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The Poetic Edda

Page 16

by Jackson Crawford

what gift will you give

  to accompany my name-giving,

  you lovely woman?

  I think you know

  what everyone’s names are.

  But I will not accept my name,

  unless I get you as a gift along with it.”

  {180} The Valkyrie said:

  [8] “I know where there lie

  forty-six

  swords

  in Sigarsholm.

  But one of those

  shield-breaking blades

  is better than the others;

  it’s decked with gold.

  [9] “There’s a ring in the hilt,

  and courage in its middle,

  and there’s fear in its point—

  fear of the man who wields it.

  A blood-colored serpent

  decorates the blade;

  another serpent bites its tail

  on the hilt’s hand-guard.”

  A king was named Eylimi; he had a daughter named Svava. She was a Valkyrie who rode on the waves and winds. It was she who gave Helgi his name, and who defended him in many battles afterwards.

  Helgi said:

  [10] “Hjorvarth, you are not

  a wise king,

  not a good leader of men,

  though you are wise enough.

  You’ve burned the halls

  of other kings,

  who had given you

  no provocation.

  [11] “But Hrothmar

  will come to power,

  and own the rings

  our people have owned.

  That man fears no one

  in this life; he thinks

  he’ll own our inheritance

  when we’re all dead.”

  {181} Hjorvarth said he would let Helgi have an army, if Helgi would avenge his mother’s father, King Svafnir. Then Helgi found the sword Svava had told him about, and he and Atli went and killed Hrothmar and did many other great warlike deeds.

  Helgi killed the giant Hati where he sat on a hill. Then Helgi and Atli anchored their ships in Hati’s Fjord. Atli stood watch during the first part of the night. Then Hrimgerth, the daughter of Hati, said:

  [12] “Who are you men

  in Hati’s Fjord?

  Your ships are decked

  with shields.

  You speak boldly;

  I think you fear nothing—

  tell me the name of your king.”

  Atli said:

  [13] “He is named Helgi,

  but you can’t do any harm

  to that fierce man.

  There are iron ships

  in his fleet; they’re too tough

  even for a giant woman.”

  [14] “What are you named,”

  asked Hrimgerth, “you strong man?

  What do people call you?

  Your king must trust you,

  since he lets you

  stand on the fair ship’s prow.”

  [15] “I am named Atli,

  and I will be fierce against you;

  I have great hate of giant women.

  I’ve often stood

  on a ship’s wet prow,

  I’ve often killed witch women.

  {182} [16] “And what are you called,

  you corpse-hungry sorceress,

  you monster? Name your father, too.

  You ought to be lying

  nine miles below the earth,

  with a tree’s roots in you.”

  [17] “I am named Hrimgerth,

  and my father is Hati,

  who I think is the greatest of giants.

  He had many women,

  all stolen from their homes,

  before Helgi killed him.”

  [18] “Witch, you’ve been here

  by the king’s ships,

  you’ve waited in the fjord’s mouth.

  You were meaning

  to give the king’s men to Ran,

  if their spears didn’t kill you first.”

  [19] “I think you’ve been

  deluded by a dream, Atli:

  I see your eyelashes sunk low.

  My mother lay in wait

  for the king’s ships, and I

  drowned Hlothvarth’s sons in the sea.

  [20] “And now you would shout, Atli,

  if you weren’t a gelding—

  now I, Hrimgerth, stretch out my neck.

  You have a coward’s heart,

  Atli, though I think

  you have a handsome voice.”

  [21] “A gelding? You’ll think I’m

  a stallion if you get to try me,

  if I come ashore from my ship.

  You’ll have all your bones

  broken, if I carry out my threats—

  I’ll hang you by your neck, Hrimgerth.”

  {183} [22] “Come to land, Atli,

  if you have the courage,

  and we’ll meet in Varin’s bay.

  I’ll straighten out

  your ribs, boy,

  if you come within my grasp.”

  [23] “I won’t leave

  till the men wake,

  and take over the watch for the king.

  I can’t be sure

  when you’ll come

  to attack our ship, you monster.”

  [24] “Wake, Helgi!”

  said Hrimgerth. “Pay me back

  for when you killed my father—

  sleep at my side

  for one night,

  and I’ll consider the debt paid.”

  [25] Helgi said, “Only a hairy beast

  would take you, you’re too ugly.

  But a giant, a very wise giant,

  the worst kind of lava-monster,

  lives in Tholley,

  and he’d be a good match for you.”

  [26] Hrimgerth said, “Helgi,

  you’d rather have Svava,

  who ruled the sea last night—

  that sparkling sea

  seemed stronger than I am.

  Here the land rises from the sea

  and holds your fleet,

  and she alone

  is the reason

  I couldn’t kill your men.”

  {184} [27] “Hear me, Hrimgerth,” said Helgi.

