The Teutonic and Scandinavian Religion.
Se. The Land and the Race.
The great Teutonic or German division
of the Indo-European family entered Europe subsequently
to the Keltic tribes, and before the Slavic immigration.
This people overspread and occupied a large part of
Northern Central Europe, from which the attempts of
the Romans to dispossess them proved futile.
Of their early history we know very little. Bishop
Percy contrasts their love of making records, as shown
by the Runic inscriptions, with the Keltic law of
secrecy. The Druids forbade any communication
of their mysteries by writing; but the German Scalds
put all their belief into popular songs, and reverenced
literature as a gift of the gods. Yet we have
received very little information concerning these
tribes before the days of Cæsar and Tacitus.
Cæsar describes them as warlike, huge in stature;
having reverence for women, who were their augurs
and diviners; worshipping the Sun, the Moon, and Fire;
having no regular priests, and paying little regard
to sacrifices. He says that they occupied their
lives in hunting and war, devoting themselves from
childhood to severe labors. They reverenced chastity,
and considered it as conducive to health and strength.
They were rather a pastoral than agricultural people;
no one owning land, but each having it assigned to
him temporarily. The object of this provision
was said to be to prevent accumulation of wealth and
the loss of warlike habits. They fought with
cavalry supported by infantry. In the time of
Augustus all attempts at conquering Germany were relinquished,
and war was maintained only in the hope of revenging
the destruction of Varus and his three legions by the
famous German chief Arminius, or Herrman.
Tacitus freely admits that the Germans
were as warlike as the Romans, and were only inferior
in weapons and discipline. He pays a generous
tribute to Arminius, whom he declares to have been
“beyond all question the liberator of Germany,”
dying at thirty-seven, unconquered in war. Tacitus
quotes from some ancient German ballads or hymns ("the
only historic monuments,” says he, “that
they possess”) the names of Tuisto, a god born
from the earth, and Mannus, his son. Tacitus
was much struck with the physical characteristics
of the race, as being so uniform. There was a
family likeness, he says, among them all,-stern
blue eyes, yellow hair, large bodies. Their wealth
was in their flocks and herds. “Gold and
silver are kept from them by the anger, or perhaps
by the favor, of Heaven.” Their rulers
were elective, and their power was limited. Their
judges were the priests. They saw something divine
in woman, and her judgments were accepted as oracles.
Such women as Veleda and Aurinia were reverenced as
prophets; “but not adored or made into goddesses,”
says Tacitus, with a side-glance at some events at
home. Their gods, Tacitus chooses to call Mercury,
Hercules, and Mars; but he distinctly says that the
Germans had neither idols nor temples, but worshipped
in sacred groves. He also says that the
Germans divined future events by pieces of sticks,
by the duel, and by the movements of sacred horses.
Their leaders might decide the less important matters,
but the principal questions were settled at public
meetings. These assemblies were held at regular
intervals, were opened by the priest, were presided
over by the chief, and decided all public affairs.
Tacitus remarks that the spirit of liberty goes to
such an extreme among the Germans as to destroy regularity
and order. They will not be punctual at their
meetings, lest it should seem as if they attended
because commanded to come. Marriage was sacred,
and, unlike other heathen nations, they were contented
with one wife. They were affectionate and constant
to the marriage vow, which meant to the pure German
woman one husband, one life, one body, and one soul.
The ancient Germans, like their modern descendants,
drank beer and Rhenish wine, and were divided into
numerous tribes, who afterward reappeared for the destruction
of the Roman Empire, as the Goths, Vandals, Lombards,
and Franks.
The Scandinavians were a branch of
the great German family. Their language, the
old Norse, was distinguished from the Alemannic, or
High German tongue, and from the Saxonic, or Low German
tongue. From the Norse have been derived the
languages of Iceland, of the Ferroe Isles, of Norway,
Sweden, and Denmark. From the Germanic branch
have come German, Dutch, Anglo-Saxon, Maeso-Gothic,
and English. It was in Scandinavia that the Teutonic
race developed its special civilization and religion.
Cut off from the rest of the world by stormy seas,
the people could there unfold their ideas, and become
themselves. It is therefore to Scandinavia that
we must go to study the German religion, and to find
the influence exercised on modern civilization and
the present character of Europe. This influence
has been freely acknowledged by great historians.
Montesquieu says:-
“The great prerogative of Scandinavia
is, that it afforded the great resource to the
liberty of Europe, that is, to almost all of liberty
there is among men. The Goth Jornandes calls
the North of Europe the forge of mankind.
I would rather call it the forge of those instruments
which broke the fetters manufactured in the South.”
Geijer, in his Swedish History, tells us:-
“The recollections which Scandinavia
has to add to those of the Germanic race are yet
the most antique in character and comparatively the
most original. They offer the completest remaining
example of a social state existing previously to
the reception of influences from Rome, and in duration
stretching onward so as to come within the sphere
of historical light.”
We do not know how much of those old
Northern ideas may be still mingled with our ways
of thought. The names of their gods we retain
in those of our weekdays,-Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday, and Friday. Their popular assemblies,
or Things, were the origin of our Parliament, our Congress,
and our general assemblies. If from the South
came the romantic admiration of woman, from the North
came a better respect for her rights and the sense
of her equality. Our trial by jury was immediately
derived from Scandinavia; and, according to Montesquieu,
as we have seen, we owe to the North, as the greatest
inheritance of all, that desire for freedom which
is so chief an element in Christian civilization.
Scandinavia proper consists of those
regions now occupied by the kingdoms of Denmark, Sweden,
and Norway. The geographical peculiarity of this
country is its proximity everywhere to the sea, and
the great extent of its coast line. The great
peninsula of Sweden and Norway, with the Northern
Ocean on its west, the Baltic and Gulf of Bothnia on
its east, penetrated everywhere by creeks, friths,
and arms of the sea, surrounded with innumerable islands,
studded with lakes, and cleft with rivers, is also
unrivalled, except by Switzerland, in the sublime and
picturesque beauty of its mountains. The other
peninsula, that of Denmark, surrounded and penetrated
also everywhere by the sea, differs in being almost
level; rising nowhere, at its highest point, more
than a thousand feet above the ocean. Containing
an area of only twenty-two thousand square miles, it
is so penetrated with bays and creeks as to have four
thousand miles of coast. Like the northern peninsula,
it is also surrounded with a multitude of islands,
which are so crowded together, especially on its eastern
coast, as to make an archipelago. It is impossible
to look at the map of Europe, and not be struck with
the resemblance in these particulars between its northern
and southern geography. The Baltic Sea is the
Mediterranean of Northern Europe. The peninsula
of Denmark, with its multitudinous bays and islands,
corresponds to Greece, the Morea, and its archipelago.
We have shown in our chapter on Greece that modern
geography teaches that the extent of coast line, when
compared with the superficial area of a country, is
one of the essential conditions of civilization.
Who can fail to see the hand of Providence in the
adaptation of races to the countries they are to inhabit?
The great tide of human life, flowing westward from
Central Asia, was divided into currents by the Caspian
and Black Seas, and by the lofty range of mountains
which, under the name of the Caucasus, Carpathian
Mountains, and Alps, extends almost in an unbroken
line from the western coast of the Caspian to the northern
limits of Germany. The Teutonic races, Germans,
Saxons, Franks, and Northmen, were thus determined
to the north, and spread themselves along the coast
and peninsulas of the Northern Mediterranean.
The other branch of the great Indo-European variety
was distributed through Syria, Asia Minor, Greece,
Southern France, Italy, and Spain. Each of these
vast European families, stimulated to mental and moral
activity by its proximity to water, developed its
own peculiar forms of national character, which were
afterwards united in modern European society.
The North developed individual freedom, the South
social organization. The North gave force, the
South culture. From Southern Europe came literature,
philosophy, laws, arts; from the North, that respect
for individual rights, that sense of personal dignity,
that energy of the single soul, which is the essential
equipoise of a high social culture. These two
elements, of freedom and civilization, always antagonist,
have been in most ages hostile. The individual
freedom of the North has been equivalent to barbarism,
and from time to time has rolled down a destroying
deluge over the South, almost sweeping away its civilization,
and overwhelming in a common ruin arts, literature,
and laws. On the other hand, civilization at the
South has passed into luxury, has produced effeminacy,
till individual freedom has been lost under grinding
despotism. But in modern civilization a third
element has been added, which has brought these two
powers of Northern freedom and Southern culture into
equipoise and harmony. This new element is Christianity,
which develops, at the same time, the sense of personal
responsibility, by teaching the individual destiny
and worth of every soul, and also the mutual dependence
and interlacing brotherhood of all human society.
This Christian element in modern civilization saves
it from the double danger of a relapse into barbarism
on the one hand, and a too refined luxury on the other.
The nations of Europe, to-day, which are the most
advanced in civilization, literature, and art, are
also the most deeply pervaded with the love of freedom;
and the most civilized nations on the globe, instead
of being the most effeminate, are also the most powerful.
