt to the mist-hid gulf beneath. He bent over and
+looked through the spray. Three fathoms under him the rock Wolf's Fang
+split the waters, and thence, if he can come thither, he may leap
+sheer into the pool below. Now he unwound the rope that was about his
+middle, and made one end fast to a knob of rock--and this was
+difficult, for his hands were stiff with cold--and the other end he
+passed through his leathern girdle. Then Eric looked again, and his
+heart sank within him. How might he give himself to this boiling flood
+and not be shattered? But as he looked, lo! a rainbow grew upon the
+face of the water, and one end of it lit upon him, and the other, like
+a glory from the Gods, fell full upon Gudruda as she stood a little
+way apart, watching at the foot of Golden Falls.
+
+"Seest thou that," said Asmund to Groa, who was at his side, "the Gods
+build their Bifrost bridge between these two. Who now shall keep them
+asunder?"
+
+"Read the portent thus," she answered: "they shall be united, but not
+here. Yon is a Spirit bridge, and, see: the waters of Death foam and
+fall between them!"
+
+Eric, too, saw the omen and it seemed good to him, and all fear left
+his heart. Round about him the waters thundered, but amidst their roar
+he dreamed that he heard a voice calling:
+
+"Be of good cheer, Eric Brighteyes; for thou shalt live to do mightier
+deeds than this, and in guerdon thou shalt win Gudruda."
+
+So he paused no longer, but, shortening up the rope, pulled on it with
+all his strength, and then leapt out upon the arch of waters. They
+struck him and he was dashed out like a stone from a sling; again he
+fell against them and again was dashed away, so that his girdle burst.
+Eric felt it go and clung wildly to the rope and lo! with the inward
+swing, he fell on Wolf's Fang, where never a man has stood before and
+never a man shall stand again. Eric lay a little while on the rock
+till his breath came back to him, and he listened to the roar of the
+waters. Then, rising on his hands and knees, he crept to its point,
+for he could scarcely stand because of the trembling of the stone
+beneath the shock of the fall; and when the people below saw that he
+was not dead, they raised a great shout, and the sound of their voices
+came to him through the noise of the waters.
+
+Now, twelve fathoms beneath him was the surface of the pool; but he
+could not see it because of the wreaths of spray. Nevertheless, he
+must leap and that swiftly, for he grew cold. So of a sudden Eric
+stood up to his full height, and, with a loud cry and a mighty spring,
+bounded out from the point of Wolf's Fang far into the air, beyond the
+reach of the falling flood, and rushed headlong towards the gulf
+beneath. Now all men watching held their breath as his body travelled,
+and so great is the place and so high the leap that through the mist
+Eric seemed but as a big white stone hurled down the face of the
+arching waters.
+
+He was gone, and the watchers rushed down to the foot of the pool, for
+there, if he rose at all, he must pass to the shallows. Swanhild could
+look no more, but sank upon the ground. The face of Gudruda was set
+like a stone with doubt and anguish. Ospakar saw and read the meaning,
+and he said to himself: "Now Odin grant that this youngling rise not
+again! for the maid loves him dearly, and he is too much a man to be
+lightly swept aside."
+
+Eric struck the pool. Down he sank, and down and down--for the water
+falling from so far must almost reach the bottom of the pool before it
+can rise again--and he with it. Now he touched the bottom, but very
+gently, and slowly began to rise, and, as he rose, was carried along
+by the stream. But it was long before he could breathe, and it seemed
+to him that his lungs would burst. Still, he struggled up, striking
+great strokes with his legs.
+
+"Farewell to Eric," said Asmund, "he will rise no more now."
+
+But just as he spoke Gudruda pointed to something that gleamed, white
+and golden, beneath the surface of the current, and lo! the bright
+hair of Eric rose from the water, and he drew a great breath, shaking
+his head like a seal, and, though but feebly, struck out for the
+shallows that are at the foot of the pool. Now he found footing, but
+was swept over by the fierce current, and cut his forehead, and he
+carried that scar till his death. Again he rose, and with a rush
+gained the bank unaided and fell upon the snow.
+
+Now people gathered about him in silence and wondering, for none had
+known so great a deed. And presently Eric opened his eyes and looked
+up, and found the eyes of Gudruda fixed on his, and there was that in
+them which made him glad he had dared the path of Golden Falls.
+
+
+
+V
+
+HOW ERIC WON THE SWORD WHITEFIRE
+
+Now Asmund the priest bent down, and Eric saw him and spoke:
+
+"Thou badest me to thy Yule-feast, lord, by yonder slippery road and I
+have come. Dost thou welcome me well?"
+
+"No man better," quoth Asmund. "Thou art a gallant man, though
+foolhardy; and thou hast done a deed that shall be told of while
+skalds sing and men live in Iceland."
+
+"Make place, my father," said Gudruda, "for Eric bleeds." And she
+loosed the kerchief from her neck and bound it about his wounded brow,
+and, taking the rich cloak from her body, threw it on his shoulders,
+and no man said her nay.
+
+Then they led him to the hall, where Eric clothed himself and rested,
+and he sent back the thrall Jon to Coldback, bidding him tell Saevuna,
+Eric's mother, that he was safe. But he was somewhat weak all that
+day, and the sound of waters roared in his ears.
+
+Now Ospakar and Groa were ill pleased at the turn things had taken;
+but all the others rejoiced much, for Eric was well loved of men and
+they had grieved if the waters had prevailed against his might. But
+Swanhild brooded bitterly, for Eric never turned to look on her.
+
+The hour of the feast drew on and, according to custom, it was held in
+the Temple, and thither went all men. When they were seated in the
+nave of the Hof, the fat ox that had been made ready for sacrifice was
+led in and dragged before the altar on which the holy fire burned. Now
+Asmund the Priest slew it, amid silence, before the figures of the
+Gods, and, catching its blood in the blood-bowl, sprinkled the altar
+and all the worshippers with the blood-twigs. Then the ox was cut up,
+and the figures of the almighty Gods were anointed with its molten fat
+and wiped with fair linen. Next the flesh was boiled in the cauldrons
+that were hung over fires lighted all down the nave, and the feast
+began.
+
+Now men ate, and drank much ale and mead, and all were merry. But
+Ospakar Blacktooth grew not glad, though he drank much, for he saw
+that the eyes of Gudruda ever watched Eric's face and that they smiled
+on each other. He was wroth at this, for he knew that the bait must be
+good and the line strong that should win this fair fish to his angle,
+and as he sat, unknowingly his fingers loosed the peace-strings of his
+sword Whitefire, and he half drew it, so that its brightness flamed in
+the firelight.
+
+"Thou hast a wondrous blade there, Ospakar!" said Asmund, "though this
+is no place to draw it. Whence came it? Methinks no such swords are
+fashioned now."
+
+"Ay, Asmund, a wondrous blade indeed. There is no other such in the
+world, for the dwarfs forged it of old, and he shall be unconquered
+who holds it aloft. This was King Odin's sword, and it is named
+Whitefire. Ralph the Red took it from King Eric's cairn in Norway, and
+he strove long with the Barrow-Dweller[*] before he wrenched it from
+his grasp. But my father won it and slew Ralph, though he had never
+done this had Whitefire been aloft against him. But Ralph the Red,
+being in drink when the ships met in battle, fought with an axe, and
+was slain by my father, and since then Whitefire has been the last
+light that many a chief's eyes have seen. Look at it, Asmund."
+
+[*] The ghost in the cairn.
+
+Now he drew the great sword, and men were astonished as it flashed
+aloft. Its hilt was of gold, and blue stones were set therein. It
+measured two ells and a half from crossbar to point, and so bright was
+the broad blade that no one could look on it for long, and all down
+its length ran runes.
+
+"A wondrous weapon, truly!" said Asmund. "How read the runes?"
+
+"I know not, nor any man--they are ancient."
+
+"Let me look at them," said Groa, "I am skilled in runes." Now she
+took the sword, and heaved it up, and looked at the runes and said, "A
+strange writing truly."
+
+"How runs it, housekeeper?" said Asmund.
+
+"Thus, lord, if my skill is not at fault:--
+
+ "Whitefire is my name--Dwarf-folk forged me--
+ Odin's sword was I--Eric's sword was I--Eric's sword shall I be--
+ And where I fall there he must follow me."
+
+Now Gudruda looked at Eric Brighteyes wonderingly, and Ospakar saw it
+and became very angry.
+
+"Look not so, maiden," he said, "for it shall be another Eric than yon
+flapper-duck who holds Whitefire aloft, though it may very well chance
+that he shall feel its edge."
+
+Now Gudruda bit her lip, and Eric burned red to the brow and spoke:
+
+"It is ill, lord, to throw taunts like an angry woman. Thou art great
+and strong, yet I may dare a deed with thee."
+
+"Peace, boy! Thou canst climb a waterfall well, I gainsay it not; but
+beware ere thou settest up thyself against my strength. Say now, what
+game wilt thou play with Ospakar?"
+
+"I will go on holmgang with thee, byrnie-clad or baresark,[*] and
+fight thee with axe or sword, or I will wrestle with thee, and
+Whitefire yonder shall be the winner's prize."
+
+[*] To a duel, usually fought, in mail or without it, on an island
+ --"holm"--within a circle of hazel-twigs.
+
+"Nay, I will have no bloodshed here at Middalhof," said Asmund
+sternly. "Make play with fists, or wrestle if ye will, for that were
+great sport to see; but weapons shall not be drawn."
+
+Now Ospakar grew mad with anger and drink--and he grinned like a dog,
+till men saw the red gums beneath his lips.
+
+"Thou wilt wrestle with me, youngling--with /me/ whom no man has ever
+so much as lifted from my feet? Good! I will lay thee on thy face and
+whip thee, and Whitefire shall be the stake--I swear it on the holy
+altar-ring; but what hast thou to set against the precious sword? Thy
+poor hovel and its lot of land shall be all too little."
+
+"I set my life on it; if I lose Whitefire let Whitefire slay me," said
+Eric.
+
+"Nay, that I will not have, and I am master here in this Temple," said
+Asmund. "Bethink thee of some other stake, Ospakar, or let the game be
+off."
+
+Now Ospakar gnawed his lip with his black fang and thought. Then he
+laughed aloud and spoke:
+
+"Bright is Whitefire and thou art named Brighteyes. See now: I set the
+great sword against thy right eye, and, if I win the match, it shall
+be mine to tear it out. Wilt thou play this game with me? If thy heart
+fails thee, let it go; but I will set no other stake against my good
+sword."
+
+"Eyes and limbs are a poor man's wealth," said Eric: "so be it. I
+stake my right eye against the sword Whitefire, and we will try the
+match to-morrow."
+
+"And to-morrow night thou shalt be called Eric One-eye," said Ospakar
+--at which some few of his thralls laughed.
+
+But most of the men did not laugh, for they thought this an ill game
+and a worst jest.
+
+Now the feast went on, and Asmund rose from his high seat in the
+centre of the nave, on the left hand looking down from the altar, and
+gave out the holy toasts. First men drank a full horn to Odin, praying
+for triumph on their foes. Then they drank to Frey, asking for plenty;
+to Thor, for strength in battle; to Freya, Goddess of Love (and to her
+Eric drank heartily); to the memory of the dead; and, last of all, to
+Bragi, God of all delight. When this cup was drunk, Asmund rose again,
+according to custom, and asked if none had an oath to swear as to some
+deed that should be done.
+
+For a while there was no answer, but presently Eric Brighteyes stood
+up.
+
+"Lord," he said, "I would swear an oath."
+
+"Set forth the matter, then," said Asmund.
+
+"It is this," quoth Eric. "On Mosfell mountain, over by Hecla, dwells
+a Baresark of whom all men have ill knowledge, for there are few whom
+he has not harmed. His name is Skallagrim; he is a mighty man and he
+has wrought much mischief in the south country, and brought many to
+their deaths and robbed more of their goods: for none can prevail
+against him. Still, I swear this, that, when the days lengthen, I will
+go up alone against him and challenge him to battle, and conquer him
+or fall."
+
+"Then, thou yellow-headed puppy-dog, thou shalt go with one eye
+against a Baresark with two," growled Ospakar.
+
+Men took no heed of his words, but shouted aloud, for Skallagrim had
+plagued them long, and there were none who dared to fight with him any
+more. Only Gudruda looked askance, for it seemed to her that Eric
+swore too fast. Nevertheless he went up to the altar, and, taking hold
+of the holy ring, he set his foot on the holy stone and swore his
+oath, while the feasters applauded, striking their cups upon the
+board.
+
+And after that the feast went merrily, till all men were drunk, except
+Asmund and Eric.
+
+Now Eric went to rest, but first he rubbed his limbs with the fat of
+seals, for he was still sore with the beating of the waters, and they
+must needs be supple on the morrow if he would keep his eye. Then he
+slept sound, and rose strong and well, and going to the stream behind
+the stead, bathed, and anointed his limbs afresh. But Ospakar did not
+sleep well, because of the ale that he had drunk. Now as Eric came
+back from bathing, in the dark of the morning, he met Gudruda, who
+watched for his coming, and, there being none to see, he kissed her
+often; but she chided him because of the match that he had made with
+Ospakar and the oath that he had sworn.
+
+"Surely," she said, "thou wilt lose thine eye, for this Ospakar is a
+giant, and strong as a troll; also he is merciless. Still, thou art a
+mighty man, and I shall love thee as well with one eye as with two.
+Oh! Eric, methought I should have died yesterday when thou didst leap
+from Wolf's Fang! My heart seemed to stop within me."
+
+"Yet I came safely to shore, sweetheart, and well does this kiss pay
+for all I did. And as for Ospakar, if but once I get these arms about
+him, I fear him little, or any man, and I covet that sword of his
+greatly. But we can talk more certainly of these things to-morrow."
+
+Now Gudruda clung to him and told him all that had befallen, and of
+the doings and words of Swanhild.
+
+"She honours me beyond my worth," he said, "who am in no way set on
+her, but on thee only, Gudruda."
+
+"Art thou so sure of that, Eric? Swanhild is fair and wise."
+
+"Ay and evil. When I love Swanhild, then thou mayest love Ospakar."
+
+"It is a bargain," she said, laughing. "Good luck go with thee in the
+wrestling," and with a kiss she left him, fearing lest she should be
+seen.
+
+Eric went back to the hall, and sat down by the centre hearth, for all
+men slept, being still heavy with drink, and presently Swanhild glided
+up to him, and greeted him.
+
+"Thou art greedy of deeds, Eric," she said. "Yesterday thou camest
+here by a path that no man has travelled, to-day thou dost wrestle
+with a giant for thine eye, and presently thou goest up against
+Skallagrim!"
+
+"It seems that this is true," said Eric.
+
+"Now all this thou doest for a woman who is the betrothed of another
+man."
+
+"All this I do for fame's sake, Swanhild. Moreover, Gudruda is
+betrothed to none."
+
+"Before another Yule-feast is spread, Gudruda shall be the wife of
+Ospakar."
+
+"That is yet to be seen, Swanhild."
+
+Now Swanhild stood silent for a while and then spoke: "Thou art a
+fool, Eric--yes, drunk with folly. Nothing but evil shall come to thee
+from this madness of thine. Forget it and pluck that which lies to
+thine hand," and she looked sweetly at him.
+
+"They call thee Swanhild the Fatherless," he answered, "but I think
+that Loki, the God of Guile, was thy father, for there is none to
+match thee in craft and evil-doing, and in beauty one only. I know thy
+plots well and all the sorrow that thou hast brought upon us. Still,
+each seeks honour after his own manner, so seek thou as thou wilt; but
+thou shalt find bitterness and empty days, and thy plots shall come
+back on thine own head--yes, even though they bring Gudruda and me to
+sorrow and death."
+
+Swanhild laughed. "A day shall dawn, Eric, when thou who dost hate me
+shalt hold me dear, and this I promise thee. Another thing I promise
+thee also: that Gudruda shall never call thee husband."
+
+But Eric did not answer, fearing lest in his anger he should say words
+that were better unspoken.
+
+Now men rose and sat down to meat, and all talked of the wrestling
+that should be. But in the morning Ospakar repented of the match, for
+it is truly said that /ale is another man/, and men do not like that
+in the morning which seemed well enough on yester eve. He remembered
+that he held Whitefire dear above all things, and that Eric's eye had
+no worth to him, except that the loss of it would spoil his beauty, so
+that perhaps Gudruda would turn from him. It would be very ill if he
+should chance to lose the play--though of this he had no fear, for he
+was held the strongest man in Iceland and the most skilled in all
+feats of strength--and, at the best, no fame is to be won from the
+overthrow of a deedless man, and the plucking out of his eye. Thus it
+came to pass that when he saw Eric he called to him in a big voice:
+
+"Hearken, thou Eric."
+
+"I hear thee, thou Ospakar," said Eric, mocking him, and people
+laughed; while Ospakar grinned angrily and said, "Thou must learn
+manners, puppy. Still, I shall find no honour in teaching thee in this
+wise. Last night we made a match in our cups, and I staked my sword
+Whitefire and thou thine eye. It would be bad that either of us should
+lose sword or eye; therefore, what sayest thou, shall we let it pass?"
+
+"Ay, Blacktooth, if thou fearest; but first pay thou forfeit of the
+sword."
+
+Now Ospakar grew very mad and shouted, "Thou wilt indeed stand against
+me in the ring! I will break thy back anon, youngster, and afterwards
+tear out thine eye before thou diest."
+
+"It may so befall," answered Eric, "but big words do not make big
+deeds."
+
+Presently the light came and thralls went out with spades and cleared
+away the snow in a circle two rods across, and brought dry sand and
+sprinkled it on the frozen turf, so that the wrestlers should not
+slip. And they piled the snow in a wall around the ring.
+
+But Groa came up to Ospakar and spoke to him apart.
+
+"Knowest thou, lord," she said, "that my heart bodes ill of this
+match? Eric is a mighty man, and, great though thou art, I think that
+thou shalt lout low before him."
+
+"It will be a bad business if I am overthrown by an untried man," said
+Ospakar, and was troubled in his mind, "and it would be evil moreover
+to lose the sword. For no price would I have it so."
+
+"What wilt thou give me, lord, if I bring thee victory?"
+
+"I will give thee two hundred in silver."
+
+"Ask no questions and it shall be so," said Groa.
+
+Now Eric was without, taking note of the ground in the ring, and
+presently Groa called to her the thrall Koll the Half-witted, whom she
+had sent to Swinefell.
+
+"See," she said, "yonder by the wall stand the wrestling shoes of Eric
+Brighteyes. Haste thee now and take grease, and rub the soles with it,
+then hold them in the heat of the fire, so that the fat sinks in. Do
+this swiftly and secretly, and I will give thee three pennies."
+
+Koll grinned, and did as he was bid, setting back the shoes just as
+they were before. Scarcely was the deed done when Eric came in, and
+made himself ready for the game, binding the greased shoes upon his
+feet, for he feared no trick.
+
+Now everybody went out to the ring, and Ospakar and Eric stripped for
+wrestling. They were clad in tight woollen jerkins and hose, and
+sheep-skin shoes were on their feet.
+
+They named Asmund master of the game, and his word must be law to both
+of them. Eric claimed that Asmund should hold the sword Whitefire that
+was at stake, but Ospakar gainsaid him, saying that if he gave
+Whitefire into Asmund's keeping, Eric must also give his eye--and
+about this they debated hotly. Now the matter was brought before
+Asmund as umpire, and he gave judgment for Eric, "for," he said, "if
+Eric yield up his eye into my hand, I can return it to his head no
+more if he should win; but if Ospakar gives me the good sword and
+conquers, it is easy for me to pass it back to him unharmed."
+
+Men said that this was a good judgment.
+
+Thus then was the arm-game set. Ospakar and Eric must wrestle thrice,
+and between each bout there would be a space while men could count a
+thousand. They might strike no blow at one another with hand, or head,
+or elbow, foot or knee; and it should be counted no fall if the haunch
+and the head of the fallen were not on the ground at the self-same
+time. He who suffered two falls should be adjudged conquered and lose
+his stake.
+
+Asmund called these rules aloud in the presence of witnesses, and
+Ospakar and Eric said that should bind them. Ospakar drew a small
+knife and gave it to his son Gizur to hold.
+
+"Thou shalt soon know, youngling, how steel tastes in the eyeball," he
+said.
+
+"We shall soon know many things," Eric answered.
+
+Now they drew off their cloaks and stood in the ring. Ospakar was
+great beyond the bigness of men and his arms were clothed with black
+hair like the limbs of a goat. Beneath the shoulder joint they were
+almost as thick as a girl's thigh. His legs also were mighty, and the
+muscles stood out upon him in knotty lumps. He seemed a very giant,
+and fierce as a Baresark, but still somewhat round about the body and
+heavy in movement.
+
+From him men looked at Eric.
+
+"Lo! Baldur and the Troll!" said Swanhild, and everybody laughed,
+since so it was indeed; for, if Ospakar was black and hideous as a
+troll, Eric was beautiful as Baldur, the loveliest of the Gods. He was
+taller than Ospakar by the half of a hand and as broad in the chest.
+Still, he was not yet come to his greatest strength, and, though his
+limbs were well knit, they seemed but as a child's against the limbs
+of Ospakar. But he was quick as a cat and lithe, his neck and arms
+were white as whey, and beneath his golden hair his bright eyes shone
+like spears.
+
+Now they stood face to face, with arms outstretched, waiting the word
+of Asmund. He gave it and they circled round each other with arms held
+low. Presently Ospakar made a rush and, seizing Eric about the middle,
+tried to lift him, but with no avail. Thrice he strove and failed,
+then Eric moved his foot and lo! it slipped upon the sanded turf.
+Again Eric moved and again he slipped, a third time and he slipped a
+third time, and before he could recover himself he was full on his
+back and fairly thrown.
+
+Gudruda saw and was sad at heart, and those around her said that it
+was easy to know how the game would end.
+
+"What said I?" quoth Swanhild, "that it would go badly with Eric were
+Ospakar's arms about him."
+
+"All is not done yet," answered Gudruda. "Methinks Eric's feet slipped
+most strangely, as though he stood on ice."
+
+But Eric was very sore at heart and could make nothing of this matter
+--for he was not overthrown by strength.
+
+He sat on the snow and Ospakar and his sons mocked him. But Gudruda
+drew near and whispered to him to be of good cheer, for fortune might
+yet change.
+
+"I think that I am bewitched," said Eric sadly: "my feet have no hold
+of the ground."
+
+Gudruda covered her eyes with her hand and thought. Presently she
+looked up quickly. "I seem to see guile here," she said. "Now look
+narrowly on thy shoes."
+
+He heard, and, loosening his shoe-string, drew a shoe from his foot
+and looked at the sole. The cold of the snow had hardened the fat, and
+there it was, all white upon the leather.
+
+Now Eric rose in wrath. "Methought," he cried, "that I dealt with men
+of honourable mind, not with cheating tricksters. See now! it is
+little wonder that I slipped, for grease has been set upon my shoes--
+and, by Thor! I will cleave the man who did it to the chin," and as he
+said it his eyes blazed so dreadfully that folk fell back from him.
+Asmund took the shoes and looked at them. Then he spoke:
+
+"Brighteyes tells the truth, and we have a sorry knave among us.
+Ospakar, canst thou clear thyself of this ill deed?"
+
+"I will swear on the holy ring that I know nothing of it, and if any
+man in my company has had a hand therein he shall die," said Ospakar.
+
+"That we will swear also," cried his sons Gizur and Mord.
+
+"This is more like a woman's work," said Gudruda, and she looked at
+Swanhild.
+
+"It is no work of mine," quoth Swanhild.
+
+"Then go and ask thy mother of it," answered Gudruda.
+
+Now all men cried aloud that this was the greatest shame, and that the
+match must be set afresh; only Ospakar bethought him of that two
+hundred in silver which he had promised to Groa, and looked around,
+but she was not there. Still, he gainsaid Eric in the matter of the
+match being set afresh.
+
+Then Eric cried out in his anger that he would let the game stand as
+it was, since Ospakar swore himself free of the shameful deed. Men
+thought this a mad saying, but Asmund said it should be so. Still, he
+swore in his heart that, even if he were worsted, Eric should not lose
+his eye--no not if swords were held aloft to take it. For of all
+tricks this seemed to him the very worst.
+
+Now Ospakar and Eric faced each other again in the ring, but this time
+the feet of Eric were bare.
+
+Ospakar rushed to get the upper hold, but Eric was too swift for him
+and sprang aside. Again he rushed, but Eric dropped and gripped him
+round the middle. Now they were face to face, hugging each other like
+bears, but moving little. For a time things went thus, while Ospakar
+strove to lift Eric, but in nowise could he stir him. Then of a sudden
+Eric put out his strength, and they staggered round the ring, tearing
+at each other till their jerkins were rent from them, leaving them
+almost bare to the waist. Suddenly, Eric seemed to give, and Ospakar
+put out his foot to trip him. But Brighteyes was watching. He caught
+the foot in the crook of his left leg, and threw his weight forward on
+the chest of Blacktooth. Backward he went, falling with the thud of a
+tree on snow, and there he lay on the ground, and Eric over him.
+
+Then men shouted "A fall! a fair fall!" and were very glad, for the
+fight seemed most uneven to them, and the wrestlers rolled asunder,
+breathing heavily.
+
+Gudruda threw a cloak over Eric's naked shoulders.
+
+"That was well done, Brighteyes," she said.
+
+"The game is still to play, sweet," he gasped, "and Ospakar is a
+mighty man. I threw him by skill, not by strength. Next time it must
+be by strength or not at all."
+
+Now breathing-time was done, and once more the two were face to face.
+Thrice Ospakar rushed, and thrice did Eric slip away, for he would
+waste Blacktooth's strength. Again Ospakar rushed, roaring like a
+bear, and fire seemed to come from his eyes, and the steam went up
+from him and hung upon the frosty air like the steam of a horse. This
+time Eric could not get away, but was swept up into that great grip,
+for Ospakar had the lower hold.
+
+"Now there is an end of Eric," said Swanhild.
+
+"The arrow is yet on the bow," answered Gudruda.
+
+Blacktooth put out his might and reeled round and round the ring,
+dragging Eric with him. This way and that he twisted, and time on time
+Eric's leg was lifted from the ground, but so he might not be thrown.
+Now they stood almost still, while men shouted madly, for no such
+wrestling had been known in the southlands. Grimly they hugged and
+strove: forsooth it was a mighty sight to see. Grimly they hugged, and
+their muscles strained and cracked, but they could stir each other no
+inch.
+
+Ospakar grew fearful, for he could make no play with this youngling.
+Black rage swelled in his heart. He ground his fangs, and thought on
+guile. By his foot gleamed the naked foot of Eric. Suddenly he stamped
+on it so fiercely that the skin burst.
+
+"Ill done! ill done!" folk cried; but in his pain Eric moved his foot.
+
+Lo! he was down, but not altogether down, for he did but sit upon his
+haunches, and still he clung to Blacktooth's thighs, and twined his
+legs about his ankles. Now with all his strength Ospakar strove to
+force the head of Brighteyes to the ground, but still he could not,
+for Eric clung to him like a creeper to a tree.
+
+"A losing game for Eric," said Asmund, and as he spoke Brighteyes was
+pressed back till his yellow hair almost swept the sand.
+
+Then the folk of Ospakar shouted in triumph, but Gudruda cried aloud:
+
+"Be not overthrown, Eric; loose thee and spring aside."
+
+Eric heard, and of a sudden loosed all his grip. He fell on his
+outspread hand, then, with a swing sideways and a bound, once more he
+stood upon his feet. Ospakar came at him like a bull made mad with
+goading, but he could no longer roar aloud. They closed and this time
+Eric had the better hold. For a while they struggled round and round
+till their feet tore the frozen turf, then once more they stood face
+to face. Now the two were almost spent; yet Blacktooth gathered up his
+strength and swung Eric from his feet, but he found them again. He
+grew mad with rage, and hugged him till Brighteyes was nearly pressed
+to death, and black bruises sprang upon the whiteness of his flesh.
+Ospakar grew mad, and madder yet, till at length in his fury he fixed
+his fangs in Eric's shoulder and bit till the blood spurted.
+
+"Ill kissed, thou rat!" gasped Eric, and with the pain and rush of
+blood, his strength came back to him. He shifted his grip swiftly, now
+his right hand was beneath the fork of Blacktooth's thigh and his left
+on the hollow of Blacktooth's back. Twice he lifted--twice the bulk of
+Ospakar rose from the ground--a third mighty lift--so mighty that the
+wrapping on Eric's forehead burst, and the blood streamed down his
+face--and lo! great Blacktooth flew in air. Up he flew, and backward
+he fell into the bank of snow, and was buried there almost to the
+knees.
+
+
+
+VI
+
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WAS BETROTHED TO UNNA
+
+For a moment there was silence, for all that company was wonderstruck
+at the greatness of the deed. Then they cheered and cheered again, and
+to Eric it seemed that he slept, and the sound of shouting reached him
+but faintly, as though he heard through snow. Suddenly he woke and saw
+a man rush at him with axe aloft. It was Mord, Ospakar's son, mad at
+his father's overthrow. Eric sprang aside, or the blow had been his
+bane, and, as he sprang, smote with his fist, and it struck heavily on
+the head of Mord above the ear, so that the axe flew from his hand,
+and he fell senseless on his father in the snow.
+
+Now swords flashed out, and men ringed round Eric to guard him, and it
+came near to the spilling of blood, for the people of Ospakar gnashed
+their teeth to see so great a hero overthrown by a youngling, while
+the southern folk of Middalhof and Ran River rejoiced loudly, for Eric
+was dear to their hearts.
+
+"Down swords," cried Asmund the priest, "and haul yon carcass from the
+snow."
+
+This then they did, and Ospakar sat up, breathing in great gasps, the
+blood running from his mouth and ears, and he was an evil sight to
+see, for what with blood and snow and rage his face was like the face
+of the Swinefell Goblin.
+
+But Swanhild spoke in the ear of Gudruda:
+
+"Here," she said, looking at Eric, "we two have a man worth loving,
+foster-sister."
+
+"Ay," answered Gudruda, "worth and well worth!"
+
+Now Asmund drew near and before all men kissed Eric Brighteyes on the
+brow.
+
+"In sooth," he said, "thou art a mighty man, Eric, and the glory of
+the south. This I prophesy of thee: that thou shalt do deeds such as
+have not been done in Iceland. Thou hast ill been served, for a knave
+unknown greased thy shoes. Yon swarthy Ospakar, the most mighty of all
+men in Iceland, could not overthrow thee, though, like a wolf, he
+fastened his fangs in thee, and, like a coward, stamped upon thy naked
+foot. Take thou the great sword that thou hast won and wear it
+worthily."
+
+Now Eric took snow and wiped the blood from his brow. Then he grasped
+Whitefire and drew it from the scabbard, and high aloft flashed the
+war-blade. Thrice he wheeled it round his head, then sang aloud:
+
+ "Fast, yestermorn, down Golden Falls,
+ Fared young Eric to thy feast,
+ Asmund, father of Gudruda--
+ Maid whom much he longs to clasp.
+ But to-day on Giant Blacktooth
+ Hath he done a needful deed:
+ Hurling him in heaped-up snowdrift;
+ Winning Whitefire for his wage."
+
+And again he sang:
+
+ "Lord, if in very truth thou thinkest
+ Brighteyes is a man midst men,
+ Swear to him, the stalwart suitor,
+ Handsel of thy sweet maid's hand:
+ Whom, long loved, to win, down Goldfoss
+ Swift he sped through frost and foam;
+ Whom, to win, to troll-like Ogre,
+ He, 'gainst Whitefire, waged his eye."
+
+Men thought this well sung, and turned to hear Asmund's answer, nor
+must they wait long.
+
+"Eric," he said, "I will promise thee this, that if thou goest on as
+thou hast begun, I will give Gudruda in marriage to no other man."
+
+"That is good tidings, lord," said Eric.
+
+"This I say further: in a year I will give thee full answer according
+as to how thou dost bear thyself between now and then, for this is no
+light gift thou askest; also that, if ye will it, you twain may now
+plight troth, for the blame shall be yours if it is broken, and not
+mine, and I give thee my hand on it."
+
+Eric took his hand, and Gudruda heard her father's words and happiness
+shone in her dark eyes, and she grew faint for very joy. And now Eric
+turned to her, all torn and bloody from the fray, the great sword in
+his hand, and he spoke thus:
+
+"Thou hast heard thy father's words, Gudruda? Now it seems that there
+is no great need of troth-plighting between us two. Still, here before
+all men I ask thee, if thou dost love me and art willing to take me to
+husband?"
+
+Gudruda looked up into his face, and answered in a sweet, clear voice
+that could be heard by all:
+
+"Eric, I say to thee now, what I have said before, that I love thee
+alone of all men, and, if it be my father's wish, I will wed no other
+whilst thou dost remain true to me and hold me dear."
+
+"Those are good words," said Eric. "Now, in pledge of them, swear this
+troth of thine upon my sword that I have won."
+
+Gudruda smiled, and, taking great Whitefire in her hand, she said the
+words again, and, in pledge of them, kissed the bright blade.
+
+Then Eric took back the war-sword and spoke thus: "I swear that I will
+love thee, and thee only, Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter, whom I
+have desired all my days; and, if I fail of this my oath, then our
+troth is at an end, and thou mayst wed whom thou wilt," and in turn he
+put his lips upon the sword, while Swanhild watched them do the oath.
+
+Now Ospakar was recovered from the fight, and he sat there upon the
+snow, with bowed head, for he knew well that he had won the greatest
+shame, and had lost both wife and sword. Black rage filled his heart
+as he listened, and he sprang to his feet.
+
+"I came hither, Asmund," he said, "to ask this maid of thine in
+marriage, and methinks that had been a good match for her and thee.
+But I have been overthrown by witchcraft of this man in a wrestling-
+bout, and thereby lost my good sword; and now I must seem to hear him
+betrothed to the maid before me."
+
+"Thou hast heard aright, Ospakar," said Asmund, "and thy wooing is
+soon sped. Get thee back whence thou camest and seek a wife in thine
+own quarter, for thou art unfit in age and aspect to have so sweet a
+maid. Moreover, here in the south we hold men of small account,
+however great and rich they be, who do not shame to seek to overcome a
+foe by foul means. With my own eyes I saw thee stamp on the naked foot
+of Eric, Thorgrimur's son; with my own eyes I saw thee, like a wolf,
+fasten that black fang of thine upon him--there is the mark of it;
+and, as for the matter of the greased shoes, thou knowest best what
+hand thou hadst in it."
+
+"I had no hand. If any did this thing, it was Groa the Witch, thy
+Finnish bedmate. For the rest, I was mad and know not what I did. But
+hearken, Asmund: ill shall befall thee and thy house, and I will ever
+be thy foe. Moreover, I will yet wed this maid of thine. And now, thou
+Eric, hearken also: I will have another game with thee. This one was
+but the sport of boys; when we meet again--and the time shall not be
+long--swords shall be aloft, and thou shalt learn the play of men. I
+tell thee that I will slay thee, and tear Gudruda, shrieking, from thy
+arms to be my wife! I tell thee that, with yonder good sword
+Whitefire, I will yet hew off thy head!"--and he choked and stopped.
+
+"Thou art much foam and little water," said Eric. "These things are
+easily put to proof. If thou willest it, to-morrow I will come with
+thee to a holmgang, and there we may set the twigs and finish what we
+have begun to-day."
+
+"I cannot do that, for thou hast my sword; and, till I am suited with
+another weapon, I may fight no holmgang. Still, fear not: we shall
+soon meet with weapons aloft and byrnie on breast."
+
+"Never too soon can the hour come, Blacktooth," said Eric, and turning
+on his heel, he limped to the hall to clothe himself afresh. On the
+threshold of the men's door he met Groa the Witch.
+
+"Thou didst put grease upon my shoes, carline and witch-hag that thou
+art," he said.
+
+"It is not true, Brighteyes."
+
+"There thou liest, and for all this I will repay thee. Thou art not
+yet the wife of Asmund, nor shalt be, for a plan comes into my head
+about it."
+
+Groa looked at him strangely. "If thou speakest so, take heed to thy
+meat and drink," she said. "I was not born among the Finns for
+nothing; and know, I am still minded to wed Asmund. For thy shoes, I
+would to the Gods that they were Hell-shoon, and that I was now
+binding them on thy dead feet."
+
+"Oh! the cat begins to spit," said Eric. "But know this: thou mayest
+grease my shoes--fit work for a carline!--but thou mayest never bind
+them on. Thou art a witch, and wilt come to the end of witches; and
+what thy daughter is, that I will not say," and he pushed past her and
+entered the hall.
+
+Presently Asmund came to seek Eric there, and prayed him to be gone to
+his stead on Ran River. The horses of Ospakar had strayed, and he must
+stop at Middalhof till they were found; but, if these two should abide
+under the same roof, bloodshed would come of it, and that Asmund knew.
+
+Eric said yea to this, and, when he had rested a while, he kissed
+Gudruda, and, taking a horse, rode away to Coldback, bearing the sword
+Whitefire with him, and for a time he saw no more of Ospakar.
+
+When he came there, his mother Saevuna greeted him as one risen from
+the dead, and hung about his neck. Then he told her all that had come
+to pass, and she thought it a marvellous story, and sorrowed that
+Thorgrimur, her husband, was not alive to know it. But Eric mused a
+while, and spoke.
+
+"Mother," he said, "now my uncle Thorod of Greenfell is dead, and his
+daughter, my cousin Unna, has no home. She is a fair woman and skilled
+in all things. It comes into my mind that we should bid her here to
+dwell with us."
+
+"Why, I thought thou wast betrothed to Gudruda the Fair," said
+Saevuna. "Wherefore, then, wouldst thou bring Unna hither?"
+
+"For this cause," said Eric; "because it seems that Asmund the Priest
+wearies of Groa the Witch, and would take another wife, and I wish to
+draw the bands between us tighter, if it may befall so."
+
+"Groa will take it ill," said Saevuna.
+
+"Things cannot be worse between us than they are now, therefore I do
+not fear Groa," he answered.
+
+"It shall be as thou wilt, son; to-morrow we will send to Unna and bid
+her here, if it pleases her to come."
+
+Now Ospakar stayed three more days at Middalhof, till his horses were
+found, and he was fit to travel, for Eric had shaken him sorely. But
+he had no words with Gudruda and few with Asmund. Still, he saw
+Swanhild, and she bid him to be of good cheer, for he should yet have
+Gudruda. For now that the maid had passed from him the mind of Ospakar
+was set in winning her. Bjrn also, Asmund's son, spoke words of good
+comfort to him, for he envied Eric his great fame, and he thought the
+match with Blacktooth would be good. And so at length Ospakar rode
+away to Swinefell with all his company; but Gizur, his son, left his
+heart behind.
+
+For Swanhild had not been idle this while. Her heart was sore, but she
+must follow her ill-nature, and so she had put out her woman's
+strength and beguiled Gizur into loving her. But she did not love him
+at all, and the temper of Asmund the Priest was so angry that Gizur
+dared not ask her in marriage. So nothing was said of the matter.
+
+
+
+Now Unna came to Coldback, to dwell with Saevuna, Eric's mother, and
+she was a fair and buxom woman. She had been once wedded, but within a
+month of her marriage her husband was lost at sea, this two years
+gone. At first Gudruda was somewhat jealous of this coming of Unna to
+Coldback; but Eric showed her what was in his mind, and she fell into
+the plan, for she hated and feared Groa greatly, and desired to be rid
+of her.
+
+Since this matter of the greasing of Eric's wrestling-shoes great
+loathing of Groa had come into Asmund's mind, and he bethought him
+often of those words that his wife Gudruda the Gentle spoke as she lay
+dying, and grieved that the oath which he swore then had in part been
+broken. He would have no more to do with Groa now, but he could not be
+rid of her; and, notwithstanding her evil doings, he still loved
+Swanhild. But Groa grew thin with spite and rage, and wandered about
+the place glaring with her great black eyes, and people hated her more
+and more.
+
+Now Asmund went to visit at Coldback, and there he saw Unna, and was
+pleased with her, for she was a blithe woman and a bonny. The end of
+it was that he asked her in marriage of Eric; at which Brighteyes was
+glad, but said that he must know Unna's mind. Unna hearkened, and did
+not say no, for though Asmund was somewhat gone in years, still he was
+an upstanding man, wealthy in lands, goods, and moneys out at
+interest, and having many friends. So they plighted troth, and the
+wedding-feast was to be in the autumn after hay-harvest. Now Asmund
+rode back to Middalhof somewhat troubled at heart, for these tidings
+must be told to Groa, and he feared her and her witchcraft. In the
+hall he found her, standing alone.
+
+"Where hast thou been, lord?" she asked.
+
+"At Coldback," he answered.
+
+"To see Unna, Eric's cousin, perchance?"
+
+"That is so."
+
+"What is Unna to thee, then, lord?"
+
+"This much, that after hay-harvest she will be my wife, and that is
+ill news for thee, Groa."
+
+Now Groa turned and grasped fiercely at the air with her thin hands.
+Her eyes started out, foam was on her lips, and she shook in her fury
+like a birch-tree in the wind, looking so evil that Asmund drew back a
+little way, saying:
+
+"Now a veil is lifted from thee and I see thee as thou art. Thou hast
+cast a glamour over me these many years, Groa, and it is gone."
+
+"Mayhap, Asmund Asmundson--mayhap, thou knowest me; but I tell thee
+that thou shalt see me in a worse guise before thou weddest Unna.
+What! have I borne the greatest shame, lying by thy side these many
+years, and shall I live to see a rival, young and fair, creep into my
+place with honour? That I will not while runes have power and spells
+can conjure the evil thing upon thee. I call down ruin on thee and
+thine--yea and on Brighteyes also, for he has brought this thing to
+pass. Death take ye all! May thy blood no longer run in mortal veins
+anywhere on the earth! Go down to Hela, Asmund, and be forgotten!" and
+she began to mutter runes swiftly.
+
+Now Asmund turned white with wrath. "Cease thy evil talk," he said,
+"or thou shalt be hurled as a witch into Goldfoss pool."
+
+"Into Goldfoss pool?--yea, there I may lie. I see it!--I seem to see
+this shape of mine rolling where the waters boil fiercest--but thine
+eyes shall never see it! /Thy/ eyes are shut, and shut are the eyes of
+Unna, for ye have gone before!--I do but follow after," and thrice
+Groa shrieked aloud, throwing up her arms, then fell foaming on the
+sanded floor.
+
+"An evil woman and a fey!" said Asmund as he called people to her. "It
+had been better for me if I had never seen her dark face."
+
+Now it is to be told that Groa lay beside herself for ten full days,
+and Swanhild nursed her. Then she found her sense again, and craved to
+see Asmund, and spoke thus to him:
+
+"It seems to me, lord, if indeed it be aught but a vision of my
+dreams, that before this sickness struck me I spoke mad and angry
+words against thee, because thou hast plighted troth to Unna, Thorod's
+daughter."
+
+"That is so, in truth," said Asmund.
+
+"I have to say this, then, lord: that most humbly I crave thy pardon
+for my ill words, and ask thee to put them away from thy mind. Sore
+heart makes sour speech, and thou knowest well that, howsoever great
+my faults, at least I have always loved thee and laboured for thee,
+and methinks that in some fashion thy fortunes are the debtor to my
+wisdom. Therefore when my ears heard that thou hadst of a truth put me
+away, and that another woman comes an honoured wife to rule in
+Middalhof, my tongue forgot its courtesy, and I spoke words that are
+of all words the farthest from my mind. For I know well that I grow
+old, and have put off that beauty with which I was adorned of yore,
+and that held thee to me. '/Carline/' Eric Brighteyes named me, and
+'carline' I am--an old hag, no more! Now, forgive me, and, in memory
+of all that has been between us, let me creep to my place in the ingle
+and still watch and serve thee and thine till my service is outworn.
+Out of Ran's net I came to thee, and, if thou drivest me hence, I tell
+thee that I will lie down and die upon thy threshold, and when thou
+sinkest into eld surely the memory of it shall grieve thee."
+
+Thus she spoke and wept much, till Asmund's heart softened in him,
+and, though with a doubting mind, he said it should be as she willed.
+
+So Groa stayed on at Middalhof, and was lowly in her bearing and soft
+of speech.
+
+
+
+VII
+
+HOW ERIC WENT UP MOSFELL AGAINST SKALLAGRIM THE BARESARK
+
+Now Atli the Good, earl of the Orkneys, comes into the story.
+
+It chanced that Atli had sailed to Iceland in the autumn on a business
+about certain lands that had fallen to him in right of his mother
+Helga, who was an Icelander, and he had wintered west of Reyjanes.
+Spring being come, he wished to sail home, and, when his ship was
+bound, he put to sea full early in the year. But it chanced that bad
+weather came up from the south-east, with mist and rain, so he must
+needs beach his ship in a creek under shelter of the Westman Islands.
+
+Now Atli asked what people dwelt in these parts, and, when he heard
+the name of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, he was glad, for in old days
+he and Asmund had gone many a viking cruise together.
+
+"We will leave the ship here," he said, "till the weather clears, and
+go up to Middalhof to stay with Asmund."
+
+So they made the ship snug, and left men to watch her; but two of the
+company, with Earl Atli, rode up to Middalhof.
+
+It must be told of Atli that he was the best of the earls who lived in
+those days, and he ruled the Orkneys so well that men gave him a by-
+name and called him Atli the Good. It was said of him that he had
+never turned a poor man away unsuccoured, nor bowed his head before a
+strong man, nor drawn his sword without cause, nor refused peace to
+him who prayed it. He was sixty years old, but age had left few marks
+on him, except that of his long white beard. He was keen-eyed, and
+well-fashioned of form and face, a great warrior and the strongest of
+men. His wife was dead, leaving him no children, and this was a sorrow
+to him; but as yet he had taken no other wife, for he would say: "Love
+makes an old man blind," and "When age runs with youth, both shall
+fall," and again, "Mix grey locks and golden and spoil two heads." For
+this earl was a man of many wise sayings.
+
+Now Atli came to Middalhof just as men sat down to meat and, hearing
+the clatter of arms, all sprang to their feet, thinking that perhaps
+Ospakar had come again as he had promised. But when Asmund saw Atli he
+knew him at once, though they had not met for nearly thirty years, and
+he greeted him lovingly, and put him in the high seat, and gave place
+to his men upon the cross-benches. Atli told all his story, and Asmund
+bade him rest a while at Middalhof till the weather grew clearer.
+
+Now the Earl saw Swanhild and thought the maid wondrous fair, and so
+indeed she was, as she moved scornfully to and fro in her kirtle of
+white. Soft was her curling hair and deep were her dark blue eyes, and
+bent were her red lips as is a bow above her dimpled chin, and her
+teeth shone like pearls.
+
+"Is that fair maid thy daughter, Asmund," asked Atli.
+
+"She is named Swanhild the Fatherless," he answered, turning his face
+away.
+
+"Well," said Atli, looking sharply on him, "were the maid sprung from
+me, she would not long be called the 'Fatherless,' for few have such a
+daughter."
+
+"She is fair enough," said Asmund, "in all save temper, and that is
+bad to cross."
+
+"In every sword a flaw," answers Atli; "but what has an old man to do
+with young maids and their beauty?" and he sighed.
+
+"I have known younger men who would seem less brisk at bridals," said
+Asmund, and for that time they talked no more of the matter.
+
+Now, Swanhild heard something of this speech, and she guessed more;
+and it came into her mind that it would be the best of sport to make
+this old man love her, and then to mock him and say him nay. So she
+set herself to the task, as it ever was her wont, and she found it
+easy. For all day long, with downcast eyes and gentle looks, she
+waited upon the Earl, and now, at his bidding, she sang to him in a
+voice soft and low, and now she talked so wisely well that Atli
+thought no such maid had trod the earth before. But he checked himself
+with many learned saws, and on a day when the weather had grown fair,
+and they sat alone, he told her that his ship was bound for Orkney
+Isles.
+
+Then, as though by chance, Swanhild laid her white hand in his, and on
+a sudden looked deep into his eyes, and said with trembling lips, "Ah,
+go not yet, lord!--I pray thee, go not yet!"--and, turning, she fled
+away.
+
+But Atli was much moved, and he said to himself: "Now a strange thing
+is come to pass: a fair maid loves an old man; and yet, methinks, he
+who looks into those eyes sees deep waters," and he beat his brow and
+thought.
+
+But Swanhild in her chamber laughed till the tears ran from those same
+eyes, for she saw that the great fish was hooked and now the time had
+come to play him.
+
+For she did not know that it was otherwise fated.
+
+Gudruda, too, saw all these things and knew not how to read them, for
+she was of an honest mind, and could not understand how a woman may
+love a man as Swanhild loved Eric and yet make such play with other
+men, and that of her free will. For she guessed little of Swanhild's
+guilefulness, nor of the coldness of her heart to all save Eric; nor
+of how this was the only joy left to her: to make a sport of men and
+put them to grief and shame. Atli said to himself that he would watch
+this maid well before he uttered a word to Asmund, and he deemed
+himself very cunning, for he was wondrous cautious after the fashion
+of those about to fall. So he set himself to watching, and Swanhild
+set herself to smiling, and he told her tales of warfare and of
+daring, and she clasped her hands and said:
+
+"Was there ever such a man since Odin trod the earth?" And so it went
+on, till the serving-women laughed at the old man in love and the wit
+of her that mocked him.
+
+
+
+Now upon a day, Eric having made an end of sowing his corn, bethought
+himself of his vow to go up alone against Skallagrim the Baresark in
+his den on Mosfell over by Hecla. Now, this was a heavy task: for
+Skallagrim was held so mighty among men that none went up against him
+any more; and at times Eric thought of Gudruda, and sighed, for it was
+likely that she would be a widow before she was made a wife. Still,
+his oath must be fulfilled, and, moreover, of late Skallagrim having
+heard that a youngling named Eric Brighteyes had vowed to slay him
+single-handed, had made of a mock of him in this fashion. For
+Skallagrim rode down to Coldback on Ran River and at night-time took a
+lamb from the fold. Holding the lamb beneath his arm, he drew near to
+the house and smote thrice on the door with his battle-axe, and they
+were thundering knocks. Then he leapt on to his horse and rode off a
+space and waited. Presently Eric came out, but half clad, a shield in
+one hand and Whitefire in the other, and, looking, by the bright
+moonlight he saw a huge black-bearded man seated on a horse, having a
+great axe in one hand and the lamb beneath his arm.
+
+"Who art thou?" roared Eric.
+
+"I am called Skallagrim, youngling," answered the man on the horse.
+"Many men have seen me once, none have wished to see me twice, and
+some few have never seen aught again. Now, it has been echoed in my
+ears that thou hast vowed a vow to go up Mosfell against Skallagrim
+the Baresark, and I am come hither to say that I will make thee right
+welcome. See," and with his axe he cut off the lamb's tail on the
+pommel of his saddle: "of the flesh of this lamb of thine I will brew
+broth and of his skin I will make me a vest. Take thou this tail, and
+when thou fittest it on to the skin again, Skallagrim will own a
+lord," and he hurled the tail towards him.
+
+"Bide thou there till I can come to thee," shouted Eric; "it will
+spare me a ride to Mosfell."
+
+"Nay, nay. It is good for lads to take the mountain air," and
+Skallagrim turned his horse away, laughing.
+
+Eric watched Skallagrim vanish over the knoll, and then, though he was
+very angry, laughed also and went in. But first he picked up the tail,
+and on the morrow he skinned it.
+
+Now the time was come when the matter must be tried, and Eric bade
+farewell to Saevuna his mother, and Unna his cousin, and girt
+Whitefire round him and set upon his head a golden helm with wings on
+it. Then he found the byrnie which his father Thorgrimur had stripped,
+together with the helm, from that Baresark who cut off his leg--and
+this was a good piece, forged of the Welshmen--and he put it on his
+breast, and taking a stout shield of bull's hide studded with nails,
+rode away with one thrall, the strong carle named Jon.
+
+But the women misdoubted them much of this venture; nevertheless Eric
+might not be gainsayed.
+
+Now, the road to Mosfell runs past Middalhof and thither he came.
+Atli, standing at the men's door, saw him and cried aloud: "Ho! a
+mighty man comes here."
+
+Swanhild looked out and saw Eric, and he was a goodly sight in his
+war-gear. For now, week by week, he seemed to grow more fair and
+great, as the full strength of his manhood rose in him, like sap in
+the spring grass, and Gudruda was very proud of her lover. That night
+Eric stayed at Middalhof, and sat hand in hand with Gudruda and talked
+with Earl Atli. Now the heart of the old viking went out to Eric, and
+he took great delight in him and in his strength and deeds, and he
+longed much that the Gods had given him such a son.
+
+"I prophesy this of thee, Brighteyes," he cried: "that it shall go ill
+with this Baresark thou seekest--yes, and with all men who come within
+sweep of that great sword of thine. But remember this, lad: guard thy
+head with thy buckler, cut low beneath his shield, if he carries one,
+and mow the legs from him: for ever a Baresark rushes on, shield up."
+
+Eric thanked him for his good words and went to rest. But, before it
+was light, he rose, and Gudruda rose also and came into the hall, and
+buckled his harness on him with her own hands.
+
+"This is a sad task for me, Eric!" she sighed, "for how do I know that
+Baresark's hands shall not loose this helm of thine?"
+
+"That is as it may be, sweet," he said; "but I fear not the Baresark
+or any man. How goes it with Swanhild now?"
+
+"I know not. She makes herself sweet to that old Earl and he is fain
+of her, and that is beyond my sight."
+
+"I have seen as much," said Eric. "It will be well for us if he should
+wed her."
+
+"Ay, and ill for him; but it is to be doubted if that is in her mind."
+
+Now Eric kissed her soft and sweet, and went away, bidding her look
+for his return on the day after the morrow.
+
+Gudruda bore up bravely against her fears till he was gone, but then
+she wept a little.
+
+
+
+Now it is to be told that Eric and his thrall Jon rode hard up
+Stonefell and across the mountains and over the black sand, till, two
+hours before sunset, they came to the foot of Mosfell, having Hecla on
+their right. It is a grim mountain, grey with moss, standing alone in
+the desert plain; but between it and Hecla there is good grassland.
+
+"Here is the fox's earth. Now to start him," said Eric.
+
+He knows something of the path by which this fortress can be climbed
+from the south, and horses may be ridden up it for a space. So on they
+go, till at length they come to a flat place where water runs down the
+black rocks, and here Eric drank of the water, ate food, and washed
+his face and hands. This done, he bid Jon tend the horses--for
+hereabouts there is a little grass--and be watchful till he returned,
+since he must go up against Skallagrim alone. And there with a
+doubtful heart Jon stayed all that night. For of all that came to pass
+he saw but one thing, and that was the light of Whitefire as it
+flashed out high above him on the brow of the mountain when first
+Brighteyes smote at foe.
+
+Eric went warily up the Baresark path, for he would keep his breath in
+him, and the light shone redly on his golden helm. High he went, till
+at length he came to a pass narrow and dark and hedged on either side
+with sheer cliffs, such as two armed men might hold against a score.
+He peered down this path, but he saw no Baresark, though it was worn
+by Baresark feet. He crept along its length, moving like a sunbeam
+through the darkness of the pass, for the light gathered on his helm
+and sword, till suddenly the path turned and he was on the brink of a
+gulf that seemed to have no bottom, and, looking across and down, he
+could see Jon and the horses more than a hundred fathoms beneath. Now
+Eric must stop, for this path leads but into the black gulf. Also he
+was perplexed to know where Skallagrim had his lair. He crept to the
+brink and gazed. Then he saw that a point of rock jutted from the
+sheer face of the cliff and that the point was worn with the mark of
+feet.
+
+"Where Baresark passes, there may yeoman follow," said Eric and,
+sheathing Whitefire, without more ado, though he liked the task
+little, he grasped the overhanging rock and stepped down on to the
+point below. Now he was perched like an eagle over the dizzy gulf and
+his brain swam. Backward he feared to go, and forward he might not,
+for there was nothing but air. Beside him, growing from the face of
+the cliff, was a birch-bush. He grasped it to steady himself. It bent
+beneath his clutch, and then he saw, behind it, a hole in the rock
+through which a man could creep, and down this hole ran footmarks.
+
+"First through air like a bird; now through earth like a fox," said
+Eric and entered the hole. Doubling his body till his helm almost
+touched his knee he took three paces and lo! he stood on a great
+platform of rock, so large that a hall might be built on it, which,
+curving inwards, cannot be seen from the narrow pass. This platform,
+that is backed by the sheer cliff, looks straight to the south, and
+from it he could search the plain and the path that he had travelled,
+and there once more he saw Jon and the horses far below him.
+
+"A strong place, truly, and well chosen," said Eric and looked around.
+On the floor of the rock and some paces from him a turf fire still
+smouldered, and by it were sheep's bones, and beyond, in the face of
+the overhanging precipice, was the mouth of a cave.
+
+"The wolf is at home, or was but lately," said Eric; "now for his
+lair;" and with that he walked warily to the mouth of the cave and
+peered in. He could see nothing yet a while, but surely he heard a
+sound of snoring?
+
+Then he crept in, and, presently, by the red light of the burning
+embers, he saw a great black-bearded man stretched at length upon a
+rug of sheepskins, and by his side an axe.
+
+"Now it would be easy to make an end of this cave-dweller," thought
+Eric; "but that is a deed I will not do--no, not even to a Baresark--
+to slay him in his sleep," and therewith he stepped lightly to the
+side of Skallagrim, and was about to prick him with the point of
+Whitefire, when! as he did so, another man sat up behind Skallagrim.
+
+"By Thor! for two I did not bargain," said Eric, and sprang from the
+cave.
+
+Then, with a grunt of rage, that Baresark who was behind Skallagrim
+came out like a she-bear robbed of her whelps, and ran straight at
+Eric, sword aloft. Eric gives before him right to the edge of the
+cliff. Then the Baresark smites at him and Brighteyes catches the blow
+on his shield, and smites at him in turn so well and truly, that the
+head of the Baresark flies from his shoulders and spins along the
+ground, but his body, with outstretched arms yet gripping at the air,
+falls over the edge of the gulf sheer into the water, a hundred
+fathoms down. It was the flash that Whitefire made as it circled ere
+it smote that Jon saw while he waited in the dell upon the mountain
+side. But of the Baresark he saw nothing, for he passed down into the
+great fire-riven cleft and was never seen more, save once only, in a
+strange fashion that shall be told. This was the first man whom
+Brighteyes slew.
+
+Now the old tale tells that Eric cried aloud: "Little chance had this
+one," and that then a wonderful thing came to pass. For the head on
+the rock opened its eyes and answered:
+
+"Little chance indeed against thee, Eric Brighteyes. Still, I tell
+thee this: that where my body fell there thou shalt fall, and where it
+lies there thou shalt lie also."
+
+Now Eric was afraid, for he thought it a strange thing that a severed
+head should speak to him.
+
+"Here it seems I have to deal with trolls," he said; "but at the
+least, though he speak, this one shall strike no more," and he looked
+at the head, but it answered nothing.
+
+Now Skallagrim slept through it all and the light grew so dim that
+Eric thought it time to make an end this way or that. Therefore, he
+took the head of the slain man, though he feared to touch it, and
+rolled it swiftly into the cave, saying, "Now, being so glib of
+speech, go tell thy mate that Eric Brighteyes knocks at his door."
+
+Then came sounds as of a man rising, and presently Skallagrim rushed
+forth with axe aloft and his fellow's head in his left hand. He was
+clothed in nothing but a shirt and the skin of Eric's lamb was bound
+to his chest.
+
+"Where now is my mate?" he said. Then he saw Eric leaning on
+Whitefire, his golden helm ablaze with the glory of the passing sun.
+
+"It seems that thou holdest somewhat of him in thine hand, Skallagrim,
+and for the rest, go seek it in yonder rift."
+
+"Who art thou?" roared Skallagrim.
+
+"Thou mayest know me by this token," said Eric, and he threw towards
+him the skin of that lamb's tail which Skallagrim had lifted from
+Coldback.
+
+Now Skallagrim knew him and the Baresark fit came on. His eyes rolled,
+foam flew to his lips, his mouth grinned, and he was awesome to see.
