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Kalevala: The Epic of the Finnish People (Penguin Classics) Paperback – June 1, 2021
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Sharing its title with the poetic name for Finland--"the land of heroes"--Kalevala is the soaring epic poem of the Finnish people. Born of an ancient tradition of folklore and song, Kalevala is a work rich in magic, cosmic mystery and myth, presenting a story of a people through the ages, from the dawn of creation. Sung by rural Finns since prehistoric times, and formally compiled by Elias Lönnrot in the nineteenth century, it is a landmark of Finnish culture and it played a vital role in galvanizing Finland's national identity in the decades leading up to independence. And yet its tales of tragedy and triumph, adventure and ambition, hope, lust, death and birth, reach far beyond the region's borders, searching the heart of human existence.
- Print length640 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPenguin Classics
- Publication dateJune 1, 2021
- Dimensions5.05 x 1.1 x 7.75 inches
- ISBN-100241403065
- ISBN-13978-0241403068
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"One of the great mythic poems of Europe." ― New York Times
"The Kalevala is a fabulous narrative spiced with exotic images and much hilarity." -- Jennifer Cooke, Melbourne Sunday Herald
"The Penguin Classic edition shines a light not just on the Finnish epic but also on Friberg’s extraordinary translational vision, which foregrounds the oral dimensions of the poem." -- Medium.com
"The republication of this translation, which has been out of print for decades, will hopefully shine a light not just on the Finnish epic but also on Friberg’s extraordinary translational vision, which foregrounds the oral dimensions of the poem." -- Rebecca Ruth Gold, Poetry Magazine
About the Author
Eino Friberg (1901-995) was a Finnish-born American author, noted for his 1989 translation the Kalevala.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Creation and the Birthof Väinämöinen
Prelude
I am wanting, I am thinking
To arise and go forth singing,
Sing my songs and say my sayings,
Hymns ancestral harmonizing,
Lore of kindred lyricking.
In my mouth the words are melting;
Utterances overflowing
To my tongue are hurrying,
Even against my teeth they burst.
Come good brother, little brother,
Pretty playmate of my childhood,
Start now with me for the singing
Sit together for the speaking,
Now that we have met together,
After separate pathways travelled;
Seldom do we come together,
Rarely do we have each other
In these ragged border regions,
These benighted northern marches.
Strike we now hand into hand,
Fingers into curve of fingers,
So that we may sing good songs,
Voice the best of all our legends
For the hearing of our loved ones,
Those who want to learn them from us,
Those among the rising young ones
Of the growing generation.
Magic verses we have gathered,
Kindled by the inspiration
From the belt of Väinämöinen,
Under forge of Ilmarinen,
Sword blade of the man far- minded,
Aim of Joukahainen’s crossbow,
From the way- back fields of Northland,
From the heaths of Kalevala.
Long ago my father sang them
As he carved his ax’s handle
And my mother also taught me
Though she kept her spindle spinning,
As I, milk- bearded mischief maker,
Clabber- mouthed and tiny tumbler,
Rolled about the floor before her:
Magic never failed the Sampo,
Louhi never lacked for spells;
Old in story grew the Sampo,
In her spells old Louhi vanished,
In his singing Vipunen,
Lemminkäinen in his capers
There are other words of magic,
Incantations I have learned,
Plucked in passing from the wayside,
Some I broke off from the heather,
Some I gathered from the bushes,
Others pulled from tender saplings,
Rubbed from haytips, snatched from hedges
Where I roamed about the cowpaths
As a youngster herding cattle,
Minding cows in cattle pastures
On honeyed hills and hillocks golden
By the side of spotted Frisky,
Trailing Muurikki, the black one.
Then the frost was singing verses,
Many a rhyme the rain recited,
Other poems the winds delivered,
On the seawaves songs came drifting,
Magic charms the birds have added
And the treetops incantations.
These I rolled up in a ball,
Made a fitting yarnball of them,
On my sled I put the yarnball,
On my sleigh I hauled it home
Right up to the threshing barn,
Hid it in a copper casket
On a shelf- end in the storehouse.
Long and lone in the darkness,
In the cold my verses lie.
Shall I take my verses out,
Save my songs from freezing weather,
Bring the casket to the cottage,
Set it on the bench- end there
Underneath this famous rooftree
And beneath this splendid ceiling?
Shall I open up the casket,
Treasure box of magic sayings,
Snip the end off from the yarnball
And undo the knot entirely?
I will sing a good song for you
And I’ll make it beautiful:
Do it on a rye bread diet,
Wash it down with barley beer.