The Scandinavian people, destined
to play so important a part in the history of the
world, were, as we have said, a branch of the great
Indo-European variety. We have seen that modern
ethnology teaches that all the races which inhabit
Europe, with some trifling exceptions, belong to one
family, which originated in Central Asia. This
has appeared and is proved by means of glossology,
or the science of language. The closest resemblance
exists between the seven linguistic families of Hindostan,
Persia, Greece, Rome, Germany, the Kelts, and the Slavi;
and it is a most striking fact of human history, that
from the earliest period of recorded time down to
the present day a powerful people, speaking a language
belonging to one or other of these races, should have
in a great measure swayed the destinies of the world.
Before the birth of Christ the peninsula
of Denmark was called by the Romans the Cimbric Chersonesus,
or Cimbric peninsula. This name came from the
Cimbri, a people who, one hundred and eleven years
before Christ, almost overthrew the Roman Republic,
exciting more terror than any event since the days
of Hannibal. More than three hundred thousand
men, issuing from the peninsula of Denmark and the
adjacent regions, poured like a torrent over Gaul
and Southern Germany. They met and overthrew in
succession four Roman armies; until, finally, they
were conquered by the military skill and genius of
Marius. After this eruption was checked, the
great northern volcano slumbered for centuries.
Other tribes from Asia-Goths, Vandals,
Huns-combined in the overthrow of the Roman
Empire. At last the inhabitants of Scandinavia
appear again under the name of Northmen, invading
and conquering England in the fifth century as Saxons,
in the ninth century as Danes, and in the eleventh
as Normans again overrunning England and France.
But the peculiarity of the Scandinavian invasions
was their maritime character. Daring and skilful
navigators, they encountered the tempests of the Northern
Ocean and the heavy roll of the Atlantic in vessels
so small and slight that they floated like eggshells
on the surface of the waves, and ran up the rivers
of France and England, hundreds of miles, without
check from shallows or rocks. In these fragile
barks they made also the most extraordinary maritime
discoveries. The sea-kings of Norway discovered
Iceland, and settled it A.D. 860 and A.D. 874.
They discovered and settled Greenland A.D. 982 and
A.D. 986. On the western coast of Greenland they
planted colonies, where churches were built, and diocesan
bishoprics established, which lasted between four and
five hundred years. Finally, in A.D. 1000, they
discovered, by sailing from Greenland, the coast of
Labrador, Nova Scotia, and Massachusetts Bay; and,
five hundred years before the discovery of Columbus,
gathered grapes and built houses on the southern side
of Cape Cod. These facts, long considered mythical,
have been established, to the satisfaction of European
scholars, by the publication of Icelandic contemporaneous
annals. This remarkable people have furnished
nearly the whole population of England by means of
the successive conquests of Saxon, Danes, and Normans,
driving the Keltic races into the mountainous regions
of Wales and North Scotland, where their descendants
still remain. Colonizing themselves also everywhere
in Northern Europe, and even in Italy and Greece, they
have left the familiar stamp of their ideas and habits
in all our modern civilization.
Se. Idea of the Scandinavian Religion.
The central idea of the Scandinavian
belief was the free struggle of soul against material
obstacles, the freedom of the Divine will in its conflict
with the opposing forces of nature. The gods of
the Scandinavians were always at war. It was
a system of dualism, in which sunshine, summer, and
growth were waging perpetual battle with storm, snow,
winter, ocean, and terrestrial fire. As the gods,
so the people. War was their business, courage
their duty, fortitude their virtue. The conflict
of life with death, of freedom with fate, of choice
with necessity, of good with evil, made up their history
and destiny.
This conflict in the natural world
was especially apparent in the struggle, annually
renewed, between summer and winter. Therefore
the light and heat gods were their friends, those
of darkness and cold their enemies. For the same
reason that the burning heat of summer, Typhon, was
the Satan of Egypt; so in the North the Jotuns, ice-giants,
were the Scandinavian devils.
There are some virtues which are naturally
associated together, such as the love of truth, the
sense of justice, courage, and personal independence.
There is an opposite class of virtues in like manner
naturally grouped together,-sympathy, mutual
helpfulness, and a tendency to social organization.
The serious antagonism in the moral world is that
of truth and love. Most cases of conscience which
present a real difficulty resolve themselves into
a conflict of truth and love. It is hard to be
true without hurting the feelings of others; it is
hard to sympathize with others and not yield a little
of our inward truth. The same antagonism is found
in the religions of the world. The religions in
which truth, justice, freedom, are developed tend to
isolation, coldness, and hardness. On the other
hand, the religions of brotherhood and human sympathy
tend to weakness, luxury, and slavery.
The religion of the German races,
which was the natural growth of their organization
and moral character, belonged to the first class.
It was a religion in which truth, justice, self-respect,
courage, freedom, were the essential elements.
The gods were human, as in the Hellenic system, with
moral attributes. They were finite beings and
limited in their powers. They carried on a warfare
with hostile and destructive agents, in which at last
they were to be vanquished and destroyed, though a
restoration of the world and the gods would follow
that destruction.
Such was the idea in all the faith
of the Teutonic race. The chief virtue of man
was courage, his unpardonable sin was cowardice.
“To fight a good fight,” this was the
way to Valhalla. Odin sent his Choosers to every
battlefield to select the brave dead to become his
companions in the joys of heaven.
Se. The Eddas and their Contents.
We have observed that Iceland was
settled from Norway in the ninth century. A remarkable
social life grew up there, which preserved the ideas,
manners, and religion of the Teutonic people in their
purity for many hundred years, and whose Eddas and
Sagas are the chief source of our knowledge of
the race. In this ultimate and barren region of
the earth, where seas of ice make thousands of square
miles desolate and impenetrable, where icy masses,
elsewhere glaciers, are here mountains, where volcanoes
with terrible eruptions destroy whole regions of inhabited
country in a few days with lava, volcanic sand, and
boiling water, was developed to its highest degree
the purest form of Scandinavian life.
The religion of the Scandinavians
is contained in the Eddas, which are two,-the
poetic, or elder Edda, consisting of thirty-seven poems,
first collected and published at the end of the eleventh
century; and the younger, or prose Edda, ascribed
to the celebrated Snorro Sturleson, born of a distinguished
Icelandic family in the twelfth century, who, after
leading a turbulent and ambitious life, and being twice
chosen supreme magistrate, was killed A.D. 1241.
The principal part of the prose Edda is a complete
synopsis of Scandinavian mythology.
The elder Edda, which is the fountain
of the mythology, consists of old songs and ballads,
which had come down from an immemorial past in the
mouths of the people, but were first collected and
committed to writing by Saemund, a Christian priest
of Iceland in the eleventh century. He was a
Bard, or Scald, as well as a priest, and one of his
own poems, “The Sun-Song,” is in his Edda.
This word “Edda” means “great-grandmother,”
the ancient mother of Scandinavian knowledge.
Or perhaps this name was given to the legends, repeated
by grandmothers to their grandchildren by the vast
firesides of the old farm-houses in Iceland.
This rhythmical Edda consists of thirty-seven
poems. It is in two parts,-the
first containing mythical poems concerning the gods
and the creation; the second, the legends of the heroes
of Scandinavian history. This latter portion
of the Edda has the original and ancient fragments
from which the German Nibelungen-lied was afterward
derived. These songs are to the German poem what
the ante-Homeric ballad literature of Greece about
Troy and Ulysses was to the Iliad and Odyssey as reduced
to unity by Homer.
The first poem in the first part of
the poetic Edda is the Voluspa, or Wisdom of Vala.
The Vala was a prophetess, possessing vast supernatural
knowledge. Some antiquarians consider the Vala
to be the same as the Nornor, or Fates. They
were dark beings, whose wisdom was fearful even to
the gods, resembling in this the Greek Prometheus.
The Voluspa describes the universe before the creation,
in the morning of time, before the great Ymir lived,
when there was neither sea nor shore nor heaven.
It begins thus, Vala speaking:-
“I command the devout
attention of all noble souls,
Of all the high and the low
of the race of Heimdall;
I tell the doings of the All-Father,
In the most ancient Sagas
which come to my mind.
“There was an age in
which Ymir lived,
When was no sea, nor shore,
nor salt waves;
No earth below, nor heaven
above,
No yawning abyss and no grassy
land.
“Till the sons of Bors
lifted the dome of heaven,
And created the vast Midgard
(earth) below;
Then the sun of the south
rose above the mountains,
And green grasses made the
ground verdant.
“The sun of the south,
companion of the moon,
Held the horses of heaven
with his right hand;
The sun knew not what its
course should be,
The moon knew not what her
power should be,
The stars knew not where their
places were.
“Then the counsellors
went into the hall of judgment,
And the all-holy gods held
a council.
They gave names to the night
and new moon;
They called to the morning
and to midday,
To the afternoon and evening,
arranging the times.”
The Voluspa goes on to describe how
the gods assembled on the field of Ida, and proceeded
to create metals and vegetables; after that the race
of dwarfs, who preside over the powers of nature and
the mineral world. Then Vala narrates how the
three gods, Odin, Honir, and Lodur, “the mighty
and mild Aser,” found Ask and Embla, the Adam
and Eve of the Northern legends, lying without soul,
sense, motion, or color. Odin gave them their
souls, Honir their intellects, Lodur their blood and
colored flesh. Then comes the description of
the ash-tree Yggdrasil, of the three Norns, or sisters
of destiny, who tell the Aser their doom, and the end
and renewal of the world; and how, at last, one being
mightier than all shall arrive:-
“Then comes the mighty
one to the council of the gods,
He with strength from on high
who guides all things,
He decides the strife, he
puts an end to struggle,
He ordains eternal laws.”
