Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 181

Gripla - 01.01.1975, Side 181
THE RISE OF LITERATURE IN ‘TERRA NOVA’ 177 by a particular way of telling a story, differing from one saga to the other. As to point three: It is superfluous to talk about foreign influences on saga literature—there is no doubt they existed, and it is quite irre- levant to ask what in detail is native Icelandic and what is due to foreign influence. Of more interest is the fourth supposition: namely men familiar with native traditions as well as with foreign literature. During the middle ages in many European countries there were only few links between folk traditions and written literature. On the continent edu- cation and knowledge of literature was attached to monasteries. The language spoken there was Latin, but there is some evidence that clerics also used older traditions of oral literature. The epic poem Waltharius manu fortis was created by a clergyman, and is based on older heroic tales; but language and form of the poem are Latin, not German. On the continent the reshaping of old oral traditions in written literature remains an exception. Telling a story or singing a lay is one thing; writing it down another. The ‘upper class’ of clergymen in the famous monasteries, where scholarship and literature flourished, was a kind of intemational élite. Conditions in Iceland were quite different. Christianization was no intemiption, neither in tradition nor in the social stmcture of the country. The leading families in pagan times were to a large extent the leading families during the first Christian centuries too. Educa- tion, higher leaming and historical or literary knowledge were not necessarily attached to the monasteries, as Ari or the Oddaverjar prove. And on the other hand clerics like Karl Jónsson of Þingeyrar also wrote in Icelandic. Obviously there was no gap between leamed laymen and clerics on the one side, common people on the other. The number of inhabitants and the non-hierarchic stmcture of society may have favoured these conditions. Nevertheless it is astonishing that these men writing works like some of the earlier konungaspgur or íslendingasogur did not use Latin as historians and chroniclers did on the continent; instead of it they used their vemacular language and obviously tried to combine tradi- tional themes and formal tendencies with their literary experience. Gripla 12
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