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Grimm's TM - Chap. 17 Chapter 17
Now what is the true meaning of the word albs, alp = genius?
One is tempted indeed to compare the Lat. albus, which according to Festus the
Sabines called alpus; alfoj (vitiligo,
leprosy) agrees still better with the law of consonant-change. Probably then
albs meant first of all a light-coloured, white, good spirit, (13)
so that, when âlfar and dvergar are contrasted, the one signifies the
white spirits, and other the black. This exactly agrees with the great beauty
and brightness of âlfar. But the two classes of creatures getting, as
we shall see, a good deal mixed up and confounded, recourse was had to composition,
and the elves proper were named liosâlfar. (14)
The above-named döckâlfar (genii obscuri) require
a counterpart, which is not found in the Eddic songs, but it is in Snorri's
prose. He says, p. 21: 'In Alfheim dwells the nation of the liosâlfar
(light elves), down in the earth dwell the döckâlfar (dark elves),
the two unlike one another in their look and their powers, liosâlfar brighter
than the sun, döckâlfar blacker than pitch.' The liosâlfar
occupy the third space of heaven, Sn. 22. Another name which never occurs in
the lays, and which at first right seems synonymous with döckâlfar,
is svartâlfar (black elves); (15)
and these Snorri evidently takes to be the same as dvergar, for his dvergar
dwell in Svartâlfaheim, (Sn. 34. 130. 136). This is, for one thing, at
variance with the separation of âlfar and dvergar in the lays, and more
particularly with the difference implied between döckâlfar and dvergar
in Sæm. 92b 188ª. That language of poetry, which everywhere else imparts
such precise information about the old faith, I am not inclined to set aside
here as vague and general. Nor, in connexion with this, ought we to overlook
the nâir, the deadly pale or dead ghosts named by the side of the dvergar,
Sæm. 92b, though again among the dvergar themselves occur the proper names
Nâr and Nâinn. Some have seen, in this antithesis of light and black elves,
the same Dualism that other mythologies set up between spirits good and bad,
friendly and hostile, heavenly and hellish, between angels of light and of darkness.
But ought we not rather to assume three kinds of Norse genii, liosâlfar,
döckâlfar, svartâlfar? No doubt I am thereby pronouncing Snorri's
statement fallacious: 'döckâlfar eru svartari en bik (pitch).' Döckr
(16) seems to me not so much downright
black, as dim, dingy; not niger, but obscurus, fuscus, aquilus. In ON. the adj.
iarpr [[jarpr - chestnut, reddish-brown]], AS. eorp, fuscus, seems to be used
of dwarfs, Haupt's Zeitschr. 3, 152; and the female name Irpa (p. 98) is akin
to it. In that case the identity of dwarfs and black elves would hold good,
and at the same time the Old Eddic distinction between dwarfs and dark elves
be justified. Such a Trilogy still wants decisive proof; but some facts can
be brought in support of it. Pomeranian legend, to begin with, seems positively
to divide subterraneans into white, brown, and black; (17)
elsewhere popular belief contents itself with picturing dwarfs in gray clothing,
in gray or brown cap-of-darkness; Scotch tradition in particular has its brownies,
spirits of brown hue, i.e., döckâlfar rather than svartâlfar
(see Suppl.). But here I have yet another name to bring in, which, as applied
to such spirits, is not in extensive use. I have not met with it outside of
the Vogtland and a part of East Thuringia. There the small elvish beings that
travel especially in the train of Berchta, are called the heimchen (supra, p.
276); and the name is considered finer and nobler than querx or erdmännchen
(Börner p. 52). It is hardly to be explained by any resemblance to chirping
crickets, which are also called heimchen, OHG. heimili (Graff 4, 953); still
less by heim (domus), for these wights are not home-spirits (domestici); besides,
the correct spelling seems to be heinchen (Variscia 2, 101), so that one may
connect it with 'Friend Hein,' the name for death, and the Low Sax. heinenkleed
(winding-sheet, Strodtmann p. 84). (18)
This notion of departed spirits, who appear in the 'furious host' in the retinue
of former gods, and continue to lead a life of thier own, may go to support
those nâir of the Edda; the pale hue may belong to them, and the gray,
brown, black to the coarser but otherwise similar dwarfs. Such is my conjecture.
