Gripla - 01.01.1990, Side 322

Gripla - 01.01.1990, Side 322
318 GRIPLA concerns the clothing of the assassin, the other the relative positions of sleeping-hall and byre in the farms Sæból and Eiðar; and further, the purpose of tying together the cows’ tails in the byre in each context. Björn K. Þórólfsson says that on both these points the account of Droplaugarsona saga is consistent, while that of Gísla saga is inconsist- ent and redundant.43 This is true enough, yet these two points do not seem to me as weighty or decisive as Björn and Jón think. What mat- ters most, it seems to me, is that these scholars have not made a de- tailed comparison in those sections that are after all most important in each separate account; namely, the description of the killing. I will now take these sections, referring to the passages I have already quot- ed. The account of Gísla saga has one feature over and above that of Droplaugarsona saga, when it tells of the talk and mutual relations of Þorgrím and Þórdís in bed. ‘Do you want me to turn towards you?’ says Þorgrím when he wakes for the first time. The sense of this ques- tion is clear, for it means straightforwardly ‘Do you want me to have intercourse with you?’ When again a few lines further on it is said that Þorgrím ‘thought that it was Þórdís waking him, and he then turned towards her’, the meaning is equally clear. Þorgrím turns to his wife to have intercourse with her, and at the same instant he is stabbed to death. This feature has no parallel in other sagas, and therefore it seems natural to suppose that here we have the residue of a tradition about the slaying of Þorgrím. The next task is to consider whether this epi- sode could have had any particular significance at any time in the peri- od when the tradition would have arisen, roughly speaking between the years 960 and 1240. In terms of Christian thought, there is no particular significance in a man being killed in the circumstances described, except in so far as the tragedy is made unusually gruesome. It becomes a totally different matter if this account is set in the conceptual and theological context of the tenth century. In fertility cults, ritual worship or celebration culminates with the king/high priest or the god of sacrifice copulating with the appropriate 43 ÍF VI, pp. xix-xx and works there cited.
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