Let me begin this lecture with a scene
in the North Atlantic 863 years since.
’Bjarne Grimolfson was blown
with his ship into the Irish Ocean; and there came
worms and the ship began to sink under them.
They had a boat which they had payed with seals’
blubber, for that the sea-worms will not hurt.
But when they got into the boat they saw that it would
not hold them all. Then said Bjarne, “As
the boat will only hold the half of us, my advice
is that we should draw lots who shall go in her; for
that will not be unworthy of our manhood.”
This advice seemed so good that none gainsaid it;
and they drew lots. And the lot fell to Bjarne
that he should go in the boat with half his crew.
But as he got into the boat, there spake an Icelander
who was in the ship and had followed Bjarne from Iceland,
“Art thou going to leave me here, Bjarne?”
Quoth Bjarne, “So it must be.”
Then said the man, “Another thing didst thou
promise my father, when I sailed with thee from Iceland,
than to desert me thus. For thou saidst that
we both should share the same lot.” Bjarne
said, “And that we will not do. Get thou
down into the boat, and I will get up into the ship,
now I see that thou art so greedy after life.”
So Bjarne went up into the ship, and the man down
into the boat; and the boat went on its voyage till
they came to Dublin in Ireland. But most men
say that Bjarne and his comrades perished among the
worms; for they were never heard of after.’
This story may serve as a text for
my whole lecture. Not only does it smack of
the sea-breeze and the salt water like all the finest
old Norse sagas: but it gives a glimpse
at least, of the nobleness which underlay the grim
and often cruel nature of the Norseman. It belongs,
too, to the culminating epoch, to the beginning of
that era when the Scandinavian peoples had their great
times; when the old fierceness of the worshippers
of Thor and Odin was tempered, without being effeminated
by the Faith of the ‘White Christ,’ till
the very men who had been the destroyers of Western
Europe became its civilisers.
It should have, moreover, a special
interest to Americans. For as American
antiquaries are well aware Bjarne was on
his voyage home from the coast of New England; possibly
from that very Mount Hope Bay, which seems to have
borne the same name in the time of those old Norsemen,
as afterwards in the days of King Philip the last
sachem of the Wampanong Indians. He was going
back to Greenland, perhaps for reinforcements, finding,
he and his fellow-captain, Thorfinn, the Esquimaux
who then dwelt in that land too strong for them.
For the Norsemen were then on the very edge of a
discovery, which might have changed the history not
only of this continent but of Europe likewise.
They had found and colonised Iceland and Greenland.
They had found Labrador, and called it Helluland,
from its ice-polished rocks. They had found Nova
Scotia seemingly and called it Markland from its woods.
They had found New England and called it Vinland
the Good. A fair land they found it, well wooded,
with good pasturage; so that they had already imported
cows, and a bull whose lowings terrified the Esquimaux.
They had found self-sown corn too, probably maize.
The streams were full of salmon. But they had
called the land Vinland, by reason of its grapes.
Quaint enough, and bearing in its very quaintness
the stamp of truth, is the story of the first finding
of the wild fox-grapes. How Leif the Fortunate,
almost as soon as he first landed, missed a little
wizened old German servant of his father’s,
Tyrker by name, and was much vexed thereat, for he
had been brought up on the old man’s knee, and
hurrying off to find him met Tyrker coming back twisting
his eyes about a trick of his smacking
his lips and talking German to himself in high excitement.
And when they get him to talk Norse again, he says,
’I have not been far, but I have news for you.
I have found vines and grapes!’ ‘Is that
true, foster-father?’ says Leif. ‘True
it is,’ says the old German, ’for I was
brought up where there was never any lack of them.’
The saga as given by Rafn has
a detailed description of this quaint personage’s
appearance; and it would not be amiss if American
wine-growers should employ an American sculptor and
there are great American sculptors to render
that description into marble, and set up little Tyrker
in some public place, as the Silenus of the New World.
Thus the first cargoes homeward from
Vinland to Greenland had been of timber and of raisins,
and of vine-stocks which were not like to thrive.
And more. Beyond Vinland the
Good there was said to be another land, Whiteman’s
Land or Ireland the Mickle, as some called
it. For these Norse traders from Limerick had
found Ari Marson, and Ketla of Ruykjanes, supposed
to have been long since drowned at sea, and said that
the people had made him and Ketla chiefs, and baptised
Ari. What is all this? and what is this, too,
which the Esquimaux children taken in Markland told
the Northmen, of a land beyond them where the folk
wore white clothes, and carried flags on poles?
Are these all dreams? or was some part of that great
civilisation, the relics whereof your antiquarians
find in so many parts of the United States, still
in existence some 900 years ago; and were these old
Norse cousins of ours upon the very edge of it?
