Gripla - 20.12.2007, Side 18

Gripla - 20.12.2007, Side 18
GRIPLA has been his helper, is pregnant by him. There follows a victorious duel with a blámaðr of immense strength, and back in Iceland Búi repeats the victory over twelve men. When he has been reconciled with his enemies he meets his fate in the son he has had with Dofri’s daughter. Búi refuses to recognize the son, who is only twelve years old, and demands that they wrestle. With the help of his mother, who on this occasion is invisible, the son kills Búi and then leaves Iceland again. Búi’s strength is great, but he is repeatedly saved from danger by the protective magic of his fostermother and the help of his giantess lover, and in the end his former lover interferes in his wrestling with their son and causes his death. Thus the borders of the world of magic and giants are fre- quently crossed in this saga, and the fate of the protagonist is decided by his dealings with female supernatural beings, as is common in fairy tales. Like the other late sagas Kjalnesinga saga has the surface characteristics of an Íslendingasaga with tales about landnám and connection with known his- torical figures such as Helgi bjóla son of Ketill Flatnose, and King Haraldr Finehair; also, the fights between farmers on Kjalarnes are precisely located in real landscape with known placenames. However, Búi is no usual saga hero. He is fostered by a woman knowledgeable of magic who is somehow mys- teriously connected with a mountain. Although not a Christian for good his- torical reasons, Búi shows strong aversion to paganism in his youth and burns a pagan temple, and in Norway he actually ‘goes into the mountains’, lives there and begets a child. The duel between father and son is of course a well known motif from heroic legend, and in the same way as Búi crosses borders, the saga crosses or wipes out the borderline between heroic fornaldarsaga and Íslendingasaga. Þorskfirðinga saga or Gull-Þóris saga is incomplete because parts of it have been erased from the only vellum manuscript (all the others are copies of this ms. of a much later date). This saga is extremely rich in personal names – some of them from Landnáma, some fictional – as well as placenames which are interpreted as drawn from personal names. Thus the saga is given an his- torical appearance, although several of the names arouse suspicion that the saga is not to be taken seriously as history. The protagonist fights dragons in his youth and thereby lays his hands on a gold-treasure which he guards jealously. Back in Iceland he takes up farming and kills many people in the conflicts he gets involved in. All his victories do little to strengthen his posi- tion, however, but in his old age he disappears and is thought to have turned into a dragon watching his gold in a waterfall named Gullfoss. An older version of this saga that Sturla Þórðarson refers to in his Landnáma-version 16
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