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The Poetic Edda

Page 18

by Jackson Crawford


  [14] Sigrun sought

  the glad king, she sought

  the king’s hand in her own.

  She kissed that helmeted king

  {208} and greeted him,

  and Helgi

  took a liking to her.

  [15] She said

  that she’d loved Helgi

  with all her heart

  before she had even seen him.

  [16] “I was promised,” she said,

  “to Hothbrodd, but there is

  another king

  I would rather have.

  Warrior, I fear

  my father’s anger,

  but I have disobeyed him

  regardless.”

  [17] Sigrun did not speak

  of her own love,

  but she said she wanted

  Helgi’s love.

  [18] Helgi said, “Pay no mind

  to your father’s anger,

  nor to the ill will

  of your kinsmen.

  Young lady, you will

  live with me!

  Good lady, I do not fear

  your family.”

  Then Helgi gathered a great navy and sailed to Frekastein, and on this journey they encountered very dangerous weather. There was continual lightning, and it even glowed on the ships. Helgi and his men saw nine Valkyries riding in the air, and they recognized Sigrun. Then the storm abated, and they came safely to land. The sons of Granmar were sitting on a certain hill when the ships sailed up to land. Guthmund leapt up on his horse and rode up to the top of a hill near the harbor. Then the Volsungs took their sails down.

  {209} Guthmund, son of Granmar, said:

  [19] “Who is the leader

  of this navy?

  Who lowers the golden sail

  upon the prow?

  I don’t think

  we can expect peace

  from this navy; I see

  a red battle-flag and Vikings.”

  Sinfjotli said:

  [20] “I think Hothbrodd

  will recognize Helgi here,

  in the middle of the fleet—

  he hates to retreat.

  He has taken

  the ancestral lands

  of your people the Fjorsungs,

  he’s stolen your inheritance.”

  [21] Guthmund said, “First,

  we should settle

  our differences

  at Frekastein.

  Hothbrodd! It’s time

  to get vengeance.

  For a long time

  we’ve been losing battles.”

  [22] Sinfjotli said, “First,

  Guthmund, you’ll need

  to watch your goats

  and climb the steep cliffs.

  Keep a wooden club

  in your hand,

  you’ll do better

  as a shepherd than a fighter.”

  [23] Helgi said, “Sinfjotli,

  it would be more honorable

  to make war,

  {210} to cheer the eagles,

  than to exchange

  pointless words,

  even if you

  hate one another.

  [24] “I have no love

  for Granmar’s sons,

  but it’s better

  for noble men not to lie.

  We have seen

  at Moinsheimar

  that they have the courage

  to draw swords;

  these warriors

  are wise and brave.”

  Guthmund rode home and reported on the hostilities. Then the sons of Granmar assembled an army; many kings came to them. Hogni, the father of Sigrun, was there, along with his sons, Bragi and Dag. There was a great battle, and all the sons of Granmar fell as well as all the other chieftains, except Dag, who was granted mercy and who swore an oath to the Volsungs. Sigrun went out on the battlefield afterwards and found Hothbrodd dying. She said:

  [25] “King Hothbrodd,

  I, Sigrun from Sefafjoll,

  will not kneel

  to embrace you in my arms.

  Your life is over,

  the wolves

  will get plenty of

  your and your brothers’ flesh.”

  Then she found Helgi, and she was glad. Helgi said:

  [26] “Wise woman,

  not everything

  has gone as you’d wish.

  The Norns have some blame.

  Bragi and Hogni

  fell today

  {211} at Frekastein,

  and I was their killer.

  [27] “And I killed Starkath

  at Styrkleif

  and the sons of Hrollaug

  at Hlebjargir.

  I saw the most warlike

  of all kings

  fighting without his arms,

  and soon without his head.

  [28] “Most of your family

  lies on the battlefield,

  they’ve become

  cold corpses.

  You could not stop

  that battle;

  you were destined

  to cause kings to clash.”

  Then Sigrun wept. Helgi spoke once more:

  [29] “Be comforted, Sigrun.

  You’ve been like Hild to us;

  and not even kings can fight fate.”

  Sigrun said, “Let all my family

  fall in battle, if that means

  I can sleep in your arms.”

  Helgi married Sigrun, and they had sons. Helgi was not an old man.

  Dag, son of Hogni, sacrified to Odin for vengeance for his father. Odin loaned Dag his own spear. Dag encountered Helgi, his brother-in-law, at the place called Fjoturlund. Dag ran Helgi through with the spear. Helgi fell there, and then Dag rode to the mountains and told Sigrun the news:

  [30] “Sister, I regret

  to tell you this hard news.

  I have been forced

  to make my own sister weep.

  That king who was

  {212} the best in all the world,

  who stood on the necks

  of many fallen enemies,

  fell today in battle

  at Fjoturlund.”

  [31] Sigrun said, “All your oaths,

  the oaths you swore

  to Helgi,

  the oaths you swore

  by the sea,

  and by the cool stone

  of Unn,

  will come back to bite you.

