The real vorpal sword?


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I'm not sure how this:

"The Sockburn Worm itself was almost certainly immortalized by Lewis Carroll in his famous nonsense rhyme, "Jabberwocky", as he lived in Croft on Tees as a boy and it was there he wrote the first verse of the rhyme. There's a theory that the legend has its roots in the slaying of some marauding Viking chieftain, who made their raids using dragon-headed longships, but that would be a too mundane an explanation…"

makes that falchion the basis for the vorpal sword... as it appears in that link is rank speculation with no evidence if I've ever seen it. Almost certain, as he lived there and wrote the first verses of the rhyme there... a logical leap of astounding proportions. Kinda goes like Carroll lived in Croft, in Croft there is a story of a Worm and a Falchion, Lewis Carroll would be familiar with the story, therefore Jabberwocky is based on the story of the Worm, therefore the Vorpal sword is based on the falchion . Maybe I'm just a sceptic. Maybe if you could parse Vorpal in some mathematical or code way to mean falchion or Conyers or something... otherwise this article is a reach.

In any case it is interesting peice of local colour and history. And certainly true that Lewis Carroll coined Vorpal Sword in the poem Jabberwocky!!

-E
 



Erratic K said:
I'm not sure how this:
story of a Worm and a Falchion, Lewis Carroll would be familiar with the story, therefore Jabberwocky is based on the story of the Worm, therefore the Vorpal sword is based on the falchion . Maybe I'm just a sceptic. Maybe if E

I think the point is, that even in hoary olde England, there aren't too many major estates which were founded on the basis of a dragon slaying, and of that small number, probably not too many which still had the 800 year old wyrm slaying sword trotted out every few years to ceremmoniously commemorate the event. This sort of thing makes a pretty big impact on a kid growing up in the area, especialy in an era before TV, video games, or D&D.

If all that took place in a small town where you grew up, and you subsequently wrote a famous couplet about a dragon and a sword, I would probably make the same assumption.

Having said all that, when you come right down to it, it is indeed rank speculation.

incidently, cryptozoologists and others have also rankly speculated that the sockburn 'wyrm' may have actually been a particularly large and ferocious (and apparently stinky) wild boar.

There have been documented incidents of individual 'rogue' animals such as wolves and lions eating rather shocking numbers (scores) of people as recently as the 19th century, and we know that some quite mighty and ferocious subspecies of varmints became extinct in Europe only recently, such as the infamous Aurochs.

DB
 
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I, too, am a bit skeptical of the connection (heck, there is one English legend of a knight donning armour with spikes and kicking a dragon to death), but I still find the story amusing, if nothing else :)
 

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