Skírnir

Volume

Skírnir - 01.09.1991, Page 121

Skírnir - 01.09.1991, Page 121
SKÍRNIR SKARLATSBÚINN VÆRINGI 383 Earl’s Skald. He was just now returned from Constantinople, where he had served several years in the corps of the Værings [...] on account of his genius as a poet for he composed verses not only in the Danish tongue but also in Greek, he had been in high favor with the Emperor Alexios and the Princess Anna. Well read in the poets, orators and philosophers of Greece and having, while in Constantinople for a time attended the lectures of a Rhetor and Philosopher, he had a vast deal more of intellectual wealth than those around him. He was a christian indeed but not of the estab- lished church of Greece: this was evident [...] from a very fanciful figure with a bird’s head wrought of beaten gold, which he wore suspended about his neck in a chain of the same metall; this figure [...] plainly indicated the Gnostic. The mystical tenets of this sect were better relished by the young northern Scald than the pure doctrines of Christianity, for in this system of belief much greater latitude was allowed for imagination. It did not require a total abandonment of Thor and Odin with whose marvells and wunderful exploits the youthful mind had been richly stored. Here too was a place for Zeus, Hermes, Ares and Aphrodite whose acquaintance he had made through Homer and Aschylos. This was also the sect of which his Constantinopolitan master was a follower, a most accommodating sect which enlarged the moral and religious views of the votives without eradicating any prejudice or sweeping away any favorite superstition or fable. The person was now called upon to explain the mythical figures and Inscription on Brestir’s golden horn. Sá maður sem svo var ávarpaður skar sig úr bæði fyrir sakir klæðaburðar og yfirbragðs alls. Efnin í klæðum hans voru mun dýrari en í klæðum annarra nærstaddra, höfðingjar ekki frátaldir. Hann var í kyrtli úr skarlatsrauðu silki utan yfir hvíta flík úr sama efni, ríkulega gulldregna. Hár hans og skegg var vandlega snyrt og liðaðist hárið í fögrum lokkum langt niður á axlir. Jafnvel liðirnir í skegginu virtust bera þess merki að listíengi hefði komið til liðs við náttúruna. Hann hafði afar tæra og hljómfagra rödd; í máli hans gætti þeirrar æðri fágunar sem stafaði af öllu fari þessa manns: hann var mælskur vel og þótt hann hefði hófstilltari talsmáta og ástríðuminni en félagar hans var hlýtt á hann af meiri eftirtekt. Það var tungutak hans og orðsnilld ásamt viðeigandi hljómfalli, marg- breytilegu en þó ekki tilgerðarlegu, sem virtist halda áheyrendum hans föngnum. Þegar hann lauk sundur munni sló þögn á hópinn því allir virtust hrífast af máli hans. Þessi maður var Islendingurinn Þorleifur sem síðar fékk viðurnefnið jarlaskdld. Hann var nýkominn úr Miklagarði, þar sem hann hafði verið með væringjum í nokkur ár [...] því hann var skáldmæltur með afbrigðum og orti ekki aðeins á dönsku heldur einnig á grísku. Hann hafði verið í miklum metum hjá Alexios keisara og Onnu prinsessu. Þar eð hann hafði lesið grísku ljóðskáldin, mælskusnillingana og heimspekingana auk þess sem hann hafði setið fyrirlestra kennimanns og heimspekings í
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