When this ceremony was finished, Sigurd Ring laid Ingeborg’s hand in Frithiof’s, and, once more commending her to the young hero’s loving care, closed his eyes and breathed his last.
[Sidenote: Betrothal of Frithiof and Ingeborg.] All the nation assembled to raise a mound for Sigurd Ring; and by his own request the funeral feast was closed by a banquet to celebrate the betrothal of Ingeborg and Frithiof. The latter had won the people’s enthusiastic admiration; but when they would fain have elected him king, Frithiof raised Sigurd Ring’s little son up on his shield and presented him to the assembled nobles as their future king, publicly swearing to uphold him until he was of age to defend himself. The child, weary of his cramped position on the shield, boldly sprang to the ground as soon as Frithiof’s speech was ended, and alighted upon his feet. This act of daring in so small a child was enough to win the affection and admiration of all his rude subjects.
According to some accounts, Frithiof now made war against Ingeborg’s brothers, and after conquering them, allowed them to retain their kingdom only upon condition of their paying him a yearly tribute. Then he and Ingeborg remained in Ringric until the young king was able to assume the government, when they repaired to Hordaland, a kingdom Frithiof had obtained by conquest, and which he left to his sons Gungthiof and Hunthiof.
[Sidenote: Frithiofs vision.] But according to Tegner’s poem, Frithiof, soon after his second betrothal to Ingeborg, made a pious pilgrimage to his father’s resting place, and while seated on the latter’s funeral mound, plunged in melancholy and remorse at the sight of the desolation about him, he was favored by a vision of a new temple, more beautiful than the first, within whose portals he beheld the three Norns.
“And lo! reclining on
their runic shields
The mighty Nornas now
the portal fill;
Three rosebuds fair
which the same garden yields,
With aspect serious,
but charming still.
Whilst Urda points upon
the blackened fields,
The fairy temple Skulda
doth reveal.
When Frithiof first
his dazzled senses cleared,
Rejoiced, admired, the
vision disappeared.”
TEGNER,
Frithiof Saga (Spalding’s tr.).
The hero immediately understood that the gods had thus pointed out to him a means of atonement, and spared neither wealth nor pains to restore Balder’s temple and grove, which soon rose out of the ashes in more than their former splendor.
When the temple was all finished, and duly consecrated to Balder’s service, Frithiof received Ingeborg at the altar from her brothers’ hands, and ever after lived on amicable terms with them.