In the same way, in the Song of Hyndla,
another of the poems of this Edda, is a prediction
of one who shall come, mightier than all the gods,
and put an end to the strife between Aser and the
giants. The song begins:-
“Wake, maid of maidens!
Awake, my friend!
Hyndla, sister, dwelling in
the glens!
It is night, it is cloudy;
let us ride together
To the sacred place, to Valhalla.”
Hyndla sings, after describing the
heroes and princes born of the gods:-
“One shall be born higher
than all,
Who grows strong with the
strength of the earth;
He is famed as the greatest
of rulers,
United with all nations as
brethren.
“But one day there shall
come another mightier than he;
But I dare not name his name.
Few are able to see beyond
The great battle of Odin and
the Wolf.”
Among the poems of the elder Edda
is a Book of Proverbs, like those of Solomon in their
sagacious observations on human life and manners.
It is called the Havamal. At first we should
hardly expect to find these maxims of worldly wisdom
among a people whose chief business was war. But
war develops cunning as well as courage, and battles
are won by craft no less than by daring. Consequently,
among a warlike people, sagacity is naturally cultivated.
The Havamal contains (in its proverbial
section) one hundred and ten stanzas, mostly quatrains.
The following are specimens:-
1. “Carefully consider the
end Before you go to do anything, For all
is uncertain, when the enemy Lies in wait in the
house.
4. “The guest who enters
Needs water, a towel, and hospitality. A
kind reception secures a return In word and in
deed.
7. “The wise man, on coming
in, Is silent and observes, Hears with his
ears, looks with his eyes, And carefully reflects
on every event.
11. “No worse a companion
can a man take on his journey Than drunkenness.
Not as good as many believe Is beer to the
sons of men. The more one drinks, the less
he knows, And less power has he over himself.
26. “A foolish man, in company,
had better be silent. Until he speaks no
one observes his folly. But he who knows
little does not know this, When he had better
be silent.
29. “Do not mock at the stranger
Who comes trusting in your kindness; For when
he has warmed himself at your fire, He may easily
prove a wise man.
34. “It is better to depart
betimes, And not to go too often to the same house.
Love tires and turns to sadness When one sits
too often at another man’s table.
35. “One’s own house,
though small, is better, For there thou art the
master. It makes a man’s heart bleed
to ask For a midday meal at the house of another.
36. “One’s own house,
though small, is better; At home thou art the
master. Two goats and a thatched roof Are
better than begging.
38. “It is hard to find a
man so rich As to refuse a gift. It
is hard to find a man so generous As to be always
glad to lend.
42. “Is there a man whom
you distrust, And who yet can help you?
Be smooth in words and false in thought, And
pay back his deceit with cunning.
48. “I hung my garments on
two scarecrows, And, when dressed, they seemed
Ready for the battle. Unclothed they
were jeered at by all.
52. “Small as a grain of
sand Is the small sense of a fool; Very unequal
is human wisdom. The world is made of two
unequal halves.
53. “It is well to be wise;
it is not well To be too wise. He has
the happiest life Who knows well what he knows.
54. “It is well to be wise;
not well To be too wise. The wise man’s
heart is not glad When he knows too much.
55. “Two burning sticks placed
together Will burn entirely away. Man
grows bright by the side of man; Alone, he remains
stupid.”
Such are the proverbs of the Havamal.
This sort of proverbial wisdom may have come down
from the days when the ancestors of the Scandinavians
left Central Asia. It is like the fables and
maxims of the Hitopadesa.
Another of these poems is called Odin’s
Song of Runes. Runes were the Scandinavian alphabet,
used for lapidary inscriptions, a thousand of which
have been discovered in Sweden, and three or four hundred
in Denmark and Norway, mostly on tombstones.
This alphabet consists of sixteen letters, with the
powers of F, U, TH, O, R, K, H, N, I, A, S, T, B, L,
M, Y. The letters R, I, T, and B very nearly resemble
the Roman letters of the same values. A magical
power was ascribed to these Runes, and they were carved
on sticks and then scraped off, and used as charms.
These rune-charms were of different kinds, eighteen
different sorts are mentioned in this song.
A song of Brynhilda speaks of different
runes which she will teach Sigurd. “Runes
of victory must those know, to conquer thine enemies.
They must be carved on the blade of thy sword. Drink-Runes
must thou know to make maidens love thee. Thou
must carve them on thy drinking horn. Runes of
freedom must thou know to deliver the captives.
Storm-Runes must thou know, to make thy vessel
go safely over the waves. Carve them on the mast
and the rudder. Herb-Runes thou must know to
cure disease. Carve them on the bark of the tree.
Speech-Runes must thou know to defeat thine
enemy in council of words, in the Thing. Mind-Runes
must thou know to have good and wise thoughts.
These are the Book-Runes, and Help-Runes, and Drink-Runes,
and Power-Runes, precious for whoever can use them.”
The second part of the poetic Edda
contains the stories of the old heroes, especially
of Sigurd, the Achilles of Northern romance. There
is also the Song of Volund, the Northern Smith, the
German Vulcan, able to make swords of powerful temper.
These songs and ballads are all serious and grave,
and sometimes tender, having in them something of
the solemn tone of the old Greek tragedy.
The prose Edda, as we have said, was
the work of Snorro Sturleson, born in Iceland in 1178.
He probably transcribed most of it from the manuscripts
in his hands, or which were accessible to him, and
from the oral traditions which had been preserved
in the memory of the Skalds. His other chief
work was the Heimskringla, or collection of Saga concerning
the history of the Scandinavians. In his preface
to this last book he says he “wrote it down
from old stories told by intelligent people”;
or from “ancient family registers containing
the pedigrees of kings,” or from “old
songs and ballads which our fathers had for their amusement”
The prose Edda begins with “The
deluding of Gylfi,” an ancient king of Sweden.
He was renowned for his wisdom and love of knowledge,
and determined to visit Asgard, the home of the AEsir,
to learn something of the wisdom of the gods.
They, however, foreseeing his coming, prepared various
illusions to deceive him. Among other things,
he saw three thrones raised one above another.
“He afterwards beheld three thrones
raised one above another, with a man sitting on
each of them. Upon his asking what the names of
these lords might be, his guide answered:
’He who sits on the lowest throne is a king;
his name is Har (the High or Lofty One); the second
is Jafnhar (i.e. equal to the High); but he who
sitteth on the highest throne is called Thridi
(the Third).’ Har, perceiving the stranger,
asked him what his errand was, adding that he should
be welcome to eat and drink without cost, as were
all those who remained in Hava Hall. Gangler
said he desired first to ascertain whether there was
any person present renowned for his wisdom.
“‘If thou art not the
most knowing,’ replied Har, ’I fear thou
wilt
hardly return safe. But go,
stand there below, and propose thy
questions; here sits one who will
be able to answer them.’
“Gangler thus began his discourse:
’Who is the first, or eldest of the
gods?’
“‘In our language,’
replied Har, ’he is called Alfadir (All-Father,
or
the Father of All); but in the old
Asgard he had twelve names.’
“‘Where is this God?’
said Gangler; ’what is his power? and what hath
he done to display his glory?’
“‘He liveth,’
replied Har, ’from all ages, he governeth all
realms, and
swayeth all things great and small.’
“‘He hath formed,’
added Jafnhar, ’heaven and earth, and the air,
and
all things thereunto belonging.’
“‘And what is more,’
continued Thridi, ’he hath made man, and given
him a soul which shall live and never perish, though
the body shall have mouldered away, or have been
burnt to ashes. And all that are righteous shall
dwell with him in the place called Gimli, or Vingolf;
but the wicked shall go to Hel, and thence to Niflhel,
which is below, in the ninth world.’”
Of the creation of the world the Eddas
thus speak: In the day-spring of the ages there
was neither seas nor shore nor refreshing breeze; there
was neither earth below nor heaven above. The
whole was only one vast abyss, without herb and without
seas. The sun had no palace, the stars no place,
the moon no power. After this there was a bright
shining world of flame to the South, and another,
a cloudy and dark one, toward the North. Torrents
of venom flowed from the last into the abyss, and froze,
and filled it full of ice. But the air oozed
up through it in icy vapors, which were melted into
living drops by a warm breath from the South; and from
these came the giant Ymir. From him came a race
of wicked giants. Afterward, from these same
drops of fluid seeds, children of heat and cold, came
the mundane cow, whose milk fed the giants. Then
arose also, in a mysterious manner, Bor, the father
of three sons, Odin, Vili, and Ve, who, after several
adventures,-having killed the giant Ymir,
and made out of his body Heaven and Earth,-proceeded
to form a man and woman named Ask and Embla.
Chaos having thus disappeared, Odin became the All-Father,
creator of gods and men, with Earth for his wife,
and the powerful Thor for his oldest son. So
much for the cosmogony of the Edda.
