A long time ago a deacon lived at Myrká, in Egafjördur.
He was in love with a girl named Gudrún, who dwelt in a farm on the opposite
side of the valley, separated from his house by a river.
The deacon had a horse with a grey mane, which
he was always in the habit of riding, and which he called Faxi.
A short time before Christmas, the deacon rode
to the farm at which his betrothed lived and invited her to join in the Christmas
festivities at Myrká, promising to fetch her on Christmas Eve. Some time before
he had started out on this ride there had been heavy snow and frost, but this
very day there came so rapid a thaw that the river over which the deacon had
safely ridden, trusting to the firmness of the ice, became impassable during
the short time he spent with his betrothed. The floods rose, and huge masses
of drift ice were whirled down the stream.
When the deacon had left the farm, he rode on to
the river, and being deep in thought did not perceive at first the change that
had taken place. As soon, however, as he saw in what state the stream was, he
rode up the banks until he came to a bridge of ice, on to which he spurred his
horse. But when he arrived at the middle of the bridge, it broke beneath him,
and he was drowned in the flood.
Next morning, a neighbouring farmer saw the deacon's
horse grazing in a field, but could discover nothing of its owner, whom he had
seen the day before cross the river, but not return. He at once suspected what
had occurred, and going down to the river, found the corpse of the deacon, which
had drifted to the bank, with all the flesh torn off the back of his head, and
the bare white skull visible. So he brought the body back to Myrká, where it
was buried a week before Christmas.
Up to Christmas Eve the river continued so swollen
that no communication could take place between the dwellers on the opposite
banks, but that morning it subsided, and Gudrún, utterly ignorant of the deacon's
death, looked forward with joy to the festivities to which she had been invited
by him.
In the afternoon Gudrún began to dress in her best
clothes, but before she had quite finished, she heard a knock at the door of
the farm. One of the maidservants opened the door, but seeing nobody there,
thought it was because the night was not sufficiently light, for the moon was
hidden for the time by clouds. So saying, "Wait there till I bring a light,"
went back into the house. But she had no sooner shut the outer door behind her,
than the knock was repeated, and Gudrún cried out from her room, "It is someone
waiting for me."
As she had by this time finished dressing, she
slipped only one sleeve of her winter cloak on, and threw the rest over her
shoulders hurriedly. When she opened the door, she saw the well known Faxi standing
outside, and by him a man whom she knew to be the deacon. Without a word he
placed Gudrún on the horse, and mounted in front of her himself, and off they
rode.
When they came to the river it was frozen over,
all except the current in the middle, which the frost had not yet hardened.
The horse walked onto the ice, and leaped over the black and rapid stream which
flowed in the middle. At the same moment the head of the deacon nodded forward,
so that his hat fell over his eyes, and Gudrún saw the large patch of bare skull
gleam white in the midst of his hair. Directly afterwards, a cloud moved from
before the moon, and the deacon said,
The moon glides, Death rides,
Seest thou not the white place
In the back of my head
Garún, Garún?
Not a word more was spoken till they came
to Myrká, where they dismounted. Then the man said,
Wait here for me,
Garún, Garún,
While I am taking Faxi, Faxi,
Outside the hedges, the hedges!
When he had gone, Gudrún saw near her in the churchyard,
where she was standing, an open grave, and half sick with horror, ran to the
church porch, and seizing the rope, tolled the bells with all her strength.
But as she began to ring them, she felt someone grasp her and pull so fiercely
at her cloak that it was torn off her, leaving only the one sleeve into which
she had thrust her arm before starting from home. Then turning round, she saw
the deacon jump headlong into the yawning grave, with the tattered cloak in
his hand, and the heaps of earth on both sides fall in over him, and close the
gave up to the brink.
Gudrún knew now that it was the deacon's ghost
with whom she had had to do, and continued ringing the bells till she roused
all the farm servants at Myrká.
That same night, after Gudrún had got shelter at
Myrká and was in bed, the deacon came again from his grave and endeavoured to
drag her away, so that no one could sleep for the noise of their struggle.
The was repeated every night for a fortnight, and
Gudrún could never be left alone for a single instant, lest the goblin deacon
should get the better of her. From time to time, also, a neighbouring priest
came and sat on the edge of the bed, reading the Psalms of David to protect
her against this ghostly persecution.
But nothing availed, till they sent for a man from
the north country, skilled in witchcraft, who dug up a large stone from the
field, and placed it in the middle of the guest room at Myrká. When the deacon
rose that night from his grave and came into the house to torment Gudrún, this
man seized him, and by uttering potent spells over him, forced him beneath the
stone, and exorcised the passionate demon that possessed him, so that there
he lies in peace to this day.
Source:
Jón Arnason, Icelandic Legends, translated by George E. J. Powell and
Eiríkur Magnússon (London: Richard Bentley, 1864), pp. 173-177.