SHOWS HOW CHIEF FRIENDS MAY BECOME FOES, AND CROSS-PURPOSES MAY PRODUCE CROSS CONSEQUENCIES, INVOLVING WORRY AND CONFUSION
When Christian had been properly cared
for, Hilda sent Ada to the hayfield, saying that she
would follow her in a short time. Now it so
happened, by one of those curious coincidences which
are generally considered unaccountable, that as Ada
ascended the track which led to the high field above
the foss, Glumm the Gruff descended towards the same
point from an opposite direction, so that a meeting
between the two, in the secluded dell, where the tracks
joined, became inevitable.
Whether or not this meeting was anticipated
we cannot tell. If it was, the young man and
maiden were inimitable actors by nature, for they
appeared to be wholly unconscious of aught save the
peculiar formation of the respective footpaths along
which they slowly moved. There was, indeed,
a twinkle in Ada’s eyes; but then Ada’s
eyes were noted twinklers; besides, a refractory eyelash
might account for such an expression.
As for Glumm, he frowned on the path
most unamiably while he sauntered along with both
hands thrust into the breast of his tunic, and the
point of his sword rasping harshly against rocks and
bushes. Glumm was peculiar in his weapons.
He wore a double-handed and double-edged sword, which
was so long that he was obliged to sling it across
his back in order to keep it off the ground.
The handle projected above his left shoulder, and
the blade, lying diagonally across his person, extended
beyond his right calf. The young man was remarkably
expert in the use of this immense weapon, and was
not only a terror to his foes, but, owing to the enormous
sweep of its long blade, an object of some anxiety
to his friends when they chanced to be fighting alongside
of him. He wore a knife or dagger at his girdle
on the right side, which was also of unusual size;
in all probability it would have been deemed a pretty
good sword by the Romans. There were only two
men in the dale who could wield Glumm’s weapons.
These were Erling and his father, Haldor. The
latter was as strong a man as Glumm, Erling was even
stronger; though, being an amiable man he could not
be easily persuaded to prove his strength upon his
friends. Glumm wore his hair very short.
It was curly, and lay close to his head.
As he sauntered along he kicked the
stones out of his way savagely, and appeared to find
relief to his feelings in so doing, as well as by
allowing his sword to rasp across the rocks and shrubs
at his side. It might have been observed, however,
that Glumm only kicked the little stones out of his
way; he never kicked the big ones. It is interesting
to observe how trifling a matter will bring out a trait
of human nature! Men will sometimes relieve their
angry feelings by storming violently at those of their
fellows who cannot hurt them, but, strangely enough,
they manage to obtain relief to these same feelings
without storming, when they chance to be in the company
of stronger men than themselves, thereby proving that
they have powers of self-restraint which prudence
not to say fear can call into exercise!
commend this moral reflection particularly to the
study of boys.
After Glumm had kicked all the little
stones out of his way, carefully letting the big ones
alone, he came suddenly face to face with Ada, who
saluted him with a look of startled surprise, a slight
blush, and a burst of hearty laughter.
“Why, Glumm,” exclaimed
the maiden, with an arch smile, “thou must have
risen off thy wrong side this morning. Methinks,
now, were I a man, I should have to look to my weapons,
for that long blade of thine seems inclined to fight
with the rocks and shrubs of its own accord.”
Poor Glumm blushed as red as if he
had been a young girl, at being thus unexpectedly
caught giving vent to his ill-humour; he stammered
something about bad dreams and evil spirits, and then,
breaking into a good-humoured smile, said:
“Well, Ada, I know not what
it is that ails me, but I do feel somewhat cross-grained.
Perchance a walk with thee may cure me, I see thou
art bound for the hayfield. But hast thou not
heard the news? The Danish vikings are
off the coast, burning and murdering wherever they
go. It is rumoured, too, that their fleet is
under that king of scoundrels, Skarpedin the Red.
Surely there is reason for my being angry.”
“Nay, then, if thou wert a bold
man thou wouldst find reason in this for being glad,”
replied Ada. “Is not the chance of a fight
the joy of a true Norseman’s heart? Surely
a spell must have been laid on thee, if thy brow darkens
and thy heart grows heavy on hearing of a stout enemy.
It is not thus with Erling the Bold. His brow
clears and his eye sparkles when a foe worthy of But
what seest thou, Glumm? Has the Dane appeared
in the forest that thy brow becomes so suddenly clouded?
