ship alongside the other side of Gunnar’s ship, and hurled a

spear athwart the deck, and aimed at him about the waist. Gunnar

sees this, and turned him about so quickly that no eye could

follow him, and caught the spear with his left hand, and hurled

it back at Karli’s ship, and that man got his death who stood

before it. Kolskegg snatched up a grapnel and cast it at Karli’s

ship, and the fluke fell inside the hold, and went out through

one of the planks and in rushed the coal-blue sea, and all the

men sprang on board other ships.

Now Gunnar leapt back to his own ship, and then Hallvard came up,

and now a great battle arose. They saw now that their leader was

unflinching, and every man did as well as he could. Sometimes

Gunnar smote with the sword, and sometimes he hurled the spear,

and many a man had his bane at his hand. Kolskegg backed him

well. As for Karli, he hastened in a ship to his brother Vandil,

and thence they fought that day. During the day Kolskegg took a

rest on Gunnar’s ship, and Gunnar sees that. Then he sung a

song —

“For the eagle ravine-eager,

Raven of my race, to-day

Better surely hast thou catered,

Lord of gold, than for thyself;

Here the morn come greedy ravens

Many any a rill of wolf (1) to sup,

But thee burning thirst down-beareth,

Prince of battle’s Parliament!”

After that Kolskegg took a beaker full of mead, and drank it off,

and went on fighting afterwards; and so it came about that those

brothers sprang up on the ship of Vandil and his brother, and

Kolskegg went on one side, and Gunnar on the other. Against

Gunnar came Vandil, and smote at once at him with his sword, and

the blow fell on his shield. Gunnar gave the shield a twist as

the sword pierced it, and broke it short off at the hilt. Then

Gunnar smote back at Vandil, and three swords seemed to be aloft,

and Vandil could not see how to shun the blow. Then Gunnar cut

both his legs from under him, and at the same time Kolskegg ran

Karli through with a spear. After that they took great war

spoil.

Thence they held on south to Denmark, and thence east to Smoland,

(2) and had victory wherever they went. They did not come back

in autumn. The next summer they held on to Reval, and fell in

there with sea-rovers, and fought at once, and won the fight.

After that they steered east to Osel,(3) and lay there somewhile

under a ness. There they saw a man coming down from the ness

above them; Gunnar went on shore to meet the man, and they had a

talk. Gunnar asked him his name, and he said it was Tofi.

Gunnar asked again what he wanted.

“Thee I want to see,” says the man. ” Two warships lie on the

other side under the ness, and I will tell thee who command them:

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