  [32] “A ship will not sail

  if you are on it,

  even if it has

  the most favorable of winds.

  A horse will not run

  if you are on it,

  even if it could save you

  from pursuing enemies.

  [33] “No sword you draw

  will cut,

  unless it cuts

  your own head off.

  I would only

  be avenged for Helgi’s death

  if you were an outlaw

  living in the woods,

  deprived of all your property

  and all joy.

  You wouldn’t even eat—

  unless you caught your own raw meat.”

  Dag said:

  [34] “You are mad, sister,

  you are out of your wits,

  when you speak such curses

  {213} against your own brother.

  Odin alone

  causes all evil,

  he’s the one

  who causes war between kin.

  [35] “I will offer you

  golden rings,

  I will offer you the lands of

  Vandilsve and Vigdalir.

  You and your children,

  well-dressed lady,

  will own half my home

  in compensation for your loss.”

  [36] Sigrun said, “I will never

  be so happy at my home

  in the day or in the night

  that I will love life,

&nbs
p; unless I see that king

  and his army,

  unless I see Helgi

  riding his horse Vigblaer

  with a golden bridle—

  I would greet him gladly.

  [37] “My husband Helgi

  has frightened

  all his enemies so much

  and all his kinsmen,

  that they are like

  trembling goats

  fleeing a wolf

  on a mountainside.

  [38] “Helgi is as high

  above other kings

  as a noble ash tree

  above a thorn,

  he is like a young stag

  coated in morning dew,

  {214} higher than

  all other beasts,

  with his horns glowing

  against the heavens.”

  A burial mound was made for Helgi. And when he came to Valhalla, Odin asked him to help him rule everything. Helgi said:

  [39] “Hunding, you will be

  a foot-washer

  and fire-starter,

  a dog-walker

  and a horse’s groom

  for every man in Valhalla.

  And don’t forget to feed the pigs

  before you go to sleep.”

  One of Sigrun’s serving-women walked during the evening near Helgi’s burial mound, and she saw Helgi riding toward the mound with a large following of men. The serving-woman said:

  [40] “Is this an illusion

  that I see before me,

  or has Ragnarok come?

  I see dead men riding,

  I see them driving

  their horses with spurs.

  Have dead kings been given leave

  to come home from Valhalla?”

  [41] Helgi said, “True,

  you see us here,

  driving

  our horses with spurs,

  and it is no illusion,

  nor is it Ragnarok,

  and neither do we have leave

  to come home from Valhalla.”

  The serving-woman went home and said to Sigrun:

  [42] “Go out from your home,

  Sigrun, if you want

  to see your

  {215} king again!

  His burial mound is open,

  Helgi has come back,

  his wounds are bleeding.

  That lord of men

  asks that you come

  and see to his injuries.”

  Sigrun went inside Helgi’s burial mound and she said:

  [43] “Now I am as happy

  to see you, husband,

  as Odin’s eager

  ravens are

  when they see

  fresh, warm corpses,

  or when, dew-covered,

  they greet the morning.

  [44] “I want to kiss you,

  my unliving king,

  before you take your

  bloody armor off.

  There’s frost frozen

  in your hair, Helgi,

  there’s blood all over

  your body, my king.

  Your hands are wet with

  the cold blood of Hogni’s kin.

  My lord, how shall I

  heal you of these things?”

  [45] Helgi said, “You alone,

  Sigrun from Sefafjoll,

  caused the sad death

  of your father Hogni.

  Gold-adorned southern woman,

  fairer than the sun,

  you wept bitter tears

  before you went to sleep;

  each tear fell bloody

  over your fierce heart,

  {216} cold, wet, bloody, burning,

  twisted with sorrow.

  [46] “But I can drink

  happily of Odin’s good mead

  even if I have lost

  my lands and my love.

  No one will sing

  a sorrowful song for me,

  even if I have

  wounds on my chest—

  for my wife Sigrun

  is in my mound,

  the Valkyrie lies

  by me, though I am dead.”

  Sigrun climbed into his bed in the mound.

  [47] Sigrun said, “Helgi,

  of Ylfing kin, I offer you

  untroubled rest

  in this place.

  I want to sleep

  in your embrace,

  as I would in the arms

  of a living husband.”

  [48] Helgi said, “Now

  I can foresee everything.

  You will sleep,

  lovely lady,

  daughter of Hogni,

  tonight and tomorrow morning

  in the arms of a dead man

  in his mound—

  and yet you are alive,

  noble lady.

  [49] “Yet still I must

  ride the warpath,

  take my pale horse

  back to Valhalla.

  {217} I have to be

  west of Bifrost

  before the rooster

  wakes the men in Odin’s hall.”

