Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1976, Side 68

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1976, Side 68
76 Faroese Bird-Name Origins (VI) large species particularly sought after by fowlers, i. e. the guillemot. And since this species and the razorbill were traditio- nally associated, stórfuglur automatically covered both species. Such a name would perhaps co^itrast, at least by implication, with smáfuglur ‘little bird’, presumably the puffin, that other common object of the fowler’s efforts. A term like the present reminds one cogently of similar rather imprecise-sounding names known to have evasive conno- tations. We imagine that stórfuglur, too, will ultimately belong to this category. Storkur ‘stork’ — a notable sequel In Fróð., xxii, 111 f., we showed that this Common Ger- manic name literally means ‘stick’ or the like, a nickname moti- vated by the bird’s habit of resting on one leg. It was observed that German dialect preserves meanings close to the basic sense, namely Tirolese ‘stem; tree-stump’, Bavarian ‘fishing rod’, further medieval Ger. Storch ‘penis’. It may interest readers to learn that this etymology has, in turn, lead to the solution of an outstanding problem of European folklore. We refer to the popular tradition that the stork brings the babies. The reason for this and associated notions has hitherto remained a total mystery, see Handwórter- buch des deutschen Aberglaubens, viii, 501. My colleague, Dr S. Lucas, however, now draws attention to the medieval sense of Storch (above) and notes that in former times the word thus signified both ‘stork’ and ‘penis’. Here is an obvious link between the bird name and a sexual organ, and evidently the beginning of the involvement of the stork in the baby business. The sense ‘penis’ occurs in the phrase des Mannes Storch (M. Lexer, Mittelhochdeutsches Hand- wórterbuch), the source being Codex germanicus monacensis 317, 71, an Austrian medical miscellany from the first half of the 15th century. It is reasonable to assume that the tradition in question is at least as old as this. Furthermore, in the present
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