Home of the Eddic Lays
Chapter 8
THE RELATION OF THE FIRST
HELGI-LAY TO THE STORY OF MELEAGER.
We have seen that the
account of Helgi's birth and of the predictions of his future greatness,
given in the First Helgi-lay, arose under the influence of an AS heroic
poem (now lost) on Wolf-Theodoric, or Wolf-dietrich. Still, other foreign
narratives seem to have affected this part of the poem.
The Norns come to the
king's court when Helgi is born, and decide the hero's fate. This poetic-mythic
feature appears here, as part of an heroic story, for the first time in
the North. (1) It was, however,
already known in classical heroic story. The account in the First Helgi-lay
resembles very closely a part of the story of Meleager as told by Hyginus
(2): Cum Althaea Thestii filia una nocte concubuerunt
Oeneus et Mars; ex quibus cum esset natus Meleager, subito in regia apparuerunt
Parcae. Cui fata ita cecinerunt: Clotho dixit eum generosum futurum, Lachesis
fortem. With this we may compare H. H., I, 1-2: 'Borghild had given birth
to Helgi the stout-hearted in Brálund. It was night in the court. The
Norns came, those who decided the fate of the prince. They said that he
should become the most famous of princes, and be regarded as the best
of the Buthlungs.'
The two passages resemble
each other even in details. ON í boe, 'in the court,' corresponds to in
regia; ON nornir kvámu to parcae apparuerunt; ON þær er öðlingi aldr um
skópu, 'those who decided the fate of the prince,' in connection with
the following báðu, 'they bade (said),' to cui fata ita cecinerunt. The
ON poem has, like the Latin, two adjectives: fortem could be taken to
correspond in meaning to Helgi's surname enn hugumstóra, 'the courageous';
generosum, 'noble,' resembles beztan in meaning. ON báðu ........verða,
'said that he should become,' corresponds to dixit eum .... futurum.
I have tried to prove
that the author of the First Helgi-lay lived in Ireland, probably at the
court of the Scandinavian king of Dublin; that he understood Irish, and
not only associated with Irish poets, but also borrowed poetic motives
from them. We know with certainty that the Irish were acquainted with
several of the Latin collections of classical, mythic, and heroic tales
made partly in the early Middle Ages. It would not, therefore, have been
remarkable if the author of our lay heard Irish poets tell orally the
story of Meleager, possibly in part as it was to be found in Hyginus,
and if he reproduced the mythical Parcae in the Norns who visit the new-born
Helgi.
An historical investigation
of the Norns and of their general relations to the Fées of Romance nations,
the Parcae of the Romans, the Moirai of the Greeks, would lead us too
far at this time. But in this connection I must point out the resemblance
in expression (to which Dr. Hj. Falk has called my attention) between
H. H., 1, 3: Sneru þær af afli ørlög ...... þáttu, 'They turned with strength
the threads of fate,' and Ovid, Metam., VIII, 453: staminaque impresso
fatalia pollice nentes of the Parcae, triplices sorores, in the story
of Meleager's Birth; and I should like also to explain the expression
which is used of the Norn in H. H., I, 4, viz. nipt Nera, 'Neri's (female)
relative.' (3) This name Neri
has the same meaning as Nörvi. According to the Gylfaginning, (4)
the father of Night was the giant Nörvi or Narfi. (5)
In Vafþrúðnismál, 25, and Alvíssmál, 29, he is called in the dative Nörvi,
for which we must postulate a nom. Nörr. Neri arose from *Nørvi, as gera,
'to do,' 'make,' from gørva. The name is to be explained from an adjective
*nörr. In Norse, *nörr meant 'narrow,' like the corresponding AS nearu.
(6) The form Neri, *Nørvi by the side of Nari,
Narvi, Nörvi, is to be explained by the primitive Germanic declension
of the adjective, like the declension of u-stems in Gothic: nom. *narwuz,
from which *nörr; definite form, *narwija, from which *nørvi. (7)
The name of Night's father
(who is thought of as dark like her), Nörr or Narvi, could thus mean 'the
narrow,' and could be explained by the fact that nearu, naru in AS and
OS poems is an epithet applied to night on account of its oppressive darkness,
and also to hell. This nearu, naru is usually interpreted as 'narrow,
oppressive.' (8)
But E. H. Meyer and Golther
have pointed out, what I myself had previously noticed, that the pedigree
of Night in Snorri's Edda is based on the Greek and Roman cosmogonic genealogies,
such as occur earliest in Hesiod. These classical pedigrees were, I suppose,
known in Britain from some Latin work, and it was doubtless in Britain
that the Norsemen became familiar with them.
