Anglo-Saxon Riddles of the Exeter Book/Annotated/23
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23 (k-d 10)
My beak was close fettered, the currents of ocean, running cold beneath me. There I grew in the sea, my body close to the moving wood. I was all alive when I came from the water, clad all in black, but a part of me white. When living, the air lifted me up, the wind from the wave, and bore me afar, up over the seal’s bath. Tell me my name. |
10 |
Neb wæs min on nearwe ⁊ ic neoþan wætre flode underflowen firgenstreamum swiþe besuncen ⁊ on sunde awox ufan yþū þeaht anum getenge liþendum wuda lice mine hæfde feorh cwico þa ic of fæðmum cwom brimes ⁊ beames on blacum hrægl · sume wæron hwite hyrste mine þa mec lifgende lyft upp ahof · wind of wæge siþþan wide bær ofer seolhbaþo saga hwæt ic hatte |
Barnacle Goose. There was a popular belief that it was born from a barnacle growing on wood, the plank of a boat, or a submerged tree trunk. Dr. Johnson’s first definition of Barnacle is “A bird like a goose, fabulously supposed to grow on trees.” The “currents” in l. 1 are literally a mountain stream.