The Origin of the Story
The Danish occupation of England has
left a very strong mark on our country in various
ways on its place-names, its racial characteristics,
its language, its literature, and, in part, on its
ideals. The legend of Havelok the Dane, with its
popularity and widespread influence, is one result
of Danish supremacy. It is thought that the origin
of the legend, which contains a twofold version of
the common story of the cruel guardian and the persecuted
heir, is to be found in Wales; but, however that may
be, it is certain that in the continual rise and fall
of small tribal kingdoms, Celtic or Teutonic, English
or Danish, the circumstances out of which the story
grew must have been common enough. Kings who
died leaving helpless heirs to the guardianship of
ambitious and wicked nobles were not rare in the early
days of Britain, Wales, or Denmark; the murder of the
heir and the usurpation of the kingdom by the cruel
regent were no unusual occurrences. The opportunity
of localising the early legend seems to have come
with the growing fame of Anlaf, or Olaf, Sihtricson,
who was known to the Welsh as Abloec or Habloc.
His adventurous life included a threefold expulsion
from his inheritance of Northumbria, a marriage with
the daughter of King Constantine III. of Scotland,
and a family kinship with King Athelstan of England.
In Anlaf Curan (as he was called) we have an historical
hero on whom various romantic stories were gradually
fathered, because of his adventurous life and his
strong personality. These stories finally crystallized
in a form which shows the English and Danish love
of physical prowess (Havelok is the strongest man
in the kingdom), as well as a certain cruelty of revenge
which is more peculiarly Danish. There is resentment
of the Norman predominance to be found in the popularity
of a story which shows the kitchen-boy excelling all
the nobles in manly exercises, and the heiress to
the kingdom wedded in scorn, as so many Saxon heiresses
were after the Conquest, to a mere scullion. There
can be no doubt, however, that Havelok stood to mediaeval
England as a hero of the strong arm, a champion of
the populace against the ruling race, and that his
royal birth and dignity were a concession to historic
facts and probabilities, not much regarded by the
common people. The story, again, showed another
truly humble hero, Grim the fisher, whose loyalty
was supposed to account for the special trading privileges
of his town, Grimsby. In Grim the story found
a character who was in reality a hero of the poor
and lowly, with the characteristic devotion of the
tribesman to his chief, of the vassal to his lord,
a devotion which was handed on from father to son,
so that a second generation continued the services,
and received the rewards, of the father who risked
life and all for the sake of his king’s heir.
The reader will not fail to notice
the characteristic anachronisms which give to life
in Saxon England in the tenth century the colour of
the Norman chivalry of the thirteenth.
Havelok and Godard
In Denmark, long ago, lived a good
king named Birkabeyn, rich and powerful, a great warrior
and a man of mighty prowess, whose rule was undisputed
over the whole realm. He had three children two
daughters, named Swanborow and Elfleda the Fair, and
one young and goodly son, Havelok, the heir to all
his dominions. All too soon came the day that
no man can avoid, when Death would call King Birkabeyn
away, and he grieved sore over his young children
to be left fatherless and unprotected; but, after
much reflection, and prayers to God for wisdom to
help his choice, he called to him Jarl Godard, a trusted
counsellor and friend, and committed into his hands
the care of the realm and of the three royal children,
until Havelok should be of age to be knighted and
rule the land himself. King Birkabeyn felt that
such a charge was too great a temptation for any man
unbound by oaths of fealty and honour, and although
he did not distrust his friend, he required Godard
to swear,
“By altar and by holy
service book,
By bells that call the faithful
to the church,
By blessed sacrament, and
sacred rites,
By Holy Rood, and Him who
died thereon,
That thou wilt truly rule
and keep my realm,
Wilt guard my babes in love
and loyalty,
Until my son be grown, and
dubbed knight:
That thou wilt then resign
to him his land,
His power and rule, and all
that owns his sway.”
Jarl Godard took this most solemn
oath at once with many protestations of affection
and whole-hearted devotion to the dying king and his
heir, and King Birkabeyn died happy in the thought
that his children would be well cared for during their
helpless youth.
