Icelandic Poetry: Or The Edda of SæmundN. Biggs, 1797 - 318 sider |
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Icelandic Poetry, Or the Edda of Saemund Amos Simon Cottle,Robert Southey Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2015 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Afori Alfi alfo alſo Alvifs ALVISS anceſtry can Ottar anſwer Balder becauſe called ceaſe Celts Dwarfs earth Edda ev'ry fabled ages loft fafe faid fame fate feaſt feems feen Fenrir ferpent fhades fhall fhine fhould fince FIOLSUID fire firft firſt flain fleep fome fons foul fpeech Freya Freyer Frigga ftill fuch fupplies fword GANRADE Gaul Geirrod Genii giant Goddeſs Gods HARBARD heaven Heimdaller Hela Hermod heroes himſelf horſe houſe Hymer Hyndla Icelandic language mallet Midgard moft monſter mortal moſt muſt names of Odin nature fecretly refides night Niorder o'er odes Odin's Ottar perfon race raiſe round Sæmund ſeems ſhall ſhine Skada ſkies SKIRNER ſky ſon ſpeak ſpeed ſpell ſpread ſuppoſed Surtur tell thee thefe themſelves theſe Thialfe thofe Thor thoſe thou thro THRYM uſe VAFTHRUDNIS VALGRIND Vani veil that hides Veorr VINDKALDER VOLVA Whence whofe whoſe wife wiſdom wolf Ymer
Populære avsnitt
Side 224 - The dwarfs figh and groan before the " doors of their caverns. Oh! ye inhabitants of " the mountains ; can you fay whether any thing
Side 32 - Jamque nocens ferrum, ferroque nocentius aurum prodierat ; prodit Bellum, quod pugnat utroque, sanguineaque manu crepitantia concutit arma. vivitur ex rapto : non hospes ab hospite tutus, non socer a genero ; fratrum quoque gratia rara est.
Side xxxvi - Scenes like these Have almost lived before me, when I gazed Upon their fair resemblance traced by him, Who sung the banished man of Ardebeil ; Or to the eye of Fancy held by her, Who among women left no equal mind When from this world she passed ; and I could weep To think that she is to the grave gone down ! Where a note names Mary Wollstonecraft, the allusion being to her Letters from Norway.
Side 52 - He requires less sleep than a bird, and sees by night, as well as by day, a hundred miles around him. So acute is his ear that no sound escapes him, for he can even hear the grass growing on the earth, and the wool on a sheep's back.
Side 27 - This fanatic hope derived additional force from the ignominy affixed to every kind of death but...
Side 27 - Certe populi quos despicit Arctos Felices errore suo ! quos ille timorum Maximus haud urget lethi metus ; inde ruendi In ferrum mens prona viris, animaeque capaces Mortis, et ignavum rediturae parcere vitae.
Side 217 - They employed pretty nearly the same characters for all these different purposes, but they varied the order and combination of the letters ; they wrote them either from right to left, or from top to bottom, or in form of a circle, or contrary to the course of the sun, &c.
Side xiv - Odin is believed to have been the name of the one true god among the first colonies who came from the East, and peopled Germany and Scandinavia, and among their posterity for several ages.
Side 23 - ... the sons of Bor, or the gods, were taking a walk, they found two pieces of wood floating upon the water; these they took, and out of them made a man and a woman. The eldest of the gods gave them life and souls; the second motion and knowledge; the third the gift of speech, hearing and sight, to which he added beauty and raiment. From this man and this woman, named Ask and Embla, is descended the race of men who are permitted to inhabit the earth.
Side 62 - ... this water keeps up the beauty of its foliage, and after having refreshed its leaves, falls back again to the earth, where it forms the dew of which the bees make their honey.