I pray thee do not run away and leave me unprotected.”
“Doubtless if I did, Erling
the Bold would come to thine aid,” replied the
young man with some asperity.
“Nay, do not be angry with me,
Glumm,” said the girl, laughing, as they reached
the field where Haldor and his stout son were busily
at work assisting Ulf, who, with all his thralls and
freemen, was engaged in cutting and gathering in his
hay.
“Hey! here come cloud and sunshine
hand in hand,” cried Erling, pausing in his
work, as Glumm and his pretty companion approached
the scene of labour.
“Get on with thy work, then,
and make the hay while I am shining,” retorted
Ada, bestowing on the youth a bright smile, which he
returned cheerfully and with interest.
This was the wicked Ada’s finishing
touch. Glumm saw the exchange of smiles, and
a pang of fierce jealousy shot through his breast.
“The cloud sometimes darts out
lightning,” he muttered angrily, and, turning
on his heel, began to toss the hay with all his might
in order to relieve his feelings.
Just then Hilda entered the field,
and Glumm, putting strong constraint on himself, accosted
her with extreme cheerfulness and respect resolved
in his heart to show Ada that there were other girls
in Horlingdal worth courting besides herself.
In this game he was by no means successful as regarded
Ada, who at once discerned his intention, but the shaft
which flew harmlessly past her fixed itself deep in
the breast of another victim. Glumm’s
unusual urbanity took the kind-hearted Hilda so much
by surprise, that she was interested, and encouraged
him, in what she conceived to be a tendency towards
improvement of disposition, by bestowing on him her
sweetest smiles during the course of the day, insomuch
that Erling the Bold became much surprised, and at
last unaccountably cross.
Thus did these two men, who had for
many years been fast and loving friends, become desperately
jealous, though each sought to conceal the fact from
the other. But the green-eyed monster having
obtained a lodgment in their bosoms, could not be
easily cast out. Yet the good sense of each
enabled him to struggle with some success against the
passion, for Glumm, although gruff, was by no means
a bad man.
The presence of those conflicting
feelings did not, however, interrupt or retard the
work of the field. It was a truly busy scene.
Masters, unfreemen, and thralls, mistresses and maidens,
were there, cutting and turning and piling up the
precious crop with might and main; for they knew that
the weather could not be trusted to, and the very lives
of their cattle depended on the successful ingathering
of the hay.
As we have here mentioned the three
different classes that existed in Norway, it may be
well to explain that the masters were peasants or
“bonders”, but not by any means similar
to peasants in other lands; on the contrary, they
were the udal-born proprietors of the soil the
peasant-nobility, so to speak, the Udallers, or freeholders,
without any superior lord, and were entitled to attend
and have a voice in the “Things” or assemblies
where the laws were enacted and public affairs regulated.
The next class was that of the “unfreemen”.
These were freed slaves who had wrought out or purchased
their freedom, but who, although personally free,
and at liberty to go where and serve whom they pleased,
were not free to attend the legislative assemblies.
They were unfree of the Things, and hence their apparently
contradictory designation. They, however, enjoyed
the protection and civil rights imparted by the laws,
and to their class belonged all the cottars on the
land paying a rent in work on the farm of the bonder
or udaller, also the house-carles or freeborn indoormen,
and the tradesmen, labourers, fishermen, etcetera,
about villages and farms. Thralls were slaves
taken in war, over whom the owners had absolute control.
They might sell them, kill them, or do with them
as they pleased. Thralls were permitted to purchase
their freedom and all the descendants of
those freed thralls, or unfreemen, were free.
The clothing of the unfreemen was
finer than that of the thralls. The legs and
arms of nearly all were bare from the knees and elbows
downward, though a few had swathed their limbs in bands
of rough woollen cloth, while others used straw for
this purpose. Nearly all the men wore shoes
of untanned leather, and caps of the same material,
or of rough homespun cloth, resembling in form the
cap of modern fishermen. The udallers, such as
Haldor, Ulf, and their children, were clad in finer
garments, which were looped and buttoned with brooches
and pendants of gold and silver, the booty gathered
on those viking cruises, against which Hilda
inveighed so earnestly.
The work went on vigorously until
the sun began to sink behind the mountain range that
lay to the north-westward of the dale. By this
time the hay was all cut, and that portion which was
sufficiently dry piled up, so Ulf and Haldor left
the work to be finished by the younger hands, and
stood together in the centre of the field chatting
and looking on.
