Présentation de l'éditeur :
Norse ancestors, inscriptions in Runic characters have frequently been found, which prove that the art of writing was not unknown. Runes, derived from some earlier alphabet, which is still a subject of controversy, were formerly a puzzle; but are now day by day forced to reveal their hidden secrets, often very human and pathetic, and sometimes obviously believed by the writer to have magical virtues. These characters were not, however, used for books or correspondence. The history of the Norse was handed down by word of mouth, in songs and tales called sagas; sung and told first by professional skalds, who were often no mean poets, and afterwards no doubt by any who could remember them; it being a point of honour not to vary the tale. When the Latin alphabet came in with Christianity, (L atin being the ecclesiastical language), some sagas were happily reduced to writing, and survive for our beneht ;giving us vivid word pictures of the daily life of Norsemen in Iceland and Norway at the very period when others of their kin were settling inC
(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)
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