Anglo-Saxon Riddles of the Exeter Book/Annotated/35
Appearance
(Redirected from Anglo-Saxon Riddles of the Exeter Book/35)
35 (k-d 4)
Bound with rings I must readily obey from time to time my servant and master and break my rest, make noisily known that he gave me a band to put on my neck. Often a man or a woman has come to greet me, when weary with sleep, wintry-cold, I answer him: (their hearts were angry): “A warm limb sometimes bursts the bound ring.” Nonetheless it is pleasant to him, my servant, a half-witted man, and to me the same, if one knows aught and can then with words riddle my riddle successfully. |
10 |
Ic sceal þragbysig þegne minum hringan hæfted hyran georne min bed brecan breahtme cyþan þæt me halswriþan hlaford sealde oft mec slæpwerigne secg oðþe meowle gretan eode ic him gromheortum winterceald oncweþe wearm lim gebundenne bæg hwilum bersteð seþeah biþ on þonce þegne minum medwisum men me ꝥ sylfe þær wiht wite ⁊ wordum mīn on sped mæge spel gesecgan :⁊ |
A Bell speaks, calling the man who rings it servant and master; tells how it rouses the sleepers on a cold wintry morning. The “bound rings,” e.g., is the “bell.” There is something a little wrong in l. 8, perhaps an omission which would make the speech clearer; and “burst” is not normally transitive in Anglo-Saxon. Mrs. von Erhardt-Siebold (PMLA lxi [1946], 620–23) argues for Handmill, and gives a diagram.