If it chance no beer is brought me,
No drink offered to the singer,
From a leaner mouth I’ll warble,
Sing along on water only
To make this evening’s joy more joyful
Honoring this famous day,
Or tomorrow’s joy it may be–
With the dawn the new day opens.
. . . . . . . . . .
Thus I heard the poems recited,
Learned how verses were composed.
Lonely come the nights upon us,
Kalevala
Lonely dawn the brightening days;
Lonely born was Väinämöinen,
All alone, the poet immortal,
From the beautiful who bore him,
From his mother, Ilmatar–
She, the virgin of the air,
Beautiful maiden, Nature’s child,
Long maintained in holiness
Her eternal maidenhood
In the far- horizoned heavens,
Level meadows of the air.
But in time she wearied of it,
Was estranged from this odd living,
Always being by herself,
Ever living as a virgin
In those far- horizoned heavens,
In those vast and empty spaces.
So at length she then descended
To the seawaves down below,
To the open clear sea surface
Out upon the open ocean.
Suddenly a storm wind blew,
Out of the east an angry blast
Blew the water to a foam
Heaving up the rollers high.
By the wind the maid was rocked,
On a wave the maid was driven
Round about the blue sea surface
By the whirling whitecaps lifted
Where her womb the wind awakened
And the sea- foam impregnated.
Thus a full womb now she carried,
Long she bore her burdened belly,
Seven hundred years she bore it
For nine lifetimes of a man,
Yet the borning was unborn,
Still the fetus undelivered.
As the mother of the water
Aimlessly the virgin drifted:
She swam eastward, she swam westward,
She swam south and northwestward,
Swimming round the whole horizon
In the anguish of her birth pangs,
In her belly’s bursting pains.
Yet the borning was unborn,
Still the fetus undelivered.
Then she fell to weeping softly,
Said a word and spoke out thus:
“Woe is me, the water wanderer,
Luckless girl, misfortune’s child!
Now already I’m in trouble,
Shelterless beneath the sky,
Ever rocking on the seawaves
To be cradled by the wind,
To be driven by the billows
On these far- extending waters,
Endlessly repeated billows.
“Better had it been for me
To have stayed the airy virgin
Than to be as I am now
Drifting as the water- mother.
It’s too cold for me to stay here,
Painful to be drifting here,
Wallowing in this watery waste.
“O thou Ukko, lord of all,
Hear me, thou the all- sustainer:
Come, O come where thou art needed;
Come, O come where thou art called!
Loose the maiden from her misery
And the woman from her womb- ache;
Come thou quickly, soon arriving
Where thy help is sooner needed.”
Then a bit of time passed over
Like a tiny rash of rain,
When a scaup, the honest bird,
Came on hovering here and there
Searching for a nesting place,
For a spot to build her home on.
She flew eastward, she flew westward,
Flew to northwest and to southward
But she cannot find a spot
Even in the worst of places
Where to build her needful nest,
Where to take up her abode.
Hovering, fluttering back and forth
Thus she thought and pondered it:
“Must I make my home on wind,
Build my hut upon the billows
Where the wind can blow it over
Or a wave can wash away?”
So the mother of the water,
Water mother, airy maiden,
Raised her knee above the surface
And her shoulder from the wave
As a refuge for the scaup
And a welcome nesting place.
Then that scaup, the lovely bird,
Fluttering round and hovering over
Spied the water- mother’s knee
Lifted from the sea’s blue surface;
Took it for a grassy tussock
Or a tuft of new- grown turf.
Flies about, flitting here and there,
Settles on the lifted kneecap.
It is there she builds her nest,
There she laid her golden eggs–
Six were the golden eggs she laid,
But the seventh was of iron.
She began to hatch the eggs there,
Heating up the lifted kneecap;
Brooded one day, brooded two days,
Even on the third day brooding.
Then the mother of the water,
Little mother, airy maiden,
Felt the rising heat upon her,
Felt as if her skin were scorching,
Thought her kneecap was on fire,
That her very veins were melting.
All at once she jerked her knee,
Agitating every member,
And the eggs rolled in the water
To the tumbling of the tides;
Into bits the eggs were broken,
Shattered into crumbs and pieces.
But the eggs and pieces were not
Mixed up with the mud and water
For at once the crumbs grew comely
And the pieces beautiful.
One egg’s lower half transformed
And became the earth below,
And its upper half transmuted
And became the sky above;
From the yolk the sun was made,
Light of day to shine upon us;
From the white the moon was formed,
Light of night to gleam above us;
All the colored brighter bits
Rose to be the stars of heaven
And the darker crumbs changed into
Clouds and cloudlets in the sky.
Quickly now the time goes forward
As the hurrying years pass by
While the newborn sun is shining
And the newborn moon is gleaming.