+He let fall the head, and, swinging the great axe aloft, rushed at
+Eric. But Brighteyes is too swift for him. It would not be well to let
+that stroke fall, and it must go hard with aught it struck. He springs
+forward, he louts low and sweeps upwards with Whitefire. Skallagrim
+sees the sword flare and drops almost to his knee, guarding his head
+with the axe; but Whitefire strikes on the iron half of the axe and
+shears it in two, so that the axe-head falls to earth. Now the
+Baresark is weaponless but unharmed, and it would be an easy task to
+slay him as he rushes by. But it came into Eric's mind that it is an
+unworthy deed to slay a swordless man, and this came into his mind
+also, that he desired to match his naked might against a Baresark in
+his rage. So, in the hardihood of his youth and strength, he cast
+Whitefire aside, and crying "Come, try a fall with me, Baresark,"
+rushed on Skallagrim.
+
+"Thou art mad," yells the Baresark, and they are at it hard. Now they
+grip and rend and tear. Ospakar was strong, but the Baresark strength
+of Skallagrim is more than the strength of Ospakar, and soon
+Brighteyes thinks longingly on Whitefire that he has cast aside. Eric
+is mighty beyond the might of men, but he can scarcely hold his own
+against this mad man, and very soon he knows that only one chance is
+left to him, and that is to cling to Skallagrim till the Baresark fit
+be passed and he is once more like other men. But this is easier to
+tell of than to do, and presently, strive as he will, Eric is on his
+back, and Skallagrim on him. But still he holds the Baresark as with
+bands of iron, and Skallagrim may not free his arms, though he strive
+furiously. Now they roll over and over on the rock, and the gloom
+gathers fast about them till presently Eric sees that they draw near
+to the brink of that mighty rift down which the severed head of the
+cave-dweller has foretold his fall.
+
+"Then we go together," says Eric, but the Baresark does not heed. Now
+they are on the very brink, and here as it chances, or as the Norns
+decree, a little rock juts up and this keeps them from falling. Eric
+is uppermost, and, strive as he will, Skallagrim may not turn him on
+his back again. Still, Brighteyes' strength may not endure very long,
+for he grows faint, and his legs slip slowly over the side of the rift
+till now he clings, as it were, by his ribs and shoulder-blades alone,
+that rub against the little rock. The light dies away, and Eric thinks
+on sweet Gudruda and makes ready to die also, when suddenly a last ray
+from the sun falls on the fierce face of Skallagrim, and lo!
+Brighteyes sees it change, for the madness goes out of it, and in a
+moment the Baresark becomes but as a child in his mighty grip.
+
+"Hold!" said Skallagrim, "I crave peace," and he loosed his clasp.
+
+"Not too soon, then," gasped Eric as, drawing his legs from over the
+brink of the rift, he gained his feet and, staggering to his sword,
+grasped it very thankfully.
+
+"I am fordone!" said Skallagrim; "come, drag me from this place, for I
+fall; or, if thou wilt, hew off my head."
+
+"I will not serve thee thus," said Eric. "Thou art a gallant foe," and
+he put out his hand and drew him into safety.
+
+For a while Skallagrim lay panting, then he gained his hands and knees
+and crawled to where Eric leaned against the rock.
+
+"Lord," he said, "give me thy hand."
+
+Eric stretched forth his left hand, wondering, and Skallagrim took it.
+He did not stretch out his right, for, fearing guile, he gripped
+Whitefire in it.
+
+"Lord," Skallagrim said again, "of all men who ever were, thou art the
+mightiest. Five other men had not stood before me in my rage, but,
+scorning thy weapon, thou didst overcome me in the noblest fashion,
+and by thy naked strength alone. Now hearken. Thou hast given me my
+life, and it is thine from this hour to the end. Here I swear fealty
+to thee. Slay me if thou wilt, or use me if thou wilt, but I think it
+will be better for thee to do this rather than that, for there is but
+one who has mastered me, and thou art he, and it is borne in upon my
+mind that thou wilt have need of my strength, and that shortly."
+
+"That may well be, Skallagrim," said Eric, "yet I put little trust in
+outlaws and cave-dwellers. How do I know, if I take thee to me, that
+thou wilt not murder me in my sleep, as it would have been easy for me
+to do by thee but now?"
+
+"What is it that runs from thy arm," asked Skallagrim.
+
+"Blood," said Eric.
+
+"Stretch out thine arm, lord."
+
+Eric did so, and the Baresark put his lips to the scratch and sucked
+the blood, then said:
+
+"In this blood of thine I pledge thee, Eric Brighteyes! May Valhalla
+refuse me and Hela take me; may I be hunted like a fox from earth to
+earth; may trolls torment me and wizards sport with me o' night; may
+my limbs shrivel and my heart turn to water; may my foes overtake me,
+and my bones be crushed across the doom-stone--if I fail in one jot
+from this my oath that I have sworn! I will guard thy back, I will
+smite thy enemies, thy hearthstone shall be my temple, thy honour my
+honour. Thrall am I of thine, and thrall I will be, and whiles thou
+wilt we will live one life, and, in the end, we will die one death."
+
+"It seems that in going to seek a foe I have found a friend," said
+Eric, "and it is likely enough that I shall need one. Skallagrim,
+Baresark and outlaw as thou art, I take thee at thy word. Henceforth,
+we are master and man and we will do many a deed side by side, and in
+token of it I lengthen thy name and call thee Skallagrim Lambstail.
+Now, if thou hast it, give me food and drink, for I am faint from that
+hug of thine, old bear."
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+HOW OSPAKAR BLACKTOOTH FOUND ERIC BRIGHTEYES AND
+SKALLAGRIM LAMBSTAIL ON HORSE-HEAD HEIGHTS
+
+Now Skallagrim led Eric to his cave and fed the fire and gave him
+flesh to eat and ale to drink. When he had eaten his fill Eric looked
+at the Baresark. He had black hair streaked with grey that hung down
+upon his shoulders. His nose was hooked like an eagle's beak, his
+beard was wild and his sunken eyes were keen as a hawk's. He was
+somewhat bent and not over tall, but of a mighty make, for his
+shoulders must pass many a door sideways.
+
+"Thou art a great man," said Eric, "and it is something to have
+overcome thee. Now tell me what turned thee Baresark."
+
+"A shameful deed that was done against me, lord. Ten years ago I was a
+yeoman of small wealth in the north. I had but one good thing, and
+that was the fairest housewife in those parts--Thorunna by name--and I
+loved her much, but we had no children. Now, not far from my stead is
+a place called Swinefell, and there dwells a mighty chief named
+Ospakar Blacktooth; he is an evil man and strong----"
+
+Eric started at the name and then bade Skallagrim take up the tale.
+
+"It chanced that Ospakar saw my wife Thorunna and would take her, but
+at first she did not listen. Then he promised her wealth and all good
+things, and she was weary of our hard way of life and hearkened.
+Still, she would not go away openly, for that had brought shame on
+her, but plotted with Ospakar that he should come and take her as
+though by force. So it came about, as I lay heavily asleep one night
+at Thorunna's side, having drunk somewhat too deeply of the autumn
+ale, that armed men seized me, bound me, and haled me from my bed.
+There were eight of them, and with them was Ospakar. Then Blacktooth
+bid Thorunna rise, clothe herself and come to be his May, and she made
+pretence to weep at this, but fell to it readily enough. Now she bound
+her girdle round her and to it a knife hung.
+
+"'Kill thyself, sweet,' I cried: 'death is better than shame.'
+
+"'Not so, husband,' she answered. 'It is true that I love but thee;
+yet a woman may find another love, but not another life,' and I saw
+her laugh through her mock tears. Now Ospakar rode in hot haste away
+to Swinefell and with him went Thorunna, but his men stayed a while
+and drank my ale, and, as they drank, they mocked me who was bound
+before them, and little by little all the truth was told of the doings
+of Ospakar and Thorunna my housewife, and I learned that it was she
+who had planned this sport. Then my eyes grew dark and I drew near to
+death from very shame and bitterness. But of a sudden something leaped
+up in my heart, fire raged before my eyes and voices in my ears called
+on to war and vengeance. I was Baresark--and like hay bands I burst my
+cords. My axe hung on the wainscot. I snatched it thence, and of what
+befell I know this alone, that, when the madness passed, eight men lay
+stretched out before me, and all the place was but a gore of blood.
+
+"'Then I drew the dead together and piled drinking tables over them,
+and benches, and turf, and anything else that would burn, and put
+cod's oil on the pile, and fired the stead above them, so that the
+tale went abroad that all these men were burned in their cups, and I
+with them.
+
+"'But I took the name of Skallagrim and swore an oath against all men,
+ay, and women too, and away I went to the wood-folk and worked much
+mischief, for I spared few, and so on to Mosfell. Here I have stayed
+these five years, awaiting the time when I shall find Ospakar and
+Thorunna the harlot, and I have fought many men, but, till thou camest
+up against me, none could stand before my might."
+
+"A strange tale, truly," said Eric; "but now hearken thou to a
+stranger, for of a truth it seems that we have not come together by
+chance," and he told him of Gudruda and the wrestling and of the
+overthrow of Blacktooth, and showed him Whitefire which he won out of
+the hand of Ospakar.
+
+Skallagrim listened and laughed aloud. "Surely," he said, "this is the
+work of the Norns. See, lord, thou and I will yet smite this Ospakar.
+He has taken my wife and he would take thy betrothed. Let it be! Let
+it be! Ah, would that I had been there to see the wrestling--Ospakar
+had never risen from his snow-bed. But there is time left to us, and I
+shall yet see his head roll along the dust. Thou hast his goodly sword
+and with it thou shalt sweep Blacktooth's head from his shoulders--or
+perchance that shall be my lot," and with this Skallagrim sprang up,
+gnashing his teeth and clutching at the air.
+
+"Peace," said Eric. "Blacktooth is not here. Save thy rage until it
+can run along thy sword and strike him."
+
+"Nay, not here, nor yet so far off, lord. Hearken: I know this
+Ospakar. If he has set eyes of longing on Gudruda, Asmund's daughter,
+he will not rest one hour till he have her or is slain; and if he has
+set eyes of hate on thee--then take heed to thy going and spy down
+every path before thy feet tread it. Soon shall the matter come on for
+judgment and even now Odin's Valkyries[*] choose their own."
+
+[*] The "corse-choosing sisters" who were bidden by Odin to single out
+ those warriors whose hour had come to die in battle and win
+ Valhalla.
+
+"It is well, then," said Eric.
+
+"Yea, lord, it is well, for we two have little to fear from any six
+men, if so be that they fall on us in fair fight. But I do not
+altogether like thy tale. Too many women are mixed up in it, and women
+stab in the back. A man may deal with swords aloft, but not with
+tricks, and lies, and false women's witchery. It was a woman who
+greased thy wrestling soles; mayhap it will be a woman that binds on
+thy Hell-shoes when all is done--ay! and who makes them ready for thy
+feet."
+
+"Of women, as of men," answered Eric, "there is this to be said, that
+some are good and some evil."
+
+"Yes, lord, and this also, that the evil ones plot the ill of their
+evil, but the good do it of their blind foolishness. Forswear women
+and so shalt thou live happy and die in honour--cherish them and live
+in wretchedness and die an outcast."
+
+"Thy talk is foolish," said Eric. "Birds must to the air, the sea to
+the shore, and man must to woman. As things are so let them be, for
+they will soon seem as though they had never been. I had rather kiss
+my dear and die, if so it pleases me to do, than kiss her not and
+live, for at the last the end will be one end, and kisses are sweet!"
+
+"That is a good saying," said Skallagrim, and they fell asleep side by
+side and Eric had no fear.
+
+Now they awoke and the light was already full, for they were weary and
+their sleep had been heavy.
+
+Hard by the mouth of the cave is a little well of water that gathers
+there from the rocks above and in this Eric washed himself. Then
+Skallagrim showed him the cave and the goodly store of arms that he
+had won from those whom he had slain and robbed.
+
+"A wondrous place, truly," said Eric, "and well fitted to the uses of
+such a chapman[*] as thou art; but, say, how didst thou find it?"
+
+[*] Merchant.
+
+"I followed him who was here before me and gave him choice--to go, or
+to fight for the stronghold. But he needs must fight and that was his
+bane, for I slew him."
+
+"Who was that, then," asked Eric, "whose head lies yonder?"
+
+"A cave-dweller, lord, whom I took to me because of the lonesomeness
+of the winter tide. He was an evil man, for though it is good to be
+Baresark from time to time, yet to dwell with one who is always
+Baresark is not good, and thou didst a needful deed in smiting his
+head from him--and now let it go to find its trunk," and he rolled it
+over the edge of the great rift.
+
+"Knowest thou, Skallagrim, that this head spoke to me after it had
+left the man's shoulders, saying that where its body fell there I
+should fall, and where it lay there I should lie also?"
+
+"Then, lord, that is likely to be thy doom, for this man was
+foresighted, and, but the night before last, as we rode out to seek
+sheep, he felt his head, and said that, before the sun sank again, a
+hundred fathoms of air should link it to his shoulders."
+
+"It may be so," answered Eric. "I thought as I lay in thy grip yonder
+that the fate was near. And now arm thyself, and take such goods as
+thou needest, and let us hence, for that thrall of mine who waits me
+yonder will think thou hast been too mighty for me."
+
+Skallagrim went to the edge of the rift and searched the plain with
+his hawk eyes.
+
+"No need to hasten, lord," he said. "See yonder rides thy thrall
+across the black sand, and with him goes thy horse. Surely he thought
+thou camest no more down the path by which thou wentest up, and it is
+not thrall's work to seek Skallagrim in his lair and ask for tidings."
+
+"Wolves take him for a fool!" said Eric in anger. "He will ride to
+Middalhof and sing my death-song, and that will sound sadly in some
+ears."
+
+"It is pleasant, lord," said Skallagrim, "when good tidings dog the
+heels of bad, and womenfolk can spare some tears and be little poorer.
+I have horses in a secret dell that I will show thee, and on them we
+will ride hence to Middalhof--and there thou must claim peace for me."
+
+"It is well," said Eric; "now arm thyself, for if thou goest with me
+thou must make an end of thy Baresark ways, or keep them for the hour
+of battle."
+
+"I will do thy bidding, lord," said Skallagrim. Then he entered the
+cave and set a plain black steel helm upon his black locks, and a
+black chain byrnie about his breast. He took the great axe-head also
+and fitted to it the half of another axe that lay among the weapons.
+Then he drew out a purse of money and a store of golden rings, and set
+them in a bag of otter skin, and buckled it about him. But the other
+goods he wrapped up in skins and hid behind some stones which were at
+the bottom of the cave--purposing to come another time and fetch them.
+
+Then they went forth by that same perilous path which Eric had trod,
+and Skallagrim showed him how he might pass the rock in safety.
+
+"A rough road this," said Eric as he gained the deep cleft.
+
+"Yea, lord, and, till thou camest, one that none but wood-folk have
+trodden."
+
+"I would tread it no more," said Eric again, "and yet that fellow
+thief of thine said that I should die here," and for a while his heart
+was heavy.
+
+Now Skallagrim Lambstail led him by secret paths to a dell rich in
+grass, that is hid in the round of the mountain, and here three good
+horses were at feed. Then, going to a certain rock, he brought out
+bits and saddles, and they caught the horses, and, mounting them, rode
+away from Mosfell.
+
+
+
+Now Eric and his henchman Skallagrim the Baresark rode four hours and
+saw nobody, till at length they came to the brow of a hill that is
+named Horse-Head Heights, and, crossing it, found themselves almost in
+the midst of a score of armed men who were about to mount their
+horses.
+
+"Now we have company," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Yes, and bad company," answered Eric, "for yonder I spy Ospakar
+Blacktooth, and Gizur and Mord his sons, ay and others. Down, and back
+to back, for they will show us little gentleness."
+
+Then they sprang to earth and took their stand upon a mound of rising
+ground--and the men rode towards them.
+
+"I shall soon know what thy fellowship is worth," said Eric.
+
+"Fear not, lord," answered Skallagrim. "Hold thou thy head and I will
+hold thy back. We are met in a good hour."
+
+"Good or ill, it is likely to be a short one. Hearken thou: if thou
+must turn Baresark when swords begin to flash, at the least stand and
+be Baresark where thou art, for if thou rushest on the foe, my back
+will be naked and I must soon be sped."
+
+"It shall be as thou sayest, lord."
+
+Now men rode round them, but at first they did not know Eric, because
+of the golden helm that hid his face in shadow.
+
+"Who are ye?" called Ospakar.
+
+"I think that thou shouldst know me, Blacktooth," Eric answered, "for
+I set thee heels up in the snow but lately--or, at the least, thou
+wilt know this," and he drew great Whitefire.
+
+"Thou mayest know me also, Ospakar," cried the Baresark. "Skallagrim,
+men called me, Lambstail, Eric Brighteyes calls me, but once thou
+didst call me Ounound. Say, lord, what tidings of Thorunna?"
+
+Now Ospakar shook his sword, laughing. "I came out to seek one foe,
+and I have found two," he cried. "Hearken, Eric: when thou art slain I
+go hence to burn and kill at Middalhof. Shall I bear thy head as
+keepsake from thee to Gudruda? For thee, Ounound, I thought thee dead;
+but, being yet alive, Thorunna, my sweet love, sends thee this," and
+he hurled a spear at him with all his might.
+
+But Skallagrim catches the spear as it flies and hurls it back. It
+strikes right on the shield of Ospakar and pierces it, ay and the
+byrnie, and the shoulder that is beneath the byrnie, so that
+Blacktooth was made unmeet for fight, and howled with pain and rage.
+
+"Go, bid Thorunna draw that splinter forth," says Skallagrim, "and
+heal the hole with kisses."
+
+Now Ospakar, writhing with his hurt, shouts to his men to slay the two
+of them, and then the fight begins.
+
+One rushes at Eric and smites at him with an axe. The blow falls on
+his shield, and shears off the side of it, then strikes the byrnie
+beneath, but lightly. In answer Eric sweeps low at him with Whitefire,
+and cuts his leg from under him between knee and thigh, and he falls
+and dies.
+
+Another rushes in. Down flashes Whitefire before he can smite, and the
+carle's shield is cloven through. Then he chooses to draw back and
+fights no more that day.
+
+Skallagrim slays a man, and wounds another sore. A tall chief with a
+red scar on his face comes at Brighteyes. Twice he feints at the head
+while Eric watches, then lowers the sword beneath the cover of his
+shield, and sweeps suddenly at Eric's legs. Brighteyes leaps high into
+the air, smiting downward with Whitefire as he leaps, and presently
+that chief is dead, shorn through shoulder to breast.
+
+Now Skallagrim slays another man, and grows Baresark. He looks so
+fierce that men fall back from him.
+
+Two rush on Eric, one from either side. The sword of him on the right
+falls on his shield and sinks in, but Brighteyes twists the shorn
+shield so strongly that the sword is wrenched from the smiter's hand.
+Now the other sword is aloft above him, and that had been Eric's bane,
+but Skallagrim glances round and sees it about to fall. He has no time
+to turn, but dashes the hammer of his axe backward. It falls full on
+the swordsman's head, and the head is shattered.
+
+"That was well done," says Eric as the sword goes down.
+
+"Not so ill but it might be worse," growls Skallagrim.
+
+Presently all men drew back from those two, for they have had enough
+of Whitefire and the Baresark's axe.
+
+Ospakar sits on his horse, his shield pinned to his shoulder and
+curses aloud.
+
+"Close in, you cowards!" he yells, "close in and cut them down!" but
+no man stirs.
+
+Then Eric mocks them. "There are but two of us," he says, "will no man
+try a game with me? Let it not be sung that twenty were overcome of
+two."
+
+Now Ospakar's son Mord hears, and he grows mad with rage. He holds his
+shield aloft and rushes on. But Gizur the Lawman does not come, for
+Gizur was a coward.
+
+Skallagrim turns to meet Mord, but Eric says:--
+
+"This one for me, comrade," and steps forward.
+
+Mord strikes a mighty blow. Eric's shield is all shattered and cannot
+stay it. It crashes through and falls full on the golden helm, beating
+Brighteyes to his knee. Now he is up again and blows fall thick and
+fast. Mord is a strong man, unwearied, and skilled in war, and Eric's
+arms grow faint and his strength sinks low. Mord smites again and
+wounds him somewhat on the shoulder.
+
+Eric throws aside his cloven shield and, shouting, plies Whitefire
+with both arms. Mord gives before him, then rushes and smites; Eric
+leaps aside. Again he rushes and lo! Brighteyes has dropped his point,
+and it stands a full span through the back of Mord, and instantly that
+was his bane.
+
+Now men rush to their horses, mount in hot haste and ride away, crying
+that these are trolls whom they have to do with here, not men.
+Skallagrim sees, and the Baresark fit takes him sore. With axe aloft
+he charges after them, screaming as he comes. There is one man, the
+same whom he had wounded. He cannot mount easily, and when the
+Baresark comes he still lies on the neck of his horse. The great axe
+wheels on high and falls, and it is told of this stroke that it was so
+mighty that man and horse sank dead beneath it, cloven through and
+through. Then the fit leaves Skallagrim and he walks back, and they
+are alone with the dead and dying.
+
+Eric leans on Whitefire and speaks:
+
+"Get thee gone, Skallagrim Lambstail!" he said; "get thee gone!"
+
+"It shall be as thou wilt, lord," answered the Baresark; "but I have
+not befriended thee so ill that thou shouldst fear for blows to come."
+
+"I will keep no man with me who puts my word aside, Skallagrim. What
+did I bid thee? Was it not that thou shouldst have done with the
+Baresark ways, and where thou stoodest there thou shouldst bide? and
+see: thou didst forget my word swiftly! Now get thee gone!"
+
+"It is true, lord," he said. "He who serves must serve wholly," and
+Skallagrim turned to seek his horse.
+
+"Stay," said Eric; "thou art a gallant man and I forgive thee: but
+cross my will no more. We have slain several men and Ospakar goes
+hence wounded. We have got honour, and they loss and the greatest
+shame. Nevertheless, ill shall come of this to me, for Ospakar has
+many friends and will set a law-suit on foot against me at the
+Althing,[*] and thou didst draw the first blood."
+
+[*] The annual assembly of free men which, in Iceland, performed the
+ functions of a Parliament and Supreme Court of Law.
+
+"Would that the spear had gone more home," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Ospakar's time is not yet," answered Eric; "still, he has something
+by which to bear us in mind."
+
+
+
+IX
+
+HOW SWANHILD DEALT WITH GUDRUDA
+
+Now Jon, Eric's thrall, watched all night on Mosfell, but saw nothing
+except the light of Whitefire as it smote the Baresark's head from his
+shoulders. He stayed there till daylight, much afraid; then, making
+sure that Eric was slain, Jon rode hard and fast for Middalhof,
+whither he came at evening.
+
+Gudruda was watching by the women's door. She strained her eyes
+towards Mosfell to catch the light gleaming on Eric's golden helm, and
+presently it gleamed indeed, white not red.
+
+"See," said Swanhild at her side, "Eric comes!"
+
+"Not Eric, but his thrall," answered Gudruda, "to tell us that Eric is
+sped."
+
+They waited in silence while Jon galloped towards them.
+
+"What news of Brighteyes?" cried Swanhild.
+
+"Little need to ask," said Gudruda, "look at his face."
+
+Now Jon told his tale and Gudruda listened, clinging to the door post.
+But Swanhild cursed him for a coward, so that he shrank before her
+eyes.
+
+Gudruda turned and walked into the hall and her face was like the face
+of death. Men saw her, and Asmund asked why she wore so strange a
+mien. Then Gudruda sang this song:
+
+ "Up to Mosfell, battle eager,
+ Rode helmed Brighteyen to the fray.
+ Back from Mosfell, battle shunning.
+ Slunk yon coward thrall I ween.
+ Now shall maid Gudruda never
+ Know a husband's dear embrace;
+ Widowed is she--sunk in sorrow,
+ Eric treads Valhalla's halls!"
+
+And with this she walked from the stead, looking neither to the right
+nor to the left.
+
+"Let the maid be," said Atli the Earl. "Grief fares best alone. But my
+heart is sore for Eric. It should go ill with that Baresark if I might
+get a grip of him."
+
+"That I will have before summer is gone," said Asmund, for the death
+of Eric seemed to him the worst of sorrows.
+
+Gudruda walked far, and, crossing Lax by the stepping stones, climbed
+Stonefell till she came to the head of Golden Falls, for, like a
+stricken thing, she desired to be alone in her grief. But Swanhild saw
+her and followed, coming on her as she sat watching the water thunder
+down the mighty cleft. Presently Swanhild's shadow fell athwart her,
+and Gudruda looked up.
+
+"What wouldst thou with me, Swanhild?" she asked. "Art thou come to
+mock my grief?"
+
+"Nay, foster-sister, for then I must mock my own. I come to mix my
+tears with thine. See, we loved Eric, thou and I, and Eric is dead.
+Let our hate be buried in his grave, whence neither may draw him
+back."
+
+Gudruda looked upon her coldly, for nothing could stir her now.
+
+"Get thee gone," she said. "Weep thine own tears and leave me to weep
+mine. Not with thee will I mourn Eric."
+
+Swanhild frowned and bit her lip. "I will not come to thee with words
+of peace a second time, my rival," she said. "Eric is dead, but my
+hate that was born of Eric's love for thee lives on and grows, and its
+flower shall be thy death, Gudruda!"
+
+"Now that Brighteyes is dead, I would fain follow on his path: so, if
+thou listest, throw the gates wide," Gudruda answered, and heeded her
+no more.
+
+Swanhild went, but not far. On the further side of a knoll of grass
+she flung herself to earth and grieved as her fierce heart might. She
+shed no tears, but sat silently, looking with empty eyes adown the
+past, and onward to the future, and finding no good therein.
+
+But Gudruda wept as the weight of her loss pressed in upon her--wept
+heavy silent tears and cried in her heart to Eric who was gone--cried
+to death to come upon her and bring her sleep or Eric.
+
+So she sat and so she grieved till, quite outworn with sorrow, sleep
+stole upon her and she dreamed. Gudruda dreamed that she was dead and
+that she sat nigh to the golden door that is in Odin's house at
+Valhalla, by which the warriors pass and repass for ever. There she
+sat from age to age, listening to the thunder of ten thousand thousand
+tramping feet, and watching the fierce faces of the chosen as they
+marched out in armies to do battle in the meads. And as she sat, at
+length a one-eyed man, clad in gleaming garments, drew near and spoke
+to her. He was glorious to look on, and old, and she knew him for Odin
+the Allfather.
+
+"Whom seekest thou, maid Gudruda?" he asked, and the voice he spoke
+with was the voice of waters.
+
+"I seek Eric Brighteyes," she answered, "who passed hither a thousand
+years ago, and for love of whom I am heart-broken."
+
+"Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur's son?" quoth Odin. "I know him well; no
+brisker warrior enters at Valhalla's doors, and none shall do more
+service at the coming of grey wolf Fenrir.[*] Pass on and leave him to
+his glory and his God."
+
+[*] The foe destined to bring destruction on the Norse gods.
+
+Then, in her dream, she wept sore, and prayed of Odin by the name of
+Freya that he would give Eric to her for a little space.
+
+"What wilt thou pay, then, maid Gudruda?" said Odin.
+
+"My life," she answered.
+
+"Good," he said; "for a night Eric shall be thine. Then die, and let
+thy death be his cause of death." And Odin sang this song:
+
+ "Now, corse-choosing Daughters, hearken
+ To the dread Allfather's word:
+ When the gale of spears' breath gathers
+ Count not Eric midst the slain,
+ Till Brighteyen once hath slumbered,
+ Wedded, at Gudruda's side--
+ Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;
+ Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!"
+
+And Gudruda awoke, but in her ears the mighty waters still seemed to
+speak with Odin's voice, saying:
+
+ "Then, Maidens, scream your battle call;
+ Whelmed with foes, let Eric fall!"
+
+She awoke from that fey sleep, and looked upwards, and lo! before her,
+with shattered shield and all besmeared with war's red rain, stood
+gold-helmed Eric. There he stood, great and beautiful to see, and she
+looked on him trembling and amazed.
+
+"Is it indeed thou, Eric, or is it yet my dream?" she said.
+
+"I am no dream, surely," said Eric; "but why lookest thou thus on me,
+Gudruda?"
+
+She rose slowly. "Methought," she said, "methought that thou wast dead
+at the hand of Skallagrim." And with a great cry she fell into his
+arms and lay there sobbing.
+
+It was a sweet sight thus to see Gudruda the Fair, her head of gold
+pillowed on Eric's war-stained byrnie, her dark eyes afloat with tears
+of joy; but not so thought Swanhild, watching. She shook in jealous
+rage, then crept away, and hid herself where she could see no more,
+lest she should be smitten with madness.
+
+"Whence camest thou? ah! whence camest thou?" said Gudruda. "I thought
+thee dead, my love; but now I dreamed that I prayed Odin, and he
+spared thee to me for a little."
+
+"Well, and that he hath, though hardly," and he told her all that had
+happened, and how, as he rode with Skallagrim, who yet sat yonder on
+his horse, he caught sight of a woman seated on the grass and knew the
+colour of the cloak.
+
+Then Gudruda kissed him for very joy, and they were happy each with
+each--for of all things that are sweet on earth, there is nothing more
+sweet that this: to find him we loved, and thought dead and cold,
+alive and at our side.
+
+And so they talked and were very glad with the gladness of youth and
+love, till Eric said he must on to Middalhof before the light failed,
+for he could not come on horseback the way that Gudruda took, but must
+ride round the shoulder of the hill; and, moreover, he was spent with
+toil and hunger, and Skallagrim grew weary of waiting.
+
+"Go!" said Gudruda; "I will be there presently!"
+
+So he kissed her and went, and Swanhild saw the kiss and saw him go.
+
+
+
+"Well, lord," said Skallagrim, "hast thou had thy fill of kissing?"
+
+"Not altogether," answered Eric.
+
+They rode a while in silence.
+
+"I thought the maid seemed very fair!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"There are women less favoured, Skallagrim."
+
+"Rich bait for mighty fish!" said Skallagrim. "This I tell thee: that,
+strive as thou mayest against thy fate, that maid will be thy bane and
+mine also."
+
+"Things foredoomed will happen," said Eric; "but if thou fearest a
+maid, the cure is easy: depart from my company."
+
+"Who was the other?" asked the Baresark--"she who crept and peered,
+listened, then crept back again, hid her face in her hands, and talked
+with a grey wolf that came to her like a dog?"
+
+"That must have been Swanhild," said Eric, "but I did not see her.
+Ever does she hide like a rat in the thatch, and as for the wolf, he
+must be her Familiar; for, like Groa, her mother, Swanhild plays much
+with witchcraft. Now I will away back to Gudruda, for my heart
+misdoubts me of this matter. Stay thou here till I come, Lambstail!"
+And Eric turns and gallops back to the head of Goldfoss.
+
+
+
+When Eric left her, Gudruda drew yet nearer to the edge of the mighty
+falls, and seated herself on their very brink. Her breast was full of
+joy, and there she sat and let the splendour of the night and the
+greatness of the rushing sounds sink into her heart. Yonder shone the
+setting sun, poised, as it were, on Westman's distant peaks, and here
+sped the waters, and by that path Eric had come back to her. Yea, and
+there on Sheep-saddle was the road that he had trod down Goldfoss; and
+but now he had slain one Baresark and won another to be his thrall,
+and they two alone had smitten the company of Ospakar, and come thence
+with honour and but little harmed. Surely no such man as Eric had ever
+lived--none so fair and strong and tender; and she was right happy in
+his love! She stretched out her arms towards him whom but an hour gone
+she had thought dead, but who had lived to come back to her with
+honour, and blessed his beloved name, and laughed aloud in her
+joyousness of heart, calling:
+
+"/Eric! Eric!/"
+
+But Swanhild, creeping behind her, did not laugh. She heard Gudruda's
+voice and guessed Gudruda's gladness, and jealousy arose within her
+and rent her. Should this fair rival like to take her joy from her?
+
+"/Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what sayest thou?/"
+
+See, now, if Gudruda were gone, if she rolled a corpse into those
+boiling waters, Eric might yet be hers; or, if he was not hers, yet
+Gudruda's he could never be.
+
+"/Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy counsel?/"
+
+Right on the brink of the great gulf sat Gudruda. One stroke and all
+would be ended. Eric had gone; there was no eye to see--none save the
+Grey Wolf's; there was no tongue to tell the deed that might be done.
+Who could call her to account? The Gods! Who were the Gods? What were
+the Gods? Were they not dreams? There were no Gods save the Gods of
+Evil--the Gods she knew and communed with.
+
+"/Grey Wolf, Grey Wolf! what is thy rede?/"
+
+There sat Gudruda, laughing in the triumph of her joy, with the
+sunset-glow shining on her beauty, and there, behind her, Swanhild
+crept--crept like a fox upon his sleeping prey.
+
+Now she is there--
+
+"/I hear thee, Grey Wolf! Back to my breast, Grey Wolf!/"
+
+Surely Gudruda heard something? She half turned her head, then again
+fell to calling aloud to the waters:
+
+"Eric! beloved Eric!--ah! is there ever a light like the light of
+thine eyes--is there ever a joy like the joy of thy kiss?"
+
+Swanhild heard, and her springs of mercy froze. Hate and fury entered
+into her. She rose upon her knees and gathered up her strength:
+
+"Seek, then, thy joy in Goldfoss," she cried aloud, and with all her
+force she thrust.
+
+Gudruda fell a fathom or more, then, with a cry, she clutched wildly
+at a little ledge of rock, and hung there, her feet resting on the
+shelving bank. Thirty fathoms down swirled and poured and rolled the
+waters of the Golden Falls. A fathom above, red in the red light of
+evening, lowered the pitiless face of Swanhild. Gudruda looked beneath
+her and saw. Pale with agony she looked up and saw, but she said
+naught.
+
+"Let go, my rival; let go!" cried Swanhild: "there is none to help
+thee, and none to tell thy tale. Let go, I say, and seek thy marriage-
+bed in Goldfoss!"
+
+But Gudruda clung on and gazed upwards with white face and piteous
+eyes.
+
+"What! art thou so fain of a moment's life?" said Swanhild. "Then I
+will save thee from thyself, for it must be ill to suffer thus!" and
+she ran to seek a rock. Now she finds one and, staggering beneath its
+weight to the brink of the gulf, peers over. Still Gudruda hangs.
+Space yawns beneath her, the waters roar in her ears, the red sky
+glows above. She sees Swanhild come and shrieks aloud.
+
+Eric is there, though Swanhild hears him not, for the sound of his
+horse's galloping feet is lost in the roar of waters. But that cry
+comes to his ears, he sees the poised rock, and all grows clear to
+him. He leaps from his horse, and even as she looses the stone,
+clutches Swanhild's kirtle and hurls her back. The rock bounds
+sideways and presently is lost in the waters.
+
+Eric looks over. He sees Gudruda's white face gleaming in the gloom.
+Down he leaps upon the ledge, though this is no easy thing.
+
+"Hold fast! I come; hold fast!" he cries.
+
+"I can no more," gasps Gudruda, and one hand slips.
+
+Eric grasps the rock and, stretching downward, grips her wrist; just
+as her hold loosens he grips it, and she swings loose, her weight
+hanging on his arm.
+
+Now he must needs lift her up and that with one hand, for the ledge is
+narrow and he dare not loose his hold of the rock above. She swings
+over the great gulf and she is senseless as one dead. He gathers all
+his mighty strength and lifts. His feet slip a little, then catch, and
+once more Gudruda swings. The sweat bursts out upon his forehead and
+his blood drums through him. Now it must be, or not at all. Again he
+lifts and his muscles strain and crack, and she lies beside him on the
+narrow ledge!
+
+All is not yet done. The brink of the cleft is the height of a man
+above him. There he must lay her, for he may not leave her to find
+aid, lest she should wake and roll into the chasm. Loosing his hold of
+the cliff, he turns, facing the rock, and, bending over Gudruda,
+twists his hands in her kirtle below the breast and above the knee.
+Then once more Eric puts out his might and draws her up to the level
+of his breast, and rests. Again with all his force he lifts her above
+the crest of his helm and throws her forward, so that now she lies
+upon the brink of the great cliff. He almost falls backward at the
+effort, but, clutching the rock, he saves himself, and with a struggle
+gains her side, and lies there, panting like a wearied hound of chase.
+
+Of all trials of strength that ever were put upon his might, Eric was
+wont to say, this lifting of Gudruda was the greatest; for she was no
+light woman, and there was little to stand on and almost nothing to
+cling to.
+
+Presently Brighteyes rose and peered at Gudruda through the gloom. She
+still swooned. Then he gazed about him--but Swanhild, the witchgirl,
+was gone.
+
+Then he took Gudruda in his arms, and, leading the horse, stumbled
+through the darkness, calling on Skallagrim. The Baresark answered,
+and presently his large form was seen looming in the gloom.
+
+Eric told his tale in few words.
+
+"The ways of womankind are evil," said Skallagrim; "but of all the
+deeds that I have known done at their hands, this is the worst. It had
+been well to hurl the wolf-witch from the cliff."
+
+"Ay, well," said Eric; "but that song must yet be sung."
+
+Now dimly lighted of the rising moon by turns they bore Gudruda down
+the mountain side, till at length, utterly fordone, they saw the fires
+of Middalhof.
+
+
+
+X
+
+HOW ASMUND SPOKE WITH SWANHILD
+
+Now as the days went, though Atli's ship was bound for sea, she did
+not sail, and it came about that the Earl sank ever deeper in the
+toils of Swanhild. He called to mind many wise saws, but these availed
+him little: for when Love rises like the sun, wisdom melts like the
+mists. So at length it came to this, that on the day of Eric's coming
+back, Atli went to Asmund the Priest, and asked him for the hand of
+Swanhild the Fatherless in marriage. Asmund heard and was glad, for he
+knew well that things went badly between Swanhild and Gudruda, and it
+seemed good to him that seas should be set between them. Nevertheless,
+he thought it honest to warn the Earl that Swanhild was apart from
+other women.
+
+"Thou dost great honour, earl, to my foster-daughter and my house," he
+said. "Still, it behoves me to move gently in this matter. Swanhild is
+fair, and she shall not go hence a wife undowered. But I must tell
+thee this: that her ways are dark and secret, and strange and fiery
+are her moods, and I think that she will bring evil on the man who
+weds her. Now, I love thee, Atli, were it only for our youth's sake,
+and thou art not altogether fit to mate with such a maid, for age has
+met thee on thy way. For, as thou wouldst say, youth draws to youth as
+the tide to the shore, and falls away from eld as the wave from the
+rock. Think, then: is it well that thou shouldst take her, Atli?"
+
+"I have thought much and overmuch," answered the Earl, stroking his
+grey beard; "but ships old and new drive before a gale."
+
+"Ay, Atli, and the new ship rides, where the old one founders."
+
+"A true rede, a heavy rede, Asmund; yet I am minded to sail this sea,
+and, if it sink me--well, I have known fair weather! Great longing has
+got hold of me, and I think the maid looks gently on me, and that
+things may yet go well between us. I have many things to give such as
+women love. At the least, if thou givest me thy good word, I will risk
+it, Asmund: for the bold thrower sometimes wins the stake. Only I say
+this, that, if Swanhild is unwilling, let there be an end of my
+wooing, for I do not wish to take a bride who turns from my grey
+hairs."
+
+Asmund said that it should be so, and they made an end of talking just
+as the light faded.
+
+Now Asmund went out seeking Swanhild, and presently he met her near
+the stead. He could not see her face, and that was well, for it was
+not good to look on, but her mien was wondrous wild.
+
+"Where hast thou been, Swanhild?" he asked.
+
+"Mourning Eric Brighteyes," she made answer.
+
+"It is meeter for Gudruda to mourn over Eric than for thee, for her
+loss is heavy," Asmund said sternly. "What hast thou to do with Eric?"
+
+"Little, or much; or all--read it as thou wilt, foster-father. Still,
+all wept for are not lost, nor all who are lost wept for."
+
+"Little do I know of thy dark redes," said Asmund. "Where is Gudruda
+now?"
+
+"High is she or low, sleeping or perchance awakened: naught reck I.
+She also mourned for Eric, and we went nigh to mingling tears--near
+together were brown curls and golden," and she laughed aloud.
+
+"Thou art surely fey, thou evil girl!" said Asmund.
+
+"Ay, foster-father, fey: yet is this but the first of my feydom. Here
+starts the road that I must travel, and my feet shall be red ere the
+journey's done."
+
+"Leave thy dark talk," said Asmund, "for to me it is as the wind's
+song, and listen: a good thing has befallen thee--ay, good beyond thy
+deserving."
+
+"Is it so? Well, I stand greatly in need of good. What is thy tidings,
+foster-father?"
+
+"This: Atli the Earl asks thee in marriage, and he is a mighty man,
+well honoured in his own land, and set higher, moreover, than I had
+looked for thee."
+
+"Ay," answered Swanhild, "set like the snow above the fells, set in
+the years that long are dead. Nay, foster-father, this white-bearded
+dotard is no mate for me. What! shall I mix my fire with his frost, my
+breathing youth with the creeping palsy of his age? Never! If Swanhild
+weds she weds not so, for it is better to go maiden to the grave than
+thus to shrink and wither at the touch of eld. Now is Atli's wooing
+sped, and there's an end."
+
+Asmund heard and grew wroth, for the matter seemed strange to him; nor
+are maidens wont thus to put aside the word of those set over them.
+
+"There is no end," he said; "I will not be answered thus by a girl who
+lives upon my bounty. It is my rede that thou weddest Atli, or else
+thou goest hence. I have loved thee, and for that love's sake I have
+borne thy wickedness, thy dark secret ways, and evil words; but I will
+be crossed no more by thee, Swanhild."
+
+"Thou wouldst drive me hence with Groa my mother, though perchance
+thou hast yet more reason to hold me dear, foster-father. Fear not: I
+will go--perhaps further than thou thinkest," and once more Swanhild
+laughed, and passed from him into the darkness.
+
+But Asmund stood looking after her. "Truly," he said in his heart,
+"ill deeds are arrows that pierce him who shot them. I have sowed
+evilly, and now I reap the harvest. What means she with her talk of
+Gudruda and the rest?"
+
+Now as he thought, he saw men and horses draw near, and one man, whose
+helm gleamed in the moonlight, bore something in his arms.
+
+"Who passes?" he called.
+
+"Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda, Asmund's
+daughter," answered a voice; "who art thou?"
+
+Then Asmund the Priest sprang forward, most glad at heart, for he
+never thought to see Eric again.
+
+"Welcome, and thrice welcome art thou, Eric," he cried; "for, know, we
+deemed thee dead."
+
+"I have lately gone near to death, lord," said Eric, for he knew the
+voice; "but I am hale and whole, though somewhat weary."
+
+"What has come to pass, then?" asked Asmund, "and why holdest thou
+Gudruda in thy arms? Is the maid dead?"
+
+"Nay, she does but swoon. See, even now she stirs," and as he spake
+Gudruda awoke, shuddering, and with a little cry threw her arms about
+the neck of Eric.
+
+He set her down and comforted her, then once more turned to Asmund:
+
+"Three things have come about," he said. "First, I have slain one
+Baresark, and won another to be my thrall, and for him I crave thy
+peace, for he has served me well. Next, we two were set upon by
+Ospakar Blacktooth and his fellowship, and, fighting for our hands,
+have wounded Ospakar, slain Mord his son, and six other men of his
+following."
+
+"That is good news and bad," said Asmund, "since Ospakar will ask a
+great weregild[*] for these men, and thou wilt be outlawed, Eric."
+
+[*] The penalty for manslaying.
+
+"That may happen, lord. There is time enough to think of it. Now there
+are other tidings to tell. Coming to the head of Goldfoss I found
+Gudruda, my betrothed, mourning my death, and spoke with her.
+Afterwards I left her, and presently returned again, to see her
+hanging over the gulf, and Swanhild hurling rocks upon her to crush
+her."
+
+"These are tidings in truth," said Asmund--"such tidings as my heart
+feared! Is this true, Gudruda?"
+
+"It is true, my father," answered Gudruda, trembling. "As I sat on the
+brink of Goldfoss, Swanhild crept behind me and thrust me into the
+gulf. There I clung above the waters, and she brought a rock to hurl
+upon me, when suddenly I saw Eric's face, and after that my mind left
+me and I can tell no more."
+
+Now Asmund grew as one mad. He plucked at his beard and stamped on the
+ground. "Maid though she be," he cried, "yet shall Swanhild's back be
+broken on the Stone of Doom for a witch and a murderess, and her body
+hurled into the pool of faithless women, and the earth will be well
+rid of her!"
+
+Now Gudruda looked up and smiled: "It would be ill to wreak such a
+vengeance on her, father," she said; "and this would also bring the
+greatest shame on thee, and all our house. I am saved, by the mercy of
+the Gods and the might of Eric's arm, and this is my counsel: that
+nothing be told of this tale, but that Swanhild be sent away where she
+can harm us no more."
+
+"She must be sent to the grave, then," said Asmund, and fell to
+thinking. Presently he spoke again: "Bid yon man fall back, I would
+speak with you twain," and Skallagrim went grumbling.
+
+"Hearken now, Eric and Gudruda: only an hour ago hath Atli the Good
+asked Swanhild of me in marriage. But now I met Swanhild here, and her
+mien was wild. Still, I spoke of the matter to her, and she would have
+none of it. Now, this is my counsel: that choice be given to Swanhild,
+either that she go hence Atli's wife, or take her trial in the Doom-
+ring."
+
+"That will be bad for the Earl then," said Eric. "Methinks he is too
+good a man to be played on thus."
+
+"/Bairn first, then friend/," answered Asmund.
+
+"Now I will tell thee something that, till this hour, I have hidden
+from all, for it is my shame. This Swanhild is my daughter, and
+therefore I have loved her and put away her evil deeds, and she is
+half-sister to thee, Gudruda. See, then, how sore is my straight, who
+must avenge daughter upon daughter."
+
+"Knows thy son Bjrn of this?" asked Eric.
+
+"None knew it till this hour, except Groa and I."
+
+"Yet I have feared it long, father," said Gudruda, "and therefore I
+have also borne with Swanhild, though she hates me much and has
+striven hard to draw my betrothed from me. Now thou canst only take
+one counsel, and it is: to give choice to Swanhild of these two
+things, though it is unworthy that Atli should be deceived, and at the
+best little good can come of it."
+
+"Yet it must be done, for honour is often slain of heavy need," said
+Asmund. "But we must first swear this Baresark thrall of thine, though
+little faith lives in Baresark's breast."
+
+Now Eric called to Skallagrim and charged him strictly that he should
+tell nothing of Swanhild, and of the wolf that he saw by her, and of
+how Gudruda was found hanging over the gulf.
+
+"Fear not," growled the Baresark, "my tongue is now my master's. What
+is it to me if women do their wickedness one on another? Let them work
+magic, hate and slay by stealth, so shall evil be lessened in the
+world."
+
+"Peace!" said Eric; "if anything of this passes thy lips thou art no
+longer a thrall of mine, and I give thee up to the men of thy
+quarter."
+
+"And I cleave that wolf's head of thine down to thy hawk's eyes; but,
+otherwise, I give thee peace, and will hold thee from harm, wood-
+dweller as thou art," said Asmund.
+
+The Baresark laughed: "My hands will hold my head against ten such
+mannikins as thou art, Priest. There was never but one man who might
+overcome me in fair fight and there he stands, and his bidding is my
+law. So waste no words and make not niddering threats against greater
+folk," and he slouched back to his horse.
+
+"A mighty man and a rough," said Asmund, looking after him; "I like
+his looks little."
+
+"Natheless a strong in battle," quoth Eric; "had he not been at my
+back some six hours gone, by now the ravens had torn out these eyes of
+mine. Therefore, for my sake, bear with him."
+
+Asmund said it should be so, and then they passed on to the stead.
+
+Here Eric stripped off his harness, washed, and bound up his wounds.
+Then, followed by Skallagrim, axe in hand, he came into the hall as
+men made ready to sit at meat. Now the tale of the mighty deeds that
+he had done, except that of the saving of Gudruda, had gone abroad,
+and as Brighteyes came all men rose and with one voice shouted till
+the roof of the great hall rocked:
+
+"/Welcome, Eric Brighteyes, thou glory of the south!/"
+
+Only Bjrn, Asmund's son, bit his hand, and did not shout, for he
+hated Eric because of the fame that he had won.
+
+Brighteyes stood still till the clamour died, then said:
+
+"Much noise for little deeds, brethren. It is true that I overthrew
+the Mosfell Baresarks. See, here is one," and he turned to Skallagrim;
+"I strangled him in my arms on Mosfell's brink, and that was something
+of a deed. Then he swore fealty to me, and we are blood-brethren now,
+and therefore I ask peace for him, comrades--even from those whom he
+has wronged or whose kin he has slain. I know this, that when
+thereafter we stood back to back and met the company of Ospakar
+Blacktooth, who came to slay us--ay, and Asmund also, and bear away
+Gudruda to be his wife--he warred right gallantly, till seven of their
+band lay stiff on Horse-Head Heights, overthrown of us, and among them
+Mord, Blacktooth's son; and Ospakar himself went thence sore smitten
+of this Skallagrim. Therefore, for my sake, do no harm to this man who
+was Baresark, but now is my thrall; and, moreover, I beg the aid and
+friendship of all men of this quarter in those suits that will be laid
+against me at the Althing for these slayings, which I hereby give out
+as done by my hand, and by the hand of Skallagrim Lambstail, the
+Baresark."
+
+At these words all men shouted again; but Atli the Earl sprang from
+the high seat where Asmund had placed him, and, coming to Eric, kissed
+him, and, drawing a gold chain from his neck, flung it about the neck
+of Eric, crying:
+
+"Thou art a glorious man, Eric Brighteyes. I thought the world had no
+more of such a breed. Listen to my bidding: come thou to the earldom
+in Orkneys and be a son to me, and I will give thee all good gifts,
+and, when I die, thou shalt sit in my seat after me."
+
+But Eric thought of Swanhild, who must go from Iceland as wife to
+Atli, and answered:
+
+"Thou doest me great honour, Earl, but this may not be. Where the fir
+is planted, there it must grow and fall. Iceland I love, and I will
+stay here among my own people till I am driven away."
+
+"That may well happen, then," said Atli, "for be sure Ospakar and his
+kin will not let the matter of these slayings rest, and I think that
+it will not avail thee much that thou smotest for thine own hand.
+Then, come thou and be my man."
+
+"Where the Norns lead there I must follow," said Eric, and sat down to
+meat. Skallagrim sat down also at the side-bench; but men shrank from
+him, and he glowered on them in answer.
+
+Presently Gudruda entered, and she seemed pale and faint.
+
+When he had done eating, Eric drew Gudruda on to his knee, and she sat
+there, resting her golden head upon his breast. But Swanhild did not
+come into the hall, though ever Earl Atli sought her dark face and
+lovely eyes of blue, and he wondered greatly how his wooing had sped.
+Still, at this time he spoke no more of it to Asmund.
+
+Now Skallagrim drank much ale, and glared about him fiercely; for he
+had this fault, that at times he was drunken. In front of him were two
+thralls of Asmund's; they were brothers, and large-made men, and they
+watched Asmund's sheep upon the fells in winter. These two also grew
+drunk and jeered at Skallagrim, asking him what atonement he would
+make for those ewes of Asmund's that he had stolen last Yule, and how
+it came to pass that he, a Baresark, had been overthrown of an unarmed
+man.
+
+Skallagrim bore their gibes for a space as he drank on, but suddenly
+he rose and rushed at them, and, seizing a man's throat in either
+hand, thrust them to the ground beneath him and nearly choked them
+there.
+
+Then Eric ran down the hall, and, putting out his strength, tore the
+Baresark from them.
+
+"This then is thy peacefulness, thou wolf!" Eric cried. "Thou art
+drunk!"
+
+"Ay," growled Skallagrim, "ale is many a man's doom."
+
+"Have a care that it is not thine and mine, then!" said Eric. "Go,
+sleep; and know that, if I see thee thus once more, I see thee not
+again."
+
+
+
+But after this men jeered no more at Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric's
+thrall.
+
+
+
+XI
+
+HOW SWANHILD BID FAREWELL TO ERIC
+
+Now all this while Asmund sat deep in thought; but when, at length,
+men were sunk in sleep, he took a candle of fat and passed to the shut
+bed where Swanhild slept alone. She lay on her bed, and her curling
+hair was all about her. She was awake, for the light gleamed in her
+blue eyes, and on a naked knife that was on the bed beside her, half
+hidden by her hair.
+
+"What wouldst thou, foster-father?" she asked, rising in the couch.
+Asmund closed the curtains, then looked at her sternly and spoke in a
+low voice:
+
+"Thou art fair to be so vile a thing, Swanhild," he said. "Who now
+would have dreamed that heart of thine could talk with goblins and
+with were-wolves--that those eyes of thine could bear to look on
+murder and those white hands find strength to do the sin?"
+
+She held up her shapely arms and, looking on them, laughed. "Would
+that they had been fashioned in a stronger mould," she said. "May they
+wither in their woman's weakness! else had the deed been done
+outright. Now my crime is as heavy upon me and nothing gained by it.
+Say what fate for me, foster-father--the Stone of Doom and the pool
+where faithless women lie? Ah, then might Gudruda laugh indeed, and I
+will not live to hear that laugh. See," and she gripped the dagger at
+her side: "along this bright edge runs the path to peace and freedom,
+and, if need be, I will tread it."
+
+"Be silent," said Asmund. "This Gudruda, my daughter, whom thou
+wouldst have foully done to death, is thine own sister, and it is she
+who, pitying thee, hath pleaded for thy life."
+
+"I will naught of her pity who have no pity," she answered; "and this
+I say to thee who art my father: shame be on thee who hast not dared
+to own thy child!"
+
+"Hadst thou not been my child, Swanhild, and had I not loved thee
+secretly as my child, be sure of this, I had long since driven thee
+hence; for my eyes have been open to much that I have not seemed to
+see. But at length thy wickedness has overcome my love, and I will see
+thy face no more. Listen: none have heard of this shameful deed of
+thine save those who saw it, and their tongues are sealed. Now I give
+thee choice: wed Atli and go, or stand in the Doom-ring and take thy
+fate."
+
+"Have I not said, father, while death may be sought otherwise, that I
+will never do this last? Nor will I do the first. I am not all of the
+tame breed of you Iceland folk--other and quicker blood runs in my
+veins; nor will I be sold in marriage to a dotard as a mare is sold at
+a market. I have answered."
+
+"Fool! think again, for I go not back upon my word. Wed Atli or die--
+by thy own hand, if thou wilt--there I will not gainsay thee; or, if
+thou fearest this, then anon in the Doom-ring."
+
+Now Swanhild covered her eyes with her hands and shook the long hair
+about her face, and she seemed wondrous fair to Asmund the Priest who
+watched. And as she sat thus, it came into her mind that marriage is
+not the end of a young maid's life--that old husbands have been known
+to die, and that she might rule this Atli and his earldom and become a
+rich and honoured woman, setting her sails in such fashion that when
+the wind turned it would fill them. Otherwise she must die--ay, die
+shamed and leave Gudruda with her love.
+
+Suddenly she slipped from the bed to the floor of the chamber, and,
+clasping the knees of Asmund, looked up through the meshes of her
+hair, while tears streamed from her beautiful eyes:
+
+"I have sinned," she sobbed--"I have sinned greatly against thee and
+my sister. Hearken: I was mad with love of Eric, whom from a child I
+have turned to, and Gudruda is fairer than I and she took him from me.
+Most of all was I mad this night when I wrought the deed of shame, for
+ill things counselled me--things that I did not call; and oh, I thank
+the Gods--if there are Gods--that Gudruda died not at my hand. See
+now, father, I put this evil from me and tear Eric from my heart," and
+she made as though she rent her bosom--"I will wed Atli, and be a good
+housewife to him, and I crave but this of Gudruda: that she forgive me
+her wrong; for it was not done of my will, but of my madness, and of
+the driving of those whom my mother taught me to know."
+
+Asmund listened and the springs of his love thawed within him. "Now
+thou dost take good counsel," he said, "and of this be sure, that so
+long as thou art in that mood none shall harm thee; and for Gudruda,
+she is the most gentle of women, and it may well be that she will put
+away thy sin. So weep no more, and have no more dealings with thy
+Finnish witchcraft, but sleep; and to-morrow I will bear thy word to
+Atli, for his ship is bound and thou must swiftly be made a wife."
+
+He went out, bearing the light with him; but Swanhild rose from the
+ground and sat on the edge of the bed, staring into the darkness and
+shuddering from time to time.
+
+"I shall soon be made his wife," she murmured, "who would be but one
+man's wife--and methinks I shall soon be made a widow also. Thou wilt
+have me, dotard--take me and thy fate! Well, well; better to wed an
+Earl than to be shamed and stretched across the Doom-stone. Oh, weak
+arms that failed me at my need, no more will I put trust in you! When
+next I wound, it shall be with the tongue; when next I strive to slay,
+it shall be by another's hand. Curses on thee, thou ill counseller of
+darkness, who didst betray me at the last! Is it for this that I
+worshipped thee and swore the oath?"
+
+
+
+The morning came, and at the first light Asmund sought the Earl. His
+heart was heavy because of the guile that his tongue must practise,
+and his face was dark as a winter dawn.
+
+"What news, Asmund?" asked Atli. "/Early tidings are bad tidings/, so
+runs the saw, and thy looks give weight to it."
+
+"Not altogether bad, Earl. Swanhild gives herself to thee."
+
+"Of her own will, Asmund?"
+
+"Ay, of her own will. But I have warned thee of her temper."
+
+"Her temper! Little hangs to a maid's temper. Once a wife and it will
+melt in softness like the snow when summer comes. These are glad
+tidings, comrade, and methinks I grow young again beneath the breath
+of them. Why art thou so glum then?"
+
+"There is something that must yet be told of Swanhild," said Asmund.
+"She is called the Fatherless, but, if thou wilt have the truth, why
+here it is for thee--she is my daughter, born out of wedlock, and I
+know not how that will please thee."
+
+Atli laughed aloud, and his bright eyes shone in his wrinkled face.
+"It pleases me well, Asmund, for then the maid is sprung from a sound
+stock. The name of the Priest of Middalhof is famous far south of
+Iceland; and never that Iceland bred a comelier girl. Is that all?"
+
+"One more thing, Earl. This I charge thee: watch thy wife, and hold
+her back from witchcraft and from dealings with evil things and trolls
+of darkness. She is of Finnish blood and the women of the Finns are
+much given to such wicked work."
+
+"I set little store by witchwork, goblins and their kin," said Atli.
+"I doubt me much of their power, and I shall soon wean Swanhild from
+such ways, if indeed she practise them."
+
+Then they fell to talking of Swanhild's dower, and that was not small.
+Afterwards Asmund sought Eric and Gudruda, and told them what had come
+to pass, and they were glad at the news, though they grieved for Atli
+the Earl. And when Swanhild met Gudruda, she came to her humbly, and
+humbly kissed her hand, and with tears craved pardon of her evil
+doing, saying that she had been mad; nor did Gudruda withhold it, for
+of all women she was the gentlest and most forgiving. But to Eric,
+Swanhild said nothing.
+
+The wedding-feast must be held on the third day from this, for Atli
+would sail on that same day, since his people wearied of waiting and
+his ship might lie bound no longer. Blithe was Atli the Earl, and
+Swanhild was all changed, for now she seemed the gentlest of maids,
+and, as befitted one about to be made a wife, moved through the house
+with soft words and downcast eyes. But Skallagrim, watching her,
+bethought him of the grey wolf that he had seen by Goldfoss, and this
+seemed not well to him.
+
+"It would be bad now," he said to Eric, as they rode to Coldback, "to
+stand in yon old earl's shoes. This woman's weather has changed too
+fast, and after such a calm there'll come a storm indeed. I am now
+minded of Thorunna, for she went just so the day before she gave
+herself to Ospakar, and me to shame and bonds."
+
+"Talk not of the raven till you hear his croak," said Eric.
+
+"He is on the wing, lord," answered Skallagrim.
