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Grimm's TM - Chap. 22 Chapter 22
Her invisibility lasts only the one night between the disappearance
of her last quarter and the appearance of her first, at newmoon (conjunction
of sun and moon); in like manner, full-moon lasts from the moment she attains
perfect sphericity till she loses it again. But in common parlance that 'nox
illunis' is included in the new moon, and similarly the decline is made to begin
simultaneously with the full. The Gothic for panselhnon was
fullişs m., or fulliş n. (gen. pl. fullişê), from which we may also infer a
niujişs for noumhnia
. Curiously, this last is rendered fulliş in Col. 2, 16,
which to my mind is a mere oversight, and not to be explained by the supposition
that the Goths looked upon full-moon as the grander festival. The AS. too must
have called full-moon fylleğ, to judge by the name of the month 'winterfylliğ,'
which says Beda (de temp. rat. 13), was so named 'ab hiema et plenilunio'; but
the later writers have only niwe môna and full môna. So there may have been an
OHG. niuwid and fullid, though we can only lay our finger on the neuters niumâni
and folmâni, (25) to which Graff 2,
222 adds a niwilune; MHG. daz niumœne and volmœne, the last in Trist. 9464. 11086.
11513 (see Suppl.). In ON. the two periods are named by the neuters 'nı ok niğ,' habitually
alliterating; nı answers to novilunium, it signifies the new light, and niğ
the declining, dwindling, from the lost root niğa nağ, from which also come
the adv. niğr (deorsum) and the noun nâğ (quies, OHG. ginâda). So that nı lasts
from the beginning of the first quarter to the full, and niğ from the decrease
of the full to the extinction of light in the last quarter. The two touch one
another at the border-line between the faintest streaks of waxing and of waning
brightness. But niğ meant especially the absence of moonlight (interlunium),
and niğamyrkr total darkness (luna silens). Kind gods created these for men
of old to tell the year by: 'nı ok niğ skôpo nıt regin öldum at âr-tali,' (26)
Sæm. 34ª. 'Mâni stırir göngu tûngls, oc ræğr nıjum oc niğum,' Sn. 12, Mâni steers
the going of the mon, and rules new moons and full. Probably even here personification
comes into play, for in Völuspâ 11 (Sæm. 2b) Nıji and Niği are dwarfs, i.e.
spirits of the sky, who are connected, we do not exactly know how, with those
lunar phases nı ok niğ. (27) Of
changeful things it is said 'şat gengr eptir nıum ok niğum,' res alternatur
et subit lunae vices. O. Swed. laws have the formula 'ny oc niğar,' for 'at
all times, under any phase,' Gutalagh, p. 108. So 'i ny ok niğa,' Sudh. bygn.
32. Upl. vidh. 28, 1. Vestg. thiuv. 22, 1; but here the second word seems to
have given up its neut. form, and passed into a personal and masc. Mod. Swed.
has 'ny och nedan'; Dan. 'ny og nœ,' 'det gaaer efter nye og nœe,' 'hverken
i nye eller nœ,' i.e. never, 'naar nyet tändes,' quando nova luna incenditur;
this næ was in O. Dan. ned, need. To the niğamyrkr above answers a Swed. nedmörk,
pitchdark. The Norse terminology differs in so far from the H. Germ., that it
expresses the total obscuration of niğ, while we designate it by neumond (i.e.
nı); with us new-moon is opposed to full-moon, with the Scandinavians niğ to
nı, each of them standing for one half of the moon's course. Since a mention
of the first and last quarters has come into use, full-moon and new-moon signify
simply the points of fullness and vacancy that lie between; and now the Swedes
and Danes have equally adopted a fullmåne, fuldmaane, as counterpart to nymåne,
nymaane, whereby the old 'ned, næ' has become superfluous, and the meaning of
'ny' somewhat modified. (28) Though the OHG. remains do not offer us a neuter niuwi, (29)
such a form may have existed, to match the Norse nı, seeing that the Mülhausen
statute of the 13th cent. (Grasshof p. 252) in granting the stranger
that would settle in the town a month's time for the attempt, says 'ein nuwe
und ein wedil, daz sint vier wochin;' that Martin von Amberg's Beichtspiegel
has 'das vol und das neu,' Dasypodius still later 'das newe, interlunium,' and
Tobler 331b 'das neu, der wachsende mond.' For the waning moon, Tobler 404b
gives 'nid si gehender (going down),' which reminds one of niğ; otherwise 'der
schwined mo,' OHG. 'diu suînenta mânin,' N. ps. 88, 38, its opposite being 'diu
folla' (see Suppl.). I have yet to bring forward another expression of wide range and
presumably old, which is used by turns for one and another phase of the moon's
light, oftenest for plenilunium, but sometimes also for interlunium: MHG. wedel:
'im was unkunt des mânen wedel,' Martina 181c; NHG. wadel, wädel, but more among
the common folk and in the chase than in written speech. Pictorius 480, Stald.
