Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1978, Side 28

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1978, Side 28
36 Sniolvs kvæði unusual collection history that casts some light upon the com- position of new ballads about the Sniolv cycle. The oldest variant of Sniolvs kvæði was collected by Svabo in 1781—1782. This variant consists of only four tættir, which are untitled but correspond to what are in later collections called (1) Golmars táttur, (2) Sniolvs táttur, (3) Ásmundar táttur, and (4) Gríms táttur. Although it might be assumed that Svabo’s text is not complete, that he only succeeded in collecting four out of a possible nine txttir, it could be argued that these four tættir do in fact comprise a complete text of the cycle. In his Indberetninger fra en Reise i Færøe 1781 og 1782, Svabo gives a short characterization of Faroese ballads in which he says that they usually consist of one, two, or three tættir, although there are those that have even four, and he names Sniolvs kvæði as the lone example.3 To judge from his specific mention of Sniolvs kvæði in this context, Svabo seems fairly certain that he has collected the entire ballad. Furthermore, the text itself with its complex but coherent structure also gives the impression of completeness. The four tættir relate sequentially three infamous acts committed by the villain Ásmund: in Golmars táttur Ásmund rapes Duke Golmar’s wife and then before killing the Duke forces him to assist in finding a sword once sunk deep beneath the sea by the valiant warrior Hildibrand. This motif, the quest for a weapon, is a rather common opening in Faroese ballads and is usually handled in one of two ways. Sometimes the pre- history of the weapon is provided, as for example in the first táttur of Sjúrðar kvæði (FK 1), in which we are told how the sword breaks when Sjúrð’s father dies and how years later Regin forges the two pieces together and gives them to the young Sjúrð. However, it also happens that a ballad can open without giving any background for the weapon, as in Risin í Holmgørðum (FK 10) — this ballad begins with Virgar’s trip to his father’s burial mound to get a sword, but nothing is said about where the sword came from or how it got into the mound. Svabo’s text of Sniolvs kvæði employs this more simple variation of the motif of the quest for a weapon.
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