Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 164

Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 164
160 GRIPLA bjarnarsonar, vísa 3, who probably does not belong to the genuine pagan mythology but is, on the contrary, very frequent in the Latin vitae. He resembles the horrible Járngrímr who appears to Guðmundr guðiþekkr in íslendinga Saga, ch. 141: all these figures remind us very strongly of the numerous Danses macabres or Vers de la Mort, so popular during the Middle Ages throughout Europe. One word more about the difficult and complex notion of fylgja and/or hamingja, a kind of protective spirit attendant on one individ- ual, or one family. It is highly probable that these figures go back to pagan sources. We find, unfortunately, or typically enough, four men- tions only of fylgjur (or hamingjur) in our texts: these are Þorgils Saga Skarða, ch. 12, where Þórðr Sturluson appears in a dream to his son Sturla to inform him of the arrival of the viðbjörn (that is Þorgils skarði), then íslendinga Saga, ch. 90, where Sighvatr Sturluson guesses that Valgarðr Styrmisson is feigr by looking at the latter’s horse. The word fylgjur itself occurs in Sturlunga Saga II, p. 287 (óvina fylgjur) and in íslendinga Saga, ch. 70 (ófriðarfylgjur). This is very little evi- dence of an element which all specialists consider to be one of the most important in Northern paganism.11 How are we to interpret this scantiness? The answer may be that the concept of fylgja fused conveniently with the Christian notion of a guardian angel. Through the intermedi- ary of such anglo-norman texts as Henri d’Arci’s Vitas Patrum12 we can quite clearly see how the two notions can be confused or amalga- mated. Besides this, the Icelanders were early acquainted with the notion of fylgjuengill, and this would facilitate the eradication of the pagan image. What we may conclude from this section of the study is that the Church had brought with itself to Iceland a lot of stories and beliefs which could assimilate or replace the ancient Northern beliefs con- cerning the other world. The ground was firm: in both camps there was the same certainty that the other world existed and was inhabited. Judging from the samtíðarsögur, one must very often wonder whether the details given of the other world are not in fact taken from Latin 11 See B. Melsteð: íslendinga saga, Kaupmannahöfn, 1903-1930, vol. II, p. 102; G. Turville-Petre: Dreams in Icelandic Tradition, in Folklore 69, 1958. 12 Lines 5960-5961.
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