On this cosmogony, we may remark that
it belongs to the class of development, or evolution,
but combined with a creation. The Hindoo, Gnostic,
and Platonic theories suppose the visible world to
have emanated from God, by a succession of fallings,
from the most abstract spirit to the most concrete
matter. The Greeks and Romans, on the contrary,
suppose all things to have come by a process of evolution,
or development from an original formless and chaotic
matter. The resemblance between the Greek account
of the origin of gods and men and that of the Scandinavians
is striking. Both systems begin in materialism,
and are radically opposed to the spiritualism of the
other theory; and in its account of the origin of
all things from nebulous vapors and heat the Edda reminds
us of the modern scientific theories on the same subject.
After giving this account of the formation
of the world, of the gods, and the first pair of mortals,
the Edda next speaks of night and day, of the sun
and moon, of the rainbow bridge from earth to heaven,
and of the great Ash-tree where the gods sit in council.
Night was the daughter of a giant, and, like all her
race, of a dark complexion. She married one of
the AEsir, or children of Odin, and their son was Day,
a child light and beautiful, like its father.
The Sun and Moon were two children, the Moon being
the boy, and the Sun the girl; which peculiarity of
gender still holds in the German language. The
Edda gives them chariot and horses with which to drive
daily round the heavens, and supposes their speed to
be occasioned by their fear of two gigantic wolves,
from Jotunheim, or the world of darkness, which pursue
them. The rainbow is named Bifrost, woven of
three hues, and by this, as a bridge, the gods ride
up every day to heaven from the holy fountain below
the earth. Near this fountain dwell three maidens,
below the great Ash-tree, who decide every man’s
fate. These Fates, or Norns, are named Urd, Verdandi,
and Skuld,-three words meaning “past,”
“present,” and “future.”
From Urd comes our word “weird,” and the
weird sisters of Shakespeare. The red in the rainbow
is burning fire, which prevents the frost-giants of
Jotunheim from going up to heaven, which they otherwise
might do. This region of the gods is called Asgard,
and contains Valhalla, where they feast every day,
with all heroes who have died in battle; drinking
mead, but not out of their enemies’ skulls,
as has been so often said. This mistake modern
scholars have attributed to a mistranslation of a
word in the original, which means “curved horns,”
the passage being, “Soon shall we drink ale out
of the curved branches of the skull,” that is,
of an animal. Their food is the flesh of a boar,
which is renewed every day.
It is not to be supposed that Odin
and the other gods lived quietly on their Olympus
without adventures. Many entertaining ones are
narrated in the Edda, had we room to tell them.
One of these describes the death of Baldur the Good,
whom all beings loved. Having been tormented with
bad dreams, indicating that his life was in danger,
he told them to the assembled gods, who made all creatures
and things, living or dead, take an oath to do him
no harm. This oath was taken by fire and water,
iron and all other metals, stones, earths, diseases,
poisons, beasts, birds, and creeping things.
After this, they amused themselves at their meeting
in setting Baldur up as a mark; some hurling darts
or shooting arrows at him, and some cutting at him
with swords and axes; and as nothing hurt him, it
was accounted a great honor done to Baldur. But
wicked Loki, or Loke, was envious at this; and, assuming
the form of a woman, he inquired of the goddess who
had administered the oath, whether all things had taken
it. She said everything except one little shrub
called mistletoe, which she thought too young and
feeble to do any harm. Therefore Loki got the
mistletoe, and, bringing it to one of the gods, persuaded
him to throw it at Baldur, who, pierced to the heart,
fell dead. The grief was immense. An especial
messenger was despatched to Queen Hela, in Hell, to
inquire if, on any terms, Baldur might be ransomed.
For nine days and nights he rode through dark chasms
till he crossed the river of Death, and entering the
kingdom of Hela, made known his request. Hela
replied that it should now be discovered whether Baldur
was so universally loved as was represented; for that
she would permit him to return to Asgard if all creatures
and all things, without exception, would weep for
him. The gods then despatched messengers through
the world to beg all things to weep for Baldur, which
they immediately did. Then you might have seen,
not only crocodiles but the most ferocious beasts
dissolved in tears. Fishes wept in the water,
and birds in the air. Stones and trees were covered
with pellucid dew-drops, and, for all we know, this
general grief may have been the occasion of some of
the deluges reported by geology. The messengers
returned, thinking the work done, when they found an
old hag sitting in a cavern, and begged her to weep
Baldur out of Hell. But she declared that she
could gain nothing by so doing, and that Baldur might
stay where he was, like other people as good as he;
planting herself apparently on the great but somewhat
selfish principle of non-intervention. So Baldur
remains in the halls of Hela. But this old woman
did not go unpunished. She was shrewdly suspected
to be Loki himself in disguise, and on inquiry so
it turned out. Whereupon a hot pursuit of Loki
took place, who, after changing himself into many
forms, was caught, and chained under sharp-pointed
rocks below the earth.
The adventures of Thor are very numerous.
The pleasantest, perhaps, is the account of his journey
to Jotunheim, to visit his enemies, the giants of
Cold and Darkness. On his way, being obliged to
pass the night in the forest, he came to a spacious
hall, with an open door, reaching from one side to
the other. In this he went to sleep, but being
aroused by an awful earthquake, Thor and his companions
crept into a chamber which opened out of the hall.
When day came they found, sleeping near them, an enormous
giant, so large, that, as it appeared, they had passed
the night in the thumb of his glove. They travelled
with him all day; and the next night Thor considered
himself justified in killing this giant, who was one
of their enemies. Three times he launched his
mallet with fearful force at the giant’s head,
and three times the giant awoke to inquire whether
it was a leaf or an acorn which had fallen on his
face. After taking leave of their enormous and
invulnerable companion, they arrived at the abodes
of Jotunheim, and the city of Utgard, and entered
the city of the king, Utgard Loki. This king
inquired what great feat Thor and his companions could
do. One professed to be a great eater; on which
the king of giants called one of his servants named
Logi, and placed between them a trough filled
with meat. Thor’s companion ate his share,
but Logi ate meat and bone too, and the trough
into the bargain, and was considered to have conquered.
Thor’s other companion was a great runner, and
was set to run with a young man named Hugi, who so
outstripped him that he reached the goal before the
other had gone half-way. Then Thor was asked what
he could do himself. He said he would engage
in a drinking-match, and was presented with a large
horn, and was requested to empty it at a single draught,
which he expected easily to do, but on looking in the
liquor seemed scarcely diminished. The second
time he tried, and lowered it slightly. A third,
and it was still only sunk half an inch. Whereupon
he was laughed at, and called for some new feat.
“We have a trifling game here,” answered
the king, “in which we exercise none but children.
It is merely to lift my cat from the ground.”
Thor put forth his whole might, but could only lift
up one foot, and was laughed at again. Angry at
this, he called for some one to wrestle with him.
“My men,” said King Utgard, “would
think it beneath them to wrestle with thee, but let
some one call my old nurse Eld, and let Thor wrestle
with her.” A toothless old woman entered
the hall, and after a violent struggle Thor began
to lose his footing, and went home excessively mortified.
But it turned out afterward that all this was illusion.
The three blows of the mallet, instead of striking
the giant’s head, had fallen on a mountain,
which he had dexterously put between, and made three
deep ravines in it, which remain to this day.
The triumphant eater was Fire itself, disguised as
a man. The successful runner was Thought.
The horn out of which Thor tried to drink was connected
with the ocean, which was lowered a few inches by his
tremendous draughts. The cat was the great Midgard
Serpent, which goes round the world, and Thor had
actually pulled the earth a little way out of its
place; and the old woman was Old Age itself.
According to this mythology, there
is coming a time in which the world will be destroyed
by fire and afterward renewed. This will be, preceded
by awful disasters; dreadful winters; wars, and desolations
on earth; cruelty and deceit; the sun and moon will
be devoured, the stars hurled from the sky, and the
earth violently shaken. The Wolf (Fenrir), the
awful Midgard Serpent, Loki, and Hela come to battle
with the gods. The great Ash-tree will shake
with fear. The Wolf (Fenrir) breaks loose, and
opens his enormous mouth. The lower jaw reaches
to the earth, and the upper to heaven. The Midgard
Serpent, by the side of the Wolf, vomits forth floods
of poison. Heaven is rent in twain, and Surtur
and the sons of Muspell ride through the breach.
These are the children of Light and Fire, who dwell
in the South, and who seem to belong neither to the
race of gods nor to that of giants, but to a third
party, who only interfere at the close of the conflict.