Be that as it may, how nearly did these fierce Vikings,
some of whom seemed to have sailed far south along
the shore, become aware that just beyond them lay
a land of fruits and spices, gold, and gems?
The adverse current of the Gulf Stream, it may be,
would have long prevented their getting past the Bahamas
into the Gulf of Mexico; but, sooner or later, some
storm must have carried a Greenland viking to
San Domingo, or to Cuba; and then, as has been well
said, some Scandinavian dynasty might have sat upon
the throne of Mexico.
These stories are well known to antiquarians.
They may be found, almost all of them, in Professor
Rafn’s Antiquitates Americanae.
The action in them stands out often so clear and dramatic,
that the internal evidence of historic truth is irresistible.
Thorvald, who, when he saw what seems to be, they
say, the bluff head of Alderton at the south-east
end of Boston Bay, said, ‘Here should I like
to dwell,’ and, shot by an Esquimaux arrow,
bade bury him on that place, with a cross at his head
and a cross at his feet, and call the place Cross Ness
for evermore; Gudrida, the magnificent widow, who
wins hearts and sees strange deeds from Iceland to
Greenland, and Greenland to Vinland and back, and at
last, worn out and sad, goes off on a pilgrimage to
Rome; Helgi and Finnbogi, the Norwegians, who, like
our Arctic voyagers in after times, devise all sorts
of sports and games to keep the men in humour during
the long winter at Hope; and last, but not least,
the terrible Freydisa, who when the Norse are seized
with a sudden panic at the Esquimaux, and flee from
them, as they had three weeks before fled from Thorfinn’s
bellowing bull, turns, when so weak that she cannot
escape, single-handed on the savages, and catching
up a slain man’s sword, puts them all to flight
with her fierce visage and fierce cries Freydisa
the Terrible, who, in another voyage, persuades her
husband to fall on Helgi and Finnbogi, when asleep,
and murder them and all their men; and then, when he
will not murder the five women too, takes up an axe
and slays them all herself, and getting back to Greenland,
when the dark and unexplained tale comes out, lives
unpunished, but abhorred henceforth. All these
folks, I say, are no phantoms, but realities; at least,
if I can judge of internal evidence.
But, beyond them, and hovering on
the verge of Mythus and fairy land, there is a ballad
called ‘Finn the Fair,’ and how
An upland Earl had twa braw
sons,
My story
to begin;
The tane was hight Haldane
the strong,
The tither
was winsome Finn.
and so forth; which was still sung,
with other ‘rimur,’ or ballads, in the
Faroes, at the end of the last century. Professor
Rafn has inserted it, because it talks of Vinland
as a well-known place, and because the brothers are
sent by the princess to slay American kings; but that
Rime has another value.
It is of a beauty so perfect, and
yet so like the old Scotch ballads in its heroic conception
of love, and in all its forms and its qualities, that
it is one proof more, to any student of early European
poetry, that we and these old Norsemen are men of
the same blood. Your own Professor Longfellow
may know it far better than I, who am no Norse scholar.
But, if he does, might I beg him to translate it
some day, as none but he can translate? It is
so sad, that no tenderness less exquisite than his
can prevent its being painful; and, at least in its
denouement, so naïve, that no purity less exquisite
than his can prevent its being dreadful. But
the Rime is as worthy of Mr. Longfellow as he is worthy
of the Rime.
If anything more important than is
told by Professor Rafn and Mr. Black be now known
to the antiquarians of Massachussets, let me entreat
them to pardon my ignorance. But let me record
my opinion that, though somewhat too much may have
been made in past years of certain rock-inscriptions,
and so forth, on this side of the Atlantic, there can
be no reasonable doubt that our own race landed and
tried to settle on the shore of New England six hundred
years before their kinsmen, and, in many cases, their
actual descendants, the august Pilgrim Fathers of the
17th century. And so, as I said, a Scandinavian
dynasty might have been seated now upon the throne
of Mexico. And how was that strange chance lost?
First, of course, by the length and danger of the
coasting voyage. It was one thing to have, like
Columbus and Vespucci, Cortes and Pizarro, the Azores
as a half-way port; another to have Greenland, or even
Iceland. It was one thing to run South West upon
Columbus’ track, across the Mar de Damas, the
Ladies Sea, which hardly knows a storm, with the blazing
blue above, the blazing blue below, in an ever-warming
climate, where every breath is life and joy; another
to struggle against the fogs and icebergs, the rocks
and currents, of the dreary North Atlantic. No
wonder, then, that the knowledge of Markland, and Vinland,
and Whiteman’s Land died away in a few generations,
and became but fire-side sagas for the winter
nights.
But there were other causes, more
honourable to the dogged energy of the Norse.
They were in those very years conquering and settling
nearer home as no other people unless,
perhaps, the old Ionian Greeks, conquered and settled.