The third son of Nótt,
'Night,' is called Dagr, 'Day,' just as Dies (Hemera) was born of Nox
(Nyx). The first son of Night is Auðr, (9)
'desolate.' This name is a Norse adaptation of Aether, who was the son
of Nox. The Norsemen must have heard Aether in Britain and have changed
it into Auðr, knowing that the AS êðe, 'desolate,' corresponded to auðr
in Old Norse. Night is married a second time to Ánarr or Ónarr, (10)
and has with him the daughter Jörð, 'earth.' In the genealogies of the
classical cosmogonies we find Terra, 'earth' (Tellus, Ge) and Love, Amor
(Eros). (11) Jörð is here a translation of Terra,
and as for Ánarr or Ónarr, in which the Norsemen doubtless thought of
án or ón, 'without,' I agree with Golther that it is an altered form of
Amor. (12)
The giant Nørvi, who is
father of Night (called in AS nearu), and black and gloomy like his daughter,
is, as E. H. Meyer has already observed, a modification of Erebus, who
is named in Cornutus directly before black Night, and who, like her, came
from Chaos (the Scandinavian Ginnungagap).
But if Nørvi is Erebus,
then the Helgi-poet's designation of the Norn, who comes in the night,
as nipt Nera, i.e. 'the female relative of Neri (Nørvi),' must also have
had its origin in the cosmogonic genealogies of the classics. In Hyginus
(13) the three Parcae are
said to be the daughters of Nox and Erebus. The author of the Helgi-lay
must have become acquainted with this genealogy in one of the British
Isles. (14)
The theory that there
is historical connection between the Norns in the Helgi-lay and the Parcae
in the Meleager-story (15) is supported, in the
first place, by the fact that the author of the Norse poem knew also,
as I shall point out in my discussion of the Hrímgerth-lay, another mythical
Greek tale, in Latin form, just as he knew the Irish version of the Destruction
of Troy; and in the second place, by the fact that the incidents of the
coming of the fate-maidens to the new-born child and their predictions
as to his future, passed from the Meleager-story by many different ways
into popular tales. (16) It is to be noted particularly
that this motive was attached in the Middle Ages to other persons among
West-European peoples, partly through the influence of Celtic works.
In the French romance
Amadas of the thirteenth century, which, according to Gaston Paris, (17)
is of Breton origin, three prophetic sisters appear at a child's birth
and decide its fate.
In the fourteenth century
French poem of Ogier le Danois, which was influenced by the Arthur-romances,
fées come to Ogier at his birth. Ogier here shows special likeness to
the Meleager-story in that the fée Morgue presents the child with a sword,
decreeing that his life shall last as long as the blade is not corroded.
This coming of the fées is not found in the older poems on Ogier. It appears,
however, again in the prose story of that hero which dates from the beginning
of the fifteenth century. (18)
The most interesting occurence
of this incident in Old French is in the fourteenth century romance of
Brun de la Montaigne. (19) There we read that,
in accordance with a time-honoured Breton custom, Butor has his young
son borne to the fountain of marvels in the forest of Broceliande. That
night many fées assembled over the future of the child. The first gave
him beauty and grace, and decreed that he should be conqueror in tourneys
and battles. The second, however, thought this liberality too great, and
as an offset decreed that he should have pain and sorrow in love. The
third, conceiving a very strong attachment for the child, promised to
aid him whenever he was in need of help. She wrapped him up in silk clothes
and put a gold ring on his finger. Then all vanished, for it was nigh
cock-crow.
The son of Maillefer (20)
also was visited by fées at his birth. After having partaken of a repast
prepared specially for them, they dispensed gifts to the child. The first
decreed that he should be valiant and handsome, govern Constantinople,
be King of Greece, and convert the Venetians. No animal should have power
to poison him. The other two also gave him similar good gifts, and all
disappeared at dawn.
In the romance of Huon
de Bordeaux, (21) finished
in 1454 and printed before 1516, we read that Oberon received marvellous
gifts at his birth from the fées invited to his christening, but that
a wicked fée, who was not invited, decreed that he should not grow after
his third year.
In Ysaie le Triste (22)
also, fées appear in the night beside the new-born child and give it good
gifts.
In Perceforest, a French
romance of the fourteenth century, Lucina, Themis, and Venus visit a girl
at her birth.
We have a similar incident
in the Icelandic tale of Mœrþöll, (23) preserved
in MS of ca. 1700. Three sisters 'blákápur' are invited to the baptism
of a new-born girl. The eldest two give good gifts; but the youngest,
who had been treated with less consideration, lays a curse on the child.
Professor Molke Moe calls
my attention to a related Norwegian tale, Trollnøstet, 'the witch's claw,'
taken down by Jørgen Moe in Bygland, in S.W. Norway. This points even
more distinctly to the Meleager-story. A strange woman comes to the cradle
of a queen's child, and says: 'Yes, handsome art thou; but yet shalt thou
become an adulterer and murderer, and shalt be sentenced to death. And
thy mother shall not live after this candle is burnt out.' The queen arouses
the nurse, and bids her extinguish the candle, which is afterwards preserved.
