Harold : the Last of the Saxon Kings — Volume 12 eBook
Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
A Scandinavian warrior, Halfred Vandraedakald, having
embraced Christianity, and being attacked by a disease
which he thought mortal, was naturally anxious that
a spirit who had accompanied him through his pagan
career should not attend him into that other world,
where her society might involve him in disagreeable
consequences. The persevering Fylgia, however;
in the shape of a fair maiden, walked on the waves
of the sea after her viking’s ship. She
came thus in sight of all the crew; and Halfred, recognising
his Fylgia, told her point blank that their connection
was at an end for ever. The forsaken Fylgia
had a high spirit of her own, and she then asked Thorold
“if he would take her.” Thorold
ungallantly refused; but Halfred the younger said,
“Maiden, I will take thee.” [284]
In the various Norse Saga there are many anecdotes
of these spirits, who are always charming, because,
with their less earthly attributes, they always blend
something of the woman. The poetry embodied in
their existence is of a softer and more humane character
than that common with the stern and vast demons of
the Scandinavian mythology.
NOTE (I)
The Origin of Earl Godwin.
Sharon Turner quotes from the Knytlinga Saga what
he calls “an explanation of Godwin’s career
or parentage, which no other document affords;”
viz.—“that Ulf, a Danish chief,
after the battle of Skorstein, between Canute and
Edmund Ironsides, pursued the English fugitives into
a wood, lost his way, met, on the morning, a Saxon
youth driving cattle to their pasture, asked him to
direct him in safety to Canute’s ships, and
offered him the bribe of a gold ring for his guidance;
the young herdsman refused the bribe, but sheltered
the Dane in the cottage of his father (who is represented
as a mere peasant), and conducted him the next morning
to the Danish camp; previously to which, the youth’s
father represented to Ulf, that his son, Godwin, could
never, after aiding a Dane to escape, rest in safety
with his countrymen, and besought him to befriend his
son’s fortunes with Canute.” The
Dane promised, and kept his word; hence Godwin’s
rise. Thierry, in his “History of the Norman
Conquest,” tells the same story, on the authority
of Torfaeus, Hist. Rer. Norweg. Now
I need not say to any scholar in our early history,
that the Norse Chronicles, abounding with romance
and legend, are never to be received as authorities
counter to our own records, though occasionally valuable
to supply omissions in the latter; and, unfortunately
for this pretty story, we have against it the direct
statements of the very best authorities we possess,
viz. The Saxon Chronicle and Florence Of
Worcester. The Saxon Chronicle expressly tells
us that Godwin’s father was Childe of Sussex
(Florence calls him minister or thegn of Sussex [285]),
and that Wolnoth was nephew to Edric, the all-powerful
Earl or Duke of Mercia. Florence confirms this
statement, and gives the pedigree, which may be deduced
as follows:
Copyrights
Harold : the Last of the Saxon Kings — Volume 12 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.