Norse Legends. Snorri Sturluson. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Snorri Sturluson
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isbn: 9788027247318
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as fast as he cleared them of men. The Danes and Swedes laid themselves now out of shooting distance all around Olaf's ship; but Earl Eirik lay always close alongside of the ships, and used hid swords and battle-axes, and as fast as people fell in his vessel others, Danes and Swedes, came in their place. So says Haldor, the Unchristian:—

      "Sharp was the clang of shield and sword,

       And shrill the song of spears on board,

       And whistling arrows thickly flew

       Against the Serpent's gallant crew.

       And still fresh foemen, it is said,

       Earl Eirik to her long side led;

       Whole armies of his Danes and Swedes,

       Wielding on high their blue sword-blades."

      Then the fight became most severe, and many people fell. But at last it came to this, that all King Olaf Trygvason's ships were cleared of men except the Long Serpent, on board of which all who could still carry their arms were gathered. Then Earl Eirik lay with his ship by the side of the Serpent, and the fight went on with battle-axe and sword. So says Haldor:—

      "Hard pressed on every side by foes,

       The Serpent reels beneath the blows;

       Crash go the shields around the bow!

       Breast-plates and breasts pierced thro' and thro!

       In the sword-storm the Holm beside,

       The earl's ship lay alongside

       The king's Long Serpent of the sea—

       Fate gave the earl the victory."

      117. OF EARL EIRIK.

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      Earl Eirik was in the forehold of his ship, where a cover of shields had been set up. In the fight, both hewing weapons, sword, and axe, and the thrust of spears had been used; and all that could be used as weapon for casting was cast. Some used bows, some threw spears with the hand. So many weapons were cast into the Serpent, and so thick flew spears and arrows, that the shields could scarcely receive them, for on all sides the Serpent was surrounded by war-ships. Then King Olaf's men became so mad with rage, that they ran on board of the enemies ships, to get at the people with stroke of sword and kill them; but many did not lay themselves so near the Serpent, in order to escape the close encounter with battle-axe or sword; and thus the most of Olaf's men went overboard and sank under their weapons, thinking they were fighting on plain ground. So says Halfred:—

      "The daring lads shrink not from death;—

       O'erboard they leap, and sink beneath

       The Serpent's keel: all armed they leap,

       And down they sink five fathoms deep.

       The foe was daunted at the cheers;

       The king, who still the Serpent steers,

       In such a strait—beset with foes—

       Wanted but some more lads like those."

      118. OF EINAR TAMBARSKELVER.

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      Einar Tambarskelver, one of the sharpest of bowshooters, stood by the mast, and shot with his bow. Einar shot an arrow at Earl Eirik, which hit the tiller end just above the earl's head so hard that it entered the wood up to the arrow-shaft. The earl looked that way, and asked if they knew who had shot; and at the same moment another arrow flew between his hand and his side, and into the stuffing of the chief's stool, so that the barb stood far out on the other side. Then said the earl to a man called Fin,—but some say he was of Fin (Laplander) race, and was a superior archer,—"Shoot that tall man by the mast." Fin shot; and the arrow hit the middle of Einar's bow just at the moment that Einar was drawing it, and the bow was split in two parts.

      "What is that," cried King Olaf, "that broke with such a noise?"

      "Norway, king, from thy hands," cried Einar.

      "No! not quite so much as that," says the king; "take my bow, and shoot," flinging the bow to him.

      Einar took the bow, and drew it over the head of the arrow. "Too weak, too weak," said he, "for the bow of a mighty king!" and, throwing the bow aside, he took sword and shield, and fought Valiantly.

      119. OLAF GIVES HIS MEN SHARP SWORDS.

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      The king stood on the gangways of the Long Serpent, and shot the greater part of the day; sometimes with the bow, sometimes with the spear, and always throwing two spears at once. He looked down over the ship's sides, and saw that his men struck briskly with their swords, and yet wounded but seldom. Then he called aloud, "Why do ye strike so gently that ye seldom cut?" One among the people answered, "The swords are blunt and full of notches." Then the king went down into the forehold, opened the chest under the throne, and took out many sharp swords, which he handed to his men; but as he stretched down his right hand with them, some observed that blood was running down under his steel glove, but no one knew where he was wounded.

      120. THE SERPENT BOARDED.

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      Desperate was the defence in the Serpent, and there was the heaviest destruction of men done by the forecastle crew, and those of the forehold, for in both places the men were chosen men, and the ship was highest, but in the middle of the ship the people were thinned. Now when Earl Eirik saw there were but few people remaining beside the ship's mast, he determined to board; and he entered the Serpent with four others. Then came Hyrning, the king's brother-in-law, and some others against him, and there was the most severe combat; and at last the earl was forced to leap back on board his own ship again, and some who had accompanied him were killed, and others wounded. Thord Kolbeinson alludes to this:—

      "On Odin's deck, all wet with blood,

       The helm-adorned hero stood;

       And gallant Hyrning honour gained,

       Clearing all round with sword deep stained.

       The high mountain peaks shall fall,

       Ere men forget this to recall."

      Now the fight became hot indeed, and many men fell on board the Serpent; and the men on board of her began to be thinned off, and the defence to be weaker. The earl resolved to board the Serpent again, and again he met with a warm reception. When the forecastle men of the Serpent saw what he was doing, they went aft and made a desperate fight; but so many men of the Serpent had fallen, that the ship's sides were in many places quite bare of defenders; and the earl's men poured in all around into the vessel, and all the men who were still able to defend the ship crowded aft to the king, and arrayed themselves for his defence. So says Haldor the Unchristian:—

      "Eirik cheers on his men,—

       'On to the charge again!'

       The gallant few

       Of Olaf's crew

       Must refuge take

       On the quarter-deck.

       Around the king

       They stand in ring;

       Their shields enclose

       The king from foes,

       And the few who still remain

       Fight madly, but in vain.

       Eirik cheers on his men—