Wilhelm Heizmann (ed.) 2017, ‘Bósa saga 1 (Busla, Buslubæn 1)’ in Margaret Clunies Ross (ed.), Poetry in fornaldarsögur. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 8. Turnhout: Brepols, p. 28.
Hér liggr Hringr konungr hilmir Gauta
einráðastr allra manna.
Ætlar þú son þinn sjálfr at myrða;
þau munu fádæmi fréttaz víða.
Hér liggr Hringr konungr, hilmir Gauta, einráðastr allra manna. Þú ætlar sjálfr at myrða son þinn; þau fádæmi munu fréttaz víða.
‘Here lies King Hringr, ruler of the Gautar, the most stubborn of all men. You yourself intend to murder your son; these shocking events will be heard far and wide. ’
Bósi, a farmer’s son, is to be executed along with the king’s legitimate son, Herrauðr, Bósi’s blood-brother, on account of the former’s slaying of the king’s bastard son, Sjóðr. Herrauðr joined with Bósi against his own father, King Hringr of East Götaland. The night before the execution, Bósi’s sorcerous foster-mother, Busla, appears. In her youth she had been Bósi’s father’s lover. She appears in the king’s bed-chamber and is ultimately successful in dissuading him from his plan. She achieves this goal by reciting a total of nine curse stanzas. They begin with two stanzas that outline the scenario, and then the curses are pronounced.
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.
Hér liggr Hringr konungr
hilmir Gauta
einráðastr
allra manna.
Ætlar þú son þinn
sjálfr at myrða;
þau munu sjálfdæmi
spyrjaz víða.
Hér liggr Hringr konungr
hilmir Gauta
einráðastr
allra manna.
Ætlar þú son þinn
sjálfr myrða;
þau munu fádæmi
fréttaz víða.
Hér liggr Hringr konungr
hilmir Gauta
einráðastr
allra manna.
Ætlar þú son þinn
sjálfr at myrða;
þau munu sjálfdæmi
spyrjaz víða.
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