Hannah Burrows (ed.) 2017, ‘Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks 45 (Angantýr Arngrímsson, Lausavísur 10)’ in Margaret Clunies Ross (ed.), Poetry in fornaldarsögur. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 8. Turnhout: Brepols, p. 404.
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þú (pron.; °gen. þín, dat. þér, acc. þik): you
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skulu (verb): shall, should, must
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2. eiga (verb; °á/eigr (præs. pl. 3. pers. eigu/eiga); átti, áttu; átt): own, have
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3. ok (conj.): and, but; also
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una (verb): be content, love
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lengi (adv.): for a long time
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hafa (verb): have
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3. á (prep.): on, at
[3] á hulðu ‘in its sheath’: Can also mean ‘in secret, in hiding’, but likely refers to the legend related earlier in the saga that Tyrfingr will cause a man’s death every time it is unsheathed.
[3] á hulðu ‘in its sheath’: Can also mean ‘in secret, in hiding’, but likely refers to the legend related earlier in the saga that Tyrfingr will cause a man’s death every time it is unsheathed.
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Hjalmarr (noun m.): Hjálmarr
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bani (noun m.; °-a; -ar): death, killer
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3. á (prep.): on, at
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1. egg (noun f.; °-jar, dat. -ju/-): edge, blade
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eitr (noun n.; °; dat. -um): poison
[6] eitr ‘poison’: Hjálm Lv 4/8 (Ǫrv 14), which appears in the R and U redactions of Heiðr, describes Tyrfingr’s tip as herðr í eitri ‘hardened in poison’ (see also Note there). In Ket 36/7 the edges of a sword are said to be eitrherðar ‘poison-hardened’ (see Note there), while eitrblandinn ‘mixed with poison’ is used of sword-edges in HjǪ 20/5 (and similarly, though not a cpd, in Hyndl 49/7).
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2. vera (verb): be, is, was, were, are, am
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í (prep.): in, into
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báðir (pron.; °gen. beggja (báðra), nom./acc. n. bǽði): both
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2. vera (verb): be, is, was, were, are, am
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maðr (noun m.): man, person
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mjǫtuðr (noun m.): °skæbne, dødsårsag, død
[7] mjötuðr: mataðr R715ˣ
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verri (adj. comp.): worse, worst
Interactive view: tap on words in the text for notes and glosses
This stanza does not seem to follow on from the previous one and may be misplaced from elsewhere in the poem. — This stanza is followed in R715ˣ by the following:
Ek mun hirða         ok í hönd nema
hvassan mæki,         er mik hafa látið.
Uggik eigi þat,         úlfa grennir,
hvat synir mínir        síðan telja.
Prose Order: Ek mun hirða hvassan mæki ok nema í hönd, er látið mik hafa. Uggik þat eigi, grennir úlfa, hvat synir mínir telja síðan. Translation: I will guard the sharp sword and take it in hand, when I am allowed to have it. I do not fear, feeder of wolves [WARRIOR], what my sons reckon later. This seems to be the result of scribal confusion, since it comprises slightly variant versions of ll. 1-5 of Herv Lv 16 (Heiðr 40) and ll. 7-8 of Herv Lv 18 (Heiðr 44), with only l. 6 being new. Cf. Andrews (1920, 98), who suggests the stanza to be genuine, noting that repetition occurs elsewhere in the dialogue between Hervǫr and Angantýr and that its restoration ‘would preserve the alternation of stanzas between the two speakers’; this alternation is not completely regular, however, and repetition does not occur elsewhere in the rest of the dialogue between Hervǫr and Angantýr to the same extent. — [4]: See Note to Heiðr 36/8.
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