Margaret Clunies Ross (ed.) 2017, ‘Friðþjófs saga ins frœkna 1 (Friðþjófr Þorsteinsson, Lausavísur 1)’ in Margaret Clunies Ross (ed.), Poetry in fornaldarsögur. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 8. Turnhout: Brepols, p. 194.
[1] Þat: om. 1006ˣ, 173ˣ
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munu (verb): will, must
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ek (pron.; °mín, dat. mér, acc. mik): I, me
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segja (verb): say, tell
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seggr (noun m.; °; -ir): man
[2] seggjum várum: deleted and supplied again in the following line 173ˣ
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várr (pron.; °f. ór/vár; pl. órir/várir): our
[2] seggjum várum: deleted and supplied again in the following line 173ˣ
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4. at (conj.): that
[3-4] at görla mun farit gamanferðum ‘that pleasure trips will be completely out of bounds’: Lit. ‘that it will be completely at an end with respect to pleasure trips’. On the usage of the p. p. of fara ‘go’ with dat. object in this sense, see LP: fara B2.
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gǫrla (adv.): quite, fully
[3-4] at görla mun farit gamanferðum ‘that pleasure trips will be completely out of bounds’: Lit. ‘that it will be completely at an end with respect to pleasure trips’. On the usage of the p. p. of fara ‘go’ with dat. object in this sense, see LP: fara B2.
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munu (verb): will, must
[3-4] at görla mun farit gamanferðum ‘that pleasure trips will be completely out of bounds’: Lit. ‘that it will be completely at an end with respect to pleasure trips’. On the usage of the p. p. of fara ‘go’ with dat. object in this sense, see LP: fara B2.
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fara (verb; ferr, fór, fóru, farinn): go, travel
[3-4] at görla mun farit gamanferðum ‘that pleasure trips will be completely out of bounds’: Lit. ‘that it will be completely at an end with respect to pleasure trips’. On the usage of the p. p. of fara ‘go’ with dat. object in this sense, see LP: fara B2.
[3-4] at görla mun farit gamanferðum ‘that pleasure trips will be completely out of bounds’: Lit. ‘that it will be completely at an end with respect to pleasure trips’. On the usage of the p. p. of fara ‘go’ with dat. object in this sense, see LP: fara B2.
[3-4] at görla mun farit gamanferðum ‘that pleasure trips will be completely out of bounds’: Lit. ‘that it will be completely at an end with respect to pleasure trips’. On the usage of the p. p. of fara ‘go’ with dat. object in this sense, see LP: fara B2.
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3. ei (adv.): not
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skati (noun m.; °-a; -nar): chieftan, prince
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skip (noun n.; °-s; -): ship
[6] til skips: so all others, á skip papp17ˣ
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fara (verb; ferr, fór, fóru, farinn): go, travel
[7] þvíat ‘because’: For the common loss of at after svá ‘so that’, þó ‘although’ and því ‘because’ in the C14th, see NS §265, Anm. 2b.
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nú (adv.): now
[7-8] blæjur eru nú komnar á blik ‘bed-sheets have now been placed on the bleaching ground’: Before the discovery of chlorine in the late C18th, sunlight was the principal bleaching agent for whitening flax-woven linen, for light energy causes a reaction in wet flax, producing a hydrogen peroxide solution that bleaches the fabric. Until well into the C20th in Scandinavia, after washing the household linen, women would set it out to whiten and dry off on a bleaching ground (ON blik; cf. ModDan. bleg, ModNorw. bleik, ModSwed. blek), usually a patch of grass beside the house (cf. Falk 1919, 40; Schlabow 1978, 76). Although conceived in the B text of Frið as a prearranged signal, the gesture of washing and whitening linen bed-sheets (blæjur) may well symbolise the termination of the intimacies understood to have been enjoyed between the women at Baldrshagi and the men of Framnes. Cf. Oddrgr 6/4, 25/8 and Rþ 23/9, where references to blæjur indicate sexual intimacy.
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2. vera (verb): be, is, was, were, are, am
[7-8] blæjur eru nú komnar á blik ‘bed-sheets have now been placed on the bleaching ground’: Before the discovery of chlorine in the late C18th, sunlight was the principal bleaching agent for whitening flax-woven linen, for light energy causes a reaction in wet flax, producing a hydrogen peroxide solution that bleaches the fabric. Until well into the C20th in Scandinavia, after washing the household linen, women would set it out to whiten and dry off on a bleaching ground (ON blik; cf. ModDan. bleg, ModNorw. bleik, ModSwed. blek), usually a patch of grass beside the house (cf. Falk 1919, 40; Schlabow 1978, 76). Although conceived in the B text of Frið as a prearranged signal, the gesture of washing and whitening linen bed-sheets (blæjur) may well symbolise the termination of the intimacies understood to have been enjoyed between the women at Baldrshagi and the men of Framnes. Cf. Oddrgr 6/4, 25/8 and Rþ 23/9, where references to blæjur indicate sexual intimacy.