+
+Now Eric came to Coldback in the Marsh, and Saevuna his mother and
+Unna, Thorod's daughter, the betrothed of Asmund, were glad to welcome
+him; for the tidings of his mighty deeds and of the overthrow of
+Ospakar and the slaying of Mord were noised far and wide. But at
+Skallagrim Lambstail they looked askance. Still, when they heard of
+those things that he had wrought on Horse-Head Heights, they welcomed
+him for his deed's sake.
+
+Eric sat two nights at Coldback, and on the second day Saevuna his
+mother and Unna rode thence with their servants to the wedding-feast
+of Swanhild the Fatherless. But Eric stopped at Coldback that night,
+saying that he would be at Middalhof within two hours of sunrise, for
+he must talk with a shepherd who came from the fells.
+
+Saevuna and her company came to Middalhof and was asked, first by
+Gudruda, then by Swanhild, why Brighteyes tarried. She answered that
+he would be there early on the morrow. Next morning, before it was
+light, Eric girded on Whitefire, took horse and rode from Coldback
+alone, for he would not bring Skallagrim, fearing lest he should get
+drunk at the feast and shed some man's blood.
+
+It was Swanhild's wedding-day; but she greeted it with little
+lightsomeness of heart, and her eyes knew no sleep that night, though
+they were heavy with tears.
+
+At the first light she rose, and, gliding from the house, walked
+through the heavy dew down the path by which Eric must draw near, for
+she desired to speak with him. Gudruda also rose a while after, though
+she did not know this, and followed on the same path, for she would
+greet her lover at his coming.
+
+Now three furlongs or more from the stead stood a vetch stack, and
+Swanhild waited on the further side of this stack. Presently she heard
+a sound of singing come from behind the shoulder of the fell and of
+the tramp of a horse's hoofs. Then she saw the golden wings of Eric's
+helm all ablaze with the sunlight as he rode merrily along, and great
+bitterness laid hold of her that Eric could be of such a joyous mood
+on the day when she who loved him must be made the wife of another
+man.
+
+Presently he was before her, and Swanhild stepped from the shadow of
+the stack and laid her hand upon his horse's bridle.
+
+"Eric," she said humbly and with bowed head, "Gudruda sleeps yet.
+Canst thou, then, find time to hearken to my words?"
+
+He frowned and said: "Methinks, Swanhild, it would be better if thou
+gavest thy words to him who is thy lord."
+
+She let the bridle-rein drop from her hands. "I am answered," she
+said; "ride on."
+
+Now pity stirred in Eric's heart, for Swanhild's mien was most heavy,
+and he leaped down from his horse. "Nay," he said, "speak on, if thou
+hast anything to tell me."
+
+"I have this to tell thee, Eric; that now, before we part for ever, I
+am come to ask thy pardon for my ill-doing--ay, and to wish all joy to
+thee and thy fair love," and she sobbed and choked.
+
+"Speak no more of it, Swanhild," he said, "but let thy good deeds
+cover up the ill, which are not small; so thou shalt be happy."
+
+She looked at him strangely, and her face was white with pain.
+
+"How then are we so differently fashioned that thou, Eric, canst prate
+to me of happiness when my heart is racked with grief? Oh, Eric, I
+blame thee not, for thou hast not wrought this evil on me willingly;
+but I say this: that my heart is dead, as I would that I were dead.
+See those flowers: they smell sweet--for me they have no odour. Look
+on the light leaping from Coldback to the sea, from the sea to Westman
+Isles, and from the Westman crown of rocks far into the wide heavens
+above. It is beautiful, is it not? Yet I tell thee, Eric, that now to
+my eyes howling winter darkness is every whit as fair. Joy is dead
+within me, music's but a jangled madness in my ears, food hath no
+savour on my tongue, my youth is sped ere my dawn is day. Nothing is
+left to me, Eric, save this fair body that thou didst scorn, and the
+dreams which I may gather from my hours of scanty sleep, and such
+shame as befalls a loveless bride."
+
+"Speak not so, Swanhild," he said, and clasped her by the hand, for,
+though he loathed her wickedness, being soft-hearted and but young, it
+grieved him to hear her words and see the anguish of her mind. For it
+is so with men, that they are easily moved by the pleading of a fair
+woman who loves them, even though they love her not.
+
+"Yea, I will speak out all my mind before I seal it up for ever. See,
+Eric, this is my state and thou hast set this crown of sorrow on my
+brows: and thou comest singing down the fell, and I go weeping o'er
+the sea! I am not all so ill at heart. It was love of thee that drove
+me down to sin, as love of thee might otherwise have lifted me to
+holiness. But, loving thee as thou seest, this day I wed a dotard, and
+go his chattel and his bride across the sea, and leave thee singing on
+the fell, and by thy side her who is my foe. Thou hast done great
+deeds, Brighteyes, and still greater shalt thou do; yet but as echoes
+they shall reach my ears. Thou wilt be to me as one dead, for it is
+Gudruda's to bind the byrnie on thy breast when thou goest forth to
+war, and hers to loose the winged helm from thy brow when thou
+returnest, battle-worn and conquering."
+
+Now Swanhild ceased, and choked with grief; then spoke again:
+
+"So now farewell; doubtless I weary thee, and--Gudruda waits. Nay,
+look not on my foolish tears: they are the heritage of woman, of
+naught else is she sure! While I live, Eric, morn by morn the thought
+of thee shall come to wake me as the sun wakes yon snowy peak, and
+night by night thy memory shall pass as at eve he passes from the
+valleys, but to dawn again in dreams. For, Eric, 'tis thee I wed
+to-day--at heart I am thy bride, thine and thine only; and when shalt
+thou find a wife who holds thee so dear as that Swanhild whom once
+thou knewest? So now farewell! Yes, this time thou shalt kiss away my
+tears; then let them stream for ever. Thus, Eric! and thus! and thus!
+do I take farewell of thee."
+
+And now she clung about his neck, gazing on him with great dewy eyes
+till things grew strange and dim, and he must kiss her if only for her
+love and tender beauty's sake. And so he kissed, and it chanced that
+as they clung thus, Gudruda, passing by this path to give her
+betrothed greeting, came upon them and stood astonished. Then she
+turned and, putting her hands to her head, fled back swiftly to the
+stead, and waited there, great anger burning in her heart; for Gudruda
+had this fault, that she was very jealous.
+
+Now Eric and Swanhild did not see her, and presently they parted, and
+Swanhild wiped her eyes and glided thence.
+
+As she drew near the stead she found Gudruda watching.
+
+"Where hast thou been, Swanhild?" she said.
+
+"To bid farewell to Brighteyes, Gudruda."
+
+"Then thou art foolish, for doubtless he thrust thee from him."
+
+"Nay, Gudruda, he drew me to him. Hearken, I say, thou sister. Vex me
+not, for I go my ways and thou goest thine. Thou art strong and fair,
+and hitherto thou hast overcome me. But I am also fair, and, if I find
+space to strike in, I also have a show of strength. Pray thou that I
+find not space, Gudruda. Now is Eric thine. Perchance one day he may
+be mine. It lies in the lap of the Norns."
+
+"Fair words from Atli's bride," mocked Gudruda.
+
+"Ay, Atli's bride, but never Atli's love!" said Swanhild, and swept
+on.
+
+A while after Eric rode up. He was shamefaced and vexed at heart,
+because he had yielded thus to Swanhild's beauty, and been melted by
+her tender words and kissed her. Then he saw Gudruda, and at the sight
+of her all thought of Swanhild passed from him, for he loved Gudruda
+and her alone. He leapt down from his horse and ran to her. But, drawn
+to her full height, she stood with dark flashing eyes and fair face
+set in anger.
+
+Still, he would have greeted her loverwise; but she lifted her hand
+and waved him back, and fear took hold of him.
+
+"What now, Gudruda?" he asked, faltering.
+
+"What now, Eric?" she answered, faltering not. "Hast seen Swanhild?"
+
+"Yea, I have seen Swanhild. She came to bid farewell to me. What of
+it?"
+
+"What of it? Why '/thus! and thus! and thus!/' didst thou bid farewell
+to Atli's bride. Ay, 'thus and thus,' with clinging lips and twined
+arms. Warm and soft was thy farewell kiss to her who would have slain
+me, Brighteyes!"
+
+"Gudruda, thou speakest truth, though how thou sawest I know not.
+Think no ill of it, and scourge me not with words, for, sooth to say,
+I was melted by her grief and the music of her talk."
+
+"It is shame to thee so to speak of her whom but now thou heldest in
+thine arms. By the grief and the music of the talk of her who would
+have murdered me thou wast melted into kisses, Eric!--for I saw it
+with these eyes. Knowest thou what I am minded to say to thee? It is
+this: 'Go hence and see me no more;' for I have little wish to cleave
+to such a feather-man, to one so blown about by the first breath of
+woman's tempting."
+
+"Yet, methinks, Gudruda, I have withstood some such winds. I tell thee
+that, hadst thou been in my place, thyself hadst yielded to Swanhild
+and kissed her in farewell, for she was more than woman in that hour."
+
+"Nay, Eric, I am no weak man to be led astray thus. Yet she is more
+than woman--troll is she also, that I know; but less than man art
+thou, Eric, thus to fall before her who hates me. Time may come when
+she shall woo thee after a stronger sort, and what wilt thou say to
+her then, thou who art so ready with thy kisses?"
+
+"I will withstand her, Gudruda, for I love thee only, and this is well
+known to thee."
+
+"Truly I know thou lovest me, Eric; but tell me of what worth is this
+love of man that eyes of beauty and tongue of craft may so readily
+bewray? I doubt me of thee, Eric!"
+
+"Nay, doubt me not, Gudruda. I love thee alone, but I grew soft as wax
+beneath her pleading. My heart consented not, yet I did consent. I
+have no more to say."
+
+Now Gudruda looked on him long and steadfastly. "Thy plight is sorry,
+Eric," she said, "and this once I forgive thee. Look to it that thou
+givest me no more cause to doubt thee, for then I shall remember how
+thou didst bid farewell to Swanhild."
+
+"I will give none," he answered, and would have embraced her; but this
+she would not suffer then, nor for many days after, for she was angry
+with him. But with Swanhild she was still more angry, though she said
+nothing of it. That Swanhild had tried to murder her, Gudruda could
+forgive, for there she had failed; but not that she had won Eric to
+kiss her, for in this she had succeeded well.
+
+
+
+XII
+
+HOW ERIC WAS OUTLAWED AND SAILED A-VIKING
+
+Now the marriage-feast went on, and Swanhild, draped in white and girt
+about with gold, sat by Atli's side upon the high seat. He was fain of
+her and drew her to him, but she looked at him with cold calm eyes in
+which hate lurked. The feast was done, and all the company rode to the
+sea strand, where the Earl's ship lay at anchor. They came there, and
+Swanhild kissed Asmund, and talked a while with Groa, her mother, and
+bade farewell to all men. But she bade no farewell to Eric and to
+Gudruda.
+
+"Why sayest thou no word to these two?" asked Atli, her husband.
+
+"For this reason, Earl," she answered, "because ere long we three
+shall meet again; but I shall see Asmund, my father, and Groa, my
+mother, no more."
+
+"That is an ill saying, wife," said Atli. "Methinks thou dost foretell
+their doom."
+
+"Mayhap! And now I will add to my redes, for I foretell /thy/ doom
+also: it is not yet, but it draws on."
+
+Then Atli bethought him of many wise saws, but spoke no more, for it
+seemed to him this was a strange bride that he had wed.
+
+They hauled the anchor home, shook out the great sail, and passed away
+into the evening night. But while land could still be seen, Swanhild
+stood near the helm, gazing with her blue eyes upon the lessening
+coast. Then she passed to the hold, and shut herself in alone, and
+there she stayed, saying that she was sick, till at length, after a
+fair voyage of twenty days, they made the Orkney Islands.
+
+But all this pleased Atli wondrous ill, yet he dared not cross her
+mood.
+
+
+
+Now, in Iceland the time drew on when men must ride to the Althing,
+and notice was given to Eric Brighteyes of many suits that were laid
+against him, in that he had brought Mord, Ospakar's son, to his death,
+dealing him a brain or a body or a marrow wound, and others of that
+company. But no suits were laid against Skallagrim, for he was already
+outlaw. Therefore he must go in hiding, for men were out to slay him,
+and this he did unwillingly, at Eric's bidding. Asmund took up Eric's
+case, for he was the most famous of all lawmen in that day, and when
+thirteen full weeks of summer were done, they two rode to the Thing,
+and with them a great company of men of their quarter.
+
+Now, men go up to the Lgberg, and there came Ospakar, though he was
+not yet healed of his wound, and all his company, and laid their suits
+against Eric by the mouth of Gizur the Lawman, Ospakar's son. The
+pleadings were long and cunning on either side; but the end of it was
+that Ospakar brought it about, by the help of his friends--and of
+these had many--that Eric must go into outlawry for three years. But
+no weregild was to be paid to Ospakar and his men for those who had
+been killed, and no atonement for the great wound that Skallagrim
+Lambstail gave him, or for the death of Mord, his son, inasmuch as
+Eric fought for his own hand to save his life.
+
+The party of Ospakar were ill pleased at this finding, and Eric was
+not over glad, for it was little to his mind that he should sail a-
+warring across the seas, while Gudruda sat at home in Iceland. Still,
+there was no help for the matter.
+
+Now Ospakar spoke with his company, and the end of it was that he
+called on them to take their weapons and avenge themselves by their
+own might. Asmund and Eric, seeing this, mustered their army of free-
+men and thralls. There were one hundred and five of them, all stout
+men; but Ospakar Blacktooth's band numbered a hundred and thirty-
+three, and they stood with their backs to the Raven's Rift.
+
+"Now I would that Skallagrim was here to guard my back," said Eric,
+"for before this fight is done few will left standing to tell its
+tale."
+
+"It is a sad thing," said Asmund, "that so many men must die because
+some men are now dead."
+
+"A very sad thing," said Eric, and took this counsel. He stalked alone
+towards the ranks of Ospakar and called in a loud voice, saying:
+
+"It would be grievous that so many warriors should fall in such a
+matter. Now hearken, you company of Ospakar Blacktooth! If there be
+any two among you who will dare to match their might against my single
+sword in holmgang, here I, Eric Brighteyes, stand and wait them. It is
+better that one man, or perchance three men, should fall, than that
+anon so many should roll in the dust. What say ye?"
+
+Now all those who watched called out that this was a good offer and a
+manly one, though it might turn out ill for Eric; but Ospakar
+answered:
+
+"Were I but well of my wound I alone would cut that golden comb of
+thine, thou braggart; as it is, be sure that two shall be found."
+
+"Who is the braggart?" answered Eric. "He who twice has learned the
+weight of this arm and yet boasts his strength, or I who stand craving
+that two should come against me? Get thee hence, Ospakar; get thee
+home and bid Thorunna, thy leman, whom thou didst beguile from that
+Ounound who now is named Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark, nurse thee
+whole of the wound her husband gave thee. Be sure we shall yet stand
+face to face, and that combs shall be cut then, combs black or golden.
+Nurse thee! nurse thee! cease thy prating--get thee home, and bid
+Thorunna nurse thee; but first name thou the two who shall stand
+against me in holmgang in Oxar's stream."
+
+Folk laughed aloud while Eric mocked, but Ospakar gnashed his teeth
+with rage. Still, he named the two mightiest men in his company,
+bidding them take up their swords against Brighteyes. This, indeed,
+they were loth to do; still, because of the shame that they must get
+if they hung back, and for fear of the wrath of Ospakar, they made
+ready to obey his bidding.
+
+Then all men passed down to the bank of Oxar, and, on the other side,
+people came from their booths and sat upon the slope of All Man's
+Raft, for it was a new thing that one man should fight two in
+holmgang.
+
+Now Eric crossed to the island where holmgangs are fought to this day,
+and after him came the two chosen, flourishing their swords bravely,
+and taking counsel how one should rush at his face, while the other
+passed behind his back and spitted him, as woodfolk spit a lamb. Eric
+drew Whitefire and leaned on it, waiting for the word, and all the
+women held him to be wondrous fair as, clad in his byrnie and his
+golden helm, he leaned thus on Whitefire. Presently the word was
+given, and Eric, standing not to defend himself as they deemed he
+surely would, whirled Whitefire round his helm and rushed headlong on
+his foes, shield aloft.
+
+The great carles saw the light that played on Whitefire's edge and the
+other light that burned in Eric's eyes, and terror got hold of them.
+Now he was almost come, and Whitefire sprang aloft like a tongue of
+flame. Then they stayed no more, but, running one this way and one
+that, cast themselves into the flood and swam for the river-edge. Now
+from either bank rose up a roar of laughter, that grew and grew, till
+it echoed against the lava rifts and scared the ravens from their
+nests.
+
+Eric, too, stopped his charge and laughed aloud; then walked back to
+where Asmund stood, unarmed, to second him in the holmgang.
+
+"I can get little honour from such champions as these," he said.
+
+"Nay," answered Asmund, "thou hast got the greatest honour, and they,
+and Ospakar, such shame as may not be wiped out."
+
+Now when Blacktooth saw what had come to pass, he well-nigh choked,
+and fell from his horse in fury. Still, he could find no stomach for
+fighting, but, mustering his company, rode straightway from the Thing
+home again to Swinefell. But he caused those two whom he had put up to
+do battle with Eric to be set upon with staves and driven from his
+following, and the end of it was that they might stay no more in
+Iceland, but took ship and sailed south, and now they are out of the
+story.
+
+On the next day, Asmund, and with him Eric and all their men, rode
+back to Middalhof. Gudruda greeted Eric well, and for the first time
+since Swanhild went away she kissed him. Moreover, she wept bitterly
+when she learned that he must go into outlawry, while she must bide at
+home.
+
+"How shall the days pass by, Eric?" she said, "when thou art far, and
+I know not where thou art, nor how it goes with thee, nor if thou
+livest or art already dead?"
+
+"In sooth I cannot say, sweet," he answered; "but of this I am sure
+that, wheresoever I am, yet more weary shall be my hours."
+
+"Three years," she went on--"three long, cold years, and no sight of
+thee, and perchance no tidings from thee, till mayhap I learn that
+thou art in that land whence tidings cannot come. Oh, it would be
+better to die than to part thus."
+
+"Well I wot that it is better to die than to live, and better never to
+have been born than to live and die," answered Eric sadly. "Here, it
+would seem, is nothing but hate and strife, weariness and bitter envy
+to fret away our strength, and at last, if we come so far, sorrowful
+age and death, and thereafter we know not what. Little of good do we
+find to our hands, and much of evil; nor know I for what ill-doing
+these burdens are laid upon us. Yet must we needs breathe such an air
+as is blown about us, Gudruda, clasping at this happiness which is
+given, though we may not hold it. At the worst, the game will soon be
+played, and others will stand where we have stood, and strive as we
+have striven, and fail as we have failed, and so on, till man has
+worked out his doom, and the Gods cease from their wrath, or Ragnarrk
+come upon them, and they too are lost in the jaws of grey wolf
+Fenrir."
+
+"Men may win one good thing, and that is fame, Eric."
+
+"Nay, Gudruda, what is it to win fame? Is it not to raise up foes, as
+it were, from the very soil, who, made with secret hate, seek to stab
+us in the back? Is it not to lose peace, and toil on from height to
+height only to be hurled down at last? Happy, then, is the man whom
+fame flies from, for hers is a deadly gift."
+
+"Yet there is one thing left that thou hast not numbered, Eric, and it
+is love--for love is to our life what the sun is to the world, and,
+though it seems to set in death, yet it may rise again. We are happy,
+then, in our love, for there are many who live their lives and do not
+find it."
+
+So these two, Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair, talked sadly, for
+their hearts were heavy, and on them lay the shadow of sorrows that
+were to come.
+
+"Say, sweet," said Eric at length, "wilt thou that I go not into
+banishment? Then I must fall into outlawry, and my life will be in the
+hands of him who may take it; yet I think that my foes will find it
+hard to come by while my strength remains, and at the worst I do but
+turn to meet the fate that dogs me."
+
+"Nay, that I will not suffer, Brighteyes. Now we will go to my father,
+and he shall give thee his dragon of war--she is a good vessel--and
+thou shalt man her with the briskest men of our quarter: for there are
+many who will be glad to fare abroad with thee, Eric. Soon she shall
+be bound and thou shalt sail at once, Eric: for the sooner thou art
+gone the sooner the three years will be sped, and thou shalt come back
+to me. But, oh! that I might go with thee."
+
+Now Gudruda and Eric went to Asmund and spoke of this matter.
+
+"I desired," he answered, "that thou, Eric, shouldst bide here in
+Iceland till after harvest, for it is then that I would take Unna,
+Thorod's daughter, to wife, and it was meet that thou shouldst sit at
+the wedding-feast and give her to me."
+
+"Nay, father, let Eric go," said Gudruda, "for well begun is, surely,
+half done. He must remain three years in outlawry: add thou no day to
+them, for, if he stays here for long, I know this: that I shall find
+no heart to let him go, and, if go he must, then I shall go with him."
+
+"That may never be," said Asmund; "thou art too young and fair to sail
+a-viking down the sea-path. Hearken, Eric: I give thee the good ship,
+and now we will go about to find stout men to man her."
+
+"That is a good gift," said Eric; and afterwards they rode to the
+seashore and overhauled the vessel as she lay in her shed. She was a
+great dragon of war, long and slender, and standing high at stem and
+prow. She was fashioned of oak, all bolted together with iron, and at
+her prow was a gilded dragon most wonderfully carved.
+
+Eric looked on her and his eyes brightened.
+
+"Here rests a wave-horse that shall bear a viking well," he said.
+
+"Ay," answered Asmund, "of all the things I own this ship is the very
+best. She is so swift that none may catch her, and she can almost go
+about in her own length. That gale must be heavy that shall fill her,
+with thee to steer; yet I give her to thee freely, Eric, and thou
+shalt do great deeds with this my gift, and, if things go well, she
+shall come back to this shore at last, and thou in her."
+
+"Now I will name this war-gift with a new name," said Eric.
+"'Gudruda,' I name her: for, as Gudruda here is the fairest of all
+women, so is this the fairest of all war-dragons."
+
+"So be it," said Asmund.
+
+Then they rode back to Middalhof, and now Eric Brighteyes let it be
+known that he needed men to sail the seas with him. Nor did he ask in
+vain, for, when it was told that Eric went a-viking, so great was his
+fame grown, that many a stout yeoman and many a great-limbed carle
+reached down sword and shield and came up to Middalhof to put their
+hands in his. For mate, he took a certain man named Hall of Lithdale,
+and this because Bjrn asked it, for Hall was a friend to Bjrn, and
+he had, moreover, great skill in all manner of seamanship, and had
+often sailed the Northern Seas--ay, and round England to the coast of
+France.
+
+But when Gudruda saw this man, she did not like him, because of his
+sharp face, uncanny eyes, and smooth tongue, and she prayed Eric to
+have nothing to do with him.
+
+"It is too late now to talk of that," said Eric. "Hall is a well-
+skilled man, and, for the rest, fear not: I will watch him."
+
+"Then evil will come of it," said Gudruda.
+
+Skallagrim also liked Hall little, nor did Hall love Skallagrim and
+his great axe.
+
+At length all were gathered; they were fifty in number and it is said
+that no such band of men ever took ship from Iceland.
+
+Now the great dragon was bound and her faring goods were aboard of
+her, for Eric must sail on the morrow, if the wind should be fair. All
+day long he stalked to and fro among his men; he would trust nothing
+to others, and there was no sword or shield in his company but he
+himself had proved it. All day long he stalked, and at his back went
+Skallagrim Lambstail, axe on shoulder, for he would never leave Eric
+if he had his will, and they were a mighty pair.
+
+At length all was ready and men sat down to the faring-feast in the
+hall at Middalhof, and that was a great feast. Eric's folk were
+gathered on the side-benches, and by the high seat at Asmund's side
+sat Brighteyes, and near to him where Bjrn, Asmund's son, Gudruda,
+Unna, Asmund's betrothed, and Saevuna, Eric's mother. For this had
+been settled between Asmund and Eric, that his mother Saevuna, who was
+some somewhat sunk in age, should flit from Coldback and come with
+Unna to dwell at Middalhof. But Eric set a trusty grieve to dwell at
+Coldback and mind the farm.
+
+When the faring-toasts had been drunk, Eric spoke to Asmund and said:
+"I fear one thing, lord, and it is that when I am gone Ospakar will
+trouble thee. Now, I pray you all to beware of Blacktooth, for, though
+the hound is whipped, he can still bite, and it seems that he has not
+yet put Gudruda from his mind."
+
+Now Bjrn had sat silently, thinking much and drinking more, for he
+loved Eric less than ever on this day when he saw how all men did him
+honour and mourned his going, and his father not the least of them.
+
+"Methinks it is thou, Eric," he said, "whom Ospakar hates, and thee on
+whom he would work his vengeance, and that for no light cause."
+
+"When bad fortune sits in thy neighbour's house, she knocks upon thy
+door, Bjrn. Gudruda, thy sister, is my betrothed, and thou art a
+party to this feud," said Eric. "Therefore it becomes thee better to
+hold her honour and thy own against this Northlander, than to gird at
+me for that in which I have no blame."
+
+Bjrn grew wroth at these words. "Prate not to me," he said. "Thou art
+an upstart who wouldst teach their duty to thy betters--ay, puffed up
+with light-won fame, like a feather on the breeze. But I say this: the
+breeze shall fail, and thou shalt fall upon the goose's back once
+more. And I say this also, that, had I my will, Gudruda should wed
+Ospakar: for he is a mighty chief, and not a long-legged carle,
+outlawed for man-slaying."
+
+Now Eric sprang from his seat and laid hand upon the hilt of
+Whitefire, while men murmured in the hall, for they held this an ill
+speech of Bjrn's.
+
+"In thee, it seems, I have no friend," said Eric, "and hadst thou been
+any other man than Gudruda's brother, forsooth thou shouldst answer
+for thy mocking words. This I tell thee, Bjrn, that, wert thou twice
+her brother, if thou plottest with Ospakar when I am gone, thou shalt
+pay dearly for it when I come back again. I know thy heart well: it is
+cunning and greedy of gain, and filled with envy as a cask with ale;
+yet, if thou lovest to feel it beating in thy breast, strive not to
+work me mischief and to put Gudruda from me."
+
+Now Bjrn sprang up also and drew his sword, for he was white with
+rage; but Asmund his father cried, "Peace!" in a great voice.
+
+"Peace!" he said. "Be seated, Eric, and take no heed of this foolish
+talk. And for thee, Bjrn, art thou the Priest of Middalhof, and
+Gudruda's father, or am I? It has pleased me to betroth Brighteyes to
+Gudruda, and it pleased me not to betroth her to Ospakar, and that is
+enough for thee. For the rest, Ospakar would have slain Eric, not he
+Ospakar, therefore Eric's hands are clean. Though thou art my son, I
+say this, that, if thou workest ill to Eric when he is over sea, thou
+shalt rightly learn the weight of Whitefire: it is a niddering deed to
+plot against an absent man."
+
+Eric sat down, but Bjrn strode scowling from the hall, and, taking
+horse, rode south; nor did he and Eric meet again till three years had
+come and gone, and then they met but once.
+
+"Maggots shall be bred of that fly, nor shall they lack flesh to feed
+on," said Skallagrim in Eric's ears as he watched Bjrn pass. But Eric
+bade him be silent, and turned to Gudruda.
+
+"Look not so sad, sweet," he said, "for hasty words rise like the foam
+on mead and pass as soon. It vexes Bjrn that thy father has given me
+the good ship: but his anger will soon pass, or, at the very worst, I
+fear him not while thou art true to me."
+
+"Then thou hast little to fear, Eric," she answered. "Look now on thy
+hair: it grows long as a woman's, and that is ill, for at sea the salt
+will hang to it. Say, shall I cut it for thee?"
+
+"Yes, Gudruda."
+
+So she cut his yellow locks, and one of them lay upon her heart for
+many a day.
+
+"Now thou shalt swear to me," she whispered in his ear, "that no other
+man or woman shall cut thy hair till thou comest back to me and I clip
+it again."
+
+"That I swear, and readily," he answered. "I will go long-haired like
+a girl for thy sake, Gudruda."
+
+He spoke low, but Koll the Half-witted, Groa's thrall, heard this oath
+and kept it in his mind.
+
+
+
+Very early on the morrow all men rose, and, taking horse, rode once
+more to the seaside, till they came to that shed where the Gudruda
+lay.
+
+Then, when the tide was high, Eric's company took hold of the black
+ship's thwarts, and at his word dragged her with might and main. She
+ran down the greased blocks and sped on quivering to the sea, and as
+her dragon-prow dipped in the water people cheered aloud.
+
+Now Eric must bid farewell to all, and this he did with a brave heart
+till at the last he came to Saevuna, his mother, and Gudruda, his dear
+love.
+
+"Farewell, son," said the old dame; "I have little hope that these
+eyes shall look again upon that bonny face of thine, yet I am well
+paid for my birth-pains, for few have borne such a man as thou. Think
+of me at times, for without me thou hadst never been. Be not led
+astray of women, nor lead them astray, or ill shall overtake thee. Be
+not quarrelsome because of thy great might, for there is a stronger
+than the strongest. Spare a fallen foe, and take not a poor man's
+goods or a brave man's sword; but, when thou smitest, smite home. So
+shalt thou win honour, and, at the last, peace, that is more than
+honour."
+
+Eric thanked her for her counsel, and kissed her, then turned to
+Gudruda, who stood, white and still, plucking at her golden girdle.
+
+"What can I say to thee?" he asked.
+
+"Say nothing, but go," she answered: "go before I weep."
+
+"Weep not, Gudruda, or thou wilt unman me. Say, thou wilt think on
+me?"
+
+"Ay, Eric, by day and by night."
+
+"And thou wilt be true to me?"
+
+"Ay, till death and after, for so long as thou cleavest to me I will
+cleave to thee. I will first die rather than betray thee. But of thee
+I am not so sure. Perchance thou mayest find Swanhild in thy
+journeyings and crave more kisses of her?"
+
+"Anger me not, Gudruda! thou knowest well that I hate Swanhild more
+than any other woman. When I kiss her again, then thou mayst wed
+Ospakar."
+
+"Speak not so rashly, Eric," she said, and as she spoke Skallagrim
+drew near.
+
+"If thou lingerest here, lord, the tide will serve us little round
+Westmans," he said, eyeing Gudruda as it were with jealousy.
+
+"I come," said Eric. "Gudruda, fare thee well!"
+
+She kissed him and clung to him, but did not answer, for she could not
+speak.
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+HOW HALL THE MATE CUT THE GRAPNEL CHAIN
+
+Gudruda bent her head like a drooping flower, and presently sank to
+earth, for her knees would bear her weight no more; but Eric marched
+to the lip of the sea, his head held high and laughing merrily to hide
+his pain of heart. Here stood Asmund, who gripped him by both hands,
+and kissed him on the brow, bidding him good luck.
+
+"I know not whether we shall meet again," he said; "but, if my hours
+be sped before thou returnest, this I charge thee: that thou mindest
+Gudruda well, for she is the sweetest of all women that I have known,
+and I hold her the most dear."
+
+"Fear not for that, lord," said Eric; "and I pray thee this, that, if
+I come back no more, as well may happen, do not force Gudruda into
+marriage, if she wills it not, and I think she will have little
+leaning that way. And I say this also: do not count overmuch on Bjrn
+thy son, for he has no loyal heart; and beware of Groa, who was thy
+housekeeper, for she loves not that Unna should take her place and
+more. And now I thank thee for many good things, and farewell."
+
+"Farewell, my son," said Asmund, "for in this hour thou seemest as a
+son to me."
+
+Eric turned to enter the sea and wade to the vessel, but Skallagrim
+caught him in his arms as though he were but a child, and, wading into
+the surf till the water covered his waistbelt, bore him to the vessel
+and lifted him up so that Eric reached the bulwarks with his hands.
+
+Then they loosed the cable and got out the oars and soon were dancing
+over the sea. Presently the breeze caught them, and they set the great
+sail and sped away like a gull towards the Westman Isles. But Gudruda
+sat on the shore watching till, at length, the light faded from Eric's
+golden helm as he stood upon the poop, and the world grew dark to her.
+
+
+
+Now Ospakar Blacktooth had news of this sailing and took counsel of
+Gizur his son, and the end of it was that they made ready two great
+ships, dragons of war, and, placing sixty fighting men in each of
+them, sailed round the Iceland coast to the Westmans and waited there
+to waylay Eric. They had spies on the land, and from them they learned
+of Brighteyes' coming, and sailed out to meet him in the channel
+between the greater and the lesser islands, where they knew that he
+must pass.
+
+Now it drew towards evening when Eric rowed down this channel, for the
+wind had fallen and he desired to be clear at sea. Presently, as the
+Gudruda came near to the mouth of the channel, that had high cliffs on
+either hand, Eric saw two long dragons of war--for their bulwarks were
+shield-hung--glide from the cover of the island and take their station
+side by side between him and the open sea.
+
+"Now here are vikings," said Eric to Skallagrim.
+
+"Now here is Ospakar Blacktooth," answered Skallagrim, "for well I
+know that raven banner of his. This is a good voyage, for we must seek
+but a little while before we come to fighting."
+
+Eric bade the men lay on their oars, and spoke:
+
+"Before us is Ospakar Blacktooth in two great dragons, and he is here
+to cut us off. Now two choices are left to us: one is to bout ship and
+run before him, and the other to row on and give him battle. What say
+ye, comrades?"
+
+Hall of Lithdale, the mate, answered, saying:
+
+"Let us go back, lest we die. The odds are too great, Eric."
+
+But a man among the crew cried out, "When thou didst go on holmgang at
+Thingvalla, Eric, Ospakar's two chosen champions stood before thee,
+yet at Whitefire's flash they skurried through the water like startled
+ducks. It was an omen, for so shall his great ships fly when we swoop
+on them." Then the others shouted:
+
+"Ay, ay! Never let it be said that we fled from Ospakar--fie on thy
+woman's talk, Hall!"
+
+"Then we are all of one mind, save Hall only," said Eric. "Let us put
+Ospakar to the proof." And while men shouted "Yea!" he turned to speak
+with Skallagrim. The Baresark was gone, for, wasting no breath in
+words, already he was fixing the long shields on the bulwark rail.
+
+The men busked on their harness and made them fit for fight, and, when
+all was ready, Eric mounted the poop, and with him Skallagrim, and
+bade the rowers give way. The Gudruda leapt forward and rushed on
+towards Ospakar's ships. Now they saw that these were bound together
+with a cable and yet they must go betwixt them.
+
+Eric ran forward to the prow, and with him Skallagrim, and called
+aloud to a great man who stood upon the ship to starboard, wearing a
+black helm with raven's wings:
+
+"Who art thou that bars the sea against me?"
+
+"I am named Ospakar Blacktooth," answered the great man.
+
+"And what must we lose at thy hands, Ospakar?"
+
+"But one thing--your lives!" answered Blacktooth.
+
+"Thrice have we stood face to face, Ospakar," said Eric, "and it seems
+that hitherto thou hast won no great glory. Now it shall be proved if
+thy luck has bettered."
+
+"Art yet healed, lord, of that prick in the shoulder which thou camest
+by on Horse-Head Heights?" roared Skallagrim.
+
+For answer, Ospakar seized a spear and hurled it straight at Eric, and
+it had been his death had he not caught it in his hand as it flew.
+Then he cast it back, and that so mightily that it sped right through
+the shield of Ospakar and was the bane of a man who stood beside him.
+
+"A gift for a gift!" laughed Eric. On rushed the Gudruda, but now the
+cable was strained six fathoms from her bow that held together the
+ships of Ospakar and it was too strong for breaking. Eric looked and
+saw. Then he drew Whitefire, and while all men wondered, leaped over
+the prow of the ship and, clasping the golden dragon's head with his
+arm, set his feet upon its claws and waited. On sped the ship and
+spears flew thick and fast about him, but there Brighteyes hung. Now
+the Gudruda's bow caught the great rope and strained it taut and, as
+it rose beneath her weight, Eric smote swift and strong with Whitefire
+and clove it in two, so that the severed ends fell with a splash into
+the quiet water.
+
+Eric sprang back to deck while stones and spears hissed about him.
+
+"That was well done, lord," said Skallagrim; "now we shall be snugly
+berthed."
+
+"In oars and out grappling-irons," shouted Eric.
+
+Up rose the rowers, and their war-gear rattled as they rose. They drew
+in the long oars, and not before it was time, for now the Gudruda
+forced her way between the two dragons of Ospakar and lay with her bow
+to their sterns. Then with a shout Eric's men cast the irons and soon
+the ships were locked fast and the fight began. The spears flew thick,
+and on either side some got their death before them. Then the men of
+that vessel, named the Raven, which was to larboard of the Gudruda,
+made ready to board. On they came with a rush, and were driven back,
+though hardly, for they were many, and those who stood against them
+few. Again they came, scrambling over the bulwarks, and this time a
+score of them leapt aboard. Eric turned from the fight against the
+dragon of Ospakar and saw it. Then, with Skallagrim, he rushed to meet
+the boarders as they swarmed along the hold, and naught might they
+withstand the axe and sword.
+
+Through and through them swept the mighty pair, now Whitefire flashed,
+and now the great axe fell, and at every stroke a man lay dead or
+wounded. Six of the boarders turned to fly, but just then the
+grappling-iron broke and their ship drifted out with the tide towards
+the open sea, and presently no man of that twenty was left alive.
+
+Now the men of the ship of Ospakar and of the Gudruda pressed each
+other hard. Thrice did Ospakar strive to come aboard and thrice he was
+pushed back. Eric was ever where he was most needed, and with him
+Skallagrim, for these two threw themselves from side to side, and were
+now here and now there, so that it seemed as though there were not one
+golden helm and one black, but rather four on board the Gudruda.
+
+Eric looked and saw that the other ship was drawing round, though
+somewhat slowly, to come alongside of them once more.
+
+"Now we must make an end of Ospakar, else our hands will be overfull,"
+he said, and therewith sprang up upon the bulwarks and after him many
+men. Once they were driven back, but came on again, and now they
+thrust all Ospakar's men before them and passed up his ship on both
+boards. By the mast stood Ospakar and with him Gizur his son, and Eric
+strove to come to him. But many men were between them, and he could
+not do this.
+
+Presently, while the fight yet went on hotly and men fell fast,
+Brighteyes felt the dragon of Ospakar strike, and, looking, saw that
+they had drifted with the send of the tide on to the rocks of the
+island. There was a great hole in the hull amidships and the water
+rushed in fast.
+
+"Back! men; back!" he cried, and all his folk that were unhurt, ran,
+and leapt on board the Gudruda; but Ospakar and his men sprang into
+the sea and swam for the shore. Then Skallagrim cut loose the
+grappling-irons with his axe, and that not too soon, for, scarcely had
+they pushed clear with great toil when the long warship slipped from
+the rock and foundered, taking many dead and wounded men with her.
+
+Now Ospakar and some of his people stood safe upon the rocks, and Eric
+called to him in mockery, bidding him come aboard the Gudruda.
+
+Ospakar made no answer, but stood gnawing his hand, while the water
+ran from him. Only Gizur his son cursed them aloud.
+
+Eric was greatly minded to follow them, and land and fight them there;
+but he might not do this, because of the rocks and of the other
+dragon, that hung about them, fearing to come on and yet not willing
+to go back.
+
+"We will have her, at the least," said Eric, and bade the rowers get
+out their oars.
+
+Now, when the men on board the other ship saw the Gudruda drawing on,
+they took to their oars at once and rowed swiftly for the sea, and at
+this a great roar of laughter went down Eric's ship.
+
+"They shall not slip from us so easily," said Eric; "give way,
+comrades, and after them."
+
+But the men were much wearied with fighting, and the decks were all
+cumbered with dead and wounded, so that by the time that the Gudruda
+had put about, and come to the mouth of the waterway, Ospakar's vessel
+had shaken out her sails and caught the wind, that now blew strong off
+shore, and sped away six furlongs or more from Eric's prow.
+
+"Now we shall see how the Gudruda sails," said Eric, and they spread
+their canvas and gave chase.
+
+Then Eric bade men clear the decks of the dead, and tend the wounded.
+He had lost seven men slain outright, and three were wounded, one to
+death. But on board the ship there lay of Ospakar's force twenty and
+three dead men.
+
+When all were cast into the sea, men ate and rested.
+
+"We have not done so badly," said Eric to Skallagrim.
+
+"We shall do better yet," said Skallagrim to Eric; "rather had I seen
+Ospakar's head lying in the scuppers than those of all his carles; for
+he may get more men, but never another head!"
+
+Now the wind freshened till by midnight it blew strongly. The mate
+Hall came to Eric and said:
+
+"The Gudruda dips her nose deep in Ran's cup. Say, Eric, shall we
+shorten sail?"
+
+"Nay," answered Eric, "keep her full and bail. Where yonder Raven
+flies, my Sea-stag must follow," and he pointed to the warship that
+rode the waves before them.
+
+After midnight clouds came up, with rain, and hid the face of the
+night-sun and the ship they sought. The wind blew ever harder, till at
+length, when the rain had passed and the clouds lifted, there was much
+water in the hold and the bailers could hardly stand at their work.
+
+Men murmured, and Hall the mate murmured most of all; but still Eric
+held on, for there, not two furlongs ahead of them, rode the dragon of
+Ospakar. But now, being afraid of the wind and sea, she had lowered
+her sail somewhat, and made as though she would put about and run for
+Iceland.
+
+"That she may not do," called Eric to Skallagrim, "if once she rolls
+side on to those seas Ran has her, for she must fill and sink."
+
+"So they hold, lord," answered Skallagrim; "see, once more she runs!"
+
+"Ay, but we run faster--she is outsailed. Up, men, up: for presently
+the fight begins."
+
+"It is bad to join battle in such a sea," quoth Hall.
+
+"Good or bad," growled Skallagrim, "do thou thy lord's bidding," and
+he half lifted up his axe.
+
+The mate said no more, for he misdoubted him of Skallagrim Lambstail
+and his axe.
+
+Then men made ready for the fray as best they might, and stood, sword
+in hand and drenched with foam, clinging to the bulwarks of the
+Gudruda as she wallowed through the seas.
+
+Eric went aft to the helm and seized it. Now but a length ahead
+Ospakar's ship laboured on beneath her small sail, but the Gudruda
+rushed towards her with all canvas set and at every leap plunged her
+golden dragon beneath the surf and shook the water from her foredeck.
+
+"Make ready the grapnel!" shouted Eric through the storm. Skallagrim
+seized the iron and stood by. Now the Gudruda rushed alongside the
+Raven, and Eric steered so skilfully that there was a fathom space,
+and no more, between the ships.
+
+Skallagrim cast the iron well and truly, so that it hooked and held.
+On sped the Gudruda and the cable tautened--now her stern kissed the
+bow of Ospakar's ship, as though she was towing her, and thus for a
+space they travelled through the seas.
+
+Eric's folk shouted and strove to cast spears; but they did this but
+ill, because of the rocking of the vessel. As for Ospakar's men, they
+clung to their bulwarks and did nothing, for all the heart was out of
+them between fear of Eric and terror of the sea. Eric called to a man
+to hold the helm, and Skallagrim crept aft to where he stood.
+
+"What counsel shall we take now?" said Eric, and as he spoke a sea
+broke over them--for the gale was strong.
+
+"Board them and make an end," answered Skallagrim.
+
+"Rough work; still, we will try it," said Eric, "for we may not lie
+thus for long, and I am loath to leave them."
+
+Then Eric called for men to follow him, and many answered, creeping as
+best they might to where he stood.
+
+"Thou art mad, Eric," said Hall the mate; "cut loose and let us drive,
+else we shall both founder, and that is a poor tale to tell."
+
+Eric took no heed, but, watching his chance, leapt on to the bows of
+the Raven, and after him leapt Skallagrim. Even as he did so, a great
+sea came and swept past and over them, so that half the ship was hid
+for foam. Now, Hall the mate stood near to the grapnel cable, and,
+fearing lest they should sink, out of the cowardice of his heart, he
+let his axe fall upon the chain, and severed it so swiftly that no man
+saw him, except Skallagrim only. Forward sprang the Gudruda, freed
+from her burden, and rushed away before the wind, leaving Eric and
+Skallagrim alone upon the Raven's prow.
+
+"Now we are in an evil plight," said Eric, "the cable has parted!"
+
+"Ay," answered Skallagrim, "and that losel Hall hath parted it! I saw
+his axe fall."
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+HOW ERIC DREAMED A DREAM
+
+Now, when the men of Ospakar, who were gathered on the poop of the
+Raven, saw what had come about, they shouted aloud and made ready to
+slay the pair. But Eric and Skallagrim clambered to the mast and got
+their backs against it, and swiftly made themselves fast with a rope,
+so that they might not fall with the rolling of the ship. Then the
+people of Ospakar came on to cut them down.
+
+But this was no easy task, for they might scarcely stand, and they
+could not shoot with the bow. Moreover, Eric and Skallagrim, being
+bound to the mast, had the use of both hands and were minded to die
+hard. Therefore Ospakar's folks got but one thing by their onslaught,
+and that was death, for three of their number fell beneath the long
+sweep of Whitefire, and one bowed before the axe of Skallagrim. Then
+they drew back and strove to throw spears at these two, but they flew
+wide because of the rolling of the vessel. One spear struck the mast
+near the head of Skallagrim. He drew it out, and, waiting till the
+ship steadied herself in the trough of the sea, hurled it at a knot of
+Ospakar's thralls, and a man got his death from it. After that they
+threw no more spears.
+
+Thence once more the crew came on with swords and axes, but faint-
+heartedly, and the end of it was that they lost some more men dead and
+wounded and fell back again.
+
+Skallagrim mocked at them with bitter words, and one of them, made mad
+by his scoffing, cast a heavy ballast-stone at him. It fell upon his
+shoulder and numbed him.
+
+"Now I am unmeet for fight, lord," said Skallagrim, "for my right arm
+is dead and I can scarcely hold my axe."
+
+"That is ill, then," said Eric, "for we have little help, except from
+each other, and I, too, am well-nigh spent. Well, we have done a great
+deed and now it is time to rest."
+
+"My left arm is yet whole, lord, and I can make shift for a while with
+it. Cut loose the cord before they bait us to death, and let us rush
+upon these wolves and fall fighting."
+
+"A good counsel," said Eric, "and a quick end; but stay a while: what
+plan have they now?"
+
+Now the men of Ospakar, having little heart left in them for such work
+as this, had taken thought together.
+
+"We have got great hurt, and little honour," said the mate. "There are
+but nineteen of us left alive, and that is scarcely enough to work the
+ship, and it seems that we shall be fewer before Eric Brighteyes and
+Skallagrim Lambstail lie quiet by yonder mast. They are mighty men,
+indeed, and it would be better, methinks, to deal with them by craft,
+rather than by force."
+
+The sailors said that this was a good word, for they were weary of the
+sight of Whitefire as he flamed on high and the sound of the axe of
+Skallagrim as it crashed through helm and byrnie; and as fear crept in
+valour fled out.
+
+"This is my rede, then," said the mate: "that we go to them and give
+them peace, and lay them in bonds, swearing that we will put them
+ashore when we are come back to Iceland. But when we have them fast,
+as they sleep at night, we will creep on them and hurl them into the
+sea, and afterwards we will say that we slew them fighting."
+
+"A shameful deed!" said a man.
+
+"Then go thou up against them," answered the mate. "If we slay them
+not, then shall this tale be told against us throughout Iceland: that
+a ship's company were worsted by two men, and we may not live beneath
+that dishonour."
+
+The man held his peace, and the mate, laying down his arms, crept
+forward alone, towards the mast, just as Eric and Skallagrim were
+about to cut themselves loose and rush on them.
+
+"What wouldest thou?" shouted Eric. "Has it gone so well with you with
+arms that ye are minded to come up against us bearing none?"
+
+"It has gone ill, Eric," said the mate, "for ye twain are too mighty
+for us. We have lost many men, and we shall lose more ere ye are laid
+low. Therefore we make you this offer: that you lay down your weapons
+and suffer yourselves to be bound till such time as we touch land,
+where we will set you ashore, and give you your arms again. Meanwhile,
+we will deal with you in friendly fashion, giving you of the best we
+have; nor will we set foot any suit against you for those of our
+number whom ye two have slain."
+
+"Wherefore then should we be bound?" said Eric.
+
+"For this reason only: that we dare not leave you free within our
+ship. Now choose, and, if ye will, take peace, which we swear by all
+the Gods we will keep towards you, and, if ye will not, then we will
+bear you down with beams and sails and stones, and slay you."
+
+"What thinkest thou, Skallagrim?" said Eric beneath his breath.
+
+"I think that I find little faith in yon carle's face," answered
+Skallagrim. "Still, I am unfit to fight, and thy strength is spent, so
+it seems that we must lie low if we would rise again. They can
+scarcely be so base as to do murder having handselled peace to us."
+
+"I am not so sure of that," said Eric; "still, starving beggars must
+eat bones. Hearken thou: we take the terms, trusting to your honour;
+and I say this: that ye shall get shame and death if ye depart from
+them to harm us."
+
+"Have no fear, lord," said the mate, "we are true men."
+
+"That we shall look to your deeds to learn," said Eric, laying down
+his sword and shield.
+
+Skallagrim did likewise, though with no good grace. Then men came with
+strong cords and bound them fast hand and foot, handling them
+fearsomely as men handle a live bear in a net. Then they led them
+forward to the prow.
+
+As they went Eric looked up. Yonder, twenty furlongs and more away,
+sailed the Gudruda.
+
+"This is good fellowship," said Skallagrim, "thus to leave us in the
+trap."
+
+"Nay," answered Eric. "They cannot put about in such a sea, and
+doubtless also they think us dead. Nevertheless, if ever it comes
+about that Hall and I stand face to face again, there will be need for
+me to think of gentleness."
+
+"I shall think little thereon," growled Skallagrim.
+
+Now they were come to the prow, and there was a half deck under which
+they were set, out of reach of the wind and water. In the deck was a
+stout iron ring, and the men made them fast with ropes to it, so that
+they might move but little, and they set their helms and weapons
+behind them in such fashion that they could not come at them. Then
+they flung cloaks about them, and brought them food and drink, of
+which they stood much in need, and treated them well in every way. But
+for all this Skallagrim trusted them no more.
+
+"We are new-hooked, lord," he said, "and they give us line. Presently
+they will haul us in."
+
+"Evil comes soon enough," answered Eric, "no need to run to greet it,"
+and he fell to thinking of Gudruda, and of the day's deeds, till
+presently he dropped asleep, for he was very weary.
+
+
+
+Now it chanced that as Eric slept he dreamed a dream so strong and
+strange that it seemed to live within him. He dreamed that he slept
+there beneath the Raven's deck, and that a rat came and whispered
+spells into his ear. Then he dreamed that Swanhild glided towards him,
+walking on the stormy seas. He saw her afar, and she came swiftly, and
+ever the sea grew smooth before her feet, nor did the wind so much as
+stir her hair. Presently she stood by him in the ship, and, bending
+over him, touched him on the shoulder, saying:
+
+"Awake, Eric Brighteyes! Awake! awake!"
+
+It seemed to him that he awoke and said "What tidings, Swanhild?" and
+that she answered:
+
+"Ill tidings, Eric--so ill that I am come hither from Straumey[*] to
+tell of them--ay, come walking on the seas. Had Gudruda done so much,
+thinkest thou?"
+
+[*] Stroma, the southernmost of the Orkneys.
+
+"Gudruda is no witch," he said in his dream.
+
+"Nay, but I am a witch, and it is well for thee, Eric. Ay, I am a
+witch. Now do I seem to sleep at Atli's side, and lo! here I stand by
+thine, and I must journey back again many a league before another day
+be born--ay, many a league, and all for love of thee, Eric! Hearken,
+for not long may the spell endure. I have seen this by my magic: that
+these men who bound thee come even now to take thee, sleeping, and
+cast thee and thy thrall into the deep, there to drown."
+
+"If it is fated it will befall," he said in his dream.
+
+"Nay, it shall not befall. Put forth all thy might and burst thy
+bonds. Then fetch Whitefire; cut away the bonds of Skallagrim, and
+give him his axe and shield. This done, cover yourselves with your
+cloaks, and wait till ye hear the murderers come. Then rise and rush
+upon them, the two of you, and they shall melt before your might. I
+have journeyed over the great deep to tell thee this, Eric! Had
+Gudruda done as much, thinkest thou?"
+
+And it seemed to him that the wraith of Swanhild kissed him on the
+brow, sighed and vanished, bearing the rat in her bosom.
+
+
+
+Eric awoke suddenly, just as though he had never slept, and looked
+around. He knew by the lowness of the sun that it was far into the
+night, and that he had slept for many hours. They were alone beneath
+the deck, and far aft, beyond the mast, as the vessel rose upon the
+waves--for the sea was still rough, though the wind had fallen--Eric
+saw the mate of the Raven talking earnestly with some men of his crew.
+Skallagrim snored beside him.
+
+"Awake!" Eric said in his ear, "awake and listen!"
+
+He yawned and roused himself. "What now, lord?" he said.
+
+"This," said Eric, and he told him the dream that he had dreamed.
+
+"That was a fey dream," said Skallagrim, "and now we must do as the
+wraith bade thee."
+
+"Easy to say, but hard to do," quoth Eric; "this is a great rope that
+holds us, and a strong."
+
+"Yes, it is great and strong; still, we must burst it."
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim were made fast in this fashion: their hands
+were bound behind them, and their legs were lashed above the feet and
+above the knee. Moreover, a thick cord was fixed about the waist of
+each, and this cord was passed through the iron ring and knotted
+there. But it chanced that beneath the hollows of their knees ran an
+oaken beam, which held the forepart of the dragon together.
+
+"We may try this," said Eric: "to set our feet against the beam and
+strain with all our strength upon the rope; though I think that no two
+men can part it."
+
+"We shall know that presently," said Skallagrim, gathering up his
+legs.
+
+Then they set their feet against the beam and pulled till it groaned;
+but, though the rope gave somewhat, it would not break. They rested a
+while, then strained again till the sweat burst out upon them and the
+rope cut into their flesh, but still it would not part.
+
+"We have found our match," said Eric.
+
+"That is not altogether proved yet," answered the Baresark. "Many a
+shield is riven at the third stroke."
+
+So once again they set their feet against the beam, and put out all
+their strength.
+
+"The ring bends," gasped Eric. "Now, when the roll of the ship throws
+our weight to leeward, in the name of Thor pull!"
+
+They waited, then put out their might, and lo! though the rope did not
+break, the iron ring burst asunder and they rolled upon the deck.
+
+"Well pulled, truly," said Skallagrim as he struggled to his haunches:
+"I am marked about the middle with rope-twists for many a day to come,
+that I will swear. What next, lord?"
+
+"Whitefire," answered Eric.
+
+Now, their arms were piled a fathom or more from where they sat, and
+right in the prow of the ship. Hither, then, they must crawl upon
+their knees, and this was weary work, for ever as the ship rolled they
+fell, and could in no wise save themselves from hurt. Eric was
+bleeding at the brow, and bloody was the hooked nose of Skallagrim,
+before they came to where Whitefire was. At length they reached the
+sword, and pushed aside the bucklers that were over it with their
+heads. The great war-blade was sheathed, and Eric must needs lie upon
+his breast and draw the weapon somewhat with his teeth.
+
+"This is an ill razor to shave with," he said, rising, for the keen
+blade had cut his chin.
+
+"So some have thought and perchance more shall think," answered
+Skallagrim. "Now set the rope on the edge and rub."
+
+This they did, and presently the thick cord that bound them was in
+two. Then Eric knelt upon the deck and pressed the bonds that bound
+his legs upon the blade, and after him Skallagrim. They were free now,
+except for their hands, and it was no easy thing to cut away the bonds
+upon their wrists. It was done thus: Skallagrim sat upon the deck, and
+Eric pushed the sword between his fingers with his feet. Then the
+Baresark rose, holding the sword, and Eric, turning back to back with
+him, fretted the cords upon his wrists against the blade. Twice he cut
+himself, but the third time the cord parted and he was free. He
+stretched his arms, for they were stiff; then took Whitefire and cut
+away the bonds of Skallagrim.
+
+"How goes it with that hurt of thine?" he asked.
+
+"Better than I had thought," answered Skallagrim; "the soreness has
+come out with the bruise."
+
+"That is good news," said Eric, "for methinks, unless Swanhild walked
+the seas for nothing, thou wilt soon need thine arms."
+
+"They have never failed me yet," said Skallagrim and took his axe and
+shield. "What counsel now?"
+
+"This, Skallagrim: that we lie down as we were, and put the cloaks
+about us as though we were yet in bonds. Then, if these knaves come,
+we can take them unawares as they think to take us."
+
+So they went again to where they had been bound, and lay down upon
+their shields and weapons, drawing cloaks over them. Scarcely had they
+done this and rested a while, when they saw the mate and all the crew
+coming along both boards towards them. They bore no weapons in their
+hands.
+
+"None too soon did Swanhild walk," said Eric; "now we shall learn
+their purpose. Be thou ready to leap forth when I give the word."
+
+"Ay, lord," answered Skallagrim as he worked his stiff arms to and
+fro. "In such matters few have thought me backward."
+
+"What news, friends?" cried Eric as the men drew near.
+
+"Bad news for thee, Brighteyes," answered the mate, "and that Baresark
+thrall of thine, for we must loose your bands."
+
+"That is good news, then," said Eric, "for our limbs are numb and dead
+because of the nipping of the cords. Is land in sight?"
+
+"Nay, nor will be for thee, Eric."
+
+"How now, friend? how now? Sure, having handselled peace to us, ye
+mean no harm towards two unarmed men?"
+
+"We swore to do you no harm, nor will we, Eric; this only will we do:
+deliver you, bound, to Ran, and leave her to deal with you as she
+may."
+
+"Bethink you, sirs," said Eric: "this is a cruel deed and most
+unmanly. We yielded to you in faith--will ye break your troth?"
+
+"War has no troth," he answered, "ye are too great to let slip between
+our fingers. Shall it be said of us that two men overcame us all?"
+
+"Mayhap!" murmured Skallagrim beneath his breath.
+
+"Oh, sirs, I beseech you," said Eric; "I am young, and there is a maid
+who waits me out in Iceland, and it is hard to die," and he made as
+though he wept, while Skallagrim laughed within his sleeve, for it was
+strange to see Eric feigning fear.
+
+But the men mocked aloud.
+
+"This is the great man," they cried, "this is that Eric of whose deeds
+folk sing! Look! he weeps like a child when he sees the water. Drag
+him forth and away with him into the sea!"
+
+"Little need for that," cried Eric, and lo! the cloaks about him and
+Skallagrim flew aside. Out they came with a roar; they came out as a
+she-bear from her cave, and high above Brighteyes' golden curls
+Whitefire shone in the pale light, and nigh to it shone the axe of
+Skallagrim. Whitefire flared aloft, then down he fell and sought the
+false heart of the mate. The great axe of Skallagrim shone and was
+lost in the breast of the carle who stood before him.
+
+"Trolls!" shrieked one. "Here are trolls!" and turned to fly. But
+again Whitefire was up and that man flew not far--one pace, and no
+more. Then they fled screaming and after them came axe and sword. They
+fled, they fell, they leaped into the sea, till none were left to fall
+and leap, for they had no time or heart to find or draw their weapons,
+and presently Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail stood alone
+upon the deck--alone with the dead.
+
+"Swanhild is a wise witch," gasped Eric, "and, whatever ill she has
+done, I will remember this to her honour."
+
+"Little good comes of witchcraft," answered Skallagrim, wiping his
+brow: "to-day it works for our hands, to-morrow it shall work against
+them."
+
+"To the helm," said Eric; "the ship yaws and comes side on to the
+seas."
+
+Skallagrim sprang to the tiller and put his strength on it, and but
+just in time, for one big sea came aboard them and left much water in
+the hold.
+
+"We owe this to thy Baresark ways," said Eric. "Hadst thou not slain
+the steersman we had not filled with water."
