A few winters before Ingjolf and Hjorleif had gone to settle in Iceland;
their voyage was much talked about, and 'twas said there was good choice of land there.
So Hæing sailed west over the sea to seek Iceland. And when they saw land,
they were approaching it from the south. But because the wind was boisterous,
and the surf ran high on the shore, and there was no haven,
they sailed on westwards along the sandy coast. And when the wind began to abate,
and the surf to calm down, there before them was a wide river-mouth.
Up this river they steered their ships, and lay close to the eastern shore thereof.
That river is now called Thjors-river;
its stream was then much narrower and deeper that it is now. They unloaded their ships,
then searched the land eastward of the river, bringing their cattle after them.
Hæing remained for the first winter on the eastern bank of the outer Rang-river.

But in the spring he searched the land eastwards,
and then took land between Thjors-river and Mark-fleet,
from fell to firth, and made his home at Hofi by east Rang-river.
Ingunn his wife bare a son in this spring after their first winter,
and the boy was named Hrafn.
And though the house there was pulled down,
the place continued to be called Hrafn-toft.
Hæing gave Baug land in Fleet-lithe,
down from Mark-river to the river outside Breidabolstead;
and he dwelt at Lithe-end.
To his shipmates Hæing gave land or sold it for a small price,
and these first settlers are called land-takers.
Hæing had sons Storolf, Herjolf, Helgi, Vestar; they all had land.
Hrafn was Hæing's fifth son. He was the first law-man in Iceland;
he dwelt at Hofi after his father,
and was the most renowned of Hæing's sons.

Page 76 Chapter
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(Hjorleif)
(Ingjolf)
(Storolf)
(Hrafn)
(Vestar)
(Herjolf)
(Helgi)