|
Njals Saga, the most famous of the Icelandic sagas, tells of the first
native inhabitant of Bjarnarfjörur, Svanur son of Björn, the settler of the
area. Svanur was related to Hallgerur langbrk, the most famous shrew in the
Sagas, and hid the slave who killed her second husband for her. The saga says
that Svanur was a great sorcerer, quarrelsome and difficult to deal with. One
day Svanur stands up and tells the slave that men are on their way to fetch and
revenge their kinsman. The slave picks up his weapons but Svanur simply wraps a
goatskin around his head, goes outside and recites:
Let there be mist and mischief, let marvels befall all those
that as foes seek you.
A great fog descended on those riding across the hill south of
Bjarnarfjörur, they could not see and fell from their saddles and some walked
into bogs while others lost their weapons in the woods. Three times they
attempted to cross the hill and were always met by the fog which lifted as soon
as they turned back. According to legend Svanur walked into the mountain above
Svanshll and came out far to the north close to his fishing station. Njls
Saga says that eventually his boat was sunk and people saw him walk from the sea
and into Mt. Kaldbakshorn where he was warmly welcomed. Much later
another sorcerer named Snorri lived at Svanshll and was somewhat of a recluse.
He told his daughter that when he died his body should be buried in a certain
part of the homefield and not in the graveyard around the church at
Kaldrananes. The local clergyman objected and demanded a Christian burial.
Transporting the coffin proved difficult because it kept falling off the horse.
When they passed close to a place that according to legend is an old burial
place, the coffin suddenly became easy to handle and the burial was uneventful.
Fifty years later gravediggers found the coffin and opened it and found
no bones in it, no teeth or human hair, only remnants of clothes and some of the
things Snorri had told his daughter to put in the coffin - fishskin, his secret
books , and some wood shavings.
Snorris son lived at Bakki across the river and had never shown any
interest in his fathers knowledge. He did not want to keep anything of his
fathers except a brown sheepdog that had served Snorri for ages and nobody had
to control. The dog would bring the sheep home for milking every day but was
never seen around the farm and nobody had to feed it. As winter approached it
disappeared and reappeared soon after the lambing season in spring. Soon after
Snorri died the dog moved of its own accord across the valley but never came
close to the buildings at Bakki. Occasionally it was seen standing on the lowest
terrace of the hillside when the sheep arrived at the farm.
|