Greenland, we have seen, they held the
western side at least and held it long
and well enough to afford, it is said, 2,600 pounds
of walrus’ teeth as yearly tithe to the Pope,
besides Peter’s pence, and to build many a convent,
and church, and cathedral, with farms and homesteads
round; for one saga speaks of Greenland as producing
wheat of the finest quality. All is ruined now,
perhaps by gradual change of climate.
But they had richer fields of enterprise
than Greenland, Iceland, and the Faroes. Their
boldest outlaws at that very time whether
from Norway, Sweden, Denmark, or Britain were
forming the imperial life-guard of the Byzantine Emperor,
as the once famous Varangers of Constantinople; and
that splendid epoch of their race was just dawning,
of which my lamented friend, the late Sir Edmund Head,
says so well in his preface to Viga Glum’s
Icelandic Saga, ’The Sagas, of which
this tale is one, were composed for the men who have
left their mark in every corner of Europe; and whose
language and laws are at this moment important elements
in the speech and institutions of England, America,
and Australia. There is no page of modern history
in which the influence of the Norsemen and their conquests
must not be taken into account Russia, Constantinople,
Greece, Palestine, Sicily, the coasts of Africa, Southern
Italy, France, the Spanish Peninsula, England, Scotland,
Ireland, and every rock and island round them, have
been visited, and most of them at one time or the other
ruled, by the men of Scandinavia. The motto on
the sword of Roger Guiscard was a proud one:
Appulus et Calaber, Siculus
mihi servit et Afer.’
Every island, says Sir Edmund Head,
and truly for the name of almost every
island on the coast of England, Scotland, and Eastern
Ireland, ends in either ey or ay or
oe, a Norse appellative, as is the word island
itself is a mark of its having been, at
some time or other, visited by the Vikings of Scandinavia.
Norway, meanwhile, was convulsed by
war; and what perhaps was of more immediate consequence,
Svend Fork-beard, whom we Englishmen call Sweyn the
renegade from that Christian Faith which had been forced
on him by his German conqueror, the Emperor Otto II. with
his illustrious son Cnut, whom we call Canute, were
just calling together all the most daring spirits
of the Baltic coasts for the subjugation of England;
and when that great feat was performed, the Scandinavian
emigration was paralysed, probably, for a time by
the fearful wars at home. While the King of
Sweden, and St. Olaf Tryggvason, king of Norway, were
setting on Denmark during Cnut’s pilgrimage
to Rome, and Cnut, sailing with a mighty fleet to
Norway, was driving St. Olaf into Russia, to return
and fall in the fratricidal battle of Stiklestead during,
strangely enough, a total eclipse of the sun Vinland
was like enough to remain still uncolonised.
After Cnut’s short-lived triumph king
as he was of Denmark, Norway, England, and half Scotland,
and what not of Wendish Folk inside the Baltic the
force of the Norsemen seems to have been exhausted
in their native lands. Once more only, if I
remember right, did ‘Lochlin,’ really
and hopefully send forth her ‘mailed swarm’
to conquer a foreign land; and with a result unexpected
alike by them and by their enemies. Had it been
otherwise, we might not have been here this day.
Let me sketch for you once more though
you have heard it, doubtless, many a time the
tale of that tremendous fortnight which settled the
fate of Britain, and therefore of North America; which
decided just in those great times when
the decision was to be made whether we should
be on a par with the other civilised nations of Europe,
like them the ’heirs of all the ages,’
with our share not only of Roman Christianity and Roman
centralisation a member of the great comity
of European nations, held together in one Christian
bond by the Pope but heirs also of Roman
civilisation, Roman literature, Roman law; and therefore,
in due time, of Greek philosophy and art. No
less a question than this, it seems to me, hung in
the balance during that fortnight of autumn, 1066.
Poor old Edward the Confessor, holy,
weak, and sad, lay in his new choir of Westminster where
the wicked ceased from troubling, and the weary were
at rest. The crowned ascetic had left no heir
behind. England seemed as a corpse, to which
all the eagles might gather together; and the South-English,
in their utter need, had chosen for their king the
ablest, and it may be the justest, man in Britain Earl
Harold Godwinsson: himself, like half the upper
classes of England then, of the all-dominant Norse
blood; for his mother was a Danish princess.
Then out of Norway, with a mighty host, came Harold
Hardraade, taller than all men, the ideal Viking of
his time. Half-brother of the now dead St. Olaf,
severely wounded when he was but fifteen, at Stiklestead,
when Olaf fell, he had warred and plundered on many
a coast. He had been away to Russia to King
Jaroslaf; he had been in the Emperor’s Varanger
guard at Constantinople and, it was whispered,
had slain a lion there with his bare hands; he had
carved his name and his comrades’ in Runic characters if
you go to Venice you may see them at this day on
the loins of the great marble lion, which stood in
his time not in Venice but in Athens. And now,
king of Norway and conqueror, for the time, of Denmark,
why should he not take England, as Sweyn and Canute
took it sixty years before, when the flower of the
English gentry perished at the fatal battle of Assingdune?
