Gripla - 20.12.2017, Side 123

Gripla - 20.12.2017, Side 123
123 ing Þórdís that Gísli brá sverði ok hjó til hans, ok vannsk Kolbeini þat at fullu [Gísli drew his sword and struck at him, and this was absolutely enough for Kolbeinn].89 It is therefore Þorbjǫrn’s disruptive influence on the young Gísli that first causes him to behave in such a “reckless” or “uncom- promising” way. this paternal influence is later depicted at two key points in the saga: firstly, when the family decides to leave norway, and secondly, during Gísli’s last stand. on both occasions, Gísli speaks verses in which he overtly refers to his father’s influence on his life, first attributing future problems to his father by saying faðir minn, af þraut þinni / stofnast styrjar efni [trouble will arise from this, my father, because of your struggle],90 and later crediting Þorbjǫrn with Gísli’s heroic deeds: þá gaf sínum sveini / sverðs minn faðir herðu [My father gave hardness to his boy’s sword].91 The fact that these verses seem to provide a frame for Gísli’s life, being the first and the last verses he speaks, show the immense impact Þorbjǫrn seems to have had on “his boy”, as Gísli calls himself in the end. Preben Meulengracht Sørensen argues that the different versions of the saga are different interpretations of the same material: “M emphasizes more than S the difference in character between the two brothers, while S demonstrates more clearly than M the moral conflict into which Gísli is forced by external circumstances.”92 These external circumstances are the pressure that Þorbjǫrn puts on Gísli – and this pressure stays with him for the rest of his life, introducing the conflicts with his siblings and in-laws that in turn lead to his outlawry and death. this would also explain why Gísli refers to his father in his last stanza: Þorbjǫrn has indeed hardened Gísli’s sword by giving him reason to kill at least once, and by instilling in him a focus on his kin’s honour that, like a sword, cuts through his family. a similarly overarching, problematic paternal influence is depicted in the other two outlaw sagas. Grettir seems to be subjected to what nowa- days would be called emotional abuse from his father:93 Ekki hafði hann 89 Ibid., 11. 90 Ibid., 14. 91 Gísla saga, 114. 92 Meulengracht Sørensen, “Murder in Marital Bed,” 241. 93 Carolyne Larrington states that, although Egill has the worst of all saga childhoods, Grettir “runs him a close second”; “awkward adolescents: Male Maturation in norse Literature,” Youth and Age in the Medieval North, ed. Shannon Lewis-Simpson (Leiden: Brill, 2008), 155. “HE HaS LonG forfEItED aLL KInSHIP tIES”
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