While the battle goes on between the gods and the giants
they keep their effulgent bands apart on the field
of battle. Meantime Heimdall-doorkeeper
of the gods-sounds his mighty trumpet, which
is heard through the whole universe, to summon the
gods to conflict. The gods, or AEsir, and all
the heroes of Valhalla, arm themselves and go to the
field. Odin fights with the Wolf; Thor with the
Midgard Serpent, whom he kills, but being suffocated
with the floods of venom dies himself. The Wolf
swallows Odin, but at that instant Vidar sets his foot
on its lower jaw, and laying hold of the upper jaw
tears it apart. He accomplishes this because
he has on the famous shoe, the materials of which have
been collecting for ages, it being made of the shreds
of shoe-leather which are cut off in making shoes,
and which, on this account, the religious Scandinavians
were careful to throw away. Loki and Heimdall
fight and kill each other. After this Surtur
darts fire over the whole earth, and the whole universe
is consumed. But then comes the restitution of
all things. There will rise out of the sea a
new heaven and a new earth. Two gods, Vidar and
Valí, and two human beings, a man and woman, survive
the conflagration, and with their descendants occupy
the heavens and earth. The suns of Thor come
with their father’s hammer and put an end to
war. Baldur, and Hodur, the blind god, come up
from Hell, and the daughter of the Sun, more beautiful
than its mother, occupies its place in the skies.
Se. The Gods of Scandinavia.
We can give no better account of the
Norse pantheon than by extracting the passages from
the prose Edda, which describe the gods. We take
the translation in Mallet’s Northern Antiquities:-
“OF ODIN.
“‘I must now ask thee,’
said Gangler, ’who are the gods that men are
bound to believe in?’
“‘There are twelve gods,’
replied Har, ’to whom divine honors ought to
be rendered.’
“‘Nor are the goddesses,’
added Jafhhar, ‘less divine and mighty.’
“‘The first and eldest of
the AEsir,’ continued Thridi, ’is Odin.
He governs all things, and although the other deities
are powerful, they all serve and obey him as children
do their father. Frigga is his wife. She
foresees the destinies of men, but never reveals what
is to come. For thus it is said that Odin
himself told Loki, “Senseless Loki, why wilt
thou pry into futurity? Frigga alone knoweth the
destinies of all, though she telleth them never."’
“’Odin is named Alfadir (All-father),
because he is the father of all the gods, and also
Valfadir (Choosing Father), because he chooses for
his sons all those who fall in combat. For
their abode he has prepared Valhalla and Vingolf,
where they are called Einherjar (Heroes or Champions).
Odin is also called Hangagud, Haptagud, and Farmagud,
and, besides these, was named in many ways when
he went to King Geirraudr.’....
“OF THOR.
“‘I now ask thee,’
said Gangler, ’what are the names of the other
gods?
What are their functions, and what
have they brought to pass?’
“‘The mightiest of them,’
replied Har, ’is Thor. He is called Asa-Thor
and Auku-Thor, and is the strongest of gods and
men. His realm is named Thrudvang, and his
mansion Bilskirnir, in which are five hundred and
forty halls. It is the largest house ever built.
Thus it is called in the Grimnismal:-
“Fire
hundred halls
And
forty more,
Methinketh,
hath
Bowed
Bilskirnir.
Of
houses roofed
There’s
none I know
My
son’s surpassing.”
“’Thor has a car drawn by
two goats called Tanngniost and Tanngrisnir.
From his driving about in this car he is called
Auku-Thor (Charioteer-Thor). He likewise possesses
three very precious things. The first is a
mallet called Mjoelnir, which both the Frost and Mountain
Giants know to their cost when they see it hurled
against them in the air; and no wonder, for it
has split many a skull of their fathers and kindred.
The second rare thing he possesses is called the belt
of strength or prowess (Megingjardir). When
he girds it about him his divine might is doubly
augmented; the third, also very precious, being his
iron gauntlets, which he is obliged to put on whenever
he would lay hold of the handle of his mallet.
There is no one so wise as to be able to relate
all Thor’s marvellous exploits, yet I could tell
thee so many myself that hours would be whiled
away ere all that I know had been recounted.’
“OF BALDUR.
“‘I would rather,’
said Gangler, ’hear something about the other
AEsir.’
“‘The second son of Odin,’
replied Har, ’is Baldur, and it may be truly
said of him that he is the best, and that all mankind
are loud in his praise. So fair and dazzling
is he in form and features, that rays of light
seem to issue from him; and thou mayst have some idea
of the beauty of his hair when I tell thee that
the whitest of all plants is called Baldur’s
brow. Baldur is the mildest, the wisest, and the
most eloquent of all the AEsir, yet such is his
nature that the judgment he has pronounced can
never be altered. He dwells in the heavenly mansion
called Breidablik, in which nothing unclean can
enter. As it is said,-
“’T
is Breidablik called,
“Where
Baldur the Fair
Hath
built him a bower,
In
that land where I know
The
least loathliness lieth."’
“OF NJOeRD.
“‘The third god,’ continued
Har, ’is Njoerd, who dwells in the heavenly
region called Noatun. He rules over the winds,
and checks the fury of the sea and of fire, and
is therefore invoked by seafarers and fishermen.
He is so wealthy that he can give possessions and treasures
to those who call on him for them. Yet Njoerd
is not of the lineage of the AEsir, for he was
born and bred in Vanaheim. But the Vanir gave
him as hostage to the AEsir, receiving from them
in his stead Hoenir. By this means was peace
re-established between the AEsir and Vanir. Njoerd
took to wife Skadi, the daughter of the giant Thjassi.
She preferred dwelling in the abode formerly belonging
to her father, which is situated among rocky mountains,
in the region called Thrymheim, but Njoerd loved
to reside near the sea. They at last agreed that
they should pass together nine nights in Thrymheim,
and then three in Noatun. One day, when Njoerd
came back from the mountains to Noatun, he thus
sang:-
“Of
mountains I’m weary,
Not
long was I there,
Not
more than nine nights;
But
the howl of the wolf
Methought
sounded ill
To
the song of the swan-bird.”
’"To which Skadi sang in reply:-
“Ne’er
can I sleep
In
my couch on the strand,
For
the screams of the sea-fowl.
The
mew as he comes
Every
morn from the main
Is
sure to awake me.”
“’Skadi then returned to
the rocky mountains, and abode in Thrymheim.
There, fastening on her snow-skates and taking her
bow, she passes her time in the chase of savage
beasts, and is called the Ondur goddess, or Ondurdis.....’
“OF THE GOD FREY, AND THE
GODDESS FREYJA.
“’Njoerd had afterwards,
at his residence at Noatun, two children, a son named
Frey, and a daughter called Freyja, both of them beauteous
and mighty. Frey is one of the most celebrated
of the gods. He presides over rain and sunshine,
and all the fruits of the earth, and should be invoked
in order to obtain good harvests, and also for peace.
He, moreover, dispenses wealth among men.
Freyja is the most propitious of the goddesses;
her abode in heaven is called Folkvang. To whatever
field of battle she rides, she asserts her right
to one half of the slain, the other half belonging
to Odin.....’
“OF TYR.
“’There is Tyr, who is the
most daring and intrepid of all the gods. ’T
is he who dispenses valor in war, hence warriors
do well to invoke him. It has become proverbial
to say of a man who surpasses all others in valor
that he is Tyr-strong, or valiant as Tyr.
A man noted for his wisdom is also said to be “wise
as Tyr.” Let me give thee a proof of his
intrepidity. When the AEsir were trying to persuade
the wolf, Fenrir, to let himself be bound up with
the chain, Gleipnir, he, fearing that they would
never afterwards unloose him, only consented on the
condition that while they were chaining him he should
keep Tyr’s right hand between his jaws.
Tyr did not hesitate to put his hand in the monster’s
mouth, but when Fenrir perceived that the AEsir had
no intention to unchain him, he bit the hand off
at that point, which has ever since been called
the wolf’s joint (ulflidr). From that time
Tyr has had but one hand. He is not regarded
as a peacemaker among men.’
“OF THE OTHER GODS.
“‘There is another god,’
continued Har, ’named Bragi, who is celebrated
for his wisdom, and more especially for his eloquence
and correct forms of speech. He is not only
eminently skilled in poetry, but the art itself
is called from his name Bragr, which epithet
is also applied to denote a distinguished poet
or poetess. His wife is named Iduna. She
keeps in a box the apples which the gods, when they
feel old age approaching, have only to taste of
to become young again. It is in this manner
that they will be kept in renovated youth until Ragnaroek.....
“’One of the gods is Heimdall,
called also the White God. He is the son of
nine virgins, who were sisters, and is a very sacred
and powerful deity. He also bears the appellation
of the Gold-toothed, on account of his teeth being
of pure gold, and also that of Hallinskithi. His
horse is called Gulltopp, and he dwells in Himinbjoerg
at the end of Bifroest. He is the warder of
the gods, and is therefore placed on the borders of
heaven, to prevent the giants from forcing their
way over the bridge. He requires less sleep
than a bird, and sees by night, as well as by day,
a hundred miles around him. So acute is his ear
that no sound escapes him, for he can even hear
the grass growing on the earth, and the wool on
a sheep’s back. He has a horn called the
Gjallar-horn, which is heard throughout the universe.....
“‘Among the AEsir,’
continued Har,’we also reckon Hoedur, who is
blind, but extremely strong. Both gods and
men would be very glad if they never had occasion
to pronounce his name, for they will long have cause
to remember the deed perpetrated by his hand.
“’Another god is Vidar,
surnamed the Silent, who wears very thick
shoes. He is almost as strong
as Thor himself, and the gods place great
reliance on him in all critical
conjunctures.
