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Grimm's TM - Chap. 2 Chapter 2
Some other appellations may be added in support. In the earliest
period of our language, the neut. ragin meant consilium. Now the plural of this,
as used in the Edda, denotes in a special manner the plurality of the gods (see
Suppl.) Regin are the powers that consult together, and direct the world; and
the expressions blið regin, (24) holl
regin (kind, merciful gods), uppregin, ginregin (superæ potestates) have
entirely this technical meaning. Ragnaröker (Goth. raginê reqvis?
dimness, darkness of gods) signifies the end of the world, the setting of the
divine luminaries. Sæm. 89 has "rögnir ok regin" coupled together,
rögnir (cf. 196) being used to distinguish the individual ragineis (raguneis?),
masc. These ON. regin [[the gods, ruling powers]] would be Goth. ragina, as
the höpt and bönd are Gothic hafta and banda, all neut.----The same
heathen conception peeps out in the OS. regangiscapu, reganogiscapu, [[decree
of the power(s)]] Hel. 79, 13. 103, 3, equivalent to fatum, destiny, the decree
and counsel of the gods, and synonymous with wurdgiscapu, [[decree of Wyrd]]
Hel. 103, 7, from wurd, fatum. And again in metodogiscapu, [[decree of the measurers,
creators]] Hel. 66, 19. 147, 11. We have seen that metod [[measurer]] likewise
is a name for the Supreme Being, which the christian poet of the Heliand has
ventured to retain from the heathen poetry. But these gen. plurals regano, [[of
the powers]] metodo [[of the measurers]] again point to the plurality of the
binding gods. The collection of Augustine's letters contains (cap. 178), in
the altercatio with Pascentius, a Gothic or perhaps a Vandal formula sihora
armen, [[have mercy, Victorious]] the meaning of which is simply kurie
elehson. (25)Even if it be an interpolation,
and written in the fifth or sixth century, instead of at the end of the fourth,
it is nevertheless remarkable that sihora [[victor, victorious one]] should
be employed in it for God and Lord. Ulphilas would have said: fráuja
armái. [[have mercy, lord]] The inf. armên, [[to have mercy, be
merciful]] if not a mistake for armê, might do duty as an imperative;
at the same time there is a Finn. and Esth. word armo signifying gratia, misericordia.
But sihora, it seems, can only be explained as Teutonic, and must have been
already in heathen times an epithet of God derived from his victorious might
(see Suppl.) Goth. sigris, [[victory]] ON. Sigr [[victory]], OHG. sigu [[victory]]
, AS. sige [[voctory]] victoria, triumphus. Oðinn is styled sigrgoð,
sigtýr, sigföður; and the Christian poets transfer to God sigidrohtîn
[[victory-drightin]], Hel. 47, 13. 114, 19. 125, 6. sigidryhtem [[victory-drightin]],
Cædm. 33, 21. 48, 20. sigmetod [[victory-measurer]], Beow. 3544. vîgsigor
[[battle-victor]], Beow. 3108. (26) elsewhere
sigoradryhten [[drightin of victories]], sigorafreá [[lord of victories]],
sigorawealdend [[lord of victories]], sigoragod [[god of victories]], sigoracyning
[[king of victories]]. It is even possible that from that ancient sihora sprang
the title sira, sire still current in Teutonic and Romance languages.
(27) The gods being represented as superi and uppregin, as dwelling
on high, in the sky, uphimin, up on the mountain height (âs, ans), it
was natural that individual gods should have certain particular mountains and
abodes assigned them. Thus, from a mere consideration of the general names for God
and gods, we have obtained results which compel us to accept an intimate connexion
between expressions in our language and conceptions proper to our heathenism.
The 'me and God,' the gracious and the angry God, the frôho (lord) and
the father, the beholding, creating, measuring, casting, the images of ans,
fastening, band, and ragin, all lead both individually, and with all the more
weight collectively, into the path to be trod. I shall take up all the threads
again, but I wish first to determine the nature and bearings of the cultus.
24. The blithe, happy gods: when people stepped along in stately gorgeous attire, men thought that gods had appeared: menn hugðu at æsir væri þar komnir,' Landn. 3, 10. The Völs. saga c. 26 says of Sigurð: 'þat hygg ec at her fari einn af goðunum,' I think that here rides one of the gods. So in Parz. 36, 18: 'alda wîp und man verjach, si ne gesachen nie helt sô wünneclîch, ir gote im solten sín gelích' (declared, they saw never a hero so winsome, their gods must be like him). The more reason is there for my note on Siegfried (ch. XV), of whom the Nib. 84, 4 says: der dort sô hêrlîchen gât' (see Suppl.). (back) 25. The Tcheremisses also pray 'juma sirlaga,' and the Tchuvashes 'tora sirlag,' i.e., God have mercy; G. J. Müllers saml. russ. gesch. 2, 359. The Morduins say when it thunders 'pashangui Proguini pas,' have mercy, god Porguini; Georgi description I. 64. (back) 26. den sig hât got in sîner hant, MS. 2, 16. (back) 27. Gott. anz. 1833, pp. 471-2. Diez however raises doubles,
Roman. gram, 1, 41. (back) << Previous Page Next Page >>
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