If he and his half-barbarous host had conquered,
the civilisation of Britain would have been thrown
back, perhaps, for centuries. But it was not
to be.
England was to be conquered
by the Norman; but by the civilised, not the barbaric;
by the Norse who had settled, but four generations
before, in the North East of France under Rou, Rollo,
Rolf the Ganger so-called, they say, because
his legs were so long that, when on horseback, he
touched the ground and seemed to gang, or walk.
He and his Norsemen had taken their share of France,
and called it Normandy to this day; and meanwhile,
with that docility and adaptability which marks so
often truly great spirits, they had changed their
creed, their language, their habits, and had become,
from heathen and murderous Berserkers, the most
truly civilised people of Europe, and as
was most natural then the most faithful
allies and servants of the Pope of Rome. So greatly
had they changed, and so fast, that William Duke of
Normandy, the great-great-grandson of Rolf the wild
Viking, was perhaps the finest gentleman, as well
as the most cultivated sovereign, and the greatest
statesman and warrior, in all Europe.
So Harold of Norway came with all
his Vikings to Stamford Bridge by York; and took,
by coming, only that which Harold of England promised
him, namely, ’forasmuch as he was taller than
any other man, seven feet of English ground.’
The story of that great battle, told
with a few inaccuracies, but told as only great poets
tell, you should read, if you have not read it already,
in the Heimskringla of Snorri Sturluson, the
Homer of the North
High feast that day held the birds of
the air and the beasts of the field, White-tailed
erne and sallow glede, Dusky raven, with horny
neb, And the grey deer, the wolf of the wood.
The bones of the slain, men say, whitened
the place for fifty years to come.
And remember, that on the same day
on which that fight befell Sep, 1066 William,
Duke of Normandy, with all his French-speaking Norsemen,
was sailing across the British Channel, under the protection
of a banner consecrated by the Pope, to conquer that
England which the Norse-speaking Normans could not
conquer.
And now King Harold showed himself
a man. He turned at once from the North of England
to the South. He raised the folk of the Southern,
as he had raised those of the Central and Northern
shires; and in sixteen days after a march
which in those times was a prodigious feat he
was entrenched upon the fatal down which men called
Heathfield then, and Senlac, but Battle to this day with
William and his French Normans opposite him on Telham
hill.
Then came the battle of Hastings.
You all know what befell upon that day; and how the
old weapon was matched against the new the
English axe against the Norman lance and
beaten only because the English broke their ranks.
If you wish to refresh your memories, read the tale
once more in Mr. Freeman’s History of England,
or Prof. Creasy’s Fifteen Decisive Battles
of the World, or even, best of all, the late Lord
Lytton’s splendid romance of Harold.
And when you go to England, go, as some of you may
have gone already, to Battle; and there from off the
Abbey grounds, or from Mountjoy behind, look down
off what was then ’The Heathy Field,’
over the long slopes of green pasture and the rich
hop-gardens, where were no hop-gardens then, and the
flat tide-marshes winding between the wooded heights,
towards the southern sea; and imagine for yourselves
the feelings of an Englishman as he contemplates that
broad green sloping lawn, on which was decided the
destiny of his native land. Here, right beneath,
rode Taillefer up the slope before them all, singing
the song of Roland, tossing his lance in air and catching
it as it fell, with all the Norse berserker spirit
of his ancestors flashing out in him, at the thought
of one fair fight, and then purgatory, or Valhalla Taillefer
perhaps preferred the latter. Yonder on the left,
in that copse where the red-ochre gully runs, is Sanguelac,
the drain of blood, into which (as the Bayeux tapestry,
woven by Matilda’s maids, still shows) the Norman
knights fell, horse and man, till the gully was bridged
with writhing bodies for those who rode after.
Here, where you stand the crest of the
hill marks where it must have been was the
stockade on which depended the fate of England.
Yonder, perhaps, stalked out one English squire or
house-carle after another: tall men with long-handled
battle-axes one specially terrible, with
a wooden helmet which no sword could pierce who
hewed and hewed down knight on knight, till they themselves
were borne to earth at last. And here, among
the trees and ruins of the garden, kept trim by those
who know the treasure which they own, stood Harold’s
two standards of the fighting man and the dragon of
Wessex. And here, close by (for here, for many
a century, stood the high altar of Battle Abbey, where
monks sang masses for Harold’s soul), upon this
very spot the Swan-neck found her hero lover’s
corpse. ‘Ah,’ says many an Englishman and
who will blame him for it ’how grand
to have died beneath that standard on that day!’
