Gripla


Gripla - 20.12.2008, Side 84

Gripla - 20.12.2008, Side 84
GRIPLA82 to the Whereabouts of an Object of Search (here G4 — the route is shown to him); XIX. The Initial Misfortune or Lack is Liquidated — the hero obtains the object of his quest; XX. The Hero Returns; XXI. The Hero is Pursued; XXII. Rescue of the Hero from Pursuit (Propp 1979, 27; 35–36; 39; 43–45; 50; 53; 55–57).4 The close relationship with folktale does not, of course, preclude the fact that the story of Þorsteinn’s adventure is nevertheless an útanferðar þáttr and that as such, as has been mentioned above, it shares the common formal properties and subject-matter of this genre. As in other tales of Icelanders abroad, we find in Þorsteins þáttr forvitna both the general nar- rative structure typical of this group of þættir (Introduction — Journey In — Alienation — Reconciliation — Journey Out — Conclusion (Harris 1972)), and its most common topic, namely the success of an Icelander who after undergoing a series of trials has managed to win the king’s favour and to get on in life. It is not sufficient, however, just to state that the story is modelled on the folktale. The very fact that such a tale has been associ- ated with the name of Haraldr Sigurðarson and placed among the stories accompanying the saga of this king in Flat needs an explanation, not least because this is the only útanferðar þáttr narrating conflicts between the Icelanders and king Haraldr in which fantastic elements are used at all. In contrast to other tales of the Icelanders and Haraldr harðráði, which never deviate from the realistic mode of representation, the entire narrative here is centred round extraordinary wonderful objects and an unprecedented quest set in some vaguely defined distant land. It seems that the latter circumstance deserves a closer look, for it may become the starting-point of an inquiry into the origins of the story of Þorsteinn’s adventure. Strangely enough, this very short and condensed tale contains a detail which is of no practical use in the action. Although the king told Þorsteinn to try to guess where he could have got the golden handles, the hero did not even try to think where Haraldr had travelled and preferred to appeal directly to Saint Óláfr. It is evident, however, that the reader of the þáttr should have understood the king’s reply as a hint at Haraldr’s long sojourn in the East, which was related in the preceding text 4 Attempts to find a parallel to Þorsteinn’s tale, either in I. M. Boberg’s Motif-Index of Early Icelandic Literature (on the quest for marvellous golden wood for a knife handle — see Boberg 1966, 159), or in the Aarne-Thompson Tale Type Index, yielded no results.
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