“’Valí, another
god, is the son of Odin and Rinda; he is bold in war,
and an excellent archer.
“’Another is called Ullur,
who is the son of Sif, and stepson of Thor. He
is so well skilled in the use of the bow, and can go
so fast on his snow-skates, that in these arts
no one can contend with him. He is also very
handsome in his person, and possesses every quality
of a warrior, wherefore it is befitting to invoke
him in single combats.
“’The name of another god
is Forseti, who is the son of Baldur and Nanna,
the daughter of Nef. He possesses the heavenly
mansion called Glitnir, and all disputants at law
who bring their cases before him go away perfectly
reconciled.....’
“OF LOKI AND HIS PROGENY.
“‘There is another deity,’
continued Har, ’reckoned in the number of the
AEsir, whom some call the calumniator of the gods,
the contriver of all fraud and mischief, and the
disgrace of gods and men. His name is Loki
or Loptur. He is the son of the giant Farbauti.....Loki
is handsome and well made, but of a very fickle
mood, and most evil disposition. He surpasses
all beings in those arts called Cunning and Perfidy.
Many a time has he exposed the gods to very great perils,
and often extricated them again by his artifices.....
“‘Loki,’ continued
Har, ’has likewise had three children by Angurbodi,
a giantess of Joetunheim. The first is the
wolf Fenrir; the second Jormungand, the Midgard
serpent; the third Hela (Death). The gods were
not long ignorant that these monsters continued
to be bred up in Joetunheim, and, having had recourse
to divination, became aware of all the evils they
would have to suffer from them; their being sprung
from such a mother was a bad presage, and from
such a sire, one still worse. All-father therefore
deemed it advisable to send one of the gods to bring
them to him. When they came he threw the serpent
into that deep ocean by which the earth is engirdled.
But the monster has grown to such an enormous size
that, holding his tail in his mouth, he encircles
the whole earth. Hela he cast into Niflheim,
and gave her power over nine worlds (regions),
into which she distributes those who are sent to her,
that is to say, all who die through sickness or old
age. Here she possesses a habitation protected
by exceedingly high walls and strongly barred gates.
Her hall is called Elvidnir; Hunger is her table;
Starvation, her knife; Delay, her man; Slowness,
her maid; Precipice, her threshold; Care, her bed;
and Burning Anguish forms the hangings of her apartments.
The one half of her body is livid, the other half the
color of human flesh. She may therefore easily
be recognized; the more so, as she has a dreadfully
stern and grim countenance.
“’The wolf Fenrir was bred
up among the gods; but Tyr alone had the daring
to go and feed him. Nevertheless, when the gods
perceived that he every day increased prodigiously
in size, and that the oracles warned them that
he would one day become fatal to them, they determined
to make a very strong iron fetter for him, which
they called Laeding. Taking this fetter to
the wolf, they bade him try his strength on it.
Fenrir, perceiving that the enterprise would not
be very difficult for him, let them do what they
pleased, and then, by great muscular exertion,
burst the chain, and set himself at liberty. The
gods, having seen this, made another fetter, half
as strong again as the former, which they called
Dromi, and prevailed on the wolf to put it on, assuring
him that, by breaking this, he would give an undeniable
proof of his vigor.
“’The wolf saw well enough
that it would not be so easy to break this fetter,
but finding at the same time that his strength had
increased since he broke Laeding, and thinking
that he could never become famous without running
some risk, voluntarily submitted to be chained.
When the gods told him that they had finished their
task, Fenrir shook himself violently, stretched
his limbs, rolled on the ground, and at last burst
his chains, which flew in pieces all around him.
He thus freed himself from Dromi, which gave rise
to the proverb “at leysa or laeethingi
eetha at drepa or droma” (to get loose out
of Laeding, or to dash out of Dromi), when anything
is to be accomplished by strong efforts.’
“’After this, the gods despaired
of ever being able to bind the wolf; wherefore
All-father sent Skirnir, the messenger of Frey, into
the country of the Dark Elves (Svartalfaheim) to
engage certain dwarfs to make the fetter called
Gleipnir. It was fashioned out of six things;
to wit, the noise made by the footfall of a cat;
the beards of women; the roots of stones; the sinews
of bears; the breath of fish; and the spittle of
birds. Though thou mayest not have heard of these
things before, thou mayest easily convince thyself
that we have not been telling thee lies. Thou
must have seen that women have no beards, that cats
make no noise when they run, and that there are no
roots under stones. Now I know what has been
told thee to be equally true, although there may
be some things thou art not able to furnish a proof
of.’
“‘I believe what thou
hast told me to be true,’ replied Gangler, ’for
what thou hast adduced in corroboratiou
of thy statement is
conceivable. But how was the
fetter smithied?’
“‘This I can tell thee,’
replied Har, ’that the fetter was as smooth
and soft as a silken string, and yet, as thou wilt
presently hear, of very great strength. When
it was brought to the gods they were profuse in
their thanks to the messenger for the trouble he had
given himself; and taking the wolf with them to
the island called Lyngvi, in the Lake Amsvartnir,
they showed him the cord, and expressed their wish
that he would try to break it, assuring him at
the same time that it was somewhat stronger than
its thinness would warrant a person in supposing it
to be. They took it themselves, one after another,
in their hands, and after attempting in vain to
break it, said, “Thou alone, Fenrir, art
able to accomplish such a feat.”
“’"Methinks,”
replied the wolf, “that I shall acquire no fame
in
breaking such a slender cord; but
if any artifice has been employed in
making it, slender though it seems,
it shall never come on my feet.”
“’The gods assured him that
he would easily break a limber silken cord, since
he had already burst asunder iron fetters of the most
solid construction. “But if thou shouldst
not succeed in breaking it,” they added,
“thou wilt show that thou art too weak to cause
the gods any fear, and we will not hesitate to
set thee at liberty without delay.”
“’"I fear me much,”
replied the wolf, “that if ye once bind me so
fast that I shall be unable to free myself by my
own efforts, ye will be in no haste to unloose
me. Loath am I, therefore, to have this cord wound
round me; but in order that ye may not doubt my
courage, I will consent, provided one of you put
his hand into my mouth as a pledge that ye intend
me no deceit.”
“’The gods wistfully looked
at each other, and found that they had only the
choice of two evils, until Tyr stepped forward and
intrepidly put his right hand between the monster’s
jaws. Hereupon the gods, having tied up the
wolf, he forcibly stretched himself, as he had formerly
done, and used all his might to disengage himself,
but the more efforts he made, the tighter became
the cord, until all the gods, except Tyr, who lost
his hand, burst into laughter at the sight.
“’When the gods saw that
the wolf was effectually bound, they took the chain
called Gelgja, which was fixed to the fetter, and drew
it through the middle of a large rock named Gjoell,
which they sank very deep into the earth; afterwards,
to make it still more secure, they fastened the end
of the cord to a massive stone called Thviti, which
they sank still deeper. The wolf made in vain
the most violent efforts to break loose, and, opening
his tremendous jaws, endeavored to bite them.
The gods, seeing this, thrust a sword into his
mouth, which pierced his under jaw up to the hilt,
so that the point touched the palate. He then
began to howl horribly, and since that time the
foam flows continually from his mouth in such abundance
that it forms the river called Von. There will
he remain until Ragnaroek.’”
There are also goddesses in the Valhalla,
of whom the Edda mentions Frigga, Saga, and many others.
Se. Resemblance of the Scandinavian
Mythology to that of Zoroaster.
These are the main points of the Scandinavian
mythology, the resemblance of which to that of Zoroaster
has been often remarked. Each is a dualism, having
its good and evil gods, its worlds of light and darkness,
in opposition to each other. Each has behind
this dualism a dim presence, a vague monotheism, a
supreme God, infinite and eternal. In each the
evil powers are for the present conquered and bound
in some subterranean prisons, but are hereafter to
break out, to battle with the gods and overcome them,
but to be destroyed themselves at the same time.
Each system speaks of a great conflagration, in which
all things will be destroyed; to be followed by the
creation of a new earth, more beautiful than the other,
to be the abode of peace and joy. The duty of
man in each system is war, though this war in the
Avesta is viewed rather as moral conflict, while in
the Edda it is taken more grossly for physical struggle.
The tone of the theology of Zoroaster is throughout
higher and more moral than that of the Scandinavians.
Its doctrine of creation is not a mere development
by a dark, unintelligent process, nor, on the other
hand, is it a Hindoo or Gnostic system of emanation.
It is neither pure materialism on the one hand nor
pantheism on the other; but a true doctrine of creation,
for an intelligent and moral purpose, by the conscious
and free act of the Creator. But in many of the
details, again, we find a singular correspondence
between these two systems. Odin corresponds to
Ormazd, Loki to Ahriman, the AEsir to the Amschaspands,
the giants of Jotunheim to the Daevas. So too
the ox (Adudab) is the equivalent of the giant Ymir,
and the creation of the man and woman, Meshia and
Meshiane, is correlated to Ask and Embla. Baldur
resembles the Redeemer Sosiosh. The bridge, Bifrost,
which goes up to heaven, is the bridge Chinevat, which
goes from the top of Albordj to heaven. The dog
Sirius (Sura), the watchman who keeps guard over the
abyss, seems also to correspond to Surtur, the watchman
of the luminous world at the South. The earth,
in the Avesta, is called Hethra, and by the ancient
Germans and Scandinavians, Hertha,-the
name given by Tacitus to this goddess, signifying
the earth, in all the Teutonic languages. In like
manner, the German name for heaven, Himmel, is derived
from the Sanskrit word “Himmala,” the
name of the Himmalah Mountains in Central Asia, believed
by the ancient inhabitants of Asia to be the residence
of their gods.
