Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1994, Side 121

Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1994, Side 121
Víglundar saga: An Icelandic Bridal-Quest Romance1 MARIANNE KALINKE Einar Ól. Sveinsson concluded his now classic monograph Dating the Icelandic Sagas by noting a gradual transformation of Icelandic values toward the end of the Middle Ages, which brought with it a change in literature: .. . as the times change, so the traditions change; the old moral values decline and the tales become popular legends. Thus, people cease to concern themselves with history, and sagas in the end become pure fiction, like Víglundar saga and Finnboga saga? In other words, increasing moral decadence led to a decline in literature: the íslendinga sögur degenerated progressively under the influence of foreign genres, and became fiction. Included in this new type of literary production in Iceland is Víglundar saga, “the only love story,” according to Paul Schach, “among the íslendinga sögur that has a happy ending.”3 Like many another saga, Víglundar saga is set in the days of King Haraldur inn hárfagri and the forestory relates the events that precipitated the forcible emigra- tion of the principal characters from Norway to Iceland, where they “komu við Snæfellsnes og tóku land í Hraunhöfn.”4 With their arrival in Iceland, they join the other immigrants whose lives shaped the period of the Settlement. Given the geographical and temporal setting, the reader expects an Islendinga saga. Yet if one comes to Víglundar saga after having read such classic texts as Njáls saga, Laxdœla saga, Egils saga, or Hrafhkels saga, that is, works which have formed our contem- porary notions of deportment, speech, and attitudes in the Icelandic sagas, one 1 I would like to express both my gratitude and indebtedness to Davíð Erlingsson for several long conversations about the saga and its “family drama.” 2 Einar Ól. Sveinsson, Dating tbe Icelandic Sagas. An Essay in Method(Bristol: Viking Society for Northern Research, 1958), p. 126. Similarly, in a popular multi-volume edition of íslendinga sögur 'm the series Islenzkar fornsögur, II (Skuggsjá, 1969), the editors, Grímur M. Helgason and Vésteinn Ólason, date the composition of Víglundar saga to the end of the l4th or the beginning of the 15th centuries, and characterize it as a “skáldsaga.” They note that the verses undoubtedly are the work of the author of the saga, and condude with the remark: “Sagan hefur ekki á sér mikinn veruleikablæ, enda eru rómantískar fornaldarsögur og riddarasögur helztu fyrirmyndir hennar” (p. xii). 3 Paul Schach, “Víglundar saga,” in Dictionary of the Middle Ages, ed. Joseph R. Strayer, vol. 12 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1989), p. 416. ^ Víglundarsaga, in íslendinga sögurogþattir, vol. II, eds. Bragi Halldórsson, JónTorfason, Sverrir Tómasson, and örnólfur Thorsson (Reykjavík: Svart á hvítu, 1986), p. 1962. Subsequent references to Vtglundar saga are to this edition. SKÁLDSKAPARMÁL 3 (1994)
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