Today (13.02.2013.) is the beginning of
runic half month of Sowilo:
Sowilo
Wholeness
- Life Forces - The Sun's Energy
This
Rune stands for wholeness, that which your nature requires. It embodies the
impulse toward self realization and indicates the path you must follow, not
from ulterior motives but from the core of your individuality.
Seeking
after wholeness is the Spiritual Warrior's quest. And yet what you are striving
to become in actuality is what you, by nature, already are. You must become
conscious of your essence and bring it into form, express it in a creative way.
A Rune of great power, making energy available to you, Sowelu marks a time for
regeneration right down to the cellular level.
Although
this Rune has no Reversed position, there is reason for caution. You may see
fit to withdraw, to retreat in the face of a pressing situation, especially if
events or people are demanding that you expend your energy now. Know that such
a retreat is a retreat in strength, and that it can indicate the need for a
voyage inward for centering, for balance. Timely retreat is among the skills of
the Spiritual Warrior.
At
the same time, for some, this Rune counsels opening yourself up, letting the
Light into a part of your life that has been secret, shut away. To accomplish
this may call for profound recognitions, for admitting to yourself something
that you have long denied.
There
is a prayer known as the Gayatri that embodies the spirit of Sowelu. Address
the sun in this fashion:
You,
who are the source of all power,
Whose
rays illuminate the whole world,
Illuminate
also my heart
So
that it too can do your work.
While
reciting the Gayatri, visualize the sun's rays streaming forth into the world,
entering your own heart, and then streaming out from your heart centre and back
into the world. This is a powerful and life enhancing prayer.
There
is a caution here not to give your self airs. Even in a time of bountiful
energy, you are required to face and vanquish your refusal to let right action
flow through you. Nourish this capacity, for it is a mark of true humility.
Practice
the art of doing without doing: aim yourself truly and then maintain your aim
without manipulative effort. Meditate on words: I can of mine own self do
nothing. For by our own power we do nothing. Even in loving, it is Love that
loves through us. This way of thinking and being integrates new energies and
permits you to flow into wholeness, which is the ultimate goal of the Spiritual
Warrior.
Value:
Transcendent power, salvation, knowledge, strength in times of trouble. Also useful
for matters of success and divination. Will counter all dark forces. The sun is
a symbol of personal, trascendent salvation. Sowilo is the rune of the will. It
is that spiritual energy which guidws all true seekers. A rune of success.
Victory, sucess. Used for healing. Used when strength and self-confidence are
needed. Strengthening of the psychic centers. Increase in spiritual will.
Guidance through the pathways, "enlightenment". Victory and success
through individual will. To increase good health, vitality and sexual powers.
Summery:
This rune represents the sun, the
heavenly body upon which all life depends and one of the principal objects of
any ancient worship. Caesar observed that the Germani worshipped both the sun
and the moon, and both of these luminaries would have played an important part
in daily life, regulating as they do between them both the seasons and the
tides.
Anglo-Saxon runic poem describes this
rune as the hope of seafarers, Norwegian Runic Poem has it as the light of the
world, and Icelandic Runic Poem poetically calls it shield of the clouds,
shining ray and either destroyer of ice or circling wheel. The Latin gloss is
rota, wheel. As shining is the most frequently applied adjective to the sun we
may trace a correspondence with the Shining God of Norse myth - Baldur, patron
of innocence and light. Camomile was called 'Baldur's brow' because the flower
was so immaculately pure it resembled the god's forehead. Baldur is also closely
associated with the mistletoe, a shaft of which was set into blind Hodur's hand
by Loki to kill Baldur.
The rune is pronounced as in modern
English 'sea'.
Baldur and Nanna
The
bright and beautiful son of Odin is the embodiment of a Solar Deity. He is
loved by everything in creation, and mourned by all but Loki, in Death.
Integral to the Ragnarok Myth, He is reborn with the new world, released from
Hel's grasp by the cosmic cataclysm. Called the "White God" in
some myths (a title He shared with Heimdall) for His fair complexion and
hallowed brilliance, Baldur embodies the energy of the nurturing process.