  “If I’m going to compensate you

  for your father, tell me more:

  Was it just one lady

  who saved my ships,

  or were there more of them?”

  [28] “There were twenty-seven,

  though one rode before them all,

  a beautiful lady wearing a helmet.

  Their mares were stirred up,

  dew dripped from their manes

  into the deep trenches,

  like hail upon the high trees

  when the year turns;

  I hated all this as I saw it.”

  [29] “Look to the east now, Hrimgerth!

  I, Helgi, have

  kept you talking till your death.

  My fleet is saved

  on land and on sea,

  and my men are spared your terrors.”

  [30] “It’s morning, Hrimgerth!

  I, Atli, have

  kept you talking till your death.

  Now you’ll become

  just a ridiculous

  standing stone in the sea.”

  King Helgi was a great warrior. He came to King Eylimi and asked for the hand of his daughter Svava. Helgi and Svava swore their faithfulness to one another, and they loved each other very much. Svava stayed at home with her father, and Helgi went out on raids. Svava was still a Valkyrie, as she had been before.

  Helgi’s half-brother Hethin also stayed at home with their father, King Hjorvarth, in Norway.

  One time Hethin was away from home alone on a winter evening, and he met a giant woman. She was riding a wolf, and she was using snakes as reins. She offered to accompany Hethin. {185} He refused her, and she said, “You’ll repay this at the feast, when you mak
e your oaths.”

  That evening there was a feast, and oaths were sworn. A big boar was brought in, and men laid their hands on it and swore oaths as they drank. Hethin swore that he would take Svava, daughter of Eylimi, his brother Helgi’s lover, but later he regretted this oath so much that he wandered wild roads to the south alone, and eventually he met his brother Helgi. Helgi said:

  [31] “Greetings, Hethin!

  What news

  can you tell me

  from Norway?

  Young ruler,

  why are you in exile?

  Why have you come alone

  to seek me?”

  [32] “A much greater

  misfortune has befallen me:

  I swore to take

  your noble-born

  bride, when I made

  my oath at the feast.”

  [33] “Don’t concern yourself,

  Hethin; the oaths

  men make while drinking

  will always prove true.

  A king has challenged me

  to a duel, and before three nights

  have passed, I must meet him

  at the appointed place.

  I doubt that I

  will survive;

  and then it would be good,

  if you took Svava.”

  [34] “Are you saying, Helgi,

  that I still deserve

  your good will,

  and gifts from you?

  {186} It would be more befitting

  if you bloodied your sword

  in me, than if you gave

  your enemy peace.”

  Helgi spoke as he did because he suspected he was doomed, and that the troll-woman that Hethin had seen riding the wolf was in fact Helgi’s own guardian spirit, and she had caused Hethin to speak as he had.

  There was a king named Alf, son of Hrothmar, and it was he who had challenged Helgi to meet him for a duel on Sigarsvellir before three nights had passed. Then Helgi said:

  [35] “That dark

  giant woman

  rode a wolf,

  she offered to go with Hethin—

  she knew that I,

  Sigerlinn’s son,

  would be slain

  on Sigarsvellir.”

  Then there was a great battle, and Helgi was mortally wounded.

  [36] Helgi sent

  Sigar to ride

  to Svava,

  Eylimi’s daughter—

  he said to tell her

  to make haste,

  if she wanted to see

  Helgi alive.

  [37] Sigar said,

  “Helgi sent me

  to you, Svava,

  he gave me a message.

  That warrior wants

  to see you again,

  before the noble man

  falls dead of his wounds.”

  [38] Svava said,

  “What has happened

  {187} to Helgi, son of Hjorvarth?

  This is a terrible sorrow for me.

  But whether he drowned in the sea,

  or was torn by a sword,

  I’ll pay this back in full

  to the man who caused it.”

  [39] Sigar said, “Helgi,

  the best king under the sun,

  fell this morning

  at Frekastein.

  Alf has

  total victory,

  although it didn’t

  have to end this way.”

  [40] Helgi said,

  “Welcome, Svava,

  this will be our last

  meeting in life.

  Spread a blanket

  beneath my body;

  a sword has come

  too near my heart.

  [41] “I ask you,

  Svava, my bride,

  if you will heed

  my dying words—

  that you will sleep

  by Hethin,

  that you will love

  my young brother.”

  [42] Svava said,

  “Helgi, when you

  gave me rings,

  I said this:

  I said I would never

  willingly in my life

  {188} put my arms around

  another man, if you died.”

  [43] “Kiss me, Svava,”

  said Hethin.

  “I won’t ever return

  to Rogheim or Rothulsfjoll,

  before I’ve avenged

  Helgi, Hjorvarth’s son.

  That man was the best

  beneath the sun.”

  It is said that Helgi and Svava were reincarnated.

