The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1981, Blaðsíða 17

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1981, Blaðsíða 17
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 15 Gunnar for the purpose of putting him to death would have agreed to a truce while he was having his women make another bow- string. A thoughtful reader must therefore declare Hallgerdur innocent of this basic charge that history has made against her. What we have here is a literary device to heighten the drama, and crown Hallgerdur’s unsavory reputation. Hallgerdur’s end was as sad as her life had been. She had been married to three men and seen them all die violently. Toward the close of her life we see her in the com- pany of a wretch named Hrappur. In due time someone ran a spear through him, at which time a very casual conversation takes place which throws a clear light on the credibility of the narrative generally: As Hrappur’s arm is hacked off, he says to the adversary: “What you have done certainly needed doing, that hand has brought harm and death to many.” “This will put an end to all that,” said his assailant as he ran Hrappur through with a spear. With Hrap- pur dead Hallgerdur disappears from the story. She had completed her role in Njal’s Saga as the untamable shrew. But in spite of all, Hallgerdur has found mercy in the legends of the nation. Once upon a time a grave was being dug in the cemetery at Laugarnes, near Reyjkavik. The grave diggers came upon what appeared to be the skeleton of a woman with an extra- ordinary abundance of hair. This could be none other than Hallgerdur, who in her old age, according to the legend, had moved there to live with her son and had died there. Sigurdur Breidfjord, a noted poet (1798- 1846) must have believed that this was true, because in a poem about Hallgerdur he says: “ad Laugamesi liggur nar, lands ad biskupssetri.” (She is buried at Laugarnes, the seat of the bishops of the country.) Thus we have legend upon legend, and an endless speculation about the boundaries of fact and fiction. III. BERGTHORA SKARPHEDINS- DOTTIR — A WOMAN WHO WAS NOT THE ‘BETTER HALF’ The average Njala reader will admire Bergthora, but condemn Hallgerdur, yet in the early chapter of the story they seem to outdo each other in intrigue and in stimulat- ing strife and bloodshed. The plain fact is that apart from her words and actions on the last day of her life there is very little that can be said in praise of Bergthora. She was the one who started the fatal feud with Hallger- dur when she insulted her after she was seated as a guest in her own house, by telling her to get up and give the seat of honor to another woman who had just arrived. Near- ly always when Bergthora is mentioned she is planning to have someone killed. The fires of hatred and the spirit of vengeance seems to have burned with greater intensity in her soul than in any of her menfolk. Njall tried repeatedly to restrain her fury, but she will not be assuaged. She challenges her sons again and again and chides them for their reluctance in going forth on slaying expeditions. The very thought of missing an opportunity for revenge seems to have been to her a great affliction. But the most memorable event in her story is when she has to choose between life and death. The anguish and lamentations of the women of the household become ever louder as the fires leap along the ceiling and the walls of the dwelling place. Flosi, the chief of the incendiairies becomes magna- nimous and says to Bergthora: “You come out, for under no circumstances do I want you to bum.” There it is that Bergthora makes herself immortal in Icelandic history and literature by declaring calmly: “I was given to Njal in marriage when I was young, and I have promised him that we would share the same fate. ” But actually, she did not have much of an option. She had heard her husband respond

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