When the funeral rites were celebrated
Jarl Godard assumed the rule of the country, and,
under pretext of securing the safety of the royal
children, removed them to a strong castle, where no
man was allowed access to them, and where they were
kept so closely that the royal residence became a
prison in all but name. Godard, finding Denmark
submit to his government without resistance, began
to adopt measures to rid himself of the real heirs
to the throne, and gave orders that food and clothes
should be supplied to the three children in such scanty
quantities that they might die of hardship; but since
they were slow to succumb to this cruel, torturing
form of murder, he resolved to slay them suddenly,
knowing that no one durst call him to account.
Having steeled his heart against all pitiful thoughts,
he went to the castle, and was taken to the inner
dungeon where the poor babes lay shivering and weeping
for cold and hunger. As he entered, Havelok, who
was even then a bold lad, greeted him courteously,
and knelt before him, with clasped hands, begging
a boon.
“Why do you weep and wail so sore?” asked
Godard.
“Because we are so hungry,”
answered Havelok. “We have so little food,
and we have no servants to wait on us; they do not
give us half as much as we could eat; we are shivering
with cold, and our clothes are all in rags. Woe
to us that we were ever born! Is there in the
land no more corn with which men can make bread for
us? We are nearly dead from hunger.”
These pathetic words had no effect
on Godard, who had resolved to yield to no pity and
show no mercy. He seized the two little girls
as they lay cowering together, clasping one another
for warmth, and cut their throats, letting the bodies
of the hapless babies fall to the floor in a pool
of blood; and then, turning to Havelok, aimed his
knife at the boy’s heart. The poor child,
terrified by the awful fate of the two girls, knelt
again before him and begged for mercy:
“Fair lord, have mercy
on me now, I pray!
Look on my helpless youth,
and pity me!
Oh, let me live, and I will
yield you all
My realm of Denmark will I
leave to you,
And swear that I will ne’er
assail your sway.
Oh, pity me, lord! be compassionate!
And I will flee far from this
land of mine,
And vow that Birkabeyn was
ne’er my sire!”
Jarl Godard was touched by Havelok’s
piteous speech, and felt some faint compassion, so
that he could not slay the lad himself; yet he knew
that his only safety was in Havelok’s death.
“If I let him go,” thought
he, “Havelok will at last work me woe! I
shall have no peace in my life, and my children after
me will not hold the lordship of Denmark in safety,
if Havelok escapes! Yet I cannot slay him with
my own hands. I will have him cast into the sea
with an anchor about his neck: thus at least
his body will not float.”
Godard left Havelok kneeling in terror,
and, striding from the tower, leaving the door locked
behind him, he sent for an ignorant fisherman, Grim,
who, he thought, could be frightened into doing his
will. When Grim came he was led into an ante-room,
where Godard, with terrible look and voice, addressed
him thus:
“Grim, thou knowest thou art
my thrall.” “Yea, fair lord,”
quoth Grim, trembling at Godard’s stern voice.
“And I can slay thee if thou dost disobey me.”
“Yea, lord; but how have I offended you?”
“Thou hast not yet; but I have a task for thee,
and if thou dost it not, dire punishment shall fall
upon thee.” “Lord, what is the work
that I must do?” asked the poor fisherman.
“Tarry: I will show thee.” Then
Godard went into the inner room of the tower, whence
he returned leading a fair boy, who wept bitterly.
“Take this boy secretly to thy house, and keep
him there till dead of night; then launch thy boat,
row out to sea, and fling him therein with an anchor
round his neck, so that I shall see him never again.”
Grim looked curiously at the weeping
boy, and said: “What reward shall I have
if I work this sin for you?”
Godard replied: “The sin
will be on my head as I am thy lord and bid thee do
it; but I will make thee a freeman, noble and rich,
and my friend, if thou wilt do this secretly and discreetly.”
Thus reassured and bribed, Grim suddenly
took the boy, flung him to the ground, and bound him
hand and foot with cord which he took from his pockets.
So anxious was he to secure the boy that he drew the
cords very tight, and Havelok suffered terrible pain;
he could not cry out, for a handful of rags was thrust
into his mouth and over his nostrils, so that he could
hardly breathe. Then Grim flung the poor boy
into a horrible black sack, and carried him thus from
the castle, as if he were bringing home broken food
for his family. When Grim reached his poor cottage,
where his wife Leve was waiting for him, he slung
the sack from his shoulder and gave it to her, saying,
“Take good care of this boy as of thy life.