Here He relates to Sunna (a feminine form...) and to the sky aspect of the
Aesir.
Baldur's
own brother is the instrument of His death, however Loki is the agent
provocateur. Hod is a Blind War God, an apt metaphor for war, Who's dart
of mistletoe kills Baldur during a "mock" battle. Frigga had
secured protection from everything in Nature (except mistletoe), thus Baldur was
thought to be invulnerable. But since mistletoe was overlooked, it became
the source material for Loki's trap. But in keeping with the almost
Odinically hypostasic nature of the Trickster, Baldur's death serves as a means
for the Gods to maintain some Heavenly order in the wake of Ragnarok.
He
is wed to Nanna, who dies from her grief at His death. She is another of
the female Fertility Goddesses. She pines for Baldur, as the Nine Worlds
do, reflective of Nature's understanding of the loss. While in Hel, the
God Hermod receives gifts from Baldur and Nanna. He takes back Odin's
ring, Draupnir, brings Frigga a linen headdress, and has a golden ring for
Fulla. The initiatory process in the life of a shaman continues...
Freya
will release Baldur from Helheim; thus we may conjecture that Odin whispered
the reason Baldur couldn't go to Valhalla: He had to remain safe in Hel
throughout Ragnarok, so as to be able to rule in Odin's place while the Old Aes
recuperated from His wounds.
Balder (Baldr, Bealdor)
By
Stephan Grundy and Diana Paxon
The greatest secret of the North is a
secret that only two know: "What did Óðinn say - before he climbed on
bale-fire - into the ear of his son?" With that question as the last one
of the riddle-game, Óðinn showed himself forth to both the etin Vafþrúðnir and
the human hero Heiðrekr, winning the games and setting the dooms of his
opponents. Wodan and Balder: they know the rune that is hidden from all others,
the eighteenth song of Hávamál which Wodan will not tell.
Snorri tells us that Balder is the
fairest and most beloved of the gods. He is the heir to the Ases' Garth, the
son of Wodan and Frija - but was doomed to an early death. Snorri's version of
Balder's death is one of the best-known tales of the North: how, after Frija
had gotten everything in the worlds except the little mistletoe to swear not to
harm him, the gods played a game in which they tossed weapons at Balder.
Meanwhile, Loki, in the shape of an old woman, had gotten the secret out of
Frija and cut an arrow of mistletoe, putting it in the hand of the blind god
Höðr and aiming it at Balder. After Balder's death, Hella said that she would
let him go if everything in the worlds would weep - and this happened, except
for one giantess named Thokk, who, Snorri tells us, was Loki in disguise.
However, according toVöluspá, Baldr and Höðr (who was slain in revenge by Váli,
the son that Óðinn had gotten for that one deed) shall come back when the world
is reborn after Ragnarök and rule in Óðinn's place.
Saxo Grammaticus has a different version
of the story. As he tells it, Balder was an aggressive, highly sexed warrior
who competed with Höðr (not blind in this version) for a woman. One day, Höðr
came on the house of some "forest-maids" (generally thought to be
walkurjas) who told him that they decided the outcome of war by their invisible
deeds in battle, and warned him not to attack Baldr. Höðr then learned that
there was but one sword that would kill Balder, which could be found together
with an armring that would give wealth to its owner. After several adventures
and struggle between the two heroes, the "forest-maids" found Höðr
again and told him he would have to eat the magical food from which Baldr got
his strength. Höðr followed the three maidens who made the food and convinced
them to give him some of it, after which he was able to mortally wound Balder.
The story of Balder, especially as
Snorri tells it, has often been thought to have been influenced by
christianity. This is almost certain in Snorri's portrayal of the god: "He
is the wisest of the Ases and most beautifully spoken and most gentle, but it
is one of his characteristics that none of his decisions can be
fulfilled". Snorri, in fact, gives us the image of a beautiful, suffering,
and rather passive god - very suspiciously like the "White Christ".