Little change had taken place in the
personal appearance of Ulf of Romsdal since the occasion
of that memorable duel related in the first chapter
of our story. Some of his elasticity, but none
of his strength, was gone. There was perhaps
a little more thought in his face, and a few more
wrinkles on his swarthy brow, but his hair was still
black and his figure straight as the blade of his
good sword. His old enemy but now fast friend,
Haldor the Fierce, had changed still less. True,
his formerly smooth chin and cheeks were now thickly
covered with luxuriant fair hair, but his broad forehead
was still unwrinkled, and his clear blue eye was as
bright as when, twenty years before, it gleamed in
youthful fire at Ulf. Many a battle had Haldor
fought since then, at home and abroad, and several
scars on his countenance and shoulders gave evidence
that he had not come out of these altogether scathless;
but war had not soured him. His smile was as
free, open, and honest, and his laugh as loud and
hearty, as in days of yore. Erling was the counterpart
of his father, only a trifle taller and stouter.
At a short distance they might have been taken for
twin brothers, and those who did not know them could
scarcely have believed that they were father and son.
Close to the spot where the two friends
stood, a sturdy thrall was engaged in piling up hay
with an uncommon degree of energy. This man
had been taken prisoner on the coast of Ireland by
Ulf, during one of his sea-roving expeditions.
He had a huge massive frame, with a profusion of
red hair on his head and face, and a peculiarly humorous
twinkle in his eye. His name was Kettle Flatnose.
We have reason to believe that the first part of
this name had no connection with that domestic utensil
which is intimately associated with tea! It was
a mere accidental resemblance of sound no doubt.
As to the latter part, that is easily explained.
In those days there were no surnames. In order
to distinguish men of the same name from each other,
it was usual to designate them by their complexions,
or by some peculiarity of person or trait of character.
A blow from a club in early life had destroyed the
shape of Kettle’s nose, and had disfigured an
otherwise handsome and manly countenance. Hence
his name. He was about thirty-five years of
age, large-boned, broad-shouldered, and tall, but lean
in flesh, and rather ungainly in his motions.
Few men cared to grapple with the huge Irish slave,
for he possessed a superabundant share of that fire
and love of fight which are said to characterise his
countrymen even at the present time. He was
also gifted with a large share of their characteristic
good humour and joviality; which qualities endeared
him to many of his companions, especially to the boys
of the neighbourhood. In short, there was not
a better fellow in the dale than Kettle Flatnose.
“Thy labour is not light, Kettle,”
observed Ulf to the thrall as he paused for a few
moments in the midst of his work to wipe his heated
brow.
“Ill would it become me, master,”
replied the man, “to take my work easy when
my freedom is so nearly gained.”
“Right, quite right,”
replied Ulf with an approving nod, as the thrall set
to work again with redoubled energy.
“That man,” he added,
turning to Haldor, “will work himself free in
a few weeks hence. He is one of my best thralls.
I give my slaves, as thou knowest, leave to work
after hours to purchase their freedom, and Kettle
labours so hard that he is almost a free man already,
though he has been with me little more than two years
and a half. I fear the fellow will not remain
with me after he is free, for he is an unsettled spirit.
He was a chief in his own land, it seems, and left
a bride behind him, I am told. If he goes, I
lose a man equal to two, he is so strong and willing. Ho!
Kettle,” continued Ulf, turning to the man,
who had just finished the job on which he had been
engaged, “toss me yonder stone and let my friend
Haldor see what thou art made of.”
Kettle obeyed with alacrity.
He seized a round stone as large as his own head,
and, with an unwieldy action of his great frame, cast
it violently through the air about a dozen yards in
advance of him.
“Well cast, well cast!”
cried Haldor, while a murmur of applause rose from
the throng of labourers who had been instantly attracted
to the spot. “Come, I will try my own
hand against thee.”
Haldor advanced, and, lifting the
stone, balanced it for a few moments in his right
hand, then, with a graceful motion and an apparently
slight effort, hurled it forward. It fell a
foot beyond Kettle’s mark.
Seeing this the thrall leaped forward,
seized the stone, ran back to the line, bent his body
almost to the ground, and, exerting himself to the
utmost, threw it into the same hollow from which he
had lifted it.
“Equal!” cried Ulf. “Come,
Haldor, try again.”
