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Popular Tales From the Norse p. xliii ORIGIN. p. xliv the traditions and tales of all times and countries into one incongruous mass of fable, as much tangled and knotted as that famous pound of flax which the lassie in one of these Tales is expected to spin into an even woof within four-and-twenty hours. No poverty of invention or want of power on the part of translators could entirely destroy the innate beauty of those popular traditions; but here, in England at least, they had almost dwindled out, or at any rate had been lost sight of as home-growths. We had learnt to buy our own children back disguised in foreign garb; and as for their being anything more than the mere pastime of an idle hour--as to their having any history or science of their own--such an absurdity was never once thought of. It had indeed, been remarked, even in the eighteenth century--that dreary time of indifference and doubt--that some of the popular traditions of the nations north of the Alps contained striking resemblances and parallels to stories in the classical mythology. But those were the days when Greek and Latin lorded it over the other languages of the earth; and when any such resemblance or analogy was observed, it was commonly supposed that that base-born slave, the vulgar tongue, had dared to make a clumsy copy of something, peculiarly belonging to the twin tyrants who ruled all the dialects of the world with a pedant's rod. At last, just at the close of that great war which Western Europe waged against the genius and fortune of the first Napoleon; just as the eagle--Prometheus and the eagle in one shape--was fast fettered by sheer force and strength to his rock in the Atlantic, there arose a man in Central Germany, on the old Thuringian soil, to p. xlv whom it was given to assert the dignity of vernacular literature, to throw
off the yoke of classical tyranny, and to claim for all the dialects of Teutonic
speech a right of ancient inheritance and perfect freedom before unsuspected
and unknown. It is almost needless to mention this honoured name. For the furtherance
of the good work which he began nearly fifty years ago, he still lives 1
and still labours. There is no spot on which an accent of Teutonic speech is
uttered where the name of Jacob Grimm is not a "household word." His
General Grammar of all the Teutonic Dialects from Iceland to England has proved
the equality of these tongues with their ancient classical oppressors. His Antiquities
of Teutonic Law have shewn that the codes of the Lombards, Franks, and Goths
were not mere savage, brutal customaries, based, as had been supposed, on the
absence of all law and right. His numerous treatises on early German authors
have shewn that the German poets of the Middle Age, Godfrey of Strasburg, Wolfram
von Eschenbach, Hartmann von der Aue, Walter von der Vogelweide, and the rest,
can hold their own against any contemporary writers in other lands. And lastly,
what rather concerns us here, his Teutonic Mythology, his Reynard the Fox, and
the collection of German Popular Tales, which he and his brother William published,
have thrown a flood of light on the early history of all the branches of our
race, and have raised what had come to be looked on as mere nursery fictions
and old wives' fables--to a study fit for the energies of grown men, and to
all the dignity of a science. p. xlvi In these pages, where we have to run over a vast tract of space, the reader who wishes to learn and not to cavil--and for such alone this Introduction is intended--must be content with results rather than processes and steps. To use a homely likeness, he must be satisfied with the soup that is set before him, and not desire to see the bones of the ox out of which it has been boiled. When we say, therefore, that in these latter days the philology and mythology of the East and West have met and kissed each other; that they now go hand in hand; that they lend one another mutual support; that one cannot be understood without the other,--we look to be believed. We do not expect to be put to the proof, how the labours of Grimm and his disciples on this side were first rendered possible by the linguistic discoveries of Anquetil du Perron and others in India and France, at the end of the last century; then materially assisted and furthered by the researches of Sir William Jones, Colebrooke, and others, in India and England during the early part of this century, and finally have become identical with those of Wilson, Bopp, Lassen, and Max Müller, at the present day. The affinity, which exists in a mythological and philological point of view, between the Aryan or Indo-European languages on the one hand, and the Sanscrit on the other, is now the first article of a literary creed, and the man who denies it puts himself as much beyond the pale of argument as he who, in a religious discussion, should meet a grave divine of the Church of England with the strict contradictory of her first article, and loudly declare his conviction that there was no God. In a general way, then, we may be permitted to dogmatize, and to lay it down as a law which p. xlvii is always in force, that the first authentic history of a nation is the history of its tongue. We can form no notion of the literature of a country apart from its language, and the consideration of its language necessarily involves the consideration of its history. Here is England, for instance, with a language, and therefore a literature, composed of Celtic, Roman, Saxon, Norse, and Romance elements. Is not this simple fact suggestive of--nay, does it not challenge us to--an inquiry into the origin and history of the races who have passed over our island, and left their mark not only on the soil but on our speech? Again, to take a wider view, and to rise from archæology to science, what problem has interested the world in a greater degree than the origin of man, and what toil has not been spent in tracing all races back to their common stock? The science of comparative philology--the inquiry, not into one isolated language--for now-a-days it may fairly be said of a man who knows only one language that he knows none--but into all the languages of one family, and thus to reduce them to one common centre, from which they spread like the rays of the sun,--if it has not solved, is in a fair way of solving, this problem. When we have done for the various members of each family what has been done of late years for the Indo-European tongues, its solution will be complete. In such an inquiry the history of a race is, in fact, the history of its language, and can be nothing else; for we have to deal with times antecedent to all history, properly so called, and the stream which in later ages may be divided into many branches now flows in a single channel. From the East, then, came our ancestors, in days of immemorial antiquity, in that grey dawn of time of which p. xlviii all early songs and lays can tell, but of which it is, as impossible as it
is useless to attempt to fix the date. Impossible, because no means exist for
ascertaining it,; useless, because it is in reality a matter of utter indifference,
when, as this tell-tale crust of earth informs us, we have: an infinity of ages
and periods to fall back on, 1 whether p. xlix this great movement, this mighty lust to change their seats, seized on the Aryan race one hundred or one thousand years sooner or later. But from the East we came, and from that central plain of Asia, now commonly called Iran. Iran, the habitation of the tillers and p. l carers 1 of the earth, as opposed to Turan, the abode
of restless horse-riding nomads--of Turks, in short; for in their name the root
survives, and still distinguishes the great Turanian or Mongolian family from.
