Gripla - 20.12.2017, Page 233

Gripla - 20.12.2017, Page 233
233 11.4% of the text, but they account for 53 of the total tally of conversations, that is, more than 50% of all the conversations. If these 53 are subtracted from the total of 98, the residue is 45, and that is more in line with the 56 conversations in Heimskringla. It should also be noted that the two cases of exceptionally long conversations in Morkinskinna, with 39 utterances in one case and 40 in the other, are from respectively “Hreiðars þáttr” (Íf 23:153–157) and “Sneglu-Halla þáttr” (Íf 23:276–278). apart from Morkinskinna the konungasögur are tight-lipped indeed. Furthermore, the conversations in the konungasögur are not analogous to what we find in the Íslendingasögur. I have not found a single example of what I termed transactional conversation in the Íslendingasögur. Quite predictably most of the conversations are assigned to royalty and the high aristocracy: 7 of 9 conversations in Orkneyinga saga, 11 of 13 conversa- tions in oddr Snorrason’s Óláfs saga Tryggvasonar, 66 of 98 conversations in Morkinskinna, 16 of 22 conversations in Fagrskinna, 8 of 9 conversa- tions in Heimskringla I, 21 of 27 conversations in Heimskringla II, 12 of 21 conversations in Heimskringla III, and 10 of 15 conversations in Knýtlinga saga. It is more difficult to make such a tally in Færeyinga saga since the exact social status of the faroe Island farmers is not always transparent. In the sagas that can be counted, 151 of the 212 conversations engage royal or high-status persons, that is, roughly 70%. the percentage of high-status conversations in the Íslendingasögur is surely in the single digits. not much effort has been made to differentiate between the Íslendinga- sögur and the konungasögur in terms of style or narrative practice, but it is evident that one of the distinguishing features is the amount of conversa- tion and the sort of subject matter deployed in such conversation. further study of the konungasögur might reveal other clear markers that set the two types apart. Such study could also shed light on quite incidental problems. for example, Eyrbyggja saga has no conversation at all in the first 24 pages, then records a replique that is a verbatim duplicate of words found in Gísla saga. that not only bolsters the supposition that the author of Eyrbyggja saga borrowed the replique from Gísla saga but perhaps suggests as well that this model inspired him to make more general use of conversation further along.3 3 on the relationship of these two texts see the remarks of the editors in the introduction to Íf 4, XXI–XXII. A NOTE ON CONVERSATION IN THE SAGAS
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