Gripla - 20.12.2007, Side 57

Gripla - 20.12.2007, Side 57
ANTIQUARIANISM, POETRY, AND WORD-OF-MOUTH FAME 55 immediately after he has slain a foe (202-206, 210), but also that this saga contains remarkably few examples of word-of-mouth fame. Possibly, then, certain saga-writers, especially if they knew of other sagas in written form (as seems likely), thought of fame through word of mouth and self-praise as vir- tually equivalent, so that Njáls saga can dispense with the latter because it contains the former. Kári’s reaction, then, would seem to describe rather precisely the transfer, in an almost physical fashion, of an apparent ‘message’ (in this case, a specific feeling of achievement), from the mind of a performer to that of a spectator. His comment performs the same disseminating function as a stanza of praise- poetry; but, in the instance of the communication of Skarpheðinn’s feelings to Kári, the transfer is more immediate, intimate, and direct than verse. This transfer idea is even suggested by the distinct characters of the two men in- volved. Up to the point of Þráinn’s killing in Njáls saga, Kári’s thoughts, com- pared to those of other characters, have seldom appeared. He offers no spon- taneous praise of Grímr and Helgi, the other two sons of Njáll, when he first appears in the saga (203-204). The killing of Þráinn produces Kári’s first as- sessment of Skarpheðinn; Kári had never seen his oldest brother-in-law fight before. Meanwhile, the saga has openly portrayed Skarpheðinn’s sensitivity to public opinion. The latter is in many ways the story’s most acute judge of what might benefit one’s reputation and what probably will not (324), and he displays a characteristic expression of emotion, grinning, while Kári has no such attribute (114, 327). The transfer also indicates that situational thinking is at work: each deed in an oral society, together with its spontaneous reaction, amounts to a potential means of communication, a potential composition — even, in its own way, a potential myth of origin.17 The sagas of Icelanders betray a passive concern with origins by including many settlement-stories and genealogies; they de- monstrate a more active concern with origins by including generative con- structs — that is, events related allusively in one saga may appear at greater length in another as if one work might be the ‘origin’ of the other. Hence, any episode of word-of-mouth fame is the potential point of origin for an entire saga.18 For instance, the transfer of Skarpheðinn’s thoughts to Kári is genera- 17 I use the phrase ‘myth of origin’ because source-relationships are often very difficult to prove, while the entire strategy of trying to learn about a subject through a search for its origins is now less valued than it used to be (Said 1975:174-175, 197; Derrida 1976:242-243). 18 Generative passages in the sagas may result from the writers of them drawing upon the same oral tradition and hence demonstrating knowledge of the same figures from the past.
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