I am to drown him at midnight, and if I do so my lord
has promised to make me a free man and give me great
wealth.”
When Dame Leve heard this she sprang
up and flung the lad down in a corner, and nearly
broke his head with the crash against the earthen
floor. There Havelok lay, bruised and aching,
while the couple went to sleep, leaving the room all
dark but for the red glow from the fire. At midnight
Grim awoke to do his lord’s behest, and Dame
Leve, going to the living-room to kindle a light,
was terrified by a mysterious gleam as bright as day
which shone around the boy on the floor and streamed
from his mouth. Leve hastily called Grim to see
this wonder, and together they released Havelok from
the gag and bonds and examined his body, when they
found on the right shoulder the token of true royalty,
a cross of red gold.
“God knows,” quoth Grim,
“that this is the heir of our land. He will
come to rule in good time, will bear sway over England
and Denmark, and will punish the cruel Godard.”
Then, weeping sore, the loyal fisherman fell down
at Havelok’s feet, crying, “Lord, have
mercy on me and my wife! We are thy thralls,
and never will we do aught against thee. We will
nourish thee until thou canst rule, and will hide thee
from Godard; and thou wilt perchance give me my freedom
in return for thy life.”
At this unexpected address Havelok
sat up surprised, and rubbed his bruised head and
said: “I am nearly dead, what with hunger,
and thy cruel bonds, and the gag. Now bring me
food in plenty!” “Yea, lord,” said
Dame Leve, and bustled about, bringing the best they
had in the hut; and Havelok ate as if he had fasted
for three days; and then he was put to bed, and slept
in peace while Grim watched over him.
However, Grim went the next morning
to Jarl Godard and said: “Lord, I have
done your behest, and drowned the boy with an anchor
about his neck. He is safe, and now, I pray you,
give me my reward, the gold and other treasures, and
make me a freeman as you have promised.”
But Godard only looked fiercely at him and said:
“What, wouldst thou be an earl? Go home,
thou foul churl, and be ever a thrall! It is enough
reward that I do not hang thee now for insolence, and
for thy wicked deeds. Go speedily, else thou
mayst stand and palter with me too long.”
And Grim shrank quietly away, lest Godard should slay
him for the murder of Havelok.
Now Grim saw in what a terrible plight
he stood, at the mercy of this cruel and treacherous
man, and he took counsel with himself and consulted
his wife, and the two decided to flee from Denmark
to save their lives. Gradually Grim sold all
his stock, his cattle, his nets, everything that he
owned, and turned it into good pieces of gold; then
he bought and secretly fitted out and provisioned a
ship, and at last, when all was ready, carried on
board Havelok (who had lain hidden all this time),
his own three sons and two daughters; then when he
and his wife had gone on board he set sail, and, driven
by a favourable wind, reached the shores of England.
Goldborough and Earl Godrich
Meanwhile in England a somewhat similar
fate had befallen a fair princess named Goldborough.
When her father, King Athelwold, lay dying all his
people mourned, for he was the flower of all fair England
for knighthood, justice, and mercy; and he himself
grieved sorely for the sake of his little daughter,
soon to be left an orphan. “What will she
do?” moaned he. “She can neither speak
nor walk! If she were only able to ride, to rule
England, and to guard herself from shame, I should
have no grief, even if I died and left her alone, while
I lived in the joy of paradise!”
Then Athelwold summoned a council
to be held at Winchester, and asked the advice of
the nobles as to the care of the infant Goldborough.
They with one accord recommended Earl Godrich of Cornwall
to be made regent for the little princess; and the
earl, on being appointed, swore with all solemn rites
that he would marry her at twelve years old to the
highest, the best, fairest, and strongest man alive,
and in the meantime would train her in all royal virtues
and customs. So King Athelwold died, and was
buried with great lamentations, and Godrich ruled
the land as regent. He was a strict but just governor,
and England had great peace, without and within, under
his severe rule, for all lived in awe of him, though
no man loved him. Goldborough grew and throve
in all ways, and became famous through the land for
her gracious beauty and gentle and virtuous demeanour.
