Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1997, Side 65

Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1997, Side 65
Stœri ek brag 63 from being a theatrical ploy, Hallfreðr’s tears as he falls at the feet of the king should be taken at face value, as an honest expression of his emotion. When the king inquires concerning the cause of his poet’s inexplicable tears, the latter responds: “Nærr fellr mer reiðin yður herra” (1:393,13), a variation of his earlier confession “ervmk leið sonar reiði” (1:390,12). The source of his unhappiness, Hallfreðr reveals, is the king’s anger which touches him so deeply. Whereas Óttarr’s killing was more or less unpremeditated, the result of a quick temper, Hallfreðr subsequently goes further, for he now chooses to disobey the king in order to assert his own notion of justice. I am referring to his mission to blind Þorleifr inn spaki who has refused to accept Christianity. Hallfreðr is sent on this errand with the king’s blessing, so to speak — Óláfr says: “skal ek leggia til ferðar þessar með þer mína gipt ok hamingiu” (1:395,18—19) — but Hallfreðr chooses to disobey the king’s order of returning with Þorleifr’s eyes; although he brings back two eyes, only one of them is Þorleifr’s, the other having been extracted from Kálfr, the instigator of the fight that resulted in the king’s coolness toward his troublesome poet. Hallfreðr’s justification for his subversion of the mission is a superior sense of justice. He explains his decision to take only one eye from Þorleifr but to make up for this by taking the other from Kálfr by saying: “Goðr drengr er meiddr en ver latum maN skræfu þessa lífa” (1:399,4—5). Important for our understanding of Hallfreðr’s disobedience to King Óláfr is his statement to Þorleifr that he will not accept gifts in exchange for not carrying out the king’s orders: “helldr mvn ek þat með ollu aa mik taka at gefa þer kauplaust aNat augat” (1:398,15-16). This is the first time that Hallfreðr shows an awareness of the need to take full responsibility for his actions. When the king subsequently learns what has happened, and that his order had been only half carried out, he tells Hallfreðr to return and retrieve Þorleifr’s other eye, but the poet stubbornly insists on his own position: “Þat uil ek eigi s(egir) Hallf(reðr) at ræna Þorleif þvi auganu sem ek gaf honum aðr” (1:400,2-3). At issue is the fact that Hallfreðr has “given” Þorleifr one of his eyes, and that therefore he cannot now retract his gift — possibly this is a hint at Óláfr’s own promise to Hallfreðr never to reject him.25 Hallfreðr’s justification of his behavior is accepted by his sovereign, and the narrator remarks: “Var Hallfireðr) þa með konungi igoðri sæmð” (1:400,9). My interpretation of Hallfreðar saga as the biography of a poet whose main concern is his relationship to paternal authority may also explain his ambivalent relationship to Kolfinna. When her father makes a decision in favor of marriage, Hallfreðr chooses not to accept this. At issue is his self-will.26 Hallfreðr wants to 25 The speech in Óláfi saga Tryggvasonar en mesta is an important “addition” contributing to our interpretation of Hallfreðr’s person and his relationship to the king. The Möiruvallabók redaction does not contain this apologia. Cf. Hallfreðar saga, ed. Bjarni Einarsson, 63:180-82. 2Í’ The character of Gunnlaugr ormstunga has been similarly explained as obtaining from his relationship to his father. Robert Cook remarked that it may have been “shaped to some extent by this early confrontation with an inflexible will superior to his own” (“The Character of Gunnlaug Serpent Tongue,” Scandinavian Stndies, 43 (1971), 9; see also Lars-Henrik Jensen who noted that Gunniaugr’s conflict with the ruling order is represented by the father
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