
Many years ago, I had the honour of having my PhD thesis examined by Ursula Dronke, but I remember her chiefly for her wonderful translations of Eddic poetry. One of the first Eddic poems I ever read was Atlakviða (maybe that's why we're imposing it on our first-years even as I speak...). Ursula's translation was both a delight in itself, and a real incentive to grapple with the difficult but completely spell-binding language of the original.
Ray Page had even more of a beneficial effect on my career - he contributed to my appointment to this job way back when in my youth, and he was both friend and benevolent academic guide ever after. He too had a real way with words, and I still think his Chronicles of the Vikings is a great place for beginners to start thinking about how we really go about studying the Viking Age. He also produced lucid and accessible books for the general reader on both Norse myths and runes. Ray was quite a polymath: an expert in Old English and Anglo-Saxon studies, Old Norse and Viking studies, manuscripts and librarianship, but his greatest influence was as a runologist and that is what I and many others will most of all remember him for.
Thanks for putting this one up. I was hoping you would!
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You were lucky to have known both of these amazing people Viqueen, and to have had them in your life as a scholar. While Mr. Page was no romantic rune mystic, his outstanding work has influenced many people who while neo-pagan themselves wanted to understand what the runes truly meant for our ancestors, not the "new-age" version of the runes. It was his book "Runes" that I sought out many years ago to educate myself on what the runes meant, and how they were used. Hail to them both!
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