Page:The Heimskringla; or, Chronicle of the Kings of Norway Vol 2.djvu/260

 252 CHRONICLE OF THE SAGA VII. Chapter CLXII. Of King Canute and Earl Ulf. Chapter CLXIII. Of the earl's murder. When King Canute saw that the kings of Norway and Sweden steered eastward with their forces along the coast, he sent men to ride night and day on the land to follow their movements. Some spies went forward, others returned ; so that King Canute had news every day of their progress. He had also spies always in their army. Now Avhen he heard that a great part of the fleet had sailed away from the kings, he turned back with his forces to Sealand, and lay with his whole fleet in the Sound ; so that part lay on the Scania* side, and a part on the Sealand side. King Canute himself, the day before Michaelmas, rode with a great retinue to Roeskilde. There his brother-in- law, Earl Ulf, had prepared a great feast for him. The earl was the most agreeable host ; but the king was silent and sullen. The earl talked to him in every way to make him cheerful, and brought forward every thing which he thought would amuse him ; but the king remained stern, and speaking little. At last the earl proposed to him a game at chess, which he agreed to; and a chess-board was produced, and they played together. Earl Ulf was hasty in temper, stiff, and in nothing yielding; but every thing he managed went on well in his hands : and he was a great war- rior, about whom there are many stories. He was the most powerful man in Denmark next to the king. Earl Ulf 's sister Gyda was married to Earl Gudin (Godwin) Ulfnadsson; and their sons were Harald king of England, and Earl Toste, Earl Walthiof, Earl Mauro-kaare, and Earl Swend. Gyda was the name of their daughter, who was married to the English king Edward the Good. When they had played a while the king made a false move, at which the earl took a knight from the king; but the king set the piece again upon the Scania, on the northern or Swedish side of the Sound.