Still the mother goes on swimming,
Water mother, airy maiden,
Swimming on those peaceful waters
Over misty seawaves wandering.
Before her flowed the liquid deep,
Behind her shone the empty heaven.
In the ninth year, tenth of summers,
Raised her head out of the sea,
Lifts her crown above the water;
Set to work on her creations,
Hastens on her handiwork,
Out upon the clear sea surface,
Out upon the open ocean.
Where she gave her hand a turn
There she put the capes in order;
Where her foot struck bottom,
there Grottoes for the fish were formed;
Where the bubbles reached the surface
There the deeps were made still deeper.
Where her side had scraped the land
There the level shores appeared;
Where she turned her foot to landward
There the salmon grounds were formed,
And wherever her head touched land
There the broad bays opened out.
Swimming farther out from shore
She halted on the smooth sea surface
Where she made the little islands.
Then she raised the hidden reefs
Where the grounded ships would founder,
Many a seaman lose his life.
Now the islands were in order
And the small isles of the sea;
Pillars for the sky were planted,
Lands and continents created;
On the rocks the writs were written
And the signs drawn on the cliffs.
Yet Väinämöinen is unborn,
Poet eternal not emerged.
Old reliable Väinämöinen
Traveled in his mother’s womb,
Traveled there for thirty summers
And as many winters too
On the ocean now so peaceful
In that misty world of water.
He is pondering, he is thinking,
How to live or how survive
In this dismal hiding place,
In this narrowest of dwellings
Where he never saw the moon,
Never got a glimpse of sunlight.
So he speaks out in these words,
Says it in these sentences:
“Free me, Moon, and Sun, release me!
Thou, Great Bear, do ever guide me,
Lead a man here through strange doors,
Through these unfamiliar gates.
Release me from this narrow nest,
From this shut- in dwelling place!
Guide the traveler to the land,
Child of mankind to the open
To behold the moon in heaven
And to wonder at the daylight,
Get to know the Great Bear’s grandeur
Or just to stare up at the stars!”
Since the moon did not arrive
Nor the sun come to release him,
Alienated from his birth time,
Impatient of this dull existence,
He pushed against his prison lock
Pressing with his nameless finger,
Slid the bony bolt aside,
With his left toe opened it;
Scrabbling with his nails he came
Crawling through the exit door.
Headlong in the sea he tumbled
With a hand- turn in the waves.
There the man was left alone
In the rough care of the billows.
There he floated for five years,
Six, seven, even eight years,
Stopped at last upon the surface
There beside a nameless headland,
On a treeless continent.
Struggling up with knee and elbow
He stood up to see the world:
To behold the moon in heaven
And to wonder at the daylight,
Get to know the Great Bear’s grandeur
Or just to stare up at the stars.
That was the birth of Väinämöinen.
Such the daring poet’s descent
From the beautiful who bore him,
From his mother, Ilmatar.
Product details
- Publisher : Penguin Classics (June 1, 2021)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 640 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0241403065
- ISBN-13 : 978-0241403068
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.05 x 1.1 x 7.75 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #62,345 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #9 in Norse & Icelandic Sagas (Books)
- #82 in Epic Poetry (Books)
- #1,058 in Folklore (Books)
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This version of The Kalevala was translated from Lönnrot's original Finnish by Eino Friberg, published in 1989. This is the first translation done by a native Finnish speaker. It is apparent from the poetry that Friberg is a master, who appreciates the nuances of both Finnish and English. Perhaps this stems from his lifelong blindness, granting him a higher level of appreciation for the sound and feeling of the words.
Poetically, this version remains very close to the original text. It uses the same trochaic tetrameter as the original (DUM-da DUM-da DUM-da DUM-da), which is a very impressive feat, considering that the English poetic tradition is largely iambic. I found it slightly awkward at first, however, once I got used to the meter, it became very readable. I enjoyed reading some sections aloud, as Friberg's poetry really captures the feeling of an ancient mythological chant.
There are a few other translations of The Kalevala available for free online, most commonly Kirby (1907) and Crawford (1888). In comparison, both of those are extremely clunky, awkward, and difficult to read. They sacrifice the poetry for the sake of the narrative. Friberg avoids these pitfalls, and has created a work that preserves both the original text's aspects of poetic beauty and epic story.
It is definitely worth $20 to read this translation of The Kalevala, and I thoroughly enjoyed the experience of reading it. This printing is the same high quality level as other Penguin Classics products, so I can't think of any negatives. If you are interested in Finnish Culture, or just world mythology in general, this is the best version of the Kalevala hands down.
I have barely started reading but the quality of the historical sense, which is mentioned in the introduction, is fine but I am going to need a study guide for this one.







