Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1978, Side 38

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1978, Side 38
46 Sniolvs kvæði family tradition. Therefore, either Sand or Skálavík was the original center for the tradition on Sandoy from whence it was transplanted to the other village. Once two singing traditions for the cycle had been established in Sand and in Skálavík, then each was subject to new influences and would develop inde- pendently from the other. The line-by-line differences between the 1819 and 1821 texts testify to the passage of a period of time between the separation of the singing traditions in Sand and Skálavík and the collection of the texts, but the closeness of the texts suggest that it was a matter of generations rather than centuries. And it was during this period that Hildardals- stríð and Risin á Blálandi were composed in Skálavík. In addition to the second layer of composition comprised by the five new tættir in Clemensen’s 1819 and 1821 texts, there was on Sandoy further ballad-making connected with the Sniolv cycle that seems to represent a still younger layer of composition. This third and youngest layer consists of the following ballads: (1) Gríms ríma (FK 52), first collected in 1822 by Clemensen from Hans Johannessen of Sand; (2) Tíð- riks kongs ríma (FK 97), first collected in 1822 by Clemensen from J. Michael Widerø of Sand; (3) Frúgvin Olrina (FK 81), first collected in 1827 by Clemensen from Poul Pedersen of Skálavík; and (4) Heljars kvæði (FK 63), first collected in 1847 by Hammershaimb from Ole Joensen of Skálavík. These four ballads appear to form a distinct third layer in the Sniolv cycle because they reflect a knowledge of several of the five new tættir found in the expanded texts of 1819 and 1821 and must therefore be younger. Another indication of their youth is the fact that they were collected relatively late and in very few variants. Gríms ríma and Heljars kvæði were collected in three variants, whereas Tíðriks kongs ríma and Frúgvin Olrina were collected in only two. It is interesting to note that earliest variants of each of these four ballads were collected in the two villages, Sand and Skálavík, that have been suggested as the two centers for the singing tradition of the Sniolv cycle. Of these four ballads Frúgvin Olrina is most reminiscent of
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