Katrina Attwood (ed.) 2007, ‘Anonymous Poems, Leiðarvísan 26’ in Margaret Clunies Ross (ed.), Poetry on Christian Subjects. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 7. Turnhout: Brepols, pp. 164-5.
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sýna (verb): show, seem
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sól (noun f.; °-ar, dat. -u/-; -ir): sun
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sól (noun f.; °-ar, dat. -u/-; -ir): sun
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land (noun n.; °-s; *-): land
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land (noun n.; °-s; *-): land
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siklingr (noun m.; °; -ar): king, ruler
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með (prep.): with
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trú (noun f.; °-ar): faith, belief
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mikill (adj.; °mikinn): great, large
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horskr (adj.; °compar. -ari): wise
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lýðr (noun m.; °-s, dat. -; -ir): one of the people
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3. á (prep.): on, at
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hauðr (noun n.): earth, ground
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2. hreinn (adj.; °compar. hreinari/hreinni, superl. hreinastr/hreinstr): pure
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2. skjótr (adj.): quick(ly)
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jarteign (noun f.; °-ar; -ir): miracle
[4] jarteinir ‘miracles’: B’s <ei> spelling is required here to preserve the rhyme with hreinn, but cf. 6/2, where the <gn> spelling is used, to rhyme with alfegnar. The <gn> form also occurs in Geisl 67/2, where the rhyme is with friðgegn. It appears likely that the <ei> form is the younger (see ANG §§292.3, 318.5; LP: jartegn, jartein).
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fríðr (adj.; °compar. -ari, superl. -astr): beautiful, fair
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1. gera (verb): do, make
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dagr (noun m.; °-s, dat. degi/dag/dagi(Thom¹ 332¹n.); -ar): day
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dróttinn (noun m.; °dróttins, dat. dróttni (drottini [$1049$]); dróttnar): lord, master
[5] dróttins: dróttinn 399a‑bˣ
[5] dróttins ‘the Lord’s’: Brynjólfur Snorrason, the writer of the 444ˣ transcript, miscopied this word as dróttinn. This error was carried over into Jón Sigurðsson’s copy of 444ˣ, 399a-bˣ, which was used by Sveinbjörn Egilsson as the basis of his 1844 edn. Sveinbjörn corrected to dróttins in a marginal n. to 444ˣ, though he notes drottinn as the ‘MS reading’ in 1844, 64 n. 13.
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dáð (noun f.; °; -ir): feat, deed < dáðfimr (adj.)
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fimr (adj.; °compar. -ari, superl. -astr): agile, deft < dáðfimr (adj.)
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jǫfurr (noun m.): ruler, prince
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himinn (noun m.; °himins, dat. himni; himnar): heaven, sky
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vín (noun n.; °-s; -): wine
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3. ór (prep.): out of
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vatn (noun n.; °-s; -*): water, lake
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2. einn (pron.; °decl. cf. einn num.): one, alone
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1. verða (verb): become, be
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2. feginn (adj.; °compar. fegnari, superl. fegnastr): glad, happy
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harðla (adv.): very, highly, greatly
Interactive view: tap on words in the text for notes and glosses
Sts 26-8 treat two of Christ’s miracles; the wedding at Cana, where he turned water into wine (st. 26), and the feeding of the Five Thousand (sts 27-8). — [5-8]: The reference here is to Christ’s turning water into wine at the wedding at Cana, recounted in John II.1-10. The miracle is also the subject of a sermon preserved in HómÍsl 1872, 187-91, and occurs in texts from all three recensions of the Sunday Letter and the MHG sermons.
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