Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1997, Side 236

Skáldskaparmál - 01.01.1997, Side 236
234 Matthew James Driscoll There are of course cases where one or another text is clearly corrupt. In 1.20, 1 W has Því var kringlótt kóngsins borð, rhyming, or rather not rhyming, with allir áttujafht tilþess. 22, and, interestingly, the totally insignificant Stockholm manuscript, have rewinstead of borð, which in view of the rhyme (and its presence in two witnesses), is likely to have been the original reading, but was then changed by someone with a better knowledge of Arthuriana.29 Similarly, W(1.44, 3) has mjöður og milskað vín, rhyming with skálum í, while 22 has mjöður og mámasí. It’s fairly obvious that the copyist was simply unfamiliar with mámasí, a rare loan-word (from Latin Malmasia), and substituted instead something more familiar, even though this resulted in an imperfect rhyme. What the utterly worthless Stockholm manuscript presents us with is more, very much more, of this same sort of variation. This would not be in any way surprising if this version of Skikkjurímur had been written down from memory rather than copied from a written text. The reasons for believing that such was indeed the case are compelling. As was mentioned above, there is virtually nothing left of the mansöngyar. These had no connexion with the story itself and were often omitted in performance, the kvœðamaður and audience both being keen to get on with the action.30 Someone who had recited Skikkjurímur a number of times without the mansöngyar would be unlikely to be able to remember them later. Another indication that this is a memorised text is that the order of the stanzas is different, and about a third are lacking.31 It is difficult to appreciate just how different the order of the stanzas in the Stockholm manuscript is. In the third ríma, for example, we have verses 10-13, 15, the first half of 51 and second half of40, 38, 33, 32, 26-29, 46, 44, 47, 48, 43, 45, 55, 30, 54, 56, 57, 34, 73, and finally 58—63, after which the text breaks off. What is more difficult to appreciate, however, is that if you actually read the Stockholm text of Skikkjurímur, that is without comparing it to the other manuscripts, it makes perfect sense. The story has been preserved (more or less) intact. The third ríma describes how one after another the women of Arthur’s court try on the mantle and are found to have been unfaithful, the mantle revealing in 29 The round table appears not to have been known in medieval Iceland; see Hermann Reichert, ‘King Arthur’s Round Table: sociological implications of its literary reception in Scandinavia’, Structure and Meaningin Old Norse Literature: New Approaches to Textual Analysis and Literary Criticism, ed. John Lindow, Lars Lönnroth, Gerd Wolfgang Weber (Odense, 1986), pp. 394-414. 30 Cf. ‘Sigurbjörn sleggja’ by Jón Trausti (Guðmundur Magnússon), Smásögur(Reykjavík, 1909), pp. 69—82, at p. 74: ‘Flestir kvæðamenn höfðu þann sið að sleppa mansöngvum, og áheyrend- urnir sáu sjaldan eftir þeim. Þeir voru oftast einhverjar gælur frá skáldsins eigin brjósti, sem ekkert komu rímnaefninu við og ekkert gerðu annað en glepja.’ 31 Although the order of the stanzas is the same in the other two manuscripts there are four stanzas in 22 not found in W, two in the first ríma and two in the third. One of the additional stanzas in the first ríma is also found in the Stockholm manuscript - the significance of which Finnur Jónsson grudgingly admitted - while the two in the third ríma are almost certainly later interpolations.
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