+
+"True, lord," answered Skallagrim; "but when once my axe is aloft, it
+seems to fly of itself, till nothing is left before it. What course
+now?"
+
+"The same on which the Gudruda was laid. Perhaps, if we may endure
+till we come to the Farey Isles,[*] we shall find her in harbour
+there."
+
+[*] The Faroes.
+
+"There is not much chance of that," said Skallagrim; "still, the wind
+is fair, and we fly fast before it."
+
+Then they lashed the tiller and set to bailing. They bailed long, and
+it was heavy work, but they rid the ship of much water. After that
+they ate food, for it was now morning, and it came on to blow yet more
+strongly.
+
+For three days and three nights it blew thus, and the Raven sped along
+before the gale. All this time, turn and turn about, Eric and
+Skallagrim stood at the helm and tended the sails. They had little
+time to eat, and none to sleep. They were so hard pressed also, and
+must harbour their strength so closely, that the bodies of the dead
+men yet cumbered the hold. Thus they grew very weary and like to fall
+from faintness, but still they held the Raven on her course. In the
+beginning of the fourth night a great sea struck the good ship so that
+she quivered from stem to stern.
+
+"Methinks I hear water bubbling up," said Skallagrim in a hoarse
+voice.
+
+Eric climbed down into the well and lifted the bottom planks, and
+there beneath them was a leak through which the water spouted in a
+thin stream. He stopped up the rent as best he might with garments
+from the dead men, and placed ballast stones upon them, then clambered
+on to the deck again.
+
+"Our hours are short now," he said, "the water rushes in apace."
+
+"Well, it is time to rest," said Skallagrim; "but see, lord!" and he
+pointed ahead. "What land is that?"
+
+"It must be the Fareys," answered Eric; "now, if we can but keep
+afloat for three hours more, we may yet die ashore."
+
+After this the wind began to fall, but still there was enough to drive
+the Raven on swiftly.
+
+And ever the water gained in the hold.
+
+Now they were not far from land, for ahead of them the bleak hills
+towered up, shining in the faint midnight light, and between the hills
+was a cleft that seemed to be a fjord. Another hour passed, and they
+were no more than ten furlongs from the mouth of the fjord, when
+suddenly the wind fell, and they were in calm water under shelter of
+the land. They went amidships and looked. The hold was half full of
+water, and in it floated the bodies of Ospakar's men.
+
+"She has not long to live," said Skallagrim, "but we may still be
+saved if the boat is not broken."
+
+Now aft, near the tiller, a small boat was bound on the half deck of
+the Raven. They went to it and looked; it was whole, with oars lashed
+in it, but half full of water, which they must bail out. This they did
+as swiftly as they might; then they cut the little boat loose, and,
+having made it fast with a rope, lifted it over the side-rail and let
+it fall into the sea, and that was no great way, for the Raven had
+sunk deep. It fell on an even keel, and Eric let himself down the rope
+into it and called to Skallagrim to follow.
+
+"Bide a while, lord," he answered; "there is that which I would bring
+with me."
+
+For a space Eric waited and then called aloud, "Swift! thou fool;
+swift! the ship sinks!"
+
+And as he called, Skallagrim came, and his arms were full of swords
+and byrnies, and red rings of gold that he had found time to gather
+from the dead and out of the cabin.
+
+"Throw all aside and come," said Eric, laying on to the oars, for the
+Raven wallowed before she sank.
+
+"There is yet time, lord, and the gear is good," answered Skallagrim,
+and one by one he threw pieces down into the boat. As the last fell
+the Raven sank to her bulwarks. Then Skallagrim stepped from the
+sinking deck into the boat, and cut the cord, not too soon.
+
+Eric gave way with all his strength, and, as he pulled, when he was no
+more than five fathoms from her, the Raven vanished with a huge swirl.
+
+"Hold still," he said, "or we shall follow."
+
+Round spun the boat in the eddy, she was sucked down till the water
+trickled over her gunwale, and for a moment they knew not if they were
+lost or saved. Eric held his breath and watched, then slowly the boat
+lifted her nose, and they were safe from the whirlpool of the lost
+dragon.
+
+"Greed is many a man's bane," said Eric, "and it was nearly thine and
+mine, Skallagrim."
+
+"I had no heart to leave the good gear," he answered; "and thou seest,
+lord, it is safe and we with it."
+
+Then they got the boat's head round slowly into the mouth of the
+fjord, pausing now and again to rest, for their strength was spent.
+For two hours they rowed down a gulf, as it were, and on either side
+of them were barren hills. At length the water-way opened out into a
+great basin, and there, on the further side of the basin, they saw
+green slopes running down to the water's edge, strewn with white
+stock-fish set to dry in the wind and sun, and above the slopes a
+large hall, and about it booths. Moreover, they saw a long dragon of
+war at anchor near the shore. For a while they rowed on, easing now
+and again. Then Eric spoke to Skallagrim.
+
+"What thinkest thou of yonder ship, Lambstail?"
+
+"I think this, lord: that she is fashioned wondrous like to the
+Gudruda."
+
+"That is in my mind also," said Eric, "and our fortune is good if it
+is she."
+
+They rowed on again, and presently a ray from the sun came over the
+hills--for now it was three hours past midnight--and, the ship having
+swung a little with the tide, lit upon her prow, and lo! there gleamed
+the golden dragon of the Gudruda.
+
+"This is a strange thing," said Eric.
+
+"Ay, lord, a strange and a merry, for now I shall talk with Hall the
+mate," and the Baresark smiled grimly.
+
+"Thou shalt do no hurt to Hall," said Eric. "I am lord here, and I
+must judge."
+
+"Thy will is my will," said Skallagrim; "but if my will were thine, he
+would hang on the mast till sea-birds nested amidst his bones."
+
+Now they were close to the ship, but they could see no man. Skallagrim
+would have called aloud, but Eric bade him hold his peace.
+
+"Either they are dead, and thy calling cannot wake them, or perchance
+they sleep and will wake of themselves. We will row under the stern,
+and, having made fast, climb aboard and see with our own eyes."
+
+This, then, they did as silently as might be, and saw that the Gudruda
+had not been handled gently by the winds and waves, for her shield
+rail was washed away. This they found also, that all men lay deep in
+sleep. Now, amidships a fire still burned, and by it was food. They
+came there and ate of the food, of which they had great need. Then
+they took two cloaks that lay on the deck, and, throwing them about
+them, warmed themselves over the fire: for they were cold and wet, ay,
+and utterly outworn.
+
+As they sat thus warming themselves, a man of the crew awoke and saw
+them, and being amazed, at once called to his fellows, saying that two
+giants were aboard, warming themselves at the fire. Now men sprang up,
+and, seizing their weapons, ran towards them, and among them was Hall
+the mate.
+
+Then suddenly Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail threw aside the
+cloaks and stood up. They were gaunt and grim to see. Their cheeks
+were hollow and their eyes stared wide with want of sleep. Thick was
+their harness with brine, and open wounds gaped upon their faces and
+their hands. Men saw and fell back in fear, for they held them to be
+wizards risen from the sea in the shapes of Eric and the Baresark.
+
+Then Eric sang this song:
+
+ "Swift and sure across the Swan's Bath
+ Sped Sea-stag on Raven's track,
+ Heav'd Ran's breast in raging billows,
+ Stream'd gale-banners through the sky!
+ Yet did Eric the war-eager
+ Leap with Baresark-mate aboard,
+ Fierce their onset on the foemen!
+ Wherefore brake the grapnel-chain?"
+
+Hall heard and slunk back, for now he saw that these were indeed Eric
+and Skallagrim come up alive from the sea, and that they knew his
+baseness.
+
+Eric looked at him and sang again:
+
+ "Swift away sped ship Gudruda,
+ Left her lord in foeman's ring;
+ Brighteyes back to back with Baresark
+ Held his head 'gainst mighty odds.
+ Down amidst the ballast tumbling,
+ Ospakar's shield-carles were rolled.
+ Holy peace at length they handselled,
+ Eric must in bonds be laid!
+
+ "Came the Grey Rat, came the Earl's wife,
+ Came the witch-word from afar;
+ Cag'd wolves roused them, and with struggling
+ Tore their fetter from its hold.
+ Now they watch upon their weapons;
+ Now they weep and pray for life;
+ Now they leap forth like a torrent--
+ Swept away in foeman's strength!
+
+ "Then alone upon the Raven
+ Three long days they steer and sail,
+ Till the waters, welling upwards,
+ Wash dead men about their feet.
+ Fails the gale and sinks the dragon,
+ Barely may they win the boat:
+ Safe they stand on ship Gudruda--
+ Say, who cut the grapnel-chain?"
+
+
+
+XV
+
+HOW ERIC DWELT IN LONDON TOWN
+
+Men stood astonished, but Hall the mate slunk back.
+
+"Hold, comrade," said Eric, "I have something to say that songs cannot
+carry. Hearken, my shield-mates: we swore to be true to each other,
+even to death: is it not so? What then shall be said of that man who
+cut loose the Gudruda and left us two to die at the foeman's hand?"
+
+"Who was the man?" asked a voice.
+
+"That man was Hall of Lithdale," said Eric.
+
+"It is false!" said Hall, gathering up his courage; "the cable parted
+beneath the straining of the ship, and afterwards we could not put
+about because of the great sea."
+
+"Thou art false!" roared Skallagrim. "With my eyes I saw thee let
+thine axe fall upon the cable. Liar art thou and dastard! Thou art
+jealous also of Brighteyes thy lord, and this was in thy mind: to let
+him die upon the Raven and then to bind his shoes upon thy cowardly
+feet. Though none else saw, I saw; and I say this: that if I may have
+my will, I will string thee, living, to the prow in that same cable
+till gulls tear out thy fox-heart!"
+
+Now Hall grew very white and his knees trembled beneath him. "It is
+true," he said, "that I cut the chain, but not from any thought of
+evil. Had I not cut it the vessel must have sunk and all been lost."
+
+"Did we not swear, Hall," said Eric sternly, "together to fight and
+together to fall--together to fare and, if need be, together to cease
+from faring, and dost thou read the oath thus? Say, mates, what reward
+shall be paid to this man for his good fellowship to us and his
+tenderness for your lives?"
+
+As with one voice the men answered "/Death!/"
+
+"Thou hearest, Hall?" said Eric. "Yet I would deal more gently with
+one to whom I swore fellowship so lately. Get thee gone from our
+company, and let us see thy cur's face no more. Get thee gone, I say,
+before I repent of my mercy."
+
+Then amidst a loud hooting, Hall took his weapons and without a word
+slunk into the boat of the Raven that lay astern, and rowed ashore;
+nor did Eric see his face for many months.
+
+"Thou hast done foolishly, lord, to let that weasel go," said
+Skallagrim, "for he will live to nip thy hand."
+
+"For good or evil, he is gone," said Eric, "and now I am worn out and
+desire to sleep."
+
+
+
+After this Eric and Skallagrim rested three full days, and they were
+so weary that they were awake for little of this time. But on the
+third day they rose up, strong and well, except for their hurts and
+soreness. Then they told the men of that which had come to pass, and
+all wondered at their might and hardihood. To them indeed Eric seemed
+as a God, for few such deeds as his had been told of since the God-
+kind were on earth.
+
+But Brighteyes thought little of his deeds, and much of Gudruda. At
+times also he thought of Swanhild, and of that witch-dream she sent
+him: for it was wonderful to him that she should have saved him thus
+from Ran's net.
+
+Eric was heartily welcomed by the Earl of the Farey Isles, for, when
+he heard his deeds, he made a feast in his honour, and set him in the
+high seat. It was a great feast, but Skallagrim became drunk at it and
+ran down the chamber, axe aloft, roaring for Hall of Lithdale.
+
+This angered Eric much and he would scarcely speak to Skallagrim for
+many days, though the great Baresark slunk about after him like his
+shadow, or a whipped hound at its master's heel, and at length humbled
+his pride so far as to ask pardon for his fault.
+
+"I grant it for thy deeds' sake," said Eric shortly; "but this is upon
+my mind: that thou wilt err thus again, and it shall be my cause of
+death--ay, and that of many more."
+
+"First may my bones be white," said Skallagrim.
+
+"They shall be white thereafter," answered Eric.
+
+At Fareys Eric shipped twelve good men and true, to take the seats of
+those who had been slain by Ospakar's folk. Afterwards, when the
+wounded were well of their hurts (except one man who died), and the
+Gudruda was made fit to take the sea again, Brighteyes bade farewell
+to the Earl of those Isles, who gave him a good cloak and a gold ring
+at parting, and sailed away.
+
+
+
+Now it were too long to tell of all the deeds that Eric and his men
+did. Never, so scalds sing, was there a viking like him for strength
+and skill and hardihood, and, in those days, no such war-dragon as the
+Gudruda had been known upon the sea. Wherever Eric joined battle, and
+that was in many places, he conquered, for none prevailed against him,
+till at last foes would fly before the terror of his name, and earls
+and kings would send from far craving the aid of his hands. Withal he
+was the best and gentlest of men. It is said of Eric that in all his
+days he did no base deed, nor hurt the weak, nor refused peace to him
+who prayed it, nor lifted sword against prisoner or wounded foe. From
+traders he would take a toll of their merchandise only and let them
+go, and whatever gains he won he would share equally, asking no larger
+part than the meanest of his band. All men loved Eric, and even his
+foes gave him honour and spoke well of him. Now that Hall of Lithdale
+was gone, there was no man among his mates who would not have passed
+to death for him, for they held him dearer than their lives. Women,
+too, loved him much; but his heart was set upon Gudruda, and he seldom
+turned to look on them.
+
+The first summer of his outlawry Eric warred along the coast of
+Ireland, but in the winter he came to Dublin, and for a while served
+in the body-guard of the king of that town, who held him in honour,
+and would have had him stay there. But Eric would not bide there, and
+next spring, the Gudruda being ready for sea, he sailed for the shores
+of England. There he gave battle to two vikings' ships of war, and
+took them after a hard fight. It was in this fight that Skallagrim
+Lambstail was wounded almost to death. For when, having taken one
+ship, Eric boarded the other with but few men, he was driven back and
+fell over a beam, and would have been slain, had not Skallagrim thrown
+himself across his body, taking on his own back that blow of a battle-
+axe which was aimed at Eric's head. This was a great wound, for the
+axe shore through the steel of the byrnie and sank into the flesh. But
+when Eric's men saw their lord down, and Skallagrim, as they deemed,
+dead athwart him, they made so fierce a rush that the foemen fell
+before them like leaves before a winter gale, and the end of it was
+that the vikings prayed peace of Eric. Skallagrim lay sick for many
+days, but he was hard to kill, and Eric nursed him back to life. After
+this these two loved each other as brother loves twin brother, and
+they could scarcely bear to be apart. But other people did not love
+Skallagrim, nor he them.
+
+Eric sailed on up the Thames to London, bringing the viking ships with
+him, and he delivered their captains bound to Edmund, Edward's son,
+the king who was called Edmund the Magnificent. These captains the
+King hung, for they had wrought damage to his ships.
+
+Eric found much favour with the King, and, indeed, his fame had gone
+before him. So when he came into the court, bravely clad, with
+Skallagrim at his back, who was now almost recovered of his wound, the
+King called out to him to draw near, saying that he desired to look on
+the bravest viking and most beauteous man who sailed the seas, and on
+that fierce Baresark whom men called "Eric's Death-shadow."
+
+So Eric came forward up the long hall that was adorned with things
+more splendid than ever his eyes had seen, and stood before the King.
+With him came Skallagrim, driving the two captive viking chiefs before
+him with his axe, as a flesher drives lambs. Now, during these many
+months Brighteyes had grown yet more great in girth and glorious to
+look on than he was before. Moreover, his hair was now so long that it
+flowed like a flood of gold down towards his girdle, for since Gudruda
+trimmed it no shears had come near his head, and his locks grew fast
+as a woman's. The King looked at him and was astonished.
+
+"Of a truth," he said, "men have not lied about thee, Icelander, nor
+concerning that great wolf-hound of thine," and he pointed at
+Skallagrim with his sword of state. "Never saw I such a man;" and he
+bade all the mightiest men of his body-guard stand forward that he
+might measure them against Eric. But Brighteyes was an inch taller
+than the tallest, and measured half a span more round the chest than
+the biggest.
+
+"What wouldest thou of me, Icelander?" asked the King.
+
+"This, lord," said Eric: "to serve thee a while, and all my men with
+me."
+
+"That is an offer that few would turn from," answered the King. "Thou
+shalt go into my body-guard, and, if I have my will, thou shalt be
+near me in battle, and thy wolf-dog also."
+
+Eric said that he asked no better, and thereafter he went up with
+Edmund the King to make war on the Danes of Mercia, and he and
+Skallagrim did great deeds before the eyes of the Englishmen.
+
+That winter Eric and his company came back to London, and abode with
+the King in much state and honour. Now, there was a certain lady of
+the court named Elfrida. She was both fair and wealthy, the sweetest
+of women, and of royal blood by her mother's side. So soon as her eyes
+fell on Eric she loved him, and no one thing did she desire more than
+to be his wife. But Brighteyes kept aloof from her, for he loved
+Gudruda alone; and so the winter wore away, and in the spring he went
+away warring, nor did he come back till autumn was at hand.
+
+The Lady Elfrida sat at a window when Eric rode through London Town in
+the King's following, and as he passed she threw him a wreath of
+flowers. The King saw it and laughed.
+
+"My cold kinswoman seems to melt before those bright eyes of thine,
+Icelander," he said, "as my foes melt before Whitefire's flame. Well,
+I could wish her a worse mate," and he looked on him strangely.
+
+Eric bowed, but made no answer.
+
+That night, as they sat at meat in the palace, the Lady Elfrida, being
+bidden in jest of Edmund the King to fill the cup of the bravest,
+passed down the board, and, before all men, poured wine into Eric's
+cup, and, as she did so, welcomed him back with short sweet words.
+
+Eric grew red as dawn, and thanked her graciously; but after the feast
+he spoke with Skallagrim, asking him of the Gudruda, and when she
+could be ready to take the sea.
+
+"In ten days, lord," said Skallagrim; "but stay we not here with the
+King this winter? It is late to sail."
+
+"Nay," said Eric, "we bide not here. I would winter this year in
+Fareys, for they are the nighest place to Iceland that I may reach.
+Next summer my three years of outlawry are over, and I would fare back
+homewards."
+
+"Now, I see the shadow of a woman's hand," said Skallagrim. "It is
+very late to face the northern seas, and we may sail to Iceland from
+London in the spring."
+
+"It is my will that we should sail," answered Eric.
+
+"Past Orkneys runs the road to Fareys," said Skallagrim, "and in
+Orkneys sits a hawk to whom the Lady Elfrida is but a dove. In faring
+from ill we may hap on worse."
+
+"It is my will that we sail," said Eric stubbornly.
+
+"As thou wilt, and as the King wills," answered Skallagrim.
+
+On the morrow Eric went in before the King, and craved a boon.
+
+"There is little that thou canst ask, Brighteyes," said the King,
+"that I will not give thee, for, by my troth, I hold thee dear."
+
+"I am come back to seek no great thing, lord," answered Eric, "but
+this only: leave to bid thee farewell. I would wend homeward."
+
+"Say, Eric," said the King, "have I not dealt well with thee?"
+
+"Well, and overwell, lord."
+
+"Why, then, wouldst thou leave me? I have this in my mind--to bring
+thee to great honour. See, now, there is a fair lady in this court,
+and in her veins runs blood that even an Iceland viking might be proud
+to mate with. She has great lands, and, mayhap, she shall have more.
+Canst thou not find a home on them, thinkest thou, Brighteyes?"
+
+"In Iceland only I am at home, lord," said Eric.
+
+Then the King was wroth, and bade him begone when it pleased him, and
+Eric bowed before him and went out.
+
+Two days afterwards, while Eric was walking in the Palace gardens he
+met the Lady Elfrida face to face. She held white flowers in her hand,
+and she was fair to see and pale as the flowers she bore.
+
+He greeted her, and, after a while, she spoke to him in a gentle
+voice: "They say that thou goest from England, Brighteyes?" she said.
+
+"Yes, lady; I go," he answered.
+
+She looked on him once and twice and then burst out weeping. "Why
+goest thou hence to that cold land of thine?" she sobbed--"that
+hateful land of snow and ice! Is not England good enough for thee?"
+
+"I am at home there, lady, and there my mother waits me."
+
+"'There thy mother waits thee,' Eric?--say, does a maid called Gudruda
+the Fair wait thee there also?"
+
+"There is such a maid in Iceland," said Eric.
+
+"Yes; I know it--I know it all," she answered, drying her tears, and
+of a sudden growing cold and proud; "Eric, thou art betrothed to this
+Gudruda; and, for thy welfare, somewhat overfaithful to thy troth. For
+hearken, Eric Brighteyes. I know this: that little luck shall come to
+thee from the maid Gudruda. It would become me ill to say more;
+nevertheless, this is true--that here, in England, good fortune waits
+thy hand, and there in Iceland such fortune as men mete to their foes.
+Knowest thou this?"
+
+Eric looked at her and answered: "Lady," he said, "men are not born of
+their own will, they live and do little that they will, they do and
+go, perchance, whither they would not. Yet it may happen to a man that
+one meets him whose hand he fain would hold, if it be but for an
+hour's travel over icy ways; and it is better to hold that hand for
+this short hour than to wend his life through at a stranger's side."
+
+"Perhaps there is wisdom in thy folly," said the Lady Elfrida. "Still,
+I tell thee this: that no good luck waits thee there in Iceland."
+
+"It well may be," said Eric: "my days have been stormy, and the gale
+is still brewing. But it is a poor heart that fears the storm. Better
+to sink; for, coward or hero, all must sink at last."
+
+"Say, Eric," said the lady, "if that hand thou dost desire to hold is
+lost to thee, what then?"
+
+"If that hand is cold in death, then henceforth I wend my ways alone."
+
+"And if it be held of another hand than thine?"
+
+"Then I will journey back to England, lady, and here in this fair
+garden I may crave speech of thee again."
+
+They looked one on another. "Fare thee well, Eric!" said the Lady
+Elfrida. "Here in this garden we may talk again; and, if we talk no
+more--why, fare thee well! Days come and go; the swallow takes flight
+at winter, and lo! at spring it twitters round the eaves. And if it
+come not again, then farewell to that swallow. The world is a great
+house, Eric, and there is room for many swallows. But alas! for her
+who is left desolate--alas, alas!" And she turned and went.
+
+It is told of this lady Elfrida that she became very wealthy and was
+much honoured for her gentleness and wisdom, and that, when she was
+old, she built a great church and named it Ericskirk. It is also told
+that, though many sought her in marriage, she wedded none.
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+HOW SWANHILD WALKED THE SEAS
+
+Within two days afterwards, the Gudruda being bound for sea, Eric went
+up to bid farewell to the King. But Edmund was so angry with him
+because of his going that he would not see him. Thereon Eric took
+horse and rode down sadly from the Palace to the river-bank where the
+Gudruda lay. But when he was about to give the word to get out the
+oars, the King himself rode up, and with him men bearing costly gifts.
+Eric went ashore to speak with him.
+
+"I am angry with thee, Brighteyes," said Edmund, "yet it is not in my
+heart to let thee go without words and gifts of farewell. This only I
+ask of thee now, that, if things go not well with thee there, out in
+Iceland, thou wilt come back to me."
+
+"I will--that I promise thee, King," said Eric, "for I shall never
+find a better lord."
+
+"Nor I a braver servant," said the King. Then he gave him the gifts
+and kissed him before all men. To Skallagrim also he gave a good
+byrnie of Welsh steel coloured black.
+
+Then Eric went aboard again and dropped down the river with the tide.
+
+For five days all went well with them, the sea being calm and the
+winds light and favourable. But on the fifth night, as they sailed
+slowly along the coasts of East Anglia over against Yarmouth sands,
+the moon rose red and ringed and the sea fell dead calm.
+
+"Yonder hangs a storm-lamp, lord," said Skallagrim, pointing to the
+angry moon. "We shall soon be bailing, for the autumn gales draw
+near."
+
+"Wait till they come, then speak," said Eric. "Thou croakest ever like
+a raven."
+
+"And ravens croak before foul weather," answered Skallagrim, and just
+as he spoke a sudden gust of wind came up from the south-east and laid
+the Gudruda over. After this it came on to blow, and so fiercely that
+for whole days and nights their clothes were scarcely dry. They ran
+northwards before the storm and still northward, sighting no land and
+seeing no stars. And ever as they scudded on the gale grew fiercer,
+till at length the men were worn out with bailing and starved with wet
+and cold. Three of their number also were washed away by the seas, and
+all were in sorry plight.
+
+It was the fourth night of the gale. Eric stood at the helm, and by
+him Skallagrim. They were alone, for their comrades were spent and lay
+beneath decks, waiting for death. The ship was half full of water, but
+they had no more strength to bail. Eric seemed grim and gaunt in the
+white light of the moon, and his long hair streamed about him wildly.
+Grimmer yet was Skallagrim as he clung to the shield-rail and stared
+across the deep.
+
+"She rolls heavily, lord," he shouted, "and the water gains fast."
+
+"Can the men bail no more?" asked Eric.
+
+"Nay, they are outworn and wait for death."
+
+"They need not wait long," said Eric. "What do they say of me?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+Then Eric groaned aloud. "It was my stubbornness that brought us to
+this pass," he said; "I care little for myself, but it is ill that all
+should die for one man's folly."
+
+"Grieve not, lord," answered Skallagrim, "that is the world's way, and
+there are worse things than to drown. Listen! methinks I hear the roar
+of breakers yonder," and he pointed to the left.
+
+"Breakers they surely are," said Eric. "Now the end is near. But see,
+is not that land looming up on the right, or is it cloud?"
+
+"It is land," said Skallagrim, "and I am sure of this, that we run
+into a firth. Look, the seas boil like a hot spring. Hold on thy
+course, lord, perchance we may yet steer between rocks and land.
+Already the wind falls and the current lessens the seas."
+
+"Ay," said Eric, "already the fog and rain come up," and he pointed
+ahead where dense clouds gathered in the shape of a giant, whose head
+reached to the skies and moved towards them, hiding the moon.
+
+Skallagrim looked, then spoke: "Now here, it seems, is witchwork. Say,
+lord, hast thou ever seen mist travel against wind as it travels now?"
+
+"Never before," said Eric, and as he spoke the light of the moon went
+out.
+
+
+
+Swanhild, Atli's wife, sat in beauty in her bower on Straumey Isle and
+looked with wide eyes towards the sea. It was midnight. None stirred
+in Atli's hall, but still Swanhild looked out towards the sea.
+
+Now she turned and spoke into the darkness, for there was no light in
+the bower save the light of her great eyes.
+
+"Art thou there?" she said. "I have summoned thee thrice in the words
+thou knowest. Say, Toad, art there?"
+
+"Ay, Swanhild the Fatherless! Swanhild, Groa's daughter! Witch-
+mother's witch-child! I am here. What is thy will with me?" piped a
+thin voice like the voice of a dying babe.
+
+Swanhild shuddered a little and her eyes grew brighter--as bright as
+the eyes of a cat.
+
+"This first," she said: "that thou show thyself. Hideous as thou art,
+I had rather see thee, than speak with thee seeing thee not."
+
+"Mock not my form, lady," answered the thin voice, "for it is as thou
+dost fashion it in thy thought. To the good I am fair as day; to the
+evil, foul as their heart. /Toad/ thou didst call me: look, now I come
+as a toad!"
+
+Swanhild looked, and behold! a ring of the darkness grew white with
+light, and in it crouched a thing hideous to see. It was shaped as a
+great spotted toad, and on it was set a hag's face, with white locks
+hanging down on either side. Its eyes were blood-red and sunken, black
+were its fangs, and its skin was dead yellow. It grinned horribly as
+Swanhild shrank from it, then spoke again:
+
+"/Grey Wolf/ thou didst call me once, Swanhild, when thou wouldst have
+thrust Gudruda down Goldfoss gulf, and as a grey wolf I came, and gave
+thee counsel that thou tookest but ill. /Rat/ didst thou call me once,
+when thou wouldst save Brighteyes from the carles of Ospakar, and as a
+rat I came and in thy shape I walked the seas. /Toad/ thou callest me
+now, and as a toad I creep about thy feet. Name thy will, Swanhild,
+and I will name my price. But be swift, for there are other fair
+ladies whose wish I must do ere dawn."
+
+"Thou art hideous to look on!" said Swanhild, placing her hand before
+her eyes.
+
+"Say not so, lady; say not so. Look at this face of mine. Knowest thou
+it not? It is thy mother's--dead Groa lent it me. I took it from where
+she lies; and my toad's skin I drew from thy spotted heart, Swanhild,
+and more hideous than I am shalt thou be in a day to come, as once I
+was more fair than thou art to-day."
+
+Swanhild opened her lips to shriek, but no sound came.
+
+"Troll," she whispered, "mock me not with lies, but hearken to my
+bidding: where sails Eric now?"
+
+"Look out into the night, lady, and thou shalt see."
+
+Swanhild looked, and the ways of the darkness opened before her witch-
+sight. There at the mouth of Pentland Firth the Gudruda laboured
+heavily in the great seas, and by the tiller stood Eric, and with him
+Skallagrim.
+
+"Seest thou thy love?" asked the Familiar.
+
+"Yea," she answered, "full clearly; he is worn with wind and sea, but
+more glorious than aforetime, and his hair is long. Say, what shall
+befall him if thou aidest not?"
+
+"This, that he shall safely pass the Firth, for the gale falls, and
+come safely to Fareys, and from Fareys isles to Gudruda's arms."
+
+"And what canst thou do, Goblin?"
+
+"This: I can lure Eric's ship to wreck, and give his comrades, all
+save Skallagrim, to Ran's net, and bring him to thy arms, Swanhild,
+witch-mother's witch-child!"
+
+She hearkened. Her breast heaved and her eyes flashed.
+
+"And thy price, Toad?"
+
+"/Thou/ art the price, lady," piped the goblin. "Thou shalt give
+thyself to me when thy day is done, and merrily will we sisters dwell
+in Hela's halls, and merrily for ever will we fare about the earth o'
+nights, doing such tasks as this task of thine, Swanhild, and working
+wicked woe till the last woe is worked on us. Art thou content?"
+
+Swanhild thought. Twice her breath went from her lips in great sighs.
+Then she stood, pale and silent.
+
+"Safely shall he sail the Firth," piped the thin voice. "Safely shall
+he sit in Fareys. Safely shall he lie in white Gudruda's arms--/hee!
+hee!/ Think of it, lady!"
+
+Then Swanhild shook like a birth-tree in the gale, and her face grew
+ashen.
+
+"I am content," she said.
+
+"/Hee! hee!/ Brave lady! She is content! Ah, we sisters shall be
+merry. Hearken: if I aid thee thus I may do no more. Thrice has the
+night-owl come at thy call--now it must wing away. Yet things will be
+as I have said; thine own wisdom shall guide the rest. Ere morn
+Brighteyes shall stand in Atli's hall, ere spring he will be thy love,
+and ere autumn Gudruda shall sit on the high seat in the hall of
+Middalhof the bride of Ospakar. Draw nigh, give me thine arm, sister,
+that blood may seal our bargain."
+
+Swanhild drew near the toad, and, shuddering, stretched out her arm,
+and then and there the red blood ran, and there they sealed their
+sisterhood. And as the nameless deed was wrought, it seemed to
+Swanhild as though fire shot through her veins, and fire surged before
+her eyes, and in the fire a shape passed up weeping.
+
+"It is done, Blood-sister," piped the voice; "now I must away in thy
+form to be about thy tasks. Seat thee here before me--so. Now lay thy
+brow upon my brow--fear not, it was thy mother's--life on death!
+curling locks on corpse hair! See, so we change--we change. Now thou
+art the Death-toad and I am Swanhild, Atli's wife, who shall be Eric's
+love."
+
+Then Swanhild knew that her beauty had entered into the foulness of
+the toad, and the foulness of the toad into her beauty, for there
+before her stood her own shape and here she crouched a toad upon the
+floor.
+
+"Away to work, away!" said a soft low voice, her own voice speaking
+from her own body that stood before her, and lo! it was gone.
+
+But Swanhild crouched, in the shape of a hag-headed toad, upon the
+ground in her bower of Atli's hall, and felt wickedness and evil
+longings and hate boil and seethe within her heart. She looked out
+through her sunken horny eyes and she seemed to see strange sights.
+She saw Atli, her lord, dead upon the grass. She saw a woman asleep,
+and above her flashed a sword. She saw the hall of Middalhof red with
+blood. She saw a great gulf in a mountain's heart, and men fell down
+it. And, last, she saw a war-ship sailing fast out on the sea, afire,
+and vanish there.
+
+Now the witch-hag who wore Swanhild's loveliness stood upon the cliffs
+of Straumey and tossed her white arms towards the north.
+
+"Come, fog! come, sleet!" she cried. "Come, fog! come, sleet! Put out
+the moon and blind the eyes of Eric!" And as she called, the fog rose
+up like a giant and stretched his arms from shore to shore.
+
+"Move, fog! beat, rain!" she cried. "Move and beat against the gale,
+and blind the eyes of Eric!"
+
+And the fog moved on against the wind, and with it sleet and rain.
+
+"Now I am afeared," said Eric to Skallagrim, as they stood in darkness
+upon the ship: "the gale blows from behind us, and yet the mist drives
+fast in our faces. What comes now?"
+
+"This is witch-work, lord," answered Skallagrim, "and in such things
+no counsel can avail. Hold the tiller straight and drive on, say I.
+Methinks the gale lessens more and more."
+
+So they did for a little while, and all around them sounded the roar
+of breakers. Darker grew the sky and darker yet, till at the last,
+though they stood side by side, they could not see each other's
+shapes.
+
+"This is strange sailing," said Eric. "I hear the roar of breakers as
+it were beneath the prow."
+
+"Lash the helm, lord, and let us go forward. If there are breakers,
+perhaps we shall see their foam through the blackness," said
+Skallagrim.
+
+Eric did so, and they crept forward on the starboard board right to
+the prow of the ship, and there Skallagrim peered into the fog and
+sleet.
+
+"Lord," he whispered presently, and his voice shook strangely, "what
+is that yonder on the waters? Seest thou aught?"
+
+Eric stared and said, "By Odin! I see a shape of light like to the
+shape of a woman; it walks upon the waters towards us and the mist
+melts before it, and the sea grows calm beneath its feet."
+
+"I see that also!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"She comes nigh!" gasped Eric. "See how swift she comes! By the dead,
+it is Swanhild's shape! Look, Skallagrim! look how her eyes flame!--
+look how her hair streams upon the wind!"
+
+"It is Swanhild, and we are fey!" quoth Skallagrim, and they ran back
+to the helm, where Skallagrim sank upon the deck in fear.
+
+"See, Skallagrim, she glides before the Gudruda's beak! she glides
+backwards and she points yonder--there to the right! Shall I put the
+helm down and follow her?"
+
+"Nay, lord, nay; set no faith in witchcraft or evil will befall us."
+
+As he spoke a great gust of wind shook the ship, the music of the
+breakers roared in their ears, and the gleaming shape upon the waters
+tossed its arms wildly and pointed to the right.
+
+"The breakers call ahead," said Eric. "The shape points yonder, where
+I hear no sound of sea. Once before, thou mindest, Swanhild walked the
+waves to warn us and thereby saved us from the men of Ospakar. Ever
+she swore she loved me; now she is surely come in love to save us and
+all our comrades. Say, shall I put about? Look: once more she waves
+her arms and points," and as he spoke he gripped the helm.
+
+"I have no rede, lord," said Skallagrim, "and I love not witch-work.
+We can die but once, and death is all around; be it as thou wilt."
+
+Eric put down the helm with all his might. The good ship answered, and
+her timbers groaned loudly, as though in woe, when the strain of the
+sea struck her abeam. Then once more she flew fast across the waters,
+and fast before her glided the wraith of Swanhild. Now it pointed here
+and now there, and as it pointed so Eric shaped his course. For a
+while the noise of breakers lessened, but now again came a thunder,
+like the thunder of waves smiting on a cliff, and about the sides of
+the Gudruda the waves hissed like snakes.
+
+Suddenly the Shape threw up its arms and seemed to sink beneath the
+waves, while a sound like the sound of a great laugh went up from sea
+to sky.
+
+"Now here is the end," said Skallagrim, "and we are lured to doom."
+
+Ere ever the words had passed his lips the ship struck, and so
+fiercely that they were rolled upon the deck. Suddenly the sky grew
+clear, the moon shone out, and before them were cliffs and rocks, and
+behind them a great wave rushed on. From the hold of the ship there
+came a cry, for now their comrades were awake and they knew that death
+was here.
+
+Eric gripped Skallagrim round the middle and looked aft. On rushed the
+wave, no such wave had he ever seen. Now it struck and the Gudruda
+burst asunder beneath the blow.
+
+But Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail were lifted on its crest
+and knew no more.
+
+
+
+Swanhild, crouching in hideous guise upon the ground in the bower of
+Atli's hall, looked upon the visions that passed before her. Suddenly
+a woman's shape, her own shape, was there.
+
+"It is done, Blood-sister," said a voice, her own voice. "Merrily I
+walked the waves, and oh, merry was the cry of Eric's folk when Ran
+caught them in her net! Be thyself, again, Blood-sister--be fair as
+thou art foul; then arise, wake Atli thy lord, and go down to the
+sea's lip by the southern cliffs and see what thou shalt find. We
+shall meet no more till all this game is played and another game is
+set," and the shape of Swanhild crouched upon the floor before the
+hag-headed toad muttering "Pass! pass!"
+
+Then Swanhild felt her flesh come back to her, and as it grew upon her
+so the shape of the Death-headed toad faded away.
+
+"Farewell, Blood-sister!" piped a voice; "make merry as thou mayest,
+but merrier shall be our nights when thou hast gone a-sailing with
+Eric on the sea. Farewell! farewell! /Were-wolf/ thou didst call me
+once, and as a wolf I came. /Rat/ thou didst call me once, and as a
+rat I came. /Toad/ didst thou call me once, and as a toad I came. Say,
+at the last, what wilt thou call me and in what shape shall I come,
+Blood-sister? Till then farewell!"
+
+
+
+And all was gone and all was still.
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+HOW ASMUND THE PRIEST WEDDED UNNA, THOROD'S DAUGHTER
+
+Now the story goes back to Iceland.
+
+When Brighteyes was gone, for a while Gudruda the Fair moved sadly
+about the stead, like one new-widowed. Then came tidings. Men told how
+Ospakar Blacktooth had waylaid Eric on the seas with two long ships,
+dragons of war, and how Eric had given him battle and sunk one dragon
+with great loss to Ospakar. They told also how Blacktooth's other
+dragon, the Raven, had sailed away before the wind, and Eric had
+sailed after it in a rising gale. But of what befell these ships no
+news came for many a month, and it was rumoured that this had befallen
+them--that both had sunk in the gale, and that Eric was dead.
+
+But Gudruda would not believe this. When Asmund the Priest, her
+father, asked her why she did not believe it, she answered that, had
+Eric been dead, her heart would surely have spoken to her of it. To
+this Asmund said that it might be so.
+
+Hay-harvest being done, Asmund made ready for his wedding with Unna,
+Thorod's daughter and Eric's cousin.
+
+Now it was agreed that the marriage-feast should be held at Middalhof;
+for Asmund wished to ask a great company to the wedding, and there was
+no place at Coldback to hold so many. Also some of the kin of Thorod,
+Unna's father, were bidden to the feast from the east and north. At
+length all was prepared and the guests came in great companies, for no
+such feast had been made in this quarter for many years.
+
+On the eve of the marriage Asmund spoke with Groa. The witch-wife had
+borne herself humbly since she was recovered from her sickness. She
+passed about the stead like a rat at night, speaking few words and
+with downcast eyes. She was busy also making all things ready for the
+feasting.
+
+Now as Asmund went up the hall seeing that everything was in order,
+Groa drew near to him and touched him gently on the shoulder.
+
+"Are things to thy mind, lord?" she said.
+
+"Yes, Groa," he answered, "more to my mind than to thine I fear."
+
+"Fear not, lord; thy will is my will."
+
+"Say, Groa, is it thy wish to bide here in Middalhof when Unna is my
+housewife?"
+
+"It is my wish to serve thee as aforetime," she answered softly, "if
+so be that Unna wills it."
+
+"That is her desire," said Asmund and went his ways.
+
+But Groa stood looking after him and her face was fierce and evil.
+
+"While bane has virtue, while runes have power, and while hand has
+cunning, never, Unna, shalt thou take my place at Asmund's side! Out
+of the water I came to thee, Asmund; into the water I go again.
+Unquiet shall I lie there--unquiet shall I wend through Hela's halls;
+but Unna shall rest at Asmund's side--in Asmund's cairn!"
+
+Then again she moved about the hall, making all things ready for the
+feast. But at midnight, when the light was low and folk slept, Groa
+rose, and, veiled in a black robe, with a basket in her hand, passed
+like a shadow through the mists that hang about the river's edge, and
+in silence, always looking behind her, like one who fears a hidden
+foe, culled flowers of noisome plants that grow in the marsh. Her
+basket being filled, she passed round the stead to a hidden dell upon
+the mountain side. Here a man stood waiting, and near him burned a
+fire of turf. In his hand he held an iron-pot. It was Koll the Half-
+witted, Groa's thrall.
+
+"Are all things ready, Koll?" she said.
+
+"Yes," he answered; "but I like not these tasks of thine, mistress.
+Say now, what wouldst thou do with the fire and the pot?"
+
+"This, then, Koll. I would brew a love-potion for Asmund the Priest as
+he has bidden me to do."
+
+"I have done many an ill deed for thee, mistress, but of all of them I
+love this the least," said the thrall, doubtfully.
+
+"I have done many a good deed for thee, Koll. It was I who saved thee
+from the Doom-stone, seeming to prove thee innocent--ay, even when thy
+back was stretched on it, because thou hadst slain a man in his sleep.
+Is it not so?"
+
+"Yea, mistress."
+
+"And yet thou wast guilty, Koll. And I have given thee many good
+gifts, is it not so?"
+
+"Yes, it is so."
+
+"Listen then: serve me this once and I will give thee one last gift--
+thy freedom, and with it two hundred in silver."
+
+Koll's eyes glistened. "What must I do, mistress?"
+
+"To-day at the wedding-feast it will be thy part to pour the cups
+while Asmund calls the toasts. Last of all, when men are merry, thou
+wilt mix that cup in which Asmund shall pledge Unna his wife and Unna
+must pledge Asmund. Now, when thou hast poured, thou shalt pass the
+cup to me, as I stand at the foot of the high seat, waiting to give
+the bride greeting on behalf of the serving-women of the household.
+Thou shalt hand the cup to me as though in error, and that is but a
+little thing to ask of thee."
+
+"A little thing indeed," said Koll, staring at her, and pulling with
+his hand at his red hair, "yet I like it not. What if I say no,
+mistress?"
+
+"Say no or speak of this and I will promise thee one thing only, thou
+knave, and it is, before winter comes, that the crows shall pick thy
+bones! Now, brave me, if thou darest," and straightway Groa began to
+mutter some witch-words.
+
+"Nay," said Koll, holding up his hand as though to ward away a blow.
+"Curse me not: I will do as thou wilt. But when shall I touch the two
+hundred in silver?"
+
+"I will give thee half before the feast begins, and half when it is
+ended, and with it freedom to go where thou wilt. And now leave me,
+and on thy life see that thou fail me not."
+
+"I have never failed thee yet," said Koll, and went his ways.
+
+Now Groa set the pot upon the fire, and, placing in it the herbs that
+she had gathered, poured water on them. Presently they began to boil
+and as they boiled she stirred them with a peeled stick and muttered
+spells over them. For long she sat in that dim and lonely place
+stirring the pot and muttering spells, till at length the brew was
+done.
+
+She lifted the pot from the fire and smelt at it. Then drawing a phial
+from her robe she poured out the liquor and held it to the sky. The
+witch-water was white as milk, but presently it grew clear. She looked
+at it, then smiled evilly.
+
+"Here is a love-draught for a queen--ah, a love-draught for a queen!"
+she said, and, still smiling, she placed the phial in her breast.
+
+Then, having scattered the fire with her foot, Groa took the pot and
+threw it into a deep pool of water, where it could not be found
+readily, and crept back to the stead before men were awake.
+
+
+
+Now the day wore on and all the company were gathered at the marriage-
+feast to the number of nearly two hundred. Unna sat in the high seat,
+and men thought her a bonny bride, and by her side sat Asmund the
+Priest. He was a hale, strong man to look on, though he had seen some
+three-score winters; but his mien was sad, and his heart heavy. He
+drank cup after cup to cheer him, but all without avail. For his
+thought sped back across the years and once more he seemed to see the
+face of Gudruda the Gentle as she lay dying, and to hear her voice
+when she foretold evil to him if he had aught to do with Groa the
+Witch-wife. And now it seemed to him that the evil was at hand, though
+whence it should come he knew not. He looked up. There Groa moved
+along the hall, ministering to the guests; but he saw as she moved
+that her eyes were always fixed, now on him and now on Unna. He
+remembered that curse also which Groa had called down upon him when he
+had told her that he was betrothed to Unna, and his heart grew cold
+with fear. "Now I will change my counsel," Asmund said to himself:
+"Groa shall not stay here in this stead, for I will look no longer on
+that dark face of hers. She goes hence to-morrow."
+
+Not far from Asmund sat Bjrn, his son. As Gudruda the Fair, his
+sister, brought him mead he caught her by the sleeve, whispering in
+her ear. "Methinks our father is sad. What weighs upon his heart?"
+
+"I know not," said Gudruda, but as she spoke she looked first on
+Asmund, then at Groa.
+
+"It is ill that Groa should stop here," whispered Bjrn again.
+
+"It is ill," answered Gudruda, and glided away.
+
+Asmund saw their talk and guessed its purport. Rousing himself he
+laughed aloud and called to Koll the Half-witted to pour the cups that
+he might name the toasts.
+
+Koll filled, and, as Asmund called the toasts one by one, Koll handed
+the cups to him. Asmund drank deep of each, till at length his sorrow
+passed from him, and, together with all who sat there, he grew merry.
+
+Last of all came the toast of the bride's cup. But before Asmund
+called it, the women of the household drew near the high seat to
+welcome Unna, when she should have drunk. Gudruda stood foremost, and
+Groa was next to her.
+
+Now Koll filled as before, and it was a great cup of gold that he
+filled.
+
+Asmund rose to call the toast, and with him all who were in the hall.
+Koll brought up the cup, and handed it, not to Asmund, but to Groa;
+but there were few who noted this, for all were listening to Asmund's
+toast and most of the guests were somewhat drunken.
+
+"The cup," cried Asmund--"give me the cup that I may drink."
+
+Then Groa started forward, and as she did so she seemed to stumble, so
+that for a moment her robe covered up the great bride-cup. Then she
+gathered herself together slowly, and, smiling, passed up the cup.
+
+Asmund lifted it to his lips and drank deep. Then he turned and gave
+it to Unna his wife, but before she drank he kissed her on the lips.
+
+Now while all men shouted such a welcome that the hall shook, and as
+Unna, smiling, drank from the cup, the eyes of Asmund fell upon Groa
+who stood beneath him, and lo! her eyes seemed to flame and her face
+was hideous as the face of a troll.
+
+Asmund grew white and put his hand to his head, as though to think,
+then cried aloud:
+
+"Drink not, Unna! the draught is drugged!" and he struck at the vessel
+with his hand.
+
+He smote it indeed, and so hard that it flew from her hand far down
+the hall.
+
+But Unna had already drunk deep.
+
+"The draught is drugged!" Asmund cried, and pointed to Groa, while all
+men stood silent, not knowing what to do.
+
+"The draught is drugged!" he cried a third time, "and that witch has
+drugged it!" And he began to tear at his breast.
+
+Then Groa laughed so shrilly that men trembled to hear her.
+
+"Yes, lord," she screamed, "the draught is drugged, and Groa the
+Witch-wife hath drugged it! Ay, tear thy heart out, Asmund, and Unna,
+grow thou white as snow--soon, if my medicine has virtue, thou shalt
+be whiter yet! Hearken all men. Asmund the Priest is Swanhild's
+father, and for many a year I have been Asmund's mate. What did I tell
+thee, lord?--that I would see the two of you dead ere Unna should take
+my place!--ay, and on Gudruda the Fair, thy daughter, and Bjrn thy
+son, and Eric Brighteyes, Gudruda's love, and many another man--on
+them too shall my curse fall! Tear thy heart out, Asmund! Unna, grow
+thou white as snow! The draught is drugged and Groa, Ran's gift! Groa
+the Witch-Wife! Groa, Asmund's love! hath drugged it!"
+
+And ere ever a man might lift a hand to stay her Groa glided past the
+high seat and was gone.
+
+For a space all stood silent. Asmund ceased clutching at his breast.
+Rising he spoke heavily:
+
+"Now I learn that sin is a stone to smite him who hurled it. Gudruda
+the Gentle spoke sooth when she warned me against this woman. /New
+wed, new dead!/ Unna, fare thee well!"
+
+And straightway Asmund fell down and died there by the high seat in
+his own hall.
+
+Unna gazed at him with ashen face. Then, plucking at her bosom she
+sprang from the dais and rushed along the hall, screaming. Men made
+way for her, and at the door she also fell dead.
+
+
+
+This then was the end of Asmund Asmundson the Priest, and Unna,
+Thorod's daughter, Eric's cousin, his new-made wife.
+
+
+
+For a moment there was silence in the hall. But before the echoes of
+Unna's screams had died away, Bjrn cried aloud:
+
+"The witch! where is the witch?"
+
+Then with a yell of rage, men leaped to their feet, seizing their
+weapons, and rushed from the stead. Out they ran. There, on the hill-
+side far above them, a black shape climbed and leapt swiftly. They
+gave tongue like dogs set upon a wolf and sped up the hill.
+
+They gained the crest of the hill, and now they were at Goldfoss
+brink. Lo! the witch-wife had crossed the bed of the torrent, for
+little rain had fallen and the river was low. She stood on Sheep-
+saddle, the water running from her robes. On Sheep-saddle she stood
+and cursed them.
+
+Bjrn took a bow and set a shaft upon the string. He drew it and the
+arrow sung through the air and smote her, speeding through her heart.
+With a cry Groa threw up her arms.
+
+Then down she plunged. She fell on Wolf's Fang, where Eric once had
+stood and, bouncing thence, rushed to the boiling deeps below and was
+no more seen for ever.
+
+Thus, then, did Asmund the Priest wed Unna, Thorod's daughter, and
+this was the end of the feasting.
+
+Thereafter Bjrn, Asmund's son, ruled at Middalhof, and was Priest in
+his place. He sought for Koll the Half-witted to kill him, but Koll
+took the fells, and after many months he found passage in a ship that
+was bound for Scotland.
+
+Now Bjrn was a hard man and a greedy. He was no friend to Eric
+Brighteyes, and always pressed it on Gudruda that she should wed
+Ospakar Blacktooth. But to this counsel Gudruda would not listen, for
+day and night she thought upon her love. Next summer there came
+tidings that Eric was safe in Ireland, and men spoke of his deeds, and
+of how he and Skallagrim had swept the ship of Ospakar single-handed.
+Now after these tidings, for a while Gudruda walked singing through
+the meads, and no flower that grew in them was half so fair as she.
+
+That summer also Ospakar Blacktooth met Bjrn, Asmund's son, at the
+Thing, and they talked much together in secret.
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+HOW EARL ATLI FOUND ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM ON THE
+SOUTHERN ROCKS OF STRAUMEY ISLE
+
+Swanhild, robed in white, as though new risen from sleep, stood,
+candle in hand, by the bed of Atli the Earl, her lord, crying "Awake!"
+
+"What passes now?" said Atli, lifting himself upon his arm. "What
+passes, Swanhild, and why dost thou ever wander alone at nights,
+looking so strangely? I love not thy dark witch-ways, Swanhild, and I
+was wed to thee in an ill hour, wife who art no wife."
+
+"In an ill hour indeed, Earl Atli," she answered, "an ill hour for
+thee and me, for, as thou hast said, eld and youth are strange
+yokefellows and pull different paths. Arise now, Earl, for I have
+dreamed a dream."
+
+"Tell it to me on the morrow, then," quoth Atli; "there is small
+joyousness in thy dreams, that always point to evil, and I must bear
+enough evil of late."
+
+"Nay, lord, my rede may not be put aside so. Listen now: I have
+dreamed that a great dragon of war has been cast away upon Straumey's
+south-western rocks. The cries of those who drowned rang in my ears.
+But I thought that some came living to the shore, and lie there
+senseless, to perish of the cold. Arise, therefore, take men and go
+down to the rocks."
+
+"I will go at daybreak," said Atli, letting his head fall upon the
+pillow. "I have little faith in such visions, and it is too late for
+ships of war to try the passage of the Firth."
+
+"Arise, I say," answered Swanhild sternly, "and do my bidding, else I
+will myself go to search the rocks."
+
+Then Atli rose grumbling, and shook the heavy sleep from his eyes: for
+of all living folk he most feared Swanhild his wife. He donned his
+garments, threw a thick cloak about him, and, going to the hall where
+men snored around the dying fires, for the night was bitter, he awoke
+some of them. Now among those men whom he called was Hall of Lithdale,
+Hall the mate who had cut the grapnel-chain. For this Hall, fearing to
+return to Iceland, had come hither saying that he had been wounded off
+Fareys, in the great fight between Eric and Ospakar's men, and left
+there to grow well of his hurt or die. Then Atli, not knowing that the
+carle lied, had bid him welcome for Eric's sake, for he still loved
+Eric above all men.
+
+But Hall loved not labour and nightfarings to search for shipwrecked
+men of whom the Lady Swanhild had chanced to dream. So he turned
+himself upon his side and slept again. Still, certain of Atli's folk
+rose at his bidding, and they went together down to the south-western
+rocks.
+
+But Swanhild, a cloak thrown over her night-gear, sat herself in the
+high seat of the hall and fixing her eyes, now upon the dying fires
+and now upon the blood-marks in her arm, waited in silence. The night
+was cold and windy, but the moon shone bright, and by its light Atli
+and his people made their way to the south-western rocks, on which the
+sea beat madly.
+
+"What lies yonder?" said Atli, pointing to some black things that lay
+beneath them upon the rock, cast there by the waves. A man climbed
+down the cliff's side that is here as though it were cut in steps, and
+then cried aloud:
+
+"A ship's mast, new broken, lord."
+
+"It seems that Swanhild dreams true," muttered Atli; "but I am sure of
+this: that none have come ashore alive in such a sea."
+
+Presently the man who searched the rocks below cried aloud again:
+
+"Here lie two great men, locked in each other's arms. They seem to be
+dead."
+
+Now all the men climb down the slippery rocks as best they may, though
+the spray wets them, and with them goes Atli. The Earl is a brisk man,
+though old in years, and he comes first to where the two lie. He who
+was undermost lay upon his back, but his face is hid by the thick
+golden hair that flowed across it.
+
+"Man's body indeed, but woman's locks," said Atli as he put out his
+hand and drew the hair away, so that the light of the moon fell on the
+face beneath.
+
+He looked, then staggered back against the rock.
+
+"By Thor!" he cried, "here lies the corpse of Eric Brighteyes!" and
+Atli wrung his hands and wept, for he loved Eric much.
+
+"Be not so sure that the men are dead, Earl," said one, "I thought I
+saw yon great carle move but now."
+
+"He is Skallagrim Lambstail, Eric's Death-shadow," said Atli again.
+"Up with them, lads--see, yonder lies a plank--and away to the hall. I
+will give twenty in silver to each of you if Eric lives," and he
+unclasped his cloak and threw it over both of them.
+
+Then with much labour they loosed the grip of the two men one from the
+other, and they set Skallagrim on the plank. But eight men bore Eric
+up the cliff between them, and the task was not light, though the Earl
+held his head, from which the golden hair hung like seaweed from a
+rock.
+
+At length they came to the hall and carried them in. Swanhild, seeing
+them come, moved down from the high seat.
+
+"Bring lamps, and pile up the fires," cried Atli. "A strange thing has
+come to pass, Swanhild, and thou dost dream wisely, indeed, for here
+we have Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail. They were locked
+like lovers in each other's arms, but I know not if they are dead or
+living."
+
+Now Swanhild started and came on swiftly. Had the Familiar tricked her
+and had she paid the price for nothing? Was Eric taken from Gudruda
+and given to her indeed--but given dead? She bent over him, gazing
+keenly on his face. Then she spoke.
+
+"He is not dead but senseless. Bring dry clothes, and make water hot,"
+and, kneeling down, she loosed Eric's helm and harness and ungirded
+Whitefire from his side.
+
+For long Swanhild and Atli tended Eric at one fire, and the serving
+women tended Skallagrim at the other. Presently there came a cry that
+Skallagrim stirred, and Atli with others ran to see. At this moment
+also the eyes of Eric were unsealed, and Swanhild saw them looking at
+her dimly from beneath. Moved to it by her passion and her joy that he
+yet lived, Swanhild let her face fall till his was hidden in her
+unbound hair, and kissed him upon the lips. Eric shut his eyes again,
+sighing heavily, and presently he was asleep. They bore him to a bed
+and heaped warm wrappings upon him. At daybreak he woke, and Atli, who
+sat watching at his side, gave him hot mead to drink.
+
+"Do I dream?" said Eric, "or is it Earl Atli who tends me, and did I
+but now see the face of Swanhild bending over me?"
+
+"It is no dream, Eric, but the truth. Thou hast been cast away here on
+my isle of Straumey."
+
+"And Skallagrim--where is Skallagrim?"
+
+"Skallagrim lives--fear not!"
+
+"And my comrades, how went it with them?"
+
+"But ill, Eric. Ran has them all. Now sleep!"
+
+Eric groaned aloud. "I had rather died also than live to hear such
+heavy tidings," he said. "Witch-work! witch-work! and that fair witch-
+face wrought it." And once again he slept, nor did he wake till the
+sun was high. But Atli could make nothing of his words.
+
+
+
+When Swanhild left the side of Eric she met Hall of Lithdale face to
+face and his looks were troubled.
+
+"Say, lady," he asked, "will Brighteyes live?"
+
+"Grieve not, Hall," she answered, "Eric will surely live and he will
+be glad to find a messmate here to greet him, having left so many
+yonder," and she pointed to the sea.
+
+"I shall not be glad," said Hall, letting his eyes fall.
+
+"Why not, Hall? Fearest thou Skallagrim? or hast thou done ill by
+Eric?"
+
+"Ay, lady, I fear Skallagrim, for he swore to slay me, and that kind
+of promise he ever keeps. Also, if the truth must out, I have not
+dealt altogether well with Eric, and of all men I least wish to talk
+with him."
+
+"Speak on," she said.
+
+Then, being forced to it, Hall told her something of the tale of the
+cutting of the cable, being careful to put another colour on it.
+
+"Now it seems that thou art a coward, Hall," Swanhild said when he had
+done, "and I scarcely looked for that in thee," for she had not been
+deceived by the glozing of his speech. "It will be bad for thee to
+meet Eric and Skallagrim, and this is my counsel: that thou goest
+hence before they wake, for they will sit this winter here in Atli's
+hall."
+
+"And whither shall I go, lady?"
+
+Swanhild gazed on him, and as she did so a dark thought came into her
+heart: here was a knave who might serve her ends.
+
+"Hall," she said, "thou art an Icelander, and I have known of thee
+from a child, and therefore I wish to serve thee in thy strait, though
+thou deservest it little. See now, Atli the Earl has a farm on the
+mainland not two hours' ride from the sea. Thither thou shalt go, if
+thou art wise, and thou shalt sit there this winter and be hidden from
+Eric and Skallagrim. Nay, thank me not, but listen: it may chance that
+I shall have a service for thee to do before spring is come."
+
+"Lady, I shall wait upon thy word," said Hall.
+
+"Good. Now, so soon as it is light, I will find a man to sail with
+thee across the Firth, for the sea falls, and bear my message to the
+steward at Atli's farm. Also if thou needest faring-money thou shalt
+have it. Farewell."
+
+Thus then did Hall fly before Eric and Skallagrim.
