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Living with the Gods. Living for the Gods. Living
through the Gods.
The
Poetic Edda Online
In the translation of
Bellows
Lays of the
Heroes
Fra Dautha Sinfjotla
Of Sinfjotli's Death
INTRODUCTORY NOTE
It has
been pointed out that the Helgi tradition, coming originally from
Denmark, was early associated with that of the Volsungs, which was of
German, or rather of Frankish, origin (cf. Introductory Note to
Helgakvitha Hjorvarthssonar). The connecting links between these two
sets of stories were few in number, the main point being the
identification of Helgi as a son of Sigmund Volsungsson. Another son of
Sigmund, however, appears in the Helgi poems, though not in any of the
poems dealing with the Volsung cycle proper. This is Sinfjotli, whose
sole function in the extant Helgi lays is to have a wordy dispute with
Gothmund Granmarsson.
Sinfjotli's history is told in detail in the early chapters of the
Volsungasaga. The twin sister of Sigmund Volsungsson, Signy, had
married Siggeir, who hated his brother-in-law by reason of his desire to
possess a sword which had belonged to Othin and been won by Sigmund.
Having treacherously invited Volsung and his ten sons to visit him,
Siggeir slew Volsung and captured his sons, who were set in the stocks.
Each night a wolf ("some men say that she was Siggeir's mother") came
out of the woods and ate up one of the brothers, till on the tenth night
Sigmund alone was left. Then, however, Signy aided him to escape, and
incidentally to kill the wolf. He vowed vengeance on Siggeir, and Signy,
who hated her husband, was determined to help him. Convinced that
Sigmund must have a helper of his own race, Signy changed forms with a
witch, and in this guise sought out Sigmund, who, not knowing who she
was, spent three nights with her. Thereafter she gave birth to a boy,
whom she named Sinfjotli ("The Yellow-Spotted"?), whom she sent to
Sigmund. For a time they lived in the woods, occasionally turning into
wolves (whence perhaps Sinfjotli's name). When Sinfjotli was full grown,
he and his father came to Siggeir's house, but were seen and betrayed by
the two young sons of Signy and Siggeir, whereupon Sinfjotli slew them.
Siggeir promptly had Sigmund and Sinfjotli buried alive, but Signy
managed to smuggle Sigmund's famous sword into the grave, and with this
the father and son dug themselves out. The next night they burned
Siggeir's house, their enemy dying in the flames, and Signy, who had at
the last refused to leave her husband, from a sense of somewhat belated
loyalty, perishing with him.
Was this
story, which the Volsungasaga relates in considerable detail, the basis
of an old poem which has been lost? Almost certainly it was, although,
as I have pointed out, many if not most of the old stories appear to
have been handed down rather in prose than in verse, for the
Volsungasaga quotes two lines of verse regarding the escape from the
grave. At any rate, Sinfjotli early became a part of the Volsung
tradition, which, in turn, formed the basis for no less than fifteen
poems generally included in the Eddic collection. Of this tradition we
may recognize three distinct parts: the Volsung-Sigmund-Sinfjotli story;
the Helgi story, and the Sigurth story, the last of these three being by
far the most extensive, and suggesting an almost limitless amount of
further subdivision. With the Volsung-Sigmund-Sinfjotli story the
Sigurth legend is connected only by the fact that Sigurth appears as
Sigmund's son by his last wife, Hjordis; with the Helgi legend it is not
connected directly at all. Aside from the fact that Helgi appears as
Sigmund's son by his first wife, Borghild, the only link between the
Volsung story proper and that of Helgi is the appearance of Sinfjotli in
two of the Helgi poems. Originally it is altogether probable that the
three stories, or sets of stories, were entirely distinct, and that
Sigurth (the familiar Siegfried) had little or nothing more to do with
the Volsungs of northern mythological-heroic tradition than he had with
Helgi.
The
annotator or compiler of the collection of poems preserved in the
Codex Regius, having finished with the Helgi lays, had before him
the task of setting down the fifteen complete or fragmentary poems
dealing with the Sigurth story. Before doing this, however, he felt it
incumbent on him to dispose of both Sigmund and Sinfjotli, the sole
links with the two other sets of stories. He apparently knew of no poem
or poems concerning the deaths of these two; perhaps there were none,
though this is unlikely. Certainly the story of how Sinfjotli and
Sigmund died was current in oral prose tradition, and this story the
compiler set forth in the short prose passage entitled Of Sinfjotli's
Death which, in Regius, immediately follows the second lay of
Helgi Hundingsbane. The relation of this passage to the prose of the
Reginsmol is discussed in the introductory note to that poem.
Sigmund,
the son of Volsung, was a king in the land of the Franks; Sinfjotli was
his eldest son, the second was Helgi, and the third Hamund. Borghild,
Sigmund's wife, had a brother who was named -----. Sinfjotli, her
stepson, and ----- both wooed the same woman, wherefore Sinfjotli slew
him. And when he came home, Borghild bade him depart, but Sigmund
offered her atonement-money, and this she had to accept. At the funeral
feast Borghild brought in ale; she took poison, a great horn full, and
brought it to Sinfjotli. But when he looked into the horn, he saw that
it was poison, and said to Sigmund: "Muddy is the drink, Father!"
Sigmund took the horn and drank therefrom. It is said that Sigmund was
so hardy that poison might not harm him, either outside or in, but all
his sons could withstand poison only without on their skin. Borghild
bore another horn to Sinfjotli and bade him drink, and all happened as
before. And yet a third time she brought him a horn, and spoke therewith
scornful words of him if he should not drink from it. He spoke as before
with Sigmund. The latter said: "Let it trickle through your beard, Son!"
Sinfjotli drank, and straight way was dead. Sigmund bore him a long way
in his arms, and came to a narrow and long fjord, and there was a little
boat and a man in it. He offered to take Sigmund across the fjord. But
when Sigmund had borne the corpse out into the boat, then the craft was
full. The man told Sigmund to go round the inner end of the fjord. Then
the man pushed the boat off, and disappeared.
King
Sigmund dwelt long in Denmark in Borghild's kingdom after he had married
her. Thereafter Sigmund went south into the land of the Franks, to the
kingdom which he had there. There he married Hjordis, the daughter of
King Eylimi; their son was Sigurth. King Sigmund fell in a battle with
the sons of Hunding, and Hjordis then married Alf the son of King
Hjalprek. There Sigurth grew up in his boyhood. Sigmund and all his sons
were far above all other men in might and stature and courage and every
kind of ability. Sigurth, however, was the fore most of all, and all men
call him in the old tales the noblest of mankind and the mightiest
leader.
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