Yes, and how right. And yet how right, likewise,
that the Norman’s cry of Dexaie, ‘God Help,’
and not the English hurrah, should have won that day,
till William rode up Mountjoye in the afternoon to
see the English army, terrible even in defeat, struggling
through copse and marsh away toward Brede, and, like
retreating lions driven into their native woods, slaying
more in the pursuit than they slew even in the fight.
But so it was to be; for so it ought
to have been. You, my American friends, delight,
as I have said already, in seeing the old places of
the old country. Go, I beg you, and look at
that old place, and if you be wise, you will carry
back from it one lesson: that God’s thoughts
are not as our thoughts; nor His ways as our ways.
It was a fearful time which followed.
I cannot but believe that our forefathers had been,
in some way or other, great sinners, or two such conquests
as Canute’s and William’s would not have
fallen on them within the short space of sixty years.
They did not want for courage, as Stanford Brigg
and Hastings showed full well. English swine,
their Norman conquerors called them often enough;
but never English cowards. Their ruinous vice,
if we are to trust the records of the time, was what
the old monks called accidia [Greek
text] and ranked it as one of the seven
deadly sins: a general careless, sleepy, comfortable
habit of mind, which lets all go its way for good
or evil a habit of mind too often accompanied,
as in the case of the Anglo-Danes, with self-indulgence,
often coarse enough. Huge eaters and huger drinkers,
fuddled with ale, were the men who went down at Hastings though
they went down like heroes before the staid
and sober Norman out of France.
But those were fearful times.
As long as William lived, ruthless as he was to all
rebels, he kept order and did justice with a strong
and steady hand; for he brought with him from Normandy
the instincts of a truly great statesman. And
in his sons’ time matters grew worse and worse.
After that, in the troubles of Stephen’s reign,
anarchy let loose tyranny in its most fearful form,
and things were done which recall the cruelties of
the old Spanish conquistadores in America. Scott’s
charming romance of Ivanhoe must be taken,
I fear, as a too true picture of English society in
the time of Richard I.
And what came of it all? What
was the result of all this misery and wrong?
This, paradoxical as it may seem that
the Norman conquest was the making of the English
people; of the Free Commons of England.
Paradoxical, but true. First,
you must dismiss from your minds the too common notion
that there is now, in England a governing Norman aristocracy,
or that there has been one, at least since the year
1215, when Magna Charta was won from the Norman John
by Normans and by English alike. For the first
victors at Hastings, like the first conquistadores
in America, perished, as the monk chronicles point
out, rapidly by their own crimes; and very few of
our nobility can trace their names back to the authentic
Battle Abbey roll. The great majority of the
peers have sprung from, and all have intermarried
with, the Commons; and the peerage has been from the
first, and has become more and more as centuries have
rolled on, the prize of success in life.
The cause is plain. The conquest
of England by the Normans was not one of those conquests
of a savage by a civilised race, or of a cowardly race
by a brave race, which results in the slavery of the
conquered, and leaves the gulf of caste between two
races, master and slave. That was the case in
France, and resulted, after centuries of oppression,
in the great and dreadful revolution of 1793, which
convulsed not only France but the whole civilised
world. But caste, thank God, has never existed
in England, since at least the first generation after
the Norman conquest.
The vast majority, all but the whole
population of England, have been always free; and
free, as they are not where caste exists, to change
their occupations. They could intermarry, if
they were able men, into the ranks above them; as
they did sink, if they were unable men, into the ranks
below them. Any man acquainted with the origin
of our English surnames may verify this fact for himself,
by looking at the names of a single parish or a single
street of shops. There, jumbled together, he
will find names marking the noblest Saxon or Angle
blood Kenward or Kenric, Osgood or Osborne,
side by side with Cordery or Banister now
names of farmers in my own parish or other
Norman-French names which may be, like those two last,
in Battle Abbey roll and side by side the
almost ubiquitous Brown, whose ancestor was probably
some Danish or Norwegian housecarle, proud of his
name Biorn the bear, and the ubiquitous Smith or Smythe,
the smiter, whose forefather, whether he now be peasant
or peer, assuredly handled the tongs and hammer at
his own forge. This holds true equally in New
England and in Old. When I search through (as
I delight to do) your New England surnames, I find
the same jumble of names West Saxon, Angle,
Danish, Norman, and French-Norman likewise, many of
primaeval and heathen antiquity, many of high nobility,
all worked together, as at home, to form the Free Commoners
of England.
If any should wish to know more on
this curious and important subject, let me recommend
them to study Ferguson’s Teutonic Name System,
a book from which you will discover that some of our
quaintest, and seemingly most plebeian surnames many
surnames, too, which are extinct in England, but remain
in America are really corruptions of
good old Teutonic names, which our ancestors may have
carried in the German Forest, before an Englishman
set foot on British soil; from which he will rise with
the comfortable feeling that we English-speaking men,
from the highest to the lowest, are literally kinsmen.
