Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1987, Side 29

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1987, Side 29
SANDOYARBÓK 33 collector posthumously attributed his text of »Trøllini í Homalondum« (CCF 28) to this cousin.14 It is unlikely to be a coincidence that nearly all the »ordinary« male and female contributors to »Sandoyarbók« should be precisely those with close ties to the collec- tor.15 It is much more likely that the dissim- ilar collecting patterns among the elite and non-elite of Sandur reflect the two diffe- rent types of performance situation in Far- oese tradition and Clemensen’s use of them in gathering texts for his »Sandoyarbók«. The relatively wide distribution of his sing- ers with royal-tenant connections would seem to indicate that his knowledge of their repertoires stemmed from the public dances, which drew performers from all over the village. On the other hand, the more restricted distribution of those of his male informants whose background was more humble or who were female suggests that his acquaintance with the repertoires of these people was gained mainly in the more private kvøldseta, specifically in his own home and the homes of close neigh- bors, where he was a habitual and informal visitor. It was here, for example, that women, who had little to gain by asserting themselves in a dance tradition dominated by men, might freely perform the heroic ballads they knew. However, to the men of crofter and freeholder households the vil- lage dance offered an opportunity to win status among their fellow villagers, and they had thus every reason to seek to excel there. The fact that Clemensen’s know- ledge of their repertoires nonetheless seems to have been of the local kvøldseta variety rather than village-wide may bear witness to the general lack of success of these men in the dance ring in competition against royal tenants and their brothers and cousins. It is clear that Clemensen did his worst collecting among women and the common- folk of Sandur who had no close ties to him. His biggest lapse in this regard was probably his failure to collect any texts whatsoever from the Reverend Dean Hentze’s household at í Todnesi. Perhaps Clemensen assumed that he would find few Faroese ballads in the parlor of the Danish minister. His mistake was, however, that he overlooked the servants’ quarters, which commonly housed no fewer than twelve people - an everchanging assort- ment of able-bodied servants from all over the islands and of older parishioners who could no longer support themselves.16 De- spite Clemensen’s oversight, it is possible that some of the ballads once heard in these quarters may have been preserved in the extensive repertoire of the minister’s eldest son, Johan Michael Hentze. It would be ill-advised, however, to suppose that all of Hentze’s repertoire stemmed from his childhood experience of the kvøldseta at í Todnesi. It is obvious, for example, that his text of »Risin av Leittrabergi« (CCF 11), reported to Clemensen in 1825, was learn- ed from H.C. Lyngbye’s Færøiske Qvæder om Sigurd Fofnersbane og hans Æt (1822).17 More difficult to understand was Clem- ensen’s failure to obtain any ballads what- soever from his close neighbors at Pállins- hús á Heyggi. The family living there until 1822 is reported to have had in its possessi- on the long cycle »ílints tættir«, which it sold to the royal farmer at á Trøð in Skála- vík for a slaughtered lamb. Even though
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