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<wordnerd> |
jo says, "Old Norse saga poetry ... requires the use of ... a kind of imagery whose name has completely escaped me. (damn senior moments!) But one example I can think of is serpent road for sea. Another would be blood ground for battlefield." Kennings, perhaps? If I have the word right, can you please explain the concept more fully to us? Thank you. | ||
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YES! Thank you. I've been pounding my brain on and off all day. Kennings were/are a poetic device, not unlike a metaphor of sorts. Some of the allusions were quite obscure to anyone outside of the culture. For example, Freyja's Treasure would be gold. I'm out of practice, but let me try. Oftimes old men Told tales of travel On whale road rough and dark dread days. T'was Freyja's Treasure held hard their hearts. Many mighty warriors dined late at Thor's trough. Note, that each line has two distinct groups which have more to do with spoken accent than "real" syllables. And each group must have two alliterative words. They need not be together, and there is a variation where the primary alliteration begins each part, and the secondary ends each. I.E.: Tall men sailed, telling the high seas. Whale road is of course the ocean. Freyja's treasure is gold. Thor's trough refers to death and dining with the gods in Valhalla. It is interesting to note that even modern scaldic verse alliterates things like "t" and "th". | |||
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on a further note... two of the best movies to hear this kind of poetic form are strangely enough: the first Conan movie. The narrator magician speaks in a scaldic sing-song that is nearly perfect. The other is The 13th Warrior, which I personally have nearly memorized. One of the disappointments for me in the LOTR, and there weren't many, was the loss of the poetic meter of the language. Many years ago, when my mother started to go blind, my late husband recorded the entirety -- all three books-- for her. I discovered a whole new element to the books listening to them read aloud. It was almost a different story hearing the cadence of the language. Especially Tom Bombadil is written in Old English cadence, which is nearly identical to the cadences of Old Norse. | |||
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It is interesting to note that even modern scaldic verse alliterates things like "t" and "th". Well, their place of articulation is the same; both are dentals. Do you ever see voiced and voiceless stops alliterated? e.g., t and d? A kenning you usually see as an example (from Beowulf, I believe) is whale road for ocean. Kennings fit under the academic rubric of poetic formulas, e.g., epithets like wine-dark sea or rosy-fingered dawn in Homer. The definitve work on the oral-formulaic theory was done by Milman Perry and Albert Lord. (See The Singer of Tales. Fasincating stuff.) | |||
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An Icelandic friend of mine pointed me to a very informative page on old Norse poetry. http://hem.passagen.se/peter9/gram/l_dikt.html quote: P.S. I just stumbled over Wikipedia's List of Kennings.This message has been edited. Last edited by: Virge, | |||
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