wn,
Without his gain, is burned down!"
35. HARALD'S ESCAPE INTO THE JUTLAND SEA.
Then King Harald sailed north and had sixty ships and the most of them
large and heavily laden with the booty taken in summer; and as they
sailed north past Thioda King Svein came down from the land with a great
force and he challenged King Harald to land and fight. King Harald
had little more than half the force of King Svein and therefore he
challenged Svein to fight at sea. So says Thorleik the Fair:--
"Svein, who of all men under heaven
Has had the luckiest birth-hour given,
Invites his foemen to the field,
There to contest with blood-stained shield.
The king, impatient of delay,
Harald, will with his sea-hawks stay;
On board will fight, and fate decide
If Svein shall by his land abide."
After that King Harald sailed north along Vendilskage; and the wind then
came against them, and they brought up under Hlesey, where they lay all
night. A thick fog lay upon the sea; and when the morning came and the
sun rose they saw upon the other side of the sea as if many lights were
burning. This was told to King Harald; and he looked at it, and said
immediately, "Strike the tilts down on the ships and take to the oars.
The Danish forces are coming upon us, and the fog there where they are
must have cleared off, and the sun shines upon the dragon-heads of their
ships, which are gilded, and that is what we see." It was so as he had
said. Svein had come there with a prodigious armed force. They rowed now
on both sides all they could. The Danish ships flew lighter before the
oars; for the Northmen's ships were both soaked with water and heavily
laden, so that the Danes approached nearer and nearer. Then Harald,
whose own dragon-ship was the last of the fleet, saw that he could not
get away; so he ordered his men to throw overboard some wood, and lay
upon it clothes and other good and valuable articles; and it was so
perfectly calm that these drove about with the tide. Now when the Danes
saw their own goods driving about on the sea, they who were in advance
turned about to save them; for they thought it was easier to take what
was floating freely about, than to go on board the Northmen to take it.
They dropped rowing and lost ground. Now when King Svein came up to them
with his ship, he urged them on, saying it would be a great shame if
they, with so great a force, could not overtake and maste
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