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Grimm's TM - Supplement Chap. 15 Sup.
p. 376.) In Eigls-perge, MB. 28, 2, 173 (Passau urbar.). Juxta
portam quae de Eigeles (at Cologne), Lacomblet 318, yr. 1134. p. 378.) The Heldensage p. 288 has two sons of Wieland, (full) brothers:
Wittich and Wittich von der aue; conf. Lat. Silvanus, a forest-god of secondary
rank: Silvani lucus extra murum est avius crebro salicto oppletus, Plaut. Aul.
iv. 6, 8. Ought we to read Viltinus for Vilkinus? Hpt's Ztschr. 6, 446. Schott
conn. Wate with Wuotan, Introd. to Gudr. lvi. To things named after Wieland
add the Wielandstein, Schwab's Alp. p. 136 seq.; after Galans a pratum Galandi,
now Préjelan in Bourgogne, Garnier's Pagi Burg. p. 83. Dan. Velants-urt, also
velamsrot, vendelsrot, Dyb. 1845, 49. 50. On Wielets-kinder conf. Schm. sub
v. Valföður vél framtelja, patris artem (mysterium?) enarrare, Sæm. 1a. Another
point of likeness betw. Wieland and Hephæstos is, that both are masters of forging
dwarfs (p. 471-2). Their handiwork was famous: ergon Hfaistoio,
Od. 4, 617. 15, 116. ouj Hfaistoj eteuxe 7, 92. p. 380.) 'Mime the old' in Bit. 138 seems to have a short i, and can hardly
belong here. Karajan in Verbrüd. von S. Peter has Mimilo, Mimistein. To Mîmigernegord
(conf. Ledebur's Bructeri p. 328), perhaps from an adj. mîmi-gern, and Mîmidun
(Mîmidomensis = Mindensis, Lappbg no. 25; Mimende on Weser, Schrader's Dyn.
104), add a third Westph. locality Mimegersen, now Memsen in Hoya country, Lappbg
no. 48. Again, Mimmelage near Osnabrück. Mimirberh, perhaps Mimisberh, Pertz
8, 776. The names Memeln-brun, -born, Memel-born, Memilsdorf, Henneb. urk. 2,
nos. 153-6. 169. 1, 166. 125, and Memelen-born (Melborn by Eisenach), Thür.
Ztschr. 4, 210 suggest the Mîmis brunnr of the Edda. With Mimingus, silvarum
satyrus, agrees the sword's name in En. 5694; conf. Mumminc, Upstdge 137, (Muma
in Thidrekss. 65). There are yet to be considered Söck-mîmir, Sæm. 46b; Hoddmîmir
who dwells î holti 37; Mîmsvinr, Mîmisvinr, Egilss. 641. Like Mîmi's head is
Virgil's head which prophesies, MSH. 4, 246. A head of brass prophesies in Val.
et Ourson c. 25; enn spinnen-hoofd in the Dutch transl. arose perhaps from taking
tête d'airain for t. d'araigne. Heads often speak in churches, F. Magn. Edda-laere
2, 264. p. 383.) On Tell conf. Böhmer's Reg. p. 197 and Sinner in the Solothurner
Wtb. 1845, p. 198. Th. Platter 87 (abt 1532) names him Wilhelm Täll, and Garg.