This is hardly consistent with the rest of what we know about him. Like Freyr
and Freyja, Balder is known to us only by a title meaning "ruler" - a
title which continued in ordinary Anglo-Saxon usage and, less often, in Old
Norse. The root of the word is probably "strength"; it may also be
identical with the Old Norse adjective baldr - "daring,
courageous". His wife's name, Nanna, probably means, "the courageous"
or "the battle-joyful" (de Vries, Religionsgeschichte, p. 223).
Although Saxo is infamous for garbling his stories, as well as euhemerizing
them, his description of Balder as a warrior is likely to be closer to our
forebears' beliefs than is Snorri's pre-Christ. The tale of the Finnish legendary
hero Lemminkäinen was also probably influenced by or based on Balder's story
(Turville-Petre, Myth and Religion, pp. 117-18). Like Balder, Lemminkäinen
was slain with a weak reed or herb (cowbane) by a blind man. His mother, too,
sorrows after him and undergoes a great journey for his sake, but she is more
successful than Frija: she is able to put her son's body together and bring him
back to life. Lemminkäinen's chief characteristics are his love for battle and
his love for women, concerning both of which he is notably successful: he is
the very paradigm of the manly young hero, and it is likely that Balder also
shared this character.
Likewise in the heroic mode, Balder's
dreams foretell his own doom. In this, he closely resembles many (indeed, most)
of the heroes of the North, who typically dream their own deaths before the
event comes about. The description of these dreams in Saxo, where the goddess
of the underworld promises Balder her embraces, are particularly similar to
Gísli's death-foreboding dreams in which a dark dís claims him as her
husband (Gísla saga Súrssonar) and Glaumvor's dream of dead women beckoning to
Gunnarr, which foretells the doom of the Burgundian king ("Atlamál hin
groenlenzku"). In fact, Balder is particularly (one might even say
fatally) attractive to these dark and deathly goddesses. It is Balder whom
Skaði desires above all others, though it is not his wyrd to be claimed by her:
it is Hella who decks her hall and brews the beer for his welcome feast.
The earliest literary work we have which
probably holds references to the Balder story is the Anglo-Saxon "Dream of
the Rood" (ca. 650-750), which inverts the process demonstrated by Snorri.
Although this poem was ostensibly about Christ, many of its elements do not correspond
to the christian myth of the crucifixion. The poem's "Christ" is
presented as a strong young Germanic warrior undergoing a swift and violent
heroic ordeal, and Wyrd is in fact invoked to describe his doom: "that was
a dreadful Wyrd" (line 73). He is wounded, not with spear or nails, but
"with arrows"; after his death, the whole of the world weeps, a
detail which is elsewhere only found in the Balder tale. It seems likely that
the christian poet used the story of Balder to transform his god from a meek
figure undergoing a shameful criminal's punishment to an heroic sacrifice of
the sort for which the Anglo-Saxons already had a model.
The image of Balder as a sacrifice is
almost certainly native Germanic. In Húsdrápa, which was written by the
Heathen Úlfr Uggason in the tenth century and shows no taint of christian
influence, Balder is called the "heilagr tafn" - the "holy
sacrifice". The very word "tafn" was used only for Heathen gifts
to the god/esses; it could not be given a christian interpretation after the conversion.
It was most often used in skaldic poetry as an internal rhyme for
"hrafn" (raven), referring to the battle-dead; the skaldic poet Helgi
trausti Óláfsson specifically called his slain foeman "Gaut's tafn"
(Óðinn's sacrifice). The interpretation of Balder's death as a holy, and
probably Wodanic, sacrifice is also borne out by the way in which it seems to
appear on a number of bracteates of the Migration Age, as spoken of later.
