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claim the price that has been set upon it, and that none may be able to deny that I slew the redoubted Grettir."

The rest of the party told him to do as he chose, but they did not think much of his act, for they believed Grettir to have been dead before Thorbjorn smote at his head, and they suspected that he had wrought his foe's sickness and death, by unhallowed means.

Then The Hook turned to Illugi, saying "It would be a pity that a brave lad like you should die, because you have associated yourself with outlaws and evil-doers."

Illugi answered, "At Al-thing, you shall be summoned to give an account of this cursed deed, and answer to the charge of witchcraft, which I shall bring against you, if I live."

"Listen to me, boy," said The Hook, "Lay your hand to my hand, and take a vow never to revenge that which has taken place to-night, and I will give you life and liberty."

"And listen you to me, Thorbjorn," replied Illugi. "If I survive, but one thought shall occupy my heart, night and day, and that will be, how I can best avenge my brother. Now that you know what to expect from me, choose whether I shall live or die."

Thorbjorn took his companions aside to ask their advice, but they shrugged their shoulders, and replied that, as he had planned the expedition, he must carry it through as he thought best.

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Well," exclaimed The Hook, "I have no fancy for having the young viper ready to sting me wherever I tread. So he shall die."

Now when Illugi knew that they had determined on slaying him, he smiled, and said

"You have chosen that course which is most to my mind."

As the day began to dawn, they led him to the east side of the island, and slew him there. It is said that they neither bound his hands nor eyes, and that he looked fearlessly at them as they smote him, and neither winked nor changed colour. Then they buried the brothers beneath a cairn, but they took the head of Grettir and bore it with them to land.

As they rowed home, the thrall, Glaum, made such outcries that they were tired of his noise, and on reaching the mainland they slew him.

One morning, Thorbjorn Hook rode with twenty men to Bjarg, in the Middle-frith, with Grettir's head hanging at his saddle-bow. On reaching the house he dismounted, and stalked into the hall, where Grettir's mother was seated with her servant. Thorbjorn flung her son's head at her feet, and sang :

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"Flitted I from the island,

With me the head of Grettir;
That yellow head, which women
Weep; with it I am standing.
Look you! the peace-destroyer's
Head lyeth on the pavement;
Look you! it cannot moulder

Now that it well is salted."

The lady sat proudly in her seat, and did not shed a tear; but lifting her voice in reply, she sang :

"Milksop! no less than sheep

Flee before the fox,

Would you have fled before
Grettir strong and hale!"

After this the Hook returned home, and folk wondered at Asdisa, saying that none but she could have borne such sons as those twain who slept in Drangey.

I must detain the reader for awhile with a few remarks I wish to make on this story-a very touching one to me, who have followed the brave man from cradle to grave, and have watched his character unfolding, in all its stern beauty. The death of Grettir is mentioned in the Icelandic annals, under the date 1033, as also in the Landnama, or Icelandic domesday book.

Some incidents in Grettir's eventful career are related in other Sagas, and the brave outlaw is mentioned in several genealogies. The persons spoken of in the Gretla are heard

of, again and again, in numerous other Sagas, and in no case is there an anachronism.

Grettir was once captured by several boors, and would have been hung, had not a rich lady interposed to save his life. This incident is also related in the Fóstbræethra Saga; and there is a curious incidental expression in a fragment of the Thorthar Saga, printed in Nordiske Oldskrifter XXVII., which seems to bear on this point. Thorth is related to have blessed the Middle-frith in these words: "This I say, that the man who grows up in this vale, shall never be hung!"

The Gretla mentions a certain Gisli, a boaster, who vowed that he would slay Grettir. The outlaw stripped the man, whipped him, and sent him home with a flea in his ear. The Viga-styr Saga, the earliest of all Icelandic Sagas, casually speaks of this very Gisli, and, without relating this incident, gives him precisely the character which is attributed to him in the Gretla. The murder of Atli, brother of our hero, and the consequent revenge, are spoken of in the Bárthar Saga. The circumstance of Grettir having lived in a cave near the farm of Bjorn Hitdolakappi, is alluded to in the Bjarnar Saga. In the Gretla, mention is made of the squabbles which took place between Bjorn and a certain Thorth. The Bjarnar Saga gives an account of this feud. In our Saga, Grettir is spoken of as meeting Viga-Barth wounded and exhausted, after a hard fight in which he had revenged the death of his brother the Heitharvigum Saga gives the details of the murder and the expedition to revenge it. Thus one Saga explains and supports another.

