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Grimm's TM - Chap. 30 Chapter 30
(Page 1) Mære however means not only fama, but fabula; and here some other
and more interesting personifications present themselves. We perceive that the existence, organization and copiousness of
poetry, as of language itself, reach back to a remote antiquity, that the resources
and beauties of both gradually decay, and have to be recruited in other ways.
Ancient poetry was a sacred calling, which bore a direct reference to the gods,
and had to do with soothsaying and magic. Before our modern names dichter (Ducange sub v. dictator) and
poet were imorted from abroad, we had no lack of native ones more beautiful.
At first the inditing and uttering of poetry seem to have gone together, the
sänger (OHG. sangari, MHG. senger and singer) was likewise the poet, there was
no question as to who had made the song. Ulphilas calls the adwn
liuþareis (OHG. liodari?); and perhaps would distinguish him from the
saggvareis (praecentor). Again, aoidoj
comes from aeidw,
as oida from
eidw, the digamma,
ascertainable from video and Goth. váit, being dropt; we must therefore assume
an older a#eidw
and a#oidoj,
(1) the singer and the godlike seer
(mantij, Lat.
vates) are one. With this I connect the Goth. inveita (adoro, p. 29); from the
sense of celebrating in festive song, might proceed that of worshipping. In
the Slavic tongue slava is gloria, slaviti venerari, slavik [O. Slav. slaviy,
Russ. solovéy] the glorifying jubilant bird, as amdwn
is from aeidw,
and our nahtigala from galan, canere. If aoidoj
means a seeing knowing singer, poet, soothsayer, why may
not a Goth. inváits, supposing there was such a word, have expressed the same? When the creative inventive faculty, as in
poihthj
, i.e., faber (and our smid equally stood for the framer
of the lied or lay, ON. lioða-smiðr), was to be specially marked, this was done
by the OHG. scuof, OS. AS. scôp (p. 407-8n.), which reminds at once of the supreme
Shaper of all things and of the shaping norn. The ON. has no skôpr
(2) that I know of, but instead of it a neuter skâld, which
I only grope after dubiously in OHG. (pp. 94. 649), and whose origin remains dark;
(3) skâldskapr, AS. scôpcræft = poësis. The Romance poetry
of the Mid. Ages derived the name of its craft from the Prov. trobar, It. trovare,
Fr. trouver, (4) to find, invent, and
trobaire, trovatore, trouvere is inventor, as scuof is creator. A word peculiar
to AS. is gid, gidd (cantus, oratio); Beow. 2124. 3446. 4205-12. 4304. 4888, or
giedd, Cod. exon. 380. 25 [yeddynges, Chauc.]; giddian (canere, fari), Cædm. 127,
6. Cod. exon. 236, 8. Beow. 1253; gidda (poeta, orator): 'gidda snotor,' El. 419.
'giedda snotor,' Cod. exon. 45, 2. 293, 20. Leo has traced it in the Ir. hat cit,
git (carmen dictum). (5) A far-famed word is the Celtic bard, Ir.
bard, pl. baird, Wel. bardh, occuring already in Festus: 'bardus Gallice, cantor
qui virorum fortium laudes canit.' Lucan's Phars., 1, 447: 'plurima securi fudistis
carmina bardi;' the lark was called bardaea or bardala (Ducange sub v.), songstress
like ahdwn
, nahtigala and slavik. No old authority gives a hint that
such bards were known to the language or customs of Germany (see Suppl.). Song, music and dance make glad (terpousi)
the heart of man, lend grace to the banquet (anaqhmata
daitoj, Od. 1, 152. 21, 430), lulling and charming
our griefs (brotwn qelkthria
, Od. 1, 337). God himself, when ailing, comes down from
heaven, to get cheered by the minstrel's lay (p. 331). Hence poetry is called
the joyous art, and song joy and bliss. We know the gai saber of the trobadors;
and joculator, joglar, jongleur, is derived from jocus, joc, jeu, play and pleasantry.
Even the Anglo-Saxons named song and music gleo (glee, gaudium), wynn (our wunne,
wonne), or dreám (jubilum): 'scôp hwîlum sang hâdor on Heorote, þa wæs hæleða
dreám,' Beow. 987; 'gidd and gleo' are coupled 4025; the song is called 'healgamen'
(aulae gaudium), the harp 'gamenwudu, gleobeám,' playing and singing 'gamen-wudu
grêtan,' to hail, to wake the frolic wood, Beow. 2123. 4210; 'gleobeám grêtan,'
Cod. exon. 42, 9. 'hearpan grêtan' and 'hearpan wynne grêtan' 296, 11. Beow. 4029.