+
+
+
+On the morrow Eric and Skallagrim arose, sick and bruised indeed, but
+not at all harmed, and went down to the shore. There they found many
+dead men of their company, but never a one in whom the breath of life
+remained.
+
+Skallagrim looked at Eric and spoke: "Last night the mist came up
+against the wind: last night we saw Swanhild's wraith upon the waves,
+and there is the path it showed, and there"--and he pointed to the
+dead men--"is the witch-seed's flower. Now to-day we sit in Atli's
+hall and here we must stay this winter at Swanhild's side, and in all
+this there lies a riddle that I cannot read."
+
+But Eric shook his head, making no answer. Then, leaving Skallagrim
+with the dead, he turned, and striding back alone towards the hall,
+sat down on a rock in the home meadows and, covering his face with his
+hands, wept for his comrades.
+
+As he wept Swanhild came to him, for she had seen him from afar, and
+touched him gently on the arm.
+
+"Why weepest thou, Eric?" she said.
+
+"I weep for the dead, Swanhild," he answered.
+
+"Weep not for the dead--they are at peace; if thou must weep, weep for
+the living. Nay, weep not at all; rejoice rather that thou art here to
+mourn. Hast thou no word of greeting for me who have not heard thy
+voice these many months?"
+
+"How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who would never have seen thy face
+again if I might have had my will? Knowest thou that yesternight, as
+we laboured in yonder Firth, we saw a shape walking the waters to lead
+us to our doom? How shall I greet thee, Swanhild, who art a witch and
+evil?"
+
+"And knowest thou, Eric, that yesternight I woke from sleep, having
+dreamed that thou didst lie upon the shore, and thus I saved thee
+alive, as perchance I have saved thee aforetime? If thou didst see a
+shape walking the waters it was that shape which led thee here. Hadst
+thou sailed on, not only those thou mournest, but Skallagrim and thou
+thyself had now been numbered with the lost."
+
+"Better so than thus," said Brighteyes. "Knowest thou also, Swanhild,
+that when last night my life came back again in Atli's hall, methought
+that Atli's wife leaned over me and kissed me on the lips? That was an
+ill dream, Swanhild."
+
+"Some had found it none so ill, Eric," she made answer, looking on him
+strangely. "Still, it was but a dream. Thou didst dream that Atli's
+wife breathed back the breath of life into thy pale lips--be sure of
+it thou didst but dream. Ah, Eric, fear me no more; forget the evil
+that I have wrought in the blindness and folly of my youth. Now things
+are otherwise with me. Now I am a wedded wife and faithful hearted to
+my lord. Now, if I still love thee, it is with a sister's love.
+Therefore forget my sins, remember only that as children we played
+upon the Iceland fells. Remember that, as boy and girl, we rode along
+the marshes, while the sea-mews clamoured round our heads. The world
+is cold, Eric, and few are the friends we find in it; many are already
+gone, and soon the friendless dark draws near. So put me not away, my
+brother and my friend; but, for a little space, whilst thou art here
+in Atli's hall, let us walk hand in hand as we walked long years ago
+in Iceland, gathering up the fifa-bloom, and watching the midnight
+shadows creep up the icy jkul's crest."
+
+Thus Swanhild spoke to him most sweetly, in a low voice of music,
+while the tears gathered in her eyes, talking ever of Iceland that he
+loved, and of days long dead, till Eric's heart softened in him.
+
+"Almost do I believe thee, Swanhild," he said, stretching out his
+hand; "but I know thus: that thou art never twice in the same mood,
+and that is beyond my measuring. Thou hast done much evil and thou
+hast striven to do more; also I love not those who seem to walk the
+seas o' nights. Still, hold thou to this last saying of thine and
+there shall be peace between us while I bide here."
+
+She touched his hand humbly and turned to go. But as she went Eric
+spoke again: "Say, Swanhild, hast thou tidings from Iceland yonder? I
+have heard no word of Asmund or of Gudruda for two long years and
+more."
+
+She stood still, and a dark shadow that he could not see flitted
+across her face.
+
+"I have few tidings, Eric," she said, turning, "and those few, if I
+may trust them, bad enough. For this is the rumour that I have heard:
+that Asmund the Priest, my father, is dead; that Groa, my mother, is
+dead--how, I know not; and, lastly, that Gudruda the Fair, thy love,
+is betrothed to Ospakar Blacktooth and weds him in the spring."
+
+Now Eric sprang up with an oath and grasped the hilt of Whitefire.
+Then he sat down again upon the stone and covered his face with his
+hands.
+
+"Grieve not, Eric," she said gently; "I put no faith in this news, for
+rumour, like the black-backed gull, often changes colour in its flight
+across the seas. Also I had it but at fifth hand. I am sure of this,
+at least, that Gudruda will never forsake thee without a cause."
+
+"It shall go ill with Ospakar if this be true," said Eric, smiling
+grimly, "for Whitefire is yet left me and with it one true friend."
+
+"Run not to meet the evil, Eric. Thou shalt come to Iceland with the
+summer flowers and find Gudruda faithful and yet fairer than of yore.
+Knowest thou that Hall of Lithdale, who was thy mate, has sat here
+these two months? He is gone but this morning, I know not whither,
+leaving a message that he returns no more."
+
+"He did well to go," said Eric, and he told her how Hall had cut the
+cable.
+
+"Ay, well indeed," answered Swanhild. "Had Atli known this he would
+have scourged Hall hence with rods of seaweed. And now, Eric, I desire
+to ask thee one more thing: why wearest thou thy hair long like a
+woman's? Indeed, few women have such hair as thine is now."
+
+"For this cause, Swanhild: I swore to Gudruda that none should cut my
+hair till she cut it once more. It is a great burden to me surely, for
+never did hair grow so fast and strong as mine, and once in a fray I
+was held fast by it and went near to the losing of my life. Still, I
+will keep the oath even if it grows on to my feet," and he laughed a
+little and shook back his golden locks.
+
+Swanhild smiled also and, turning, went. But when her face was hidden
+from him she smiled no more.
+
+"As I live," she said in her heart, "before spring rains fall I again
+will cause thee to break this oath, Eric. Ay, I will cut a lock of
+that bright hair of thine and send it for a love-token to Gudruda."
+
+But Eric still sat upon the rock thinking. Swanhild had set an evil
+seed of doubt in his heart, and already it put forth roots. What if
+the tale were true? What if Gudruda had given herself to Ospakar?
+Well, if so--she should soon be a widow, that he swore.
+
+Then he rose, and stalked grimly towards the hall.
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+HOW KOLL THE HALF-WITTED BROUGHT TIDINGS FROM ICELAND
+
+Presently as Eric walked he met Atli the Earl seeking him. Atli
+greeted him.
+
+"I have seen strange things, Eric," he said, "but none more strange
+than this coming of thine and the manner of it. Swanhild is
+foresighted, and that was a doom-dream of hers."
+
+"I think her foresighted also," said Eric. "And now, Earl, knowest
+thou this: that little good can come to thee at the hands of one whom
+thou hast saved from the sea."
+
+"I set no faith in such old wives' tales," answered Atli. "Here thou
+art come, and it is my will that thou shouldest sit here. At the
+least, I will give thee no help to go hence."
+
+"Then we must bide in Straumey, it seems," said Eric: "for of all my
+goods and gear this alone is left me," and he looked at Whitefire.
+
+"Thou hast still a gold ring or two upon thy arm," answered the Earl,
+laughing. "But surely, Eric, thou wouldst not begone?"
+
+"I know not, Earl. Listen: it is well that I should be plain with
+thee. Once, before thou didst wed Swanhild, she had another mind."
+
+"I have heard something of that, and I have guessed more, Brighteyes;
+but methinks Swanhild is little given to gadding now. She is as cold
+as ice, and no good wife for any man," and Atli sighed, "'Snow melts
+not if sun shines not,' so runs the saw. Thou art an honest man, Eric,
+and no whisperer in the ears of others' wives."
+
+"I am not minded indeed to do thee such harm, Earl, but this thou
+knowest: that woman's guile and beauty are swords few shields can
+brook. Now I have spoken--and they are hard words to speak--be it as
+thou wilt."
+
+"It is my will that thou shouldest sit here this winter, Eric. Had I
+my way, indeed, never wouldest thou sit elsewhere. Listen: things have
+not gone well with me of late. Age hath a grip of me, and foes rise up
+against one who has no sons. That was an ill marriage, too, which I
+made with Swanhild yonder: for she loves me not, and I have found no
+luck since first I saw her face. Moreover, it is in my mind that my
+days are almost sped. Swanhild has already foretold my death, and, as
+thou knowest well, she is foresighted. So I pray thee, Eric, bide thou
+here while thou mayest, for I would have thee at my side."
+
+"It shall be as thou wilt, Earl," said Eric.
+
+
+
+So Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail sat that winter in the
+hall of Atli the Earl at Straumey. For many weeks all things went well
+and Eric forgot his fears. Swanhild was gentle to him and kindly. She
+loved much to talk with him, even of Gudruda her rival; but no word of
+love passed her lips. Nevertheless, she did but bide her time, for
+when she struck she determined to strike home. Atli and Eric were ever
+side by side, and Eric gave the Earl much good counsel. He promised to
+do this also, for now, being simple-minded, his doubts had passed and
+he had no more fear of Swanhild. On the mainland lived a certain chief
+who had seized large lands of Atli's, and held them for a year or
+more. Now Eric gave his word that, before he sailed for Iceland in the
+early summer, he would go up against this man and drive him from the
+lands, if he could. For Brighteyes might not come to Iceland till hard
+upon midsummer, when his three years of outlawry were spent.
+
+The winter wore away and the spring came. Then Atli gathered his men
+and went with Eric in boats to where the chief dwelt who held his
+lands. There they fell on him and there was a fierce fight. But in the
+end the man was slain by Skallagrim, and Eric did great deeds, as was
+his wont. Now in this fray Eric was wounded in the foot by a spear, so
+that he must be borne back to Straumey, and he lay there in the hall
+for many days. Swanhild nursed him, and most days he sat talking with
+her in her bower.
+
+When Eric was nearly healed of his hurt, the Earl went with all his
+people to a certain island of the Orkneys to gather scat[*] that was
+unpaid, and Skallagrim went with him. But Eric did not go, because of
+his hurt, fearing lest the wound should open if he walked overmuch.
+Thus it came to pass that, except for some women, he was left almost
+alone with Swanhild.
+
+[*] Tribute.
+
+Now, when Atli had been gone three days, it chanced on an afternoon
+that Swanhild heard how a man from Iceland sought speech with her. She
+bade them bring him in to where she was alone in her bower, for Eric
+was not there, having gone down to the sea to fish.
+
+The man came and she knew him at once for Koll the Half-witted, who
+had been her mother Groa's thrall. On his shoulders was the cloak that
+Ospakar Blacktooth had given him; it was much torn now, and he had a
+worn and hungry look.
+
+"Whence comest thou, Koll?" she asked, "and what are thy tidings?"
+
+"From Scotland last, lady, where I sat this winter; before that, from
+Iceland. As for my tidings, they are heavy, if thou hast not heard
+them. Asmund the Priest is dead, and dead is Unna his wife, poisoned
+by thy mother, Groa, at their marriage-feast. Dead, too, is thy
+mother, Groa. Bjrn, Asmund's son, shot her with an arrow, and she
+lies in Goldfoss pool."
+
+Now Swanhild hid her face for a while in her hands. Then she lifted it
+and it was white to see. "Speakest thou truth, fox? If thou liest,
+this I swear to thee--thy tongue shall be dragged from thee by the
+roots!"
+
+"I speak the truth, lady," he answered. But still he spoke not all the
+truth, for he said nothing of the part which he had played in the
+deaths of Asmund and Unna. Then he told her of the manner of their
+end.
+
+Swanhild listened silently--then said:
+
+"What news of Gudruda, Asmund's daughter? Is she wed?"
+
+"Nay, lady. Folk spoke of her and Ospakar, that was all."
+
+"Hearken, Koll," said Swanhild, "bearing such heavy tidings, canst
+thou not weight the ship a little more? Eric Brighteyes is here. Canst
+thou not swear to him that, when thou didst leave Iceland it was said
+without question that Gudruda had betrothed herself to Ospakar, and
+that the wedding-feast was set for this last Yule? Thou hast a hungry
+look, Koll, and methinks that things have not gone altogether well
+with thee of late. Now, if thou canst so charge thy memory, thou shalt
+lose little by it. But, if thou canst not, then thou goest hence from
+Straumey with never a luck-penny in thy purse, and never a sup to stay
+thy stomach with."
+
+Now of all things Koll least desired to be sent from Straumey; for,
+though Swanhild did not know it, he was sought for on the mainland as
+a thief.
+
+"That I may do, lady," he said, looking at her cunningly. "Now I
+remember that Gudruda the Fair charged me with a certain message for
+Eric Brighteyes, if I should chance to see him as I journeyed."
+
+Then Swanhild, Atli's wife, and Koll the Half-witted talked long and
+earnestly together.
+
+
+
+At nightfall Eric came in from his fishing. His heart was light, for
+the time drew near when he should sail for home, and he did not think
+on evil. For now he feared Swanhild no longer, and, no fresh tidings
+having come from Iceland about Ospakar and Gudruda, he had almost put
+the matter from his mind. On he walked to the hall, limping somewhat
+from his wound, but singing as he came, and bearing his fish slung
+upon a pole.
+
+At the men's door of the hall a woman stood waiting. She told Eric
+that the lady Swanhild would speak with him in her bower. Thither he
+went and knocked. Getting no answer he knocked again, then entered.
+
+Swanhild sat on a couch. She was weeping, and her hair fell about her
+face.
+
+"What now, Swanhild?" he said.
+
+She looked up heavily. "Ill news for thee and me, Eric. Koll, who was
+my mother's thrall, has come hither from Iceland, and these are his
+tidings: that Asmund is dead, and Unna, thy cousin, Thorod of
+Greenfell's daughter, is dead, and my mother Groa is dead also."
+
+"Heavy tidings, truly!" said Eric; "and what of Gudruda, is she also
+dead?"
+
+"Nay, Eric she is wed--wed to Ospakar."
+
+Now Eric reeled against the wall, clutching it, and for a space all
+things swam round him. "Where is this Koll?" he gasped. "Send me Koll
+hither."
+
+Presently he came, and Eric questioned him coldly and calmly. But Koll
+could lie full well. It is said that in his day there was no one in
+Iceland who could lie so well as Koll the Half-witted. He told Eric
+how it was said that Gudruda was plighted to Ospakar, and how the
+match had been agreed on at the Althing in the summer that was gone
+(and indeed there had been some such talk), and how that the feast was
+to be at Middalhof on last Yule Day.
+
+"Is that all thy tidings?" said Eric. "If so, I give no heed to them:
+for ever, Koll, I have known thee for a liar!"
+
+"Nay, Eric, it is not all," answered Koll. "As it chanced, two days
+before the ship in which I sailed was bound, I saw Gudruda the Fair.
+Then she asked me whither I was going, and I told her that I would
+journey to London, where men said thou wert, and asked her if she
+would send a message. Then she alighted from her horse, Blackmane, and
+spoke with me apart. 'Koll,' she said, 'it well may happen that thou
+wilt see Eric Brighteyes in London town. Now, if thou seest him, I
+charge thee straightly tell him this. Tell him that my father is dead,
+and my brother Bjrn, who rules in his place, is a hard man, and has
+ever urged me on to wed Ospakar, till at last, having no choice, I
+have consented to it. And say to Eric that I grieve much and sorely,
+and that, though we twain should never meet more, yet I shall always
+hold his memory dear.'"
+
+"It is not like Gudruda to speak thus," said Eric: "she had ever a
+stout heart and these are craven words. Koll, I hold that thou liest;
+and, if indeed I find it so, I'll wring the head from off thee!"
+
+"Nay, Eric, I lie not. Wherefore should I lie? Hearken: thou hast not
+heard all my tale. When the lady Gudruda had made an end of speaking
+she drew something from her breast and gave it me, saying: 'Give this
+to Eric, in witness of my words.'"
+
+"Show me the token," said Eric.
+
+Now, many years ago, when they were yet boy and girl, it chanced that
+Eric had given to Gudruda the half of an ancient gold piece that he
+had found upon the shore. He had given her half, and half he had kept,
+wearing it next his heart. But he knew not this, for she feared to
+tell him, that Gudruda had lost her half. Nor indeed had she lost it,
+for Swanhild had taken the love-token and hidden it away. Now she
+brought it forth for Koll to build his lies upon.
+
+Then Koll drew out the half-piece from a leather purse and passed it
+to him. Eric plunged his hand into his breast and found his half. He
+placed the two side by side, while Swanhild watched him. Lo! they
+fitted well.
+
+Then Eric laughed aloud, a hard and bitter laugh. "There will be
+slaying," he cried, "before all this tale is told. Take thy fee and
+begone, thou messenger of ill," and he cast the broken piece at Koll.
+"For once thou hast spoken the truth."
+
+Koll stooped, found the gold and went, leaving Brighteyes and Swanhild
+face to face.
+
+He hid his brow in his arms and groaned aloud. Softly Swanhild crept
+up to him--softly she drew his hands away, holding them between her
+own.
+
+"Heavy tidings, Eric," she said, "heavy tidings for thee and me! She
+is a murderess who gave me birth and she has slain my own father--my
+father and thy cousin Unna also. Gudruda is a traitress, a traitress
+fair and false. I did ill to be born of such a woman; thou didst ill
+to put thy faith in such a woman. Together let us weep, for our woe is
+equal."
+
+"Ay, let us weep together," Eric answered. "Nay, why should we weep?
+Together let us be merry, for we know the worst. All words are said--
+all hopes are sped! Let us be merry, then, for now we have no more
+tidings to fear."
+
+"Ay," Swanhild answered, looking on him darkly, "we will be merry and
+laugh our sorrows down. Ah! thou foolish Eric, under what unlucky star
+wast thou born that thou knewest not true from false?" and she called
+the serving-women, bidding them bring food and wine.
+
+Now Eric sat alone with Swanhild in her bower and made pretence to
+eat. But he could eat little, though he drank deep of the southern
+wine. Close beside him sat Swanhild, filling his cup. She was wondrous
+fair that night, and it seemed to Eric that her eyes gleamed like
+stars. Sweetly she spoke also and wisely. She told strange tales and
+she sang strange songs, and ever her eyes shone more and more, and
+ever she crept closer to him. Eric's brain was afire, though his heart
+was cold and dead. He laughed loud and mightily, he told great tales
+of deeds that he had done, growing boastful in his folly, and still
+Swanhild's eyes shone more and more, and still she crept closer,
+wooing him in many ways.
+
+Now of a sudden Eric thought of his friend, Earl Atli, and his mind
+grew clear.
+
+"This may not be, Swanhild," he said. "Yet I would that I had loved
+thee from the first, and not the false Gudruda: for, with all thy dark
+ways, at least thou art better than she."
+
+"Thou speakest wisely, Eric," Swanhild answered, though she meant not
+that he should go. "The Norns have appointed us an evil fate, giving
+me as wife to an old man whom I do not love, and thee for a lover to a
+woman who has betrayed thee. Ah, Eric Brighteyes, thou foolish Eric!
+why knewest thou not the false from the true while yet there was time?
+Now are all words said and all things done--nor can they be undone. Go
+hence, Eric, ere ill come of it; but, before thou goest, drink one cup
+of parting, and then farewell."
+
+And she slipped from him and filled the cup, mixing in it a certain
+love-portion that she had made ready.
+
+"Give it me that I may swear an oath on it," said Eric.
+
+Swanhild gave him the cup and stood before him, watching him.
+
+"Hearken," he said: "I swear this, that before snow falls again in
+Iceland I will see Ospakar dead at my feet or lie dead at the feet of
+Ospakar."
+
+"Well spoken, Eric," Swanhild answered. "Now, before thou drinkest,
+grant me one little boon. It is but a woman's fancy, and thou canst
+scarce deny me. The years will be long when thou art gone, for from
+this night it is best that we should meet no more, and I would keep
+something of thee to call back thy memory and the memories of our
+youth when thou hast passed away and I grow old."
+
+"What wouldst have then, Swanhild? I have nothing left to give, except
+Whitefire alone."
+
+"I do not ask Whitefire, Eric, though Whitefire shall kiss the gift. I
+ask nothing but one tress of that golden hair of thine."
+
+"Once I swore that none should touch my hair again except Gudruda's
+self."
+
+"It will grow long, then, Eric, for now Gudruda tends black locks and
+thinks little on golden. Broken are all oaths."
+
+Eric groaned. "All oaths are broken in sooth," he said. "Have then thy
+will;" and, loosing the peace-strings, he drew Whitefire from its
+sheath and gave her the great war-sword.
+
+Swanhild took it by the hilt, and, lifting a tress of Eric's yellow
+hair, she shore through it deftly with Whitefire's razor-edge, smiling
+as she shore. With the same war-blade on which Eric and Gudruda had
+pledged their troth, did Swanhild cut the locks that Eric had sworn no
+hand should clip except Gudruda's.
+
+He took back the sword and sheathed it, and, knotting the long tress,
+Swanhild hid it in her bosom.
+
+"Now drink the cup, Eric," she said--"pledge me and go."
+
+Eric drank to the dregs and cast the cup down, and lo! all things
+changed to him, for his blood was afire, and seas seemed to roll
+within his brain. Only before him stood Swanhild like a shape of light
+and glory, and he thought that she sang softly over him, always
+drawing nearer, and that with her came a scent of flowers like the
+scent of the Iceland meads in May.
+
+"All oaths are broken, Eric," she murmured, "all oaths are broken
+indeed, and now must new oaths be sworn. For cut is thy golden hair,
+Brighteyes, and not by Gudruda's hand!"
+
+
+
+XX
+
+HOW ERIC WAS NAMED ANEW
+
+Eric dreamed. He dreamed that Gudruda stood by him looking at him with
+soft, sad eyes, while with her hand she pointed to his hair, and
+spake.
+
+"Thou hast done ill, Eric," she seemed to say. "Thou hast done ill to
+doubt me; and now thou art for ever shamed, for thou hast betrayed
+Atli, thy friend. Thou hast broken thy oath, and therefore hast thou
+fallen into this pit; for when Swanhild shore that lock of thine, my
+watching Spirit passed, leaving thee to Swanhild and thy fate. Now, I
+tell thee this: that shame shall lead to shame, and many lives shall
+pay forfeit for thy sin, Eric."
+
+Eric awoke, thinking that this was indeed an evil dream which he had
+dreamed. He woke, and lo! by him was Swanhild, Atli's wife. He looked
+upon her beauty, and fear and shame crept into his heart, for now he
+knew that it was no dream, but he was lost indeed. He looked again at
+Swanhild, and hatred and loathing of her shook him. She had overcome
+him by her arts; that cup was drugged which he had drunk, and he was
+mad with grief. Yes, she had played upon his woe like a harper on a
+harp, and now he was ashamed--now he had betrayed his friend who loved
+him! Had Whitefire been to his hand at that moment, Eric had surely
+slain himself. But the great sword was not there, for it hung in
+Swanhild's bower. Eric groaned aloud, and Swanhild turned at the
+sound. But he sprang away and stood over her, cursing her.
+
+"Thou witch!" he cried, "what hast thou done? What didst thou mix in
+that cup yestre'en? Thou hast brought me to this that I have betrayed
+Atli, my friend--Atli, thy lord, who left thee in my keeping!"
+
+He seemed so terrible in his woe and rage that Swanhild shrank from
+him, and, throwing her hair about her face, peeped at him through its
+meshes as once she had peeped at Asmund.
+
+"It is like a man," she said, gathering up her courage and her wit;
+"'tis like a man, having won my love, now to turn upon me and upbraid
+me. Fie upon thee, Eric! thou hast dealt ill with me to bring me to
+this."
+
+Now Eric ceased his raving, and spoke more calmly.
+
+"Well thou knowest the truth, Swanhild," he said.
+
+"Hearken, Eric," she answered. "Let this be secret between us. Atli is
+old, and methinks that not for long shall he bide here in Straumey.
+Soon he will die; it is upon my mind that he soon will die, and, being
+childless, his lands and goods pass to me. Then, Eric, thou shalt sit
+in Atli's hall, and in all honour shall Atli's wife become thy bride."
+
+Eric listened coldly. "I can well believe," he said, "that thou hast
+it in mind to slay thy lord, for all evil is in thy heart, Swanhild.
+Now know this: that if in honour or dishonour my lips touch that fair
+face of thine again, may the limbs rot from thy trunk, and may I lie a
+log for ever in the halls of Hela! If ever my eyes of their own will
+look again upon thy beauty, may I go blind and beg my meat from
+homestead to homestead! If ever my tongue whisper word of love into
+thy ears, may dumbness seize it, and may it wither to the root!"
+
+Swanhild heard and sank upon the ground before him, her head bowed
+almost to her feet.
+
+"Now, Swanhild, fare thee well," said Eric. "Living or dead, may I
+never see thy face again!"
+
+She gazed up through her falling hair; her face was wild and white,
+and her eyes glowed in it as live embers glow in the ashes of burnt
+wood.
+
+"We are not so easily parted, Eric," she said. "Not for this came I to
+witchcraft and to sin. Thou fool! hast thou never heard that, of all
+the foes a man may have, none is so terrible as the woman he has
+scorned? Thou shalt learn this lesson, Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur's
+son: for here we have but the beginning of the tale. For its end, I
+will write it in runes of blood."
+
+"Write on," said Eric. "Thou canst do no worse than thou hast done,"
+and he passed thence.
+
+For a while Swanhild crouched upon the ground, brooding in silence.
+Then she rose, and, throwing up her arms, wept aloud.
+
+"Is it for this that I have sold my soul to the Hell-hag?" she cried.
+"Is it for this that I have become a witch, and sunk so low as I sank
+last night--to be scorned, to be hated, to be betrayed? Now Eric will
+go to Atli and tell this tale. Nay, there I will be beforehand with
+him, and with another story--an ancient wile of women truly, but one
+that never yet has failed them, nor ever will. And then for vengeance!
+I will see thee dead, Eric, and dead will I see Gudruda at thy side!
+Afterwards let darkness come--ay, though the horror rides it! Swift!--
+I must be swift!"
+
+
+
+Eric passed into Swanhild's bower, and, finding Whitefire, bore it
+thence. On the table was food. He took it. Then, going to the place
+where he was wont to sleep, he armed himself, girding his byrnie on
+his breast and his golden helm upon his head, and taking shield and
+spear in his hand. Then he passed out. By the men's door he found some
+women spreading fish in the sun. Eric greeted them, saying that when
+the Earl came back, for he was to come on that morning, he would find
+him on the south-western rocks nigh to where the Gudruda sank. This he
+begged of them to tell Atli, for he desired speech with him.
+
+The women wondered that Brighteyes should go forth thus and fully
+armed, but, holding that he had some deed to do, they said nothing.
+
+Eric came to the rocks, and there he sat all day long looking on the
+sea, and grieving so bitterly that he thought his heart would burst
+within him. For of all the days of Eric's life this was the heaviest,
+except one other only.
+
+But Swanhild, going to her bower, caused Koll the Half-witted to be
+summoned. To him she spoke long and earnestly, and they made a
+shameful plot together. Then she bade Koll watch for Atli's coming
+and, when he saw the Earl leave his boats, to run to him and say that
+she would speak with him.
+
+After this Swanhild sent a man across the firth to the stead where
+Hall of Lithdale sat, bidding him to come to her at speed.
+
+When the afternoon grew towards the evening, Koll, watching, saw the
+boats of Atli draw to the landing-place. Then he went down, and, going
+to the Earl, bowed before him:
+
+"What wouldst thou, fellow, and who art thou?" asked Atli.
+
+"I am a man from Iceland; perchance, lord, thou sawest me in Asmund's
+hall at Middalhof. I am sent here by the Lady Swanhild to say that she
+desires speech with thee, and that at once." Then, seeing Skallagrim,
+Koll fled back to the house, for he feared Skallagrim.
+
+Now Atli was uneasy in his mind, and, saying nothing, he hurried up to
+the hall, and through it into Swanhild's bower.
+
+There she sat on a couch, her eyes red with weeping, and her curling
+hair unbound.
+
+"What now, Swanhild?" he asked. "Why lookest thou thus?"
+
+"Why look I thus, my lord?" she answered heavily. "Because I have to
+tell thee that which I cannot find words to fit," and she ceased.
+
+"Speak on," he said. "Is aught wrong with Eric?"
+
+Then Swanhild drew near and told him a false tale.
+
+When it was done for a moment or so Atli stood still, and grew white
+beneath his ruddy skin, white as his beard. Then he staggered back
+against the wainscoting of the bower.
+
+"Woman, thou liest!" he said. "Never will I believe so vile a thing of
+Eric Brighteyes, whom I have loved."
+
+"Would that I could not believe it!" she answered. "Would that I could
+think it was but an evil dream! But alas! Nay, I will prove it. Suffer
+that I summon Koll, the Icelander, who was my mother's thrall--Groa
+who now is dead, for I have that tidings also. He saw something of
+this thing, and he will bear me witness."
+
+"Call the man," said Atli sternly.
+
+So Koll was summoned, and told his lies with a bold face. He was so
+well taught, and so closely did his story tally with that of Swanhild,
+that Atli could find no flaw in it.
+
+"Now I am sure, Swanhild, that thou speakest truth," said the Earl
+when Koll had gone. "And now also I have somewhat to say to this Eric.
+For thee, rest thyself; that which cannot be mended must be borne,"
+and he went out.
+
+
+
+Now, when Skallagrim came to the house he asked for Eric. The women
+told him that Brighteyes had gone down to the sea, fully armed, in the
+morning, and had not returned.
+
+"Then there must be fighting toward, and that I am loth to miss," said
+Skallagrim, and, axe aloft, he started for the south-western rocks at
+a run. Skallagrim came to the rocks. There he found Eric, sitting in
+his harness, looking out across the sea. The evening was wet and
+windy; the rain beat upon him as he sat, but Eric took no heed.
+
+"What seekest thou, lord?" asked the Baresark.
+
+"Rest," said Eric, "and I find none."
+
+"Thou seekest rest helm on head and sword in hand? This is a strange
+thing, truly!"
+
+"Stranger things have been Skallagrim. Wouldst thou hear a tale?" and
+he told him all.
+
+"What said I?" asked Skallagrim. "We had fared better in London town.
+Flying from the dove thou hast found the falcon."
+
+"I have found the falcon, comrade, and she has pecked out my eyes. Now
+I would speak with Atli, and then I go hence."
+
+"Hence go the twain of us, lord. The Earl will be here presently and
+rough words will fly in this rough weather. Is Whitefire sharp,
+Brighteyes?"
+
+"Whitefire was sharp enough to shear my hair, Skallagrim; but if Atli
+would strike let him lay on. Whitefire will not be aloft for him."
+
+"That we shall see," said Skallagrim. "At least, if thou art harmed
+because of this loose quean, my axe will be aloft."
+
+"Keep thou thine axe in its place," said Eric, and as he spoke Atli
+came, and with him many men.
+
+Eric rose and turned to meet the Earl, looking on him with sad eyes.
+For Atli, his face was as the face of a trapped wolf, for he was mad
+with rage at the shame that had been put upon him and the ill tale
+that Swanhild had told of Eric's dealings with her.
+
+"It seems that the Earl has heard of these tidings," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Then I shall be spared the telling of them," answered Eric.
+
+Now they stood face to face; Atli leaned upon his drawn sword, and his
+wrath was so fierce that for a while he could not speak. At length he
+found words.
+
+"See ye that man, comrades?" he said, pointing at Eric with the sword.
+"He has been my guest these many months. He has sat in my hall and
+eaten of my bread, and I have loved him as a son. And wot ye how he
+has repaid me? He has put me to the greatest shame, me and my wife the
+Lady Swanhild, whom I left in his guard--to such shame, indeed, that I
+cannot speak it."
+
+"True words, Earl," said Eric, while folk murmured and handled their
+swords.
+
+"True, but not all the truth," growled Skallagrim. "Methinks the Earl
+has heard a garbled tale."
+
+"True words, thyself thou sayest it," went on Atli "thou hound that I
+saved from the sea! 'Ran's gift, Hela's gift,' so runs the saw, and
+now from Ran to Hela thou shalt go, thou mishandler of defenceless
+women!"
+
+"Here is somewhat of which I know nothing," said Eric.
+
+"And here is something of which thou shalt know," answered Atli, and
+he shook his sword before Eric's eyes. "Guard thyself!"
+
+"Nay, Earl; thou art old, and I have done the wrong--I may not fight
+with thee."
+
+"Art thou a coward also?" said the Earl.
+
+"Some have deemed otherwise," said Eric, "but it is true that heavy
+heart makes weak hand. Nevertheless this is my rede. With thee are ten
+men. Stand thou aside and let them fall on me till I am slain."
+
+"The odds are too heavy even for thee," said Skallagrim. "Back to
+back, lord, as we have stood aforetime, and let us play this game
+together."
+
+"Not so," cried Atli, "this shame is mine, and I have sworn to
+Swanhild that I will wipe it out in Eric's blood. Stand thou before me
+and draw!"
+
+Then Eric drew Whitefire and raised his shield. Atli the Earl rushed
+at him and smote a great two-handed blow. Eric caught it on his shield
+and suffered no harm; but he would not smite back.
+
+Atli dropped his point. "Niddering art thou, and coward to the last!"
+he cried. "See, men, Eric Brighteyes fears to fight. I am not come to
+this that I will cut down a man who is too faint-hearted to give blow
+for blow. This is my word: take ye your spear-shafts and push this
+coward to the shore. Then put him in a boat and drive him hence."
+
+Now Eric grew red as the red light of sunset, for his manhood might
+not bear this.
+
+"Take shield," he said, "and, Earl, on thine own head be thy blood,
+for none shall live to call Eric niddering and coward."
+
+Atli laughed in his folly and his rage. He took a shield, and, once
+more springing on Brighteyes, struck a great blow.
+
+Eric parried, then whirled Whitefire on high and smote--once and once
+only! Down rushed the bright blade like a star through the night.
+Sword and shield did Atli lift to catch the blow. Through shield it
+sheared, and arm that held the shield, through byrnie mail and deep
+into Earl Atli's side. He fell prone to earth, while men held their
+breath, wondering at the greatness of that stroke.
+
+But Eric leaned on Whitefire and looked at the old Earl upon the rock.
+
+"Now, Atli, thou hast had thy way," he said, "and methinks things are
+worse than they were before. But I will say this: would that I lay
+there and thou stoodest to watch me die, for as lief would I have
+slain my father as thee, Earl Atli. There lies Swanhild's work!"
+
+Atli gazed upwards into Eric's sad eyes and, while he gazed so, his
+rage left him, and of a sudden a light brake upon his mind, as even
+then the light of the setting sun brake through the driving mist.
+
+"Eric," he said, "draw near and speak with me ere I am sped. Methinks
+that I have been beguiled and that thou didst not do this thing that
+Swanhild said and Koll bore witness to."
+
+"What did Swanhild say, then, Earl Atli?"
+
+The Earl told him.
+
+"It was to be looked for from her," said Eric, "though I never thought
+of it. Now hearken!" and he told him all.
+
+Atli groaned aloud. "I know this now, Eric," he said: "that thou
+speakest truth, and once more I have been deceived. Eric, I forgive
+thee all, for no man may fight against woman's witchcraft, and witch's
+wine. Swanhild is evil to the heart. Yet, Eric, I lay this doom upon
+thee--I do not lay it of my own will, for I would not harm thee, whom
+I love, but because of the words that the Norns put in my mouth, for
+now I am fey in this the hour of my death. Thou hast sinned, and that
+thou didst sin against thy will shall avail thee nothing, for of thy
+sin fate shall fashion a handle to the spear which pierces thee.
+Henceforth thou art accursed. For I tell thee that this wicked woman
+Swanhild shall drag thee down to death, and worse than death, and with
+thee those thou lovest. By witchcraft she brought thee to Straumey, by
+lies she laid me here before thee. Now by hate and might and cruel
+deeds shall she bring thee to lie more low than I do. For, Eric, thou
+art bound to her, and thou shalt never loose the bond!"
+
+Atli ceased a while, then spoke again more faintly:
+
+"Hearken, comrades," he cried; "my strength is well-nigh spent. Ye
+shall swear four things to me--that ye will give Eric Brighteyes and
+Skallagrim Lambstail safe passage from Straumey. That ye will tell
+Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa's daughter and Atli's wife, that, at
+last, I know her for what she is--a murderess, a harlot, a witch and a
+liar; and that I forgive Eric whom she tricked, but that her I hate
+and spit upon. That ye will slay Koll the Half-witted, Groa's thrall,
+who came hither about two days gone, since by his lies he hath set an
+edge upon this sword of falsehood. That ye will raise no blood-feud
+against Eric for this my slaying, for I goaded him to the deed. Do ye
+swear?"
+
+"We swear," said the men.
+
+"Then farewell! And to thee farewell, also, Eric Brighteyes! Now take
+my hand and hold it while I die. Behold! I give thee a new name, and
+by that name thou shalt be called in story. I name thee /Eric the
+Unlucky/. Of all tales that are told, thine shall be the greatest. A
+mighty stroke that was of thine--a mighty stroke! Farewell!"
+
+Then his head fell back upon the rock and Earl Atli died. And as he
+died the last rays of light went out of the sky.
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+HOW HALL OF LITHDALE TOOK TIDINGS TO ICELAND
+
+Now on the same night that Atli died at the hand of Eric, Swanhild
+spake with Hall of Lithdale, whom she had summoned from the mainland.
+She bade him do this: take passage in a certain ship that should sail
+for Iceland on the morrow from the island that is called Westra, and
+there tell all these tidings of the ill-doings of Eric and of the
+slaying of Atli by his hand.
+
+"Thou shalt say this," she went on, "that Eric had been my love for
+long, but that at length the matter came to the ears of Atli, the
+Earl. Then, holding this the greatest shame, he went on holmgang with
+Eric and was slain by him. This shalt thou add to thy tale also, that
+presently Eric and I will wed, and that Eric shall rule as Earl in
+Orkneys. Now these tidings must soon come to the ears of Gudruda the
+Fair, and she will send for thee, and question thee straightly
+concerning them, and thou shalt tell her the tale as thou toldest it
+at first. Then thou shalt give Gudruda this packet, which I send her
+as a gift, saying, that I bade her remember a certain oath which Eric
+took as to the cutting of his hair. And when she sees that which is
+within the packet is somewhat stained, tell her that is but the blood
+of Atli that is upon it, as his blood is upon Eric's hands. Now
+remember thou this, Hall, that if thou fail in the errand thy life
+shall pay forfeit, for presently I will also come to Iceland and hear
+how thou hast sped."
+
+Then Swanhild gave him faring-money and gifts of wadmal and gold
+rings, promising that he should have so much again when she came to
+Iceland.
+
+Hall said that he would do all these things, and went at once; nor did
+he fail in his tasks.
+
+
+
+Atli being dead, Eric loosed his hand and called to the men to take up
+his body and bear it to the hall. This they did. Eric stood and
+watched them till they were lost in the darkness.
+
+"Whither now, lord?" said Skallagrim.
+
+"It matters little," said Eric. "What is thy counsel?"
+
+"This is my counsel. That we take ship and sail back to the King in
+London. There we will tell all this tale. It is a far cry from
+Straumey to London town, and there we shall sit in peace, for the King
+will think little of the slaying of an Orkney Earl in a brawl about a
+woman. Mayhap, too, the Lady Elfrida will not set great store by it.
+Therefore, I say, let us fare back to London."
+
+"In but one place am I at home, and that is Iceland," said Eric.
+"Thither I will go, Skallagrim, though it be but to miss friend from
+stead and bride from bed. At the least I shall find Ospakar there."
+
+"Listen, lord!" said Skallagrim. "Was it not my rede that we should
+bide this winter through in London? Thou wouldst none of it, and what
+came about? Our ship is sunk, gone are our comrades, thine honour is
+tarnished, and dead is thy host at thine own hand. Yet I say all is
+not lost. Let us hence south, and see no more of Swanhild, of Gudruda,
+of Bjrn and Ospakar. So shall we break the spell. But if thou goest
+to Iceland, I am sure of this: that the evil fate which Atli foretold
+will fall on thee, and the days to come shall be even more unlucky
+than the days that have been."
+
+"It may be so," said Eric. "Methinks, indeed, it will be so.
+Henceforth I am Eric the Unlucky. I will go back to Iceland and there
+play out the game. I care little if I live or am slain--I have no more
+joy in my life. I stand alone, like a fir upon a mountain-top, and
+every wind from heaven and every storm of hail and snow beats upon my
+head. But I say to thee, Skallagrim: go thy road, and leave a luckless
+man to his ill fate. Otherwise it shall be thine also. Good friend
+hast thou been to me; now let us part and wend south and north. The
+King will be glad to greet thee yonder in London, Lambstail."
+
+"But one severing shall we know, lord," said Skallagrim, "and that
+shall be sword's work, nor will it be for long. It is ill to speak
+such words as these of the parting of lord and thrall. Bethink thee of
+the oath I swore on Mosfell. Let us go north, since it is thy will: in
+fifty years it will count for little which way we wended from the
+Isles."
+
+So they went together down to the shore, and, finding a boat and men
+who as yet knew nothing of what had chanced to Atli, they sailed
+across the firth at the rising of the moon.
+
+Two days afterwards they found a ship at Wick that was bound for
+Fareys, and sailed in her, Eric buying a passage with the half of a
+gold ring that the King had given him in London.
+
+Here at Fareys they sat a month or more; but not in the Earl's hall as
+when Eric came with honour in the Gudruda, but in a farmer's stead.
+For the tale of Eric's dealings with Atli and Atli's wife had reached
+Fareys, and the Earl there had been a friend of Atli's. Moreover, Eric
+was now a poor man, having neither ship nor goods, nor friends.
+Therefore all looked coldly on him, though they wondered at his beauty
+and his might. Still, they dared not to speak ill or make a mock of
+him; for, two men having done so, were nearly slain of Skallagrim, who
+seized the twain by the throat, one in either hand, and dashed their
+heads together. After that men said little.
+
+They sat there a month, till at length a chapman put in at Fareys,
+bound for Iceland, and they took passage with him, Eric paying the
+other half of his gold ring for ship-room. The chapman was not willing
+to give them place at first, for he, too, had heard the tale; but
+Skallagrim offered him choice, either to do so or to go on holmgang
+with him. Then the chapman gave them passage.
+
+
+
+Now it is told that when his thralls and house-carles bore the corpse
+of Atli the Earl to his hall in Straumey, Swanhild met it and wept
+over it. And when the spokesman among them stood forward and told her
+those words that Atli had bidden them to say to her, sparing none, she
+spoke thus:
+
+"My lord was distraught and weak with loss of blood when he spoke
+thus. The tale I told him was true, and now Eric has added to his sin
+by shedding the blood of him whom he wronged so sorely."
+
+And thereafter she spoke so sweetly and with so much gentleness,
+craft, and wisdom that, though they still doubted them, all men held
+her words weighty. For Swanhild had this art, that she could make the
+false sound true in the ears of men and the true sound false.
+
+Still, being mindful of their oath, they hunted for Koll and found
+him. And when the thrall knew that they would slay him he ran thence
+screaming. Nor did Swanhild lift a hand to save his life, for she
+desired that Koll should die, lest he should bear witness against her.
+Away he ran towards the cliffs, and after him sped Atli's house-
+carles, till he came to the great cliffs that edge in the sea. Now
+they were close upon him and their swords were aloft. Then, sooner
+than know the kiss of steel, the liar leapt from the cliffs and was
+crushed, dying miserably on the rocks below. This was the end of Koll
+the Half-witted, Groa's thrall.
+
+Swanhild sat in Straumey for a while, and took all Atli's heritage
+into her keeping, for he had no male kin; nor did any say her nay.
+Also she called in the moneys that he had out at interest, and that
+was a great sum, for Atli was a careful and a wealthy man. Then
+Swanhild made ready to go to Iceland. Atli had a great dragon of war,
+and she manned that ship and filled it with stores and all things
+needful. This done, she set stewards and grieves over the Orkney lands
+and farms, and, when the Earl was six weeks dead, she sailed for
+Iceland, giving out that she went thither to set a blood-suit on foot
+against Eric for the death of Atli, her lord. There she came in safety
+just as folk rode to the Thing.
+
+
+
+Now Hall of Lithdale came to Iceland and told his tale of the doings
+of Eric and the death of Atli. Oft and loud he told it, and soon
+people gossiped of it in field and fair and stead. Bjrn, Asmund's
+son, heard this talk and sent for Hall. To him also Hall told the
+tale.
+
+"Now," said Bjrn, "we will go to my sister Gudruda the Fair, and
+learn how she takes these tidings."
+
+So they went in to where Gudruda sat spinning in the hall, singing as
+she span.
+
+"Greeting, Gudruda," said Bjrn; "say, hast thou tidings of Eric
+Brighteyes, thy betrothed?"
+
+"I have no tidings," said Gudruda.
+
+"Then here is one who brings them."
+
+Now for the first time Gudruda the Fair saw Hall of Lithdale. Up she
+sprang. "Thou hast tidings of Eric, Hall? Ah! thou art welcome, for no
+tidings have come of him for many a month. Speak on," and she pressed
+her hand against her heart and leaned towards him.
+
+"My tidings are ill, lady."
+
+"Is Eric dead? Say not that my love is dead!"
+
+"He is worse than dead," said Hall. "He is shamed."
+
+"There thou liest, Hall," she answered. "Shame and Eric are things
+apart."
+
+"Mayst thou think so when thou hast heard my tale, lady," said Hall,
+"for I am sad at heart to speak it of one who was my mate."
+
+"Speak on, I say," answered Gudruda, in such a voice that Hall shrank
+from her. "Speak on; but of this I warn thee: that if in one word thou
+liest, that shall be thy death when Eric comes."
+
+Now Hall was afraid, thinking of the axe of Skallagrim. Still, he
+might not go back upon his word. So he began at the beginning, telling
+the story of how he was wounded in the fight with Ospakar's ships and
+left Farey isles, and how he came thence to Scotland and sat in Atli's
+hall on Orkneys. Then he told how the Gudruda was wrecked on Straumey,
+and, of all aboard, Eric and Skallagrim alone were saved because of
+Swanhild's dream.
+
+"Herein I see witch-work," said Gudruda.
+
+Then Hall told that Eric became Swanhild's love, but of the other tale
+which Swanhild had whispered to Atli he said nothing. For he knew that
+Gudruda would not believe this, and, moreover, if it were so, Swanhild
+had not sent the token which he should give.
+
+"It may well be," said Gudruda, proudly; "Swanhild is fair and light
+of mind. Perchance she led Brighteyes into this snare." But, though
+she spoke thus, bitter jealousy and anger burned in her breast and she
+remembered the sight which she had seen when Eric and Swanhild met on
+the morn of Atli's wedding.
+
+Then Hall told of the slaying of Atli the Good by Eric, but he said
+nothing of the Earl's dying words, nor of how he goaded Brighteyes
+with his bitter words.
+
+"It was an ill deed in sooth," said Gudruda, "for Eric to slay an old
+man whom he had wronged. Still, it may chance that he was driven to it
+for his own life's sake."
+
+Then Hall said that he had seen Swanhild after Atli's slaying, and
+that she had told him that she and Eric should wed shortly, and that
+Eric would rule in Orkneys by her side.
+
+Gudruda asked if that was all his tale.
+
+"Yes, lady," answered Hall, "that is all my tale, for after that I
+sailed and know not what happened. But I am charged to give something
+to thee, and that by the Lady Swanhild. She bade me say this also:
+that, when thou lookest on the gift, thou shouldst think on a certain
+oath which Eric took as to the cutting of his hair." And he drew a
+linen packet from his breast and gave it to her.
+
+Thrice Gudruda looked on it, fearing to open it. Then, seeing the
+smile of mockery on Bjrn's cold face, she took the shears that hung
+at her side and cut the thread with them. And as she cut, a lock of
+golden hair rose from the packet, untwisting itself like a living
+snake. The lock was long, and its end was caked with gore.
+
+"Whose hair is this?" said Gudruda, though she knew the hair well.
+
+"Eric's hair," said Hall, "that Swanhild cut from his head with Eric's
+sword."
+
+Now Gudruda put her hand to her bosom. She drew out a satchel, and
+from the satchel a lock of yellow hair. Side by side she placed the
+locks, looking first at one and then at the other.
+
+"This is Eric's hair in sooth," she said--"Eric's hair that he swore
+none but I should cut! Eric's hair that Swanhild shore with Whitefire
+from Eric's head--Whitefire whereon we plighted troth! Say now, whose
+blood is this that stains the hair of Eric?"
+
+"It is Atli's blood, whom Eric first dishonoured and then slew with
+his own hand," answered Hall.
+
+Now there burned a fire on the hearth, for the day was cold. Gudruda
+the Fair stood over the fire and with either hand she let the two
+locks of Eric's hair fall upon the embers. Slowly they twisted up and
+burned. She watched them burn, then she threw up her hands and with a
+great cry fled from the hall.
+
+Bjrn and Hall of Lithdale looked on each other.
+
+"Thou hadst best go hence!" said Bjrn; "and of this I warn thee,
+Hall, though I hold thy tidings good, that, if thou hast spoken one
+false word, that will be thy death. For then it would be better for
+thee to face all the wolves in Iceland than to stand before Eric in
+his rage."
+
+Again Hall bethought himself of the axe of Skallagrim, and he went out
+heavily.
+
+
+
+That day a messenger came from Gudruda to Bjrn, saying that she would
+speak with him. He went to where she sat alone upon her bed. Her face
+was white as death, and her dark eyes glowed.
+
+"Eric has dealt badly with thee, sister, to bring thee to this
+sorrow," said Bjrn.
+
+"Speak no evil of Eric to me," Gudruda answered. "The evil that he has
+done will be paid back to him; there is little need for thee to heap
+words upon his head. Hearken, Bjrn my brother: is it yet thy will
+that I should wed Ospakar Blacktooth?"
+
+"That is my will, surely. There is no match in Iceland as this
+Ospakar, and I should win many friends by it."
+
+"Do this then, Bjrn. Send messengers to Swinefell and say to Ospakar
+that if he would still wed Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter, let
+him come to Middalhof when folk ride from the Thing and he shall not
+go hence alone. Nay, I have done. Now, I pray thee speak no more to me
+of Eric or of Ospakar. Of the one I have seen and heard enough, and of
+the other I shall hear and see enough in the years that are to come."
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+HOW ERIC CAME HOME AGAIN
+
+Swanhild made a good passage from the Orkneys, and was in Iceland
+thirty-five days before Eric and Skallagrim set foot there. But she
+did not land by Westman Isles, for she had no wish to face Gudruda at
+that time, but by Reyjaness. Now she rode thence with her company to
+Thingvalla, for here all men were gathered for the Thing. At first
+people hung aloof from her, notwithstanding her wealth and beauty; but
+Swanhild knew well how to win the hearts of men. For now she told the
+same story of Eric that she had told to Atli, and there were none to
+say her nay. So it came to pass that she was believed, and Eric
+Brighteyes held to be shamed indeed. Now, too, she set a suit on foot
+against Eric for the death of Atli at his hand, claiming that sentence
+of the greater outlawry should be passed against him, and that his
+lands at Coldback in the Marsh on Ran River should be given, half to
+her in atonement for the Earl's death, and half to the men of Eric's
+quarter.
+
+On the day of the opening of the Thing Ospakar Blacktooth came from
+the north, and with him his son Gizur and a great company of men.
+Ospakar was blithe, for from the Thing he should ride to Middalhof,
+there to wed Gudruda the Fair. Then Swanhild clad herself in beautiful
+attire, and, taking men with her, went to the booth of Ospakar.
+
+Blacktooth sat in his booth and by him sat Gizur his son the Lawman.
+When he saw a beauteous lady, very richly clad, enter the booth he did
+not know who it might be. But Gizur knew her well, for he could never
+put Swanhild from his mind.
+
+"Lo! here comes Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's widow," said Gizur,
+flushing red with joy at the sight of her.
+
+Then Ospakar greeted her heartily, and made place for her by him at
+the top of the booth.
+
+"Ospakar Blacktooth," she said, "I am come to ask this of thee: that
+thou shalt befriend me in the suit which I have against Eric
+Brighteyes for the slaying of Earl Atli, my husband."
+
+"Thou couldst have come to no man who is more willing," said Ospakar,
+"for, if thou hast something against Eric, I have yet more."
+
+"I would ask this, too, Ospakar: that thy son Gizur should take up my
+suit and plead it; for I know well that he is the most skilful of all
+lawmen."
+
+"I will do that," said Gizur, his eyes yet fixed upon her face.
+
+"I looked for no less from thee," said Swanhild, "and be sure of this,
+that thou shalt not plead for nothing," and she glanced at him
+meaningly. Then she set out her case with a lying tongue, and
+afterwards went back to her booth, glad at heart. For now she learned
+that Hall had not failed in his errand, seeing that Gudruda was about
+to wed Ospakar.
+
+Gizur gave warning of the blood-suit, and the end of it was that,
+though he had no notice and was not there to answer to the charge,
+against all right and custom Eric was declared outlaw and his lands
+were given, half to Swanhild and half to the men of his quarter. For
+now all held that Swanhild's was a true tale, and Eric the most
+shameful of men, and therefore they were willing to stretch the law
+against him. Also, being absent, he had few friends, and those men of
+small account; whereas Ospakar, who backed Swanhild's suit, was the
+most powerful of the northern chiefs, as Gizur was the most skilled
+lawman in Iceland. Moreover, Bjrn the Priest, Asmund's son, was among
+the judges, and, though Swanhild's tale seemed strange to him after
+that which he had heard from Hall of Lithdale, he loved Eric little.
+He feared also that if Eric came a free man to Iceland before Gudruda
+was wed to Ospakar, her love would conquer her anger, for he could see
+well that she still loved Brighteyes. Therefore he strove with might
+and main that Eric should be brought in guilty, nor did he fail in
+this.
+
+So the end of it was that Eric Brighteyes was outlawed, his lands
+declared forfeit, and his head a wolf's head, to be taken by him who
+might, should he set foot in Iceland.
+
+Thereafter, the Althing being ended, Bjrn, Gizur, and Ospakar, with
+all their company, rode away to Middalhof to sit at the marriage-
+feast. But Swanhild and her folk went by sea in the long war-ship to
+Westmans. For this was her plan: to seize on Coldback and to sit there
+for a while, till she saw if Eric came out to Iceland. Also she
+desired to see the wedding of Ospakar and Gudruda, for she had been
+bidden to it by Bjrn, her half-brother.
+
+Now Ospakar came to Middalhof, and found Gudruda waiting his coming.
+
+She stood in the great hall, pale and cold as April snow, and greeted
+him courteously. But when he would have kissed her, she shrank from
+him, for now he was more hideous in her sight than he had ever been,
+and she loathed him in her heart.
+
+That night there was feasting in the hall, and at the feast Gudruda
+heard that Eric had been made outlaw. Then she spoke:
+
+"This is an ill deed, thus to judge an absent man."
+
+"Say, Gudruda," said Bjrn in her ear, "hast thou not also judged Eric
+who is absent?"
+
+She turned her head and spoke no more of Eric; but Bjrn's words fixed
+themselves in her heart like arrows. The tale was strange to her, for
+it seemed that Eric had been made outlaw at Swanhild's suit, and yet
+Eric was Swanhild's love: for Swanhild's self had sent the lock of
+Brighteyes' hair by Hall, saying that he was her love and soon would
+wed her. How, then, did Swanhild bring a suit against him who should
+be her husband? Moreover, she heard that Swanhild sailed down to
+Coldback, and was bidden to the marriage-feast, that should be on the
+third day from now. Could it be, then, when all was said and done,
+that Eric was less faithless than she deemed? Gudruda's heart stood
+still and the blood rushed to her brow when she thought on it. Also,
+even if it were so, it was now too late. And surely it was not so, for
+had not Eric been made outlaw? Men were not made outlaw for a little
+thing. Nay, she would meet her fate, and ask no more of Eric and his
+doings.
+
+On the morrow, as Gudruda sat in her chamber, it was told her that
+Saevuna, Thorgrimur's widow and Eric's mother, had come from Coldback
+to speak with her. For, after the death of Asmund and of Unna, Saevuna
+had moved back to Coldback on the Marsh.
+
+"Nay, how can this be?" said Gudruda astonished, for she knew well
+that Saevuna was now both blind and bed-ridden.
+
+"She has been borne here in a chair," said the woman who told her,
+"and that is a strange sight to see."
+
+At first Gudruda was minded to say her nay; but her heart softened,
+and she bade them bring Saevuna in. Presently she came, being set in a
+chair upon the shoulders of four men. She was white to see, for
+sickness had aged her much, and she stared about her with sightless
+eyes. But she was still tall and straight, and her face was stern to
+look on. To Gudruda it seemed like that of Eric when he was angered.
+
+"Am I nigh to Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter?" asked Saevuna.
+"Methinks I hear her breathe."
+
+"I am here, mother," said Gudruda. "What is thy will with me?"
+
+"Set down, carles, and begone!" quoth Saevuna; "that which I have to
+say I would say alone. When I summon you, come."
+
+The carles set down the chair upon the floor and went.
+
+"Gudruda," said the dame, "I am risen from my deathbed, and I have
+caused myself to be borne on my last journey here across the meads,
+that I may speak with thee and warn thee. I hear that thou hast put
+away my son, Eric Brighteyes, to whom thou art sworn in marriage, and
+art about to give thyself to Ospakar Blacktooth. I hear also that thou
+hast done this deed because a certain man, Hall of Lithdale--whom from
+his youth up I have known for a liar and a knave, and whom thou
+thyself didst mistrust in years gone by--has come hither to Iceland
+from Orkneys, bearing a tale of Eric's dealings with thy half-sister
+Swanhild. This I hear, further: that Swanhild, Atli's widow, hath come
+out to Iceland and laid a suit against Eric for the slaying of Atli
+the Earl, her husband, and that Eric has been outlawed and his lands
+at Coldback are forfeit. Tell me now, Gudruda, Asmund's daughter, if
+these tales be true?"
+
+"The tales are true, mother," said Gudruda.
+
+"Then hearken to me, girl. Eric sprang from my womb, who of all living
+men is the best and first, as he is the bravest and most strong. I
+have reared this Eric from a babe and I know his heart well. Now I
+tell thee this, that, whatever Eric has done or left undone, naught of
+dishonour is on his hands. Mayhap Swanhild has deceived him--thou art
+a woman, and thou knowest well the arts which women have, and the
+strength that Freya gives them. Well thou knowest, also, of what breed
+this Swanhild came; and perchance thou canst remember how she dealt
+with thee, and with what mind she looked on Eric. Perchance thou canst
+remember how she plotted against thee and Eric--ay, how she thrust
+thee from Goldfoss brink. Say, then, wilt thou take her word? Wilt
+thou take the word of this witch-daughter of a witch? Wilt thou not
+think on Groa, her mother, and of Groa's dealings with thy father, and
+with Unna my kinswoman? As the mother is, so shall the daughter be.
+Wilt thou cast Eric aside, and that unheard?"
+
+"There is no more room for doubt, mother," said Gudruda. "I have proof
+of this: that Eric has forsaken me."
+
+"So thou thinkest, child; but I tell thee that thou art wrong! Eric
+loves thee now as he loved thee aforetime, and will love thee always."
+
+"Would that I could believe it!" said Gudruda. "If I could believe
+that Eric still loved me--ay, even though he had been faithless to me
+--I would die ere I wed Ospakar!"
+
+"Thou art foolish, Gudruda, and thou shalt rue thy folly bitterly. I
+am outworn, and death draws near to me--far from me now are hates and
+loves, hopes and fears; but I know this: that woman is mad who, loving
+a man, weds where she loves not. Shame shall be her portion and
+bitterness her bread. Unhappy shall she live, and when she comes to
+die, but as a wilderness--but as the desolate winter snow, shall be
+the record of her days!"
+
+Now Gudruda wept aloud. "What is done is done," she cried; "the
+bridegroom sits within the hall--the bride awaits him in the bower.
+What is done is done--I may hope no more to be saved from Ospakar."