This roused the jealousy of Earl Godrich, who had
played the part of king so long that he almost believed
himself King of England, and he began to consider
how he could secure the kingdom for himself and his
son. Thereupon he had Goldborough taken from
Winchester, where she kept royal state, to Dover,
where she was imprisoned in the castle, and strictly
secluded from all her friends; there she remained,
with poor clothes and scanty food, awaiting a champion
to uphold her right.
Havelok Becomes Cook’s Boy
When Grim sailed from Denmark to England
he landed in the Humber, at the place now called Grimsby,
and there established himself as a fisherman.
So successful was he that for twelve years he supported
his family well, and carried his catches of fish far
afield, even to Lincoln, where rare fish always brought
a good price. In all this time Grim never once
called on Havelok for help in the task of feeding the
family; he reverenced his king, and the whole household
served Havelok with the utmost deference, and often
went with scanty rations to satisfy the boy’s
great appetite. At length Havelok began to think
how selfishly he was living, and how much food he
consumed, and was filled with shame when he realized
how his foster-father toiled unweariedly while he
did nothing to help. In his remorseful meditations
it became clear to him that, though a king’s
son, he ought to do some useful work. “Of
what use,” thought he, “is my great strength
and stature if I do not employ it for some good purpose?
There is no shame in honest toil. I will work
for my food, and try to make some return to Father
Grim, who has done so much for me. I will gladly
bear his baskets of fish to market, and I will begin
to-morrow.”
On the next day, in spite of Grim’s
protests Havelok carried a load of fish equal to four
men’s burden to Grimsby market, and sold it
successfully, returning home with the money he received;
and this he did day by day, till a famine arose and
fish and food both became scarce. Then Grim,
more concerned for Havelok than for his own children,
called the youth to him and bade him try his fortunes
in Lincoln, for his own sake and for theirs; he would
be better fed, and the little food Grim could get
would go further among the others if Havelok were
not there. The one obstacle in the way was Havelok’s
lack of clothes, and Grim overcame that by sacrificing
his boat’s sail to make Havelok a coarse tunic.
That done, they bade each other farewell, and Havelok
started for Lincoln, barefooted and bareheaded, for
his only garment was the sailcloth tunic. In
Lincoln Havelok found no friends and no food for two
days, and he was desperate and faint with hunger,
when he heard a call: “Porters, porters!
hither to me!” Roused to new vigour by the chance
of work, Havelok rushed with the rest, and bore down
and hurled aside the other porters so vigorously that
he was chosen to carry provisions for Bertram, the
earl’s cook; and in return he received the first
meal he had eaten for nearly three days.
On the next day Havelok again overthrew
the porters, and, knocking down at least sixteen,
secured the work. This time he had to carry fish,
and his basket was so laden that he bore nearly a cartload,
with which he ran to the castle. There the cook,
amazed at his strength, first gave him a hearty meal,
and then offered him good service under himself, with
food and lodging for his wages. This offer Havelok
accepted, and was installed as cook’s boy, and
employed in all the lowest offices carrying
wood, water, turf, hewing logs, lifting, fetching,
carrying and in all he showed himself a
wonderfully strong worker, with unfailing good temper
and gentleness, so that the little children all loved
the big, gentle, fair-haired youth who worked so quietly
and played with them so merrily. When Havelok’s
old tunic became worn out, his master, the cook, took
pity on him and gave him a new suit, and then it could
be seen how handsome and tall and strong a youth this
cook’s boy really was, and his fame spread far
and wide round Lincoln Town.
Havelok and Goldborough
At the great fair of Lincoln, sports
of all kinds were indulged in, and in these Havelok
took his part, for the cook, proud of his mighty scullion,
urged him to compete in all the games and races.
As Earl Godrich had summoned his Parliament to meet
that year at Lincoln, there was a great concourse
of spectators, and even the powerful Earl Regent himself
sometimes watched the sports and cheered the champions.
The first contest was “putting the stone,”
and the stone chosen was so weighty that none but
the most stalwart could lift it above the knee none
could raise it to his breast. This sport was new
to Havelok, who had never seen it before, but when
the cook bade him try his strength he lifted the stone
easily and threw it more than twelve feet. This
mighty deed caused his fame to be spread, not only
among the poor servants with whom Havelok was classed,
but also among the barons, their masters, and Havelok’s
Stone became a landmark in Lincoln. Thus Godrich
heard of a youth who stood head and shoulders taller
than other men and was stronger, more handsome and
yet a mere common scullion. The news brought
him a flash of inspiration: “Here is the
highest, strongest, best man in all England, and him
shall Goldborough wed. I shall keep my vow to
the letter, and England must fall to me, for Goldborough’s
royal blood will be lost by her marriage with a thrall,
the people will refuse her obedience, and England will
cast her out.”
