Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1992, Side 53

Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1992, Side 53
Women and Men in Laxdæla saga 51 some reasons are apparent for Ólafur’s success abroad - his family connections in Ireland, his gifts to the Norwegian royalty - it still seems that his rewards exceed his deserts, and it is striking that the evidence of physical manliness is so thin. His prowess is not greater back in Iceland, where the only acts he performs - the laying of Hrappur’s ghost (ch. 24) and his part in action against Kotkel and his family of sorcerers (chs. 37-38) - are short of heroic. Otherwise, Ólafur’s career is marked by two things: the achieving and displaying of great wealth and splendor, and acting in a weak, vacillating way at a number of key moments. Since Ursula Dronke (1979) has already described Ólafur’s “blundering benevolence” in a number of scenes where his behavior is well-intentioned but ineffective, it will suffice here to examine one episode. When he comes to Norway for the second time, to get timber, Ólafur accepts hospitality for the winter from a prosperous man named Geir- mundur gnýr, who is described as an “ódældarmaður” (29:1574). The reader may well wonder at the wisdom of accepting an invitation from such a man, in spite of his wealth. The following year Ólafur acts inconsistently when Geirmundur brings his goods onto Ólafur’s ship: „Eigi mundir þú fara á mínu skipi ef eg hefði fyrr vitað því að vera ætla eg þá munu nokkura á íslandi að betur gegndi að þig sæju aldrei. En nú er þú ert hér kominn við svo mikið fé þá nenni eg eigi að reka þig aftur sem búrakka." (29:1575) This is the worst sort of vacillation: first Ólafur insults the man whose hospitality he has enjoyed for the whole winter by saying he doesn’t want to offer him passage on his ship, and then he says he will take him anyway. It would have been better not to say anything at all. To make things worse, when they get to Iceland Ólafur invites Geirmundur to stay with him, and this leads of course to Geirmundur’s asking to marry Þuríður. Ólafur’s first answer is a flat “no”, but when Geirmundur bribes Þorgerður and she talks to Ólafur on Geirmundur’s behalf, he contradicts his own good instincts: “Eigi skal þetta gera í móti þér heldur en annað þótt eg væri fúsari að gifta Þuríði öðrum manni”(29:1576). The next bit of inconsistency in this episode occurs three years later, when Geirmundur abandons Þuríður and their baby daughter without leaving them any of his extensive wealth. Ólafur not only fails to take strong action, he goes as far as to give him “kaupskipið með öllum reiða” (30:1576). What is at stake here of course is the domestic relation between Ólafur and Þorgerður: she persuaded him to permit the marriage, and now he, in a typical feud between married partners, wants her to see clearly that he was right and she was wrong. When Þorgerður and Þuríður complain
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Skáldskaparmál

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