"Geisli" is the earliest Nordic Christian "drápa" (long stanzaic poem) known to exist. Written by Einarr Skúlason, the twelfth century's premier Icelandic poet, "Geisli" marked a stylistic shift in Old Norse poetry brought about by Christianity and European learning. Einarr Skúlason was a priest as well as a skald, and his writing demonstrates that he was as familiar with the traditions of Latin liturgy and hagiography as with the conventions of skaldic poetry.
"Geisli" is a very important source for the modern scholar studying Old Norse hagiography and the history of Christianity in Iceland and Norway. This new critical edition features a version in normalized orthography, as well as a version in prose word order, a translation into English, a complete glossary, an introduction that situates the poem in its context, and substantial explanatory notes. Editor Martin Chase uses the famous "Flateyjarbók" manuscript as a base text, but takes into account all known manuscripts of the poem. Long needed by scholars, this new edition will be extremely valuable to anyone with an interest in Old Norse as well as medievalists in other disciplines.
Author(s): Einarr Skúlason, Martin Chase (ed.)
Series: Toronto Old Norse–Icelandic Series, 1
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Year: 2005
Language: English, Old Norse
Pages: VIII+250
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction
Manuscripts of "Geisli" 3
Editions of "Geisli" 5
Author and Date 8
Sources and Analogues 10
The Poetics of "Geisli" 16
Appreciation 21
Headnotes to the Text 45
"Geisli" 49
Commentary 123
Glossary 171
Abbreviations and Short Titles 210
Notes 213
Bibliography 229
Index 241