|
In the Kalevala rune entitled "Haava" (The Wound, section 8),〔Bosley, K., translator (1999) ''The Kalevala.'' Oxford World's Classics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.〕 Väinämöinen attempts a heroic feat that results in a gushing wound, the blood from which covers the entire earth. This deluge is not emphasized in the Kalevala version redacted by Elias Lönnrot, but the global quality of the flood is evident in original variants of the rune. In one variant collected in Northern Ostrobothnia in 1803/04, the rune tells: : ''The blood came forth like a flood '' : ''the gore ran like a river: '' : ''there was no hummock '' : ''and no high mountain '' : ''that was not flooded '' : ''all from Väinämöinen's toe : ''from the holy hero's knee.''〔Kuusi, M., Bosley, K., and Branch, M., editors and translators (1977) ''Finnish folk poetry: epic: an anthology in Finnish and English.'' Helsinki: Finnish Literature Society. p 94〕 Matti Kuusi notes in his analysis that the rune's motifs of constructing a boat, a wound, and a flood have parallels with flood myths from around the world.〔Kuusi, M., Bosley, K., and Branch, M., editors and translators (1977) ''Finnish folk poetry: epic: an anthology in Finnish and English.'' Helsinki: Finnish Literature Society.〕 According to Anna-Leena Siikala, Väinämöinen's legs are of mythological and cosmogonic significance throughout Finnish mythology. For example, it is originally on Väinämöinen's knee that the primordial water-fowl first lays the world egg. ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Finnish flood myth」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|