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XXIV.—On the Legend of Weland the Smith. By Thomas Wright, Esq. F.S.A.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 June 2012

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Extract

The interest which, at the last meeting of your Society, you appeared to take in the traditions connected with the cromlech known as that of Wayland Smith, described in the paper by Mr. Akerman, has encouraged me to offer a few remarks on the subject, which, though not possessing much novelty, have not hitherto been, I think, laid before English readers in a connected form. As Mr. Akerman has observed, the Antiquaries of former days have treated with too much contempt the local legends connected with the monuments of our early forefathers; and through their neglect we have lost irretrievably a large portion of the valuable materials which connected the popular belief of our peasantry hardly a hundred years ago with the mythology of our forefathers at a remote period, when it differed comparatively little from the other branches of the same primeval stock which are now so widely separated. During a century these materials, the popular legends and traditions of the peasantry have been rapidly disappearing before the march of modern improvements; and I would earnestly impress upon the members of this Society the utility of collecting and preserving as many of them as still exist.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 0000

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References

page 321 note * This description of Gawayn's sword is printed in Michel's Notes to Tristan, vol. ii. p. 181.