Balder's home is called
"Breiðablik" (Broad-Gleaming), and it is said that
no feiknstafir (staves of harm) can come there, which de Vries reads
as speaking of Balder's invulnerability (Religionsgeschichte, p. 214). The god
Forseti (Fosite) is supposed to be his son. Balder was worshipped during the
Viking Age; several place-names in Sweden and Denmark are compounded with his,
including a "Balder's Mountain" and a "Balder's Cornfield".
Turville-Petre comments, however, that these names tell us little - only that
his cult does not seem to have been practised widely, that it might have been
connected with rocks and hills, and perhaps that there was an element of
fruitfulness to it (Myth and Religion, pp. 117-18). There is a place-name
Baldersbrønd (Balder's Spring) in Denmark, which Saxo mentions. According to
the Gesta Danorum, when Balder returned to shore after defeating Höðr in a
sea-battle, he pierced the earth to loose this spring so that his tired
soldiers could drink. This, as Stephan P. Schwartz has pointed out (Poetry and
Law in Germanic Myth, pp. 20-21), bears a close resemblance to the Frisian
legend of Fosite, and may well hint at a belief in Balder, as well as Fosite,
as a law-god (see the discussion under Fosite in "Wuldor and Other
Gods").
The "Zweite
Merseburger Zauberspruch" also mentions Balder:
Phol and Wodan went to the wood.
Then Balder's horse sprained its foot.
Then chanted Sinthgunt, Sunna her sister;
then chanted Frija, Folla her sister,
then chanted Wodan, as well he knew how to.
Thus be the bone-sprain, thus be the blood-sprain,
thus be the limb-sprain,
bone to bone,
blood to blood,
limb to limb:
thus be the binding.
Then Balder's horse sprained its foot.
Then chanted Sinthgunt, Sunna her sister;
then chanted Frija, Folla her sister,
then chanted Wodan, as well he knew how to.
Thus be the bone-sprain, thus be the blood-sprain,
thus be the limb-sprain,
bone to bone,
blood to blood,
limb to limb:
thus be the binding.
There has been much academic argument
about this charm, including the question of whether "Balder" is meant
as a personal name, or whether it is a title for the god "Phol". If
this charm has any meaning besides being the common Indo-European healing charm
with Germanic names plugged in, then the interpretation which seems the most
spiritually valid (though Turville-Petre dismisses it as over-imaginative) is
the idea that the stumbling of Balder's horse on the way to the wood
(presumably, to the holy stead within a grove) was a sign of his coming death.
The belief that the stumbling of a horse was an ill sign was, indeed, very well
known to our forebears; and in his studies of bracteate-iconography (see
below), Karl Hauck has come to the conclusion that there is Migration Age
pictoral evidence for this reading of the charm.
The bracteate from Fakse (Denmark) has a
central figure with a ring in his left hand and a half-broken twig jutting
downward from his solar plexus. He stands in a half-marked enclosure. Behind
him is a man with a spear; before him is a man with wings who wears a feminine
skirt and also holds a ring. A bird of prey hovers above his head; there are
two fish at the bottom of the bracteate. On the bracteate from Beresina-Raum,
the same grouping appears, with the difference that the figure in feminine garb
stands within the semi-enclosure and holds the twig up; the shot has not yet
been fired. The one from Gummerup has the foremost figure holding a sword as
well as a ring; the twig is shooting overhead.
Karl Hauck, a German scholar who has
specialized in bracteate iconography for over forty years, has written
extensively on these bracteates: his conclusions can be summarized as follows.