  Helgi and his men rode their way, and Sigrun and her serving-women returned to her home. The next evening Sigrun had a serving-woman keep watch on Helgi’s burial mound. And when Sigrun returned to the mound at sunset, she said:

  [50] “My husband,

  the son of Sigmund,

  would have come back

  from Odin’s hall, if he could.

  But I expect

  there is little chance

  of his return

  when eagles sleep in the trees,

  and all the people

  are dreaming.”

  [51] A serving-woman said,

  “Do not be so foolish

  that you go alone

  to his burial mound.

  All the dead

  are more powerful

  at night than they are

  during bright day.”

  Sigrun did not live long, because of her sorrow and indifference to life. It was generally believed in ancient times that people were reborn, though this is now called a superstition. Helgi and Sigrun are said to have been reborn. He was then called Helgi, the Sorrow of Hadding, and she was called Kara, Daughter of Halfdan, and she was a Valkyrie, as is told in the Song of Kara.

  {218} Fra dautha Sinfjotla (The Death of Sinfjotli)

  The poems in the Sigurth tradition begin with a prose piece called Fra dautha Sinfjotla, “Concerning the Death of Sinfjotli,” who is Sigurth’s half-brother by their father Sigmund. The ferryman who takes Sinfjotli’s body away is probably Odin, who takes a great interest in the fortune of Sigurth’s family, the Volsungs (also compare Odin’s appearance as a ferryman in Harbarthsljoth).

  Fra dautha Sinfjotla

  Sigmund, son of Volsung, was a king of the Franks. Sinfjotli was his oldest son, and the second was named Helgi, the third Hamund.

  Borghild, Sigmund’s wife, had a brother. Her stepson Sinfjotli and her brother both wooed the same woman, and because of this, Sinfjotli killed her brother. When Sinfjotli came home, Borghild told him to leave, but Sigmund offered her compensation for her brother’s death, and she was forced to accept this.

  At the funeral for her brother, Borghild was serving beer. She took a large horn full of poison and served it to Sinfjotli. When he looked inside the horn, he saw that there was poison in it and said to his father: “This drink is cloudy, father!” Sigmund took the horn and drank everything in it; it is said that Sigmund was so hardy that he was impervious to poison, whether by skin contact or by drinking it. But his sons were impervious only by skin, not internally.

  Borghild brought another hornful to Sinfjotli and told him to drink from it, but it went exactly as before. And then she brought him the horn for a third time, and she mocked him for not wanting to drink from it. Sinfjotli spoke as he had before to his father, but Sigmund said: “Wet your mustache, son!” Sinfjotli drank and fell dead im
mediately.

  Sigmund carried Sinfjotli’s body in his arms for a long time, till he came to a long, narrow fjord, where he saw a little boat and a man standing on it, who offered to ferry Sigmund over the fjord. But when Sigmund put the body of his son on the boat, the ferry was full, and the ferryman said that Sigmund would need to walk around the fjord. Then he shoved off from shore and disappeared.

  King Sigmund remained for a long time in Denmark, in Borghild’s kingdom, after he was married to her. But then Sigmund {219} returned to the kingdom he had in France, and there he married Hjordis, daughter of King Eylimi, and their son was Sigurth. King Sigmund fell in a battle against Hunding’s sons, and after that Hjordis remarried to Alf, son of King Hjalprek. Sigurth grew up with him while still a boy.

  Sigmund and all his sons were far better than other men in strength and height, in courage, and in all achievements, but Sigurth was the greatest of all, and in the old sagas people say that he was greater than all other men, and that he was the noblest of all warrior kings.

  {220} Gripisspa (Gripir’s Prophecies to Sigurth)

  The first poem about Sigurth is Gripisspa (“Gripir’s Prophecies”), in which Sigurth’s future is foretold to him by his uncle Gripir. Modern readers should be warned that the medieval attitude toward “spoilers” was more accepting than that of modern audiences; much of the action of Sigurth’s later life (as related in the following poems) is revealed here.

  Gripisspa

  Gripir was the brother of Hjordis, Sigurth’s mother; they were the children of Eylimi. Gripir was a wiser ruler than all others, and he could see the future. Sigurth rode to Gripir’s hall alone. Sigurth was easy to recognize. He met a man named Geitir outside the hall and spoke with him. Sigurth greeted him and said:

  [1] “WHO IS IT WHO LIVES

  in this place?

  What name do men

  give to their king here?

  Geitir said:

  “Gripir is the name

  of the leader of men

  who rules this strong land

  and all its legions.”

  Sigurth said:

  [2] “Is the wise king

  home right now?

  Do you think he will

  talk to me?

  I’m a stranger

  who wants to speak with him.

  I must meet

  with Gripir soon.”

  {221} Geitir said:

  [3] “But the noble king

  will ask me what the name

  of this stranger is

  who wants to talk to him.”

  Sigurth said:

  “I am called Sigurth,

  son of Sigmund,

  and Hjordis

  was my mother.”

  [4] Then Geitir went

  to Gripir and said:

  “A stranger

  has come here.

 

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