In a hero-lay founded on thoroughtly German legend, that of Morolt, there appear
precisely three troops of spirits, who take charge of the fallen in battle and
of their souls: a white, a pale, and a black troop (p. 28b), which is explained
to mean 'angels, kinsmen of the combatants coming up from hades, and devils.'
No such warlike part is ever played by the Norse âlfar, not they, but
the valkyrs have to do with battles; but the traditions may long have become
tangled together, and the offices confounded. (19)
The liosâlfar that dwell 'niðri î iörðu,' nay, the
very same that in the Alvîsmâl are not expressly named, but designated
by the words 'î heljo.' Or I can put it in this way: liosâlfar live
in heaven, döckâlfar (and nâir?) in hel, the heathen hades,
svartâlfar in Svartâlfaheim, which is never used in the same sense
as hel (see Suppl.). The dusky elves are souls of dead men, as the younger poet
supposed, or are we to separate döckâlfar and nâir? Both have
their abode in the realms of hades, as the light ones have in those of heaven.
Of no other elves has the Edda so much to tell as of the black, who have more
dealings with mankind; svartâlfar are named in abundance, liosâlfar
and döckâlfar but fitfully. One thing we must not let go: the identity of svartâlfar
and dvergar. Dvergar, Goth. dvaírgs? AS. dweorg, OHG. tuerc, MHG. tverc,
our zwerg, (20) answer to the Lat.
nanus, Gr. nannoj (dwarf, puppet), Ital.
nano, Span. enano, Portug. anao, Prov. nan, nant, Fr. nain, Mid. Nethl. also
naen, Ferg. 2243-46-53-82. 3146-50, and nane, 3086-97; or Gr. pugmaioj.
Beside the masc. forms just given, OHG. and MHG. frequently use the neut. form
gituerc, getwerc, Nib. 98,1. 335, 3. MS. 2, 15ª. Wigal. 6080. 6591. Trist. 14242.
14515. daz wilde getwerc, Ecke 81. 82. Wh. 57, 25. Getwerc is used as a masc.
in Eilhart 2881-7. Altd. bl. 1, 253-6-8; der twerk in Hoffm. fundgr. 237. Can
qeourgoj (performing miraculous deeds,
what the MHG. would call wunderære) have anything to do with it? As to
meaning, the dwarfs resemble the Idæan Dactyls of the ancients, the Cabeiri
and pataikoi: all or most of the dvergar
in the Edda are cunning smiths (Sn. 34. 48. 130. 354). This seems the simplest
explanation of their black sooty appearance, like that of the cyclopes. Their
forges are placed in caves and mountains: Svartâlfheimr must therefore
lie in a mountainous region, not in the abyss of hell. And our German folk-tales
everywhere speak of the dwarfs as forging in the mountains: 'von golde wirkent
si diu spœhen werc' says the Wartburg War of the getwerc Sinnels in Palakers,
whereas elves and elfins have rather the business of weaving attributed to them.
Thus, while dwarfs border on the smith-heroes and smith-gods (Wielant, Vulcan),
the functions of elves approach those of fays and good-wives (see Suppl.). (21)
If there be any truth in this view of the matter, one can easily
conceive how it might get altered and confused in the popular belief of a later
time, when the new christian notions of angel and devil had been introduced.
At bottom all elves, even the light ones, have some devil-like qualities, e.g.
their loving to teaze men; but they are not therefore devils, not even the black
ones, but often good-natured beings. It appears even that to these black elves
in particular, i.e., mountain spirits, who in various ways came into contact
with man, a distinct reverence was paid, a species of worship, traces of which
lasted down to recent times. The clearest evidence of this is found in the Kormakssaga
p. 216-8. The hill of the elves, like the altar of a god, is to be reddened
with the blood of a slaughtered bull, and of the animal's flesh a feast prepared
for the elves: 'Hôll einn er heðan skamt î brott, er âlfar
bûa î (cave that elves dwell in); grâðûng þann,
er Kormakr drap (bull that K. slew), skaltû fâ, ok riôða
blôð grâðûngsins â hôlinn ûtan,
en gera âlfum veizlu (make the elves a feast) af slâtrinu, ok mun
þer batna.' An actual âlfabôt. With this I connect the superstitious
custom of cooking food for angels, and setting it for them (Superst. no. 896).
So there is a table covered and a pot of food placed for home-smiths and kobolds
(Deut. sagen, no. 37. 38. 71); meat and drink for domina Abundia (supra, p.
