Skíðaríma

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Skíðaríma (Icelandic pronunciation: [ˈsciːðaˌriːma]) is a humorous Icelandic ríma, of unknown authorship, dated to around 1450–1500.[1]

Summary

The hero is the audacious and inventive beggar Skíði, who was apparently a historic figure from the 12th century. It was also a real event that he had a dream in 1195, and it is this dream that is the matter of Skíðaríma. Skíði dreams that

Heðinn and Högni as their incessant war about Hildr threatens to destroy Valhalla. Skíði manages to make peace by asking to marry Hildr and finding her willing.[2]

However, as Skíði could not stop mentioning the word God in front of the

Sigurðr the dragon slayer throws him out through the door. Skíði wakes up with a lot of pain in a farm on Iceland
.

The depiction of the grovelling, avaricious and impudent beggar is considered to be very funny, and the poem is full of burlesque humour.

Editions and translations

Manuscripts

The oldest manuscript of the ríma is Reykjavík, Stofnun Árna Magnússon, Am 1025 4to, copied in 1737 by Jón Þorkelsson Skálholtsrektor.[3]

References

  1. ^ Haukur Þorgeirsson, Hljóðkerfi og bragkerfi Stoðhljóð, tónkvæði og önnur úrlausnarefni í íslenskri bragsögu ásamt útgáfu á Rímum af Ormari Fraðmarssyni (unpublished Ph.D thesis, University of Iceland, 2013), p. 253 (in Icelandic).
  2. ^ Skiðarima in the Nordisk familjebok encyclopedia (in Swedish)
  3. ^ Skíðaríma: An Inquiry into Written and Printed Texts, References and Commentaries, ed. by Theo Homan, Amsterdamer Publikationen zur Sprache und Literatur, 20 (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1975), pp. 13, 16.