I have mentioned only a few instances out of many, to show the reader the authority we have for regarding these stories as historical. But these are not the only testimonies to the truth of the narrative; there are geographical details in the Saga which will bear the closest scrutiny. In the account of Grettir's life among the Eagle tarns, his hut is said to have been situated near a spit of land which projects into the Great Arnarvatn, and he is spoken of as swimming along the side of this spit without being observed by a hired

assassin, who was on the look-out for him, standing on the end of the promontory.

Now the appearance of the lake itself bears out the statement of the Saga in the most emphatic manner. The only grassy spot along the shore of the lake faces the south, and is close to a tongue of land covered with herbage, rising about nine feet abruptly from the water's edge with an almost overhanging scarp; so that any one swimming close along the side would necessarily be hidden from the person on the top. Near the same lake is a cleft in the rock, in which Grettir defended himself against a band of men, led against him by Thorir of Garth. A friend of the outlaw, named Hallmund, stationed himself behind him, and guarded his back, without being himself visible. The description in the Saga of the way in which this support was given is puzzling; but on seeing the rift where the conflict took place, all the difficulty vanishes. There is a nook like a sentry-box in the side of the cleft, and it was in this that Hallmund ensconced himself, so that he could hew down any one who attempted to pass through the chasm, whilst he remained completely screened from observation.

There remain, it must be allowed, some incidents in the narrative which are undoubtedly fabulous, and which have been inserted to fill up and adorn the story; but these are easily distinguishable from the facts. For instance, it is told of Grettir that he broke open an old víkings-cairn, and, after a hard struggle with the tomb-dweller, despoiled him of his sword and treasures. This same adventure is found in the Flóamanna, Holmverja, Hrómundar, Bárthar Sagas; also in those of Olaf Geirstafa-alfs and the elder and younger histories of Olaf the saint. It is unquestionably a myth which has suffered anthropomorphosis, and represents the descent of the sun into the grave of winter, to return after having despoiled it of its prey-the fruits of the earth.

The belief in vampires is so widely spread, that I hardly like to dismiss the story of Glámr as a fable; it is, moreover, susceptible of an explanation. The Vale of Shadows was always famous for being a stronghold of robbers and men

slayers, so that Glámr may have been simply a freebooter, who was invested with a supernatural character by the fears of the inhabitants. The witchcraft in the account of Grettir's death is easily explained away. It was the interest of Grettir's friends, and of Thorir his enemy, to circulate the story that Grettir came by his death through unhallowed means; thus the outlaw's kindred were able to bring an action against his slayer, and Thorir was freed from the necessity of paying the price he had offered for his head.

The Saga writer is careful to tell us that the thrall informed Thorbjorn's companions of the cause of Grettir's sickness, before he was killed. That the outlaw wounded himself whilst chopping up wood is by no means improbable, and that his condition of body was so unhealthy that the wound mortified, is likely enough, as his food had been confined to sea-birds and fish.

This sickness was connected with Thorbjorn Hook by the fact of Thorbjorn having a foster-mother who had always been accounted a witch; and thus the supernatural portion of the story was engrafted on the main body of fact.

The Saga has undergone embellishments, but the main facts are indisputably true. Perhaps no better idea of its relation to pure unadulterated history can be obtained than through an incident related to me by the priest of Hvammr in Northrárdalr. He said that there had lived an old farmer at Lángadalr within the memory of man, the same who had transcribed the volume of Sagas which I saw at Underfell in the Vatnsdalr. This farmer had been enthusiastic in his admiration of the Gretla. One night he saw, or dreamed that he saw, a tall figure approach his bedside, and at once he recognized Grettir the Strong.

The old man's face brightened up, and rising in his bed he held with the hero a long conversation, of which only this is reported.

Said the farmer: "Tell me, who was the strongest man in Iceland was he Orm Storolfson ?"

"Orm Storolfson!" exclaimed the apparition, with con

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