Godrich therefore brought Goldborough
to Lincoln, received her with bell-ringing and seemly
rejoicing, and bade her prepare for her wedding.
This the princess refused to do until she knew who
was her destined husband, for she said she would wed
no man who was not of royal birth. Her firmness
drove Earl Godrich to fierce wrath, and he burst out:
“Wilt thou be queen and mistress over me?
Thy pride shall be brought down: thou shalt have
no royal spouse: a vagabond and scullion shalt
thou wed, and that no later than to-morrow! Curses
on him who speaks thee fair!” In vain the princess
wept and bemoaned herself: the wedding was fixed
for the morrow morn.
The next day at dawn Earl Godrich
sent for Havelok, the mighty cook’s boy, and
asked him: “Wilt thou take a wife?”
“Nay,” quoth Havelok,
“that will I not. I cannot feed her, much
less clothe and lodge her. My very garments are
not my own, but belong to the cook, my master.”
Godrich fell upon Havelok and beat him furiously,
saying, “Unless thou wilt take the wench I give
thee for wife I will hang or blind thee”; and
so, in great fear, Havelok agreed to the wedding.
At once Goldborough was brought, and forced into an
immediate marriage, under penalty of banishment or
burning as a witch if she refused. And thus the
unwilling couple were united by the Archbishop of
York, who had come to attend the Parliament.
Never was there so sad a wedding!
The people murmured greatly at this unequal union,
and pitied the poor princess, thus driven to wed a
man of low birth; and Goldborough herself wept pitifully,
but resigned herself to God’s will. All
men now acknowledged with grief that she and her husband
could have no claim to the English throne, and thus
Godrich seemed to have gained his object. Havelok
and his unwilling bride recognised that they would
not be safe near Godrich, and as Havelok had no home
in Lincoln to which he could take the princess, he
determined to go back to his faithful foster-father,
Grim, and put the fair young bride under his loyal
protection. Sorrowfully, with grief and shame
in their hearts, Havelok and Goldborough made their
way on foot to Grimsby, only to find the loyal Grim
dead; but his five children were alive and in prosperity.
When they saw Havelok and his wife they fell on their
knees and saluted them with all respect and reverence.
In their joy to see their king again, these worthy
fisherfolk forgot their newly won wealth, and said:
“Welcome, dear lord, and thy fair lady!
What joy is ours to see thee again, for thy subjects
are we, and thou canst do with us as thou wilt.
All that we have is thine, and if thou wilt dwell
with us we will serve thee and thy wife truly in all
ways!” This greeting surprised Goldborough, who
began to suspect some mystery, and she was greatly
comforted when brothers and sisters busied themselves
in lighting fires, cooking meals, and waiting on her
hand and foot, as if she had been indeed a king’s
wife. Havelok, however, said nothing to explain
the mystery, and Goldborough that night lay awake
bewailing her fate as a thrall’s bride, even
though he was the fairest man in England.
The Revelation and Return to Denmark
As Goldborough lay sleepless and unhappy
she became aware of a brilliant light shining around
Havelok and streaming from his mouth; and while she
feared and wondered an angelic voice cried to her:
“Fair Princess, cease
this grief and heavy moan!
For Havelok, thy newly wedded
spouse,
Is son and heir to famous
kings: the sign
Thou findest in the cross
of ruddy gold
That shineth on his shoulder.
He shall be
Monarch and ruler of two mighty
realms;
Denmark and England shall
obey his rule,
And he shall sway them with
a sure command.
This shalt thou see with thine
own eyes, and be
Lady and Queen, with Havelok,
o’er these lands.”
This angelic message so gladdened
Goldborough that she kissed, for the first time, her
unconscious husband, who started up from his sleep,
saying, “Dear love, sleepest thou? I have
had a wondrous dream. I thought I sat on a lofty
hill, and saw all Denmark before me. As I stretched
out my arms I embraced it all, and the people clung
to my arms, and the castles fell at my feet; then
I flew over the salt sea with the Danish people clinging
to me, and I closed all fair England in my hand, and
gave it to thee, dear love! Now what can this
mean?”