180b Wilh. Dell, while Rabelais 1, 23 does not mention him. A picture of Tell
in Schwzbg's Memorial 116a. Some stories make the son shoot the apple off the
father's head. Schützeichel is at this day a family-name at Bonn, Simrock's
Edda p. 396. Many single heroes remain to be considered, such as Poppo the
strong, Hpt's Ztschr. 3, 239, conf. 8, 347; Hugleich 5, 10. Also lines of heroes:
stirps Immidingorum (Saxon) et Erbonum (Bavar.), Pertz. 8, 226. p. 383.) The god must stand at the head of the line, because he passes
for the father and grandfather of the men. Still there remains an enormous difference
between gods and men; hence in Saxo, ed. M. 117, the (earthly) Nanna rejects
the suit of Balder: nuptiis deum mortali sociari non posse, quod ingens naturae
discrimen copulae commercium tollat ........ supernis terrestria non jugari. p. 385n.) Saxo calls Othin, Thor, etc. merely opinative, not naturaliter
deos (ed. M. 118), and Balder a semideus (conf. p. 340); whereupon P. E. Müller
om Saxo p. 54 remarks: Odin lived neither before nor after Christ. Old Conrad
in his Troj. Kr. 858-911 is not quite of that opinion: 'si wâren liute als ir
nu sît, wan daz (they were men like you, only) ir krefteclîch gewalt was michel
unde manicvalt von kriutern und von steinen ........ ouch lepten gnuoge (lived
plenty) bî der zît, die zouberaere wâren, und wunder in den jâren mit gougelwîse
worhten (with jugglery wrought).' How the old gods were degraded into conjurors,
is shown p. 1031. ----- Of the deification of men there are plenty of examples:
'daz kint waere mit den goten ein got,' Pass. 298, 27. The heathen adore Sigelôt
as a god, Rol. 198, 21. Ipomidon will be a god himself, Tit. 3057. 4147-60.
er wolde got hien erde sîn, Diemer 139, 24. als er iz waere got 131, 22. mîn
wirde gelîch den goten steic, Turl. Wh. 66a. Of Caligula: 'wart hi so sot, dat
hi wilde wesen god, ende hi seide openbare dat hi Jupiters broeder ware,' Maerl.
2, 236, conf. 333. 'Grambaut, roi de Baviere, se nommoit dieu en terre,' and
called his castle Paradis, Belle Hellene p.m. 23. The Mongols practise the worship
of ancestors, deific. of rulers, Klemm 3, 194-5; also veneration of saints and
relics. p. 392.) The Greeks required beauty of form in heroes as well as gods,
Lucian's Charid. 6. 7. Of Charlem. it is said: anges resemble du ciel ius devolé,
Aspr. 21a. Heroes share the lofty stature of gods. Of Huglâcus the legend says:
quem equus a duodecimo anno portare non potuit; cujus ossa in Rheni fluminis
insula, ubi in oceanum prorumpit, reservata sunt, et de longinquo venientibus
pro miraculo ostenduntur (Suppl. to 365). ----- Manyhandedness is often mentioned.
Ancient men with four hands, four feet, and two faces, Plato symp. 189, four
ears 190. ex gar ceirej ekastw ap wmwn aissonto, Orph.
arg. 519. Men with 8 toes, 6 hands, Megenb. 490, 2. 30; conf. gods and giants
(p. 527). From the three-handed and three or four-elbowed Heime (Germ. 4, 17)
perh. the Heimenstein takes its name, about which there is a folk-tale, G. Schwab's
Alb pp. 161-165. A story about 'so Heyne, so,' who helps to raise a treasure,
in H. v. Herford, Potth. p. 93; conf. Brîsînga-men (p. 306). A three-headed
figure on the Gallehus horn discov. 1734 (Henneb., plate 2). ----- Most akin
to the gods seem those heroes who are favoured with a second birth. (p. 385).
The fact of many heroes' names being repeated in their descendants may have
to do with this belief, GDS. 441. But Helgi and Svava are genuine endrbornir,
Sæm. 148. 169. 159b. As late as in MS. 1, 97b we read: 'sturbe ich nâch ir minne,
und wurde ich danne lebende, sô wurbe ich aber umbe daz wîp (I would woo her
again).' Contrariwise MS. 1, 69b: 'sô bin ich doch ûf anders niht geborn.' Solinus
says Scipio was another of the Unborn, and was therefore called Cæsar, Maerl.
1, 401; conf. the Lay of Mimmering tand, Danske Vis. 1, 100. ----- Karna, son
of the Sun, was born with earrings and a coat of mail, Holtzm. 2, 123-9. 136.
wart ie man mit wâfen geborn, Krone 10534; conf. 'born with a fiddle.' To phenomena
occurring at the birth of a hero, add the storm that attended Alexander's, Pseudocallisth.
p.m. 12. Alcmena tests Hercules with snakes, which he kills lying in his cradle,
as Sigmund does Sinfjötli by kneading the dough that had snakes in it, Völs.
saga c. 7. Kullervo, when 3 nights old, tears up his swathings, Castrén 2, 45.