Nay, so utterly made up now is the old blood-feud
between Norseman and Englishman, between the descendants
of those who conquered and those who were conquered,
that in the children of our Prince of Wales, after
800 years, the blood of William of Normandy is mingled
with the blood of the very Harold who fell at Hastings.
And so, by the bitter woes which followed the Norman
conquest was the whole population, Dane, Angle, and
Saxon, earl and churl, freeman and slave, crushed
and welded together into one homogeneous mass, made
just and merciful towards each other by the most wholesome
of all teachings, a community of suffering; and if
they had been, as I fear they were, a lazy and a sensual
people, were taught
That life is not as idle ore,
But heated hot with burning
fears,
And bathed in baths of hissing
tears,
And battered with the strokes
of doom
To shape and use.
But how did these wild Vikings become
Christian men? It is a long story. So staunch
a race was sure to be converted only very slowly.
Noble missionaries as Ansgar, Rembert, and Poppo,
had worked for 150 years and more among the heathens
of Denmark. But the patriotism of the Norseman
always recoiled, even though in secret, from the fact
that they were German monks, backed by the authority
of the German emperor; and many a man, like Svend
Fork-beard, father of the great Canute, though he had
the Kaiser himself for godfather, turned heathen once
more, the moment he was free, because his baptism
was the badge of foreign conquest, and neither pope
nor Kaiser should lord it over him, body or soul.
St. Olaf, indeed, forced Christianity on the Norse
at the sword’s point, often by horrid cruelties,
and perished in the attempt. But who forced it
on the Norsemen of Scotland, England, Ireland, Neustria,
Russia, and all the Eastern Baltic? It was absorbed
and in most cases, I believe, gradually and willingly,
as a gospel and good news to hearts worn out with the
storm of their own passions. And whence came
their Christianity? Much of it, as in the case
of the Danes, and still more of the French Normans,
came direct from Rome, the city which, let them defy
its influence as they would, was still the fount of
all theology, as well as of all civilisation.
But I must believe that much of it came from that
mysterious ancient Western Church, the Church of St.
Patric, St. Bridget, St. Columba, which had covered
with rude cells and chapels the rocky islets of the
North Atlantic, even to Iceland itself. Even
to Iceland; for when that island was first discovered,
about A.D. 840, the Norsemen found in an isle, on
the east and west and elsewhere, Irish books and bells
and wooden crosses, and named that island Papey, the
isle of the popes some little colony of
monks, who lived by fishing, and who are said to have
left the land when the Norsemen settled in it.
Let us believe, for it is consonant with reason and
experience, that the sight of those poor monks, plundered
and massacred again and again by the ‘mailed
swarms of Lochlin,’ yet never exterminated, but
springing up again in the same place, ready for fresh
massacre, a sacred plant which God had planted, and
which no rage of man could trample out let
us believe, I say, that that sight taught at last
to the buccaneers of the old world that there was
a purer manliness, a loftier heroism, than the ferocious
self-assertion of the Berserker, even the heroism of
humility, gentleness, self-restraint, self-sacrifice.
That there was a strength which was made perfect
in weakness; a glory, not of the sword but of the
cross. We will believe that that was the lesson
which the Norsemen learnt, after many a wild and bloodstained
voyage, from the monks of Iona or of Derry, which
caused the building of such churches as that which
Sightrys, king of Dublin, raised about the year 1030,
not in the Norse but in the Irish quarter of Dublin:
a sacred token of amity between the new settlers and
the natives on the ground of a common faith.
Let us believe, too, that the influence of woman was
not wanting in the good work that the story
of St. Margaret and Malcolm Canmore was repeated,
though inversely, in the case of many a heathen Scandinavian
jarl, who, marrying the princely daughter of some
Scottish chieftain, found in her creed at last something
more precious than herself; while his brother or his
cousin became, at Dublin or Wexford or Waterford, the
husband of some saffron-robed Irish princess, ‘fair
as an elf,’ as the old saying was; ‘some
maiden of the three transcendent hues,’ of whom
the old book of Linane says
Red as the blood which flowed
from stricken deer,
White as the snow on which
that blood ran down,
Black as the raven who drank
up that blood.
and possibly, as in the
case of Brian Boru’s mother, had given his fair-haired
sister in marriage to some Irish prince, and could
not resist the spell of their new creed, and the spell
too, it may be, of some sister of theirs who had long
given up all thought of earthly marriage to tend the
undying fire of St. Bridget among the consecrated virgins
of Kildare.
I am not drawing from mere imagination.
