|
Post by Goldenfleeced on Sept 24, 2013 13:18:18 GMT
I was just thinking about Odin, and more particularly, his horse... Sleipnir... the one that has eight legs. I was wondering how, and why, any horse at all might end up with eight legs; I mean, it doesn't seem like it would make you a better runner, really... you'd just get your legs all tangled up, I would think. So, why eight legs...? Unless Sleipnir is a spider... or an octopus... but I don't think so. And then... I had an answer. Here is Sleipnir... And here is my 'answer'... You see...? Two knights... four legs... plus one horse... four legs... equals (drumroll, please) An 'eight-legged' horse that can still run. Baaahahahaha...
|
|
|
Post by Goldenfleeced on Sept 24, 2013 13:50:57 GMT
Of course, the legend of Sleipnir is a little bit more complicated than that. The original story, which I should reprint just for the sake of interest, has to do (coincidentally) with a 'builder,' much like Hiram... and an attempt to delay the completion of his 'work.' Gosh, that sounds familiar... Even more interesting, I think, is its connection to other things... such as the fact that Odin rides Sleipnir to Hel, or 'hell:' John Lindow theorizes that Sleipnir's "connection to the world of the dead grants a special poignancy to one of the kennings in which Sleipnir turns up as a horse word," referring to the skald Úlfr Uggason's usage of "sea-Sleipnir" in his Húsdrápa, which describes the funeral of Baldr. Lindow continues that "his use of Sleipnir in the kenning may show that Sleipnir's role in the failed recovery of Baldr was known at that time and place in Iceland; it certainly indicates that Sleipnir was an active participant in the mythology of the last decades of paganism." Lindow adds that the eight legs of Sleipnir "have been interpreted as an indication of great speed or as being connected in some unclear way with cult activity."[21]
Hilda Ellis Davidson says that "the eight-legged horse of Odin is the typical steed of the shaman" and that in the shaman's journeys to the heavens or the underworld, a shaman "is usually represented as riding on some bird or animal." Davidson says that while the creature may vary, the horse is fairly common "in the lands where horses are in general use, and Sleipnir's ability to bear the god through the air is typical of the shaman's steed" and cites an example from a study of shamanism by Mircea Eliade of an eight-legged foal from a story of a Buryat shaman. Davidson says that while attempts have been made to connect Sleipnir with hobby horses and steeds with more than four feet that appear in carnivals and processions, but that "a more fruitful resemblance seems to be on the bier on which a dead man is carried in the funeral procession by four bearers; borne along thus, he may be described as riding on a steed with eight legs." As an example, Davidson cites a funeral dirge from the Gondi people in India as recorded by Verrier Elwin, stating that "it contains references to Bagri Maro, the horse with eight legs, and it is clear from the song that it is the dead man's bier." Davidson says that the song is sung when a distinguished Muria dies, and provides a verse:
What horse is this? It is the horse of Bagri Maro. What should we say of its legs? This horse has eight legs. What should we say of its heads? This horse has four heads. . . . Catch the bridle and mount the horse.
Davidson adds that the representation of Odin's steed as eight-legged could arise naturally out of such an image, and that "this is in accordance with the picture of Sleipnir as a horse that could bear its rider to the land of the dead."
Ulla Loumand cites Sleipnir and the flying horse Hófvarpnir as "prime examples" of horses in Norse mythology as being able to "mediate between earth and sky, between Ásgarðr, Miðgarðr and Útgarðr and between the world of mortal men and the underworld."
The Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture theorizes that Sleipnir's eight legs may be the remnants of horse-associated divine twins found in Indo-European cultures and ultimately stemming from Proto-Indo-European religion. The encyclopedia states that "[...] Sleipnir is born with an extra set of legs, thus representing an original pair of horses. Like Freyr and Njörðr, Sleipnir is responsible for carrying the dead to the otherworld." The encyclopedia cites parallels between the birth of Sleipnir and myths originally pointing to a Celtic goddess who gave birth to the Divine horse twins. These elements include a demand for a goddess by an unwanted suitor (the hrimthurs demanding the goddess Freyja) and the seduction of builders...en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SleipnirAbove the rider on the Tjängvide image stone is a horizontal figure holding a spear, which may be a valkyrie, and a female figure greets the rider with a cup. The scene has been interpreted as a rider arriving at the world of the dead...
|
|
|
Post by Goldenfleeced on Sept 24, 2013 14:01:47 GMT
Just for fun... and don't forget to kiss the horse...
|
|