DESCRIBES OUR HERO’S INTERVIEW
WITH JARL RONGVOLD AND KING HARALD HAARFAGER
Late in the evening, Erling and Glumm
arrived in the neighbourhood of the house of Jarl
Rongvold, where King Harald Haarfager was staying in
guest-quarters with a numerous retinue.
In the days of which we write there
were no royal palaces in Norway. The kings spent
most of their time when not engaged in war
or out on viking cruises in travelling
about the country, with a band of “herd-men”,
or men-at-arms, in “guest-quarters”.
Wherever they went the inhabitants were bound by
law to afford them house-room and good cheer at their
own cost, and the kings usually made this tax upon
their people as light as possible by staying only
a few days at each place.
Rongvold, who entertained the King
at this time, was one of those Jarls or Earls rulers
over districts under himself of whom he
had recently created many throughout the land, to
supersede those small independent kings who refused
to become subject to him. He was a stout warrior,
an able courtier, and a very dear friend of the King.
Just before his arrival at Jarl Rongvold’s
house, King Harald had completed a considerable part
of the programme which he had laid down in the great
work of subduing the whole of Norway to himself.
And wild bloody work it had been.
Hearing that several of the small
kings had called a meeting in the uplands to discuss
his doings, Harald went, with all the men he could
gather, through the forests to the uplands, came to
the place of meeting about midnight without being
observed by the watchmen, set the house on fire, and
burnt or slew four kings with all their followers.
After that he subdued Hedemark, Ringerige, Gudbrandsdal,
Hadeland, Raumarige, and the whole northern part of
Vingulmark, and got possession of all the land as
far south as the Glommen. It was at this time
that he was taunted by the girl Gyda, and took the
oath not to clip his hair until he had subdued the
whole land as formerly related. After
his somewhat peculiar determination, he gathered together
a great force, and went northwards up the Gudbrandsdal
and over the Doverfielde. When he came to the
inhabited land he ordered all the men to be killed,
and everything wide around to be delivered to the
flames. The people fled before him in all directions
on hearing of his approach some down the
country to Orkadal, some to Gaulerdal, and some to
the forests; but many begged for peace, and obtained
it on condition of joining him and becoming his men.
He met no decided opposition till he came to Orkadal,
where a king named Gryting gave him battle. Harald
won the victory. King Gryting was taken prisoner,
and most of his men were killed. He took service
himself, however, under the King, and thereafter all
the people of Orkadal district swore fidelity to him.
Many other battles King Harald fought,
and many other kings did he subdue all
of which, however, we will pass over at present, merely
observing that wherever he conquered he laid down the
law that all the udal property should belong to him,
and that the bonders the hitherto free
landholders both small and great, should
pay him land dues for their possessions. It
is due, however, to Harald Fairhair, to say that he
never seems to have aimed at despotic power; for it
is recorded of him that over every district he set
an earl, or jarl, to judge according to the law
of the land and to justice, and also to collect
the land dues and the fines; and for this each earl
received a third part of the dues and services and
fines for the support of his table and other expenses.
Every earl had under him four or more bersers, on
each of whom was bestowed an estate of twenty merks
yearly, for which he was bound to support twenty men-at-arms
at his own expense each earl being obliged
to support sixty retainers. The King increased
the land dues and burdens so much that his earls had
greater power and income than the kings had before,
and when this became known at Drontheim many of the
great men of that district joined the King.
Wherever Harald went, submission or
extinction were the alternatives; and as he carried
things with a high hand, using fire and sword freely,
it is not a matter of wonder that his conquests were
rapid and complete. It has been said of Harald
Fairhair by his contemporaries, handed down by the
scalds, and recorded in the Icelandic Sagas, that
he was of remarkably handsome appearance, great and
strong, and very generous and affable to his men.
But to return.
It was late in the evening, as we
have said, when Erling and Glumm reached the vicinity
of Jarl Rongvold’s dwelling. Before coming
in sight of it they were met by two of the mounted
guards that were posted regularly as sentries round
the King’s quarters. These challenged them
at once, and, on being informed that they desired to
have speech with the King on matters of urgency, conveyed
them past the inner guard to the house.
