Kari Ellen Gade (ed.) 2009, ‘Máni, Lausavísur 1’ in Kari Ellen Gade (ed.), Poetry from the Kings’ Sagas 2: From c. 1035 to c. 1300. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 2. Turnhout: Brepols, pp. 641-2.
Byr gef brátt, inn ǫrvi,
Bjǫrgynjar til mǫrgum
— þess biðjum vér — þjóðum,
þungstóls konungr sólar.
Angrar oss, þats lengi
útnyrðingr heldr fyrðum
— vindrs til seinn at sundi
sunnrœnn — í dys Unnar.
{Inn ǫrvi konungr {þungstóls sólar}}, gef brátt mǫrgum þjóðum byr til Bjǫrgynjar; vér biðjum þess. Angrar oss, þats útnyrðingr heldr fyrðum lengi í Unnardys; sunnrœnn vindrs til seinn at sundi.
‘Generous king of the heavy seat of the sun [SKY/HEAVEN > = God], give quickly many people fair wind to Bergen; we ask for that. It grieves us that the north-western wind keeps men long in Hummerdus; the southern wind is too slow [in coming] across the sea.’
After joining Magnús’s retinue, Máni accompanies the king on his final voyage from Tønsberg to Bergen. There is no wind, and the fleet is held up for a week in Hummerdus off Lista. Máni comments on the situation with the following st.
After having been laid up in Hummerdus, Magnús sailed north along the coast with his fleet. The forces of Magnús and Sverrir joined battle at Fimreite in Sogndal (western Norway), and Magnús fell in that battle (15 June 1184).
Text is based on reconstruction from the base text and variant apparatus and may contain alternative spellings and other normalisations not visible in the manuscript text. Transcriptions may not have been checked and should not be cited.
Byr gefðu brátt, inn ǫrvi,
Bjǫrgynjar til mǫrgum
— þess biðjum vér — þjóðum,
þung-stáls konungr sólar.
Angrar oss, þats lengi
útnyrðingr heldr fyrðum
— vindrs til seinn at †suði†
sunnrœnn — í dys Unnar.
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