Gripla - 01.01.1998, Side 165

Gripla - 01.01.1998, Side 165
FOLKTALE AND PARABLE 163 that at the end of the þáttr, when Auðun is described as „inn mesti gæfu- maðr“, I believe we can understand this in the spiritual sense. Despite Refr’s situation in pre-Christian Scandinavia, he, too, is described as having „gæfa“ (Gautreks saga:45). What is more, this quality of his is mentioned precisely in opposition not to some kind of secular bad luck, but to the specifically evil magic and trgllskapr of the sea king’s counselor Refnefr, an illmenni who rejects Refr’s gifts, throwing them into the sea. Significantly, the shadow of Oðinn is completely absent from the story of Refr. His is a tale of good luck and wisdom, rather than of bad luck and foolishness; it implicitly contrasts the fruitful exchange of gifts with the barren sacrifices of the other stories. The meaning of Gautreks saga is constructed by the reader very much in retrospect. Not until the end of the saga can its elements be added up and understood as a whole. Foolish, miserly, Oðinn-worshipping peasants bring about their own destruction after an encounter with a generous king; an immensely strong, intelligent, generous, unflinching, and loyal warrior brings about the death of his equally unflinching and generous king and foster- brother because of Óðinn’s demands; finally, a farmer’s son makes a gener- ous gift to a clever man and eventually wins land and a princess from a gen- erous king — none of these worship Óðinn, and all come to a happy end. Not until the reader has noticed the parallels between the story of Refr and Auðunar þáttr can the pro-generosity and anti-Odinic themes of the saga be connected, for Auðunar þáttr, a narrative that explicitly associates Christianity with the generosity of kings and the good luck of a farmer’s son, provides the link missing in Gautreks saga: the name of the generosity that brings grace is charity. That this is indeed a Christian reinterpretation of the traditional qualities that made a king popular is obscured by Gautreks saga’s pre-Christian setting, but it is much clearer in the Flateyjarbók saga of St Óláfr. There we find a curious pair of þœttir, Styrbjamar þáttr Svíakappa and Hróa þáttr, which closely resembles Gautreks saga in its combination of themes.21 The first þáttr tells of an ill-fated Swedish champion defeated by the enmity between Þórr and Óðinn, and the second tells of a Danish merchant who, supported by the good luck of King Sveinn Haraldsson, out-tricks the Swedes who try to cheat him of his cargo and returns to Denmark with many treasures for the king. Similarly, the Flateyjarbók version of Fóstbræðra saga contrasts Þormóðr Kolbrúnarskáld’s treatment at the hands of the miserly King Knútr 21 For a more detailed readings of these texts, see Rowe (1998).
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