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Svipdagsmál
''Svipdagsmál'' or ''The Lay of Svipdagr'' is an Old Norse poem, a part of the ''Poetic Edda'', comprising two poems, ''The Spell of Gróa'' and ''The Lay of Fjölsviðr''. The two works are grouped since they have a common narrator, Svipdagr. Moreover, they would appear to have a common origin since they are closely similar in use of language, structure, style and metre (ljóðaháttr). These two poems are found in several 17th-century paper manuscripts. In at least three of these manuscripts, the poems are in reverse order and separated by a third Eddic poem titled ''Hyndluljóð''.〔McKinnell (2005:202).〕 For a long time, the connection between the two poems was not realized, until in 1854 Svend Grundtvig pointed out a connection between the story told in ''Grógaldr'' and the first part of the medieval Scandinavian ballad of ''Ungen Sveidal''〔Ballad no. 70 in the second volume of his ''Danmarks gamle Folkeviser''〕/''Herr Svedendal''/''Hertig Silfverdal''. Then in 1856, Sophus Bugge noticed that the last part of the ballad corresponded to ''Fjölsvinnsmál''. Bugge wrote about this connection in ''Forhandlinger i Videnskabs-Selskabet i Christiania'' 1860, calling the two poems together ''Svipdagsmál''. Subsequent scholars have accepted this title.〔Sveinsson (1975).〕 ==Poems==
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