Studia Islandica - 01.07.1966, Side 63

Studia Islandica - 01.07.1966, Side 63
61 In the three chapters of his Óláfs saga following the story of Rauðúlfr (chapters 157—159, ÓH 462—465) Snorri tells how Rauðúlfr’s son Dagr (who, as we are told in the þáttr, had entered the king’s service) helped to unmask a traitor, Þórir Qlvisson, by means of his accomplishment, the ability to see a man’s true character. The evidence of Þórir’s guilt was a hidden gold arm-ring, a bribe from King Knútr of Denmark. This is reminiscent of Þórarins þáttr Nefjúlfs- sonar,1 where Þórarinn is similarly found to have a gold arm-ring given him by Knútr concealed on his arm, al- though, unlike Þórir, he is found to be not guilty of treason. There is probably a literary relationship between these two stories, although it is difficult to say which is the borrower. The episode of Þórir’s discovery cannot originally have been part of the story of Rauðúlfr. It is closely connected with other events in Óláfs saga and the tone and style is dif- ferent from that of the þáttr, which clearly ends with the discovery of Bjprn the Steward’s guilt: the addition of an extra episode would upset the balance of the story. Since Rauðúlfr and his sons are not mentioned elsewhere in Óláfs saga, it is probable that they are fictional characters invented by the author of RauSúlfs þáttr. Dagr cannot therefore have originally been concerned with the discovery of Þórir’s treachery: his part in the story was probably invented by Snorri. The episode of Þórir’s death appears to have been related very briefly in the versions of Óláfs saga older than Snorri’s. The substance of the Middle saga is probably reproduced fairly accurately in the Legendary saga, which has simply: “He (Öláfr) had four of their men slain. One was the nephew of Þórir Hundr (i.e. Þórir Qlvisson: his name is not even given). Another was Grjótgarðr, whose wife Kálfr Árnason subsequently married.”2 The episode does not survive in Styrmir’s version, nor in the Oldest saga, but 1 ÓH 805—808. 2 Óláfs Saga hins helga, ed. O. A. Johnsen (Kristiania 1922), p. 63.

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