The prophecy, nevertheless, was fulfilled.
In Germany also we have
early evidence of the belief under discussion. To Professor Moltke Moe
I owe the two following references. In Hartmann von Aue's Erec (v. 9900),
written at the end of the twelfth century, Frau Sælde (Good Luck) comes
to the cradle of the new-born child, and gives it gifts. In the confessional
of Burchard of Worms (d 1025), the question is asked: 'Do you believe,
as some do, that those whom people call Parcae, still exist?......That,
when a child is born, they decide what shall happen to him.'
In Scandinavia the story
of Meleager's birth influenced, as is well known, the Nornagest (him to
whom the Norns came).
Saxo tells (Bk. VI. p.
272, ed. Müller) that it was the custom in olden times to question the
Norns (Parcae) as to a child's fate. Thus Fridleif (Fridleuus) acted when
he wished to know the destiny of his son Óláf (Olauus). The first Norn
gave the boy beauty and favour among men; the second, liberality; but
the third, who was malicious, decreed that he should be miserly. Olrik,
(24) who shows that the story
was taken by Saxo from an Old Norse source, thinks that the third Norn
laid upon Óláf the curse that he should be betrayed by the servant he
trusted most.
The account in the Helgi-lay
differs from most tales of fate-maidens coming to a new-born child, in
that Helgi receives no bad gift.
That the Wolf-Theodoric
story which influenced the Helgi-poet in his account of the hero's birth,
contained a prophecy of the future greatness of the new-born child, appears
probable after comparing the German poem with the Cormac story. It was
doubtless this agreement which suggested to the Norse poet the introduction
of the fate-maidens, the earliest example of whose appearance at an infant's
birth is preserved in the story of Meleager. (25)
It is just possible, however, that our poet was influenced in this borrowing
by finding other points of contact between the Meleager and Helgi stories.
Sigrún, for example, may have seemed to him to resemble Atalanta, Meleager's
love, who was a huntress, and one of Diana's maiden-nymphs, (26)
and who, armed as a man, took part with the men in the chase of the Calydonian
boar. (27) In the First Helgi-lay, Sigrún rides
with a company of battle-maidens, all of them birnie-clad and armed with
helmet, spear, and bow. When Helgi helps Sigrún, he kills her relatives;
when Meleager helps Atalanta, he kills his mother's brothers. (28)
It is perhaps also worth
mentioning that Meleager is called a son of Mars, and that the Helgi-poet
represents his hero as sprung from a race of famous warriors. He made
him a son of Sigmund, the hero specially protected by the Battle-God Odin,
and of Borghild, i.e. the battle-maiden dwelling in the castle. Naturally,
then, the poet felt impelled to let fate-maidens predict the hero's greatness
even at his birth.
ENDNOTES:
1.
The sibyl (völva) in her prophecy (Vpá, 23) indicates Urðr,
Verðandi and Skuld as those who decide the fates of men in general,
and in Fáfnismál (12, 13) the Norns are said to come to women
in travail to deliver them. Back
2. Hygini Fabulae, ed. M. Schmidt, p. 27. Back
3. I have given up an earlier conjecture, that nera might be = neðra.
Back
4. Chapter 10, Snorra Edda, I, 54. Back
5. The Uppsala-Edda writes nori. Back
6. There is a trace of the adjective, e.g. in mod. Icel. nirfill, a miser,
and in many names of places, in the elucidation of which Prof. O. Rygh has
been good enough to help me: Nørva-sund (in the MS also norva-, niorva-,
naurfa-), the straits of Gibraltar; Nyrvi, the small island in Søndmør,
in Western Norway, on which the town of Aalesund now lies; *Nör, now
Naaren, a little and rather narrow island on the inside of Ytre Sulen in
Nordre Bergenhus Amt; Njerve, a country-place on Søndre Undal, Lister
and Mandals Amt, on the narrow Spangereid in S.W. Norway. E. H. Meyer Die
Eddische Kosmogonie, p. 104), has explained Narvi as a loan-word from AS
nearu. Back
7. Cf. þykkr---þjukkr, gørr---görr,
kyrr---Old Gutnisk' (language spoken in island Gotland) qver, etc.
Back
8. Cf. nearo nihtwaco, nihtes nearwe, etc; see Grein's Glossary. In the
newly-discovered OS Genesis-fragments, 286, we have narouua naht. This has
already been pointed out by E. H. Meyer, and by Golther (Handbuch d. germ.