Then, beside grêtan, there is used wrecan (ciere, excitare): 'gid wrecan,' to
rouse the lay, Beow. 2123. 4304. 4888. 'gid âwrecan' 3445. 4212. 'wordgid wrecan'
6338. 'geomorgidd wrecan,' Andr. 1548. The gleoman, gligman, is a minstrel, gleocræft
the gay science of music and song. In Wigalois p. 312 six fiddlers scrape all
sorrow out of the heart; if one could always have them by! And Fornald. sög. 1,
315, says: "leika hörpu ok segja sögur svâ at gaman þaetti at." I will
quote a remarkable parallel from Finnish poetry. It is true, the lay is called
runo, the poet runolainen, and runoan to indite or sing, the song is laulu, the
singer laulaya, and laulan I sing; but in the epic lays I find ilo (gaudium) used
for the song, and teen iloa (gaudium cieo) for singing (6)(see
Suppl.). A thing of such high importance cannot have
originated with man himself, it must be regarded as the gift of heaven. Invention
and utterance are put in the heart by the gods, the minstrel is god-inspired:
qespij aoidh, Od. 1,
328. 8, 498. aoidh qespesih,
Il. 2, 600. qespij aoidoj o ken terphsin
aeidwn
, Od. 17, 385. Gods of the highest rank are wardens and patrons
of the art divine, Zeus and Apollo among the Greeks, with us Wuotan and Bragr,
Wäinämöinen with the Finns. Saga was Wuotan's daughter (p. 310), as the Muse was
Zeus's; Freyja loved the minnesong: 'henni lîkaði vel mansöngr,' Sn. 29. On the origin of poetry the Younger Edda (Sn. 82 – 87) gives at
full length a myth, which the Elder had alluded to in Hâvamâl, (Sæm. 12. 23-4).
Once upon a time the Aesir and Vanir made a covenant of peace, and in token
of it each party stept up to a vessel, and let fall into it their spittle,
(7) as atonements and treaties were often hallowed by
mingling of bloods (RA. 193-4); here the holy spittle is equivalent to blood,
and even turns into blood, as the sequel shews. The token of peace (griðamark)
was too precious to be wasted, so the gods shaped out of it a man named kvâsir,
of all beings the wisest and shrewdest. (8)
This Kvâsir travelled far in the world, and taught men wisdom (frœði, OHG. fruotî).
But when he came to the dwelling of two dwarfs, Fialar and Galar (OHG. Filheri,
Kalheri?), they slew him, and let his blood run into two vats and a cauldron,
which last was named Oðhrœrir, and the vats Sôn and Boðn. Then the dwarfs mixed
the blood with honey, and of this was made a costly mead,
(9) whereof whosoever tasted received the gift of poesy
and wisdom: he became a skâld or a frœða-maðr (sage). We came upon a trace of
this barrel of blood and honey among the dwarfs, p. 468. Fialar and Galar tried to conceal the murder, giving out that
Kvâsir had been choked by the fulness of his wisdom; but it was soon reported
that they were in possession of his blood. In a quarrel they had with giant
Suttûngr, they were forced to give up to him the precious mead, as composition
for having killed his father. Suttûngr preserved it carefully in Hnitbiörg,
and made his daughter the fair Gunnlöð keeper of it. The gods had to summon up all their strength to regain possession
of the holy blood. Oðinn himself came from heaven to earth, and seeing nine
labourers mowing hay, he asked them if their scythes wanted sharpening. They
said they did, and he pulled a whetstone (10)
out of his belt, and gave them an edge; they cut so much better now, that the
mowers began bargaining for the stone, but Oðinn threw it up in the air, and
while each was trying to catch it, they all cut one another's throats with their
scythes. (11) At night Oðinn found
a lodging with another giant, Suttûng's brother Baugi, who sorely complained
that he had that day lost his nine men, and had not a workman left. Oðinn, who
called himself Bölverkr, was ready to undertake nine men's work, stipulating
only for a drink of Suttûng's mead. (12)
Baugi said the mead belonged to his brother, but he would do his best to obtain
the drink from him. Bölverkr accomplished the nine men's work in summer, and
when winter came demanded his wages. They both went off to Suttûng, but he would
not part with a drop of mead. Bölverkr was for trying stratagem, to which Baugi
agreed. Then Bölverkr produced a gimlet name Rati, (13)
and desired Baugi to bore the mountain through with it, which apparently he
did; but when Bölverkr blew into the hole and the dust flew back in his face,
he concluded that his ally was no honester than he should be. He made him bore
again, and this time when he blew, the dust flew inwards. He now changed himself
into a worm, and crept in at the hole; Baugi plunged the drill in after him,
but missed him. In the mountain Bölverkr passed three nights with Gunnlöð, and
she vowed to let him have three draughts of the mead: at the first draught he
drained Oðhrœrir, at the second Boðn, at the third Sôn, and so he had all the
mead. Then he took the shape of an eagle, flew his fleetest, and Suttûngr as
a second eagle gave chase. The Aesir saw Oðinn come flying, and in the courtyard
of Asgarð they set out vats, into which Oðinn, hard pressed by Suttûng, spat
out the mead, and thus it turned into spittle again, as it had been at first.
