The Three Fates
The Northern goddesses of fate, who
were called Norns, were in nowise subject to the other
gods, who might neither question nor influence their
decrees. They were three sisters, probably descendants
of the giant Norvi, from whom sprang Nott (night).
As soon as the Golden Age was ended, and sin began
to steal even into the heavenly homes of Asgard, the
Norns made their appearance under the great ash Yggdrasil,
and took up their abode near the Urdar fountain.
According to some mythologists, their mission was
to warn the gods of future evil, to bid them make
good use of the present, and to teach them wholesome
lessons from the past.
These three sisters, whose names were
Urd, Verdandi, and Skuld, were personifications of
the past, present, and future. Their principal
occupations were to weave the web of fate, to sprinkle
daily the sacred tree with water from the Urdar fountain,
and to put fresh clay around its roots, that it might
remain fresh and ever green.
“Thence come the maids
Who much do know;
Three from the hall
Beneath the tree;
One they named Was,
And Being next,
The third Shall be.”
The Voeluspa (Henderson’s
tr.).
Some authorities further state that
the Norns kept watch over the golden apples which
hung on the branches of the tree of life, experience,
and knowledge, allowing none but Idun to pick the fruit,
which was that with which the gods renewed their youth.
The Norns also fed and tenderly cared
for two swans which swam over the mirror-like surface
of the Urdar fountain, and from this pair of birds
all the swans on earth are supposed to be descended.
At times, it is said, the Norns clothed themselves
with swan plumage to visit the earth, or sported like
mermaids along the coast and in various lakes and
rivers, appearing to mortals, from time to time, to
foretell the future or give them sage advice.
The Norns’ Web
The Norns sometimes wove webs so large
that while one of the weavers stood on a high mountain
in the extreme east, another waded far out into the
western sea. The threads of their woof resembled
cords, and varied greatly in hue, according to the
nature of the events about to occur, and a black thread,
tending from north to south, was invariably considered
an omen of death. As these sisters flashed the
shuttle to and fro, they chanted a solemn song.
They did not seem to weave according to their own
wishes, but blindly, as if reluctantly executing the
wishes of Orlog, the eternal law of the universe, an
older and superior power, who apparently had neither
beginning nor end.
Two of the Norns, Urd and Verdandi,
were considered to be very beneficent indeed, while
the third, it is said, relentlessly undid their work,
and often, when nearly finished, tore it angrily to
shreds, scattering the remnants to the winds of heaven.
As personifications of time, the Norns were represented
as sisters of different ages and characters, Urd (Wurd,
weird) appearing very old and decrepit, continually
looking backward, as if absorbed in contemplating past
events and people; Verdandi, the second sister, young,
active, and fearless, looked straight before her,
while Skuld, the type of the future, was generally
represented as closely veiled, with head turned in
the direction opposite to where Urd was gazing, and
holding a book or scroll which had not yet been opened
or unrolled.
These Norns were visited daily by
the gods, who loved to consult them; and even Odin
himself frequently rode down to the Urdar fountain
to bespeak their aid, for they generally answered his
questions, maintaining silence only about his own
fate and that of his fellow gods.
“Rode he long and rode
he fast.
First beneath
the great Life Tree,
At the sacred
Spring sought he
Urdar, Norna of the Past;
But her backward seeing eye
Could no knowledge now supply.
Across Verdandi’s page
there fell
Dark shades that ever woes
foretell;
The shadows which ’round
Asgard hung
Their baleful darkness o’er
it flung;
The secret was not written
there
Might save Valhal, the pure
and fair.
Last youngest of the sisters
three,
Skuld, Norna of Futurity,
Implored to speak, stood silent by,
Averted was her tearful eye.”
Valhalla (J. C. Jones).
Other Guardian Spirits
Besides the three principal Norns
there were many others, far less important, who seem
to have been the guardian spirits of mankind, to whom
they frequently appeared, lavishing all manner of gifts
upon their favourites, and seldom failing to be present
at births, marriages, and deaths.
“Oh, manifold is their kindred,
and who shall tell them all?
There are they that rule o’er men folk,
and the stars that rise
and fall.”
Sigurd the Volsung (William
Morris).
The Story of Nornagesta
On one occasion the three sisters
visited Denmark, and entered the dwelling of a nobleman
as his first child came into the world. Entering
the apartment where the mother lay, the first Norn
promised that the child should be handsome and brave,
and the second that he should be prosperous and a
great scald predictions which filled the
parents’ hearts with joy. Meantime news
of what was taking place had gone abroad, and the
neighbours came thronging the apartment to such a
degree that the pressure of the curious crowd caused
the third Norn to be pushed rudely from her chair.