Goldborough answered joyfully:
“It means, dear heart, that thou shalt be King
of Denmark and of England too: all these realms
shall fall into thy power, and thou shalt be ruler
in Denmark within one year. Now do thou follow
my advice, and let us go to Denmark, taking with us
Grim’s three sons, who will accompany thee for
love and loyalty; and have no fear, for I know thou
wilt succeed.”
The next morning Havelok went to church
early, and prayed humbly and heartily for success
in his enterprise and retribution on the false traitor
Godard; then, laying his offering on the altar before
the Cross, he went away glad in heart. Grim’s
three sons, Robert the Red, William Wendut, and Hugh
the Raven, joyfully consented to go with Havelok to
Denmark, to attack with all their power the false Jarl
Godard and to win the kingdom for the rightful heir.
Their wives and families stayed in England, but Goldborough
would not leave her husband, and after a short voyage
the party landed safely on the shores of Denmark,
in the lands of Jarl Ubbe, an old friend of King Birkabeyn,
who lived far from the court now that a usurper held
sway in Denmark.
Havelok and Ubbe
Havelok dared not reveal himself and
his errand until he knew more of the state of parties
in the country, and he therefore only begged permission
to live and trade there, giving Ubbe, as a token of
goodwill and a tribute to his power, a valuable ring,
which the jarl prized greatly. Ubbe, gazing at
the so-called merchant’s great stature and beauty,
lamented that he was not of noble birth, and planned
to persuade him to take up the profession of arms.
At first, however, he simply granted Havelok permission
to trade, and invited him and Goldborough to a feast,
promising them safety and honour under his protection.
Havelok dreaded lest his wife’s beauty might
place them in jeopardy, but he dared not refuse the
invitation, which was pointedly given to both; accordingly,
when they went to Ubbe’s hall, Goldborough was
escorted by Robert the Red and William Wendut.
Ubbe received them with all honour,
and all men marvelled at Goldborough’s beauty,
and Ubbe’s wife loved Goldborough at first sight
as her husband did Havelok, so that the feast passed
off with all joy and mirth, and none dared raise a
hand or lift his voice against the wandering merchant
whom Ubbe so strangely favoured. But Ubbe knew
that when once Havelok and his wife were away from
his protection there would be little safety for them,
since the rough Danish nobles would think nothing
of stealing a trader’s fair wife, and many a
man had cast longing eyes on Goldborough’s loveliness.
Therefore when the feast was over, and Havelok took
his leave, Ubbe sent with him a body of ten knights
and sixty men-at-arms, and recommended them to the
magistrate of the town, Bernard Brown, a true and upright
man, bidding him, as he prized his life, keep the
strangers in safety and honour. Well it was that
Ubbe and Bernard Brown took these precautions, for
late at night a riotous crowd came to Bernard’s
house clamouring for admittance. Bernard withstood
the angry mob, armed with a great axe, but they burst
the door in by hurling a huge stone; and then Havelok
joined in the defence. He drew out the great beam
which barred the door, and crying, “Come quickly
to me, and you shall stay here! Curses on him
who flees!” began to lay about him with the big
beam, so that three fell dead at once. A terrible
fight followed, in which Havelok, armed only with
the beam, slew twenty men in armour, and was then sore
beset by the rest of the troop, aiming darts and arrows
at his unarmoured breast. It was going hardly
with him, when Hugh the Raven, hearing and understanding
the cries of the assailants, called his brothers to
their lord’s aid, and they all joined the fight
so furiously that, long ere day, of the sixty men
who had attacked the inn not one remained alive.
In the morning news was brought to
Jarl Ubbe that his stranger guest had slain sixty
of the best of his soldiery.
“What can this mean?”
said Ubbe. “I had better go and see to it
myself, for any messenger would surely treat Havelok
discourteously, and I should be full loath to do that.”
He rode away to the house of Bernard Brown, and asked
the meaning of its damaged and battered appearance.
“My lord,” answered Bernard
Brown, “last night at moonrise there came a
band of sixty thieves who would have plundered my house
and bound me hand and foot. When Havelok and
his companions saw it they came to my aid, with sticks
and stones, and drove out the robbers like dogs from
a mill. Havelok himself slew three at one blow.