The spear-holding man is clearly Wodan, the winged and cross-dressed figure
Loki, and the man in the middle Balder. Hauck interprets the ring which Balder
holds as Draupnir, which Wodan put on the funeral pyre, and suggests that here,
it appears as the symbol of Balder's sacrifice. As discussed in greater detail
below, it is possible that Höðr's part in the slaying was a later addition and
that Wodan originally had a more direct part in it; Hauck's interpretation is
that in the oldest version, which we see on the bracteates, Wodan gave his son
the ring while Balder was still alive, to mark him out for doom. The enclosure,
which appears in several variant forms, is especially interesting: it seems to
show a fence of some sort, and in the area from which these bracteates stem, a
number of place-names go back to an original "Óðinn's enclosure", in
which the particular term for "enclosure" seems to describe a
construction of wood ("Frühmittelalterliche Bildüberlieferung und die
organisierte Kult", p. 487). In Snorri's version of the story, vengeance
cannot be taken on Höðr at once because the slaying occured in a holy place
(griðastaðr, or "peace-stead"); this may also refer to a specific
holy enclosure. The bird of prey may represent, as Hauck has often suggested, a
baleful battle-wight whose appearance is a sign of Balder's doom, or it may be
one of Wodan's birds ready to claim its share of the sacrifice; the fish which
appear at the bottom of a couple of these bracteates probably show the might of
the Underworld where Balder, according to the Norse sources, shall soon fare on
his burning ship.
The variant forms of the Siegfried-story
also offer a suspiciously close correspondence to the tale of Balder's death.
According to the German Nibelungenlied, Siegfried had bathed in a dragon's
blood and was therefore invulnerable except for one spot on his back where a
linden leaf had fallen. Hagen found out from Siegfried's wife Kriemhild where
that place was, and speared Siegfried in the back as he bent to drink from a stream.
Both the invulnerability motif and the spearing are missing from the Norse
version - it might be suggested, because Balder was still known as a god in the
North at that time, but had long been suppressed in the south. In both
versions, however, the figure of Siegfried was very like that of Balder:
handsome and loved by all, the bravest of men and the best of warriors, but
doomed to die young in spite of all his strength and magical warding. According
to Continental tradition (the epic poem "Waltharius" and the German
source forÞiðreks saga), Hagen was also said to be one-eyed; and his name means
"hedge-thorn" (hawthorn), which is a wholly unlikely name for a
Germanic warrior (the popularity of the Old Norse name Högni was based on this
character's heroic role in the lays about the fall of the Rhenish Burgundian
kingdom). "Hagen", like "Helgi" and a few other names which
became common in the Viking Age, may well have originally been a cultic title,
referring to an enclosure like that in which the Balder of the bracteates was
sacrificed. The place-names Hauck cites also hint at the possibility of a
strong Wodan-identification for both the name and the character. The spearing,
of course, is typical for a Wodan-sacrifice; the more so given the streamside location,
since running streams were often thought to be holy, and there is a particular
connection between streams and both Balder and his son Fosite.
The interpretation of Wodan as the chief
mover in Balder's death rests on several strong points. Firstly, the seemingly
harmless missile weapon which suddenly becomes deadly is characteristic for
Wodan-sacrifices. In Gautreks saga, Wodan gives Starkaðr a reed to thrust
into King Víkarr at the mock sacrifice which has been arranged. When Starkaðr
does this, the reed suddenly becomes a spear and the calf-gut around Víkarr's
neck becomes a strong rope. In Styrbjarnar þáttr, after King Eiríkr has
sacrificed to Wodan, the god gives him a reed to cast over Styrbjörn's army
with the words "Óðinn has you all!" He does this, and his foes are
straightaway struck blind. Wodan is also well-known for deeming the deaths of
his chosen heroes and his children. The list of heroes whom he blessed, only to
have them slain in the end, is long and enfolds both legendary and historical
warriors: Sigmundr the Völsung and Hrólfr kraki, Haraldr Hilditönn, Heiðrekr,
Eiríkr Blood-Axe and Hákon the Good, among others. Unlike the rest, however,
Balder does not take his place in Valhöll - it is not for the last battle that
Wodan wants him.
The name Höðr simply means
"warrior"; and Wodan himself, as well as Bileygr
("weak-eyed") is also called Tvíblindi ("blind in both
eyes"), and Helblindi ("Hel-blind"). The figure of the blind
warrior, then, is not hard to read as Wodan himself, and this is how many
scholars, including Turville-Petre, de Vries, and Polomé, see him. However,
the Beowulf poet knew a version of the story in which Hathcyn slays
his brother Herebeald; if Beowulf is indeed to be dated to the late
seventh/early eighth century, this would show that Höðr was a part of the tale
quite early. It is also to be noted that Wodan seldom actually slays his own
victims: he is the one who deems their death, but leaves other hands to carry
out his sacrifice.
