The Younger Edda Also called Snorre\'s Edda, or The Prose Edda
THE YOUNGER EDDA: also called SNORRE'S EDDA, OR THE PROSE EDDA. An English Version of the Foreword; The Fooling of Gylfe, The Afterword; Brage's Talk, The Afterword to Brage's Talk, and the Important Passages in the Poetical Diction (Skaldskaparmal). with an Introduction, Notes, Vocabulary, and Index. By RASMUS B. ANDERSON, LL.D., Formerly Professor of the Scandinavian Languages in the University of Wisconsin, Ex-U.S. Minister to Denmark,
river,--those long-drawn sheets of water, whereon the sun spreads
sheets of light and scatters blinding points. Looking along the road,
on either side of its stone-hard surface, one sees the pleasant,
cultivated earth, the bits of land sewn to each other, and many-hued,
brown or green as the billiard cloth, then paling in the distance.
Here and there, on this map in colors, copses bulge forth. The
by-roads are pricked out with trees, which follow each other artlessly
and divide the infantile littleness of orchards.
This landscape holds us by the soul. It is a watercolor now (for it
rained a little last night), with its washed stones, its tiles
varnished anew, its roofs that are half slate and half light, its
shining pavements, water-jeweled in places, its delicately blue sky,
with clouds like silky paper; and between two house-fronts of yellow
ocher and tan, against the purple velvet of distant forests, there is
the neighboring steeple, which is like ours and yet different. Roundly
one's gaze embraces all the panorama, which is delightful as the
rainbow.
From the Place, then, where one feels himself so abundantly at home, we
enter the church. From the depths of this thicket of lights, the good
priest murmurs the great infinite speech to us, blesses us, embraces us
severally and altogether, like father and mother both. In the manorial
pew, the foremost of all, one glimpses the Marquis of Monthyon, who has
the air of an officer, and his mother-in-law, Baroness Grille, who is
dressed like an ordinary lady.
THE YOUNGER EDDA: also called SNORRE'S EDDA, OR THE PROSE EDDA. An English Version of the Foreword; The Fooling of Gylfe, The Afterword; Brage's Talk, The Afterword to Brage's Talk, and the Important Passages in the Poetical Diction (Skaldskaparmal). with an Introduction, Notes, Vocabulary, and Index. By RASMUS B. ANDERSON, LL.D., Formerly Professor of the Scandinavian Languages in the University of Wisconsin, Ex-U.S. Minister to Denmark,