+
+"What is done is done, yet it can be brought to nothing; but soon that
+shall be done which may never be undone! Gudruda, fare thee well!
+Never shall I listen to thy voice again. I hold thee shameless, thou
+unfaithful woman, who in thy foolish jealousy art ready to sell
+thyself to the arms of one thou hatest! Ho! carles; come hither. Bear
+me hence!"
+
+Now the men came in and took up Saevuna's chair. Gudruda watched them
+bear her forth. Then suddenly she sprang from her seat and ran after
+her into the hall, weeping bitterly.
+
+Now as Saevuna, Eric's mother, was carried out she was met by Ospakar
+and Bjrn.
+
+"Stay," said Bjrn. "What does this carline here?--and why weeps
+Gudruda, my sister?"
+
+The men halted. "Who calls me 'carline'?" said Saevuna. "Is the voice
+I hear the voice of Bjrn, Asmund's son?"
+
+"It is my voice, truly," said Bjrn, "and I would know this--and this
+would Ospakar, who stands at my side, know also--why thou comest here,
+carline? and why Gudruda weeps?"
+
+"Gudruda weeps because she has good cause to weep, Bjrn. She weeps
+because she has betrayed her love, Eric Brighteyes, my son, and is
+about to be sold in marriage--to be sold to thee, Ospakar Blacktooth,
+like a heifer at a fair."
+
+Then Bjrn grew angry and cursed Saevuna, nor did Ospakar spare to add
+his ill words. But the old dame sat in her chair, listening silently
+till all their curses were spent.
+
+"Ye are evil, the twain of you," she said, "and ye have told lies of
+Eric, my son; and ye have taken his bride for lust and greed, playing
+on the jealous folly of a maid like harpers on a harp. Now I tell you
+this, Bjrn and Ospakar! My blind eyes are opened and I see this hall
+of Middalhof, and lo! it is but a gore of blood! Blood flows upon the
+board--blood streams along the floor, and ye--ye twain!--lie dead
+thereon, and about your shapes are shrouds, and on her feet are Hell-
+shoon! Eric comes and Whitefire is aloft, and no more shall ye stand
+before him whom ye have slandered than stands the birch before the
+lightning stroke! Eric comes! I see his angry eyes--I see his helm
+flash in the door-place! Red was that marriage-feast at which sat
+Unna, my kinswoman, and Asmund, thy father--redder shall be the feast
+where sit Gudruda, thy sister, and Ospakar! The wolf howls at thy
+door, Bjrn! the grave-worm opens his mouth! trolls run to and fro
+upon thy threshold, and the ghosts of men speed Hellwards! Ill were
+the deeds of Groa--worse shall be the deeds of Groa's daughter! Red is
+thy hall with blood, Bjrn!--for Whitefire is aloft and--/I tell thee
+Eric comes!/"--and with one great cry she fell back--dead.
+
+Now they stood amazed, and trembling in their fear.
+
+"Saevuna hath spoken strange words," said Bjrn.
+
+"Shall we be frightened by a dead hag?" quoth Ospakar, drawing his
+breath again. "Fellows, bear this carrion forth, or we fling it to the
+dogs."
+
+Then the men tied the body of Saevuna, Thorgrimur's widow, Eric's
+mother, fast in the chair, and bore it thence. But when at length they
+came to Coldback, they found that Swanhild was there with all her
+following, and had driven Eric's grieve and his folk to the fells. But
+one old carline, who had been nurse to Eric, was left there, and she
+sat wailing in an outhouse, being too weak to move.
+
+Then the men set down the corpse of Saevuna in the outhouse, and,
+having told all their tale to the carline, they fled also.
+
+That night passed, and passed the morrow; but on the next day at dawn
+Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail landed near Westman Isles.
+They had made a bad passage from Fareys, having been beat about by
+contrary winds; but at length they came safe and well to land.
+
+Now this was the day of the marriage-feast of Gudruda the Fair and
+Ospakar; but Eric knew nothing of these tidings.
+
+"Where to now, lord?" said Skallagrim.
+
+"To Coldback first, to see my mother, if she yet lives, and to learn
+tidings of Gudruda. Then as it may chance."
+
+Near to the beach was a yeoman's house. Thither they went to hire
+horses; but none were in the house, for all had gone to Gudruda's
+marriage-feast. In the home meadow ran two good horses, and in the
+outhouses were saddles and bridles. They caught the horses, saddled
+them and rode for Coldback. When they had ridden for something over an
+hour they came to the crest of a height whence they could see Coldback
+in the Marsh.
+
+Eric drew rein and looked, and his heart swelled within him at the
+sight of the place where he was born. But as he looked he saw a great
+train of people ride away from Coldback towards Middalhof--and in the
+company a woman wearing a purple cloak.
+
+"Now what may this mean?" said Eric.
+
+"Ride on and we shall learn," answered Skallagrim.
+
+So they rode on, and as they rode Eric's breast grew heavy with fear.
+Now they passed up the banked way through the home meadows of the
+house, but they could see no one; and now they were at the door. Down
+sprang Eric and walked into the hall. But none were there to greet
+him, though a fire yet burned upon the earth. Only a gaunt hound
+wandered about the hall, and, seeing him, sprang towards him,
+growling. Eric knew him for his old wolf-hound, and called him by his
+name. The dog listened, then ran up and smelt his hands, and
+straightway howled with joy and leapt upon him. For a while he leapt
+thus, while Eric stared around him wondering and sad at heart. Then
+the dog ran to the door and stopped, whining. Eric followed after him.
+The hound passed through the entrance, and across the yard till he
+came to an outhouse. Here the dog stopped and scratched at the door,
+still whining. Eric thrust it open. Lo! there before him sat Saevuna,
+his mother, dead in a chair, and at her feet crouched the carline--she
+who had been Eric's nurse.
+
+Now he grasped the door-posts to steady himself, and his shadow fell
+upon the white face of his mother and the old carline at her feet.
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+ HOW ERIC WAS A GUEST AT THE WEDDING-FEAST OF GUDRUDA THE FAIR
+
+Eric looked, but said nothing.
+
+"Who art thou?" whined the carline, gazing up at him with tear-blinded
+eyes. But Eric's face was in the shadow, and she only saw the glint of
+his golden hair and the flash of the golden helm. For Eric could not
+speak yet a while.
+
+"Art thou one of the Swanhild's folk, come to drive me hence with the
+rest? Good sir, I cannot go to the fells, my limbs are too weak. Slay
+me, if thou wilt, but drive me not from this," and she pointed to the
+corpse. "Say now, will thou not help me to give it burial? It is
+unmeet that she who in her time had husband, and goods, and son,
+should lie unburied like a dead cow on the fells. I have still a
+hundred in silver, if I might but come at it. It is hidden, sir, and I
+will pay thee if thou wilt help me to bury her. These old hands are
+too feeble to dig a grave, nor could I bear her there alone if it were
+dug. Thou wilt not help me?--then may thine own mother's bones lie
+uncovered, and be picked of gulls and ravens. Oh, that Eric Brighteyes
+would come home again! Oh, that Eric was here! there is work to do and
+never a man to do it."
+
+Now Eric gave a great sob and cried, "Nurse, nurse! knowest thou me
+not! /I/ am Eric Brighteyes."
+
+She uttered a loud cry, and, clasping him by the knees, looked up into
+his face.
+
+"Thanks be to Odin! Thou art Eric--Eric come home again! But alas,
+thou hast come too late!"
+
+"What has happened, then?" said Eric.
+
+"What has happened? All evil things. Thou art outlawed, Eric, at the
+suit of Swanhild for the slaying of Atli the Earl. Swanhild sits here
+in Coldback, for she hath seized thy lands. Saevuna, thy mother, died
+two days ago in the hall of Middalhof, whither she went to speak with
+Gudruda."
+
+"Gudruda! what of Gudruda?" cried Eric.
+
+"This, Brighteyes: to-day she weds Ospakar Blacktooth."
+
+Eric covered his face with his hand. Presently he lifted it.
+
+"Thou art rich in evil tidings, nurse, though, it would seem, poor in
+all besides. Tell me at what hour is the wedding-feast?"
+
+"An hour after noon, Eric; but now Swanhild has ridden thither with
+her company."
+
+"Then room must be found at Middalhof for one more guest," said Eric,
+and laughed aloud. "Go on!--pour out thy evil news and spare me not!--
+for nothing has any more power to harm me now! Come hither,
+Skallagrim, and see and hearken."
+
+Skallagrim came and looked on the face of dead Saevuna.
+
+"I am outlawed at Swanhild's suit, Lambstail. My life lies in thy
+hand, if so be thou wouldst take it! Hew off my head, if thou wilt,
+and bear it to Gudruda the Fair--she will thank thee for the gift. Lay
+on, Lambstail; lay on with that axe of thine."
+
+"Child's talk!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"Child's talk, but man's work! Thou hast not heard the tale out.
+Swanhild hath seized my lands and sits here at Coldback! And--what
+thinkest thou, Skallagrim?--but now she has ridden a-guesting to the
+marriage-feast of Ospakar Blacktooth with Gudruda the Fair! Swanhild
+at Gudruda's wedding!--the eagle in the wild swan's nest! But there
+will be another guest," and again he laughed aloud.
+
+"/Two/ other guests," said Skallagrim.
+
+"More of thy tale, old nurse!--more of thy tale!" quoth Eric. "No
+better didst thou ever tell me when, as a lad, I sat by thee, in the
+ingle o' winter nights--and the company is fitting to the tale!" and
+he pointed to dead Saevuna.
+
+Then the carline told on. She told how Hall of Lithdale had come out
+to Iceland, and of the story that he bore to Gudruda, and of the
+giving of the lock of hair.
+
+"What did I say, lord?" broke in Skallagrim--"that in Hall thou hadst
+let a weasel go who would live to nip thee?"
+
+"Him I will surely live to shorten by a head," quoth Eric.
+
+"Nay, lord, this one for me--Ospakar for thee, Hall for me!"
+
+"As thou wilt, Baresark. Among so many there is room to pick and
+choose. Tell on, nurse!"
+
+Then she told how Swanhild came out to Iceland, and, having won
+Ospakar Blacktooth and Gizur to her side, had laid a suit against Eric
+at the Thing, and there bore false witness against him, so that
+Brighteyes was declared outlaw, being absent. She told, too, how
+Gudruda had betrothed herself to Ospakar, and how Swanhild had moved
+down to Coldback and seized the lands. Lastly she told of the rising
+of Saevuna from her deathbed, of her going to Middalhof, of the words
+she spoke to Bjrn and Ospakar, and of her death in the hall at
+Middalhof.
+
+When all was told, Eric stooped and kissed the cold brow of his
+mother.
+
+"There is little time to bury thee now, my mother," he said, "and
+perchance before six hours are sped there will be one to bury at thy
+side. Nevertheless, thou shalt sit in a better place than this."
+
+Then he cut loose the cords that bound the body of Saevuna to the
+chair, and, lifting it in his arms, bore it to the hall. There he set
+the corpse in the high seat of the hall.
+
+"We need not start yet a while, Skallagrim," said Eric, "if indeed
+thou wouldst go a-guesting with me to Middalhof. Therefore let us eat
+and drink, for there are deeds to do this day."
+
+So they found meat and mead and ate and drank. Then Eric washed
+himself, combed out his golden locks, and looked well to his harness
+and to Whitefire's edge. Skallagrim also ground his great axe upon the
+whetstone in the yard, singing as he ground. When all was ready, the
+horses were caught, and Eric spoke to the carline:
+
+"Hearken, nurse. If it may be that thou canst find any of our folk--
+and perchance now that they see that Swanhild has ridden to Middalhof
+some one of them will come down to spy--thou shalt say this to them.
+Thou shalt say that, if Eric Brighteyes yet lives, he will be at the
+foot of Mosfell to-morrow before midday, and if, for the sake of old
+days and fellowship, they are minded to befriend a friendless man, let
+them come thither with food, for by then food will be needed, and I
+will speak with them. And now farewell," and Eric kissed her and went,
+leaving her weeping.
+
+As it chanced, before another hour was sped, Jon, Eric's thrall, who
+had stayed at home in Iceland, seeing Coldback empty, crept down from
+the fells and looked in. The carline saw him, and told him these
+tidings. Then he went thence to find the other men. Having found them
+he told them Eric's words, and a great gladness came upon them when
+they learned that Brighteyes still lived, and was in Iceland. Then
+they gathered food and gear, and rode away to the foot of Mosfell that
+is now called Ericsfell.
+
+
+
+Ospakar sat in the hall at Middalhof, near to the high seat. He was
+fully armed, and a black helm with a raven's crest was on his head.
+For, though he said nothing of it, not a little did he fear that
+Saevuna spoke sooth--that her words would come true, and, before this
+day was done, he and Eric should once more stand face to face. At his
+side sat Gudruda the Fair, robed in white, a worked head-dress on her
+head, golden clasps upon her breast and golden rings about her arms.
+Never had she been more beautiful to see; but her face was whiter than
+her robes. She looked with loathing on Blacktooth at her side, rough
+like a bear, and hideous as a troll. But he looked on her with
+longing, and laughed from side to side of his great mouth when he
+thought that at last he had got her for his own.
+
+"Ah, if Eric would but come, faithless though he be!--if Eric would
+but come!" thought Gudruda; but no Eric came to save her. The guests
+gathered fast, and presently Swanhild swept in with all her company,
+wrapped about in her purple cloak. She came up to the high seat where
+Gudruda sat, and bent the knee before her, looking on her with lovely
+mocking face and hate in her blue eyes.
+
+"Greeting, Gudruda, my sister!" she said. "When last we met I sat,
+Atli's bride, where to-day thou sittest the bride of Ospakar. Then
+Eric Brighteyes held thy hand, and little thou didst think of wedding
+Ospakar. Now Eric is afar--so strangely do things come about--and
+Blacktooth, Brighteyes' foe, holds that fair hand of thine."
+
+Gudruda looked on her and turned whiter yet in her pain, but she
+answered never a word.
+
+"What! no word for me, sister?" said Swanhild. "And yet it is through
+me that thou comest to this glad hour. It is through me that thou art
+rid of Eric, and it is I who have given thee to the arms of mighty
+Ospakar. No word of thanks for so great a service!--fie on thee,
+Gudruda! fie!"
+
+Then Gudruda spoke: "Strange tales are told of thee and Eric, Groa's
+daughter! I have done with Eric, but I have done with thee also. Thou
+hast thrust thyself here against my will and, if I may, I would see
+thy face no more."
+
+"Wouldst thou see Eric's face, Gudruda?--say, wouldst see Eric's face?
+I tell thee it is fair!"
+
+But Gudruda answered nothing, and Swanhild fell back, laughing.
+
+Now the feast began, and men waxed merry. But ever Gudruda's heart
+grew heavier, for in it echoed those words that Saevuna had spoken.
+Her eyes were dim, and she seemed to see naught but the face of Eric
+as it had looked when he came back to her that day on the brink of
+Goldfoss Falls and she had thought him dead. Oh! what if he still
+loved her and were yet true at heart? Swanhild mocked her!--what if
+this was a plot of Swanhild's? Had not Swanhild plotted aforetime, and
+could a wolf cease from ravening or a witch from witch-work? Nay, she
+had seen Eric's hair--that he had sworn none save she should touch!
+Perchance he had been drugged, and the hair shorn from him in his
+sleep? Too late to think! Of what use was thought?--beside her sat
+Ospakar, in one short hour she would be his. Ah! that she could see
+him dead--the troll who had trafficked her to shame, the foe she had
+summoned in her wrath and jealousy! She had done ill--she had fallen
+into Swanhild's snare, and now Swanhild came to mock her!
+
+The feast went on--cup followed cup. Now they poured the bride-cup!
+Before her heart beat two hundred times she would be the wife of
+Ospakar!
+
+Blacktooth took the cup--pledged her in it, and drank deep. Then he
+turned and strove to kiss her. But Gudruda shrank from him with horror
+in her eyes, and all men wondered. Still she must drink the bridal
+cup. She took it. Dimly she saw the upturned faces, faintly she heard
+the murmur of a hundred voices.
+
+What was that voice she caught above them all--there--without the
+hall?
+
+Holding the cup in her hand, Gudruda bent forward, staring down the
+skali. Then she cried aloud, pointing to the door, and the cup fell
+clattering from her hand and rolled along the ground.
+
+Men turned and looked. They saw this: there on the threshold stood a
+man, glorious to look at, and from his winged helm of gold the rays of
+light flashed through the dusky hall. The man was great and beautiful
+to see. He had long yellow hair bound in about his girdle, and in his
+left hand he held a pointed shield, in his right a spear, and at his
+thigh there hung a mighty sword. Nor was he alone, for by his side, a
+broad axe on his shoulder and shield in hand, stood another man, clad
+in black-hued mail--a man well-nigh as broad and big, with hawk's
+eyes, eagle beak, and black hair streaked with grey.
+
+For a moment there was silence. Then a voice spoke:
+
+"Lo! here be the Gods Baldur and Thor!--come from Valhalla to grace
+the marriage-feast!"
+
+Then the man with golden hair cried aloud in a voice that made the
+rafters ring:
+
+"Here are Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail, his thrall, come
+from over sea to grace the feast, indeed!"
+
+"I could have looked for no worse guests," said Bjrn, beneath his
+breath, and rose to bid men thrust them out. But before he could
+speak, lo! gold-helmed Eric and black-helmed Skallagrim were stalking
+up the length of that great hall. Side by side they stalked, with
+faces fierce and cold; nor stayed they till they stood before the high
+seat. Eric looked up and round, and the light of his eyes was as the
+light of a sword. Men marvelled at his greatness and his wonderful
+beauty, and to Gudruda he seemed like a God.
+
+"Here I see faces that are known to me," said Eric. "Greetings,
+comrades!"
+
+"Greetings, Brighteyes!" shouted the Middalhof folk and the company of
+Swanhild; but the carles of Ospakar laid hand on sword--they too knew
+Eric. For still all men loved Eric, and the people of his quarter were
+proud of the deeds he had done oversea.
+
+"Greeting, Bjrn, Asmund's son!" quoth Eric. "Greeting, Ospakar
+Blacktooth! Greeting, Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's witch-wife--
+Groa's witch-bairn! Greeting, Hall of Lithdale, Hall the liar--Hall
+who cut the grapnel-chain! And to thee, sweet Bride, to thee Gudruda
+the Fair, greeting!"
+
+Now Bjrn spoke: "I will take no greeting from a shamed and outlawed
+man. Get thee gone, Eric Brighteyes, and take thy wolf-hound with
+thee, lest thou bidest here stiff and cold."
+
+"Speak not so loud, rat, lest hound's fang worry thee!" growled
+Skallagrim.
+
+But Eric laughed aloud and cried--
+
+"Words must be said, and perchance men shall die, ere ever I leave
+this hall, Bjrn!"
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+HOW THE FEAST WENT
+
+"Hearken all men!" said Eric.
+
+"Thrust him out!" quoth Bjrn.
+
+"Nay, cut him down!" said Ospakar, "he is an outlawed man."
+
+"Words first, then deeds," answered Skallagrim. "Thou shalt have thy
+fill of both, Blacktooth, before day is done."
+
+"Let Eric say his say," said Gudruda, lifting her head. "He has been
+doomed unheard, and it is my will that he shall say his say."
+
+"What hast thou to do with Eric?" snarled Ospakar.
+
+"The bride-cup is not yet drunk, lord," she answered.
+
+"To thee, then, I will speak, lady," quoth Eric. "How comes it that,
+being betrothed to me, thou dost sit there the bride of Ospakar?"
+
+"Ask of Swanhild," said Gudruda in a low voice. "Ask also of Hall of
+Lithdale yonder, who brought me Swanhild's gift from Straumey."
+
+"I must ask much of Hall and he must answer much," said Eric. "What
+tale, then, did he bring thee from Straumey?"
+
+"He said this, Eric," Gudruda answered: "that thou wast Swanhild's
+love; that for Swanhild's sake thou hadst basely killed Atli the Good,
+and that thou wast about to wed Swanhild's self and take the Earl's
+seat in Orkneys."
+
+"And for what cause was I made outlaw at the Althing?"
+
+"For this cause, Eric," said Bjrn, "that thou hadst dealt evilly with
+Swanhild, bringing her to shame against her will, and thereafter that
+thou hadst slain the Earl, her husband."
+
+"Which, then, of these tales is true? for both cannot be true," said
+Brighteyes. "Speak, Swanhild."
+
+"Thou knowest well that the last is true," said Swanhild boldly.
+
+"How then comes it that thou didst charge Hall with that message to
+Gudruda? How then comes it that thou didst send her the lock of hair
+which thou didst cozen me to give thee?"
+
+"I charged Hall with no message, and I sent no lock of hair," Swanhild
+answered.
+
+"Stand thou forward, Hall!" said Eric, "and liar and coward though
+thou art, dare not to speak other than the truth! Nay, look not at the
+door: for, if thou stirrest, this spear shall find thee before thou
+hast gone a pace!"
+
+Now Hall stood forward, trembling with fear, for he saw the eye of
+Skallagrim watching him close, and while Lambstail watched, his
+fingers toyed with the handle of his axe.
+
+"It is true, lord, that Swanhild charged me with that message which I
+gave to the Lady Gudruda. Also she bade me give the lock of hair."
+
+"And for this service thou didst take money, Hall?"
+
+"Ay, lord, she gave me money for my faring."
+
+"And all the while thou knewest the tidings false?"
+
+Hall made no reply.
+
+"Answer!" thundered Eric--"answer the truth, knave, or by every God
+that passes the hundred gates I will not spare thee twice!"
+
+"It is so, lord," said Hall.
+
+"Thou liest, fox!" cried Swanhild, white with wrath and casting a
+fierce look upon Hall. But men took no heed of Swanhild's words, for
+all eyes were bent on Eric.
+
+"Is it now your pleasure, comrades, that I should tell you the truth?"
+said Brighteyes.
+
+The most part of the company shouted "Yea!" but the men of Ospakar
+stood silent.
+
+"Speak on, Eric," quoth Gudruda.
+
+"This is the truth, then: Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's wife, has
+always sought my love, and she has ever hated Gudruda whom I loved.
+From a child she has striven to work mischief between us. Ay, and she
+did this, though till now it has been hidden: she strove to murder
+Gudruda; it was on the day that Skallagrim and I overcame Ospakar and
+his band on Horse-Head Heights. She thrust Gudruda from the brink of
+Golden Falls while she sat looking on the waters, and as she hung
+there I dragged her back. Is it not so, Gudruda?"
+
+"It is so," said Gudruda.
+
+Now men murmured and looked at Swanhild. But she shrank back, plucking
+at her purple cloak.
+
+"It was for this cause," said Eric, "that Asmund, Swanhild's father,
+gave her choice to wed Atli the Earl and pass over sea or to take her
+trial in the Doom-Ring. She wedded Atli and went away. Afterwards, by
+witchcraft, she brought my ship to wreck on Straumey's Isle--ay, she
+walked the waters like a shape of light and lured us on to ruin, so
+that all were drowned except Skallagrim and myself. Is it not so,
+Skallagrim?"
+
+"It is so, lord. I saw her with my eyes."
+
+Again folk murmured.
+
+"Then we must sit in Atli's hall," said Eric, "and there we dwelt last
+winter. For a while Swanhild did no harm, till I feared her no more.
+But some three months ago, I was left with her: and a man called Koll,
+Groa's thrall, of whom ye know, came out from Iceland, bringing news
+of the death of Asmund the priest, of Unna my cousin, and of Groa the
+witch. To these ill-tidings Swanhild bribed him to add something. She
+bribed him to add this: that thou, Gudruda, wast betrothed to Ospakar,
+and wouldst wed him on last Yule Day. Moreover, he gave me a certain
+message from thee, Gudruda, and, in token of its truth, the half of
+that coin which I broke with thee long years ago. Say now, lady, didst
+thou send the coin?"
+
+"Nay, never!" cried Gudruda; "many years ago I lost the half thou
+gavest me, though I feared to tell thee."
+
+"Perchance one stands there who found it," said Eric, pointing with
+his spear at Swanhild. "At the least I was deceived by it. Now the
+tale is short. Swanhild mourned with me, and in my sorrow I mourned
+bitterly. Then it was she asked a boon, that lock of mine, Gudruda,
+and, thinking thee faithless, I gave it, holding all oaths broken.
+Then too, when I would have left her, she drugged me with a witch-
+draught--ay, she drugged me, and I woke to find myself false to my
+oath, false to Atli, and false to thee, Gudruda. I cursed her and I
+left her, waiting for the Earl, to tell him all. But Swanhild
+outwitted me. She told him that other tale of shame that ye have
+heard, and brought Koll to him as witness of the tale. Atli was
+deceived by her, and not until I had cut him down in anger at the
+bitter words he spoke, calling me coward and niddering, did he know
+the truth. But before he died he knew it; and he died, holding my hand
+and bidding those about him find Koll and slay him. Is it not so, ye
+who were Atli's men?"
+
+"It is so, Eric!" they cried; "we heard it with our own ears, and we
+slew Koll. But afterwards Swanhild brought is to believe that Earl
+Atli was distraught when he spoke thus, and that things were indeed as
+she had said."
+
+Again men murmured, and a strange light shone in Gudruda's eyes.
+
+"Now, Gudruda, thou hast heard all my story," said Eric. "Say, dost
+thou believe me?"
+
+"I believe thee, Eric."
+
+"Say then, wilt thou still wed yon Ospakar?"
+
+Gudruda looked on Blacktooth, then she looked at golden Eric and
+opened her lips to speak. But before a word could pass them Ospakar
+rose in wrath, laying his hand upon his sword.
+
+"Thinkest thou thus to lure away my dove, outlaw? First I will see
+thee food for crows."
+
+"Well spoken, Blacktooth," laughed Eric. "I waited for such words from
+thee. Thrice have we striven together--once out yonder in the snow,
+once on Horse-Head Heights, and once by Westman Isles--and still we
+live to tell the tale. Come down, Ospakar: come down from that soft
+seat of thine and here and now let us put it to the proof who is the
+better man. When we met before, the stake was Whitefire set against my
+eye. Now the stake is our lives and fair Gudruda's hand. Talk no more,
+Ospakar, but fall to it."
+
+"Gudruda shall never wed thee, while I live!" said Bjrn; "thou art a
+landless loon, a brawler, and an outlaw. Get thee gone, Eric, with thy
+wolf-hound!"
+
+"Squeak not so loud, rat--squeak not so loud, lest hound's fang worry
+thee!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"Whether I wed Gudruda or whether I wed her not is a matter that shall
+be known in its season," said Eric. "For thy words, I say this: that
+it is risky to hurl names at such as I am, Bjrn, lest perchance I
+answer them with spear-thrusts. Thy answer, Ospakar! What need to
+wait? Thy answer!"
+
+Now Ospakar looked at Brighteyes and grew afraid. He was a mighty man,
+but he knew the weight of Eric's arm.
+
+"I will not fight with thee, carle," he said, "who hast naught to
+lose."
+
+"Then thou art coward and niddering!" said Eric. "Ospakar /Niddering/
+I name thee here before all men! What! thou couldst plot against me--
+thou couldst waylay me, ten to one and two ships to one, but face to
+face with me alone thou dost not dare to stand? Comrades, look on your
+lord!--look at Ospakar the /Niddering!/"
+
+Now the swarthy brow of Blacktooth grew red with rage, and his breath
+came in great gasps. "Ho, men!" he cried, "drive this knave away.
+Strip his harness off him and whip him hence with rods."
+
+"Let but a man stir towards me and this spear flies through thy heart,
+Niddering," cried Eric. "Gudruda, what thinkest thou of thy lord?"
+
+"I know this," said Gudruda, "that I will not wed a man who is named
+'Niddering' in the face of all and lifts no sword."
+
+Gudruda spoke thus, because she was mad with love and fear and shame,
+and she desired that Eric should stand face to face with Ospakar
+Blacktooth, for thus, alone, she might perhaps be rid of Ospakar.
+
+"Such words do not come well from gentle lips," said Bjrn.
+
+"Is it to be borne, brother," answered Gudruda, "that the man who
+would call me wife should be named Ospakar the Niddering? When that
+shame is washed away, and then only, can I think on marriage. I will
+never be Niddering's bride!"
+
+"Thou hearest, Ospakar Niddering?" said Eric. Then he gave the spear
+in his hand to Skallagrim, and, gripping Whitefire's hilt, he burst
+the peace-strings, and tore it from the scabbard.
+
+Now the great sword shone on high like lightning leaping from a cloud,
+and as it shone men shouted, "/Ospakar! Ospakar Niddering!/ Come, win
+back Whitefire from Eric's hand, or be for ever shamed!"
+
+Blacktooth could endure this no more. He snatched sword and shield,
+and, like a bear from a cave, like a wolf from his lair, rushed
+roaring from his seat. On he came, and the ground shook beneath his
+bulk.
+
+"At last, Niddering!" cried Eric, and sprang to meet him.
+
+"Back! all men, back!" shouted Skallagrim, "now we shall see blows."
+
+As he spoke the great swords flashed aloft and clanged upon the iron
+shields. So heavy were the blows that fire leapt out from them.
+Ospakar reeled back beneath the shock, and Eric was beaten to his
+knee. Now he was up, but as he rushed, Ospakar struck again and swept
+away half of Brighteyen's pointed shield so that it fell upon the
+floor. Eric smote also, but Ospakar dropped his knee to earth and the
+sword hissed over him. Blacktooth cut at Eric's legs; but Brighteyes
+sprang from the ground and took no harm.
+
+Now some cried, "/Eric! Eric!/" and some cried "/Ospakar! Ospakar!/"
+for no one knew how the fight would go.
+
+Gudruda sat watching in the high seat, and as blows fell her colour
+came and went.
+
+Swanhild drew near, watching also, and she desired in her fierce heart
+to see Eric brought to shame and death, for, should he win, then
+Gudruda would be rid of Ospakar. Now by her side stood Gizur,
+Ospakar's son, and near to her was Bjrn. These two held their breath,
+for, if Eric conquered, all their plans were brought to nothing.
+
+Even as he sprang into the air, Eric smote down with all his strength.
+The blow fell on Ospakar's shield. It shore through the shield and
+struck on the shoulder beneath. But Blacktooth's byrnie was good, nor
+did the sword bite into it. Still the stroke was so heavy that Ospakar
+staggered back four paces beneath it, then fell upon the ground.
+
+Now folk raised a shout of "/Eric! Eric!/" for it seemed that Ospakar
+was sped. Brighteyes, too, cried aloud, then rushed forward. Now, as
+he came, Swanhild whispered an eager word into the ear of Bjrn. By
+Bjrn's foot lay that half of Eric's shield which had been shorn away
+by the sword of Ospakar. Gudruda, watching, saw Bjrn push it with his
+shoe so that it slid before the feet of Brighteyes. His right foot
+caught on it, he stumbled heavily--stumbled again, then fell prone on
+his face, and, as he fell, stretched out his sword hand to save
+himself, so that Whitefire flew from his grasp. The blade struck its
+hilt against the ground, then circled in the air and fixed itself,
+point downwards, in the clay of the flooring. The hand of Ospakar
+rising from the ground smote against the hilt of Whitefire. He saw it,
+with a shout he cast his own sword away and clasped Whitefire.
+
+Away circled the sword of Ospakar; and of that cast this strange thing
+is told, false or true. Far in the corner of the hall lurked Thorunna,
+she who had betrayed Skallagrim when he was named Ounound. She had
+come with a heavy heart to Middalhof in the company of Ospakar; but
+when she saw Skallagrim, her husband--whom she had betrayed, and who
+had turned Baresark because of her wickedness--shame smote her, and
+she crept away and hid herself behind the hangings of the hall. The
+sword sped along point first, it rushed like a spear through the air.
+It fell on the hangings, piercing them, piercing the heart of
+Thorunna, who cowered behind them, so that with one cry she sank dead
+to earth, slain by her lover's hand.
+
+
+
+Now when men saw that Ospakar once more held Whitefire in his hand--
+Whitefire that Brighteyes had won from him--they called aloud that it
+was an omen. The sword of Blacktooth had come back to Blacktooth and
+now Eric would surely be slain of it!
+
+Eric sprang from the ground. He heard the shouts and saw Whitefire
+blazing in Ospakar's hand.
+
+"Now thou art weaponless, fly! Brighteyes; fly!" cried some.
+
+Gudruda's cheek grew white with fear, and for a moment Eric's heart
+failed him.
+
+"Fly not!" roared Skallagrim. "Bjrn tripped thee. Yet hast thou half
+a shield!"
+
+Ospakar rushed on, and Whitefire flickered over Eric's helm. Down it
+came and shore one wing from the helm. Again it shone and fell, but
+Brighteyes caught the blow on his broken shield.
+
+Then, while men waited to see him slain, Eric gave a great war-shout
+and sprang forward.
+
+"Thou art mad!" shouted the folk.
+
+"Ye shall see! Ye shall see!" screamed Skallagrim.
+
+Again Ospakar smote and again Eric caught the blow; and behold! he
+struck back, thrusting with the point of the shorn shield straight at
+the face of Ospakar.
+
+"/Peck! Eagle; peck!/" cried Skallagrim.
+
+Once more Whitefire shone above him. Eric rushed in beneath the sword,
+and with all his mighty strength thrust the buckler-point at
+Blacktooth's face. It struck fair and full, and lo! the helm of
+Ospakar burst asunder. He threw wide his giant arms, then fell as a
+pine falls upon the mountain edge. He fell back, and he lay still.
+
+But Eric, stooping over him, took Whitefire from his hand.
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+HOW THE FEAST ENDED
+
+For a moment there was silence in the hall, for men had known no such
+fight as this.
+
+"Why, then, do ye gape?" laughed Skallagrim, pointing with the spear.
+"Dead is Ospakar!--slain by the swordless man! Eric Brighteyes hath
+slain Ospakar Blacktooth!"
+
+Then there went up such a shout as never was heard in the hall of
+Middalhof.
+
+Now when Gudruda knew that Ospakar was sped, she looked at Eric as he
+rested, leaning on his sword, and her heart was filled with awe and
+love. She sprang from her seat, and, coming to where Brighteyes stood,
+she greeted him.
+
+"Welcome to Iceland, Eric!" she said. "Welcome, thou glory of the
+south!"
+
+Now Swanhild grew wild, for she saw that Eric was about to take
+Gudruda in his arms and kiss her before all men.
+
+"Say, Bjrn," she cried; "wilt thou suffer that this outlaw, having
+slain Ospakar, should lead Gudruda hence as wife?"
+
+"He shall never do so while I live," cried Bjrn, nearly mad with
+rage. "This is my command, sister: that thou dost see Eric no more."
+
+"Say, Bjrn," answered Gudruda, "did I dream, or did I indeed see thee
+thrust the broken buckler before Eric's feet, so that he stumbled on
+it and fell?"
+
+"That thou sawest, lady," said Skallagrim; "for I saw it also."
+
+Now Bjrn grew white in his anger. He did not answer Gudruda, but
+called aloud to his men to slay Eric and Skallagrim. Gizur called also
+to the folk of Ospakar, and Swanhild to those who came with her.
+
+Then Gudruda fled back to her seat.
+
+But Eric cried aloud also: "Ye who love me, cleave to me. Suffer it
+not that Brighteyes be cut down of northerners and outland men. Hear
+me, Atli's folk; hear me, carles of Coldback and of Middalhof!"
+
+And so greatly did many love Eric that half of the thralls of Bjrn,
+and almost all of the company of Swanhild who had been Atli's shield-
+men and Brighteyes' comrades, drew swords, shouting "Eric! Eric!" But
+the carles of Ospakar came on to make an end of him.
+
+Bjrn saw, and, drawing sword, smote at Brighteyes, taking him
+unawares. But Skallagrim caught the blow upon his axe, and before
+Bjrn could smite again Whitefire was aloft and down fell Bjrn, dead!
+
+That was the end of Bjrn, Asmund's son.
+
+"Thou hast squeaked thy last, rat! What did I tell thee?" cried
+Skallagrim. "Take Bjrn's shield and back to back, lord, for here come
+foes."
+
+"There goes one," answered Eric, pointing to the door.
+
+Now Hall of Lithdale slunk through the doorway--Hall, the liar, who
+cut the grapnel-chain--for he wished to see the last of Skallagrim.
+But the Baresark still held Eric's spear in his hand. He whirled it
+aloft, and it hissed through the air. The aim was good, for, as he
+crept away, the spear struck Hall between neck and shoulder, pinning
+him to the doorpost, and there the liar died.
+
+"Now the weasel is nailed to the beam," said Skallagrim. "Hall of
+Lithdale, what did I promise thee?"
+
+"Guard thy head and my back," quoth Eric; "blows fall!"
+
+Now men smote at Eric and Skallagrim, nor did they spare to smite in
+turn. And as foes fell before him, Eric stepped one pace forward
+towards the door, and Skallagrim, who, back to back with him, held off
+those who pressed behind, took one step rearwards. Thus, a foe for
+every step, they won their way down the long hall. Fierce raged the
+fray around them, for, made with hate and drink and the lust of fight,
+Swanhild's folk--Eric's friends--remembering the words of Atli, fell
+on Ospakar's; and the people of Bjrn fell on each other, brother on
+brother, and father on son--nor might the fray be stayed. The boards
+were overthrown, dead men lay among the meats and mead, and the blood
+of freeman, lord and thrall ran adown the floor. Everywhere through
+the dusky hall glittered the sheen of flashing swords and rose the
+clang of war. Darts clove the air like tongues of flame, and the
+clamour of battle beat against the roof.
+
+Blinded of the Norns who brought these things to pass, men sought no
+mercy and they gave none, but smote and slew till few were left to
+slay.
+
+And still Gudruda sat in her bride-seat, and, with eyes fixed in
+horror, watched the waxing of the war. Near to her stood Swanhild,
+marking all things with a fierce-set face, and calling down curses on
+her folk, who one and all cried "Eric! Eric!" and swept the thralls of
+Ospakar as corn is swept of the sickle.
+
+And there, nigh to the door, pale of face and beautiful to see, golden
+Eric clove his way, and with him went black Skallagrim. Terrible was
+the flare of Whitefire as he flicked aloft like the levin in the
+cloud. Terrible was the flare of Whitefire; but more terrible was the
+light of Eric's eyes, for they seemed to flame in his head, and
+wherever that fire fell it lighted men the way to death. Whitefire
+sung and flickered, and crashed the axe of Skallagrim, and still
+through the press of war they won their way. Now Gizur stands before
+them, spear aloft, and Whitefire leaps up to meet him. Lo! he turns
+and flies. The coward son of Ospakar does not seek the fate of
+Ospakar!
+
+The door is won. They stand without but little harmed, while women
+wail aloud.
+
+"To horse!" cried Skallagrim; "to horse, ere our luck fail us!"
+
+"There is no luck in this," gasped Eric; "for I have slain many men,
+and among them is Bjrn, the brother of her whom I would make my
+bride."
+
+"Better one such fight than many brides," said Skallagrim, shaking his
+red axe. "We have won great glory this day, Brighteyes, and Ospakar is
+dead--slain by a swordless man!"
+
+
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim ran to their horses, none hindering them, and,
+mounting, rode towards Mosfell.
+
+All that evening and all the night they rode, and at morning they came
+across the black sand to Mosfell slopes that are by the Hecla. Here
+they rested, and, taking off their armour, washed themselves in the
+stream: for they were very weary and foul with blood and wounds. When
+they had finished washing and had buckled on their harness again,
+Skallagrim, peering across the plain with his hawk's eyes, saw men
+riding fast towards them.
+
+"Foes are soon afoot, lord," he said. "I thought we had stayed their
+hunger for a while."
+
+"Would that I might stay mine," quoth Eric. "I am weary, and unfit for
+fight."
+
+"I have still strength for one or two," said Skallagrim, "and then
+good-night! But these are no foes. They are of the Coldback folk. The
+carline has kept her word."
+
+Then Eric was glad, and presently six men, headed by Jon his thrall,
+the same man who had watched on Mosfell when Eric went up to slay the
+Baresark, rode to them and greeted them. "Beggar women," said Jon,
+"whom they met at Ran River, had told them of the death of Ospakar,
+and of the great slaying at Middalhof, and they would know if the
+tidings were true."
+
+"It is true, Jon," said Eric; "but first give us food, if ye have it,
+for we are hungered and spent. When we have eaten we will speak."
+
+So they led up a pack-horse and from it took stockfish and smoked
+meat, of which Eric and Skallagrim ate heartily, till their strength
+came back to them.
+
+Then Eric spoke. "Comrades," he said, "I am an outlawed man, and,
+though I have not sought it, much blood is on my head. Atli is dead at
+my hand; Ospakar is dead at my hand; Bjrn the Priest, Asmund's son,
+is dead at my hand, and with them many another man. Nor may the matter
+stay here, for Gizur, Blacktooth's son, yet lives, and Bjrn has kin
+in the south, and Swanhild will buy friends with gold, and all of
+these will set on me to slay me, so that at the last I die by the
+sword."
+
+"No need for that," said Skallagrim. "Our vengeance is wrought, and
+now, as before, the sea is open, and I think that a welcome awaits us
+in London."
+
+"Now Gudruda is widowed before she was fully wed," said Eric,
+"therefore I bide an outlawed man here in Iceland. I go hence no more,
+though it be death to stay, unless indeed Gudruda the Fair goes with
+me."
+
+"It will be death, then," said Skallagrim, "and the swords are forged
+that we shall feel. The odds are too heavy, lord."
+
+"Mayhap," answered Eric. "No man may flee his fate, and I shall not
+altogether grieve when mine finds me. Hearken, comrades: I go up to
+Mosfell height, and there I stay, till those be found who can drag me
+from my hole. But this is my counsel to you: that ye leave me to my
+doom, for I am an unlucky man who always chooses the wrong road."
+
+"That will not I," said Skallagrim.
+
+"Nor we," said Eric's folk; "Swanhild holds Coldback, and we are
+driven to the fells. To the fells then we will go with thee, Eric
+Brighteyes, and become cave-dwellers and outlaws for thy sake. Fear
+not, thou shalt still find many friends."
+
+"I did not look for such a thing at your hands," said Eric; "but
+stormy waters show how the boat is built. May no bad luck come to you
+from your good fellowship. And now let us to our nest."
+
+Then they caught the horses, and rode with Brighteyes up the steep
+side of Mosfell, till at length they came to that secret dell which
+Skallagrim had once shown to Eric. Here they turned the horses loose
+to feed, and, going forward on foot, reached the dark and narrow pass
+that Brighteyes had trod when he sought for the Baresark foe.
+Skallagrim led the way along it, then came Eric and the rest. One by
+one they stepped on to the giddy point of rock, and, catching at the
+birch-bush, entered the hole. So they gained the platform and the
+great cave beyond; and they found that no man had set foot there since
+the day when Eric had striven with Skallagrim. For there on the rock,
+rotten with the weather, lay that haft of wood which Brighteyes had
+hewed from the axe of Skallagrim, and in the cave were many things
+beside as the Baresark had left them.
+
+So they took up their dwelling in the cave, Eric, Skallagrim, and the
+six Coldback men, and there they dwelt many months. But Eric sent out
+his men, one at a time, and got together food and a store of
+sheepskins, and other needful things. For he knew this well: that
+Gizur and Swanhild would before long come up against them, and, if
+they could not take them by force, would set themselves to watch the
+mountain-path and starve them out.
+
+
+
+When Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Middalhof the fight still
+raged fiercely in the hall, and nothing but death might stay it. The
+minds of men were mad, and they smote one another, and slew each
+other, till at length of all that marriage company few were left
+unharmed, except Gizur, Swanhild, and Gudruda. For the serving thralls
+and womenfolk had fled the hall, and with them some peaceful men.
+
+Then Gudruda spoke as one in a dream.
+
+"Saevuna's prophecy was true," she said, "red was the marriage-feast
+of Asmund my father, redder has been the marriage-feast of Ospakar!
+She saw the hall of Middalhof one gore of blood, and lo! it is so.
+look upon thy work, Swanhild," and she pointed to the piled-up dead--
+"look upon thy work, witch-sister, and grow fearful: for all this
+death is on thy head!"
+
+Swanhild laughed aloud. "I think it a merry sight," she cried. "The
+marriage-feast of Asmund our father was red, and thy marriage-feast,
+Gudruda, has been redder. Would that thy blood and the blood of Eric
+ran with the blood of Bjrn and Ospakar! That tale must yet be told,
+Gudruda. There shall be binding on of Hell-shoes at Middalhof, but I
+bind them not. My task is still to come: for I will live to fasten the
+Hell-shoes on the feet of Eric, and on thy feet, Gudruda! At the
+least, I have brought about this much, that thou canst scarcely wed
+Eric the outlaw: for with his own hand he slew Bjrn our brother, and
+because of this I count all that death as nothing. Thou canst not mate
+with Brighteyes, lest the wide wounds of Bjrn thy brother should take
+tongues and cry thy shame from sea to sea!"
+
+Gudruda made no answer, but sat as one carved in stone. Then Swanhild
+spoke again:
+
+"Let us away to the north, Gizur; there to gather strength to make an
+end of Eric. Say, wilt thou help us, Gudruda? The blood-feud for the
+death of Bjrn is thine."
+
+"Ye are enough to bring about the fall of one unfriended man," Gudruda
+said. "Go, and leave me with my sorrow and the dead. Nay! before thou
+goest, listen, Swanhild, for there is that in my heart which tells me
+I shall never look again upon thy face. From evil to evil thou hast
+ever gone, Swanhild, and from evil to evil thou wilt go. It may well
+chance that thy wickedness will win. It may well chance that thou wilt
+crown thy crimes with my slaying and the slaying of the man who loves
+me. But I tell thee this, traitress--murderess, as thou art--that here
+the tale ends not. Not by death, Swanhild, shalt thou escape the deeds
+of life! /There/ they shall rise up against thee, and /there/ every
+shame that thou hast worked, every sin that thou hast sinned, and
+every soul that thou hast brought to Hela's halls, shall come to haunt
+thee and to drive thee on from age to age! That witchcraft which thou
+lovest shall mesh thee. Shadows shall bewilder thee; from the bowl of
+empty longings thou shalt drink and drink, and not be satisfied. Yea!
+lusts shall mock and madden thee. Thou shalt ride the winds, thou
+shalt sail the seas, but thou shalt find no harbour, and never shalt
+thou set foot upon a shore of peace.
+
+"Go on, Swanhild--dye those hands in blood--wade through the river of
+shame! Seek thy desire, and finding, lose! Work thy evil, and winning,
+fail! I yet shall triumph--I yet shall trample thee; and, in a place
+to come, with Eric at my side, I shall make a mock of Swanhild the
+murderess! Swanhild the liar, and the wanton, and the witch! Now get
+thee gone!"
+
+Swanhild heard. She looked up at Gudruda's face and it was alight as
+with a fire. She strove to answer, but no words came. Then Groa's
+daughter turned and went, and with her went Gizur.
+
+
+
+Now women and thralls came in and drew out the wounded and those who
+still breathed from among the dead, taking them to the temple. They
+bore away the body of Ospakar also, but they left the rest.
+
+
+
+All night long Gudruda sat in the bride's seat. There she sat in the
+silver summer midnight, looking on the slain who were strewn about the
+great hall. All night she sat alone in the bride's seat thinking--ever
+thinking.
+
+How, then, would it end? There her brother Bjrn lay a-cold--Bjrn the
+justly slain of Brighteyes; yet how could she wed the man who slew her
+brother? From Ospakar she was divorced by death; from Eric she was
+divorced by the blood of Bjrn her brother! How might she unravel this
+tangled skein and float to weal upon this sea of death? All things
+went amiss! The doom was on her! She had lived to an ill purpose--her
+love had wrought evil! What availed it to have been born to be fair
+among women and to have desired that which might not be? And she
+herself had brought these things to pass--she had loosed the rock
+which crushed her! Why had she hearkened to that false tale?
+
+Gudruda sat on high in the bride's seat, asking wisdom of the piled-up
+dead, while the cold blue shadows of the nightless night gathered over
+her and them--gathered, and waned, and grew at last to the glare of
+day.
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+HOW ERIC VENTURED DOWN TO MIDDALHOF AND WHAT HE FOUND
+
+Gizur went north to Swinefell, and Swanhild went with him. For now
+that Ospakar was dead at Eric's hand, Gizur ruled in his place at
+Swinefell, and was the greatest lord in all the north. He loved
+Swanhild, and desired to make her his wife; but she played with him,
+talking darkly of what might be. Swanhild was not minded to be the
+wife of any man, except of Eric; to all others she was cold as the
+winter earth. Still, she fooled Gizur as she had fooled Atli the Good,
+and he grew blind with love of her. For still the beauty of Swanhild
+waxed as the moon waxes in the sky, and her wicked eyes shone as the
+stars shine when the moon has set.
+
+Now they came to Swinefell, and there Gizur buried Ospakar Blacktooth,
+his father, with much state. He set him in a chamber of rock and
+timbers on a mountain-top, whence he might see all the lands that once
+were his, and built up a great mound of earth above him. To this day
+people tell that here on Yule night black Ospakar bursts out, and
+golden Eric rides down the blast to meet him. Then come the clang of
+swords, and groans, and the sound of riven helms, till presently
+Brighteyes passes southward on the wind, bearing in his hand the half
+of a cloven shield.
+
+So Gizur bound the Hell-shoes on his father, and swore that he would
+neither rest nor stay till Eric Brighteyes was dead and dead was
+Skallagrim Lambstail. Then he gathered a great force of men and rode
+south to Coldback, to the slaying of Eric, and with him went Swanhild.
+
+
+
+Gudruda sat alone in the haunted hall of Middalhof and brooded on her
+love and on her fate. Eric, too, sat in Mosfell cave and brooded on
+his evil chance. His heart was sick with sorrow, and there was little
+that he could do except think about the past. He would not go to
+foray, after the fashion of outlaws, and there was no need of this.
+For the talk of his mighty deeds spread through the land, so that the
+people spoke of little else. And the men of his quarter were so proud
+of these deeds of Eric's that, though some of their kind had fallen at
+his hands in the great fight of Middalhof and some at the hands of
+Skallagrim, yet they spoke of him as men speak of a God. Moreover they
+brought him gifts of food and clothing and arms, as many as his people
+could carry away, and laid them in a booth that is on the plain near
+the foot of Mosfell, which thenceforth was named Ericsfell. Further,
+they bade his thralls tell him that, if he wished it, they would find
+him a good ship of war to take him from Iceland--ay, and man it with
+loyal men and true.
+
+Eric thanked them through Jon his thrall, but answered that he wished
+to die here in Iceland.
+
+
+
+Now, when Eric had sat two months and more in Mosfell cave and autumn
+was coming, he learned that Gizur and Swanhild had moved down to
+Coldback, and with them a great company of men who were sworn to slay
+him. He asked if Gudruda the Fair had also gathered men for his
+slaying. They told him no; that Gudruda stayed with her thralls and
+women at Middalhof, mourning for Bjrn her brother. From these tidings
+Eric took some heart of hope: at the least Gudruda laid no blood-feud
+against him. For he waited, thinking, if indeed she yet loved him,
+that Gudruda would send him some word or token of her love. But no
+word came, since between them ran the blood of Bjrn. On the morrow of
+these tidings Skallagrim spoke to Eric.
+
+"This is my counsel, lord," he said, "that we ride out by night and
+fall on the folk of Gizur at Coldback, and burn the stead over them,
+putting them to the sword. I am weary of sitting here like an eagle in
+a cage."
+
+"Such is no counsel of mine, Skallagrim," answered Brighteyes. "I am
+weary of sitting here, indeed; but I am yet more weary of bringing men
+to their death. I will shed no more blood, unless it is to save my own
+head. When the people of Gizur came to seek me on Mosfell, they shall
+find me here; but I will not go to them."
+
+"Thy heart is out of thee, lord," said Skallagrim; "thou wast not wont
+to speak thus."
+
+"Ay, Skallagrim," said Eric, "the heart is out of me. Yet I ride from
+Mosfell to-day."
+
+"Whither, lord?"
+
+"To Middalhof, to have speech with Gudruda the Fair."
+
+"Like enough, then, thou wilt be silent thereafter."
+
+"It well may be," said Eric. "Yet I will ride. I can bear this doubt
+no longer."
+
+"Then I shall come with thee," said Skallagrim.
+
+"As thou wilt," answered Eric.
+
+So at midday Eric and Skallagrim rode away from Mosfell in a storm of
+rain. The rain was so heavy that those of Gizur's spies who watched
+the mountain did not see them. All that day they rode and all the
+night, till by morning they came to Middalhof. Eric told Skallagrim to
+stay with the horses and let them feed, while he went on foot to see
+if by chance he might get speech with Gudruda. This the Baresark did,
+though he grumbled at the task, fearing lest Eric should be done to
+death, and he not there to die with him.
+
+Now Eric walked to within two bowshots of the house, then sat down in
+a dell by the river, from the edge of which he could see those who
+passed in and out. Presently his heart gave a leap, for there came out
+from the woman's door a lady tall and beautiful to see, and with
+golden hair that flowed about her breast. It was Gudruda, and he saw
+that she bore a napkin in her hand. Then Eric knew, according to her
+custom on the warm mornings, that she came alone to bathe in the
+river, as she had always done from a child. It was her habit to bathe
+here in this place: for at the bottom of the dell was a spot where
+reeds and bushes grew thick, and the water lay in a basin of rock and
+was clear and still. For at this spot a hot spring ran into the river.
+
+Eric went down the dell, hid himself close in the bushes and waited,
+for he feared to speak with Gudruda in the open field. A while passed,
+and presently the shadow of the lady crept over the edge of the dell,
+then she came herself in that beauty which since her day has not been
+known in Iceland. Her face was sad and sweet, her dark and lovely eyes
+were sad. On she came, till she stood within a spear's length of where
+Eric lay, crouched in the bush, and looking at her through the hedge
+of reeds. Here a flat rock overhung the water, and Gudruda sat herself
+on this rock, and, shaking off her shoes, dipped her white feet in the
+water. Then suddenly she threw aside her cloak, baring her arms, and,
+gazing upon the shadow of her beauty in the mirror of the water,
+sighed and sighed again, while Eric looked at her with a bursting
+heart, for as yet he could find no words to say.
+
+Now she spoke aloud. "Of what use to be so fair?" she said. "Oh,
+wherefore was I born so fair to bring death to many and sorrow on
+myself and him I love?" And she shook her golden hair about her arms
+of snow, and, holding the napkin to her eyes, wept softly. But it
+seemed to Eric that between her sobs she called upon his name.
+
+Now Eric could no longer bear the sight of Gudruda weeping. While she
+wept, hiding her eyes, he rose from behind the screen of reeds and
+stood beside her in such fashion that his shadow fell upon her. She
+felt the sunlight pass and looked up. Lo! it was no cloud, but the
+shape of Eric, and the sun glittered on his golden helm and hair.
+
+"Eric!" Gudruda cried; "Eric!" Then, remembering how she was attired,
+snatching her cloak, she threw it about her arms and thrust her wet
+feet into her shoes. "Out upon thee!" she said; "is it not enough,
+then, that thou shouldst break thy troth for Swanhild's sake, that
+thou shouldst slay my brother and turn my hall to shambles? Wouldst
+now steal upon me thus!"
+
+"Methought that thou didst weep and call upon my name, Gudruda," he
+said humbly.
+
+"By what right art thou here to hearken to my words?" she answered.
+"Is it, then, strange that I should speak the name of him who slew my
+brother? Is it strange that I should weep over that brother whom thou
+didst slay? Get thee gone, Brighteyes, before I call my folk to kill
+thee!"
+
+"Call on, Gudruda. I set little price upon my life. I laid it in the
+hands of chance when I came from Mosfell to speak with thee, and now I
+will pay it down if so it pleases thee. Fear not, thy thralls shall
+have an easy task: for I shall scarcely care to hold my own. Say,
+shall I call for thee?"
+
+"Hush! Speak not so loud! Folk may hear thee, Eric, and then thou wilt
+be in danger--I would say that, then shall ill things be told of me,
+because I am found with him who slew my brother?"
+
+"I slew Ospakar too, Gudruda. Surely the death of him by whose side
+thou didst sit as wife is more to thee than the death of Bjrn?"
+
+"The bride-cup was not yet drunk, Eric; therefore I have no blood-feud
+for Ospakar."
+
+"Is it, then, thy will that I should go, lady?"
+
+"Yes, go!--go! Never let me see thy face again!"
+
+Brighteyes turned without a word. He took three paces and Gudruda
+watched him as he went.
+
+"Eric!" she called. "Eric! thou mayest not go yet: for at this hour
+the thralls bring down the kine to milk, and they will see thee. Liest
+thou hid here. I--I will go. For though, indeed, thou dost deserve to
+die, I am not willing to bring thee to thy end--because of old
+friendship I am not willing!"
+
+"If thou goest, I will go also," said Eric. "Thralls or no thralls, I
+will go, Gudruda."
+
+"Thou art cruel to drive me to such a choice, and I have a mind to
+give thee to thy fate."
+
+"As thou wilt," said Eric; but she made as though she did not hear his
+words.
+
+"Now," she said, "if we must stay here, it is better that we hide
+where thou didst hide, lest some come upon thee." And she passed
+through the screen of rushes and sat down in a grassy place beyond,
+and spoke again.
+
+"Nay, sit not near me; sit yonder. I would not touch thee, nor look
+upon thee, who wast Swanhild's love, and didst slay Bjrn my brother."
+
+"Say, Gudruda," said Eric, "did I not tell thee of the magic arts of
+Swanhild? Did I not tell thee before all men yonder in the hall, and
+didst thou not say that thou didst believe my words? Speak."
+
+"That is true," said Gudruda.
+
+"Wherefore, then, dost thou taunt me with being Swanhild's love--with
+being the love of her whom of all alive I hate the most--and whose
+wicked guile has brought these sorrows on us?"
+
+But Gudruda did not answer.
+
+"And for this matter of the death of Bjrn at my hands, think,
+Gudruda: was I to blame in it? Did not Bjrn thrust the cloven shield
+before my feet, and thus give me into the hand of Ospakar? Did he not
+afterwards smite at me from behind, and would he not have slain me if
+Skallagrim had not caught the blow? Was I, then, to blame if I smote
+back and if the sword flew home? Wilt thou let the needful deed rise
+up against our love? Speak, Gudruda!"
+
+"Talk no more of love to me, Eric," she answered; "the blood of Bjrn
+has blotted out our love: it cries to me for vengeance. How may I
+speak of love with him who slew my brother? Listen!" she went on,
+looking on him sidelong, as one who wished to look and yet not seem to
+see: "here thou must hide an hour, and, since thou wilt not sit in
+silence, speak no tender words to me, for it is not fitting; but tell
+me of those deeds thou didst in the south lands over sea, before thou
+wentest to woo Swanhild and camest hither to kill my brother. For till
+then thou wast mine--till then I loved thee--who now love thee not.
+Therefore I would hear of the deeds of that Eric whom once I loved,
+before he became as one dead to me."
+
+"Heavy words, lady," said Eric--"words to make death easy."
+
+"Speak not so," she said; "it is unmanly thus to work upon my fears.
+Tell me those tidings of which I ask."
+
+So Eric told her all his deeds, though he showed small boastfulness
+about them. He told her how he had smitten the war-dragons of Ospakar,
+how he had boarded the Raven and with Skallagrim slain those who
+sailed in her. He told her also of his deeds in Ireland, and of how he
+took the viking ships and came to London town.
+
+And as he told, Gudruda listened as one who hung upon her lover's
+dying words, and there was but one light in the world for her, the
+light of Eric's eyes, and there was but one music, the music of his
+voice. Now she looked upon him sidelong no longer, but with open eyes
+and parted lips she drank in his words, and always, though she knew it
+not herself, she crept closer to his side.
+
+Then he told her how he had been greatly honoured of the King of
+England, and of the battles he had fought in at his side. Lastly, Eric
+told her how the King would have given him a certain great lady of
+royal blood in marriage, and how Edmund had been angered because he
+would not stay in England.
+
+"Tell me of this lady," said Gudruda, quickly. "Is she fair, and how
+is she named?"
+
+"She is fair, and her name is Elfrida," said Eric.