De Vries (Altgermanische Religionsgeschichte)
and Polomé (Essays on Germanic Religion) both interpret Balder's death as an
initiation ritual: and surely a youth's passage through death to come back as
man and ruler, as Balder does, is one of the basic models of initiation. This can
also be compared to Wodan's initiation on the World-Tree: he dies, sinks down,
and returns more mighty than before. Balder's initiation, however, is far
longer-lasting, and may even have greater meaning for the worlds. Because he
does not join the warriors in Walhall, despite the fact that he has been slain
with a shooting-weapon and burned according to the usual practise of Wodan's
followers, he does not die at Ragnarök. Instead, he is in Hella's safe keeping
throughout the last battle, so that when the world is born again, he can come
back and take his father's place to make the might of the gods great again.
Balder's rebirth is also Wodan's rebirth, and Wodan's great victory: but
without death, as the Death-God himself knows, there can be no rebirth. Balder's
death has sometimes been read as a myth of fruitfulness, but he has nothing to
do with the fruitfulness of the fields. Instead, his passage shows this process
on the largest of all scales: the falling and rising again of the cosmos. The
worlds weep at Balder's death, because they know that to be the sign of their
doom as well, but we know that this shall not last forever. Kveldulf Gundarsson
suggests that this lore is truly the secret which Wodan whispered in Balder's
ear: the rune eihwaz ("yew"), "the rune of the will which
survives death and rebirth...life hidden within death as the fire is hidden
within the rough, cold bark of the yew...By this rune Baldr, hidden for a time
in Hel's protecting kingdom, is able to bring himself and Hodhr forth alive
again after Ragnarok" (Teutonic Magic, p. 103).
To Ásatrú, Balder is the seed of hope.
Living, he is, like Siegfried, the brave young hero who embodies all that is
brightest within us. His sacrifice ends the old age and brings the new to
birth; as he waits in Hella's halls for his rebirth, he reminds us that even
Ragnarök cannot destroy the might of the god/esses nor the best of what they,
and we, have wrought. In this new time, we may also think on the fact that it
was Siegfried's story which has saved more of the old lore, in poetry and
prose, than the legend of any other hero, and the same story that has kindled
the widest-reaching works of Teutonic art in this age: Siegfried's deeds and
early death have wrought much the same work for Heathendom among the folk that
Balder's early death will wreak for the god/esses, so that the hero may well be
seen as a reflection of the god.
Balder is less a god to be called on for
help than one to be loved, remembered, and toasted at symbel. There are no
hints in the lore of our forebears of him doing anything for humans: his might
is not in what he does, but in the promise of what he is and shall become. It
is particularly fitting to remember him at the four great feasts of the year:
at Midsummer's, when the Sun stands at her height and our thoughts turn to the
deeds of the bright young heroes and heroines; at Winternights, when the world
turns towards darkness and cold; at Yule, when the dead are closest to the land
of the living and only the evergreens show that life shall spring forth again;
and at Ostara, when we may most hope that the brightness of the land's rebirth
shall be echoed again in the bright rebirth of the worlds after Ragnarök.
The plants holy to Balder are the ox-eye
daisy and white flowers of the same family, which are called "Balder's
Brow"; the name is also given to the chammomile. The linden and the
mistletoe bear the obvious association with the god, especially the latter: the
"mist-twig" is the plant that opens the way into the underworld, as
it did for Balder, but it may also be seen as the plant that will open his way
back out again.
Balder's colour is white; gold may also
be fitting to him.
"Siegfried's Funeral March"
from Götterdämmerung is fitting music for remembering Balder's death,
the more so since Wagner quite deliberately subsituted Siegfried for Balder in
his version of the fall of the old world and the dawning of the new.
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