Se. Scandinavian Worship.
The religious ceremonies of the Scandinavians
were simple. Their worship, like that of the
followers of Zoroaster, was at first held in the open
air; but in later times they erected temples, some
of which were quite splendid. There were three
great festivals in the year. The first was at
the winter solstice, and on the longest night of the
year, which was called the Mother Night, as that which
produced the rest. This great feast was called
Yul, whence comes the English Yule, the old name for
Christmas, which festival took its place when the
Scandinavians became Christians. Their festival
was in honor of the sun, and was held with sacrifices,
feasting, and great mirth. The second festival
was in spring, in honor of the earth, to supplicate
fruitful crops. The third was also in the spring,
in honor of Odin. The sacrifices were of fruits,
afterward animals, and occasionally, in later times,
human beings. The people believed in divine interposition,
and also in a fixed destiny, but especially in themselves,
in their own force and courage. Some of them laughed
at the gods, some challenged them to fight with them,
and professed to believe in nothing but their own
might and main. One warrior calls for Odin, as
a foeman alone worthy of his steel, and it was considered
lawful to fight the gods. The quicken-tree, or
mountain-ash, was believed to possess great virtues,
on account of the aid it afforded to Thor on one occasion.
Beside the priests, the Northern nations
had their soothsayers. They also believed that
by the power of runes the dead could be made to speak.
These runes were called galder, and another kind of
magic, mostly practised by women, was called seid.
It was thought that these wise women possessed the
power of raising and allaying storms, and of hardening
the body so that the sword could not cut it.
Some charms could give preternatural strength, others
the power of crossing the sea without a ship, of creating
and destroying love, of assuming different forms,
of becoming invisible, of giving the evil eye.
Garments could be charmed to protect or to destroy
the wearer. A horse’s head, set on a stake,
with certain imprecations, produced fearful mischief
to a foe.
Very few remains of temples have been
found in the North. But (as Laing remarks in
his “Sea-Kings of Norway”) the most permanent
remains of the religion of Odin are found in the usages
and languages of the descendants of those who worshipped
him. These descendants all retain, in the names
of Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, the recollections
of the chief gods of this mythology. Mara (the
nightmare) still torments the sleep of the English-speaking
people; and the Evil One, Nokke (so says Laing), is
the ancestor of Old Nick.
Every ninth year solemn sacrifices
were held in the great temple at Upsal in Sweden.
The king and all citizens of importance must appear
in person and bring offerings. Crowds came together
on these occasions, and no one was excluded, except
for some base or cowardly action. Nine human beings
were sacrificed, usually captives or slaves, but in
times of great calamity even a king was made a victim.
Earl Hakon, of Norway, offered his son in sacrifice
to obtain a victory over some pirates. The bodies
were buried in groves, which thence were regarded
as very sacred. One, called Odin’s grove,
near the temple of Upsal, was sacred in every twig
and leaf.
Se. Social Character, Maritime
Discoveries, and Political Institutions of the Scandinavians.
Of the manners, customs, and habits
of the Scandinavians, we cannot speak at length.
Society among them was divided into two classes,-the
landholder or bondsmen, and the thralls or slaves.
The duty of the last was to perform domestic service
and till the ground, and they consisted of prisoners
taken in war and their children. The business
of the landholder or bondsman was war, and his chief
virtue courage. His maxim was, to conquer a single
opponent, to attack two, not to yield to three, and
only to give way to four. To die in battle was
their high ambition; then they believed that they
should pass to the halls of Odin. King Ragnar
died singing the pleasure of receiving death in battle,
saying, “The hours of my life have passed away;
I shall die laughing.” Saxo, describing
a duel, said that one of the champions fell, laughed,
and died. Rather than die in their bed, some,
when sick, leaped from a rock into the sea. Others,
when dying, would be carried into a field of battle.
Others induced their friends to kill them. The
Icelandic Sagas are filled with stories of single
combats, or holm-gangs. When not fighting
they were fond of feasting; and the man who could
drink the most beer was counted the best. The
custom of drinking toasts came from the North.
As the English give the Queen, and we the President,
as the first health on public occasions, so they begin
with a cup, first to Odin, and afterward to other deities,
and then to the memory of the dead, in what was called
grave-beer. Their institutions were patriarchal;
the head of the family was the chief of the tribe
and also its priest. But all the freemen in a
neighborhood met in the Thing, where they decided
disputes, laid down social regulations, and determined
on public measures. The Thing was, therefore,
legislature, court of justice, and executive council
in one; and once a year, in some central place, there
was held a similar meeting to settle the affairs of
the whole country, called the Land-Thing or All-Thing.
At this the king was chosen for the whole community,
who sometimes appointed subordinate officers called
Yarls, or earls, to preside over large districts.
Respect for women was a marked trait among the Scandinavians,
as Tacitus has noticed of their congeners, the Germans.
They were admired for their modesty, sense, and force
of character, rather than for the fascinations which
the nations of the South prefer. When Thor described
his battle with the sorceress, the answer was, “Shame,
Thor! to strike a woman!” The wife was expected
to be industrious and domestic. She carried the
keys of the house; and the Sagas frequently mention
wives who divorced their husbands for some offence,
and took back their dowry. The Skalds, or Bards,
had a high place and great distinction among this
people. Their songs constituted the literature
and history of the Scandinavians, and the people listened,
not as to the inspiration of an individual mind, but
to the pulsation of its own past life. Their
praises were desired, their satire feared, by the
greatest heroes and kings. Their style was figurative,
sometimes bombastic, often obscure.
Of the maritime expeditions of the
Northmen we have already spoken. For many centuries
they were the terror of Europe, North and South.
The sea-kings of Norway appeared before Constantinople
in 866, and afterward a body-guard of the emperors
of the East was composed of these pirates, who were
called the Varangians. Even before the death of
Charlemagne their depredations brought tears to his
eyes; and after his death they pillaged and burnt
the principal cities of France, and even his own palace
at Aix-la-Chapelle. They carried their arms into
Spain, Italy, and Greece. In 844 a band of these
sea-rovers sailed up the Guadalquiver and attacked
Seville, then in possession of the Moors, and took
it, and afterward fought a battle with the troops
of Abderahman II. The followers of Mohammed and
the worshippers of Odin, the turbaned Moors and the
fair-haired Norwegians, here met, each far from his
original home, each having pursued a line of conquest,
which thus came in contact at their furthest extremes.
The Northmen in Italy sold their swords
to different princes, and under Count Rainalf built
the city of Aversa in 1029. In Sicily the
Northern knights defeated the Saracens, and enabled
the Greek Emperor to reconquer the island. Afterward
they established themselves in Southern Italy, and
took possession of Apulia. A league formed against
them by the Greek and German Emperors and the Pope
ended in the utter defeat of the Papal and German
army by three thousand Normans, and they afterward
received and held Apulia as a Papal fief. In 1060
Robert Guiscard became Duke of Apulia and Calabria,
and at last of the whole kingdom of Naples. Sicily
was conquered by his brother, Count Roger, who, with
a few Northmen, routed vast numbers of the Saracens
and completed the subjection of the island, after
thirty years of war. Meantime his brother Robert
crossed the Adriatic and besieged and took Durazzo,
after a fierce battle, in which the Scandinavian soldiers
of the Greek Emperor fought with the Normans descended
from the same Scandinavian ancestors.
Se. Relation of this System to Christianity.
The first German nation converted
to Christianity was that of the Goths, whose teacher
was Ulphilas, born 318, consecrated a bishop in 348.
Having made many converts to Christianity among his
people, a persecution arose against them from the
pagan Goths; and in 355, in consequence of this persecution,
he sought and obtained leave to settle his converts
in Maesia. He preached with fervor, studied the
Scripture in Greek and Latin, and made the first translation
of the Bible into any German language. Fragments
of his Gothic version are preserved at Upsal.
This copy, called the “Codex Argenteus,”
was captured by the Swedes at Prague during the Thirty
Years’ War. This manuscript is of the sixth
century, and, together with some palimpsests, is the
only source of our knowledge of this ancient version.
Ulphilas was an Arian, and died confessing
his faith in that form of Unitarianism. Neander
says it is to the credit of the orthodox historians
that they do not on that account abate anything of
their praise of Ulphilas for his great labors as a
missionary, confessor, and doctor. His translation
was, for a long time, used all over Europe by the various
tribes of German descent.