(14) The mead is given by Oðinn to the âses, and to
men that can skill of poesy. This explains the fluctuating names of the poetic
art: it is called Kvâsis blôð (Kv. sanguis); dverga drecka, fylli (nanorum potus,
satietas); Oðhrœris, Boðnar, Sônar laug (O., B., S. aqua); Hnitbiarga laug (Hn.
aqua); Suttûngs miöðr (S. mulsum); Oðins fengr, fundr, dryckr (O. praeda, inventio,
potus); Oðins giöf (O. donum); dryckr Asanna (Asarum potus). Some of these names are well worth explaining
minutely. Boðn is rendered oblatio, Sôn reconciliatio: neither of them, at all
events when first used by the dwarfs, can have had any such meaning yet. We
can easily connect boðn with AS. byden, OHG. putin (Graff 3, 87); sôn certainly
agrees with the OHG suona (emendatio), not with Goth. sáun (lytrum). Sæm. 118b.
234a has 'Sônar dreyri' in the sense of 'sônar dreyri,' atonement-blood (conf.
sônar göltr, p. 51). More meaning and weight attaches to the cauldron's name,
which occurs also in Sæm. 23b. 28a. 88a, the last time spelt correctly. To explain
the word, I must mention first, that a Goth. adj. vôþs, dulcis, answers to OHG
wuodi, OS. wôthi, AS. wêðe, which is used alike of sweet smell and sweet sound;
'swêg þæs wêðan sanges,' sonus dulcis cantilenae. And further, that an AS. noun
wôð (masc.) is carmen, facundia: 'wôða wynsumast,' carmen jucundissimum, Cod.
exon. 358, 9. 'wôða wlitegast,' carmen pulcherrimum, El. 748. 'wôð wera,' prophetia
virorum, Cædm. 254, 23. 'wôðbora' (carmen ferens), both as poëta, Cod. exon.
295, 19. 489, 17 and as orator, propheta 19, 18. 346, 21. 'witgena wôðsong,'
cantus prophetarum 4, 1. 'wôðcræft,' poësis 234, 30. 360, 7 synon. with the
scôpcræft and gleocræft above. 'wynlicu wôðgiefu,' jocundum poëseos donum 414,
10 alluding at once to the gay art and to Wôden's gift. Now, whether the sense
of 'sweet, gentle,' lay in the noun wôð itself, or was first developed in the
derived adj. (which seems nearer the truth, as wôð in some passages of Cod.
exon. 118, 4. 125, 31. 156, 8 means only a loud sound, clamor, without any reference
to song); it is plain that to it corresponds the ON. ôðr (also masc.) which
denotes as well poëma as ingenium, facundia. In the former sense its agreement
with the Lat. oda, Gr. wdh
(contr. from aoidh), purely accidental
with the difference of gender sufficiently shews. It is remarkable that at the
creation of Askr and Embla, Sæm. 3b, Hœnir is said to have imparted to them
the lacking ôð, which on p. 561 I translated 'reason': perhaps 'speech, gift
of speech' would be more correct? (15)
Be that as it may, Oðhrœrir seems clearly to be 'poësin ciens, dulcem artem
excitans,' which is in striking harmony with the AS. 'gid wrecan' and Finn.
'teen iloa' above; hrœra, OHG. hruoran, MHG. rüeren, means tangere, ciere, and
the cauldron would have been in OHG. Wuodhruori, AS. Wôðhrêre. Freyja's husband
Oðr (Sæm. 5b. Sn. 37), whom she sought through the world and bewept with golden
tears, may have been a personification of poetic art; (16)
was he the same as Kvâsir, who traversed the world, and was murdered by the
dwarfs? Thus Oðhrœrir contained the sweet drink of divine poesy, which
imparted immortality; and from the exertions made by the gods, particularly
Oðinn, to regain possession of it when it had fallen into the hands of dwarfs
and giants, follows its identity with amrita, ambrosia and nectar (p. 317-9);
the ichor in the veins of gods is like the limpid spittle of the Ases and Vanes. The pure bee, which has survived from Paradise
(17) brings the honey of song to the lips of the sleeper,
p. 696 (see Suppl.). I cannot resist the temptation to add some more legends of how
the inspiration of song came to great poets overnight in their sleep: the story
of Pindar is told again of Homer and Aeschylus under another form. << Previous Page Next Page >>
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