Don’t ship, but what would England and Norway’s relationship be like in modern day compared to the past?
The past is a very long time, but I chose to focus on the earliest time they would have interacted - the viking age - and the 1800s, as there's quite a bit of interaction there.
In modern times, England and Norway are good friends and are important business partners, especially now that the UK is no longer part of the EU they are even more interested in keeping good relations. They are both sort of outliers in Europe and England is perhaps more familiar with the strange ways of Norway than most.
This was not always the case though. Their relationship definitely improved a lot during the last century. In the 1800s it became popular for Brits to travel in Norway as tourists, and I've read some travel books from the period. It seemed like the englishmen found the norwegians to be simple and much less developed than themselves. Some even described having to hide their rotten fish because the norwegians would come dig it up eat (fermented fish is a delicacy in Norway). At times England would be a bit patronising during this period - and I think is not only true for Norway.
Going even further back, England was an easy target for bullying, being disorganised and unstable during the Viking Age. Norway had more intimate dealings with Scotland in this period, but would occationally either invade England with Denmark, or help the English king against invaders. Norwegians were not uncommonly mercenarices during the Viking Age. So, I think their relationship early on would have been shifting.
England and Norway's relationship has never been better than it is today.