Ulphilas, therefore, led the way in
that work which resulted in one of the greatest events
of modern history; namely, the conversion of the German
race to Christianity. It was by various families
of this Teutonic stem-Goths, Vandals, Saxons,
Lombards, Burgundians, Franks-that the
Roman Empire was overthrown. If they had not been
converted to Christianity before and during these
conquests, what would have been the fate of European
civilization? The only bond uniting the modern
and ancient world was the Christian faith, and this
faith was so adapted to the German character that
it was everywhere accepted by them. The
conversion of the Anglo-Saxons by Augustin (A.D. 597),
of the Germans by Boniface (A.D. 718-755), of the
Saxons (A.D. 803), and the universal downfall of German
heathenism, was a condition sine qua non of
that union of Latin and Greek culture with the German
vitality, which was at the root of modern European
civilization. Previous to this the Visigoths
were converted, as we have seen; then the Ostrogoths;
then the Vandals and Gepidae,-all in the
fourth century. The Franks became Christians in
the fifth century, the Alemanni and Lombards in the
sixth. All of these tribes were converted by
Arian missionaries, except the Franks. But the
records of these missions have perished, for the historians
were Catholics, “who,” says Milman,
“perhaps destroyed, or disdained to preserve,
the fame of Arian conquests to a common Christianity.”
“It was a surprising spectacle,” says
he, “to behold the Teutonic nations melting gradually
into the general mass of Christian worshippers.
In every other respect they were still distinct races.
The conquering Ostrogoth or Visigoth, the Vandal,
the Burgundian, the Frank, stood apart from the subjugated
Roman population, as an armed or territorial aristocracy.
They maintain, in great part at least, their laws,
their language, their habits, their character; in
religion alone they are blended into one society, constitute
one church, worship at the same altar, and render allegiance
to the same hierarchy. This is the single bond
of their common humanity.”
The German races also established
everywhere the feudal system, that curious institution,
which has been the subject of so much discussion, and
has perplexed the readers of history by its incongruities.
These perplexities, however, may perhaps be relieved
if we see that the essential character of this institution
was this, that it was an army permanently quartered
on a subject people. This definition contains
the explanation of the whole system. The Germans
had overrun and conquered the Roman Empire. They
intended to possess and retain it. But being much
fewer in numbers than the conquered people, how could
they do this? Suppose that when the Confederate
States had been conquered by the Union Army it had
been determined to hold them permanently as a conquered
territory. It could be done thus. First,
the original inhabitants must be disarmed and put
under stringent laws, like that of the curfew, etc.
Then to every private soldier in the Union Army a
farm, say of fifty acres, would be assigned, on condition
that whenever summoned by the captain of his company
he would present himself armed to do military duty.
In like manner the captain would receive, say a hundred
acres, on condition of appearing with his company
when summoned by his colonel. Then the colonel
would receive five hundred acres, on condition of
appearing with his regiment when summoned by the general.
The general (dux, duke) must appear with his
brigade when summoned by the commander-in-chief (imperator,
emperor), and he would hold perhaps a thousand acres
on this condition. All this land, thus held on
condition of military service, would be held in fee,
and would exemplify the actual foundation of the whole
feudal system, which was simply an arrangement by
which a conquering army could hold down the conquered
nation.
Of course, such a system as this was
one of tyranny and cruelty, and during several centuries
it was tempered and softened only by the mediatorial
influence of the Christian Church. This was the
only power strong enough to shield the oppressed and
to hold back the arm of the tyrant. Feudalism
served, no doubt, some useful purposes. It was
a method of riveting together, with iron nails, the
conquerors and conquered, until they could come into
a union of a better kind.
It was about the year 1000 that the
people of the North were converted to Christianity.
This process of conversion was a long time going on,
and there were several relapses into paganism; so
that no precise time can be fixed for the conversion
of a single nation, much less for that of the different
branches of the Scandinavian stock separately situated
in Sweden and Denmark, Iceland and Greenland, and
colonized in England and Normandy. A mission
was established in Denmark, A.D. 822, and the king
was baptized; but the overthrow of this Christian
king restricted the labors of the missionary.
An attempt was made in Sweden in 829, and the missionary,
Anschar, remained there a year and a half; but the
mission there established was soon overthrown.
Uniting wisdom with his ardor, Anschar established
at Hamburg schools where he educated Danish and Swedish
boys to preach Christianity in their own language
to their countrymen. But the Normans laid waste
this city, and the Christian schools and churches were
destroyed. About 850 a new attempt was made in
Sweden, and there the subject was laid by the king
before his council or parliament, consisting of two
assemblies, and they decided to allow Christianity
to be preached and practised, apparently on the ground
that this new god, Christ, might help them in their
dangers at sea, when the other gods could not.
And thus, according to the independent character of
this people, Christianity was neither allowed to be
imposed upon them by their king against their will,
nor excluded from the use of those who chose to adopt
it. It took its chance with the old systems,
and many of the Danes and Normans believed in worshipping
both Odin and Christ at the same time. King Harold
in Denmark, during the last half of the tenth century,
favored the spread of Christianity, and was himself
baptized with his wife and son, believing at first
that the Christian God was more powerful than the heathen
gods, but finally coming to the conclusion that these
last were only evil spirits. On the other hand,
some of the Danes believed that Christ was a god,
and to be worshipped; but that he was a less powerful
god than Odin or Thor. The son of King Harold,
in 990, returned to paganism and drove out the Christian
priests; but his son, Canute the Great, who began to
reign in 1014, was converted to Christianity in England,
and became its zealous friend. But these fierce
warriors made rather poor Christians. Adam of
Bremen says: “They so abominate tears and
lamentations, and all other signs of penitence which
we think so salubrious, that they will neither weep
for their own sins nor at the death of their best friends.”
Thus, in these Northern regions, Christianity grew
through one or two centuries, not like the mustard-seed,
but like the leaven, infusing itself more and more
into their national life. According to the testimony
of an eye-witness, Adam of Bremen, the Swedes were
very susceptible to religious impressions. “They
receive the preachers of the truth with great kindness,”
says he, “if they are modest, wise, and able;
and our bishops are even allowed to preach in their
great public assemblies.” In Norway, Prince
Hacon, in the middle of the tenth century, attempted
to establish Christianity, which he had learned in
England. He proposed to the great national assembly
that the whole nation should renounce idolatry, worship
God and Christ, keep Sundays as festivals, and Fridays
as fasts. Great opposition was made, and there
was danger of universal insurrection, so that the
king had to yield, and even himself drink a toast to
Odin and eat horse-flesh, which was a heathen practice.
Subsequent kings of Norway introduced Christianity
again; but the people, though willing to be baptized,
frequently continued Pagans, and only by degrees renounced,
with their old worship, their habits of piracy.
The Icelanders embraced Christianity at their All-Thing
in the year 1000, but with the condition that they
might also continue their old worship, and be permitted
the eating of horse-flesh and exposition of infants.
When the All-Thing broke up, the assembled multitudes
went to the hot-baths to be baptized, preferring for
this rite hot water to cold. The Scandinavians
seem at this period to have lost their faith in their
old religion, and to have been in a transition state.
One warrior says that he relies more on his own strength
and arms than upon Thor. Another says, “I
would have thee know that I believe neither in idols
nor spirits, but only in my own force and courage.”
A warrior told King Olaff in Norway, “I am neither
Christian nor Pagan. My companions and I have
no other religion than confidence in our own strength
and good success.” Evidently Christianity
for a long time sat very lightly on these nations.
They were willing to be baptized and accept some of
the outward ceremonies and festivals of the Catholic
Church, which were considerately made to resemble
their old ones.
Nevertheless Christianity met many
of the wants of this noble race of men; and, on the
other hand, their instincts as a race were as well
adapted to promote an equal development of every side
of Christian life. The Southern races of Europe
received Christianity as a religion of order; the Northern
races, as a religion of freedom. In the South
of Europe the Catholic Church, by its ingenious organization
and its complex arrangements, introduced into life
discipline and culture. In the North of Europe
Protestant Christianity, by its appeals to the individual
soul, awakens conscience and stimulates to individual
and national progress. The nations of Southern
Europe accepted Christianity mainly as a religion of
sentiment and feeling; the nations of Northern Europe,
as a religion of truth and principle. God adapted
Christianity to the needs of these Northern races;
but he also adapted these races, with their original
instincts and their primitive religion, to the needs
of Christianity. Without them, we do not see
how there could be such a thing in Europe to-day as
Protestantism. It was no accident which made
the founder of the Reformation a Saxon monk, and the
cradle of the Reformation Germany. It was no accident
which brought the great Gustavus Adolphus from the
northern peninsula, at the head of his Swedish Protestants,
to turn the tide of war in favor of Protestantism
and to die on the field of Lutzen, fighting for freedom
of spirit. It is no accident which makes the
Scandinavian races to-day, in Sweden and Norway, in
Denmark and North Germany and Holland, in England
and the United States, almost the only Protestant nations
of the world. The old instincts still run in
the blood, and cause these races to ask of their religion,
not so much the luxury of emotion or the satisfaction
of repose, in having all opinions settled for them
and all actions prescribed, as, much rather, light,
freedom, and progress. To them to-day, as to
their ancestors,
“Is life a simple art
Of duties to be
done,
A game where each man takes
his part,
A race where all
must run;
A battle whose great scheme
and scope
They little care
to know;
Content, as men at arms, to
cope
Each with his
fronting foe.”