Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1997, Side 56

Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1997, Side 56
54 Marianne Kalinke relationship to King Óláfr are to be understood in light of his problematic relationship to his father and grandfather. Not until the biological father has been replaced by the adopted father does HaJIfreðr actually begin to assert himself in action. Back in Iceland his deeds were circumscribed by his father and grandfather, and in Norway both his verse and his deeds are subject to the critical scrutiny of the king. Nevertheless, only in relation to the king is Hallfreðr able to establish a balance, albeit precarious, between his own desires and the will of the king. The paternal authority of the biological father is replaced by that of the monarch and ultimately by that of the pater omnium, that is, God. In an essay entitled “Family Romances,” published nearly a century ago, Sigmund Freud offered some observations on the development of children that could have a bearing on our understanding of Hallfreðr’s life as it is woven into the biography of King ÓláfrTryggvason. Freud pointed out that “[t]he liberation of an individual, as he grows up, from the authority of his parents is one of the most necessary though one of the most painful results brought about by the course of his development.”6 As he matures, the child begins to weave so-called family romances, “the commonest of these imaginative romances [being] the replace- ment of both parents or of the father alone by grander people” (p. 240). Freud’s thesis was that “the whole effort at replacing the real father by a superior one is only an expression of the child’s longing for the happy, vanished days when his father seemed to him the noblest and strongest of men” (pp. 240—41). Of this earlier stage of childhood, the author of Hallfreðr’s biography does not give us a glimpse. When we first encounter the protagonist, he is already well on the way to seeking a replacement. His grandfather, the mother’s father, is no suitable surrogate, since he and his son-in-law are not only perceived to be acting in tandem but in effect collude to expatriate Hallfreðr both in the literal and figurative senses of the word; they deprive him of both a father and a country. The poet’s subsequent relationship to King Óláfr, and the repeated testing of that relationship, may be interpreted as expressing Hallfreðr’s attempt to establish his own person and to assert his independence toward the father figure. The reading of Hallfreðar saga, that is, the life of the poet, that is proposed here is based on the text transmitted in Óláfi saga Tryggvasonar en mesta. This is one of two redactions of the saga; the other is transmitted in Möðruvallabók. While the redaction in Óláfisaga Tryggvasonar 'is presumably more faithful to the original saga,7 it nonetheless has undergone certain modifications. The most significant difference between the life of the poet as it is told in Möðruvallabók and in Óláfi saga Tryggvasonar en mesta is supratextual; it extends beyond verbal and structural variants, additions, and omissions. In Óláfi saga Tryggvasonar the text that is the life of Hallfreðr exists only because it is incorporated into the text purporting to 6 Sigmund Freud, “Family Romances,” The StandardEdition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, tr. under the editorship of James Strachey. Vol. IX (1906—1908), Jensen’s Gradiva and Other Works (London: The Hogarth Press), p. 237. 7 See Bjarni Einarsson, To skjaldesagacr, p. 127.
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