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skaldic

Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages

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Þul Jǫtna II 1III/7 — Glaumarr ‘Glaumarr’

Enn eru eptir         jǫtna heiti:
Eimgeitir, Verr,         Ímr, Hringvǫlnir,
Viddi, Víðgrípr,         Vandill, Gyllir,
Grímnir, Glaumarr,         Glámr, Sámendill,
Vǫrnir, Harðgreipr         ok Vagnhǫfði.

Enn eru eptir heiti jǫtna: Eimgeitir, Verr, Ímr, Hringvǫlnir, Viddi, Víðgrípr, Vandill, Gyllir, Grímnir, Glaumarr, Glámr, Sámendill, Vǫrnir, Harðgreipr ok Vagnhǫfði.

Still there are names of giants to come: Eimgeitir, Verr, Ímr, Hringvǫlnir, Viddi, Víðgrípr, Vandill, Gyllir, Grímnir, Glaumarr, Glámr, Sámendill, Vǫrnir, Harðgreipr and Vagnhǫfði.

readings

[7] Glaumarr: glaumvarr , A, B

notes

[7] Glaumarr: Or Glaumvarr (so , A, B and adopted in Skj B and Skald). Neither variant occurs elsewhere, although Glaumr lit. ‘noise’ (or ‘enjoyment, joy’) is the name of a giant (cf. Eil Þdr 20/1 niðjar Glaums ‘descendants of Glaumr <giant> [GIANTS]’). If the correct form is Glaumvarr, the name may mean ‘joy-cautious one’ (-varr (adj.) ‘aware, cautious, scared’).

grammar

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