“Nay, I will not try until he
beats me,” replied Haldor with a good-natured
laugh. “But do thou take a cast, Ulf.
Thine arm is powerful, as I can tell from experience.”
“Not so,” replied Ulf.
“It becomes men who are past their prime to
reserve their strength for the sword and battle-axe.
Try it once more, Kettle. Mayhap thou wilt
pass the mark next time.”
Kettle tried again and again, but
without gaining a hair’s-breadth on Haldor’s
throw. The stalwart thrall had indeed put forth
greater force in his efforts than Haldor, but he did
not possess his skill.
“Will no young man make trial
of his strength and skill?” said Haldor, looking
round upon the eager faces of the crowd.
“Glumm is no doubt anxious to
try his hand,” said Erling, who stood close
to the line, with his arms resting on the head of his
long-hafted battle-axe. “The shining of
the Sunbeam will doubtless warm thy heart and nerve
thine arm.”
Erling muttered the latter part of
his speech in a somewhat bitter tone, alluding to
Hilda’s smiles; but the jealous and sulky Glumm
could appreciate no sunbeams save those that flashed
from Ada’s dark eyes. He understood the
remark as a triumphant and ironical taunt, and, leaping
fiercely into the ring formed by the spectators, exclaimed:
“I will cast the stone, but
I must have a better man than thou, Kettle, to strive
with. If Erling the Bold will throw ”
“I will not balk thee,”
interrupted the other quickly, as he laid down his
axe and stepped up to the line.
Glumm now made a cast. Everyone
knew well enough that he was one of the best throwers
of the stone in all the dale, and confidently anticipated
an easy victory over the thrall. But the unusual
tumult of conflicting feelings in the young man’s
breast rendered him at the time incapable of exerting
his powers to the utmost in a feat, to excel in which
requires the union of skill with strength. At
his first throw the stone fell short about an inch!
At this Ada’s face became grave,
and her heart began to flutter with anxiety; for although
willing enough to torment her lover a little herself,
she could not brook the idea of his failing in a feat
of strength before his comrades.
Furious with disappointment and jealousy,
and attributing Ada’s expression to anxiety
lest he should succeed, Glumm cast again with passionate
energy, and sent the stone just an inch beyond the
thrall’s mark. There was a dispute on
the point, however, which did not tend to soothe the
youth’s feelings, but it was ultimately decided
in his favour.
Erling now stood forth; and as he
raised his tall form to its full height, and elevated
the stone above his head, he seemed (especially to
Hilda) the beau-ideal of manly strength and
beauty.
He was grieved, however, at Glumm’s
failure, for he knew him to be capable of doing better
than he had done. He remembered their old friendship
too, and pity for his friend’s loss of credit
caused the recently implanted jealousy for a moment
to abate. He resolved, therefore, to exert himself
just sufficiently to maintain his credit.
But, unhappily for the successful
issue of this effort of self-denial, Erling happened
to cast his eye towards the spot where Hilda stood.
The tender-hearted maiden chanced at that moment
to be regarding Glumm with a look of genuine pity.
Of course Erling misconstrued the look! Next
moment the huge stone went singing through the air,
and fell with a crash full two yards beyond Glumm’s
mark. Happening to alight on a piece of rock,
it sprang onward, passed over the edge of the hill
or brae on the summit of which the field lay, and
gathering additional impetus in its descent, went
bounding down the slope, tearing through everything
in its way, until it found rest at last on the sea
beach below.
A perfect storm of laughter and applause
greeted this unexpected feat, but high above the din
rose the voice of Glumm, who, now in a towering passion,
seized his double-handed sword, and shouting
“Guard thee, Erling!”
made a furious blow at his conqueror’s head.
Erling had fortunately picked up his
axe after throwing the stone. He immediately
whirled the heavy head so violently against the descending
sword that the blade broke off close to the hilt, and
Glumm stood before him, disarmed and helpless, gazing
in speechless astonishment at the hilt which remained
in his hands.
“My good sword!” he exclaimed,
in a tone of deep despondency.
At this Erling burst into a hearty
fit of laughter. “My bad sword, thou must
mean,” said he. “How often have I
told thee, Glumm, that there was a flaw in the metal!
I have advised thee more than once to prove the blade,
and now that thou hast consented to do so, behold the
result! But be not so cast down, man; I have
forged another blade specially for thyself, friend
Glumm, but did not think to give it thee so soon.”
