Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
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kæʃməx wuor jeːri | middle lozva mansi (LM) | Pershä, Michail Grigorich | poetry/song (poe) | Bear Songs (bes) | 1381 | by Eichinger, Viktoria | – |
Text Source | Editor | Collector |
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Munkácsi, Bernát (1893): Vogul népköltési gyüjtemény. In: III. kötet. Medveénekek. Elsö füzet. Vogul szövegek és fordításaik. Budapest: Magyar tudományos akadémia, 344-357. | Munkácsi, Bernát; Kálmán, Béla | Munkácsi, Bernát (MU) |
English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
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"Song of Kæʃməx Forest" | – | – | – |
Citation |
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Munkácsi, Bernát 1893: OUDB Middle Lozva Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1381. Ed. by Eichinger, Viktória. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1381 (Accessed on 2024-11-25) |
kæʃməx wuor jeːri (glossed version) |
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1 |
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Song of Kæʃməx Forest. |
2 |
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I emerge at the opening of the golden smoke hole. |
3 |
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I emerge at the seven golden smoke holes, |
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here and there are patches of snow. |
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I left with three bear strides. |
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I went for a long time or a short time, |
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I went up the side of a high, high mountain. |
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I gaze upon the seven circles of the revolving sky. |
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My high forest where I lay for three winters, |
10 |
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my Ɔwəs Forest catches my eye. |
11 |
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My forest bearing tender boys and tender girls, |
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my forest bringing forth tender boys and tender girls, |
13 |
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my Ɔwəs Forest catches my eye. |
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My right eye |
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is watering. |
16 |
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What am I doing here, |
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has my last summer come? |
18 |
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I wipe it away with my right front paw. |
19 |
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I went for a long time or for a short time, |
20 |
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I come to a rushy moor, |
21 |
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I come to a beautiful bulrushy moor. |
22 |
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I look to the water, |
23 |
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seven cranes, a flock of cranes |
24 |
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are standing down at the water, |
25 |
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seven elk bulls, a herd of elk bulls |
26 |
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are pawing at the water. |
27 |
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I conceal myself behind sheltering grass, |
28 |
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I conceal myself behind a sheltering tree. |
29 |
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I spring forward at them with three bear jumps, |
30 |
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I let loose with the large voice of a bear attacking. |
31 |
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The herd of seven elk bulls |
32 |
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took flight, |
33 |
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the seven cranes, the flock of cranes |
34 |
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took wing. |
35 |
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I asked for an oracle, |
36 |
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If you know whether I am to continue living, |
37 |
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[seven cranes] [cranes with young] |
38 |
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[your crane head] |
39 |
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pull your crane head of seven cranes, of cranes with young to the south. |
40 |
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If my last summer has come, |
41 |
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[seven cranes] [cranes with young] |
42 |
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[your crane head] |
43 |
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pull your crane head of seven cranes, of cranes with young to the north. |
44 |
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[tender crane young born this summer] |
45 |
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[its crane head] |
46 |
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It pulls its crane head of tender crane young born this summer to the north. |
47 |
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You accursed thing! |
48 |
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If I were only able to get my hands on you, |
49 |
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how I would tear you apart to bits of a cap, to bits of a mitten. |
50 |
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I find no pieces of grass to eat, |
51 |
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I find no twigs to eat. |
52 |
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I went for a long time, suddenly |
53 |
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my jay-aunt |
54 |
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[cone one span long] |
55 |
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comes flying with a cone one span long. |
56 |
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I clap my two bear front-paws together, |
57 |
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I let loose with the large voice of an attacking bear. |
58 |
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She drops the cone one span long, |
59 |
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she flies off further, she alights there, |
60 |
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she muttered something there, |
61 |
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she said something there. |
62 |
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For a full week of the waxing moon |
63 |
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[this span-long cone] |
64 |
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I search for this span-long cone, I find it, |
65 |
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I stuff it into my ten-fanged gapped mouth, |
66 |
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I put on weight there a leaf thick. |
67 |
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My jay-aunt |
68 |
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had not long since murmured good things. |
69 |
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I heard, she said: |
70 |
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[cone-growing forest] |
71 |
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Do you not hear, do you not see a cone-growing forest? |
72 |
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[cone-bearing cone-forest] |
73 |
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The Kæʃməx Forest is a cone-bearing cone-forest. |
74 |
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I, too, know the Kæʃməx Forest, |
75 |
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I took off. |
76 |
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I come to the edge of a dense pine forest, |
77 |
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half cones, cone pieces lie about. |
78 |
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I gather the half cones, the cone pieces. |
79 |
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Going about like that, I look up, |
