Elf King and the Names of Odin by Susan Price
Green Man boss below crossing at Rochester Cathedral.(Akoliasnikoff)
The lyrics of the folk-song 'John Barleycorn.'
I've known them since I was a teenager and, in my book 'Elf King', I have the hero, Elfgift and his half-brother, Wulfweard, sing a version of this song as they raise dead warriors from their graves to form an army. Well, sometimes you really need an army.
Printed versions of this ballad date back five hundred years, to the 16th Century, and it's often assumed, as a rough guide, that any folk-song or tale appearing in print, was probably known at least a hundred years earlier, if not before. It's also been argued that 'John Barleycorn' is a survival from paganism, since it seems to describe the sacrifice and resurrection of a corn-god who dies every winter and is reborn in the spring.
I'd love to believe it, I really would, but...
16th Century Britain -- and even 15th Century Britain -- was a long way from paganism. I'm not the only one to be unconvinced. It's been pointed out that there are many versions of this song and, in some of them, the ‘three kings’ are non-royal men who swear to kill Barleycorn because they've drunk too much of ‘the nut-brown ale’ and are suffering fierce hangovers. They kill Barleycorn in an attempt to make sure he’ll never inflict such suffering on them again— but he ‘springs up’ once more the following year, to be brewed into yet more beer that somebody has to drink. This makes it a simple drinking song, to an accompaniment of mugs bashed on tables and boots stamped on floors.
Of course, you can have it both ways and argue that it is a pagan hymn to Frey or Ing— but when these gods were forgotten or forbidden, people explained the song (or disguised it) by saying it was only about hangovers and drinking. Take your pick.
If you don’t know the song and would like to hear it, you can find many versions of it by, for instance, Martin Carthy, Steeleye Span, Jethro Tull and Winterfylleth. Here's a live performance from Steve Winwood.
Later in the book, I use a snatch from the folk-song 'Jack Orion' or 'Glasgerion.' I have it sung by a travelling harpist -- I change 'fiddle' to 'harp', naturally.
The name of my harpist is Ud, which happens to be one of the many, many 'eke'-names for Odin, the Norse god of War, Poetry, Sorcery and Inspiration. The Romans identified Odin with their Mercury or the Greek Hermes, who was another god with a list of jobs as long as your leg. Travellers, heralds, dog-killers, thieves, scholars, liars, the home,... you name it, Hermes was god of it.
Hermes: Wikipedia |
Woden and Wood
The Norse god, Odin, was Woden to the Saxons, and Wednesday is His day. (The Black Country town a few miles from me, Wednesbury, is Woden's Fortified Place -- borough, bury and burg mean 'fortress town.')
Odin or Woden is the name this god is most often known by, but it's yet another 'eke-name', or nick-name.
In A Midsummer Night's Dream, Shakespeare has Demetrius say,
Odin was certainly not the god of choice for desperate lovers, though. (Better off trying Frey or Freyja.) Odin was a god of battle and inspiring wars and battles was Odin's strategy for gathering an army of warriors, to fight with Him against Chaos at Ragnarok, the End of the World. (He seems to be striding about the world again, right now.)
Human sacrifices were made to Odin, by hanging -- and, in myth, Odin sacrificed Himself to Himself, hanging Himself from Yggdrasil, the World Tree. This earned Him the by-name, The Hanged God. (The name of the great ash at the centre of the world, Yggdrasil, means 'Odin's Horse'. Ygg (Terrible One) is yet another name for Odin, and 'drasil' means 'horse.' ) At the end of a rope, He rode the tree into death.
At the foot of Yggdrasil is a pool of water, or a well. Beside it live the Norns, the Norse Fates. Drinking from this magical pool brings insight. It often turns up in later folk-lore and fairy-tales as 'The Well at the World's End.' Odin bought more wisdom by paying for a drink from this well, the price being one of His eyes. This gave Him yet more eke-names: One-Eye and Blinded One.
He’s imagined as an older man, so He’s called Grey-Beard. His weapon and symbol was a spear, so He’s called Spear Carrier. Because He travelled so much, wandering over the earth and between worlds, He’s called Walker, Wanderer and ‘Way-Weary.’
In another likeness to Hermes, Odin was usually described dressed as a traveler, wearing a broad-brimmed hat, or a hood, pulled low to hide His missing eye. This gave Him the names ‘Broad Hat’ and ‘Old Hood’. His cloak and hat are usually said to be blue, because blue was associated with death. (In the Icelandic Sagas, if it's mentioned that someone is dressed in blue, you can be sure that bloodshed and murder is on its way.)
In the ballads of the Scottish Border, recorded hundreds of years after the introduction of Christianity, a character sometimes turns up called ‘Old Carl Hood.’
‘Then in came he, Old Carl Hood
Who comes always for ill and never for good.’
‘Carl’ is an old word meaning ‘man.’ This ill-intentioned, old man, hooded as Odin usually was, is said to be a folk-memory of Odin, come in disguise, to stir up strife and ill-feeling (leading to wars and so to more harvests of heroes). I suppose, if such a memory of Odin could survive over a thousand years to be written down in the 19th and 20th centuries by collectors of old ballads, it's remotely possible that 'John Barleycorn' is a distant memory of a hymn to Frey. But I still doubt it.
Odin was also called ‘the Treacherous God’ because He always broke the promises He made to His followers. As a god of war, the promise He made was to bring His followers victory.
But Odin's secret agenda was always to add to His army of dead heroes. He promised victory but what the devious deity really wanted was your death in battle. And what if the leaders on both sides worshipped Odin? Only one of them could be victorious.
An Einherjar and a berserk? (Public Domain) |
Comments
I mean, a silly girl boasts that she's better at weaving than Hera, so Hera instantly turns her into a spider? Midas prefers Pan's music to Apollo's, so Apollo gives him donkey's ears? The Norse gods don't seem to go in for that sort of pettiness.
Arachne
I knew who she was all right.
Her in that shabby robe, old-lady hair –
she didn’t fool me! No,
I was half-expecting her, the jealous cat!
They have it all, those gods,
and always lust for more.
She knew I was the best.
She couldn’t match my work
so she destroyed it,
tore it up, before the world
could see that I had bested her.
But that was not enough, oh no -
she touched me, shrivelled me,
changed me into this.
‘Weave on,’ she mocked, ‘I’ll leave you that,
weave for your supper, since you cannot sing.’
I weave my webs as light as air, stronger than stone,
softer than swansdown, finer than silk,
shimmering in sunshine, sparkling in rain.
And every bright-winged creature I ensnare,
watch die, feast on, obliterate,
Athene, stands for you.
Sandra, great poem! I suspect it's yours, though you don't give yourself credit.
I've had to revise my good opinion of Hermes-Mercury. I think it must have stemmed from childhood reading of cleaned-up myths, and from Leon Garfield's retellings. When I check out His true nature, He seems closer to the Norse Loki than Odin. A thief, a con-artist and a stalker and a rapist.