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Grimm's TM - Chap. 14 Chapter 14
Beside language, the gods have customs in common with men. They
love song and play, take delight in hunting, war and banquets, and the goddesses
in ploughing, weaving, spinning; both of them keep servants and messengers.
Zeus causes all the other gods to be summoned to the assembly (agorh, Il. 8,
2. 20, 4), just as the Ases attend to the þîng (Sæm. 93ª),
on the rökstôla, and by the Yggdrasill (Sæm. 1b 2ª 44ª),
to counsel and to judge. Hebe, youth, is cupbearer of the gods and handmaid
to Here (Il. 5, 722), as Fulla is to Frigg (Sn. 36); the youth Ganymede is cupbearer
too, and so is Beyla at the feast of the Ases (Sæm. 67ª); Skîrnir
is Frey's shoemaker (81) and messenger, Beyggvir and Beyla are also called his
servants (59). These services do no detriment to their own divine nature. Beside
Hermes, the goddess Iris goes on errands for the Greek gods (see Suppl.). Among the gods themselves there is a difference of rank. Three
sons of Kronos have the world divided among them, the sky is allotted to Zeus,
the sea to Poseidon, hell to Hades, and the earth they are supposed to share
between them (Il. 15, 193). These three tower above all the rest, like Hâr,
Iafnhâr and Thriði in the Norse religion, the triad spoken of on p.
162. This is not the same thing as 'Wuotan, Donar, Ziu,' if only because the
last two are not brothers but sons of Wuotan, although these pass for the three
mightiest gods. Then, together with this triad, we become aware of a circle
of twelve (p. 26), a close circle from which some of the gods are excluded.
Another division, that into old and new gods, does not by any means coincide
with this: not only Oðinn and his Ases, but also Zeus and his colleagues,
appear as upstarts (21) to have supplanted
older gods of nature (see Suppl.). All the divinities, Greek and Norse, have offices and functions
assigned them, which define their dominion, and have had a marked influence
on their pictorial representation. In Sn. 27-29 these offices are specified,
each with the words: 'hann ræðr fyrir (he looks after),' or 'â
hann skal heita til, er gott at heita til (to him you shall pray for, it is
good to pray for)'. Now, as any remnants of Greek or Teutonic paganism in the
Mid. Ages were sure to connect themselves with some christian saints, to whom
the protection of certain classes or the healing of certain diseases was carried
over, it is evident that a careful classification of these guardian saints according
to the offices assigned them, on the strength of which they are good to pray
to, (22) would be of advantage to our antiquities. And the
animals dedicated to each deified saint (as once they were to gods) would have
to be specified too. The favourite residence of each god is particularly pointed out
in the Grîmnismâl; mountains especially were consecrated to the
Teutonic, as to the Greek deities: Sigtýsberg, Himinbiörg, &c.
Olympus was peculiarly the house of Zeus (Dioj
dwma), to which the other gods assembled (Il. 1, 494); on the highest
peak of the range he would sit apart (ater allwn
1, 498. 5, 753), loving to take counsel alone (apaneuqe
qewn 8, 10). He had another seat on Ida (11, 183. 336), whence he looked
down to survey the doings of men, as Oðinn did from Hliðsciâlf.
Poseidon sat on a height in the wooded range of Samos (13, 12). Valhöll
and Bilskirnir, the dwellings of Oðinn and Thôrr, are renowned for
their enormous size; the one is said to have 540 doors, through any one of which
800 einheriar can go out at once, and Bilskirnir has likewise 540 'golfe'[ON.
gôlfr, floor] (see Suppl.). If now we take in one view the relations of gods and men, we
find they meet and touch at all points. As the created being is filled with
a childlike sense of its dependence on the creator, and prayers and offerings
implore his favour, so deity too delights in its creations, and takes in them
a fatherly interest. Man's longing goes forth towards heaven; the gods fix their
gaze on the earth, to watch and direct the doings of mortals. The blessed gods
do commune with each other in their heavenly abodes, where feasts and revels
go on as in earthly fashion; but they are more drawn to men, whose destinies
enlist their liveliest sympathy. It is not true, what Mart. Cap. says 2, 9:
ipsi dicuntur dii, et caelites alias perhibentur........nec admodum eos mortalium
curarum vota sollicitant, apaqeij que perhibentur.
Not content with making their will known by signs and messengers, they resolve
to come down themselves and appear to men. Such appearance is in the Hindu mythology
marked by a special name: avatâra, i.e., descensus.
(23) Under this head come first the solemn car-processions of deities
heralding peace and fruitfulness or war and mischief, which for the most, part
recur at stated seasons, and are associated with popular festivals; on the fall
of heathenism, only motherly wise-women still go their rounds, and heroes ride
through field or air. More rarely, and not at regular intervals, there take
place journeys of gods through the world, singly or in twos or threes, to inspect
the race of man, and punish the crimes they have noticed. Thus Mercury and Oðinn
apeared on earth, or Heimdall to found the three orders, and Thôrr visited
at weddings; Oðinn, Hnir and Loki travelled in company; medieval legend
makes God the Father seek a lodging, or the Saviour and St. Peter, or merely
three angels (as the Servian song does, Vuk 4, no. 3). Most frequent however
are the solitary appearances of gods, who, invoked or uninvoked, suddenly bring
succour to their favoured ones in every time of need; the Greek epos is quite
full of this. Athene, Poseidon, Ares, Aphrodite mingle with the warriors, warning,
advising, covering; and just as often do Mary and saints from heaven appear
in christian legends. The Lithuanian Perkunos also walks on earth (see Suppl.). But when they descend, they are not always visible; you may hear
the car of the god rush by, and not get sight of him bodily; like ghosts the
blessed gods flit past the human eye unnoticed, till the obstructive mist be
removed from it. Athene seizes Achilles by the hair, only by him and no other
is she seen, Il. 1, 197; to take the succouring deities visible to Diomed, she
has 'taken the mist from his eyes, that was on them before' 5, 127: In the Asiatic legends, it seems to me, the manifestations of
deity are conceived deeply and purely in comparison, and nowhere more profoundly
than in those of India. The god comes down and abides in the flesh for a season,
for the salvation of mankind. Wherever the doctrine of metempsychosis prevailed,
the bodies of animals even were eligible for avatâra; and of Vishnu's
ten successive incarnations, the earlier ones are animal, it was in the later
ones that he truly 'became man' (see Suppl.). The Greek and Teutonic mythologies
steer clear of all such notions; in both of them the story of the gods was too
sensuously conceived to have invested their transformation with the seriousness
and duration of an avatâra, although a belief in such incarnation is in
itself so nearly akin to that of the heroes being bodily descended from the
gods. I think that on all these lines of research, which could be extended
to many other points as well, I have brought forward a series of undeniable
resemblances between the Teutonic mythology and the Greek. Here, as in the relation
between the Greek and Teutonic languages, there is no question of borrowing
or choice, nothing but unconscious affinity, allowing room (and that inevitably)
for considerable divergences. But who can fail to recognise, or who invalidate,
the surprising similarity of opinions on the immortality of gods, their divine
food, their growing up overnight, their journeyings and transformations, their
epithets, their anger and their mirth, their suddenness in appearing and recognition
at parting, their use of carriages and horses, their performance of all natural
functions, their illnesses, their language, their servants and messengers, offices
and dwellings? To conclude, I think I see a further analogy in the circumstance,
that out of the names of living gods, as Týr, Freyr, Baldr, Bragi, Zeus,
grew up the common nounds týr, fráuja, baldor, bragi, deus, or
they bordered close upon them (see Suppl.). << Previous Page Next Page >>
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