tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">88
89
General resemblance in the themes of these poems—unity of action |
89 |
Development of style, and not neglect of unity nor multiplication of contents, accounts for the difference of length between earlier and later poems |
91 |
Progress of Epic in England—unlike the history of Icelandic poetry |
92 |
2. The Northern Group |
93 |
The contents of the so-called "Elder Edda" (i.e. Codex Regius 2365, 4to Havn.) to what extent Epic |
93 93 |
Notes on the contents of the poems, to show their scale; the Lay of Weland |
94 |
Different plan in the Lays of Thor, Þrymskviða and Hymiskviða |
95 |
The Helgi Poems—complications of the text |
95 |
Three separate stories—Helgi Hundingsbane and Sigrun |
95 |
Helgi Hiorvardsson and Swava |
98 |
Helgi and Kara (lost) |
99 |
The story of the Volsungs—the long Lay of Brynhild contains the whole story in abstract giving the chief place to the character of Brynhild |
100 100 101 |
The Hell-ride of Brynhild |
102 |
The fragmentary Lay of Brynhild (Brot af Sigurðarkviðu) |
103 |
Poems on the death of Attila—the Lay of Attila (Atlakviða), and the Greenland Poem of Attila (Atlamál) |
105 |
Proportions of the story |
105 |
A third version of the story in the Lament of Oddrun (Oddrúnargrátr) |
107 |
The Death of Ermanaric (Hamðismál) |
109 |
The Northern idylls of the heroines (Oddrun, Gudrun)—the Old Lay of Gudrun, or Gudrun's story to Theodoric |
109 |
The Lay of Gudrun (Guðrúnarkviða)—Gudrun's sorrow for Sigurd |
111 |
The refrain |
111 |
Gudrun's Chain of Woe (Tregrof Guðrúnar) |
111 |
The Ordeal of Gudrun, an episodic lay |
111 |
Poems in dialogue, without narrative— (1) Dialogues in the common epic measure—Balder's Doom, Dialogues of Sigurd, Angantyr—explanations in prose, between the dialogues (2) Dialogues in the gnomic or elegiac measure: (a) vituperative debates—Lokasenna, Harbarzlióð (in irregular verse), Atli and Rimgerd (b) Dialogues implying action—The Wooing of Frey (Skírnismál) |
112 112 114 |
Svipdag and Menglad (Grógaldr, Fiölsvinnsmál) |
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