many of the company drowned.
Gudrid's son Biorn was born at Brattalithe and named after a brave man;
and then it became a question for Karlsefne what he had better do. He
had had from Gudrid a fine estate in Greenland, but he had one of his
own at Rowanness in Iceland, and wanted to take her there. He told
her: "I had the only good thing in Greenland when I had you; and you
were not born here, and do not belong here either. But it shall be as
you please."
She said at once, "Let us go home to Iceland," and as she said it her
face fell and she looked sorrowfully at him.
"What is it now, sweetheart?"
"I remember," she said, "what was foretold of me when first I came to
Greenland, and all of it has been fulfilled but two things. Now I am
afraid again, though it was so long ago."
Karlsefne laughed. "And one was that you should end your days in
Iceland?" She nodded, fearing the rest; but he went on--
"And the other was that you should outlive me?" She nodded again; but
he looked at her and laughed, until she did too, but ruefully.
"Let be all that, my dear," he said. "Death is not so fearful a
thing--and the longer we live the less fearful it is. But I will tell
you this, my Gudrid: I should be a miserable man were you to die first.
And what would these children do without you? I call that comfortable
soothsay, for my part--but I am not for dying yet awhile."
He was not; for the rest of his tale is as prosperous as its beginning.
He settled down in Iceland upon his own land, and did well by Gudrid
and her children before his time came. As for her, it is said that
when she had seen her sons out in the world, and married her daughters
seemly, she turned to religion. A pilgrimage to Rome is reported, and
that she became a nun. Thorberg had predicted of her that she should
find the life which she loved best, and may have meant that of
religion. The fact appears to be that Gudrid was a sweet nature and
could be happy anywhere if she were allowed to love. And if it is not
permitted always to love men, a woman can always love God.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Gudrid the Fair, by Maurice Hewlett
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