R. D. Fulk (ed.) 2017, ‘Einarr skálaglamm Helgason, Haraldsdrápa blátannar 1’ in Kari Ellen Gade and Edith Marold (eds), Poetry from Treatises on Poetics. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 3. Turnhout: Brepols, p. 137.
(not checked:)
liðr (noun m.; °-ar/-s, dat. -i/-; -ir, acc. liðu): joint, limb < liðbrandr (noun m.): [limb-fires]
[1, 2] kná granda liðbrǫndum ‘harms limb-fires [ARM-RINGS]’: The meaning is that he is generous, since he breaks pieces off armlets of gold to distribute.
(not checked:)
brandr (noun m.; °-s, dat. -i; -ar): sword, prow; fire < liðbrandr (noun m.): [limb-fires]
[1, 2] kná granda liðbrǫndum ‘harms limb-fires [ARM-RINGS]’: The meaning is that he is generous, since he breaks pieces off armlets of gold to distribute.
(not checked:)
knega (verb): to know, understand, be able to
[1] kná: ‘ligr kna’ B(3v), ‘l[…] kna’ B(5v), ‘l . gr kna’ 744ˣ(35r)
[1, 2] kná granda liðbrǫndum ‘harms limb-fires [ARM-RINGS]’: The meaning is that he is generous, since he breaks pieces off armlets of gold to distribute.
[1-2] landfrœkn jǫfurr Lundar ‘the land-valiant prince of Lund [DANISH KING]’: Lund is in Skåne, now in southern Sweden, though it was under Danish rule until 1658. The ms. readings are retained here, as by Finnur Jónsson (1891a, 181-2), despite his reservations about the construction. In Skj B Finnur follows Konráð Gíslason (1892, 100, but cf. Finnur Jónsson 1891a, 181-2, defending the ms. reading, though conceding that the construction is unusual) in emending land- to lands, so that the reference is to frœkn jǫfurr lands Lundar ‘the valiant prince of the land of Lund’. Kock (NN §2239) argues that landfrœkn ‘land-valiant’ is comparable to víðfrœkn ‘widely-valiant’ and þjóðsterkr ‘mightily-strong’, and the construction ‘the land of Lund’ is unusual.
[1-2] landfrœkn jǫfurr Lundar ‘the land-valiant prince of Lund [DANISH KING]’: Lund is in Skåne, now in southern Sweden, though it was under Danish rule until 1658. The ms. readings are retained here, as by Finnur Jónsson (1891a, 181-2), despite his reservations about the construction. In Skj B Finnur follows Konráð Gíslason (1892, 100, but cf. Finnur Jónsson 1891a, 181-2, defending the ms. reading, though conceding that the construction is unusual) in emending land- to lands, so that the reference is to frœkn jǫfurr lands Lundar ‘the valiant prince of the land of Lund’. Kock (NN §2239) argues that landfrœkn ‘land-valiant’ is comparable to víðfrœkn ‘widely-valiant’ and þjóðsterkr ‘mightily-strong’, and the construction ‘the land of Lund’ is unusual.
(not checked:)
frœkn (adj.): brave, bold < landfrœkn (adj.)
[1-2] landfrœkn jǫfurr Lundar ‘the land-valiant prince of Lund [DANISH KING]’: Lund is in Skåne, now in southern Sweden, though it was under Danish rule until 1658. The ms. readings are retained here, as by Finnur Jónsson (1891a, 181-2), despite his reservations about the construction. In Skj B Finnur follows Konráð Gíslason (1892, 100, but cf. Finnur Jónsson 1891a, 181-2, defending the ms. reading, though conceding that the construction is unusual) in emending land- to lands, so that the reference is to frœkn jǫfurr lands Lundar ‘the valiant prince of the land of Lund’. Kock (NN §2239) argues that landfrœkn ‘land-valiant’ is comparable to víðfrœkn ‘widely-valiant’ and þjóðsterkr ‘mightily-strong’, and the construction ‘the land of Lund’ is unusual.
(not checked:)
jǫfurr (noun m.): ruler, prince
[1-2] landfrœkn jǫfurr Lundar ‘the land-valiant prince of Lund [DANISH KING]’: Lund is in Skåne, now in southern Sweden, though it was under Danish rule until 1658. The ms. readings are retained here, as by Finnur Jónsson (1891a, 181-2), despite his reservations about the construction. In Skj B Finnur follows Konráð Gíslason (1892, 100, but cf. Finnur Jónsson 1891a, 181-2, defending the ms. reading, though conceding that the construction is unusual) in emending land- to lands, so that the reference is to frœkn jǫfurr lands Lundar ‘the valiant prince of the land of Lund’. Kock (NN §2239) argues that landfrœkn ‘land-valiant’ is comparable to víðfrœkn ‘widely-valiant’ and þjóðsterkr ‘mightily-strong’, and the construction ‘the land of Lund’ is unusual.
[1, 2] kná granda liðbrǫndum ‘harms limb-fires [ARM-RINGS]’: The meaning is that he is generous, since he breaks pieces off armlets of gold to distribute.
(not checked:)
2. hyggja (verb): think, consider
[3] hykka (‘hycka ec’): ‘[…]’ B(3v), hykkað ek B(5v), ‘hýck . d ek’ 744ˣ(18r)
(not checked:)
ræsir (noun m.): ruler
(not checked:)
rekkr (noun m.; °; -ar): man, champion
(not checked:)
Rín (noun f.): [Rhine]
[4] grjót Rínar ‘the stones of the Rhine <river> [GOLD]’: In the best-known legend of the early Germanic world, the fateful gold of the Niflungar, the curse on which brought death to many, was finally sunk in the Rhine, never to be found again. The tale is told succinctly in Skm (SnE 1998, I, 46-9).
(not checked:)
grjót (noun n.): rock, stone
[4] grjót Rínar ‘the stones of the Rhine <river> [GOLD]’: In the best-known legend of the early Germanic world, the fateful gold of the Niflungar, the curse on which brought death to many, was finally sunk in the Rhine, never to be found again. The tale is told succinctly in Skm (SnE 1998, I, 46-9).
(not checked:)
4. of (particle): (before verb)
(not checked:)
þrjóta (verb; str. 2; þrýtr, þraut, þrutu, þrotinn): end, fail
[4] þrjóta: so all others, þrjóti R
Interactive view: tap on words in the text for notes and glosses
The helmingr is cited to illustrate a kenning referring to gold.
Use the buttons at the top of the page to navigate between stanzas in a poem.
The text and translation are given here, with buttons to toggle whether the text is shown in the verse order or prose word order. Clicking on indiviudal words gives dictionary links, variant readings, kennings and notes, where relevant.
This is the text of the edition in a similar format to how the edition appears in the printed volumes.
This view is also used for chapters and other text segments. Not all the headings shown are relevant to such sections.