Arnljot GellineAmerican-Scandinavian foundation, 1917 - 155 стор. |
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Сторінка 60
... bade to sing praises To the Lord . Joyous the sight of home After absence . Rode then Bishop Sigurd Forward the King to question ; but made halt While at some distance from him , And waited . The King's august countenance Shone with the ...
... bade to sing praises To the Lord . Joyous the sight of home After absence . Rode then Bishop Sigurd Forward the King to question ; but made halt While at some distance from him , And waited . The King's august countenance Shone with the ...
Сторінка 110
... bade it open , Went forth : " Follow me now , comrades , The Lord will guard Of his own the banner This day ! " When the ring was opened , Stood he out illumined ' Mid the thick darkness Around . When he met the foemen , Shrank they ...
... bade it open , Went forth : " Follow me now , comrades , The Lord will guard Of his own the banner This day ! " When the ring was opened , Stood he out illumined ' Mid the thick darkness Around . When he met the foemen , Shrank they ...
Сторінка 120
... bade them stand up and array them for their journey . So Thorod and his man stood up and arrayed them , and breakfast was served them . Then Thorir [ their host ] gave snow - shoes to either of them , and Arnljot betook himself to ...
... bade them stand up and array them for their journey . So Thorod and his man stood up and arrayed them , and breakfast was served them . Then Thorir [ their host ] gave snow - shoes to either of them , and Arnljot betook himself to ...
Сторінка 126
... bade them , and the Serpent began to gain on the boat . And now the boatman , observ- ing the approach of his pursuers , was seen by the King to glance sharply around in all directions , and to look hard at the rocks as if measuring his ...
... bade them , and the Serpent began to gain on the boat . And now the boatman , observ- ing the approach of his pursuers , was seen by the King to glance sharply around in all directions , and to look hard at the rocks as if measuring his ...
Сторінка 136
... bade his men fare quietly , and not to spoil for the bonder what was his own . And this men did well , while the king was anigh ; but the companies that came after gave no heed to this , and men so overran the acre that it was all laid ...
... bade his men fare quietly , and not to spoil for the bonder what was his own . And this men did well , while the king was anigh ; but the companies that came after gave no heed to this , and men so overran the acre that it was all laid ...
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Загальні терміни та фрази
Æsir Afrafaste army Arnljot Gelline art thou bade banner battle BATTLE OF STIKLESTAD bishop Björn Björnson Blood-red body bonders bore Chapter chieftain christened Christianity death earth eyes faith fare farmstead father fell fight Finn fire follow forest gave gaze gleaming go hurrying go scurrying gods Gowk-Thorir greeting hand heard heaven Heimskringla host Iamtlanders Ingigerd Kalf Kalv Arnesson King answered King Olaf King's King's men land laughter lifted light Loki Lord mickle mighty mind Mörland mountains naught Ne'er night Norsemen Norway o'er Odin Olaf the Holy Olaf Trygvason Olaf's Onward peace poem Ragnarök ring rode Rolf Krake Saga of Olaf sang says shalt shields shoulder Sighvat silent skalds slain smiled smote Snorri Sturluson SONG spear Stiklestad stood sword thee Thorgeir Thorgils Thorir Hound Thormod thought Throndhjem Tiundaland took Tore Hund Trand Translated trolls Vikar vision warriors weary words wounded
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Сторінка 32 - ... the hosts of the heathen, and, smiling, falls with his king on the field of Stiklestad. One song from this cycle, "The Cloister in the South" is here reproduced in an exact copy of the original metre, in the hope that even this imperfect representation of the poem may be better than none at all. Who would enter so late the cloister in?
Сторінка ix - Arnljot Gelline HH Boyesen says: "Never has he found a more daring and tremendous expression for the spirit of old Norse paganism than in this powerful but somewhat chaotic poem. Never has any one gazed more deeply into the ferocious heart of the primitive, predatory man, whose free, wild soul has not yet been tamed by social obligations and the scourge of the law.