In the Sv. folks. 1, 139. 140, the child walks and talks as soon as born. Of
the grown-up hero's strength the examples are countless. Tied to an oak, he
pulls it up, Sv. forns. 1, 44. Danske V. 1, 13; Beowulf has in his hand the
strength of thirty, Beow. 756. They eat and drink enormously, like Thôrr (Suppl.
to 320); so Hammer grå, Sv. forns. 1, 61-2, conf. the giant bride 1, 71-2. Syv.
49. ----- Heroes have beaming godlike eyes, snake's eyes, ormr î auga; so have
kings, Saxo, ed. M. p. 70. Aslög's son (Sigurð's and Brynhild's grandson) is
called Sigurðr ormr-î-auga, gen. Sigurðar orms-î-auga, Fornald. s. 1, 267. 273.
2, 10-4. Fornm. 1, 115. His step-brothers say: eigi er oss î augum ormr ne frânir
snâkar, Fornald. 1, 268 (conf. orm frânn, Heimskr. 7, 238. Sæm. Hafn. 2, 13).
Sigurðr Oðins aettar, þeim er ormr î auga, Fornald. 1, 258. Aslög prophesies
of her unborn son: 'enn â þeim sveini mun vera þat mark, at svâ mun þikkja,
sem ormr liggi um auga sveininum' ---- a false interpretation, for not the eyebrows
coiling round, but the inner look (î auga) was meant, Fornald. 1, 257. In Sæm.
187a he is called 'inn frân-eygi sveinn.' brann Brynhildi eldr or augom (fire
flashed from B.'s eyes) 215b. âmun (minaces) eru augu ormi þeim enum frâna (Völundr)
156a. hvöss eru augu î Hagals þýju (Helgi in disguise) 158b. We still say: something
great shines out of his eyes. GDS. 126-7. ----- Other heroes show other marks:
on Hagen's breast is a golden cross, Gudr. 143-7. 153; betw. Wolfdietrich's
shoulders a red cross, Hugd. 139. 189. Valentin and Namelos have also a cross
betw. the shoulders, like the mark of the lime-leaf on Siegfried's back, where
alone he is vulnerable (as Achilles was in one heel), Nib. 845, 3. 4. Swan-children
have a gold chain about the neck, the reali di Franza a niello on the right
shoulder, Reali 6, 17. p.m. 344; conf. the wolfs-zagelchen betw. the shoulder-blades
(Suppl. to 1097). Of the Frankish hero Sigurd, the Vilk. saga c. 319 says: 'hans
horund var svâ hart sem sigg villigaltar; sigg may mean a bristly skin, and
seems conn. with the legend of the bristled Merowings. (1)
In cap. 146 we are told that Sigurd's skin grew hard as horn; and in Gudr. 101,
that wild Hagen's skin hardened through drinking the monster's blood. No doubt
the original meaning was, merely that he gained strength by it. The great, though
not superhuman age of 110 years is attained by Hermanaricus, Jorn. c. 24. We
read in Plaut. mil. glor. iv. 2, 86: meri bellatores gignuntur, quas hic praegnates
fecit, et pueri annos octingentos vivunt. The gods bestow blessings, the heroes
evils, Babr. 63. p. 392.) Strong Franz also holds converse with his knowing steed, Müllenh.
p. 422. The hero talks with his sword as well as his horse, Sv. forns. 1, 65.
Klage 847 seq. Wigal. 6514. Drachenk. 161a. Vilkinas. pp. 54. 160-1. The dying
hero would fain annihilate his sword, e.g. the Servian Marko and Roland, Conr.
Rol. 237, 3. p. 394.) Where a god, devil or hero sits, there is left a mark in the stone.
Their hands and feet, nay, their horses' hoofs, leave marks behind (Suppl. to
664). ons heren spronc, Maerl. 2, 116. Stone remains wet with a hero's tears:
hiute (to this day) ist der stein naz, dâ Karl uffe sâz, Ksrchr. 14937.
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