80 |
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cone-growing cone-pines, |
81 |
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cones a span long, |
82 |
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stand there. |
83 |
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Like my aunt, the she-ermine |
84 |
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I climb up, I clamber up, |
85 |
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[cone-growing cone-pine] |
86 |
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I strike down the cones of the cone-growing cone-pine. |
87 |
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My two neck-collared cub-sons |
88 |
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are squabbling. |
89 |
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One says, this cone was thrown down to me, |
90 |
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the other says, this cone was thrown down to me. |
91 |
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The one says, if it was thrown down to you, |
92 |
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[man rich in sustenance] |
93 |
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may I be struck down by the feathered arrow at the bottom of the quiver of the man rich in sustenance, |
94 |
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and if it was thrown to me, |
95 |
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[man rich in sustenance] |
96 |
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may you be struck down by the feathered arrow at the bottom of the quiver of the man rich in sustenance. |
97 |
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I climb down. |
98 |
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With my two ten-fingered paws |
99 |
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I cuff their ears. |
100 |
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Accursed ones! |
101 |
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[devil content on his own] |
102 |
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Why do you touch upon the devil not bothering us? |
103 |
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[devil content on his own] |
104 |
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Why do you stir up the devil not bothering us? |
105 |
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I look up: the cone-branch bearing cones |
106 |
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is still there, it has remained. |
107 |
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[like my aunt the she-ermine] |
108 |
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I climb up like my aunt the she-ermine. |
109 |
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[cone-branch bearing cones] |
110 |
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I strike the cone-branch bearing cones, it doesn't snap. |
111 |
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Again I stirke it, it snaps, |
112 |
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My two ten-fingered paws slip off, |
113 |
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[in the middle of my three-part breast] |
114 |
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then I am pierced in the middle of my three-part breast. |
115 |
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I am blown at there by the north wind of the north, |
116 |
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I am blown at there by the south wind of the south, |
117 |
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[rich man's daughter] [from her father's attic] |
118 |
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[beautiful birch-bark vessel] [given from home as dowry] |
119 |
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I am blown at (like) the beautiful birch-bark vessel in which the rich man's daughter (keeps) the bridewealth brought from home, from her father's attic. |
120 |
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[poor man's daughter] [from her mother's attic] |
121 |
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[treasure given from home as a dowry] [beautiful birch-bark vessel] |
122 |
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I am blown at (like) the beautiful birch-bark vessel in which the poor man's daughter (keeps) the treasure brought from home, from her mother's attic as dowry. |
123 |
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[youngest son of the old man] |
124 |
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[cone-bearing cone forest] |
125 |
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I turn the thoughts of the youngest son of the old man towards the cone-bearing cone forest. |
126 |
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The youngest son of the old man |
127 |
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[in that cone-bearing cone forest] |
128 |
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comes to me, finds me in that cone-bearing cone forest. |
129 |
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I, the beautiful, beautiful birch-bark vessel with bridewealth am dropped down there, |
130 |
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I, the beautiful, beautiful birch-bark vessel with food, am dropped down there. |
131 |
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The youngest son of the old man |
132 |
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makes a willow framed knapsack. |
133 |
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I am bound to the willow-framed knapsack, |
134 |
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I am shouldered there by the handsome son of my lady. |
135 |
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[my lady's handsome son] |
136 |
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I was carried by my lady's handsome son for a long time or a short time, |
137 |
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Suddenly we arrive at the village edge where girls shriek. |
138 |
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The handsome son of my master |
139 |
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emits a thin cry of one with little to eat. |
140 |
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Many young [n.n.]-handed women are there. |
141 |
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[male squirrel swimming in the water] |
142 |
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We got drenched like a male squirrel swimming in the water. |
143 |
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The handsome son of my lady |
144 |
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[to the beautiful house built by himself] |
145 |
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brings me to the beautiful house built by himself. |
146 |
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[braided-hair woman] [made] |
147 |
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[pitch wood] [sooty house] |
148 |
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They bring me into the house made sooty by the braided-hair woman lighting pitch wood fires. |
149 |
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[three days and nights] |
150 |
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[for the length] |
151 |
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[in a good nest of smooth cloth] |
152 |
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I sat for the length of three days and nights in a good nest of smooth cloth. |
153 |
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I looked through fine pieces of silver coin. |
154 |
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[abundant bowl of foal's fat] |
155 |
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[five days and nights] |
156 |
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For the length of five days and nights I was shown an abundant bowl of foal's fat. |
157 |
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Beautiful games with hands askew |
158 |
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were performed for me. |
159 |
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[beautiful games with feet askew] |
160 |
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I saw there beautiful games with feet askew. |