[7-8] blæjur eru nú komnar á blik ‘bed-sheets have now been placed on the bleaching ground’: Before the discovery of chlorine in the late C18th, sunlight was the principal bleaching agent for whitening flax-woven linen, for light energy causes a reaction in wet flax, producing a hydrogen peroxide solution that bleaches the fabric. Until well into the C20th in Scandinavia, after washing the household linen, women would set it out to whiten and dry off on a bleaching ground (ON blik; cf. ModDan. bleg, ModNorw. bleik, ModSwed. blek), usually a patch of grass beside the house (cf. Falk 1919, 40; Schlabow 1978, 76). Although conceived in the B text of Frið as a prearranged signal, the gesture of washing and whitening linen bed-sheets (blæjur) may well symbolise the termination of the intimacies understood to have been enjoyed between the women at Baldrshagi and the men of Framnes. Cf. Oddrgr 6/4, 25/8 and Rþ 23/9, where references to blæjur indicate sexual intimacy.
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3. á (prep.): on, at
[7-8] blæjur eru nú komnar á blik ‘bed-sheets have now been placed on the bleaching ground’: Before the discovery of chlorine in the late C18th, sunlight was the principal bleaching agent for whitening flax-woven linen, for light energy causes a reaction in wet flax, producing a hydrogen peroxide solution that bleaches the fabric. Until well into the C20th in Scandinavia, after washing the household linen, women would set it out to whiten and dry off on a bleaching ground (ON blik; cf. ModDan. bleg, ModNorw. bleik, ModSwed. blek), usually a patch of grass beside the house (cf. Falk 1919, 40; Schlabow 1978, 76). Although conceived in the B text of Frið as a prearranged signal, the gesture of washing and whitening linen bed-sheets (blæjur) may well symbolise the termination of the intimacies understood to have been enjoyed between the women at Baldrshagi and the men of Framnes. Cf. Oddrgr 6/4, 25/8 and Rþ 23/9, where references to blæjur indicate sexual intimacy.
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blik (noun n.): gleam
[7-8] blæjur eru nú komnar á blik ‘bed-sheets have now been placed on the bleaching ground’: Before the discovery of chlorine in the late C18th, sunlight was the principal bleaching agent for whitening flax-woven linen, for light energy causes a reaction in wet flax, producing a hydrogen peroxide solution that bleaches the fabric. Until well into the C20th in Scandinavia, after washing the household linen, women would set it out to whiten and dry off on a bleaching ground (ON blik; cf. ModDan. bleg, ModNorw. bleik, ModSwed. blek), usually a patch of grass beside the house (cf. Falk 1919, 40; Schlabow 1978, 76). Although conceived in the B text of Frið as a prearranged signal, the gesture of washing and whitening linen bed-sheets (blæjur) may well symbolise the termination of the intimacies understood to have been enjoyed between the women at Baldrshagi and the men of Framnes. Cf. Oddrgr 6/4, 25/8 and Rþ 23/9, where references to blæjur indicate sexual intimacy.
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koma (verb; kem, kom/kvam, kominn): come
[7-8] blæjur eru nú komnar á blik ‘bed-sheets have now been placed on the bleaching ground’: Before the discovery of chlorine in the late C18th, sunlight was the principal bleaching agent for whitening flax-woven linen, for light energy causes a reaction in wet flax, producing a hydrogen peroxide solution that bleaches the fabric. Until well into the C20th in Scandinavia, after washing the household linen, women would set it out to whiten and dry off on a bleaching ground (ON blik; cf. ModDan. bleg, ModNorw. bleik, ModSwed. blek), usually a patch of grass beside the house (cf. Falk 1919, 40; Schlabow 1978, 76). Although conceived in the B text of Frið as a prearranged signal, the gesture of washing and whitening linen bed-sheets (blæjur) may well symbolise the termination of the intimacies understood to have been enjoyed between the women at Baldrshagi and the men of Framnes. Cf. Oddrgr 6/4, 25/8 and Rþ 23/9, where references to blæjur indicate sexual intimacy.
Interactive view: tap on words in the text for notes and glosses
Friðþjófr and his men have been visiting Ingibjǫrg and her female companions at Baldrshagi ‘Baldr’s pasture’, while her brothers Helgi and Hálfdan are away. Friðþjófr tells Ingibjǫrg that, when her brothers return, she must spread linen sheets out to bleach on the rooftop of the highest building, called dísarsalr ‘hall of the goddess’, where he could see them from his farm at Framnes. The next morning he recites this stanza, and his men look across Sognefjorden and see that the roof of the hall is covered in white linen cloth.
This stanza and the two following (Frið 1, 2 and 3) are found only in B recension mss. The A text has neither the motif of the linen sheets nor the stanza itself (but see an apparent allusion in Frið 8/7-8). This stanza is in fornyrðislag. — [3-4]: Finnur Jónsson (Skj) and Kock (Skald) put the line division between mun and farit, producing a long-line comprising a regular Sievers Type B odd line plus a Type C2 even line with neutralisation (farit) and resolution (gaman-) in metrical positions 1-2. From the point of view of distribution of stress it is unlikely, however, that the auxiliary mun could receive full stress directly followed by the p. p. farit in an unstressed position after the metrical caesura. The lineation adopted here and in most eds results in an irregular Type B odd line followed by a hypometrical even line, unless we assume suspension of alliteration on the first element of the cpd (gaman-), which is rare but does occur in later poetry.
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