the Aryan, Iranian, or Indo-European race. It is scarce worth while to inquire--even
if inquiry could lead to any result--what cause set them in motion from their
ancient seats. Whether impelled by famine or internal strife, starved out like
other nationalities in recent times, or led on by adventurous chiefs, whose
spirit chafed at the narrowness of home, certain it is that they left that home
and began a wandering westwards, which only ceased when it reached the Atlantic
and the Northern Ocean. Nor was the fate of those they left behind less strange.
At some period almost as remote as, but after, that at which the wanderers for
Europe started, the remaining portion of the p. li stock, or a considerable offshoot from it, turned their faces east, and passing the Indian Caucasus, poured through the defiles of Affghanistan, crossed the plain of the Five Rivers, and descended on the fruitful plains of India. The different destiny of these stocks has been wonderful indeed. Of those who went west, we have only to enumerate the names under which they appear in history--Celts, Greeks, Romans, Teutons, Slavonians--to see and to know at once that the stream of this migration has borne on its waves all that has become most precious to man. To use the words of Max Müller: "They have been the prominent actors in the great drama of history, and have carried to their fullest growth all the elements of active life with which our nature is endowed. They have perfected society and morals, and we learn from their literature and works of art the elements of science, the laws of art, and the principles of philosophy. In continual struggle with each other, and with Semitic and Mongolian races, these Aryan nations have become the rulers of history, and it seems to be their mission to link all parts of the world together by the chains of civilisation, commerce, and religion." We may add, that though by nature tough and enduring, they have not been obstinate and self-willed; they have been distinguished from. all other nations, and particularly from their elder brothers whom they left behind, by their common sense, by their power of adapting themselves to all circumstances, and by making the best of their position; above all, they have been teachable, ready to receive impressions from without, and, when received, to develop them. To shew the truth of this, we need only observe, that they adopted Christianity p. lii from another race, the most obstinate and stiff-necked the world has ever seen, who, trained under the Old Dispensation to preserve the worship of the one true God, were too proud to accept the further revelation of God under the New, and, rejecting their birthright, suffered their inheritance to pass into other hands. Such, then, has been the lot of the Western branch, of the younger brother,
who, like the younger brother whom we shall meet so often in these Popular Tales,
went out into the world, with nothing but his good heart and God's blessing
to guide him; and now has come to all honour and fortune, and to be a king,
ruling over the world. He went out and did. Let us see now what became of the
elder brother, who stayed at home some time after his brother went out, and
then only made a short journey. Having driven out the few aboriginal inhabitants
of India with little effort, and following the course of the great rivers, the
Eastern Aryans gradually established themselves all over the peninsula; and
then, in calm possession of a world of their own, undisturbed by conquest from
without, and accepting with apathy any change of dynasty among their rulers,
ignorant of the past and careless of the future, they sat down once for all
and thought--thought not of what they had to do here, that stern lesson
of every-day life from which neither men nor nations can escape if they are
to live with their fellows, but how they could abstract themselves entirely
from their present existence, and immerse themselves wholly in dreamy speculations
on the future. Whatever they may have been during their short migration and
subsequent settlement, it is certain that they appear in the Vedas-- © 2004-2007 Northvegr. Most of the material on this site is in the public domain. However, many people have worked very hard to bring these texts to you so if you do use the work, we would appreciate it if you could give credit to both the Northvegr site and to the individuals who worked to bring you these texts. A small number of texts are copyrighted and cannot be used without the author's permission. Any text that is copyrighted will have a clear notation of such on the main index page for that text. Inquiries can be sent to info@northvegr.org. Northvegr™ and the Northvegr symbol are trademarks and service marks of the Northvegr Foundation. |
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