IN WHICH THE TABLE BEGINS SOMEWHAT FURIOUSLY
By the early light of a bright summer
morning, long, long ago, two small boats were seen
to issue from one of the fiords or firths on the west
coast of Norway, and row towards the skerries or low
rocky islets that lay about a mile distant from the
mainland.
Although the morning was young, the
sun was already high in the heavens, and brought out
in glowing colours the varied characteristics of a
mountain scene of unrivalled grandeur.
The two shallops moved swiftly towards
the islands, their oars shivering the liquid mirror
of the sea, and producing almost the only sound that
disturbed the universal stillness, for at that early
hour Nature herself seemed buried in deep repose.
A silvery mist hung over the water, through which
the innumerable rocks and islands assumed fantastic
shapes, and the more distant among them appeared as
though they floated in air. A few seagulls rose
startled from their nests, and sailed upwards with
plaintive cries, as the keels of the boats grated on
the rocks, and the men stepped out and hauled them
up on the beach of one of the islets.
A wild uncouth crew were those Norsemen
of old! All were armed, for in their days the
power and the means of self-defence were absolutely
necessary to self-preservation.
Most of them wore portions of scale
armour, or shirts of ring mail, and headpieces of
steel, though a few among them appeared to have confidence
in the protection afforded by the thick hide of the
wolf, which, converted into rude, yet not ungraceful,
garments, covered their broad shoulders. All,
without exception, carried sword or battle-axe and
shield. They were goodly stalwart men every one,
but silent and stern.
It might have been observed that the
two boats, although bound for the same islet, did
not row in company. They were beached as far
from each other as the little bay into which they
ran would admit of, and the crews stood aloof in two
distinct groups.
In the centre of each group stood
a man who, from his aspect and bearing, appeared to
be superior to his fellows. One was in the prime
of life, dark and grave; the other in the first flush
of manhood, full grown, though beardless, fair, and
ruddy. Both were taller and stouter than their
comrades.
The two men had met there to fight,
and the cause of their feud was Love!
Both loved a fair Norse maiden in
Horlingdal. The father of the maid favoured
the elder warrior; the maid herself preferred the younger.
In those days, barbarous though they
undoubtedly were, law and justice were more respected
and more frequently appealed to in Norway than in
almost any other country. Liberty, crushed elsewhere
under the deadweight of feudalism, found a home in
the bleak North, and a rough but loving welcome from
the piratical, sea-roving! She did not, indeed,
dwell altogether scathless among her demi-savage guardians,
who, if their perceptions of right and wrong were
somewhat confused, might have urged in excuse that
their light was small. She received many shocks
and frequent insults from individuals, but liberty
was sincerely loved and fondly cherished by the body
of the Norwegian people, through all the period of
those dark ages during which other nations scarce dared
to mention her name.
Nevertheless, it was sometimes deemed
more convenient to settle disputes by the summary
method of an appeal to arms than to await the issue
of a tedious and uncertain lawsuit such an appeal
being perfectly competent to those who preferred it,
and the belief being strong among the fiery spirits
of the age that Odin, the god of war, would assuredly
give victory to the right.
In the present instance it was not
considered any infringement of the law of liberty
that the issue of the combat would be the disposal
of a fair woman’s hand, with or without her
heart. Then, as now, women were often forced
to marry against their will.
Having gone to that island to fight an
island being a naturally circumscribed battlefield
whose limits could not conveniently be transgressed the
two champions set to work at once with the cool businesslike
promptitude of men sprung from a warlike race, and
nurtured from their birth in the midst of war’s
alarms.
Together, and without speaking, they
ascended the rock, which was low and almost barren,
with a small extent of turf in the centre, level, and
admirably suited to their purpose. Here they
faced each other; the one drew his sword, the other
raised his battle-axe.
There was no sentiment in that combat.
The times and the men were extremely matter-of-fact.
The act of slaying gracefully had not yet been acquired;
yet there was much of manly grace displayed as each
threw himself into the position that nature and experience
had taught him was best suited to the wielding of
his peculiar weapon.
For one instant each gazed intently
into the face of the other, as if to read there his
premeditated plan of attack. At that moment the
clear blue eye of the younger man dilated, and, as
his courage rose, the colour mounted to his cheek.
The swart brow of the other darkened as he marked
the change; then, with sudden spring and shout, the
two fell upon each other and dealt their blows with
incredible vigour and rapidity.
They were a well-matched pair.