Glumm stood abashed, and had not a
word to reply. Fortunately his feelings were
relieved by the attention of the whole party being
attracted at that moment to the figure of a man on
the opposite side of the valley, who ran towards them
at full speed, leaping over almost every obstacle
that presented itself in his course. In a few
minutes he rushed, panting, into the midst of the
throng, and presented a baton or short piece of wood
to Ulf, at the same time exclaiming: “Haste!
King Harald holds a Thing at the Springs. Speed
on the token.”
The import of this message and signal
were well understood by the men of Horlingdal.
When an assembly or Thing was to be convened for discussing
civil matters a wooden truncheon was sent round from
place to place by fleet messengers, each of whom ran
a certain distance, and then delivered over his “message-token”
to another runner, who carried it forward to a third,
and so on. In this manner the whole country could
be roused and its chief men assembled in a comparatively
short time. When, however, the Thing was to be
assembled for the discussion of affairs pertaining
to war, an arrow split in four parts was the message-token.
When the split arrow passed through the land men were
expected to assemble armed to the teeth, but when the
baton went round it was intended that they should
meet without the full panoply of war.
As soon as the token was presented,
Ulf looked about for a fleet man to carry forward
the message. Several of the youths at once stepped
forward offering their services. Foremost among
them was a stout, deep-chested active boy of about
twelve years of age, with long flaxen curls, a round
sunburnt face, a bold yet not forward look, a merry
smile, and a pair of laughing blue eyes. This
was Erling’s little brother Alric a
lad whose bosom was kept in a perpetual state of stormy
agitation by the conflict carried on therein between
a powerful tendency to fun and mischief, and a strong
sense of the obedience due to parents.
“I will go,” said the
boy eagerly, holding out his hand for the token.
“Thou, my son?” said Haldor,
regarding him with a look of ill-suppressed pride.
“Go to thy mother’s bower, boy.
What if a fox, or mayhap even a wolf, met thee on
the fell?”
“Have I not my good bow of elm?”
replied Alric, touching the weapon, which, with a
quiver full of arrows, was slung across his back.
“Tush! boy; go pop at the squirrels
till thou be grown big enough to warrant thy boasting.”
“Father,” said Alric with
a look of glee, “I’m sure I did not boast.
I did but point to my poor weapons. Besides,
I have good legs. If I cannot fight, methinks
I can run.”
“Out upon thee ”
“Nay, Haldor,” said Ulf,
interrupting the discussion, “thou art too hard
on the lad. Can he run well?”
“I’ll answer for that,”
said Erling, laying his large hand on his brother’s
flaxen head. “I doubt if there is a fleeter
foot in all the dale.”
“Away then,” cried Ulf,
handing the token to Alric, “and see that ye
deserve all this praise. And now, sirs, let us
fare to the hall to sup and prepare for our journey
to the Springs.”
The crowd at once broke up and hurried
away to Ulfstede in separate groups, discussing eagerly
as they went, and stepping out like men who had some
pressing business on hand. Alric had already
darted away like a hunted deer.
Erling turned hastily aside and went
away alone. As soon as he reached a spot where
the rugged nature of the ground concealed him from
his late companions, he started up the valley at his
utmost speed, directing his course so as to enable
him to overshoot and intercept his brother. He
passed a gorge ahead of the boy; and then, turning
suddenly to the left, bore down upon him. So
well did he calculate the distance, that on turning
round the edge of a jutting cliff he met him face to
face, and the two ran somewhat violently into each
other’s arms.
On being relieved from this involuntary
embrace, Alric stepped back and opened his eyes wide
with surprise, while Erling roared with laughter.
“Ye are merry, my brother,”
said Alric, relaxing into a grin, “but I have
seen thee often thus, and may not stop to observe thee
now, seeing that it is nothing new.”
“Give me an arrow, thou rogue!
There,” said Erling, splitting the shaft into
four parts, handing it back to the boy, and taking
the baton from him. “Get thee gone, and
use thy legs well. We must not do the King the
dishonour to appear before him without our weapons
in these unsettled times. Let the token be sent
out north, south, east, and west; and, harkee, lad,
say nothing to anyone about the object of the assembly.”
Alric’s countenance became grave,
then it again relaxed into a broad grin. Giving
his brother an emphatic wink with one of his large
blue eyes, he darted past him, and was soon far up
the glen, running with the speed of a deer and waving
the war-token over his head.