+
+"And didst thou have speech with her on this matter?"
+
+"Somewhat."
+
+Now Gudruda drew herself away from Eric's side.
+
+"What was the purport of thy speech?" she said, looking down. "Speak
+truly, Eric."
+
+"It came to little," he answered. "I told her that there was one in
+Iceland to whom I was betrothed, and to Iceland I must go."
+
+"And what said this Elfrida, then?"
+
+"She said that I should get little luck at the hands of Gudruda the
+Fair. Moreover, she asked, should my betrothed be faithless to me, or
+put me from her, if I should come again to England."
+
+Now Gudruda looked him in the face and spoke. "Say, Eric, is it in thy
+mind to sail for England in the spring, if thou canst escape thy foes
+so long?"
+
+Now Eric took counsel with himself, and in his love and doubt grew
+guileful as he had never been before. For he knew well that Gudruda
+had this weakness--she was a jealous woman.
+
+"Since thou dost put me from thee, that is in my mind, lady," he
+answered.
+
+Gudruda heard. She thought on the great and beauteous Lady Elfrida,
+far away in England, and of Eric walking at her side, and sorrow took
+hold of her. She said no word, but fixed her dark eyes on Brighteyes'
+face, and lo! they filled with tears.
+
+Eric might not bear this sight, for his heart beat within him as
+though it would burst the byrnie over it. Suddenly he stretched out
+his arms and swept her to his breast. Soft and sweet he kissed her,
+again and yet again, and she struggled not, though she wept a little.
+
+"It is small blame to me," she whispered, "if thou dost hold me on thy
+breast and kiss me, for thou art more strong than I. Bjrn must know
+this if his dead eyes see aught. Yet for thee, Eric, it is the
+greatest shame of all thy shames."
+
+"Talk not, my sweet; talk not," said Eric, "but kiss thou me: for thou
+knowest well that thou lovest me yet as I love thee."
+
+Now the end of it was that Gudruda yielded and kissed him whom she had
+not kissed for many years.
+
+"Loose me, Eric," she said; "I would speak with thee," and he loosed
+her, though unwillingly.
+
+"Hearken," she went on, hiding her fair face in her hands: "it is true
+that for life and death I love thee now as ever--how much thou mayest
+never know. Though Bjrn be dead at thy hands, yet I love thee; but
+how I may wed thee and not win the greatest shame, that I know not. I
+am sure of one thing, that we may not bide here in Iceland. Now if,
+indeed, thou lovest me, listen to my rede. Get thee back to Mosfell,
+Eric, and sit there in safety through this winter, for they may not
+come at thee yonder on Mosfell. Then, if thou art willing, in the
+spring I will make ready a ship, for I have no ship now, and,
+moreover, it is too late to sail. Then, perchance, leaving all my
+lands and goods, I will take thy hand, Eric, and we will fare together
+to England, seeking such fortune as the Norns may give us. What sayest
+thou?"
+
+"I say it is a good rede, and would that the spring were come."
+
+"Ay, Eric, would that the spring were come. Our lot has been hard, and
+I doubt much if things will go well with us at the last. And now thou
+must hence, for presently the serving-women will come to seek me.
+Guard thyself, Eric, as thou lovest me--guard thyself, and beware of
+Swanhild!" Then once more they kissed soft and long, and Eric went.
+
+But Gudruda sat a while behind the screen of reeds, and was very happy
+for a space. For it was as though the winter were past and summer
+shone upon her heart again.
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+HOW GUDRUDA WENT UP TO MOSFELL
+
+Eric walked warily till he came to the dell where he had left
+Skallagrim and the horses. It was the same dell in which Groa had
+brewed the poison-draught for Asmund the Priest and Unna, Thorod's
+daughter.
+
+"What news, lord?" said Skallagrim. "Thou wast gone so long that I
+thought of seeking thee. Hast thou seen Gudruda?"
+
+"Ay," said Eric, "and this is the upshot of it, that in the spring we
+sail for England and bid farewell to Iceland and our ill luck."
+
+"Would, then, that it were spring," said Skallagrim, speaking
+Brighteyes' own words. "Why not sail now and make an end?"
+
+"Gudruda has no ship and it is late to take the sea. Also I think that
+she would let a time go by because of the blood-feud which she has
+against me for the death of Bjrn."
+
+"I would rather risk these things than stay the winter through in
+Iceland," said Skallagrim, "it is long from now to spring, and yon
+wolf's den is cold-lying in the dark months, as I know well."
+
+"There is light beyond the darkness," said Eric, and they rode away.
+Everything went well with them till late at night they came to the
+slopes of Mosfell. They were half asleep on their horses, being weary
+with much riding, and the horses were weary also. Suddenly,
+Skallagrim, looking up, caught the faint gleam of light from swords
+hidden behind some stones.
+
+"Awake, lord!" he cried, "here are foes ahead."
+
+Gizur's folk behind the stones heard his voice and came out from their
+ambush. There were six of them, and they formed in line before the
+pair. They were watching the mountain, for a rumour had reached them
+that Eric was abroad, and, seeing him, they had hidden hastily behind
+the stones.
+
+"Now what counsel shall we take?" said Eric, drawing Whitefire.
+
+"We have often stood against men more than six, and sometimes we have
+left more men than six to mark where we stood," answered Skallagrim.
+"It is my counsel that we ride at them!"
+
+"So be it," said Eric, and he spurred his weary horse with his heels.
+Now when the six saw Eric and Skallagrim charge on them boldly, they
+wavered, and the end of it was that they broke and fled to either side
+before a blow was struck. For it had come to this pass, so great was
+the terror of the names of Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim Lambstail,
+that no six men dared to stand before them in open fight.
+
+So the path being clear they rode on up the slope. But when they had
+gone a little way, Skallagrim turned his horse, and mocked those who
+had lain in ambush, saying:
+
+"Ye fight well, ye carles of Gizur, Ospakar's son! Ye are heroes,
+surely! Say now, mighty men, will ye stand there if I come down alone
+against you?"
+
+At these words the men grew mad with wrath, and flung their spears.
+Skallagrim caught one on his shield and it fell to the earth, but
+another passed over his head and struck Eric on the left shoulder,
+near the neck, making a deep wound. Feeling the spear fast in him,
+Eric grasped it with his right hand, drew it forth, and turning,
+hurled it so hard, that the man before it got his death from the blow,
+for his shield did not serve to stay it. Then the rest fled.
+
+Skallagrim bound up Eric's wound as well as he could, and they went on
+to the cave. But when Eric's folk, watching above, saw the fight they
+ran down and met him. Now the hurt was bad and Eric bled much; still,
+within ten days it healed up for the time.
+
+But a little while after Eric's wound was skinned over, the snows set
+in on Mosfell, and the days grew short and the nights long. Once
+Gizur's men to the number of fifty came half way up the mountain to
+take it; but, when they saw how strong the place was, they feared, and
+went back, and after that returned no more, though they always watched
+the fell.
+
+It was very dark and lonesome there upon the fell. For a while Eric
+kept in good heart, but as the days went by he grew troubled. For
+since he was wounded this had come upon him, that he feared the dark,
+and the death of Atli at his hand and Atli's words weighed more and
+more upon his mind. They had no candles on the fell, yet, rather than
+stay in the blackness of the cave, Eric would wrap sheepskins about
+him and sit by the edge of that gulf down which the head of the
+Baresark had foretold his fall, and look out at the wide plains and
+fells and ice-mountains, gleaming in the silver shine of the Northern
+lights or in the white beams of the stars.
+
+It chanced that Eric had bidden the men who stayed with him to build a
+stone hut upon the flat space of rock before the cave, and to roof it
+with turves. He had done this that work might keep them in heart, also
+that they might have a place to store such goods as they had gathered.
+Now there was one stone lying near that no two men of their number
+could move, except Skallagrim and one other. One day, while it was
+light, Eric watched these two rolling the stone along to where it must
+stand, and it was slow work. Presently they stayed to rest. Then Eric
+came and putting his hands beneath the stone, lifted, and while men
+wondered, he rolled the mass alone, to where it should be set as the
+corner stone of the hut.
+
+"Ye are all children," he said, and laughed merrily.
+
+"Ay, when we set our strength against thine, lord," answered
+Skallagrim; "but look: the blood runs from thy neck--the spear-wound
+has broken out afresh."
+
+"So it is, surely," said Eric. Then he washed the wound and bound it
+up, thinking little of the matter.
+
+But that night, according to his custom, Eric sat on the edge of the
+gulf and looked at the winter lights as they played over Hecla's
+snows. He was sad and heavy at heart, for he thought of Gudruda and
+wondered much if they should live to wed. Remembering Atli's words, he
+had little faith in his good luck. Now as Eric sat and thought, the
+bandage on his neck slipped, so that the hurt bled, and the frost got
+hold of the wound and froze it, and froze his long hair to it also, in
+such fashion that when he went to the cave where all men slept, he
+could not loose his hair from the sore, but lay down with it frozen to
+him. On the morrow the hair was caked so fast about his neck that it
+could only be freed by shearing it. But this Eric would not suffer.
+None, he said, should shear his hair, except Gudruda. Thus he had
+sworn, and when he broke the oath misfortune had come of it. He would
+break that vow no more, if it cost him his life. For sorrow and his
+ill luck had taken so great a hold of Eric's mind that in some ways he
+was scarcely himself.
+
+So it came to pass that he fell more and more sick, till at length he
+could not rise from his bed in the cave, but lay there all day and
+night, staring at the little light which pierced the gloom. Still, he
+would not suffer that anyone should touch his hair. And when one stole
+upon him sleeping, thinking so to cut it before he woke, and come at
+the wound, suddenly he sat up and dealt the man such a buffet on the
+head that he went near to death from it.
+
+Then Skallagrim spoke.
+
+"On this matter," he said, "it seems that Brighteyes is mad. He will
+not suffer that any touch his hair, except Gudruda, and yet, if his
+hair is not shorn, he must die, for the wound will fester under it.
+Nor may we cut it by strength, for then he will kill himself in
+struggling. It is come to this then: either Gudruda must be brought
+hither or Eric will shortly die."
+
+"That may not be," they answered. "How can the lady Gudruda come here
+across the snows, even if she will come?"
+
+"Come she can, if she has the heart," said Skallagrim, "though I put
+little trust in women's hearts. Still, I ride down to Middalhof, and
+thou, Jon, shalt go with me. For the rest, I charge you watch your
+lord; for, if I come back and find anything amiss, that shall be the
+death of some, and if I do not come back but perish on the road, yet I
+will haunt you."
+
+Now Jon liked not this task; still, for love of Eric and fear of
+Skallagrim, he set out with the Baresark. They had a hard journey
+through the snow-drifts and the dark, but on the third day they came
+to Middalhof, knocked upon the door and entered.
+
+Now it was supper-time, and people, sitting at meat, saw a great black
+man, covered with snow and rime, stalk up the hall, and after him
+another smaller man, who groaned with the cold, and they wondered at
+the sight. Gudruda sat on the high seat and the firelight beat upon
+her face.
+
+"Who comes here?" she said.
+
+"One who would speak with thee, lady," answered Skallagrim.
+
+"Here is Skallagrim the Baresark," said a man. "He is an outlaw, let
+us kill him!"
+
+"Ay, it is Skallagrim," he answered, "and if there is killing to be
+done, why here's that which shall do it," and he drew out his axe and
+smiled grimly.
+
+Then all held their peace, for they feared the axe of Skallagrim.
+
+"Lady," he said, "I do not come for slaying or such child's play, I
+come to speak a word in thine ear--but first I ask a cup of mead and a
+morsel of food, for we have spent three days in the snows."
+
+So they ate and drank. Then Gudruda bade the Baresark draw near and
+tell her his tale.
+
+"Lady," said he, "Eric, my lord, lies dying on Mosfell."
+
+Gudruda turned white as the snow.
+
+"Dying?--Eric lies dying?" she said. "Why, then, art thou here?"
+
+"For this cause, lady: I think that thou canst save him, if he is not
+already sped." And he told her all the tale.
+
+Now Gudruda thought a while.
+
+"This is a hard journey," she said, 'and it does not become a maid to
+visit outlaws in their caves. Yet I am come to this, that I will die
+before I shrink from anything that may save the life of Eric. When
+must we ride, Skallagrim?"
+
+"This night," said the Baresark. "This night while the men sleep, for
+now night and day are almost the same. The snow is deep and we have no
+time to lose if we would find Brighteyes living."
+
+"Then we will ride to-night," answered Gudruda.
+
+Afterwards, when people slept, Gudruda the Fair summoned her women,
+and bade them say to all who asked for her that she lay sick in bed.
+But she called three trusty thralls, bidding them bring two pack-
+horses laden with hay, food, drugs, candles made of sheep's fat, and
+other goods, and ride with her. Then, all being ready, they rode away
+secretly up Stonefell, Gudruda on her horse Blackmane, and the others
+on good geldings that had been hay-fed in the yard, and by daylight
+they passed up Horse-Head Heights. They slept two nights in the snow,
+and on the second night almost perished there, for much soft snow
+fell. But afterwards came frost and a bitter northerly wind and they
+passed on. Gudruda was a strong woman and great of heart and will, and
+so it came about that on the third day she reached Mosfell, weary but
+little harmed, though the fingers of her left hand were frostbitten.
+They climbed the mountain, and when they came to the dell where the
+horses were kept, certain of Eric's men met them and their faces were
+sad.
+
+"How goes it now with Brighteyes?" said Skallagrim, for Gudruda could
+scarcely speak because of doubt and cold. "Is he dead, then?"
+
+"Nay," they answered, "but like to die, for he is beside himself and
+raves wildly."
+
+"Push on," quoth Gudruda; "push on, lest it be too late."
+
+So they climbed the mountain on foot, won the pass and came to that
+giddy point of rock where he must tread who would reach the platform
+that is before the cave. Now since she had hung by her hands over
+Goldfoss gulf, Gudruda had feared to tread upon a height with nothing
+to hold to. Skallagrim went first, then called to her to follow.
+Thrice she looked, and turned away, trembling, for the place was awful
+and the fall bottomless. Then she spoke aloud to herself:
+
+"Eric did not fear to risk his life to save me when I hung over Golden
+Falls; less, then, should I fear to risk mine to save him," and she
+stepped boldly down upon the point. But when she stood there, over the
+giddy height, shivers ran along her body, and her mind grew dark. She
+clutched at the rock, gave one low cry and began to fall. Indeed she
+would have fallen and been lost, had not Skallagrim, lying on his
+breast in the narrow hole, stretched out his arms, caught her by the
+cloak and kirtle and dragged her to him. Presently her senses came
+back.
+
+"I am safe!" she gasped, "but by a very little. Methinks that here in
+this place I must live and die, for I can never tread yonder rock
+again."
+
+"Thou shalt pass it safe enough, lady, with a rope round thee," said
+Skallagrim, and led the way to the cave.
+
+Gudruda entered, forgetting all things in her love of Eric. A great
+fire of turf burned in the mouth of the cave to temper the bitter wind
+and frost, and by its light Gudruda saw her love through the smoke-
+reek. He lay upon a bed of skins at the far end of the cave and his
+bright grey eyes were wild, his wan face was white, and now of a
+sudden it grew red with fever, and then was white again. He had thrown
+the sheepskins from his mighty chest, the bones of which stood out
+grimly. His long arms were thrust through the locks of his golden
+hair, and on one side of his neck the hair clung to him and it was but
+a black mass.
+
+He raved loudly in his madness. "Touch me not, carles, touch me not;
+ye think me spent and weak, but, by Thor! if ye touch my hair, I will
+loosen the knees of some. Gudruda alone shall shear my hair: I have
+sworn and I will keep the oath that I once broke. Give me snow! snow!
+my throat burns! Heap snow on my head, I bid you. Ye will not? Ye mock
+me, thinking me weak! Where, then, is Whitefire?--I have yet a deed to
+do! Who comes yonder? Is it a woman's shape or is it but a smoke-
+wraith? 'Tis Swanhild the Fatherless who walks the waters. Begone,
+Swanhild, thou witch! thou hast worked evil enough upon me. Nay, it is
+not Swanhild, it is Elfrida; lady, here in England I may not stay. In
+Iceland I am at home. Yea, yea, things go crossly; perchance in this
+garden we may speak again!"
+
+Now Gudruda could bear his words no longer, bur ran to him and knelt
+beside him.
+
+"Peace, Eric!" she whispered. "Peace! It is I, thy love. It is
+Gudruda, who am come to thee."
+
+He turned his head and looked upon her strangely.
+
+"No, no," he said, "it is not Gudruda the Fair. She will have little
+to do with outlaws, and this is too rough a place for her to come to.
+It is dark also and Atli speaks in the darkness. If thou art Gudruda,
+give me a sign. Why comest thou here and where is Skallagrim? Ah! that
+was a good fight--
+
+ "Down among the ballast tumbling
+ Ospakar's shield-carles were rolled.
+
+"But he should never have slain the steersman. The axe goes first and
+Skallagrim follows after. Ha, ha! Ay, Swanhild, we'll mingle tears.
+Give me the cup. Why, what is this? Thou art afire, a glory glows
+about thee, and from thee floats a scent like the scent of the Iceland
+meads in May."
+
+"Eric! Eric!" cried Gudruda, "I am come to shear thy hair, as thou
+didst swear that I alone should do."
+
+"Now I know that thou art Gudruda," said the crazed man. "Cut, cut;
+but let not those knaves touch my head, lest I should slay them."
+
+Then Gudruda drew out her shears, and without more ado shore off
+Brighteyes' golden locks. It was no easy task, for they were thick as
+a horse's mane, and glued to the wound. Yet when she had cut them, she
+loosened the hair from the flesh with water which she heated upon the
+fire. The wound was in a bad state and blue, still Eric never winced
+while she dragged the hair from it. Then she washed the sore clean,
+and put sweet ointment on it and covered it with napkins.
+
+This done, she gave Eric broth and he drank. Then, laying her hand
+upon his head, she looked into his eyes and bade him sleep. And
+presently he slept--which he had scarcely done for many days--slept
+like a little child.
+
+Eric slept for a day and a night. But at that same hour of the
+evening, when he had fallen asleep, Gudruda, watching him by the light
+of a taper that was set upon a rock, saw him smile in his dreams.
+Presently he opened his eyes and stared at the fire which glowed in
+the mouth of the cave, and the great shadows that fell upon the rocks.
+
+"Strange!" she heard him murmur, "it is very strange! but I dreamed I
+slept, and that Gudruda the Fair leaned over me as I slept. Where,
+then, is Skallagrim? Perhaps I am dead and that is Hela's fire," and
+he tried to lift himself upon his arm, but fell back from faintness,
+for he was very weak. Then Gudruda took his hand, and, leaning over
+him, spoke:
+
+"Hush, Eric!" she said; "that was no dream, for I am here. Thou hast
+been sick to death, Eric; but now, if thou wilt rest, things shall go
+well with thee."
+
+"/Thou/ art here?" said Eric, turning his white face towards her. "Do
+I still dream, or how comest thou here to Mosfell, Gudruda?"
+
+"I came through the snows, Eric, to cut thy hair, which clung to the
+festering wound, for in thy madness thou wouldst not suffer anyone to
+touch it."
+
+"Thou camest through the snows--over the snows--to nurse me, Gudruda?
+Thou must love me much then," and he was so weak that, as he spoke,
+the tears rolled down Eric's cheeks.
+
+Then Gudruda kissed him, weeping also, and, laying her face by his,
+bade him be at peace, for she was there to watch him.
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+HOW SWANHILD WON TIDINGS OF ERIC
+
+Now Eric's strength came back to him and his heart opened in the light
+of Gudruda's eyes like a flower in the sunshine. For all day long she
+sat at his side, holding his hand and talking to him, and they found
+much to say.
+
+But on the fifth day from the day of his awakening she spoke thus:
+
+"Eric, now I must go back to Middalhof. Thou art safe and it is not
+well that I should stay here."
+
+"Not yet, Gudruda," he said; "leave me not yet."
+
+"Yes, love, I must leave thee. The moon is bright, the sky has
+cleared, and the snow is hard with frost and fit for the hoofs of
+horses. I must go before more storms come. Listen now: in the second
+week of spring, if all is well, I will send thee a messenger with
+words of token, then shalt thou come down secretly to Middalhof, and
+there, Eric, we will be wed. Then, on the next day, we will sail for
+England in a trading-ship that I shall get ready, to seek our fortune
+there."
+
+"It will be a good fortune if thou art by my side," said Eric, "so
+good that I doubt greatly if I may find it, for I am Eric the Unlucky.
+Swanhild must yet be reckoned with, Gudruda. Yes, thou art right: thou
+must go hence, Gudruda, and swiftly, though it grieves me much to part
+with thee."
+
+Then Eric called Skallagrim and bade him make things ready to ride
+down to Middalhof with the Lady Gudruda.
+
+This Skallagrim did swiftly, and afterwards Eric and Gudruda kissed
+and parted, and they were sad at heart to part.
+
+Now on the fifth day after the going of Gudruda, Skallagrim came back
+to Mosfell somewhat cold and weary. And he told Eric, who could now
+walk and grew strong again, that he and Jon had ridden with Gudruda
+the Fair to Horse-Head Heights, seeing no man, and had left her there
+to go on with her thralls. He had come back also seeing no one, for
+the weather was too cold for the men of Gizur to watch the fell in the
+snows.
+
+
+
+Now Gudruda came safely to Middalhof, having been eleven days gone,
+and found that few had visited the house, and that these had been told
+that she lay sick abed. Her secret had been well kept, and, though
+Swanhild had no lack of spies, many days went by before she learned
+that Gudruda had gone up to Mosfell to nurse Eric.
+
+After this Gudruda began to make ready for her flight from Iceland.
+She called in the moneys that she had out at interest, and with them
+bought from a certain chapman a good trading-ship which lay in its
+shed under the shelter of Westman Isles. This ship she began to make
+ready for sea so soon as the heart of the winter was broken, putting
+it about that she intended to send her on a trading voyage to Scotland
+in the spring. And also to give colour to this tale she bought many
+pelts and other goods, such as chapmen deal in.
+
+Thus the days passed on--not so badly for Gudruda, who strove to fill
+their emptiness in making ready for the full and happy time; but for
+Eric in his cave they were very heavy, for he could find nothing to do
+except to sleep and eat, and think of Gudruda, whom he might not see.
+
+For Swanhild also, sitting at Coldback, the days did not go well. She
+was weary of the courting of Gizur, whom she played with as a cat
+plays with a rat, and her heart was sick with love, hate, and
+jealousy. For she well knew that Gudruda and Eric still clung to each
+other and found means of greeting, if not of speech. At that time she
+wished to kill Eric if she could, though she would rather kill Gudruda
+if she dared. Still, she could not come at Eric, for her men feared to
+try the narrow way of Mosfell, and when they met him in the open they
+fled before him.
+
+Presently it came to her ears that Gudruda made a ship ready to sail
+to Scotland on a trading voyage, and she was perplexed by this tale,
+for she knew that Gudruda had no love of trading and never thought of
+gain. So she set spies to watch the ship. Still, the slow days drew
+on, and at length the air grew soft with spring, and flowers showed
+through the snow.
+
+Eric sat in his mountain nest waiting for tidings, and watched the
+nesting eagles wheel about the cliffs. At length news came. For one
+morning, as he rose, Skallagrim told him that a man wanted to speak
+with him. He had come to the mountain in the darkness, and had lain in
+a dell till the breaking of the light, for, now that the snows were
+melting, the men of Gizur and Swanhild watched the ways.
+
+Eric bade them bring the man to him. When he saw him he knew that he
+was a thrall of Gudruda's and welcomed him heartily.
+
+"What tidings?" he asked.
+
+"This, lord," said the thrall: "Gudruda the Fair bids me say that she
+is well and that the snows melt on the roof of Middalhof."
+
+Now this was the signal word that had been agreed upon between Eric
+and Gudruda, that she should send him when all was ready.
+
+"Good," said Eric, "ride back to Gudruda the Fair and say that Eric
+Brighteyes is well, but on Hecla the snows melt not."
+
+By this answer he meant that he would be with her presently, though
+the thrall could make nothing of it. Then Skallagrim asked tidings of
+the man, and learned that Swanhild was still at Middalhof, and with
+her Gizur, and that they gave out that they wished to make an end of
+waiting and slay Eric.
+
+"First snare your bird, then wring his neck," laughed Skallagrim.
+
+Then Eric did this: among his men were some who he knew were not
+willing to sail from Iceland, and Jon, his thrall, was of them, for
+Jon did not love the angry sea. He bade these bide a while on Mosfell
+and make fires nightly on the platform of rock which is in front of
+the cave, that the spies of Gizur and Swanhild might be deceived by
+them, and think that Eric was still on the fell. Then, when they heard
+that he had sailed, they were to come down and hide themselves with
+friends till Gizur and his following rode north. But he told two of
+the men who would sail with him to make ready.
+
+That night before the moon rose Eric said farewell to Jon and the
+others who stayed on Mosfell, and rode away with Skallagrim and the
+two who went with him. They passed the plain of black sand in safety,
+and so on to Horse-Head Heights. Now at length, as the afternoon drew
+on to evening, from Stonefell's crest they saw the Hall of Middalhof
+before them, and Eric's heart swelled in his breast. Yet they must
+wait till darkness fell before they dared enter the place, lest they
+should be seen and notice of their coming should be carried to Gizur
+and Swanhild. And this came into the mind of Eric, that of all the
+hours of his life that hour of waiting was the longest. Scarcely,
+indeed, could Skallagrim hold him back from going down the mountain
+side, he was so set on coming to Gudruda whom he should wed that
+night.
+
+At length the darkness fell, and they went on. Eric rode swiftly down
+the rough mountain path, while Skallagrim and the two men followed
+grumbling, for they feared that their horses would fall. At length
+they came to the place, and riding into the yard, Eric sprang from his
+horse and strode to the women's door. Now Gudruda stood in the porch,
+listening; and while he was yet some way off, she heard the clang of
+Brighteyen's harness, and the colour came and went upon her cheek.
+Then she turned and fled to the high seat of the hall, and sat down
+there. Only two women were left in Middalhof with her, and some
+thralls who tended the kine and horses. But these slept, not in the
+hall, but in an outhouse. Gudruda had sent the rest of her people down
+to the ship to help in the lading, for it was given out that the
+vessel sailed on the morrow. She had done this that there might be no
+talk of the coming of Eric to Middalhof.
+
+Now Brighteyes came to the porch, and, finding the door wide, walked
+in. But Skallagrim and the men stayed without a while, and tended the
+horses. A fire burned upon the centre hearth in the hall, and threw
+shadows on the panelling. Eric walked on by its light, looking to left
+and right, but seeing neither man nor woman. Then a great fear took
+him lest Gudruda should be gone, or perhaps slain of Swanhild, Groa's
+daughter, and he trembled at the thought. He stood by the fire, and
+Gudruda, watching from the shadow of the high seat, saw the dull light
+glow upon his golden helm, and a sigh of joy broke from her lips. Eric
+heard the sigh and looked, and as he looked a stick of pitchy
+driftwood fell into the fire and flared up fiercely. Then he saw.
+There, in the carved high seat, robed all in bridal white, sat Gudruda
+the Fair, his love. Her golden hair flowed about her breast, her white
+arms were stretched towards him, and on her sweet face shone such a
+look of love as he had never seen.
+
+"/Eric!/" she whispered softly, and the breath of her voice ran down
+the empty panelled hall, that from all sides seemed to answer,
+"/Eric./"
+
+Slowly he drew near to her. He saw nothing but the glory of Gudruda's
+face and the light shining on Gudruda's hair; he heard nothing save
+the sighing of her breath; he knew nothing except that before him sat
+his fair bride, won after many years.
+
+Now he had climbed the high seat, and now, wrapped in each other's
+arms, they sat and gazed into each other's eyes, and lo! the air of
+the great hall rolled round them a sea of glory, and sweet voices
+whispered in their ears. Now Freya smiled upon them and led them
+through her gates of love, and they were glad that they had been born.
+
+Thus then they were wed.
+
+
+
+Now the story tells that Swanhild spoke with Gizur, Ospakar's son, in
+the house at Coldback.
+
+"I tire of this slow play," she said. "We have tarried here for many
+weeks, and Atli's blood yet cries out for vengeance, and cries for
+vengeance the blood of black Ospakar, thy father, and the blood of
+many another, dead at great Eric's hand."
+
+"I tire also," said Gizur, "and I am much needed in the north. I say
+this to thee, Swanhild, that, hadst thou not so strictly laid it on me
+that Eric must die ere thou weddest me, I had flitted back to
+Swinefell before now, and there bided my time to bring Brighteyes to
+his end."
+
+"I will never wed thee, Gizur, till Eric is dead," said Swanhild
+fiercely.
+
+"How shall we come at him then?" he answered. "We may not go up that
+mountain path, for two men can hold it against all our strength, and
+folk do not love to meet Eric and Skallagrim in a narrow way."
+
+"The place has been badly watched," said Swanhild. "I am sure of this,
+that Eric has been down to Middalhof and seen Gudruda, my half-sister.
+She is shameless, who still holds commune with him who slew her
+brother and my husband. Death should be her reward, and I am minded to
+slay her because of the shame that she has brought upon our blood."
+
+"That is a deed which thou wilt do alone, then," said Gizur, "for I
+will have no hand in the murder of that fair maid--no, nor will any
+who live in Iceland!"
+
+Swanhild glanced at him strangely. "Hearken, Gizur!" she said:
+"Gudruda makes a ship ready to sail with goods to Scotland and bring a
+cargo thence before winter comes again. Now I find this strange, for
+never before did I know Gudruda turn her thoughts to trading. I think
+that she has it in her mind to sail from Iceland with this outlaw
+Eric, and seek a home over seas, and that I will not bear."
+
+"It may be," said Gizur, "and I should not be sorry to see the last of
+Brighteyes, for I think that more men will die at his hand before he
+stiffens in his barrow."
+
+"Thou art cowardly-hearted, thou son of Ospakar!" Swanhild said. "Thou
+sayest thou lovest me and wouldest win me to wife: I tell thee that
+there is but one road to my arms, and it leads over the corpse of
+Eric. Now this is my counsel: that we send the most of our men to
+watch that ship of Gudruda's, and, when she lifts anchor, to board her
+and search, for she is already bound for sea. Also among the people
+here I have a carle who was born near Hecla, and he swears this to me,
+that, when he was a lad, searching for an eagle's eyrie, he found a
+path by which Mosfell might be climbed from the north, and that in the
+end he came to a large flat place, and, looking over, saw that
+platform where Eric dwells with his thralls. But he could not see the
+cave, because of the overhanging brow of the rock. Now we will do
+this: thou and I, and the carle alone--no more, for I do not wish that
+our search should be noised abroad--to-morrow at the dawn we will ride
+away for Mosfell, and, passing under Hecla, come round the mountain
+and see if this path may still be scaled. For, if so, we will return
+with men and make an end of Brighteyes."
+
+This plan pleased Gizur, and he said that it should be so.
+
+So very early on the following morning Swanhild, having sent many men
+to watch Gudruda's ship, rode away secretly with Gizur and the thrall,
+and before it was again dawn they were on the northern slopes of
+Mosfell. It was on this same night that Eric went down from the
+mountain to wed Gudruda.
+
+For a while the climbing was easy, but at length they came to a great
+wall of rock, a hundred fathoms high, on which no fox might find a
+foothold, nor anything that had not wings.
+
+"Here now is an end of our journey," said Gizur, "and I only pray
+this, that Eric may not ride round the mountain before we are down
+again." For he did not know that Brighteyes already rode hard for
+Middalhof.
+
+"Not so," said the thrall, "if only I can find the place by which,
+some thirty summers ago, I won yonder rift, and through it the crest
+of the fell," and he pointed to a narrow cleft in the face of the rock
+high above their heads, that was clothed with grey moss.
+
+Then he moved to the right and searched, peering behind stones and
+birch-bushes, till presently he held up his hand and whistled. They
+passed along the slope and found him standing by a little stream of
+water which welled from beneath a great rock.
+
+"Here is the place," the man said.
+
+"I see no place," answered Swanhild.
+
+"Still, it is there, lady," and he climbed on to the rock, drawing her
+after him. At the back of it was a hole, almost overgrown with moss.
+"Here is the path," he said again.
+
+"Then it is one that I have no mind to follow," answered Swanhild.
+"Gizur, go thou with the man and see if his tale is true. I will stay
+here till ye come back."
+
+Then the thrall let himself down into the hole and Gizur went after
+him. But Swanhild sat there in the shadow of the rock, her chin
+resting on her hand, and waited. Presently, as she sat, she saw two
+men ride round the base of the fell, and strike off to the right
+towards a turf-booth which stood the half of an hour's ride away. Now
+Swanhild was the keenest-sighted of all women of her day in Iceland,
+and when she looked at these two men she knew one of them for Jon,
+Eric's thrall, and she knew the horse also--it was a white horse with
+black patches, that Jon had ridden for many years. She watched them go
+till they came to the booth, and it seemed to her that they left their
+horses and entered.
+
+Swanhild waited upon the side of the fell for nearly two hours in all.
+Then, hearing a noise above her, she looked up, and there, black with
+dirt and wet with water, was Gizur, and with him was the thrall.
+
+"What luck, Gizur?" she asked.
+
+"This, Swanhild: Eric may hold Mosfell no more, for we have found a
+way to bolt the fox."
+
+"That is good news, then," said Swanhild. "Say on."
+
+"Yonder hole, Swanhild, leads to the cleft above, having been cut
+through the cliff by fire, or perhaps by water. Now up that cleft a
+man may climb, though hardly, as by a difficult stair, till he comes
+to the flat crest of the fell. Then, crossing the crest, on the
+further side, perhaps six fathoms below him, he sees that space of
+rock where is Eric's cave; but he cannot see the cave itself, because
+the brow of the cliff hangs over. And so it is that, if any come from
+the cave on to the space of rock, it will be an easy matter to roll
+stones upon them from above and crush them."
+
+Now when Swanhild heard this she laughed aloud.
+
+"Eric shall mock us no more," she said, "and his might can avail
+nothing against rocks rolled on him from above. Let us go back to
+Coldback and summon men to make an end of Brighteyes."
+
+So they went on down the mountain till they came to the place where
+they had hidden their horses. Then Swanhild remembered Jon and the
+other man whom she had seen riding to the booth, and she told Gizur of
+them.
+
+"Now," she said, "we will snare these birds, and perchance they will
+twitter tidings when we squeeze them."
+
+So they turned and rode for the booth, and drawing near, they saw two
+horses grazing without. Now they got off their horses, and creeping up
+to the booth, looked in through the door which was ajar. And they saw
+this, that one man sat on the ground with his back to the door, eating
+stock-fish, while Jon made bundles of fish and meal ready to tie on
+the horses. For it was here that those of his quarter who loved Eric
+brought food to be carried by his men to the cave on Mosfell.
+
+Now Swanhild touched Gizur on the arm, pointing first to the man who
+sat eating the fish and then to the spear in Gizur's hand. Gizur
+thought a while, for he shrank from this deed.
+
+Then Swanhild whispered in his ear, "Slay the man and seize the other;
+I would learn tidings from him."
+
+So Gizur cast the spear, and it passed through the man's heart, and he
+was dead at once. Then he and the thrall leapt into the booth and
+threw themselves on Jon, hurling him to the ground, and holding swords
+over him. Now Jon was a man of small heart, and when he saw his plight
+and his fellow dead he was afraid, and prayed for mercy.
+
+"If I spare thee, knave," said Swanhild, "thou shalt do this: thou
+shalt lead me up Mosfell to speak with Eric."
+
+"I may not do that, lady," groaned Jon; "for Eric is not on Mosfell."
+
+"Where is he, then?" asked Swanhild.
+
+Now Jon saw that he had said an unlucky thing, and answered:
+
+"Nay, I know not. Last night he rode from Mosfell with Skallagrim
+Lambstail."
+
+"Thou liest, knave," said Swanhild. "Speak, or thou shalt be slain."
+
+"Slay on," groaned Jon, glancing at the swords above him, and shutting
+his eyes. For, though he feared much to die, he had no will to make
+known Eric's plans.
+
+"Look not at the swords; thou shalt not die so easily. Hearken: speak,
+and speak truly, or thou shalt seek Hela's lap after this fashion,"
+and, bending down, she whispered in his ear, then laughed aloud.
+
+Now Jon grew faint with fear; his lips turned blue, and his teeth
+chattered at the thought of how he should be made to die. Still, he
+would say nothing.
+
+Then Swanhild spoke to Gizur and the thrall, and bade them bind him
+with a rope, tear the garments from him, and bring snow. They did
+this, and pushed the matter to the drawing of knives. But when he saw
+the steel Jon cried aloud that he would tell all.
+
+"Now thou takest good counsel," said Swanhild.
+
+Then in his fear Jon told how Eric had gone down to Middalhof to wed
+Gudruda, and thence to fly with her to England.
+
+Now Swanhild was mad with wrath, for she had sooner died than that
+this should come about.
+
+"Let us away," she said to Gizur. "But first kill this man."
+
+"Nay,' said Gizur, "I will not do that. He has told his tidings; let
+him go free."
+
+"Thou art chicken-hearted," said Swanhild, who, after the fashion of
+witches, had no mercy in her. "At the least, he shall not go hence to
+warn Eric and Gudruda of our coming. If thou wilt not kill him, then
+bind him and leave him."
+
+So Jon was bound, and there in the booth he sat two days before anyone
+came to loose him.
+
+"Whither away?" said Gizur to Swanhild.
+
+"To Middalhof first," Swanhild answered.
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+HOW WENT THE BRIDAL NIGHT
+
+Now Eric and Gudruda sat silent in the high seat of the hall at
+Middalhof till they heard Skallagrim enter by the women's door. Then
+they came down from the high seat, and stood hand in hand by the fire
+on the hearth. Skallagrim greeted Gudruda, looking at her askance, for
+Skallagrim stood in fear of women alone.
+
+"What counsel now, lord?" said the Baresark.
+
+"Tell us thy plans, Gudruda," said Eric, for as yet no word had passed
+between them of what they should do.
+
+"This is my plan, Eric," she answered. "First, that we eat; then that
+thy men take horse and ride hence through the night to where the ship
+lies, bearing word that we will be there at dawn when the tide serves,
+and bidding the mate make everything ready for sailing. But thou and I
+and Skallagrim will stay here till to-morrow is three hours old, and
+this because I have tidings that Gizur's folk will search the ship
+to-night. Now, when they search and do not find us, they will go away.
+Then, at the dawning, thou and I and Skallagrim will row on board the
+ship as she lies at anchor, and, slipping the cable, put to sea before
+they know we are there, and so bid farewell to Swanhild and our woes."
+
+"Yet it is a risk for us to sleep here alone," said Eric.
+
+"There is little danger," said Gudruda. "Nearly all of Gizur's men
+watch the ship; and I have learned this from a spy, that, two days
+ago, Gizur, Swanhild, and one thrall rode from Coldback towards
+Mosfell, and they have not come back yet. Moreover, the place is
+strong, and thou and Skallagrim are here to guard it."
+
+"So be it, then," answered Eric, for indeed he had little thought left
+for anything, except Gudruda.
+
+After this the women came in and set meat on the board, and all ate.
+
+Now, when they had eaten, Eric bade Skallagrim fill a cup, and bring
+it to him as he sat on the high seat with Gudruda. Skallagrim did so;
+and then, looking deep into each other's eyes, Eric Brighteyes and
+Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter, drank the bride's cup.
+
+"There are few guests to grace our marriage-feast, husband," said
+Gudruda.
+
+"Yet shall our vows hold true, wife," said Eric.
+
+"Ay, Brighteyes," she answered, "in life and in death, now and for
+ever!" and they kissed.
+
+"It is time for us to be going, methinks," growled Skallagrim to those
+about him. "We are not wanted here."
+
+Then the men who were to go on to the ship rose, fetched their horses,
+and rode away. Also they caught the horses of Skallagrim, Eric, and
+Gudruda, saddled them and, slipping their bridles, made them fast in a
+shed in the yard, giving them hay to eat. Afterwards Skallagrim barred
+the men's door and the women's door, and, going to Gudruda, asked
+where he should stay the night till it was time to ride for the sea.
+
+"In the store-chamber," she answered, "for there is a shutter of which
+the latch has gone. See that thou watch it well, Skallagrim; though I
+think none will come to trouble thee."
+
+"I know the place. It shall go badly with the head that looks through
+yonder hole," said Skallagrim, glancing at his axe.
+
+Now Gudruda forgot this, that in the store-chamber were casks of
+strong ale.
+
+Then Gudruda told him to wake them when the morrow was two hours old,
+for Eric had neither eyes nor words except for Gudruda alone, and
+Skallagrim went.
+
+The women went also to their shut bed at the end of the hall, leaving
+Brighteyes and Gudruda alone. Eric looked at her.
+
+"Where do I sleep to-night?" he asked.
+
+"Thou sleepest with me, husband," she answered soft, "for nothing,
+except Death, shall come between us any more."
+
+Now Skallagrim went to the store-room, and sat down with his back
+against a cask. His heart was heavy in him, for he boded no good of
+this marriage. Moreover, he was jealous. Skallagrim loved but one
+thing in the world truly, and that was Eric Brighteyes, his lord. Now
+he knew that henceforth he must take a second place, and that for one
+thought which Eric gave to him, he would give ten to Gudruda.
+Therefore Skallagrim was very sad at heart.
+
+"A pest upon the women!" he said to himself, "for from them comes all
+evil. Brighteyes owes his ill luck to Swanhild and this fair wife of
+his, and that is scarcely done with yet. Well, well, 'tis nature; but
+would that we were safe at sea! Had I my will, we had not slept here
+to-night. But they are newly wed, and--well, 'tis nature! Better the
+bride loves to lie abed than to ride the cold wolds and seek the
+common deck."
+
+Now, as Skallagrim grumbled, fear gathered in his heart, he knew not
+of what. He began to think on trolls and goblins. It was dark in the
+store-room, except for a little line of light that crept through the
+crack of the shutter. At length he could bear the darkness and his
+thoughts no longer, but, rising, threw the shutter wide and let the
+bright moonlight pour into the chamber, whence he could see the
+hillside behind, and watch the shadows of the clouds as they floated
+across it. Again Skallagrim sat down against his cask, and as he sat
+it moved, and he heard the wash of ale inside it.
+
+"That is a good sound," said Skallagrim, and he turned and smelt at
+the cask; "aye, and a good smell, too! We tasted little ale yonder on
+Mosfell, and we shall find less at sea." Again he looked at the cask.
+There was a spigot in it, and lo! on the shelf stood horn cups.
+
+"It surely is on draught," he said; "and now it will stand till it
+goes sour. 'Tis a pity; but I will not drink. I fear ale--ale is
+another man! No, I will not drink," and all the while his hand went up
+to the cups upon the shelf. "Eric is better lain yonder in Gudruda's
+chamber than I am here alone with evil thoughts and trolls," he said.
+"Why, what fish was that we ate at supper? My throat is cracked with
+thirst! If there were water now I'd drink it, but I see none. Well,
+one cup to wish them joy! There is no harm in a cup of ale," and he
+drew the spigot from the cask and watched the brown drink flow into
+the cup. Then he lifted it to his lips and drank, saying "Skoll!
+skoll!"[*] nor did he cease till the horn was drained. "This is
+wondrous good ale," said Skallagrim as he wiped his grizzled beard.
+"One more cup, and evil thoughts shall cease to haunt me."
+
+[*] "Health! health!"
+
+Again he filled, drank, sat down, and for a while was merry. But
+presently the black thoughts came back into his mind. He rose, looked
+through the shutter-hole to the hillside. He could see nothing on it
+except the shadows of the clouds.
+
+"Trolls walk the winds to-night," he said. "I feel them pulling at my
+beard. One more cup to frighten them."
+
+He drank another draught of ale and grew merry. Then ale called for
+ale, and Skallagrim drained cup on cup, singing as he drained, till at
+last heavy sleep overcame him, and he sank drunken on the ground there
+by the barrel, while the brown ale trickled round him.
+
+
+
+Now Eric Brighteyes and Gudruda the Fair slept side by side, locked in
+each other's arms. Presently Gudruda was wide awake.
+
+"Rouse thee, Eric," she said, "I have dreamed an evil dream."
+
+He awoke and kissed her.
+
+"What, then, was thy dream, sweet?" he said. "This is no hour for bad
+dreams."
+
+"No hour for bad dreams, truly, husband; yet dreams do not weigh the
+hour of their coming. I dreamed this: that I lay dead beside thee and
+thou knewest it not, while Swanhild looked at thee and mocked."
+
+"An evil dream, truly," said Eric; "but see, thou art not dead. Thou
+hast thought too much on Swanhild of late."
+
+Now they slept once more, till presently Eric was wide awake.
+
+"Rouse thee, Gudruda," he said, "I too have dreamed a dream, and it is
+full of evil."
+
+"What, then, was thy dream, husband?" she asked.
+
+"I dreamed that Atli the Earl, whom I slew, stood by the bed. His face
+was white, and white as snow was his beard, and blood from his great
+wound ran down his byrnie. 'Eric Brighteyes,' he said, 'I am he whom
+thou didst slay, and I come to tell thee this: that before the moon is
+young again thou shalt lie stiff, with Hell-shoes on thy feet. Thou
+art Eric the Unlucky! Take thy joy and say thy say to her who lies at
+thy side, for wet and cold is the bed that waits thee and soon shall
+thy white lips be dumb.' Then he was gone, and lo! in his place stood
+Asmund, thy father, and he also spoke to me, saying, 'Thou who dost
+lie in my bed and at my daughter's side, know this: the words of Atli
+are true; but I add these to them: ye shall die, yet is death but the
+gate of life and love and rest,' and he was gone."
+
+Now Gudruda shivered with fear, and crept closer to Eric's side.
+
+"We are surely fey, for the Norns speak with the voices of Atli and of
+Asmund," she said. "Oh, Eric! Eric! whither go we when we die? Will
+Valhalla take thee, being so mighty a man, and must I away to Hela's
+halls, where thou art not? Oh! that would be death indeed! Say, Eric,
+whither do we go?"
+
+"What said the voice of Asmund?" answered Brighteyes. "That death is
+but the gate of life and love and rest. Hearken, Gudruda, my May! Odin
+does not reign over all the world, for when I sat out yonder in
+England, a certain holy man taught me of another God--a God who loves
+not slaughter, a God who died that men might live for ever in peace
+with those they love."
+
+"How is this God named, Eric?"
+
+"They name Him the White Christ, and there are many who cling to Him."
+
+"Would that I knew this Christ, Eric. I am weary of death and blood
+and evil deeds, such as are pleasing to our Gods. Oh, Eric, if I am
+taken from thee, swear this to me: that thou wilt slay no more, save
+for thy life's sake only."
+
+"I swear that, sweet," he made answer. "For I too am weary of death
+and blood, and desire peace most of all things. The world is sad, and
+sad have been our days. Yet it is well to have lived, for through many
+heavy days we have wandered to this happy night."
+
+"Yea, Eric, it is well to have lived; though I think that death draws
+on. Now this is my counsel: that we rise, and that thou dost put on
+thy harness and summon Skallagrim, so that, if evil comes, thou mayst
+meet it armed. Surely I thought I heard a sound--yonder in the hall!"
+
+"There is little use in that," said Eric, "for things will befall as
+they are fated. We may do nothing of our own will, I am sure of this,
+and it is no good to struggle with the Norns. Yet I will rise."
+
+So he kissed her, and made ready to leave the bed, when suddenly, as
+he lingered, a great heaviness seized him.
+
+"Gudruda," he said, "I am pressed down with sleep."
+
+"That I am also, Eric," she said. "My eyes shut of themselves and I
+can scarcely stir my limbs. Ah, Eric, we are fey indeed, and this is--
+death that comes!"
+
+"Perchance!" he said, speaking heavily.
+
+"Eric!--wake, Eric! Thou canst not move? Yet hearken to me--ah! this
+weight of sleep! Thou lovest me, Eric!--is it not so?"
+
+"Yea," he answered.
+
+"Now and for ever thou lovest me--and wilt cleave to me always
+wherever we go?"
+
+"Surely, sweet. Oh, sweet, farewell!" he said, and his voice sounded
+like the voice of one who speaks across the water.
+
+"Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!--my love--my love, farewell!" she answered
+very slowly, and together they sank into a sleep that was heavy as
+death.
+
+
+
+Now Gizur, Ospakar's son, and Swanhild, Atli's widow, rode fast and
+hard from Mosfell, giving no rest to their horses, and with them rode
+that thrall who had showed the secret path to Gizur. They stayed a
+while on Horse-Head Heights till the moon rose. Now one path led hence
+to the shore that is against the Westmans, where Gudruda's ship lay
+bound. Then Swanhild turned to the thrall. Her beautiful face was
+fierce and she had said few words all this while, but in her heart
+raged a fire of hate and jealousy which shone through her blue eyes.
+
+"Listen," she said to the thrall. "Thou shalt ride hence to the bay
+where the ship of Gudruda the Fair lies at anchor. Thou knowest where
+our folk are in hiding. Thou shalt speak thus to them. Before it is
+dawn they must take boats and board Gudruda's ship and search her.
+And, if they find Eric, the outlaw, aboard, they shall slay him, if
+they may."
+
+"That will be no easy task," said the thrall.
+
+"And if they find Gudruda they shall keep her prisoner. But if they
+find neither the one nor the other, they shall do this: they shall
+drive the crew ashore, killing as few as may be, and burn the ship."
+
+"It is an ill deed thus to burn another's ship," said Gizur.
+
+"Good or ill, it shall be done," answered Swanhild fiercely. "Thou art
+a lawman, and well canst thou meet the suit; moreover Gudruda has
+wedded an outlaw and shall suffer for her sin. Now go, and see thou
+tarry not, or thy back shall pay the price."
+
+The man rode away swiftly. Then Gizur turned to Swanhild, asking:
+"Whither, then, go we?"
+
+"I have said to Middalhof."
+
+"That is into the wolf's den, if Eric and Skallagrim are there," he
+answered: "I have little chance against the two of them."
+
+"Nay, nor against the one, Gizur. Why, if Eric's right hand were hewn
+from him, and he stood unarmed, he would still slay thee with his
+left, as, swordless, he slew Ospakar thy father. Yet I shall find a
+way to come at him, if he is there."
+
+Then they rode on, and Gizur's heart was heavy for fear of Eric and
+Skallagrim the Baresark. So fiercely did they ride that, within one
+hour after midnight, they were at the stead of Middalhof.
+
+"We will leave the horses here in the field," said Swanhild.
+
+So they leaped to earth and, tying the reins of the horses together,
+left them to feed on the growing grass. Then they crept into the yard
+and listened. Presently there came a sound of horses stamping in the
+far corner of the yard. They went thither, and there they found a
+horse and two geldings saddled, but with the bits slipped, and on the
+horse was such a saddle as women use.
+
+"Eric Brighteyes, Skallagrim Lambstail, and Gudruda the Fair,"
+whispered Swanhild, naming the horses and laughing evilly--"the birds
+are within! Now to snare them."
+
+"Were it not best to meet them by the ship?" asked Gizur.
+
+"Nay, thou fool; if once Eric and Skallagrim are back to back, and
+Whitefire is aloft, how many shall be dead before they are down,
+thinkest thou? We shall not find them sleeping twice."
+
+"It is shameful to slay sleeping men," said Gizur.
+
+"They are outlaws," she answered. "Hearken, Ospakar's son. Thou sayest
+thou dost love me and wouldst wed me: know this, that if thou dost
+fail me now, I will never look upon thy face again, but will name thee
+Niddering in all men's ears."
+
+Now Gizur loved Swanhild much, for she had thrown her glamour on him
+as once she did on Atli, and he thought of her day and night. For
+there was this strange thing about Swanhild that, though she was a
+witch and wicked, being both fair and gentle she could lead all men,
+except Eric, to love her.
+
+But of men she loved Eric alone.
+
+Then Gizur held his peace; but Swanhild spoke again:
+
+"It will be of no use to try the doors, for they are strong. Yet when
+I was a child before now I have passed in and out the house at night
+by the store-room casement. Follow me, Gizur." Then she crept along
+the shadow of the wall, for she knew it every stone, till she came to
+the store-room, and lo! the shutter stood open, and through it the
+moonlight poured into the chamber. Swanhild lifted her head above the
+sill and looked, then started back.
+
+"Hush!" she said, "Skallagrim lies asleep within."
+
+"Pray the Gods he wake not!" said Gizur beneath his breath, and turned
+to go. But Swanhild caught him by the arm; then gently raised her head
+and looked again, long and steadily. Presently she turned and laughed
+softly.
+
+"Things go well for us," she said; "the sot lies drunk. We have
+nothing to fear from him. He lies drunk in a pool of ale."
+
+Then Gizur looked. The moonlight poured into the little room, and by
+it he saw the great shape of Skallagrim. His head was thrown back, his
+mouth was wide. He snored loudly in his drunken sleep, and all about
+him ran the brown ale, for the spigot of the cask lay upon the floor.
+In his left hand was a horn cup, but in his right he still grasped his
+axe.
+
+"Now we must enter," said Swanhild. Gizur hung back, but she sprang
+upon the sill lightly as a fox, and slid thence into the store-room.
+Then Gizur must follow, and presently he stood beside her in the room,
+and at their feet lay drunken Skallagrim. Gizur looked first at his
+sword, then on the Baresark, and lastly at Swanhild.
+
+"Nay," she whispered, "touch him not. Perchance he would cry out--and
+we seek higher game. He has that within him which will hold him fast
+for a while. Follow where I shall lead."
+
+She took his hand and, gliding through the doorway, passed along the
+passage till she came to the great hall. Swanhild could see well in
+the dark, and moreover she knew the road. Presently they stood in the
+empty hall. The fire had burnt down, but two embers yet glowed upon
+the hearth, like red and angry eyes.
+
+For a while Swanhild stood still listening, but there was nothing to
+hear. Then she drew near to the shut bed where Gudruda slept, and,
+with her ear to the curtain, listened once more. Gizur came with her,
+and as he came his foot struck against a bench and stirred it. Now
+Swanhild heard murmured words and the sound of kisses. She started
+back, and fury filled her heart. Gizur also heard the voice of Eric,
+saying: "I will rise." Then he would have fled, but Swanhild caught
+him by the arm.
+
+"Fear not," she whispered, "they shall soon sleep sound."
+
+He felt her stretch out her arms and presently he saw this wonderful
+thing: the eyes of Swanhild glowing in the darkness as the embers
+glowed upon the hearth. Now they glowed brightly, so brightly that he
+could see the outstretched arms and the hard white face beneath them,
+and now they grew dim, of a sudden to shine bright again. And all the
+while she hissed words through her clenched teeth.
+
+Thus she hissed, fierce and low:
+
+ "Gudruda, Sister mine, hearken and sleep!
+ By the bond of blood I bid thee sleep!--
+ By the strength that is in me I bid thee sleep!--
+ Sleep! sleep sound!
+
+ "Eric Brighteyes, hearken and sleep!
+ By the bond of sin I charge thee sleep!--
+ By the blood of Atli I charge thee, sleep!--
+ Sleep! sleep sound!"
+
+Then thrice she tossed her hands aloft, saying:
+
+ "From love to sleep!
+ From sleep to death!
+ From death to Hela!
+ Say, lovers, where shall ye kiss again?"
+
+Then the light went out of her eyes and she laughed low. And ever as
+she whispered, the spoken words of the two in the shut bed grew
+fainter and more faint, till at length they died away, and a silence
+fell upon the place.
+
+"Thou hast no cause to fear the sword of Eric, Gizur," she said.
+"Nothing will wake him now till daylight comes."
+
+"Thou art awesome!" answered Gizur, for he shook with fear. "Look not
+on me with those flaming eyes, I pray thee!"
+
+"Fear not," she said, "the fire is out. Now to the work."
+
+"What must we do, then?"
+
+"/Thou/ must do this. Thou must enter and slay Eric."
+
+"That I can not--that I will not!" said Gizur.
+
+She turned and looked at him, and lo! her eyes began to flame again--
+upon his eyes they seemed to burn.
+
+"Thou wilt do as I bid thee," she said. "With Eric's sword thou shalt
+slay Eric, else I will curse thee where thou art, and bring such evil
+on thee as thou knowest not of."
+
+"Look not so, Swanhild," he said. "Lead on--I come."
+
+Now they creep into the shut chamber of Gudruda. It is so dark that
+they can see nothing, and nothing can they hear except the heavy
+breathing of the sleepers.
+
+This is to be told, that at this time Swanhild had it in her mind to
+kill, not Eric but Gudruda, for thus she would smite the heart of
+Brighteyes. Moreover, she loved Eric, and while he lived she might yet
+win him; but Eric dead must be Eric lost. But on Gudruda she would be
+bitterly avenged--Gudruda, who, for all her scheming, had yet been a
+wife to Eric!
+
+Now they stand by the bed. Swanhild puts out her hand, draws down the
+clothes, and feels the breast of Gudruda beneath, for Gudruda slept on
+the outside of the bed.
+
+Then she searches by the head of the bed and finds Whitefire which
+hung there, and draws the sword.
+
+"Here lies Eric, on the outside," she says to Gizur, "and here is
+Whitefire. Strike and strike home, leaving Whitefire in the wound."
+
+Gizur takes the sword and lifts it. He is sore at heart that he must
+do such a coward deed; but the spell of Swanhild is upon him, and he
+may not flinch from it. Then a thought takes him and he also puts down
+his hand to feel. It lights upon Gudruda's golden hair, that hangs
+about her breast and falls from the bed to the ground.
+
+"Here is woman's hair," he whispers.
+
+"No," Swanhild answers, "it is Eric's hair. The hair of Eric is long,
+as thou hast seen."
+
+Now neither of them knows that Gudruda cut Eric's locks when he lay
+sick on Mosfell, though Swanhild knows well that it is not Brighteyes
+whom she bids Gizur slay.
+
+Then Gizur, Ospakar's son, lifts the sword, and the faint starlight
+struggling into the chamber gathers and gleams upon the blade. Thrice
+he lifts it, and thrice it draws it back. Then with an oath he strikes
+--and drives it home with all his strength!
+
+From the bed beneath there comes one long sigh and a sound as of limbs
+trembling against the bed-gear. Then all is still.
+
+"It is done!" he says faintly.
+
+Swanhild puts down her hand once more. Lo! it is wet and warm. Then
+she bends herself and looks, and behold! the dead eyes of Gudruda
+glare up into her eyes. She can see them plainly, but none know what
+she read there. At the least it was something that she loved not, for
+she reels back against the panelling, then falls upon the floor.
+
+Presently, while Gizur stands as one in a dream, she rises, saying: "I
+am avenged of the death of Atli. Let us hence!--ah! let us hence
+swiftly! Give me thy hand, Gizur, for I am faint!"
+
+So Gizur gives her his hand and they pass thence. Presently they stand
+in the store-room, and there lies Skallagrim, still plunged in his
+drunken sleep.
+
+"Must I do more murder?" asks Gizur hoarsely.
+
+"Nay," Swanhild says. "I am sick with blood. Leave the knave."
+
+They pass out by the casement into the yard and so on till they find
+their horses.
+
+"Lift me, Gizur; I can no more," says Swanhild.
+
+He lifts her to the saddle.
+
+"Whither away?" he asks.
+
+"To Coldback, Gizur, and thence to cold Death."
+
+
+
+Thus did Gudruda, Eric's bride and Asmund's daughter, the fairest
+woman who ever lived in Iceland, die on her marriage night by the hand
+of Gizur, Ospakar's son, and through the hate and witchcraft of
+Swanhild the Fatherless, her half-sister.
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+HOW THE DAWN CAME
+
+The dawn broke over Middalhof. Slowly the light gathered in the empty
+hall, it crept slowly into the little chamber where Eric slept, and
+Gudruda slept also with a deeper sleep.
+
+Now the two women came from their chamber at the far end of the hall,
+and drew near the hearth, shivering, for the air was cold. They knelt
+by the fire, blowing at the embers till the sticks they cast upon them
+crackled to a blaze.
