Audiobook: Elder Edda (Bray Translation)
- Download Introduction, Pt. 01 (General) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 02 (The Sayings of Grimnir) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 03 (The Wisdom of All-Wise) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 04 (The Words of the Mighty Weaver) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 05 (The Words of Odin, the High One) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 06 (The Lay of Hymir) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 07 (The Lay of Thrym) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 08 (The Story of Skirnir) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 09 (Day-Spring and Menglöd) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 10 (Greybeard & Thor) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 11 (The Song of Rig) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 12 (The Lay of Hyndla) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 13 (Baldr's Dreams) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 14 (Loki's Mocking) audio
- Download Introduction, Pt. 15 (The Soothsaying of the Vala) audio
- Download I. The Sayings of Grimnir audio
- Download II. The Wisdom of All-Wise audio
- Download III. The Words of the Mighty Weaver audio
- Download IV. The Words of Odin, the High One audio
- Download V. The Lay of Hymir audio
- Download VI. The Lay of Thrym audio
- Download VII. The Story of Skirnir audio
- Download VIII. Day-Spring and Menglöd audio
- Download IX. Greybeard & Thor audio
- Download X. The Song of Rig audio
- Download XI. The Vala's Shorter Soothsaying audio
- Download XII. The Lay of Hyndla audio
- Download XIII. Baldr's Dreams audio
- Download XIV. Loki's Mocking audio
- Download XV. Fragments From Snorri's Edda audio
- Download XVI. The Soothsaying of the Vala audio
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The Elder or Poetic Edda is a collection of Old Norse poems dating from the thirteenth century CE. Though no two translators or editors seem to agree on precisely which poems should be included in this collection, the Elder Edda is the most important source for Norse mythology and legends of northern European heroes. The later "Younger" or Prose Edda, gathered or transcribed by Snorri Sturluson in about 1220 CE, is the other such source, largely drawing on and even directly quoting from the poetic material of the Elder Edda. Even the uninitiated reader of the Eddas may find them familiar in sound, rhythm, and content because of their considerable influence on the work of J.R.R. Tolkien and his Middle Earth fantasies. Though the Bray edition is entitled "The Elder or Poetic Edda, commonly known as Sæmund's Edda," even at the time of its 1908 publication no scholar still believed that the twelfth-century Icelandic scholar Sæmundur Sigfússon had anything to do with the Poetic Edda; whoever actually compiled and transcribed these old oral myths is unknown to modern scholarship. This recording is of Part I (Mythological Poems), including elegant introductory material by translator and scholar Olive Bray. It does not include the Icelandic of the facing pages in this parallel bilingual edition. ( Expatriate)
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