Never have I seen a warrior so good! He is worth
a thousand in a fray. But alas! he is grievously
wounded, with three deadly gashes in side and arm and
thigh, and at least twenty smaller wounds. I am
scarcely harmed at all, but I fear he will die full
soon.”
Ubbe could scarcely believe so strange
a tale, but all the bystanders swore that Bernard
told nothing but the bare truth, and that the whole
gang of thieves, with their leader, Griffin the Welshman,
had been slain by the hero and his small party.
Then Ubbe bade them bring Havelok, that he might call
a leech to heal his wounds, for if the stranger merchant
should live Jarl Ubbe would without fail dub him knight;
and when the leech had seen the wounds he said the
patient would make a good and quick recovery.
Then Ubbe offered Havelok and his wife a dwelling
in his own castle, under his own protection, till
Havelok’s grievous wounds were healed. There,
too, fair Goldborough would be under the care of Ubbe’s
wife, who would cherish her as her own daughter.
This kind offer was accepted gladly, and they all went
to the castle, where a room was given them next to
Ubbe’s own.
At midnight Ubbe woke, aroused by
a bright light in Havelok’s room, which was
only separated from his own by a slight wooden partition.
He was vexed suspecting his guest of midnight wassailing,
and went to inquire what villainy might be hatching.
To his surprise, both husband and wife were sound
asleep, but the light shone from Havelok’s mouth,
and made a glory round his head. Utterly amazed
at the marvel, Ubbe went away silently, and returned
with all the garrison of his castle to the room where
his guests still lay sleeping. As they gazed on
the light Havelok turned in his sleep, and they saw
on his shoulder the golden cross, shining like the
sun, which all men knew to be the token of royal birth.
Then Ubbe exclaimed: “Now I know who this
is, and why I loved him so dearly at first sight:
this is the son of our dead King Birkabeyn. Never
was man so like another as this man is to the dead
king: he is his very image and his true heir.”
With great joy they fell on their knees and kissed
him eagerly, and Havelok awoke and began to scowl
furiously, for he thought it was some treacherous
attack; but Ubbe soon undeceived him.
“‘Dear lord,’
quoth he, ’be thou in naught dismayed,
For in thine eyes methinks
I see thy thought
Dear son, great joy is mine
to live this day!
My homage, lord, I freely
offer thee:
Thy loyal men and vassals
are we all,
For thou art son of mighty
Birkabeyn,
And soon shalt conquer all
thy father’s land,
Though thou art young and
almost friendless here.
To-morrow will we swear our
fealty due,
And dub thee knight, for prowess
unexcelled.’”
Now Havelok knew that his worst danger
was over, and he thanked God for the friend He had
sent him, and left to the good Jarl Ubbe the management
of his cause. Ubbe gathered an assembly of as
many mighty men of the realm, and barons, and good
citizens, as he could summon; and when they were all
assembled, pondering what was the cause of this imperative
summons, Ubbe arose and said:
“Gentles, bear with me if I
tell you first things well known to you. Ye know
that King Birkabeyn ruled this land until his death-day,
and that he left three children one son,
Havelok, and two daughters to the guardianship
of Jarl Godard: ye all heard him swear to keep
them loyally and treat them well. But ye do not
know how he kept his oath! The false traitor
slew both the maidens, and would have slain the boy,
but for pity he would not kill the child with his own
hands. He bade a fisherman drown him in the sea;
but when the good man knew that it was the rightful
heir, he saved the boy’s life and fled with him
to England, where Havelok has been brought up for
many years. And now, behold! here he stands.
In all the world he has no peer, and ye may well rejoice
in the beauty and manliness of your king. Come
now and pay homage to Havelok, and I myself will be
your leader!”
Jarl Ubbe turned to Havelok, where
he stood with Goldborough beside him, and knelt before
him to do homage, an example which was followed by
all present. At a second and still larger assembly
held a fortnight later a similar oath of fealty was
sworn by all, Havelok was dubbed knight by the noble
Ubbe, and a great festival was celebrated, with sports
and amusements for the populace. A council of
war and vengeance was held with the great nobles.