That such things must have happened, and happened
again and again, is certain to anyone who knows, even
superficially, the documents of that time. And
I doubt not that, in manners as well as in religion,
the Norse were humanised and civilised by their contact
with the Celts, both in Scotland and in Ireland, Both
peoples had valour, intellect, imagination: but
the Celt had that which the burly angular Norse character,
however deep and stately, and however humorous, wanted;
namely, music of nature, tenderness, grace, rapidity,
playfulness; just the qualities, combining with the
Scandinavian (and in Scotland with the Angle) elements
of character which have produced, in Ireland and in
Scotland, two schools of lyric poetry second to none
in the world.
And so they were converted to what
was then a dark and awful creed; a creed of ascetic
self-torture and purgatorial fires for those who escaped
the still more dreadful, because endless, doom of the
rest of the human race. But, because it was
a sad creed, it suited better men, who had, when conscience
reawakened in them, but too good reason to be sad;
and the minsters and cloisters which sprang up over
the whole of Northern Europe, and even beyond it,
along the dreary western shores of Greenland itself,
are the symbols of a splendid repentance for their
own sins and for the sins of their forefathers.
Gudruna herself, of whom I spoke just
now, one of those old Norse heroines who helped to
discover America, though a historic personage, is
a symbolic one likewise, and the pattern of a whole
class. She, too, after many journeys to Iceland,
Greenland, and Winland, goes on a pilgrimage to Rome,
to get, I presume, absolution from the Pope himself
for all the sins of her strange, rich, stormy, wayward
life.
Have you not read many
of you surely have La Motte Fouque’s
Romance of Sintram? It embodies all that
I would say. It is the spiritual drama of that
early middle age; very sad, morbid if you will, but
true to fact. The Lady Verena ought not, perhaps,
to desert her husband, and shut herself up in a cloister.
But so she would have done in those old days.
And who shall judge her harshly for so doing?
When the brutality of the man seems past all cure,
who shall blame the woman if she glides away into
some atmosphere of peace and purity, to pray for him
whom neither warnings nor caresses will amend?
It is a sad book, Sintram. And yet not
too sad. For they were a sad people, those old
Norse forefathers of ours. Their Christianity
was sad; their minsters sad; there are few sadder,
though few grander, buildings than a Norman church.
And yet, perhaps, their Christianity
did not make them sad. It was but the other
and the healthier side of that sadness which they had
as heathens. Read which you will of the old
sagas heathen or half-Christian the
Eyrbiggia, Viga Glum, Burnt Niall, Grettir the
Strong, and, above all, Snorri Sturluson’s Heimskringla
itself and you will see at once how sad
they are. There is, in the old sagas, none
of that enjoyment of life which shines out everywhere
in Greek poetry, even through its deepest tragedies.
Not in complacency with Nature’s beauty, but
in the fierce struggle with her wrath, does the Norseman
feel pleasure. Nature to him was not, as in
Mr. Longfellow’s exquisite poem, the kind
old nurse, to take him on her knee and whisper to him,
ever anew, the story without an end. She was
a weird witch-wife, mother of storm demons and frost
giants, who must be fought with steadily, warily,
wearily, over dreary heaths and snow-capped fells,
and rugged nesses and tossing sounds, and away into
the boundless sea or who could live? till
he got hardened in the fight into ruthlessness of need
and greed. The poor strip of flat strath, ploughed
and re-ploughed again in the short summer days, would
yield no more; or wet harvests spoiled the crops, or
heavy snows starved the cattle. And so the Norseman
launched his ships when the lands were sown in spring,
and went forth to pillage or to trade, as luck would
have, to summerted, as he himself called it; and came
back, if he ever came, in autumn to the women to help
at harvest-time, with blood upon his hand. But
had he staid at home, blood would have been there
still. Three out of four of them had been mixed
up in some man-slaying, or had some blood-feud to
avenge among their own kin.
The whole of Scandinavia, Denmark,
Sweden, Norway, Orkney, and the rest, remind me ever
of that terrible picture of the great Norse painter,
Tiddeman, in which two splendid youths, lashed together,
in true Norse duel fashion by the waist, are hewing
each other to death with the short axe, about some
hot words over their ale. The loss of life, and
that of the most gallant of the young, in those days
must have been enormous. If the vitality of
the race had not been even more enormous, they must
have destroyed each other, as the Red Indians have
done, off the face of the earth. They lived
these Norsemen, not to live they lived to
die. For what cared they? Death what
was death to them! what it was to the Jomsburger Viking,
who, when led out to execution, said to the headsman,
’Die! with all pleasure. We used to question
in Jomsburg whether a man felt when his head was off?
Now I shall know; but if I do, take care, for I shall
smite thee with my knife. And meanwhile, spoil
not this long hair of mine; it is so beautiful.’
But, oh! what waste. What might
not these men have done if they had sought peace,
not war; if they had learned a few centuries sooner
to do justly, and love mercy, and walk humbly with
their God?
