Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 159

Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 159
PAGANISM AND LITERATURE 155 called God’s skjaldmcer (a typical heiti for the valkyries) in Jóns Saga Helga I, ch. 48. One curious element has also to be mentioned: it concems the phenomenon of herjjöturr, this uncouth and sudden paralysis which strikes a man, in a battle for instance, or at the very moment when it is most important for him to spring into action: incapable of taking flight or of defending himself, he is killed on the spot. There are very few instances of this in the whole of Icelandic literature, except in Sturlunga, where one finds several cases of it (Islendinga Saga, ch. 144, Sturlunga Saga II, p. 288; those two examples using the word herfjöturr itself). There is a valkyrie who is named Herfjöturr: she is mentioned in Grímnismál (strophe 36), a poem which is recorded in Snorri’s Edda. The problem is that of knowing whether or not this notion—which may well be founded on quite normal or physiological features—is Germanic or Northem at all. We have instances of simi- lar occurrences in Homer’s works (Odyssey XXII 297 seq. and Iliad XII 358-360 or XXII 5 seq.) or even in Atharva Veda (VIII.8 or XI.9) and two miracles at least in the jarteinabœkr remind us of it: Odda- verja Þáttr, ch. 6, and Jarteinábók Þorláks Byskups II, ch. 1. Identical remarks would apply to a similar phenomenon, Þeim var bilt, in re- lation to the goddess Bil and are illustrated, in connection with the god Þórr himself, once more in the Gylfaginning (ch. 44). It occurs several times in Sturlunga, for example in íslendinga Saga, ch. 98. These are all the instances I could find of references to gods and myths in the samtíðarsögur. They call for an important and very signi- ficant remark: practically all the details which have just been listed above, scanty as they are, could have come from Snorri Sturluson’s works (all of them written before 1241, and some of them some twenty years earlier), especially Gylfaginning. This possibility is parti- cularly convincing for the Fölski episode in íslendinga Saga. It is as if Sturla Þórðarson and other authors of samtíðarsögur had tried to apply in their works what they had leamed in Snorri’s works—and we do know that Snorri did not compose his Edda out of regret at the passing of the old faith, but on pedagogical and so-called historical
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