ds and talking, and singing old
songs. Karlsefne was full of business all this time, with parties out
exploring the country, and so did not see what was going on in and
about the camp. Then, one day, news was brought him that a whale had
come into the creek and was stranded in shoal water. The men, short as
they were of food, were eager to get at it. Karlsefne went out to see
it--a huge beast, greyish and arched in the back. He did not know what
sort of a whale it was, but the men were set upon it, and Thorhall
vehement. "Get at it, get at it--what do you fear, man? I tell you it
is a godsend," he said. He had been very queer in his ways for a week
or more, and one day had been found upon a cliff overhanging the water,
with his arms stiffly out, his chin towards the sky. His eyes had been
shut, his mouth open, his nostrils splayed out. He had writhed and
twisted about, talking in a strange tongue. They were some time
bringing him to his senses, and had no thanks from him for doing it;
but they had fetched him home and put him to bed. He had lain there
with his head covered up until the news of the whale was brought in.
That caused him to leap out of his bed. He was the most eager of them
all to cut up the great beast.
Karlsefne gave the word, and they fell on the whale with hatchets and
knives. Soon the pots were bubbling and the steam filling their
nostrils. Karlsefne would not eat of it, and would not allow Gudrid
any; but the rest made a feast. It was rich and savoury, very fat;
this was the hour of Thorhall's triumph. He came and stood by the
messes as they ate, with gleaming eyes. "Does this not prove to you
that Redbeard was your friend? What had your white Christ brought you
but death and misery? Now by my incantations I have brought Thor round
to look on you with favour again. This is my doing, and your leader
here thought I was mad and tied me down to a bed."
Some men stopped eating as they heard him; some turned away and would
not begin to eat. Karlsefne, when he knew what was going on, came down
like a flame of fire. "What is this he says? That this is his
doing--with prayers to Thor? And you of the new faith and the true
faith, eat of what he offers to his idols! Cast that beastliness to
the sea, and be done with it." Some of the eaters were ill already,
and many were to be so; but Karlsefne was obeyed. The cauldrons were
emptied over the cliffs, and the birds gathered from all
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