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Heimdalargaldr : ウィキペディア英語版 | Heimdalargaldr ''Heimdalargaldr'' (Old Norse "Heimdallr's galdr") is an Old Norse poem about the god Heimdallr of Norse mythology. The poem is mentioned in two books of the 13th century ''Prose Edda'' book—''Gylfaginning'' and ''Skáldskaparmál''—but outside of a single, two-lined fragment that appears in ''Gylfaginning'', the poem is considered to be lost. In the surviving fragment, Heimdallr comments that he is the son of nine sisters (the Nine Mothers of Heimdallr). Scholars have commented on the information the surviving lines presents and have speculated about what the poem may have contained. ==Fragment== The poem is mentioned in two books of the ''Prose Edda''; ''Gylfaginning'' and ''Skáldskaparmál''. The sole surviving fragment of ''Heimdalargaldr'' appears in chapter 25 of ''Gylfaginning''. In the chapter, the enthroned figure of High tells the disguised mythical king Gangleri about the god Heimdallr, including that he is the son of nine sisters. After quoting a stanza about the Heimdallr's dwelling Himinbjörg from the poem ''Grímnismál'', High comments that Heimdallr says the following lines in a work by the name of ''Heimdalargaldr'':
In chapter 8 of ''Skáldskaparmál'', various ways to refer to Heimdallr are provided. The section notes that Heimdallr is the subject of a work known as ''Heimdalargaldr'', and that, since the poem, "the head has been called Heimdall's doom: man's doom is an expression for sword."〔Faulkes (1995:76).〕
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「Heimdalargaldr」の詳細全文を読む
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