Angry at this insult, Skuld proudly
rose and declared that her sister’s gifts should
be of no avail, since she would decree that the child
should live only as long as the taper then burning
near the bedside. These ominous words filled
the mother’s heart with terror, and she tremblingly
clasped her babe closer to her breast, for the taper
was nearly burned out and its extinction could not
be very long delayed. The eldest Norn, however,
had no intention of seeing her prediction thus set
at naught; but as she could not force her sister to
retract her words, she quickly seized the taper, put
out the light, and giving the smoking stump to the
child’s mother, bade her carefully treasure
it, and never light it again until her son was weary
of life.
“In the mansion it was night:
The Norns came,
Who should the prince’s
Life determine.”
Saemund’s Edda (Thorpe’s
tr.).
The boy was named Nornagesta, in honour
of the Norns, and grew up to be as beautiful, brave,
and talented as any mother could wish. When he
was old enough to comprehend the gravity of the trust
his mother told him the story of the Norns’
visit, and placed in his hands the candle end, which
he treasured for many a year, placing it for safe-keeping
inside the frame of his harp. When his parents
were dead, Nornagesta wandered from place to place,
taking part and distinguishing himself in every battle,
singing his heroic lays wherever he went. As he
was of an enthusiastic and poetic temperament, he did
not soon weary of life, and while other heroes grew
wrinkled and old, he remained young at heart and vigorous
in frame. He therefore witnessed the stirring
deeds of the heroic ages, was the boon companion of
the ancient warriors, and after living three hundred
years, saw the belief in the old heathen gods gradually
supplanted by the teachings of Christian missionaries.
Finally Nornagesta came to the court of King Olaf
Tryggvesson, who, according to his usual custom, converted
him almost by force, and compelled him to receive baptism.
Then, wishing to convince his people that the time
for superstition was past, the king forced the aged
scald to produce and light the taper which he had
so carefully guarded for more than three centuries.
In spite of his recent conversion,
Nornagesta anxiously watched the flame as it flickered,
and when, finally, it went out, he sank lifeless to
the ground, thus proving that in spite of the baptism
just received, he still believed in the prediction
of the Norns.
In the middle ages, and even later,
the Norns figure in many a story or myth, appearing
as fairies or witches, as, for instance, in the tale
of “the Sleeping Beauty,” and Shakespeare’s
tragedy of Macbeth.
“1st
Witch. When shall we three meet again,
In
thunder, lightning, or in rain?
2nd Witch.
When the hurlyburly’s done,
When
the battle’s lost and won:
3rd Witch.
That will be ere the set of sun.”
Macbeth (Shakespeare).
The Vala
Sometimes the Norns bore the name
of Vala, or prophétesses, for they had the power
of divination a power which was held in
great honour by all the Northern races, who believed
that it was restricted to the female sex. The
predictions of the Vala were never questioned, and
it is said that the Roman general Drusus was so terrified
by the appearance of Veleda, one of these prophétesses,
who warned him not to cross the Elbe, that he actually
beat a retreat. She foretold his approaching
death, which indeed happened shortly after through
a fall from his steed.
These prophétesses, who
were also known as Idises, Dises, or Hagedises, officiated
at the forest shrines and in the sacred groves, and
always accompanied invading armies. Riding ahead,
or in the midst of the host, they would vehemently
urge the warriors on to victory, and when the battle
was over they would often cut the bloody-eagle upon
the bodies of the captives. The blood was collected
into great tubs, wherein the Dises plunged their naked
arms up to the shoulders, previous to joining in the
wild dance with which the ceremony ended.
It is not to be wondered at that these
women were greatly feared. Sacrifices were offered
to propitiate them, and it was only in later times
that they were degraded to the rank of witches, and
sent to join the demon host on the Brocken, or Blocksberg,
on Valpurgisnacht.
Besides the Norns or Dises, who were
also regarded as protective deities, the Northmen
ascribed to each human being a guardian spirit named
Fylgie, which attended him through life, either in
human or brute shape, and was invisible except at
the moment of death by all except the initiated few.
The allegorical meaning of the Norns
and of their web of fate is too patent to need explanation;
still some mythologists have made them demons of the
air, and state that their web was the woof of clouds,
and that the bands of mists which they strung from
rock to tree, and from mountain to mountain, were
ruthlessly torn apart by the suddenly rising wind.
Some authorities, moreover, declare that Skuld, the
third Norn, was at times a Valkyr, and at others personated
the goddess of death, the terrible Hel.