+
+"It seems that Gudruda is not yet gone," said one to the other. "I
+thought she should ride away with Eric before the dawn."
+
+"Newly wed lie long abed!" laughed the other.
+
+"I am glad to see the blessed light," said the first woman, "for last
+night I dreamed that once again this hall ran red with blood, as at
+the marriage-feast of Ospakar."
+
+"Ah," answered the other, "it will be well for the south when Eric
+Brighteyes and Gudruda are gone over sea, for their loves have brought
+much bloodshed upon the land."
+
+"Well, indeed!" sighed the first. "Had Asmund the Priest never found
+Groa, Ran's gift, singing by the sea, Valhalla had not been so full
+to-day. Mindest thou the day he brought her here?"
+
+"I remember it well," she answered, "though I was but a girl at the
+time. Still, when I saw those dark eyes of hers--just such eyes as
+Swanhild's!--I knew her for a witch, as all Finn women are. It is an
+evil world: my husband is dead by the sword; dead are both my sons,
+fighting for Eric; dead is Unna, Thorod's daughter; Asmund, my lord,
+is dead, and dead is Bjrn; and now Gudruda the Fair, whom I have
+rocked to sleep, leaves us to go over sea. I may not go with her, for
+my daughter's sake; yet I almost wish that I too were dead."
+
+"That will come soon enough," said the other, who was young and fair.
+
+
+
+Now the witch-sleep began to roll from Eric's heart, though his eyes
+were not yet open. But the talk of the women echoed in his ears, and
+the words "/dead!/" "/dead!/" "/dead!/" fell heavily on his slumbering
+sense. At length he opened his eyes, only to shut them again, because
+of a bright gleam of light that ran up and down something at his side.
+Heavily he wondered what this might be, that shone so keen and bright
+--that shone like a naked sword.
+
+Now he looked again. Yes, it was a sword which stood by him upon the
+bed, and the golden hilt was like the hilt of Whitefire. He lifted up
+his hand to touch it, thinking that he dreamed. Lo! his hand and arm
+were red!
+
+Then he remembered, and the thought of Gudruda flashed through his
+heart. He sat up, gazing down into the shadow at his side.
+
+
+
+Presently the women at the fire heard a sound as of a great man
+falling to earth.
+
+"What is that noise?" said one.
+
+"Eric leaping from his bed," answered the other. "He has slept too
+long, as we have also."
+
+As they spoke the curtain of the shut bed was pushed away, and through
+it staggered Eric in his night-gear, and lo! the left side of it was
+red. His eyes were wide with horror, his mouth was open, and his face
+was white as ice.
+
+He stopped, looking at them, made as though to speak, and could not.
+Then, while they shrank from him in terror, he turned, and, walking
+like a drunken man, staggered from the hall down that passage which
+led to the store-chamber. The door stood wide, the shutter was wide,
+and on the floor, soaked in the dregs of ale, Skallagrim yet lay
+snoring, his axe in one hand and a cup in the other.
+
+Eric looked and understood.
+
+"Awake, drunkard!" he cried, in so terrible a voice that the room
+shook. "Awake, and look upon thy work!"
+
+Skallagrim sat up, yawning.
+
+"Forsooth, my head swims," he said. "Give me ale, I am thirsty."
+
+"Never wilt thou look on ale again, Skallagrim, when thou hast seen
+that which I have to show!" said Eric, in the same dread voice.
+
+Then Skallagrim rose to his feet and gaped upon him.
+
+"What means this, lord? Is it time to ride? and say! why is thy shirt
+red with blood?"
+
+"Follow me, drunkard, and look upon thy work!" Eric said again.
+
+Then Skallagrim grew altogether sober, and grasping his axe, followed
+after Brighteyes, sore afraid of what he might see.
+
+They went down the passage, past the high seat of the hall, till they
+came to the curtain of the shut bed; and after them followed the
+women. Eric seized the curtain in his hand, rent it from its
+fastenings, and cast it on the ground. Now the light flowed in and
+struck upon the bed. It fell upon the bed, it fell upon Whitefire's
+hilt and ran along the blade, it gleamed on a woman's snowy breast and
+golden hair, and shone in her staring eyes--a woman who lay stiff and
+cold upon the bed, the great sword fixed within her heart!
+
+"Look upon thy work, drunkard!" Eric cried again, while the women who
+peeped behind sent their long wail of woe echoing down the panelled
+hall.
+
+"Hearken!" said Eric: "while thou didst lie wallowing in thy swine's
+sleep, foes crept across thy carcase, and this is their handiwork:--
+yonder she lies who was my bride!--now is Gudruda the Fair a death-
+wife who last night was my bride! This is thy work, drunkard! and now
+what meed for thee?"
+
+Skallagrim looked. Then he spoke in a hoarse slow voice:
+
+"What meed, lord? But one--death!"
+
+Then with one hand he covered his eyes and with the other held out his
+axe to Eric Brighteyes.
+
+Eric took the axe, and while the women ran thence screaming, he
+whirled it thrice about his head. Then he smote down towards the skull
+of Skallagrim, but as he smote it seemed to him that a voice whispered
+in his ear: "/Thy oath!/"--and he remembered that he had sworn to slay
+no more, save for his own life's sake.
+
+The mighty blow was falling and he might only do this--loose the axe
+before it clove Skallagrim in twain. He loosed and away the great axe
+flew. It passed over the head of Skallagrim, and sped like light
+across the wide hall, till it crashed through the panelling on the
+further side, and buried itself to the haft in the wall beyond.
+
+"It is not for me to kill thee, drunkard! Go, die in thy drink!"
+
+"Then I will kill myself!" cried the Baresark, and, rushing across the
+hall he tore the great axe from its bed.
+
+"Hold!" said Eric; "perhaps there is yet a deed for thee to do. Then
+thou mayest die, if it pleases thee."
+
+"Ay," said Skallagrim coming back, "perchance there is still a deed to
+do!"
+
+And, flinging down the axe, Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark fell
+upon the floor and wept.
+
+But Eric did not weep. Only he drew Whitefire from the heart of
+Gudruda and looked at it.
+
+"Thou art a strange sword, Whitefire," he said, "who slayest both
+friend and foe! Shame on thee, Whitefire! We swore our oath on thee,
+Whitefire, and thou hast cut its chain! Now I am minded to shatter
+thee." And as Eric looked on the great blade, lo! it hummed strangely
+in answer.
+
+"'First must thou be the death of some,' thou sayest? Well, maybe,
+Whitefire! But never yet didst thou drink so sweet a life as hers who
+now lies dead, nor ever shalt again."
+
+Then he sheathed the sword, but neither then nor afterwards did he
+wipe the blood of Gudruda from its blade.
+
+"Last night a-marrying--to-day a-burying," said Eric, and he called to
+the women to bring spades. Then, having clothed himself, he went to
+the centre of the hall, and, brushing away the sand, broke the hard
+clay-flooring, dealing great blows on it with an axe. Now Skallagrim,
+seeing his purpose, came to him and took one of the spades, and
+together they laboured in silence till they had dug a grave a fathom
+deep.
+
+"Here," said Eric, "here, in thine own hall where thou wast born and
+lived, Gudruda the Fair, thou shalt sleep at the last. And of
+Middalhof I say this: that none shall live there henceforth. It shall
+be haunted and accursed till the rafters rot and the walls fall in,
+making thy barrow, Gudruda."
+
+Now this indeed came to pass, for none have lived in Middalhof since
+the days of Gudruda the Fair, Asmund's daughter. It has been ruined
+these many years, and now it is but a pile of stones.
+
+
+
+When the grave was dug, Eric washed himself and ate some food. Then he
+went in to where Gudruda lay dead, and bade the women make her ready
+for burial. This they did. When she was washed and clad in a clean
+white robe, Eric came to her, and with his own hand bound the Hell-
+shoes on her feet and closed her eyes.
+
+It was just then that a man came who said that the people of Gizur and
+of Swanhild had burned Gudruda's ship, driving the crew ashore.
+
+"It is well," said Eric. "We need the ship no more; now hath she whom
+it should bear wings with which to fly." Then he went in and sat down
+on the bed by the body of Gudruda, while Skallagrim crouched on the
+ground without, tearing at his beard and muttering. For the fierce
+heart of Skallagrim was broken because of that evil which his
+drunkenness had brought about.
+
+All day Eric sat thus, looking on his dead love's face, till the hour
+came round when he and Gudruda had drunk the bride-cup. Then he rose
+and kissed dead Gudruda on the lips, saying:
+
+"I did not look to part with thee thus, sweet! It is sad that thou
+shouldst have gone and left me here. Natheless, I shall soon follow on
+thy path."
+
+Then he called aloud:
+
+"Art sober, drunkard?"
+
+Skallagrim came and stood before him, saying nothing.
+
+"Take thou the feet of her whom thou didst bring to death, and I will
+take her head."
+
+So they lifted up Gudruda and bore her to the grave. Then Eric stood
+near the grave, and, taking dead Gudruda in his arms, looked upon her
+face by the light of the fire and of the candles that were set about.
+
+He looked thrice, then sang aloud:
+
+ "Long ago, when swept the snow-blast,
+ Close we clung and plighted troth.
+ Many a year, through storm and sword-song,
+ Sore I strove to win thee, sweet!
+ But last night I held thee, Fairest,
+ Lock'd, a wife, in lover's arms.
+ Now, Gudruda, in thy death-rest,
+ Sleep thou soft till Eric come!
+
+ "Hence I go to wreak thy murder.
+ Hissing fire of flaming stead,
+ Groan of spear-carles, wail of women,
+ Soon shall startle through the night.
+ Then on Mosfell, Kirtle-Wearer,
+ Eric waits the face of Death.
+ Freed from weary life and sorrow,
+ Soon we'll kiss in Hela's halls!"
+
+Then he laid her in the grave, and, having shrouded a sheet over her,
+they filled it in together, hiding Gudruda the Fair from the sight of
+men for ever.
+
+Afterwards Eric armed himself, and this Skallagrim did also. Then he
+strode from the hall, and Skallagrim followed him. In the yard those
+horses were still tied that should have carried them to the ship, and
+on one was the saddle of Gudruda. She had ridden on this horse for
+many years, and loved it much, for it would follow her like a dog.
+Eric looked at him, then said aloud:
+
+"Gudruda may need thee where she is, Blackmane," for so the horse was
+named. "At the least, none shall ride thee more!" And he snatched the
+axe from the hand of Skallagrim and slew the horse at a blow.
+
+Then they rode away, heading for Coldback. The night was wild and
+windy, and the sky dark with scudding clouds, through which the moon
+peeped out at times. Eric looked up, then spoke to Skallagrim:
+
+"A good night for burning, drunkard!"
+
+"Ay, lord; the flames will fly briskly," answered Skallagrim.
+
+"How many, thinkest thou, walked over thee, drunkard, when thou didst
+lie yonder in the ale?"
+
+"I know not," groaned Skallagrim; "but I found this in the soft earth
+without: the print of a man's and a woman's feet; and this on the hill
+side: the track of two horses ridden hard."
+
+"Gizur and Swanhild, drunkard," said Eric. "Swanhild cast us into deep
+sleep by witchcraft, and Gizur dealt the blow. Better for him that he
+had never been born than that he has lived to deal that coward's
+blow!"
+
+
+
+Then they rode on, and when midnight was a little while gone they came
+to the stead at Coldback. Now this house was roofed with turves, and
+the windows were barred so that none could pass through them. Also in
+the yard were faggots of birch and a stack of hay.
+
+Eric and Skallagrim tied their horses in a dell that is to the north
+of the stead and crept up to the house. All was still; but a fire
+burnt in the hall, and, looking through a crack, Eric could see many
+men sleeping about it. Then he made signs to Skallagrim and together,
+very silently, they fetched hay and faggots, piling them against the
+north door of the house, for the wind blew from the north. Now Eric
+spoke to Skallagrim, bidding him stand, axe in hand, by the south
+door, and slay those who came out when the reek began to smart them:
+but he went himself to fire the pile.
+
+When Brighteyes had made all things ready for the burning, it came
+into his mind that, perhaps, Gizur and Swanhild were not in the house.
+But he would not hold his hand for this, for he was mad with grief and
+rage. So once more he prepared for the deed, when again he heard a
+voice in his ear--the voice of Gudruda, and it seemed to say:
+
+"/Thine oath, Eric! remember thine oath!/"
+
+Then he turned and the rage went out of his heart.
+
+"Let them seek me on Mosfell," he said, "I will not slay them secretly
+and by reek, the innocent and the guilty together." And he strode
+round the house to where Skallagrim stood at the south door, axe aloft
+and watching.
+
+"Does the fire burn, lord? I see no smoke," whispered Skallagrim.
+
+"Nay, I have made none. I will shed no more blood, except to save my
+life. I leave vengeance to the Norns."
+
+Now Skallagrim thought that Brighteyes was mad, but he dared say
+nothing. So they went to their horses, and when they found them, Eric
+rode back to the house. Presently they drew near, and Eric told
+Skallagrim to stay where he was, and riding on to the house, smote
+heavy blows upon the door, just as Skallagrim once had smitten, before
+Eric went up to Mosfell.
+
+Now Swanhild lay in her shut bed; but she could not sleep, because of
+what she saw in the eyes of Gudruda. Little may she ever sleep again,
+for when she shuts her eyes once more she sees that which was written
+in the dead eyes of Gudruda. So, as she lay, she heard the blows upon
+the door, and sprang frightened from her bed. Now there was tumult in
+the hall, for every man rose to his feet in fear, searching for his
+weapons. Again the loud knocks came.
+
+"It is the ghost of Eric!" cried one, for Gizur had given out that
+Eric was dead at his hand in fair fight.
+
+"Open!" said Gizur, and they opened, and there, a little way from the
+door, sat Brighteyes on a horse, great and shadowy to see, and behind
+him was Skallagrim the Baresark.
+
+"It is the ghost of Eric!" they cried again.
+
+"I am no ghost," said Brighteyes. "I am no ghost, ye men of Swanhild.
+Tell me: is Gizur, the son of Ospakar, among you?"
+
+"Gizur is here," said a voice; "but he swore he slew thee last night."
+
+"Then he lied," quoth Eric. "Gizur did not slay me--he murdered
+Gudruda the Fair as she lay asleep at my side. See!" and he drew
+Whitefire from its scabbard and held it in the rays of the moon that
+now shone out between the cloud rifts. "Whitefire is red with
+Gudruda's blood--Gudruda slaughtered in her sleep by Gizur's coward
+hand!"
+
+Now men murmured, for this seemed to them the most shameful of all
+deeds. But Gizur, hearing, shrank back aghast.
+
+"Listen again!" said Eric. "I was minded but now to burn you all as ye
+slept--ay, the firing is piled against the door. Still, I held my
+hand, for I have sworn to slay no more, except to save my life. Now I
+ride hence to Mosfell. Thither let Gizur come, Gizur the murderer, and
+Swanhild the witch, and with them all who will. There I will give them
+greeting, and wipe away the blood of Gudruda from Whitefire's blade."
+
+"Fear not, Eric," cried Swanhild, "I will come, and there thou mayst
+kill me, if thou canst."
+
+"Against thee, Swanhild," said Eric, "I lift no hand. Do thy worst, I
+leave thee to thy fate and the vengeance of the Norns. I am no woman-
+slayer. But to Gizur the murderer I say, come."
+
+Then he turned and went, and Skallagrim went with him.
+
+"Up, men, and cut Eric down!" cried Gizur, seeking to cover his shame.
+
+But no man stirred.
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+HOW ERIC SENT AWAY HIS MEN FROM MOSFELL
+
+Now Eric and Skallagrim came to Mosfell in safety, and during all that
+ride Brighteyes spoke no word. He rode in silence, and in silence
+Skallagrim rode after him. The heart of Skallagrim was broken because
+of the sorrow which his drunkenness had brought about, and the heart
+of Eric was buried in Gudruda's grave.
+
+On Mosfell Eric found four of his own men, two of whom had been among
+those that the people of Gizur and Swanhild had driven from Gudruda's
+ship before they fired her. For no fight had been made on the ship.
+There also he found Jon, who had been loosed from his bands in the
+booth by one who heard his cries as he rode past. Now when Jon saw
+Brighteyes, he told him all, and fell at Eric's feet and wept because
+he had betrayed him in his fear.
+
+But Eric spoke no angry word to him. Stooping down he raised him,
+saying, "Thou wast never overstout of heart, Jon, and thou art
+scarcely to be blamed because thou didst speak rather than die in
+torment, though perhaps some had chosen so to die and not to speak.
+Now I am a luckless man, and all things happen as they are fated, and
+the words of Atli come true, as was to be looked for. The Norns,
+against whom none may stand, did but work their will through thy
+mouth, Jon; so grieve no more for that which cannot be undone."
+
+Then he turned away, but Jon wept long and loudly.
+
+That night Eric slept well and dreamed no dreams. But on the morrow he
+woke at dawn, and clothed himself and ate. Then he called his men
+together, and with them Skallagrim. They came and stood before him,
+and Eric, drawing Whitefire, leaned upon it and spoke:
+
+"Hearken, mates," he said: "I know this, that my hours are short and
+death draws on. My years have been few and evil, and I cannot read the
+purpose of my life. She whom I loved has been slain by the witchcraft
+of Swanhild and the coward hand of Gizur the murderer, and I go to
+seek her where she waits. I am very glad to go, for now I have no more
+joy in life, being but a luckless man; it is an ill world, friends,
+and all the ways are red with blood. I have shed much blood, though
+but one life haunts me now at the last, and that is the life of Atli
+the Earl, for he was no match for my might and he is dead because of
+my sin. With my own blood I will wash away the blood of Atli, and then
+I seek another place, leaving nothing but a tale to be told in the
+ingle when fall the winter snows. For to this end we all come at the
+last, and it matters little if it find us at midday or at nightfall.
+We live in sorrow, we die in pain and darkness: for this is the curse
+that the Gods have laid upon men and each must taste it in his season.
+But I have sworn that no more men shall die for me. I will fight the
+last great fight alone; for I know this: I shall not easily be
+overcome, and with my fallen foes I will tread on Bifrost Bridge.
+Therefore, farewell! When the bones of Eric Brighteyes lie in their
+barrow, or are picked by ravens on the mountain side, Gizur will not
+trouble to hunt out those who clung to him, if indeed Gizur shall live
+to tell the tale. Nor need ye fear the hate of Swanhild, for she aims
+her spears at me alone. Go, therefore, and when I am dead, do not
+forget me, and do not seek to avenge me, for Death the avenger of all
+will find them also."
+
+Now Eric's men heard and groaned aloud, saying that they would die
+with him, for they loved Eric one and all. Only Skallagrim said
+nothing.
+
+Then Brighteyes spoke again: "Hear me, comrades. If ye will not go, my
+blood will be on your heads, for I will ride out alone, and meet the
+men of Gizur in the plain and fall there fighting."
+
+Then one by one they crept away to seek their horses in the dell. And
+each man as he went came to Eric and kissed his hand, then passed
+thence weeping. Jon was the last to go, except Skallagrim only, and he
+was so moved that he could not speak at all.
+
+It was this Jon who, in after years, when he was grown very old,
+wandered from stead to stead telling the deeds of Eric Brighteyes, and
+always finding a welcome because of his tale, till at length, as he
+journeyed, he was overtaken by a snowstorm and buried in a drift. For
+Jon, who lacked much, had this gift: he had a skald's tongue. Men have
+always held that it was to the honour of Jon that he told the tale
+thus, hiding nothing, seeing that some of it is against himself.
+
+
+
+Now when all had gone, Eric looked at Skallagrim, who still stood near
+him, axe in hand.
+
+"Wherefore goest thou not, drunkard?" he said. "Surely thou wilt find
+ale and mead in the vales or oversea. Here there is none. Hasten! I
+would be alone!"
+
+Now the great body of Skallagrim shook with grief and shame, and the
+red blood poured up beneath his dark sin. Then he spoke in a thick
+voice:
+
+"I did not think to live to hear such words from the lips of Eric
+Brighteyes. They are well earned, yet it is unmanly of thee, lord,
+thus to taunt one who loves thee. I would sooner die as Swanhild said
+yonder thrall should die than live to listen to such words. I have
+sinned against thee, indeed, and because of my sin my heart is broken.
+Hast thou, then, never sinned that thou wouldst tear it living from my
+breast as eagles tear a foundered horse? Think on thine own sins,
+Eric, and pity mine! Taunt me thus once more or bid me go once more
+and I will go indeed! I will go thus--on the edge of yonder gulf thou
+didst overcome me by thy naked might, and there I swore fealty to
+thee, Eric Brighteyes. Many a year have we wandered side by side, and,
+standing back to back, have struck many a blow. I am minded to do
+this: to stand by thee in the last great fight that draws on and to
+die there with thee. I have loved no other man save thee, and I am too
+old to seek new lords. Yet, if still thou biddest me, I will go thus.
+Where I swore my oath to thee, there I will end it. For I will lay me
+down on the brink of yonder gulf, as once I lay when thy hand was at
+my throat, and call out that thou art no more my lord and I am no more
+thy thrall. Then I will roll into the depths beneath, and by this
+death of shame thou shalt be freed of me, Eric Brighteyes."
+
+Eric looked at the great man--he looked long and sadly. Then he spoke:
+
+"Skallagrim Lambstail, thou hast a true heart. I too have sinned, and
+now I put away thy sin, although Gudruda is dead through thee and I
+must die because of thee. Stay by me if thou wilt and let us fall
+together."
+
+Then Skallagrim came to Eric, and, kneeling before him, took his hands
+and kissed them.
+
+"Now I am once more a man," he said, "and I know this: we two shall
+die such a great death that it will be well to have lived to die it!"
+and he arose and shouted:
+
+ "A! hai! A! hai! I see foes pass in pride!
+ A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!
+ Hear the song of the sword!
+ Whitefire is aloft--aloft!
+ Bare is the axe of the Baresark!
+ Croak, ye nesting ravens;
+ Flap your wings, ye eagles,
+ For bright is Mosfell's cave with blood!
+ Lap! lap! thou Grey Wolf,
+ Laugh aloud, Odin!
+
+ "Laugh till shake the golden doors;
+ Heroes' feet are set on Bifrost,
+ Open, ye hundred gates!
+ A! hai! A! hai! red runs the fray!
+ A! hai! A! hai! Valkyries ride the wind!"
+
+Then Skallagrim turned and went to clean his harness and the golden
+helm of Eric.
+
+
+
+Now at Coldback Gizur spoke with Swanhild.
+
+"Thou hast brought the greatest shame upon me," he said, "for thou
+hast caused me to slay a sleeping woman. Knowest thou that my own men
+will scarcely speak with me? I have come to this evil pass, through
+love of thee, that I have slain a sleeping woman!"
+
+"It was not my fault that thou didst kill Gudruda," answered Swanhild;
+"surely I thought it was Eric whom thy sword pierced! I have not
+sought thy love, Gizur, and I say this to thee: go, if thou wilt, and
+leave me alone!"
+
+Now Gizur looked at her, and was minded to go; but, as Swanhild knew
+well, she held him too fast in the net of her witcheries.
+
+"I would go, if I might go!" answered Gizur; "but I am bound to thee
+for good or evil, since it is fated that I shall wed thee."
+
+"Thou wilt never wed me while Eric lives," said Swanhild.
+
+Now she spoke thus truthfully, and by chance, as it were, not as
+driving Gizur on to slay Eric--for, now that Gudruda was dead, she was
+in two minds as to this matter, since, if she might, she still desired
+to take Eric to herself--but meaning that while Eric lived she would
+wed no other man. But Gizur took it otherwise.
+
+"Eric shall certainly die if I may bring it about," he answered, and
+went to speak with his men.
+
+Now all were gathered in the yard at Coldback, and that was a great
+company. But their looks were heavy because of the shame that Gizur,
+Ospakar's son, had brought upon them by the murder of Gudruda in her
+sleep.
+
+"Hearken, comrades!" said Gizur: "great shame is come upon me because
+of a deed that I have done unwittingly, for I aimed at the eagle Eric
+and I have slain the swan Gudruda."
+
+Then a certain old viking in the company, named Ketel, whom Gizur had
+hired for the slaying of Eric, spoke:
+
+"Man or woman, it is a niddering deed to kill folk in their sleep,
+Gizur! It is murder, and no less, and small luck can be hoped for from
+the stroke."
+
+Now Gizur felt that his people looked on him askance and heavily, and
+knew that it would be hard to show them that he was driven to this
+deed against his will, and by the witchcraft of Swanhild. So, as was
+his nature, he turned to guile for shelter, like a fox to his hole,
+and spoke to them with the tongue of a lawman; for Gizur had great
+skill in speech.
+
+"That tale was not all true which Eric Brighteyes told you," he said.
+"He was mad with grief, and moreover it seems that he slept, and only
+woke to find Gudruda dead. It came about thus: I stood with the lady
+Swanhild, and was about to call aloud on Eric to arm himself and come
+forth and meet me face to face----"
+
+"Then, lord, methinks thou hadst never met another foe," quoth the
+viking Ketel who had spoken first.
+
+"When of a sudden," went on Gizur, taking no note of Ketel's words,
+"one clothed in white sprang from the bed and rushed on me. Then I,
+thinking that it was Eric, lifted sword, not to smite, but to ward him
+away; but the linen-wearer met the sword and fell down dead. Then I
+fled, fearing lest men should wake and trap us, and that is all the
+tale. It was no fault of mine if Gudruda died upon the sword."
+
+Thus he spoke, but still men looked doubtfully upon him, for his eye
+was the eye of a liar--and Eric, as they knew, did not lie.
+
+"It is hard to find the truth between lawman's brain and tongue," said
+the old viking Ketel. "Eric is no lawman, but a true man, and he sang
+another song. I would slay Eric indeed, for between him and me there
+is a blood-feud, since my brother died at his hand when, with
+Whitefire for a crook, Brighteyes drove armed men like sheep down the
+hall of Middalhof--ay and swordless, slew Ospakar. Yet I say that Eric
+is a true man, and, whether or no thou art true, Gizur the Lawman,
+that thou knowest best--thou and Swanhild the Fatherless, Groa's
+daughter. If thou didst slay Gudruda as thou tellest, say, how come
+Gudruda's blood on Whitefire's blade? How did it chance, Gizur, that
+thou heldest Whitefire in thy hand and not thine own sword? Now I tell
+thee this: either thou shalt go up against Eric and clear thyself by
+blows, or I leave thee; and methinks there are others among this
+company who will do the same, for we have no wish to be partners with
+murderers and their wickedness"
+
+"Ay, a good word!" said many who stood by. "Let Gizur go up with us to
+Mosfell, and there stand face to face with Eric and clear himself by
+blows."
+
+"I ask no more," said Gizur; "we will ride to-night."
+
+"But much more shalt thou get, liar," quoth Ketel to himself, "for
+that hour when thou lookest once again on Whitefire shall be thy
+last!"
+
+
+
+So Gizur and Swanhild made ready to go up against Eric. That day they
+rode away with a great company, a hundred and one in all, and this was
+their plan. They sent six men with that thrall who had shown them the
+secret path, bidding him guide them to the mountain-top. Then, when
+they were come thither, and heard the shouts of those who sought to
+gain the platform from the south, they were to watch till Eric and his
+folk came out from the cave, and shoot them with arrows from above or
+crush them with stones. But if perchance Eric left the platform and
+came to meet his foes in the narrow pass, then they must let
+themselves down with ropes from the height above, and, creeping after
+him round the rock, must smite him in the back. Moreover, in secret,
+Gizur promised a great reward of ten hundreds in silver to him who
+should kill Eric, for he did not long to stand face to face with him
+alone. Swanhild also in secret made promise of reward to those who
+should bring Eric to her, bound, but living; and she bade them do this
+--to bear him down with shields and tie him with ropes.
+
+
+
+So they rode away, the seven who should climb the mountain from behind
+going first, and on the morrow morning they crossed the sand and came
+to Mosfell.
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM GREW FEY
+
+Now the night came down upon Mosfell, and of all nights this was the
+strangest. The air was quiet and heavy, yet no rain fell. It was so
+silent, moreover, that, did a stone slip upon the mountain side or a
+horse neigh far off on the plains, the sound of it crept up the fell
+and was echoed from the crags.
+
+Eric and Skallagrim sat together on the open space of rock that is
+before the cave, and great heaviness and fear came into their hearts,
+so that they had no desire to sleep.
+
+"Methinks the night is ghost-ridden," said Eric, "and I am fey, for I
+grow cold, and it seems to me that one strokes my hair."
+
+"It is ghost-ridden, lord," answered Skallagrim. "Trolls are abroad,
+and the God-kind gather to see Eric die."
+
+For a while they sat in silence, then suddenly the mountain heaved up
+gently beneath them. Thrice it seemed to heave like a woman's breast,
+and left them frightened.
+
+"Now the dwarf-folk come from their caves," quoth Skallagrim, "and
+great deeds may be looked for, since they are not drawn to the upper
+earth by a little thing."
+
+Then once more they sat silent; and thick darkness came down upon the
+mountain, hiding the stars.
+
+"Look," said Eric of a sudden, and he pointed to Hecla.
+
+Skallagrim looked, and lo! the snowy dome of Hecla was aglow with a
+rosy flame like the light of dawn.
+
+"Winter lights," said Lambstail, shuddering.
+
+"Death lights!" answered Eric. "Look again!"
+
+They looked, and behold! in the rosy glow there sat three giant forms
+of fire, and their shapes were the shapes of women. Before them was a
+loom of blackness that stretched from earth to sky, and they wove at
+it with threads of flame. They were splendid and terrible to see.
+Their hair streamed behind them like meteor flames, their eyes shone
+like lightning, and their breasts gleamed like the polished bucklers
+of the gods. They wove fiercely at the loom of blackness, and as they
+wove they sang. The voice of the one was as the wind whistling through
+the pines; the voice of the other was as the sound of rain hissing on
+deep waters; and the voice of the third was as the moan of the sea.
+They wove fearfully and they sang loudly, but what they sang might not
+be known. Now the web grew and the woof grew, and a picture came upon
+the loom--a great picture written in fire.
+
+Behold! it was the semblance of a storm-awakened sea, and a giant ship
+fled before the gale--a dragon of war, and in the ship were piled the
+corses of men, and on these lay another corse, as one lies upon a bed.
+They looked, and the face of the corse grew bright. It was the face of
+Eric, and his head rested upon the dead heart of Skallagrim.
+
+Clinging to each other, Eric and Skallagrim saw the sight of fear that
+was written on the loom of the Norns. They saw it for a breath. Then,
+with a laugh like the wail of wolves, the shapes of fire sprang up and
+rent the web asunder. Then the first passed upward to the sky, the
+second southward towards Middalhof, but the third swept over Mosfell,
+so that the brightness of her flaming form shone on the rock where
+they sat by the cave, and the lightning of her eyes was mirrored in
+the byrnie of Skallagrim and on Eric's golden helm. She swept past,
+pointing downwards as she went, and lo! she was gone, and once more
+darkness and silence lay upon the earth.
+
+Now this sight was seen of Jon the thrall also, and he told it in his
+story of the deeds of Eric. For Jon lay hid in a secret place on
+Mosfell, waiting for tidings of what came to pass.
+
+
+
+For a while Eric and Skallagrim clung to each other. Then Skallagrim
+spoke.
+
+"We have seen the Valkyries," he said.
+
+"Nay," answered Eric, "we have seen the Norns--who are come to warn us
+of our doom! We shall die to-morrow."
+
+"At the least," said Skallagrim, "we shall not die alone: we had a
+goodly bed on yonder goblin ship, and all of our own slaying methinks.
+It is not so ill to die thus, lord!"
+
+"Not so ill!" said Eric; "and yet I am weary of blood and war, of
+glory and of my strength. Now I desire rest alone. Light fire--I can
+bear this darkness no longer; the marrow freezes in my bones."
+
+"Fire can be seen of foes," said Skallagrim.
+
+"It matters little now," said Eric, "we are feyfolk."
+
+So Skallagrim lighted the fire, piling much brushwood and dry turf
+over it, till presently it burnt up brightly, throwing light on all
+the space of rock, and heavy shadows against the cliff behind. They
+sat thus a while in the light of the flames, looking towards the deep
+gulf, till suddenly there came a sound as of one who climbed the gulf.
+
+"Who comes now, climbing where no man may pass?" cried Eric, seizing
+Whitefire and springing to his feet. Presently he sank down again with
+white face and staring eyes, and pointed at the edge of the cliff. And
+as he pointed, the neck of a man rose in the shadow above the brink,
+and the hands of a man grasped the rock. But there was no head on the
+neck. The shape of the headless man drew itself slowly over the brink,
+it walked slowly into the light towards the fire, then sat itself down
+in the glare of the flames, which shrank away from it as from a
+draught of wind. Pale with terror, Eric and Skallagrim looked on the
+headless thing and knew it. It was the wraith of the Baresark that
+Brighteyes had slain--the first of all the men he slew.
+
+"It is my mate, Eric, whom thou didst kill years ago and whose severed
+head spoke with thee!" gasped Skallagrim.
+
+"It is he, sure enough!" said Eric; "but where may his head be?"
+
+"Perchance the head will come," answered Skallagrim. "He is an evil
+sight to see, surely. Say, lord, shall I fall upon him, though I love
+not the task?"
+
+"Nay, Skallagrim, let him bide; he does but come to warn us of our
+fate. Moreover, ghosts can only be laid in one way--by the hewing off
+of the head and the laying of it at the thigh. But this one has no
+head to hew."
+
+Now as he spoke the headless man turned his neck as though to look.
+Once more there came the sound of feet and lo! men marched in from the
+darkness on either side. Eric and Skallagrim looked up and knew them.
+They were those of Ospakar's folk whom they had slain on Horse-Head
+Heights; all their wounds were on them and in front of them marched
+Mord, Ospakar's son. The ghosts gazed upon Eric and Skallagrim with
+cold dead eyes, then they too sat down by the fire. Now once more
+there came the sound of feet, and from every side men poured in who
+had died at the hands of Eric and Skallagrim. First came those who
+fell on that ship of Ospakar's which Eric sank by Westmans; then the
+crew of the Raven who had perished upon the sea-path. Even as the man
+died, so did each ghost come. Some had been drowned and their harness
+dripped water! Some had died of spear-thrusts and the spears were yet
+fixed in their breasts! Some had fallen beneath the flash of Whitefire
+and the weight of the axe of Skallagrim, and there they sat, looking
+on their wide wounds!
+
+Then came more and more. There were those whom Eric and Skallagrim had
+slain upon the seas, those who had fallen before them in the English
+wars, and all that company who had been drowned in the waters of the
+Pentland Firth when the witchcraft of Swanhild had brought the Gudruda
+to her wreck.
+
+"Now here we have a goodly crew," said Eric at length. "Is it done,
+thinkest thou, or will Mosfell send forth more dead?"
+
+As he spoke the wraith of a grey-headed man drew near. He had but one
+arm, for the other was hewn from him, and the byrnie on his left side
+was red with blood.
+
+"Welcome, Earl Atli!" cried Eric. "Sit thou over against me, who
+to-morrow shall be with thee."
+
+The ghost of the Earl seated itself and looked on Eric with sad eyes,
+but it spake never a word.
+
+Then came another company, and at their head stalked black Ospakar.
+
+"These be they who died at Middalhof," cried Eric. "Welcome, Ospakar!
+that marriage-feast of thine went ill!"
+
+"Now methinks we are overdone with trolls," said Skallagrim; "but see!
+here come more."
+
+As he spoke, Hall of Lithdale came, and with him Koll the Half-witted,
+and others. And so it went on till all the men whom Eric and
+Skallagrim had slain, or who had died because of them, or at their
+side, were gathered in deep ranks before them.
+
+"Now it is surely done," said Eric.
+
+"There is yet a space," said Skallagrim, pointing to the other side of
+the fire, "and Hell holds many dead."
+
+Even as the words left his lips there came a noise of the galloping of
+horse's hoofs, and one clad in white rode up. It was a woman, for her
+golden hair flowed down about her white arms. Then she slid from the
+horse and stood in the light of the fire, and behold! her white robe
+was red with blood, a great sword was set in her heart, and the face
+and eyes were the face and eyes of Gudruda the Fair, and the horse she
+rode was Blackmane, that Eric had slain.
+
+Now when Brighteyes saw her he gave a great cry.
+
+"Greeting, sweet!" he said. "I am no longer afraid, since thou comest
+to bear me company. Thou art dear to my sight--ay even in yon death-
+sheet. Greeting, sweet, my May! I laid thee stiff and cold in the
+earth at Middalhof, but, like a loving wife, thou hast burst thy
+bonds, and art come to save me from the grip of trolls. Thou art
+welcome, Gudruda, Asmund's daughter! Come, wife, sit thou at my side."
+
+The ghost of Gudruda spake no word. She walked through the fire
+towards him, and the flames went out beneath her feet, to burn up
+again when she had passed. Then she sat down over against Eric and
+looked on him with wide and tender eyes. Thrice he stretched out his
+arms to clasp her, but thrice their strength left them and they fell
+back to his side. It was as though they struck a wall of ice and were
+numbed by the bitter cold.
+
+"Look, here are more," groaned Skallagrim.
+
+Then Eric looked, and lo! the empty space to the left of the fire was
+filled with shadowy shapes like shapes of mist. Amongst them was
+Gizur, Ospakar's son, and many a man of his company. There, too, was
+Swanhild, Groa's daughter, and a toad nestled in her breast. She
+looked with wide eyes upon the eyes of dead Gudruda's ghost, that
+seemed not to see her, and a stare of fear was set on her lovely face.
+Nor was this all; for there, before that shadowy throng, stood two
+great shapes clad in their harness, and one was the shape of Eric and
+one the shape of Skallagrim.
+
+Thus, being yet alive, did these two look upon their own wraiths!
+
+Then Eric and Skallagrim cried out aloud and their brains swam and
+their senses left them, so that they swooned.
+
+
+
+When they opened their eyes and life came back to them the fire was
+dead, and it was day. Nor was there any sign of that company which had
+been gathered on the rock before them.
+
+"Skallagrim," quoth Eric, "it seems that I have dreamed a strange
+dream--a most strange dream of Norns and trolls!"
+
+"Tell me thy dream, lord," said Skallagrim.
+
+So Eric told all the vision, and the Baresark listened in silence.
+
+"It was no dream, lord," said Skallagrim, "for I myself have seen the
+same things. Now this is in my mind, that yonder sun is the last that
+we shall see, for we have beheld the death-shadows. All those who were
+gathered here last night wait to welcome us on Bifrost Bridge. And the
+mist-shapes who sat there, amongst whom our wraiths were numbered, are
+the shapes of those who shall die in the great fight to-day. For days
+are fled and we are sped!"
+
+"I would not have it otherwise," said Eric. "We have been greatly
+honoured of the Gods, and of the ghost-kind that are around us and
+above us. Now let us make ready to die as becomes men who have never
+turned back to blow, for the end of the story should fit the
+beginning, and of us there is a tale to tell."
+
+"A good word, lord," answered Skallagrim: "I have struck few strokes
+to be shamed of, and I do not fear to tread Bifrost Bridge in thy
+company. Now we will wash ourselves and eat, so that our strength may
+be whole in us."
+
+So they washed themselves with water, and ate merrily, and for the
+first time for many months Eric was merry. For now that the end was at
+hand his heart grew light within him. And when they had put the desire
+of food from them, and buckled on their harness, they looked out from
+their mountain height, and saw a cloud of dust rise in the desert
+plain of black sand beneath, and through it the sheen of spears.
+
+"Here come those of whom, if there is truth in visions, some few shall
+never go back again," said Eric. "Now, what counsel hast thou,
+Skallagrim? Where shall we meet them? Here on the space of rock, or
+yonder in the deep way of the cliff?"
+
+"My counsel is that we meet them here," said Skallagrim, "and cut them
+down one by one as they try to turn the rock. They can scarcely come
+at us to slay us here so long as our arms have strength to smite."
+
+"Yet they will come, though I know not how," answered Eric, "for I am
+sure of this, that our death lies before us. Here, then, we will meet
+them."
+
+Now the cloud of dust drew nearer, and they saw that this was a great
+company which came up against them. At the foot of the fell the men
+stayed and rested a while, and it was not till afternoon that they
+began to climb the mountain.
+
+"Night will be at hand before the game is played," said Skallagrim.
+"See, they climb slowly, saving their strength, and yonder among them
+is Swanhild in a purple cloak."
+
+"Ay, night will be at hand, Skallagrim--a last long night! A hundred
+to two--the odds are heavy; yet some shall wish them heavier. Now let
+us bind on our helms."
+
+
+
+Meanwhile Gizur and his folk crept up the paths from below. Now that
+thrall who knew the secret way had gone on with six chosen men, and
+already they climbed the watercourse and drew near to the flat crest
+of the fell. But Eric and Skallagrim knew nothing of this. So they sat
+down by the turning place that is over the gulf and waited, singing of
+the taking of the Raven and of the slaying in the stead at Middalhof,
+and telling tales of deeds that they had done. And the thrall and his
+six men climbed on till at length they gained the crest of the fell,
+and, looking over, saw Eric and Skallagrim beneath them.
+
+"The birds are in the snare, and hark! they sing," said the thrall;
+"now bring rocks and be silent."
+
+But Gizur and his people, having learned that Eric and Skallagrim were
+alone upon the mountain, pushed on.
+
+"We have not much to fear from two men," said Gizur.
+
+"That we shall learn presently," answered Swanhild. "I tell thee this,
+that I saw strange sights last night, though I did not sleep. I may
+sleep little now that Gudruda is dead, for that which I saw in her
+eyes haunts me."
+
+Then they went on, and the face of Gizur grew white with fear.
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+HOW ERIC AND SKALLAGRIM FOUGHT THEIR LAST GREAT FIGHT
+
+Now the thrall and those with him on the crest of the fell heard the
+murmur of the company of Gizur and Swanhild as they won the mountain
+side, though they could not see them because of the rocks.
+
+"Now it is time to begin and knock these birds from their perch," said
+the thrall, "for that is an awkward corner for our folk to turn with
+Whitefire and the axe of Skallagrim waiting on the farther side."
+
+So he balanced a great stone, as heavy as three men could lift, on the
+brow of the rock, and aimed it. Then he pushed and let it go. It smote
+the platform beneath with a crash, two fathoms behind the spot where
+Eric and Skallagrim sat. Then it flew into the air, and, just as
+Brighteyes turned at the sound, it struck the wings of his helm, and,
+bursting the straps, tore the golden helm-piece from his head and
+carried it away into the gulf beneath.
+
+Skallagrim looked up and saw what had come about.
+
+"They have gained the crest of the fell," he cried. "Now we must fly
+into the cave or down the narrow way and hold it."
+
+"Down the narrow way, then," said Eric, and while rocks, spears and
+arrows rushed between and around them, they stepped on to the stone
+and won the path beyond. It was clear, for Gizur's folk had not yet
+come, and they ran nearly to the mouth of it, where there was a bend
+in the way, and stood there side by side.
+
+"Thou wast at death's door then, lord!" said Skallagrim.
+
+"Head-piece is not head," answered Eric; "but I wonder how they won
+the crest of the fell. I have never heard tell of any path by which it
+might be gained."
+
+"There they are at the least," said Skallagrim. "Now this is my will,
+that thou shouldst take my helm. I am Baresark and put little trust in
+harness, but rather in my axe and strength alone."
+
+"I will not do that," said Eric. "Listen: I hear them come."
+
+Presently the tumult of voices and the tramp of feet grew clearer, and
+after a while Gizur, Swanhild, and the men of their following turned
+the corner of the narrow way, and lo! there before them--ay within
+three paces of them--stood Eric and Skallagrim shoulder to shoulder,
+and the light poured down upon them from above.
+
+They were terrible to see, and the light shone brightly on Eric's
+golden hair and Whitefire's flashing blade, and the shadows lay dark
+on the black helm of Skallagrim and in the fierce black eyes beneath.
+
+Back surged Gizur and those with him. Skallagrim would have sprung
+upon them, but Eric caught him by the arm, saying: "A truce to thy
+Baresark ways. Rush not and move not! Let us stand here till they
+overwhelm us."
+
+Now those behind Gizur cried out to know what ailed them that they
+pushed back.
+
+"Only this," said Gizur, "that Eric Brighteyes and Skallagrim
+Lambstail stand like two grey wolves and hold the narrow way."
+
+"Now we shall have fighting worth the telling of," quoth Ketel the
+viking. "On, Gizur, Ospakar's son, and cut them down!"
+
+"Hold!" said Swanhild; "I will speak with Eric first," and, together
+with Gizur and Ketel, she passed round the corner of the path and came
+face to face with those who stood at bay there.
+
+"Now yield, Eric," she cried. "Foes are behind and before thee. Thou
+art trapped, and hast little chance of life. Yield thee, I say, with
+thy black wolf-hound, so perchance thou mayest find mercy even at the
+hands of her whose husband thou didst wrong and slay."
+
+"It is not my way to yield, lady," answered Eric, "and still less
+perchance is it the way of Skallagrim. Least of all will we yield to
+thee who, after working many ills, didst throw me in a witch-sleep,
+and to him who slew the wife sleeping at my side. Hearken, Swanhild:
+here we stand, awaiting death, nor will we take mercy from thy hand.
+For know this, we shall not die alone. Last night as we sat on Mosfell
+we saw the Norns weave our web of fate upon their loom of darkness.
+They sat on Helca's dome and wove their pictures in living flame, then
+rent the web and flew upward and southward and westward, crying our
+doom to sky and earth and sea. Last night as we sat by the fire on
+Mosfell all the company of the dead were gathered round us--ay! and
+all the company of those who shall die to-day. Thou wast there, Gizur
+the murderer, Ospakar's son! thou wast there, Swanhild the witch,
+Groa's daughter! thou wast there, Ketel Viking! with many another man;
+and there were we two also. Valkyries have kissed us and death draws
+near. Therefore, talk no more, but come and make an end. Greeting,
+Gizur, thou woman-murderer! Draw nigh! draw nigh! Out sword! up
+shield! and on, thou son of Ospakar!"
+
+Swanhild spoke no more, and Gizur had no word.
+
+"On, Gizur! Eric calls thee," quoth Ketel Viking; but Gizur slunk
+back, not forward.
+
+Then Ketel grew mad with rage and shame. He called to the men, and
+they drew near, as many as might, and looked doubtfully at the pair
+who stood before them like rocks upon a plain. Eric laughed aloud and
+Skallagrim gnawed the edge of his shield. Eric laughed aloud and the
+sound of his laughter ran up the rocks.
+
+"We are but two," he cried, "and ye are many! Is there never a pair
+among you will stand face to face with a Baresark and a helmless man?"
+and he tossed Whitefire high into the air and caught it by the hilt.
+
+Then Ketel and another man of his following sprang forward with an
+oath, and their axes thundered loud on the shields of Eric and of
+Skallagrim. But Whitefire flickered up and the axe of Skallagrim
+crashed, and at once their knees were loosened, so that they sank down
+dead.
+
+"More men! more men!" cried Eric. "These were brave, but their might
+was little. More men for the Grey Wolf's maw!"
+
+Then Swanhild lashed the folk with bitter words, and two of them
+sprang on. They sprang on like hounds upon a deer at bay, and they
+rolled back as gored hounds roll from the deer's horns.
+
+"More men! more men!" cried Eric. "Here lie but four and a hundred
+press behind. Now he shall win great honour who lays Brighteyes low
+and brings down the helm of Skallagrim."
+
+Again two came on, but they found no luck, for presently they also
+were down upon the bodies of those who went before. Now none could be
+found to come up against the pair, for they fought like Baldur and
+Thor, and none could touch them, and no harness might withstand the
+weight of their blows that shore through shield and helm and byrnie,
+deep to the bone beneath. Then Eric and Skallagrim leaned upon their
+weapons and mocked their foes, while these cursed and tore their
+beards with rage and shame.
+
+Now it is to be told that when the thrall and those with him saw Eric
+and Skallagrim had escaped their rocks and spears, they took counsel,
+and the end of it was that they slid down a rope to the platform that
+is under the crest of the fell. Thence, though they could see nothing,
+they could hear the clang of blows and the shouts of those who fought
+and fell--ay! and the mocking of Eric and of Skallagrim.
+
+"Now it goes thus," said the thrall, who was a cunning man: "Eric and
+Skallagrim hold the narrow way and none can stand against them. This,
+then, is my rede: that we turn the rock and take them in the back."
+
+His fellows thought this a good saying, and one by one they stood upon
+the little rock and won the narrow way. They crept along this till
+they were near to Eric and Skallagrim. Now Swanhild, looking up, saw
+them and started. Skallagrim noted this and glanced over his shoulder,
+and that not too soon, for, as he looked, the thrall lifted sword to
+smite the head of Eric.
+
+With a shout of "Back to back!" the Baresark swung round and ere ever
+the sword might fall his axe was buried deep in the thrall's breast.
+
+"Now we must cut our path through them," said Skallagrim, "and, if it
+may be, win the space that is before the cave. Keep them off in front,
+and I will mind these mannikins."
+
+Now Gizur's folk, seeing what had come about, took heart and fell upon
+Eric with a rush, and those who were with the dead thrall rushed at
+Skallagrim, and there began such a fight as has not been known in
+Iceland. But the way was so narrow that scarce more than one man could
+come to each of them at a time. And so fierce and true were the blows
+of Eric and Skallagrim that of those who came on few went back. Down
+they fell, and where they fell they died, and for every man who died
+Eric and Skallagrim won a pace towards the point of rock. Whitefire
+flamed so swift and swept so wide that it seemed to Swanhild,
+watching, as though three swords were aloft at once, and the axe of
+Skallagrim thundered down like the axe of a woodman against a tree,
+and those groaned on whom it fell as groans a falling tree. Now the
+shields of these twain were hewn through and through, and cast away,
+and their blood ran from many wounds. Still, their life was whole in
+them and they plied axe and sword with both hands. And ever men fell,
+and ever, fighting hard, they drew nearer to the point of rock.
+
+Now it was won, and now all the company that came with the thrall from
+over the mountain brow were dead or sorely wounded at the hands of
+black Skallagrim. Lo! one springs on Eric, and Gizur creeps behind
+him. Whitefire leaps to meet the man and does not leap in vain; but
+Gizur smites a coward blow at Eric's uncovered head, and wounds him
+sorely, so that he falls to his knee.
+
+"Now I am smitten to the death, Skallagrim," cries Eric. "Win the rock
+and leave me." Yet he rises from his knee.
+
+Then Skallagrim turns, red with blood and terrible to see.
+
+"'Tis but a scratch. Climb thou the rock--I follow," he says, and,
+screaming like a horse, with weapon aloft he leaps alone upon the foe.
+They break before the Baresark rush; they break, they fall--they are
+cloven by Baresark axe and trodden of Baresark feet! They roll back,
+leaving the way clear--save for the dead. Then Skallagrim follows
+Brighteyes to the rock.
+
+Now Eric wipes the gore from his eyes and sees. Then, slowly, and with
+a reeling brain, he steps down upon the giddy point. He goes near to
+falling, yet does not fall, for now he lies upon the open space, and
+creeps on hands and knees to the rock-wall that is by the cave, and
+sits resting his back against it, Whitefire on his knee.
+
+Before he is there, Skallagrim staggers to his side with a rush.
+
+"Now we have time to breathe, lord," he gasps. "See, here is water,"
+and he takes a pitcher that stands by, and gives Eric to drink from
+the pool, then drinks himself and pours the rest of the water on
+Eric's wound. Then new life comes to them, and they both stand on
+their feet and win back their breath.
+
+"We have not done so badly!" says Skallagrim, "and we are still a
+match for one or two. See, they come! Say, where shall we meet them,
+lord?"
+
+"Here," quoth Eric; "I cannot stand well upon my legs without the help
+of the rock. Now I am all unmeet for fight."
+
+"Yet shall this last stand of thine be sung of!" says Skallagrim.
+
+Now finding none to stay them, the men of Gizur climb one by one upon
+the rock and win the space that is beyond. Swanhild goes first of all,
+because she knows well that Eric will not harm her, and after her come
+Gizur and the others. But many do not come, for they will lift sword
+no more.
+
+Now Swanhild draws near and looks on Eric and mocks him in the
+fierceness of her heart and the rage of her wolf-love.
+
+"Now," she says, "now are Brighteyes dim eyes! What! weepest thou,
+Eric?"
+
+"Ay, Swanhild," he answered, "I weep tears of blood for those whom
+thou hast brought to doom."
+
+She draws nearer and speaks low to him: "Hearken, Eric. Yield thee!
+Thou hast done enough for honour, and thou art not smitten to the
+death of yonder cowardly hound. Yield and I will nurse thee back to
+health and bear thee hence, and together we will forget our hates and
+woes."
+
+"Not twice may a man lie in a witch's bed," said Eric, "and my troth
+is plighted to other than thee, Swanhild."
+
+"She is dead," says Swanhild.
+
+"Yes, she is dead, Swanhild; and I go to seek her amongst the dead--I
+go to seek her and to find her!"
+
+But the face of Swanhild grew fierce as the winter sea.
+
+"Thou hast put me away for the last time, Eric! Now thou shalt die, as
+I have promised thee and as I promised Gudruda the Fair!"
+
+"So shall I the more quickly find Gudruda and lose sight of thy evil
+face, Swanhild the harlot! Swanhild the murderess! Swanhild the witch!
+For I know this: thou shalt not escape!--thy doom draws on also!--and
+haunted and accursed shalt thou be for ever! Fare thee well, Swanhild;
+we shall meet no more, and the hour comes when thou shalt grieve that
+thou wast ever born!"
+
+Now Swanhild turned and called to the folk: "Come, cut down these
+outlaw rogues and make an end. Come, cut them down, for night draws
+on."
+
+Then once more the men of Gizur closed in upon them. Eric smote thrice
+and thrice the blow went home, then he could smite no more, for his
+strength was spent with toil and wounds, and he sank upon the ground.
+For a while Skallagrim stood over him like a she-bear o'er her young
+and held the mob at bay. Then Gizur, watching, cast a spear at Eric.
+It entered his side through a cleft in his byrnie and pierced him
+deep.
+
+"I am sped, Skallagrim Lambstail," cried Eric in a loud voice, and all
+men drew back to see giant Brighteyes die. Now his head fell against
+the rock and his eyes closed.
+
+Then Skallagrim, stooping, drew out the spear and kissed Eric on the
+forehead.
+
+"Farewell, Eric Brighteyes!" he said. "Iceland shall never see such
+another man, and few have died so great a death. Tarry a while, lord;
+tarry a while--I come--I come!"
+
+Then crying "/Eric! Eric!/" the Baresark fit took him, and once more
+and for the last time Skallagrim rushed screaming upon the foe, and
+once more they rolled to earth before him. To and fro he rushed,
+dealing great blows, and ever as he went they stabbed and cut and
+thrust at his side and back, for they dared not stand before him, till
+he bled from a hundred wounds. Now, having slain three more men, and
+wounded two others, Skallagrim might no more. He stood a moment
+swaying to and fro, then let his axe drop, threw his arms high above
+him, and with one loud cry of "/Eric!/" fell as a rock falls--dead
+upon the dead.
+
+But Eric was not yet gone. He opened his eyes and saw the death of
+Skallagrim and smiled.
+
+"Well ended, Lambstail!" he said in a faint voice.
+
+"Lo!" cried Gizur, "yon outlawed hound still lives! Now I will do a
+needful task and make an end of him, and so shall Ospakar's sword come
+back to Ospakar's son."
+
+"Thou art wondrous brave now that the bear lies dying!" said Swanhild.
+
+Now it seemed that Eric heard the words, for suddenly his might came
+back to him, and he staggered to his knees and thence to his feet.
+Then, as folk fall from him, with all his strength he whirls Whitefire
+round his head till it shines like a wheel of fire. "Thy service is
+done and thou art clean of Gudruda's blood--go back to those who
+forged thee!" Brighteyes cries, and casts Whitefire from him towards
+the gulf.
+
+Away speeds the great blade, flashing like lightning through the rays
+of the setting sun, and behold! as men watch it is gone--gone in mid-
+air!
+
+Since that day no such sword as Whitefire has been known in Iceland.
+
+"Now slay thou me, Gizur," says the dying Eric.
+
+Gizur comes on with little eagerness, and Eric cries aloud:
+
+"Swordless I slew thy father!--swordless, shieldless, and wounded to
+the death I will yet slay /thee/, Gizur the Murderer!" and with a loud
+cry he staggered towards him.
+
+Gizur smites him with his sword, but Eric does not stay, and while men
+wait and wonder, Brighteyes sweeps him into his great arms--ay, sweeps
+him up, lifts him from the ground and reels on.
+
+Eric reels on to the brink of the gulf. Gizur sees his purpose,
+struggles and shrieks aloud. But the strength of the dying Eric is
+more than the strength of Gizur. Now Brighteyes stands on the dizzy
+edge and the light of the passing sun flames about his head. And now,
+bearing Gizur with him, he hurls himself out into the gulf, and lo!
+the sun sinks!
+
+Men stand wondering, but Swanhild cries aloud:
+
+"Nobly done, Eric! nobly done! So I would have seen thee die who of
+all men wast the first!"
+
+
+
+This then was the end of Eric Brighteyes the Unlucky, who of all
+warriors that have lived in Iceland was the mightiest, the goodliest,
+and the best beloved of women and of those who clung to him.
+
+Now, on the morrow, Swanhild caused the body of Eric to be searched
+for in the cleft, and there they found it, floating in water and with
+the dead Gizur yet clasped in its bear-grip. Then she cleansed it and
+clothed it again in its rent armour, and bound on the Hell-shoes, and
+it was carried on horses to the sea-side, and with it were borne the
+bodies of Skallagrim Lambstail the Baresark, Eric's thrall, and of all
+those men whom they had slain in the last great fight on Mosfell, that
+is now named Ericsfell.
+
+Then Swanhild drew her long dragon of war, in which she had come from
+Orkneys, from its shed over against Westman Isles, and in the centre
+of the ship, she piled the bodies of the slain in the shape of a bed,
+and lashed them fast. And on this bed she laid the corpse of Eric
+Brighteyes, and the breast of black Skallagrim the Baresark was his
+pillow, and the breast of Gizur, Ospakar's son, was his foot-rest.
+
+Then she caused the sails to be hoisted, and went alone aboard the
+long ship, the rails of which were hung with the shields of the dead
+men.
+
+And when at evening the breeze freshened to a gale that blew from the
+land, she cut the cable with her own hand, and the ship leapt forward
+like a thing alive, and rushed out in the red light of the sunset
+towards the open sea.
+
+Now ever the gale freshened and folk, standing on Westman Heights, saw
+the long ship plunge past, dipping her prow beneath the waves and
+sending the water in a rain of spray over the living Swanhild, over
+the dead Eric and those he lay upon.
+
+And by the head of Eric Brighteyes, her hair streaming on the wind,
+stood Swanhild the Witch, clad in her purple cloak, and with rings of
+gold about her throat and arms. She stood by Eric's head, swaying with
+the rush of the ship, and singing so sweet and wild a song that men
+grew weak who heard it.
+
+Now, as the people watched, two white swans came down from the clouds
+and sped on wide wings side by side over the vessel's mast.
+
+The ship rushed on through the glow of sunset into the gathering
+night. On sped the ship, but still Swanhild sung, and still the swans
+flew over her.
+
+The gale grew fierce, and fiercer yet. The darkness gathered deep upon
+the raging sea.
+
+Now that ship was seen no more, and the death-song of Swanhild as she
+passed to doom was never heard again.
+
+For swans and ship, and Swanhild, and dead Eric and his dead foes,
+were lost in the wind and the night.
+
+But far out on the sea a great flame of fire leapt up towards the sky.
+
+
+
+Now this is the tale of Eric Brighteyes, Thorgrimur's son; of Gudruda
+the Fair, Asmund's daughter; of Swanhild the Fatherless, Atli's wife,
+and of Ounound, named Skallagrim Lambstail, the Baresark, Eric's
+thrall, all of whom lived and died before Thangbrand, Wilibald's son,
+preached the White Christ in Iceland.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext of Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard
+
diff --git a/old/ericb10.zip b/old/ericb10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9cc5594
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/ericb10.zip
Binary files differ