Cite as: Kari Ellen Gade (ed.) 2017, ‘Snorri Sturluson, Háttatal 87’ in Kari Ellen Gade and Edith Marold (eds), Poetry from Treatises on Poetics. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 3. Turnhout: Brepols, p. 1197.
context: This variant is called ‘the lesser
end-rhyme’ (in minni runhenda), because
the identical end-rhymes are restricted to each helmingr (see st. 81). According to the commentary, it is a
truncated (hnept) version of the
metre in st. 86. That is not entirely correct, however, because although the lines end in
monosyllables, they are still tetrasyllabic (regular Type B: ll. 1-3, 5, 7, 8;
Type E: ll. 4, 6) and not catalectic variants of Types C3 and D2.
notes: For this metre, see also RvHbreiðm Hl 47-8. — [7, 8]: Note the apparently
rhotacised form of er in the rhyme er ‘is’ : sker ‘skerries’ (see Note to st. 82/5, 6
above).
texts: ‹Ht 90›,
‹SnE 682›
editions: Skj Snorri Sturluson: 2. Háttatal 87 (AII, 74; BII, 85); Skald II, 46; SnE 1848-87, I, 704-5, III, 132, SnE 1879-81, I, 14, 84, II, 31, SnE 1931, 249, SnE 2007, 35; Konráð Gíslason 1895-7, I, 57-8.
sources