Myth., p. 522). Kögel (Gesch. d. deut. Lit., Ergänzungsheft'
to vol. I, pp. 12 ff) finds in narouua naht a stem narwa-, dark,'
which is, he thinks, different from narwa-, narrow.' Back
9. Gen. Auðs, in a verse by Hallfreth in Snorri's Edda. Back
10. Ánars in full-rhyme with hánum,
Thjóthólf in Fms., VI, 140. Ónars in full-rhyme with
gróna, Hallfreth in Sn. Edda, I, 320 (wrongly annars-granna in MS
757, anas-græna in U); Ónars in full-rhyme with grónu.
Guthrom Sindri in Hákonar saga góða, Heimsk. (chap. 9,
ed. F. Jónsson). In Sn. Ed., I, 54, W has anarr, U onarr, r alone
incorrectly annarr. E. H. Meyer is wrong in holding to this form. Back
11. The following passage is taken from a book, On the Nature of the
Gods,' written in Greek by Cornutus (born ca. 20, D. 68 AD) as given in
a modern Latin translation: Phornuti speculatio de Natura Deorum, Jodoco
Velareo interprete, Ed. Lugd., 1608, p. 158: Proinde fabulati sunt
Chaos esse genitum, quemadmodum describit Hesiodus. Post hoc Terram et Tartarum
et Amorem, at ex Chao Erebum et Noctem prodiisse, vel ex Nocte Aethera et
Diem.' Cf. p. 158 a. Back
12. Cf. mesopotania, Gislason, Prøver, p. 409; epíneus for
Opimius, Prøver, p. 118. As regards the ending, cf. Old Irish pudar
from Lat. putor, Old Irish sdupar from Lat. stupor. I had written down the
explanation of Ánarr as Amor several years before I read the same
in Golther, Handbuch, p. 523. Back
13. In the beginning of Hygini Fabulae. He names
Fatum among the children of Nox and Erebus. Back
14. The goddess Hel is called nipt Nara, Nari's sister,' in Egil's
Höfuðlausn, 10; jódís úlfs ok Narfa, the
sister of the wolf and Narfi,' in Ynglingatal, 12. In Snorri's Edda (cf.
the prose piece after the Lokasenna) Nari or Narfi is said to be the son
of Loki, whose daughter is Hel. This connection also between Hel and Nari
or Narfi is probably due to genealogies in the classical cosmogonies. Hyginus
has: Ex Nocte et Erebo: Fatum, Mors. Back
15. Cf. Golther, Handbuch der German. Mythol., pp. 106 f. Back
16. For example, in Modern Greek tales. See B. Schmidt,
Griechische Märchen, No. 3 (p. 68) and No. 5 (pp. 74 f); cf. B. Schmidt,
Das Volksleben der Neugriechen, I, p. 211 f (communicated by Prof. Moltke
Moe). Back
17. La Litt. franc. au moyen âge, 2nd ed., §66. Back
18. Vigfusson (Corp. Poet. Bor., I, CXXX) compares a number of features
in the Helgi-story and in that of Holger (Ogier) the Dane; but only two
of his parallels deserve any attention: (I) the fées at the birth
of Ogier (just discussed), and (2) the rescue of Ogier by a fée in
a terrible storm at sea. These motives do not belong to the oldest story
of Ogier, and cannot therefore be regarded as echoes of the old Helgi
myth.' Back
19. Ed. Paul Meyer (Soc. des anc. textes francais), Paris, 1875. Back
20. See Le Roman de Guillaume au Court Nez in Le
Roux de Lincy, Livre des Légendes, Paris, 1836, p. 257. On the whole
matter concerning fées see particularly Alfred Maury, Les fées
du moyen âge, Paris, 1843; Hertz, Spielmannsbuch, Die Bretonischen
Feen. Back
21. See Dunlop-Liebrecht, Gesch. des Prosaromans, p. 124a; cf. p. 89 b.
On this romance cf. F. Wolf in Denkschriften der Wiener Akad., VIII, 198.
Back
22. Dunlop-Liebrecht, pp. 86, 90. Back
23. In Jón Árnason, Isl. þjóðsögur,
II, 424 ff; Maurer, Isl. Volkssagen, pp. 284 f. Back
24. Sakses Oldhist., I, 71 f. Back
25. In the Irish Tale of the Destruction of Troy
Hercules seeks help, among other places, at Sparta and Salamina. In Hyginus
(Fab. 173, p. 29 in M. Schmidt's edition) Sparta and Salamin are named among
the places which sent Oeneus help against the Calydonian boar. Back
26. Atalanta is called, e.g. in Myth. Vatic., 2, 144: summa venatrix, Dianae
scilicet comes. Be it noted further that dísarsalrinn (in Yngl. s.)
is translated by edes Diane (in Hist. Norveg.). Back
27. Note that Irish tríath and torc, as well as the ON jöfurr,
mean both wild-boar and king. Back
28. Illa cum Meleagri fidem implorasset, ille intervenit et amorem cognationi
anteposuit avunculosque suos occidit (Hyginus, Fables, ed. Schmidt, 174,
p. 29 M.). Back
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