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Exeter Book Riddle 57 (55) – a double solution?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 September 2008
Extract
To offer a solution to Riddle 57 must seem to many like a fool rushing swiftly in where others have swallowed gnats – and raindrops, hailstones, thunderclouds, musical notes, bees and more. Yet for a long time I have been convinced that everyone else had got it wrong, and that the answer could only be ‘swifts’. On further investigation, it turned out that some scholars, indeed, had had the same idea – it was Moritz Trautmann's final solution, and Cyril Brett thought of swifts but rejected them in favour of starlings – and that it was only (as it were) half-right. However, it still seems worthwhile attempting to demonstrate that, at least on the literal level, swifts are the only possible answer. I shall therefore dissect Riddle 57, discussing the identity of its subject under four headings: appearance, locomotion, habitat and call. Though initially ignoring the riddle's last half-line, I shall not forget it.
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References
1 References are to The Exeter Book, ed. Krapp, G. P. and Dobbie, E. V. K., ASPR 3 (New York, 1936); Riddle 57 is on p. 209, with notes on pp. 350–1.Google Scholar In Craig Williamson, The Old English Riddles of the Exeter Book (Chapel Hill, NC, 1977), Krapp and Dobbie's first three riddles are combined into one, and the rest are then numbered two in advance; the riddle discussed is therefore Williamson's no. 55; in other editions its number varies from 55 to 58.Google Scholar
2 For a list of all solutions to Riddle 57, up to 1981, see Fry, D. K., ‘Exeter Book Riddle Solutions’, OEN 15.1 (1981), 22–33, at 24.Google ScholarPulsiano, P. and Wolf, K., in ‘Exeter Book Riddle 57: those Damned Souls, Again’, Germanic Notes 22 (1991), 2–5, point out an error in Fry's reference to bees; it should be dk (Garvin), not ak (Blackburn).Google Scholar
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