Monday, 29 December 2014

Blood and Poems: The Saga of Hallfred Troublesome-Poet

The Myth: Viking Sagas! Blood! Magic! Snow! Violence! Seafaring! Vicious, vicious poetry!
The Book: Sagas of Warrior-Poets
The Author:  Various bards of the thirteenth century.
This text: Paperback anthology from a 1997 translation by various scholars
Price: Well, I paid $16.95 according to the sticker. (Penguin Classics. Amazon has an etext which is slightly cheaper, and there are probably earlier translations around.)

The Saga of Hallfred Troublesome-Poet
So Hallfred is in love with Kolfinna Avaldadottir, but isn't ready for the commitment of marriage. Kolfinna's father Avaldi therefore arranges to marry Kolfinna to Gris, who has been as far afield as Constantinople and may have been a Varangian Guard. Hallfred complains to Kolfinna, who tells him that he's had his chance. Gris and his father tell Hallfred that they don't want him sniffing around Kolfinna any more. Hallfred's foster father and his actual father agree, and Hallfred is sent overseas.

Hallfred befriends Earl Hakon of Norway with poetry and becomes a succesful trader, staying well away from the north of Iceland where Kolfinna is. Then Hakon dies and Olaf Tryggvason - also known as St. Olaf - is now king, with a new religion and new laws. Olaf demands that Hallfred and his crew convert. Hallfred, canny merchant that he his, agrees on two conditions: that Olaf never forsake him, and that the king himself act as sponsor in his baptism.

Hallfred stays with the king for some years, composing vaguely pagan poems that Olaf doesn't really want to hear, and gains the nickname 'Troublesome-Poet' during this period. Slowly and reluctantly, Hallfred gives up his poetic references to the old gods at Olaf's insistence. Still, when Hallfred's rival, the courtier Kalf, accuses him of being a secret pagan, it's all a bit too plausible, and only the king's baptism oaths prevent him from exiling Hallfred. Instead, he gives Hallfred the task of blinding Thorleif the Wise, an influential pagan hold-out in up-country Norway.

Hallfred makes his way onto Thorleif's farm, in secret initially, but Thorleif has dreamed of his coming and rumbles him. They fight, and Hallfred rips out one of Thorleif's eyes. Thorleif offers him money and gifts and favour if Hallfred spares him. Hallfred refuses the gifts but agrees to grant mercy off his own bat. On the way home, he stops in at Kalf's place, and takes his eye, too. He presents both eyes to King Olaf, who notices the difference and wants to send Hallfred back to Thorleif for his other eye. Hallfred refuses, but says he's happy to go back to Kalf's place. The king says it's probably better if he doesn't.

Hallfred continues to travel but not trade, as a shipwreck loses him worldly goods. A wealthy but elderly man named Audgisl hires him to accompany his caravan through dangerous territory. They run afoul of a bandit named Onund, who kills Audgisl and is killed in turn by Hallfred. Hallfred continues the journey to Audgisl's home, and on the way he is attacked by another man named Bjorn, and kills him. Audgisl's kin put him to trial for the murder of Bjorn, but on discovering that he was a trusted friend of Audgisl and following him to recover the body, they find in his favour and award him Onund's accumulated booty. Hallfred falls in love with Audgisl's widow, named Ingibjorg, and settles down for some years. They have two fine sons, Audgisl and Hallfred, Jr.

During this time, Hallfred's only religious observance is to make the sign of the cross over his beer. King Olaf appears to him in a dream and berates him for lapsing in his faith. The king's fetch demands that Hallfred bring his family to meet him. They do, and Ingibjorg and the kids are baptised.

Ingibjorg dies shortly afterwards, and Hallfred becomes homesick for Iceland. He sends the boys off to fosterings, and takes some men to Gris' homestead. The first thing he does is reacquaint himself with Kolfinna, and spending the night with her. He tells her that he has heard a great deal of scandalous poetry about Gris, and asks if she had written them. She denies it, and grows more offended with each verse, and more so when he starts composing his own. Gris hears about this liaison and the poetry, and he and his men try to kill Hallfred. They fail. Gris continues to demand compensation, in the form of Hallfred's royally-bestowed jewellery. Hallfred scoffs and refuses, and continues to compose satirical poetry.

Now very highly offended, Gris prepares a lawsuit. Hallfred has a weak case, which becomes weaker when Gris' kinsman kills his cousin, the lawyer. He opts for the 'challenge the opponent to a duel' defence, available in Viking courts, but the recently deposed King Olaf appears to him in a dream and tells him that he doesn't exactly have right - and therefore God - on his side. Hallfred cancels the duel and asks for a settlement, even though it's likely to go against him. The judge - Hallfred's uncle - balances up the murders, the kisses and the poems, and orders Hallfred to pay a fine, more of his royal jewellery.

Hallfred leaves his farm, with the vague intention of avenging King Olaf by killing the Earl Eirik. Dream-Olaf appears and tells him that this is a bad plan, and that he should instead reconcile himself to the Earl through poetry. Eirik's men capture him and he takes a lunge at the earl, and he is sentenced to death. Thorleif the Wise requests that Hallfred be spared, in recognition of his earlier clemency. The two become friends.

Hallfred's adventuring days are now largely over, though he does travel briefly with Gunnlaug Serpent-Tongue, hero of the next Saga, and they compare warrior-poet notes. Hallfred dies at sea as he is taking his family back to Iceland one last time. His coffin washes up in Iona, where the abbot's servants plunder his remains. Dream-Olaf berates the abbot for his poor treatment of the poet, and the monks recover Hallfred's body for Christian burial, making altar goods from his treasures - the last of his king-bestowed gold.

And here the saga of Hallfred ends. 

Next: Gunnlaug Serpent-Tongue.

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