Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 120

Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 120
116 GRIPLA skírðir ok kristnir at kalla.) Very similar to this is the observation in Fóstbrœðra saga (ch. 2): En þó at þá væri menn kristnir kallaðir, þá var þó í þann tíð ung kristni ok mjök vanger, svá at margir gneistar heiðninnar váru þó þá eptir ok í óvenju lagðir. Even though people were called Christian, still Christianity was young and very imperfect, for many sparks of heathendom remained and had become evil customs. Although the author himself takes a dim view of the remnants of paganism and the attendant vices, many persons in those days thought it advantageous, he tells us, to be skilled in magic því at kristni var ung ok vanger (ch. 9). And even though Christianity was young (ch. 18), it was not customary to plunder the slain. In other words, even though paganism was evil and many Christians were not yet firm in the faith, people did not stoop so low as to plunder the bodies of those they had slain. Could this, perhaps, be an ironic allusion to contemporary practices as described in Sturlunga sagal The author of this saga (ch. 23) also indulges in a bit of ironic humor in the episode dealing with Gríma, who sheltered and nursed Þormóðr in Greenland. Þormóð’s enemies search for him in Gríma’s house, where they find a chair with the likeness of Þórr carved on the chairposts. When chided by her rival witch Þórdís about this witch- craft (fyrnska), Gríma explains with a feigned ingenuousness that de- lights the modern reader no less than it must have amused the author’s contemporaries: ‘Ek kem sjaldan til kirkju at heyra kenningar lærðra manna, því at ek á langt at fara, en fámennt heima. Nú kemr mér þá heldr í hug, er ek sé líkneski Þórs af tré gert, þat er ek má brjóta ok brenna, þegar ek vil, hversu miklu sá er meiri, er skapat hefir himin ok jörð ok alla hluti sýniliga ok ósýniliga ok öllum hlutum gefr líf ok engi maðr má yfir stíga.’ ‘I seldom get to church to hear the sermons of priests, for I have a great distance to travel and few men at home to accompany me. But whenever I see the wooden likeness of Þórr, that I can break or burn at will, I think of how much greater he is who has created heaven and earth and all things visible and invisible, and who gives life to all things and cannot be sur- passed by anyone.’
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