286); money or bread deposited in the caves of subterraneans, in going past
(Neocorus 1, 262. 560). (22) There
are plants named after elves as well as after gods: alpranke, alpfranke, alfsranke,
alpkraut (lonicera periclymen., solanum dulcam.), otherwise called geissblatt,
in Denmark troldbär, in Sweden trullbär; dweorges dwosle, pulegium
(Lye), Mone's authorities spell dwostle, 322ª; dvergeriis, acc. to Molbech's
Dial. Lex. p. 86, the spartium scoparium. A latrina was called âlfrek,
lit. genios fugans, Eyrb. saga, cap. 4 (see Suppl.). Whereas man grows but slowly, not attaining his full stature
till after his fifteenth year, and then living seventy years, and a giant can
be as old as the hills; the dwarf is already grown up in the third year of his
life, and a greybeard in the seventh; (23)
the Elf-king is commonly described as old and white-bearded. Accounts of the creation of dwarfs will be presented in chap.
XIX.; but they only seem to refer to the earthly form of the black elves, not
of the life. 13. The word appears in the name of the snowclad mountains (alpes, see Suppl.), and that of the clear river (Albis, Elbe), while the ON. elf elfa [[river?]], Swed. elf, Dan. elv = fluvius, is still merely appellative; the ghostly elvish swan (OHG. alpiz, MHG. elbez, AS. ælfet, ON. alpt [[swan]], p. 429) can be explained both by its colour and its watery abode; likewise the Slav. labud, lebed, from Labe. Back 14. Vanir also may contain the notion of white, bright; consider the ON. vœnn [[fair to behold, beautiful]] (pulcher), the Ir. ban (albus), ben, bean (femina), Lat. Venus, Goth. qinô, AS. cwen. To this add, that the Ir. banshi, ban-sighe denotes an elvish being usually regarded as female, a fay. The same is expressed by sia, sighe alone, which is said to mean properly the twilight, the hour of spirits (see Suppl.). Back 15. Thorlac. spec. 7, p. 160, gives the liosâlfar another name hvitâlfar (white elves); I have not found the word in the old writings. Back 16. Conf. OHG. tunchal, MHG. tunkel (our dunkel), Nethl. donker. Back 17. E. M. Arndt's Märchen und Jugenderinnerungen, Berl. 1818, p. 159. In Phil. von Steinau's Volkssagen, Zeitz 1838, pp. 291-3, the same traditions are given, but only white and black (not brown) dwarfs are distinguished. Back 18. 'Heinenkleed is not conn. with Friend Hein, but means a hünenkleed (ch. XVIII.); conf. also the hünnerskes, and perhaps the haunken, or aunken in the Westph. sgönaunken.'---Extr. from Suppl. Back 19. The different races of elves contending for a corpse (Ir. Elfenm. 68). Back 20. In Lausitz and E. Thuringia querx, in Thüringerwald querlich. Jac. von Königshofen, p. 89, has querch. In Lower Saxony sometimes twârm, for twarg. Back 21. In Bretagne the korr, pl. korred answers to our elf, the korrigan to our elfin; and she too is described like a fay: she sits by the fountain, combing her hair, and whosever catches her doing so, must marry her at once, or die in three days (Villemarqué 1, 17). The Welsh cawr means a giant. Back 22. The Old Pruss. and Lith. parstuk (thumbkin) alsohas food placed for him, conf. Lasicz 54. The Lett. behrstuhki is said to mean a child's doll, Bergm. 145. Back 23. Emp. Ludwig the Bavarian
(1347) writes contemptuously to Markgraf Carl of Moravia: 'Recollige, quia nondum
venit hora, ut pigmei de Judea (l. India) statura cubica evolantes fortitudine
gnauica (l. gnanica, i.e. nanica) terras gygantium detrahere debeant in ruinas,
et ut pigmei, id est homines bicubitales, qui in anno tercio crescunt ad perfectam
quantitatem et in septimo anno senescunt et moriuntur, imperent gygantibus.'
Pelzel's Carl IV. 1 urk. p. 40. Conf. Böhmer's Font. 1, 227. 2, 570. Yet
this description does not look to me quite German; the more the dwarfs are regarded
as elves, there is accorded to them, and especially to elfins (as to the Greek
oreads), a higher and semi-divine age; conf. the stories of changlings quoted
further on. Laurîn, acc. to the poems, was more than 400 years old. Back
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