  {189} Helgakvitha Hundingsbana I (The First Poem of Helgi, Killer of Hunding)

  The Helgi of the next two poems is the son of the hero Sigmund and his wife Borghild. This, the first of these two poems, begins with Helgi’s birth, which is attended by the Norns (goddess-like figures who determine fate). The Norns predict Helgi will be famous and rule a wide kingdom; a raven also predicts his success as a warrior. Helgi lives up to these expectations and kills King Hunding while he is still only fifteen years old. He refuses to compensate Hunding’s sons for their father’s loss, and he kills them in a subsequent battle.

  After this battle, he sees Valkyries in the sky, and he desires Sigrun, their leader. She tells him, however, that she has been promised by her father Hogni to marry King Hothbrodd. She asks Helgi to fight him for her hand in marriage, which Helgi eagerly agrees to do. He sails with a great navy to do battle with Hothbrodd. Upon arriving at his kingdom, Hothbrodd’s brother Guthmund interrogates them from the shore, and becomes embroiled in an exchange of insults with Helgi’s half-brother Sinfjotli (this exchange comprises st. 32–44). Helgi finally stops the banter by entreating them to fight with weapons like men. Helgi and Sinfjotli win the ensuing battle, and Sigrun congratulates Helgi, telling him he has won Hothbrodd’s lands as well as her hand in marriage.

  Helgakvitha Hundingsbana I

  Here begins the poem of the Volsungs, the poem about Helgi, the killer of Hunding and Hothbrodd:

  [1] IT WAS IN ANCIENT DAYS

  when eagles cried,

  and holy waters fell

  from the mountains of heaven.

  Then Helgi,

  the bold man,

  was born to Borghild

  in Bralund.

  {190} [2] It was night in the house

  when the Norns came in,

  the ones who make fate

  for the noble-born.

  They said the boy

  would be a very famous king,

  he would be considered

  the best of all rulers.

  [3] They decided his fate

  with their power,

  when they broke the walls

  of Bralund.

  They had bands

  made of gold;

  they laid them down

  under the night-time sky.

  [4] They hid their ends

  in the east and west,

  to show the borders

  of the lands this king would rule.

  One of the Norns

  hid the third end

  in the north; she said

  it would hold forever.

  [5] One thing grieved

  Sigmund, Helgi’s father,

  and his wife

  Borghild, Helgi’s mother.

  One raven said

  to another raven,

  expecting a feast:

  “I know something:

  [6] “Sigmund’s young son

  will wear armor!

  He’s just a day old;

  his first day has just dawned.

  But he has sharp eyes

  {191} like a war-king;

  that boy’s a friend of wolves—

  we’ll be happy and well-fed!”

  [7] The boy grew up

  and was warlike at a young age;

  they said he was already

  reckoned as a man.

  King Sig
mund himself

  returned from battle

  to give the young prince

  a worthy sword.

  [8] Sigmund named him Helgi,

  and gave him lands—

  Solfjoll, Snofjoll,

  Sigarsvellir, Hringstath,

  Hringstoth, Hatun,

  and Himinvangar—

  young Helgi

  held a ready sword.

  [9] Then the young king

  began to grow up,

  a noble tree

  in the company of his kinsmen.

  He paid his men

  in gold—he was no miser

  with the loot

  from his campaigns.

  [10] He did not have long

  to wait for battle.

  When the young man

  was just fifteen years old,

  he killed the brave

  King Hunding,

  who had ruled lands

  and men a long time.

  {192} [11] But the sons of Hunding

  sent him a message,

  they demanded compensation

  in the form of money.

  They had much to avenge—

  Helgi had killed their father,

  and taken

  much wealth.

  [12] Helgi paid them

  nothing of what they asked;

  he would not compensate them

  for the loss of their father.

  Instead he called for

  stormy weather,

  for a rain of gray spears

  and the wrath of Odin.

  [13] Those kings

  rode to battle;

  the battle was held

  at Logafjoll.

  They broke the peace

  of King Frothi’s time;

  Odin’s wolves

  did not go hungry.

  [14] Helgi rested

  after he killed them

  beneath Arastein—

  Alf and Eyjolf,

  Hjorvarth and Havarth,

  all the sons of Hunding.

  He destroyed the whole

  family of that warrior.

  [15] Then light shone

  from Logafjoll,

  and in those lights

  he saw lightning.

  He saw Valkyries

  {193} wearing helmets

  in the high heavens;

  their armor was bloody,

  and banners waved

  from their spears.

  [16] Right away

  King Helgi asked

  those armed women,

  those southern Valkyries,

  if they would go home

  with the warriors

  that night.

  Battle raged all around.

  [17] And Sigrun,

  daughter of Hogni,

  said to that king from her horse

  as the battle died down:

  “I think we have

  other business

  than drinking beer

  with warriors tonight.

  [18] “My father

  promised me

  to Hothbrodd,

  the grim son of Granmar.

  But I tell you, Helgi,

  I said to that good king

 

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