Cookies on our website

We use cookies on this website, mainly to provide a secure browsing experience but also to collect statistics on how the website is used. You can find out more about the cookies we set, the information we store and how we use it on the cookies page.

Continue

skaldic

Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages

Menu Search

Lausavísur — Hetta LvV (Bárð)

Hetta

Hetta, Lausavísur — Vol. 5 — Margaret Clunies Ross

Margaret Clunies Ross (forthcoming), ‘ Hetta, Lausavísur’ in Margaret Clunies Ross, Kari Ellen Gade and Tarrin Wills (eds), Poetry in Sagas of Icelanders. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 5. Turnhout: Brepols, p. . <https://skaldic.org/m.php?p=text&i=3007> (accessed 26 April 2024)

 

Róa skaltu fjallfirðan
framm á lǫg stirðan,
þar mun grá glitta,
ef vilt Grímsmið hitta,
þar skalt þá liggja,
Þórr er vinr Friggjar;
rói norpr enn nefskammi
nesit í Hrakhvammi.
 
The new edition is unavailable.
This text is from an old edition
Út røri einn á báti
Ingjaldr í skinnfeldi,
týndi átján ǫnglum
Ingjaldr í skinnfeldi;
ok fertugu færi
Ingjaldr í skinnfeldi;
aptr kom aldri síðan
Ingjaldr í skinnfeldi.
 
The new edition is unavailable.
This text is from an old edition
Close

Log in

This service is only available to members of the relevant projects, and to purchasers of the skaldic volumes published by Brepols.
This service uses cookies. By logging in you agree to the use of cookies on your browser.

Close

Information about a text: poem, sequence of stanzas, or prose work

This page is used for different resources. For groups of stanzas such as poems, you will see the verse text and, where published, the translation of each stanza. These are also links to information about the individual stanzas.

For prose works you will see a list of the stanzas and fragments in that prose work, where relevant, providing links to the individual stanzas.

Where you have access to introduction(s) to the poem or prose work in the database, these will appear in the ‘introduction’ section.

The final section, ‘sources’ is a list of the manuscripts that contain the prose work, as well as manuscripts and prose works linked to stanzas and sections of a text.