Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 124

Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 124
120 GRIPLA unless we deliberately disregard the author’s own explicit words—that in this story, as in Njáls saga, fate or destiny is closely associated with pagan sorcery and witchcraft. As a final example of a saga hero whose lifelong misfortune and eventual tragic death seem to derive less from his conflict with society or from a combination of personal ógœfa and impersonal fate than from the baleful influence of witchcraft and black magic let us review briefly three of Grettir’s encounters with various kinds of supematural powers. At a haunted farm a thoroughly un-Christian shepherd named Glámr is slain mysteriously during the Christmas season. He retums as a revenant and wreaks such havoc that no one dare dwell in those parts until Grettir overcomes him (Grettis saga, ch. 35). But the re- venant puts a double curse on Grettir, so that he will henceforth dread the darkness and all of his deeds will tum to great personal misfortune (snúask þér til ógæfu ok hamingjuleysis). The farmer thanks Grettir for ridding him of this unclean spirit (þenna óhreina anda), and this juxtaposition of pagan concepts and Christian term- inology is not without significance. The outlawry and killings predicted for Grettir by Glámr become a reality, and Grettir seeks to establish his innocence of having deliber- ately burned the sons of Þórir to death by submitting to an ordeal in Norway. King Óláfr gives his permission, but before Grettir can undergo the test, a boy in the church baits him into striking him. King Óláfr thereupon withdraws the right to undergo the ordeal, de- claring that it is not possible for Grettir to overcome his innate mis- fortune (ógæfa). Most of those present, however, think the mysterious lad must have been an unclean spirit sent to enchant or bring misfortune to Grettir (en þat ætla menn helzt, at þat hafi verit óhreinn andi, sendr til óheilla Gretti). Again we find this significant juxtaposition or near-identification of Christian and pagan concepts: óhreinn andi and ógœfa, óheill. And finally, Grettir’s death is brought about through the black magic of an old witch named Þuríðr, who cuts mnes on a tree root, reddens them with her blood, and chants magic incantations over them (tók hon kníf sinn ok reist rúnar á rótinni ok rauð í blóði sínu ok kvað yfir galdra). When Grettir tries to chop up this óheillatré for kindling, the axe skids off and wounds him, and this wound so
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