The Death of Godard
Havelok, now acknowledged King of
Denmark, was unsatisfied until he had punished the
treacherous Godard, and he took a solemn oath from
his soldiers that they would never cease the search
for the traitor till they had captured him and brought
him bound to judgment. After all, Godard was
captured as he was hunting. Grim’s three
sons, now knighted by King Havelok, met him in the
forest, and bade him come to the king, who called
on him to remember and account for his treatment of
Birkabeyn’s children. Godard struck out
furiously with his fists, but Sir Robert the Red wounded
him in the right arm. When Godard’s men
joined in the combat, Robert and his brothers soon
slew ten of their adversaries, and the rest fled;
returning, ashamed at the bitter reproaches of their
lord, they were all slain by Havelok’s men.
Godard was taken, bound hand and foot, placed on a
miserable jade with his face to the tail, and so led
to Havelok. The king refused to be the judge
of his own cause, and entrusted to Ubbe the task of
presiding at the traitor’s trial. No mercy
was shown to the cruel Jarl Godard, and he was condemned
to a traitor’s death, with torments of terrible
barbarity. The sentence was carried out to the
letter, and Denmark rejoiced in the punishment of
a cruel villain.
Death of Godrich
Meanwhile Earl Godrich of Cornwall
had heard with great uneasiness that Havelok had become
King of Denmark, and intended to invade England with
a mighty army to assert his wife’s right to the
throne. He recognised that his own device to
shame Goldborough had turned against him, and that
he must now fight for his life and the usurped dominion
he held over England. Godrich summoned his army
to Lincoln for the defence of the realm against the
Danes, and called out every man fit to bear weapons,
on pain of becoming thrall if they failed him.
Then he thus addressed them:
“Friends, listen to
my words, and you will know
’Tis not for sport,
nor idle show, that I
Have bidden you to meet at
Lincoln here.
Lo! here at Grimsby foreigners
are come
Who have already won the Priory.
These Danes are cruel heathen,
who destroy
Our churches and our abbeys:
priests and nuns
They torture to the death,
or lead away
To serve as slaves the haughty
Danish jarls.
Now, Englishmen, what counsel
will ye take?
If we submit, they will rule
all our land,
Will kill us all, and sell
our babes for thralls,
Will take our wives and daughters
for their own.
Help me, if ever ye loved
English land,
To fight these heathen and
to cleanse our soil
From hateful presence of these
alien hordes.
I make my vow to God and all
the saints
I will not rest, nor houseled
be, nor shriven,
Until our realm be free from
Danish foe!
Accursed be he who strikes
no blow for home!”
The army was inspired with valour
by these courageous words, and the march to Grimsby
began at once, with Earl Godrich in command.
Havelok’s men marched out gallantly to meet them,
and when the battle joined many mighty deeds of valour
were done, especially by the king himself, his foster-brothers,
and Jarl Ubbe. The battle lasted long and was
very fierce and bloody, but the Danes gradually overcame
the resistance of the English, and at last, after
a great hand-to-hand conflict, King Havelok captured
Godrich. The traitor earl, who had lost a hand
in the fray, was sent bound and fettered to Queen
Goldborough, who kept him, carefully guarded, until
he could be tried by his peers, since (for all his
treason) he was still a knight.
When the English recognised their
rightful lady and queen they did homage with great
joy, begging mercy for having resisted their lawful
ruler at the command of a wicked traitor; and the king
and queen pardoned all but Godrich, who was speedily
brought to trial at Lincoln. He was sentenced
to be burnt at the stake, and the sentence was carried
out amid general rejoicings.
Now that vengeance was satisfied,
Havelok and his wife thought of recompensing the loyal
helpers who had believed in them and supported them
through the long years of adversity. Havelok married
one of Grim’s daughters to the Earl of Chester,
and the other to Bertram, the good cook, who became
Earl of Cornwall in the place of the felon Godrich
and his disinherited children; the heroic Ubbe was
made Regent of Denmark for Havelok, who decided to
stay and rule England, and all the noble Danish warriors
were rewarded with gifts of gold, and lands and castles.
After a great coronation feast, which lasted for forty
days, King Havelok dismissed the Danish regent and
his followers, and after sad farewells they returned
to their own country. Havelok and Goldborough
ruled England in peace and security for sixty years,
and lived together in all bliss, and had fifteen children,
who all became mighty kings and queens.