long time ago i found 2 videos, there was a Old Norse version and Proto Norse (North Germanic)version. the videos was a play made out of  the Atlakviða poem.
 
so i downloaded the videos and added subtitel with translation to english. (I translated the videos from the Norwegian subtitels.)
 
after i made the video i uploaded it to youtube and made a dictionary in the "About this video part" with help from my Icelandic friend.
 
 
Old Norse version:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCVTodh_6aE
 
North Germanic version:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3FMwNSHgFI&feature=related


To: norse_course@yahoogroups.com
From: originalpatricia@...
Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2008 05:37:25 +0000
Subject: Re: [norse_course] Atlakviða með skýringum (Atlakviða with Explanations)

Thanks LN - that has cleared up something for me - it does look as if the Poets were so very  skilled at the
use of - and a Science almost of the double meaning -
Kveðja
Patricia
 
-------Original Message----- --
 
From: llama_nom
Date: 25/02/2008 00:34:30
Subject: [norse_course] Atlakviða með skýringum (Atlakviða with Explanations)
 
--- In norse_course@ yahoogroups. com, "llama_nom" <600cell@...> wrote:
>
 
> Apart from those Old Norse texts themselves, Icelandic is useful for
> reading the scholarly apparatus that accompanies Icelandic editions of
> Old Norse texts and other academic material and *websites* about the
> medieval literature.
 
A case in point:
 
 
I just came across this site with an introduction to the poem and
notes in Modern Icelandic. I see they interpret 'ár' in the first
strophe as "once upon a time", "long ago" rather than as "messanger"
(accusative singular of 'árr', in apposition to 'segg' "man"), which
is grammatically equally possible.
 
Atli sendi
ár til Gunnars
kunnan segg at ríða,
Knéfröðr var sá heitinn;
 
I recently read a paper arguing that this and other notoriously
debated words in the poem are deliberately ambiguous, and show the
poets skill in saying more than one thing at once, often juxtaposing
the polite surface with its sinister undercurrents, as in 'valrauðr'
"adorned with high-quality (red) gold" or "red with the blood of the
slain" (Neil C. Hultin 1974: Some homonyms in the Old Norse Atlakviða,
MLN 89:5, German Issue. pp. 862-866).
 
LN
 
 
 
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