For nearly two hours did they toil and moil over
the narrow limits of that sea-girt rock yet
victory leaned to neither side. Now the furious
blows rained incessant on the sounding shields; anon
the din of strife ceased, while the combatants moved
round each other, shifting their position with elastic
step, as, with wary motion and eagle glances, each
sought to catch the other off his guard, and the clash
of steel, as the weapons met in sudden onset, was mingled
with the shout of anger or defiance. The sun
glanced on whirling blade and axe, and sparkled on
their coats of mail as if the lightning flash were
playing round them; while screaming seamews flew and
circled overhead, as though they regarded with intelligent
interest and terror the mortal strife that was going
on below.
Blood ere long began to flow freely
on both sides; the vigour of the blows began to abate,
the steps to falter. The youthful cheek grew
pale; the dark warrior’s brow grew darker, while
heaving chests, labouring breath, and an occasional
gasp, betokened the approaching termination of the
struggle. Suddenly the youth, as if under the
influence of a new impulse, dropped his shield, sprang
forward, raised himself to his full height, grasped
his axe with both hands, and, throwing it aloft (thus
recklessly exposing his person), brought it down with
terrific violence on the shield of his adversary.
The action was so sudden that the
other, already much exhausted, was for the moment
paralysed, and failed to take advantage of his opportunity.
He met but failed to arrest the blow with his shield.
It was crushed down upon his head, and in another
moment the swarthy warrior lay stretched upon the
turf.
Sternly the men conveyed their fallen
chief to his boat, and rowed him to the mainland,
and many a week passed by ere he recovered from the
effects of the blow that felled him. His conqueror
returned to have his wounds dressed by the bride for
whom he had fought so long and so valiantly on that
bright summer morning.
Thus it was that King Haldor of Horlingdal,
surnamed the Fierce, conquered King Ulf of Romsdal,
acquired his distinctive appellation, and won Herfrida
the Soft-eyed for his bride.
It must not be supposed that these
warriors were kings in the ordinary acceptation of
that term. They belonged to the class of “small”
or petty kings, of whom there were great numbers in
Norway in those days, and were merely rich and powerful
free-landholders or udallers.
Haldor the Fierce had a large family
of sons and daughters. They were all fair, strong,
and extremely handsome, like himself.
Ulf of Romsdal did not die of his
wounds, neither did he die of love. Disappointed
love was then, as now, a terrible disease, but not
necessarily fatal. Northmen were very sturdy
in the olden time. They almost always recovered
from that disease sooner or later. When his
wounds were healed, Ulf married a fair girl of the
Horlingdal district, and went to reside there, but
his change of abode did not alter his title.
He was always spoken of as Ulf of Romsdal. He
and his old enemy Haldor the Fierce speedily became
fast friends; and so was it with their wives, Astrid
and Herfrida, who also took mightily to each other.
They span, and carded wool, and sewed together oftentimes,
and discussed the affairs of Horlingdal, no doubt
with mutual advantage and satisfaction.
Twenty years passed away, and Haldor’s
eldest son, Erling, grew to be a man. He was
very like his father almost a giant in size;
fair, very strong, and remarkably handsome.
His silken yellow hair fell in heavy curls on a pair
of the broadest shoulders in the dale. Although
so young, he already had a thick short beard, which
was very soft and curly. His limbs were massive,
but they were so well proportioned, and his movements
so lithe, that his great size and strength were not
fully appreciated until one stood close by his side
or fell into his powerful grasp.
Erling was lion-like, yet he was by
nature gentle and retiring. He had a kindly
smile, a hearty laugh, and bright blue eyes.
Had he lived in modern days he would undoubtedly have
been a man of peace. But he lived “long
long ago” therefore he was a man of
war. Being unusually fearless, his companions
of the valley called him Erling the Bold. He
was, moreover, extremely fond of the sea, and often
went on viking cruises in his own ships, whence
he was also styled Erling the Sea-king, although he
did not at that time possess a foot of land over which
to exercise kingly authority.
Now, it must be explained here that
the words Sea-king and Viking do not denote the same
thing. One is apt to be misled by the termination
of the latter word, which has no reference whatever
to the royal title king. A viking was merely
a piratical rover on the sea, the sea-warrior of the
period, but a Sea-king was a leader and commander of
vikings. Every Sea-king was a viking,
but every viking was not a Sea-king; just as
every Admiral is a sailor, but every sailor is not
an Admiral. When it is said that Erling was
a Sea-king, it is much as if we had said he was an
admiral in a small way.