The state of readiness for instant
action in which the men were kept did not escape the
observant eyes of the visitors. Besides an outlying
mounted patrol, which they had managed to pass unobserved,
and the sentries who conducted them, they found a
strong guard round the range of farm buildings where
the King and his men lay. These men were all
well armed, and those of them who were not on immediate
duty lay at their stations sound asleep, each man
with his helmet on his head, his sword under it, his
right hand grasping the hilt, and his shield serving
the purpose of a blanket to cover him.
Although the young men observed all
this they did not suffer their looks to betray idle
curiosity, but rode on with stern countenances, looking,
apparently, straight before them, until they reined
up at the front door of the house.
In a few minutes a stout handsome
man with white hair came out and saluted Erling in
a friendly way. This was Jarl Rongvold, who was
distantly related to him.
“I would I could say with truth
that I am glad to see thee, cousin,” he said,
“but I fear me that thine errand to the King
is not likely to end in pleasant intercourse, if all
be true that is reported of the folk in Horlingdal.”
“Thanks, kinsman, for the wish,
if not for the welcome,” replied the youth,
somewhat stiffly, as he dismounted; “but it matters
little to me whether our intercourse be pleasant or
painful, so long as it is profitable. The men
of Horlingdal send a message to Harald Haarfager;
can my companion and I have speech with him?”
“I can manage that for thee,
yet would I counsel delay, for the King is not in
a sweet mood to-night, and it may go ill with thee.”
“I care not whether the King’s
mood be sweet or sour,” replied Erling sternly.
“Whatever he may become in the future, Harald
is not yet the all-powerful king he would wish to
be. The men of Horlingdal have held a Thing,
and Glumm and I have been deputed to see the King,
convey to him their sentiments, and ask his intentions.”
A grim smile played on the jarl’s
fine features for a moment, as he observed the blood
mantling to the youth’s forehead.
“No good will come to thee or
thine, kinsman, by meeting the King with a proud look.
Be advised, Erling,” he continued in a more
confidential tone; “it is easier to swim with
the stream than against it and wiser too,
when it is impossible to turn it. Thou hast heard,
no doubt, of Harald’s doings in the north.”
“I have heard,” said Erling bitterly.
“Well, be he right or be he
wrong, it were easier to make the Glommen run up the
fells than to alter the King’s determination;
and it seems to me that it behoves every man who loves
his country, and would spare further bloodshed, to
submit to what is inevitable.”
“Every lover of his country
deems bloodshed better than slavery,” said Erling,
“because the death of a few is not so great an
evil as the slavery of all.”
“Aye, when there is hope that
good may come of dying,” rejoined the jarl,
“but now there is no hope.”
“That is yet to be proved,”
said the youth; and Glumm uttered one of those emphatic
grunts with which men of few words are wont to signify
their hearty assent to a proposition.
“Tut, kinsman,” continued
Rongvold, with a look of perplexity, “I don’t
like the idea of seeing so goodly a youth end his days
before his right time. Let me assure thee that,
if thou wilt join us and win over thy friends in Horlingdal,
a splendid career awaits thee, for the King loves
stout men, and will treat thee well; he is a good master.”
“It grieves me that one whose
blood flows in my veins should call any man master!”
said Erling.
“Now a plague on thee, for a
stupid hot-blood,” cried the jarl; “if
thou art so displeased with the word, I can tell thee
that it need never be used, for, if ye will take service
with the King, he will give thee the charge and the
revenues of a goodly district, where thou shalt be
master and a jarl too.”
“I am a king!” said Erling,
drawing himself proudly up. “Thinkest thou
I would exchange an old title for a new one, which
the giver has no right to create?”
Glumm uttered another powerfully emphatic
grunt at this point.
“Besides,” continued Erling,
“I have no desire to become a scatt-gatherer.”
