Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 179

Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 179
THE RISE OF LITERATURE IN 'TERRA NOVA’ 175 obviously wrote down traditions as he knew them, and the anonym- ous scribe who first wrote Eddic lays probably did it in a similar manner. This does not mean that these traditions must have been preserved unchanged, but the alterations or additions were limited. When folk tales, ballads, or legends are written down, this is very often performed by scholars; and putting them on paper or parch- ment begins in general the ending of a living tradition. Also Snorri’s approach to scaldic poetry was a scholarly one aimed at explaining scaldic poetry at a time when it had passed its highest achievements. Themes and rules of Eddic and scaldic poetry were fixed; writing down was not an innovation in the development of these genres. Writing down old traditions is a very common process and examples can be found in many times and cultures, from Charlemagne, who ordered to collect and write down German heroic lays to Elias Lönn- roth, who collected Finnish epic songs and elaborated the epos Kale- vala out of this material. Prose narratives in folk tradition like Marchen, hero tales, Sagen and legends are never fixed by rules of form and metre as poetic tradi- tions, and the so-called ‘epic laws of folk tales’ are not at all laws or rules comparable with metric rules in poetic tradition; they are mere tendencies of composing and narrating a story. These tendencies are followed more in Márchen, less in other kinds of folk tales. Saga literature is first of all literature, and thanks to the work of many scholars—not the least Icelandic ones—today there is no doubt that the sagas in the shape we can read them in manuscripts are works of literature and not products of folk tradition. But probably all the sagas are built on traditional material, and in my opinion we are not allowed to neglect this fact. Of course these pre-literary oral traditions are vague in many respects; we do not know very much about the subjects of such traditions and still less about their form. But without these traditions a very great part of saga literature would not exist. Therefore the process of literarisation of oral traditions is an extremely important one, and one of the most fascinating I know. I did not succeed in finding a society or a literature comparable with Iceland in this respect. There are for instance single works built on folk traditions like Kalevala, The Cid or even—to a lesser degree —the Decameron of Boccaccio. But I do not know a single national
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