Page:The Early Kings of Norway.djvu/53

 HAKON JARL. 43 Jomsburg chiefs and other choice spirits, generally of the robber class, all risen into height of highest robber enthusiasm, pledged the vow to one another ; Svein that he would conquer England (which, in a sense, he, after long struggling, did) ; and the Jomsburgers that they would ruin and root out Hakon Jarl (which, as we have just seen, they could by no means do), and other guests other foolish things which proved equally unfeasible. Sea-robber volunteers so especially abound- ing in that time, one perceives how easily the Joms- burgers could recruit themselves, build or refit new robber fleets, man them with the pick of crews, and steer for opulent, fruitful England; where, under Ethelred the Unready, was such a field for profitable enterprise as the viking public never had before or since. An idle question sometimes rises on me — idle enough, for it never can be answered in the affirma- tive or the negative. Whether it was not these same refitted Jomsburgers who appeared some while after this at Red Head Point, on the shore of Angus, and sustained a new severe beating, in what the Scotch still faintly remember as their ' Battle of Loncarty ? '