Part 76 (1/2)

It is said that a spy who had seen the fleet of King Harald said to Thorkel Geysa's daughters, ”Ye said, Geysa's daughters, that King Harald dared not come to Denmark.” Dotta, Thorkel's daughter, replied, ”That was yesterday.” Thorkel had to ransom his daughters with a great sum. So says Grane:--

”The gold-adorned girl's eye Through Hornskeg wood was never dry, As down towards the sandy sh.o.r.e The men their lovely prizes bore.

The Norway leader kept at bay The foe who would contest the way, And Dotta's father had to bring Treasure to satisfy the king.”

King Harald plundered in Denmark all that summer, and made immense booty; but he had not any footing in the land that summer in Denmark.

He went to Norway again in autumn and remained there all winter (A.D.

1049).

33. MARRIAGES AND CHILDREN OF HARALD HARDRADE.

The winter after King Magnus the Good died, King Harald took Thora, daughter of Thorberg Arnason, and they had two sons; the oldest called Magnus, and the other Olaf. King Harald and Queen Ellisif had two daughters; the one Maria, the other Ingegerd. The spring after the foray which has just been related King Harald ordered the people out and went with them to Denmark (A.D. 1049), and herried there, and did so summer after summer thereafter. So says Stuf, the skald:--

”Falster lay waste, as people tell,-- The raven in other isles fared well.

The Danes were everywhere in fear, For the dread foray every year.”

34. OF THE ARMAMENTS OF SVEIN ULFSON AND HARALD.

King Svein ruled over all the Danish dominions after King Magnus's death. He sat quiet all the winter; but in summer he lay out in his s.h.i.+ps with all his people and it was said he would go north to Norway with the Danish army and make not less havoc there than King Harald had made in Denmark. King Svein proposed to King Harald in winter (A.D.

1049) to meet him the following summer at the Gaut river and fight until in the battle-field their differences were ended, or they were settled peacefully. They made ready on both sides all winter with their s.h.i.+ps, and called out in summer one-half of all the fighting men. The same summer came Thorleik the Fair out of Iceland, and composed a poem about King Svein Ulfson. He heard, when he arrived in Norway, that King Harald had sailed south to the Gaut river against King Svein. Then Thorleik sang this:--

”The wily Svein, I think, will meet These inland Nors.e.m.e.n fleet to fleet; The arrow-storm, and heaving sea, His vantage-fight and field will be.

G.o.d only knows the end of strife, Or which shall have his land and life; This strife must come to such an end, For terms will never bind King Svein.”

He also sang these verses:--

”Harald, whose red s.h.i.+eld oft has shone O'er herried coasts, and fields hard won, Rides in hot wrath, and eager speeds O'er the blue waves his ocean-steeds.

Svein, who in blood his arrows stains, Brings o'er the ocean's heaving plains His gold-beaked s.h.i.+ps, which come in view Out from the Sound with many a hue.”

King Harald came with his forces to the appointed meeting-place; but there he heard that King Svein was lying with his fleet at the south side of Seeland. Then King Harald divided his forces; let the greater part of the bonde-troops return home; and took with him his court-men, his lendermen, the best men-at-arms, and all the bonde-troops who lived nearest to the Danish land. They sailed over to Jutland to the south of Vendilskage, and so south to Thioda; and over all they carried fire and sword. So says Stuf, the skald:--

”In haste the men of Thyland fly From the great monarch's threat'ning eye; At the stern Harald's angry look The boldest hearts in Denmark shook.”

They went forward all the way south to Heidaby, took the merchant town and burnt it. Then one of Harald's men made the following verses:--

”All Heidaby is burned down!

Strangers will ask where stood the town.

In our wild humour up it blazed, And Svein looks round him all amazed.

All Heidaby is burned down!