Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1997, Side 60

Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1997, Side 60
58 Marianne Kalinke wins this round, but also receives his cognomen “vandræðaskáld.” His positioning vis-á-vis the king has not yet concluded, however, for when, after the recitadon of the poem, the king asks him to become his retainer, Hallfreðr once more negotiates: Ek var fyrr hirðmaðr Hakonar j(arls). Nv mun ek ecki geraz þer hand genginn ok engum pðrum hpfðingia nema þu heitir mer þvi at mik hendi enga þa lutí er þu segir mik þer af hendan e(ðr) rekir mik fra þer. (1:387,17-20) The king realizes the possible consequences of acceding to Hallfreðr’s exorbitant demand, but acquiesces nonetheless: in effect Hallfreðr is pleading for the king’s absolute acceptance of his person without regard to his future behavior. Hallfreðr’s reaction to the king’s invitation to become his retainer, that is, to accept him as his lord, as well as to the earlier exhortation to take Christ as his heavenly lord, not only has a bearing on subsequent events but also serves to elucidate Hallfreðr’s former behavior in Iceland. Ursula Dronke interpreted Hallfreðr’s series of verses on the divine powers, which displeased King Óláfr so much, as “a brilliant way of expressing the two facts known about the poet Hallfreðr, (1) that he was ‘difficult’ and (2) that he moved from a heathen to a Christian patron.”13 Her understanding of Hallfreðr as re-enacting “the traditio- nal drama of defiance to conversion” (p. 26) is well taken, but tells only half the story; in its portrait of Hallfreðr, the saga goes beyond depicting him as protesting the new faith. The skáld challenges the new religion inasmuch as it is symptomatic of the authority the king wields, and in his case that is also paternal authority. Not for nothing has King Óláfr become his godfather, a substitute for his biological father. Hallfreðr’s grudging acceptance of Christianity, not accomplis- hed without getting something in return from King Óláfr, anticipates his grud- ging submission to the king as his retainer. Hallfreðr’s negotiations as he enters into both a spiritual and a secular relation- ship with the king elucidate his relationship with his biological father. It is especially the promise he extracts from King Óláfr when the latter invites him to become his retainer which throws light on Hallfreðr’s psyche. When he elicits from the king a promise not to reject him under any circumstances, Hallfreðr is pleading for an absolute love, something not granted to him by his own íather. With the substitution of King Óláfr’s spiritual and political authority for Óttarr’s parental authority, Hallfreðr actually begins to assert himself in action, and not solely in verse as had been the case in Iceland. At home his deeds had been circumscribed by his father and grandfather, while in Norway both are now subject to the critical scrutiny of the king; nevertheless, only in relation to the king is Hallfreðr able to establish a delicate balance between his own desires and the will of a father figure. The erstwhile rebel is beginning to mature. Hallfreðr’s repeated testing of King Óláfr’s patience and willingness to give in 13 Ursula Dronke, “The Poet’s Persona in the Skalds’ Sagas,” Parergon, 22 (1978), 26.
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