The jarl flushed a little at this
thrust, but mastering his indignation said, with a
smile
“Nay, then, if ye prefer a warrior’s
work there is plenty of that at the disposal of the
King.”
“I have no particular love for
war,” said Erling. Jarl Rongvold looked
at his kinsman in undisguised amazement.
“Truly thou art well fitted
for it, if not fond of it,” he said curtly;
“but as thou art bent on following thine own
nose, thou art like to have more than enough of that
which thou lovest not. Come, I will bring
thee to the King.”
The jarl led the two young men into
his dwelling, where nearly a hundred men-at-arms were
carousing. The hall was a long, narrow, and high
apartment, with a table running down each side, and
one at either end. In the centre of each table
was a raised seat, on which sat the chief guests,
but, at the moment they entered, the highest of these
seats was vacant, for the King had left the table.
The fireplace of the hall was in the centre, and
the smoke from it curled up among the rafters, which
it blackened before escaping through a hole in the
roof.
As all the revellers were armed, and
many of them were moving about the hall, no notice
was taken of the entrance of the strangers, except
that one or two near whom they passed remarked that
Jarl Rongvold owned some stout men-at-arms.
The King had retired to one of the
sleeping-chambers off the great halt in which he sat
at a small window, gazing dreamily upon the magnificent
view of dale, fell, fiord, and sea, that lay stretched
out before the house. The slanting rays of the
sun shone through the window, and through the heavy
masses of the King’s golden hair, which fell
in enormous volumes, like a lion’s mane, on
a pair of shoulders which were noted, even in that
age of powerful men, for enormous breadth and strength.
Like his men, King Harald was armed from head to foot,
with the exception of his helmet, which lay, with
his shield, on the low wolf-skin couch on which he
had passed the previous night.
He did not move when the jarl and
the young men entered, but on the former whispering
in his ear he let his clenched fist fall on the window
sill, and, turning, with a frown on his bold, handsome
face, looked long and steadily at Erling. And
well might he gaze, for he looked upon one who bore
a singularly strong resemblance to himself. There
was the same height and width and massive strength,
the same bold, fearless look in the clear blue eyes,
and the same firm lips; but Erling’s hair fell
in softer curls on his shoulders, and his brow was
more intellectual. Being a younger man, his beard
was shorter.
Advancing a step, after Jarl Rongvold
had left the room, Erling stated the sentiments of
the men of Horlingdal in simple, blunt language, and
ended by telling the King that they had no wish to
refuse due and lawful allegiance to him, but that
they objected to having the old customs of the land
illegally altered.
During the progress of his statement
both Erling and Glumm observed that the King’s
face flushed more than once, and that his great blue
eyes blazed with astonishment and suppressed wrath.
After he had concluded, the King still gazed at him
in ominous silence. Then he said, sternly:
“For what purpose camest thou
hither if the men of Horlingdal hold such opinions?”
“We came to tell you, King Harald,
what the men of Horlingdal think, and to ask what
you intend to do.”
There was something so cool in this
speech that a sort of grin curled the King’s
moustache, and mingled with the wrath that was gathering
on his countenance.
“I’ll tell thee what I
will do,” he said, drawing his breath sharply,
and hissing the words; “I will march into the
dale, and burn and s ” He stopped
abruptly, and then in a soft tone added, “But
what will they do if I refuse to listen to
them?”
“I know not what the men of
Horlingdal will do,” replied Erling; “but
I will counsel them to defend their rights.”
At this the King leaped up, and drew
his sword half out of its scabbard, but again checked
himself suddenly; for, as the Saga tells us, “it
was his invariable rule, whenever anything raised
his anger, to collect himself and let his passion
run off, and then take the matter into consideration
coolly.”
“Go,” he said, sitting
down again at the window, “I will speak with
thee on this subject to-morrow.”
Erling, who during the little burst
of passion had kept his blue eyes unflinchingly fixed
on those of the King, bowed and retired, followed by
Glumm, whose admiration of his friend’s diplomatic
powers would have been unbounded, had he only wound
up with a challenge to the King, then and there, to
single combat!