Gripla - 20.12.2006, Page 140

Gripla - 20.12.2006, Page 140
GRIPLA138 perhaps the most famous.19 Laughter sometimes carries a similarly oblique power, heroic laughter in the face of fate or danger offering audiences an op- portunity to pinpoint the time at which a character perceives the overall mean- ing of the events in which he/she is caught. It is this sense of a character’s recognition that gives to laughter the features of secondary authorship: laughter can express a crystallisation in a character’s perception of his/her for- tunes (G. Clark 1994:184, for instance, suggests that Hallgerðr’s laughter in Brennu-Njáls saga represents her assurance that Þjóstólfr must die).20 To sum up: Much of the drama of the sagas comes when characters make major decisions or when characters respond conspicuously to the events around them. In such moments, saga authors are given an opportunity to place his- torical events in the context of directly expressed reactions. This not only adds an intensity and an insightfulness that are difficult to achieve by an exterior perspective; it provides the opportunity for the audience to view events with sympathy, empathy, and with a sense of the drama that is unfolding. In such moments, characters perform a secondary authorship; that is, while they may not express directly an author’s view of the events of the saga, characters are themselves engaged in a kind of authorial activity and thus may offer an in- sight into saga authors’ ideas of authorship and its limits. Thus, a discussion of 19 Lönnroth’s study of Brennu-Njáls saga, for instance, makes it clear that the author of that saga was well-read, and that such comments as this one by Gunnarr, and Njáll’s beautiful ex- pression of his grief at the loss of Hƒskuldr — ‘when I heard that he had been slain I felt that the sweetest light of my eyes had been put out’ (Cook 2001:207) — indicate something of his reflections of how Christian writing might be used in a local context (see Lönnroth 1976: 153-157 concerning connections with Grœnlendinga saga and Alexanders saga, 102-105 on a clerical influence, esp. 116-126 regarding the influence of Romance literature on Gunnarr’s characterisation; see also the note to Cook 2001:332). 20 For Clark’s argument for dynamic characters in the sagas, see especially 175-176. Consider, too, how much is captured by Snorri Sturluson’s response to Hallveig Ormsdóttir in Íslend- inga saga: „En þat var Hallveig Ormsdóttir er þá var féríkust á Íslandi. Snorra þótti hennar ferð heldr hæðileg ok brosti að” (Sturlunga saga 1988:284-285); ‘And it turned out to be Hallveig Ormsdóttir, who was then the richest woman in Iceland. To Snorri, her mode of travel seemed rather ludicrous, and he smiled at it.’ Sturla Þórðarson, the author of this account and Snorri’s nephew, could well have enjoyed this story, and the rather amusing reflection of Snorri’s wit that it suggests. The story is given added bite by the fact that Snorri is outdone by Sturla Sighvatsson in the quest for Solveig – „þótti mönnum sem hann [Snorri] hefði til annars ætlað” (286; ‘it seemed to men as if he [Snorri] had other plans’ for a union with Solveig) — and by Snorri’s eventual partnership with Hallveig: „Hafði Snorri þá miklu meira fé en engi annarra á Íslandi” (290) – ‘Snorri then had much more property than anyone else in Iceland’ (my translations). On Snorri’s relationship with Hallveig, see Jochens 1994:459. On laughter in the sagas, see also Le Goff 1992.
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