And yet one loves them, blood-stained
as they are. Your own poets, men brought up
under circumstances, under ideas the most opposite
to theirs, love them, and cannot help it. And
why? It is not merely for their bold daring,
it is not merely for their stern endurance; nor again
that they had in them that shift and thrift, those
steady and common-sense business habits, which made
their noblest men not ashamed to go on voyages of
merchandise. Nor is it, again, that grim humour humour
as of the modern Scotch which so often
flashes out into an actual jest, but more usually
underlies unspoken all their deeds. Is it not
rather that these men are our forefathers? that their
blood runs in the veins of perhaps three men out of
four in any general assembly, whether in America or
in Britain? Startling as the assertion may be,
I believe it to be strictly true.
Be that as it may, I cannot read the
stories of your western men, the writings of Bret
Harte, or Colonel John Hay, for instance, without
feeling at every turn that there are the old Norse
alive again, beyond the very ocean which they first
crossed, 850 years ago.
Let me try to prove my point, and
end with a story, as I began with one.
It is just 30 years before the Norman
conquest of England, the evening of the battle of
Sticklestead. St. Olaf’s corpse is still
lying unburied on the hillside. The reforming
and Christian king has fallen in the attempt to force
Christianity and despotism on the Conservative and
half-heathen party the free bonders or
yeoman-farmers of Norway. Thormod, his poet, the
man, as his name means, of thunder mood who
has been standing in the ranks, at last has an arrow
in his left side. He breaks off the shaft, and
thus sore wounded goes up, when all is lost, to a farm
where is a great barn full of wounded. One Kimbe
comes, a man out of the opposite or bonder part.
’There is great howling and screaming in there,’
he says. ’King Olaf’s men fought
bravely enough: but it is a shame brisk young
lads cannot bear their wounds. On what side wert
thou in the fight?’ ‘On the best side,’
says the beaten Thormod. Kimbe sees that Thormod
has a gold bracelet on his arm. ’Thou art
surely a king’s man. Give me thy gold
ring and I will hide thee, ere the bonders kill thee.’
Thormod said, ’Take it, if thou
canst get it. I have lost that which is worth
more;’ and he stretched out his left hand, and
Kimbe tried to take it. But Thormod, swinging
his sword, cut off his hand; and it is said Kimbe
behaved no better over his wound than those he had
been blaming.
Then Thormod went into the barn; and
after he had sung his song there in praise of his
dead king, he went into an inner room, where was a
fire, and water warming, and a handsome girl binding
up men’s wounds. And he sat down by the
door; and one said to him ’Why art thou so dead
pale? Why dost thou not call for the leech?’
Then sung Thormod
I am not blooming; and the
fair
And slender maiden loves to
care
For blooming youths.
Few care for me,
With Fenri’s gold meal
I can’t fee;
and so forth, improvising after the old Norse fashion.
Then Thormod got up and went to the
fire, and stood and warmed himself. And the nurse-girl
said to him, ’Go out man, and bring some of the
split-firewood which lies outside the door.’
He went out and brought an armful of wood and threw
it down. Then the nurse-girl looked him in the
face and said, ‘Dreadful pale is this man.
Why art thou so?’ Then sang Thormod
Thou wonderest, sweet bloom,
at me,
A man so hideous to see.
The arrow-drift o’ertook
me, girl,
A fine-ground arrow in the
whirl
Went through me, and I feel
the dart
Sits, lovely lass, too near
my heart.
The girl said, ‘Let me see thy
wound.’ Then Thormod sat down, and the
girl saw his wounds, and that which was in his side,
and saw that there was a piece of iron in it; but
could not tell where it had gone. In a stone
pot she had leeks and other herbs, and boiled them,
and gave the wounded men of it to eat. But Thormod
said, ’Take it away; I have no appetite now
for my broth.’ Then she took a great pair
of tongs and tried to pull out the iron; but the wound
was swelled, and there was too little to lay hold
of. Now said Thormod, ’Cut in so deep that
thou canst get at the iron, and give me the tongs.’
She did as he said. Then took Thormod the gold
bracelet off his hand and gave it the nurse-girl, and
bade her do with it what she liked.
‘It is a good man’s gift,’
said he. ’King Olaf gave me the ring this
morning.’
Then Thormod took the tongs and pulled
the iron out. But on the iron was a barb, on
which hung flesh from the heart, some red, some white.
When he saw that, he said, ’The king has fed
us well. I am fat, even to the heart’s
roots.’ And so leant back and was dead.
I shall not insult your intelligence
by any comment or even epithet of my own. I
shall but ask you was not this man your kinsman?
Does not the story sound, allowing for all change
of manners as well as of time and place, like a scene
out of your own Bret Harte or Colonel John Hay’s
writings; a scene of the dry humour the rough heroism
of your own far West? Yes, as long as you have
your Jem Bludsos and Tom Flynns of Virginia
City, the old Norse blood is surely not extinct,
the old Norse spirit is not dead.