2, 456, Tobler 441b have wedel, wädel full-moon, wädeln to become full-moon,
when her horns meet, i.e., when she completes her circle. Keisersperg's Postille
138b: 'ietz so ist er nüw, ietz fol, ietz alt, ietz die erst qvart, ietz die
ander qvart, ietz ist es wedel'; here full-moon and wedel are not so clearly
defined as in another passage of Keisersperg (Oberlin 1957) on March: 'wan es
ist sein wedel, sein volmon.' In Dasypodius: 'plenilunium, der volmon, wädel.'
(30) The Germans in Bohemia commonly
use wädel for full-moon, and Schm. 4, 22 produces other notable authorities.
But the word is known in Lower Germany too; Böhmer's Kantzow p. 266 spells it
wadel, (31) the Brem. wtb. 5, 166
'waal, vollmond' (like aal for adel, a swamp), and Kilian 'waedel, senium lunae.'
From the phraseology of Superst. I, 973 one would take wädel to be a general
name for the moon, whether waxing or waning, for 'the bad wädel' [new-moon]
surely implies a good wädel favourable to the operation. Now wadel, wedel means
that which wags to and fro, and is used of an animal's tail, flabrum, flabellum,
cauda; it must either, like zungâ and tûngl, refer to the tip or streak of light
in the crescent moon, or imply that the moon cruises about in the sky. (32)
The latter explanation fits a passage in the AS. poem on Finnesburg fight, line
14: 'nû scîneğ şes môna wağol under wolcnum,' i.e., the moon walking [wading]
among the clouds, wağol being taken for the adj. vagus, vagabundus. Probably
even the OHG. wadal was applied to the moon, as an adj. vagus (Graff 1, 776),
or as a subst. flabellum (1, 662). But, as this subst. not only signifies flabellum
[whisk], but fasciculus [wisp], the name may ultimately be connected with the
bundle of brushwood that a myth (to be presently noticed) puts in the spots
of the full-moon (see Suppl.). Lith. jáunas menu novilunium, pilnatis plenilunium, puspilis first
quarter, pusdylis last qu., delczia luna decrescens, lit. trunca, worn away,
tarpijos interlunium (from tarp, inter); puspilis means half-full, pusdylis
half-worn, from the same root as delczia truncation, decrease. There is also
a 'menu tusczias,' vacant moon; and the sickle-shaped half-moon is called dalgakynos.
Lettic: jauns mehnes novilun., pilna mehnes plenilun., mehnes punte luna accrescens,
wezza mehnes (33) luna senescens.-----Finnic:
uusikuu novil., fäysikuu plenil., ylikuu luna accr., alakuu decr., formed with
uusi novus, täysi plenus, yli superus, ala inferus, which supports our explanation
of the ON. niğ [[the waning moon]].-----The Servians divide thus: miyena novil.,
mladina luna accr., lit. young, puna plenil., ushtap luna decr. Slovèn mlay,
mlad novil., polna plenil., ship plenil., but no doubt also luna decr., from
shipati to nip, impair. Pol. now and Boh. nowy novil., Pol. pelnia and Boh.
auplnek plenil. Here we see another instance of the ruder races having more
various and picturesque names for natural phenomena, which among the more cultivated
are replaced by abstract and uniform ones. No doubt Teutonic speech in its various
branches once possessed other names beside niğ and wadel. Tacitus merely tells us that the Germani held their assemblies
at new moon or full moon, not that the two periods were thought equally favourable
to all enterprises without distinction. We may guess that some matters were
more suitable to new moon, others to full; the one would inspire by its freshness,
the other by its fulness. (34) Caesar 1, 50 reports to us the declaration of wise women in the
camp of Ariovistus: 'non esse fas Germanos superare, si ante novam lunam proelio
contendissent.' A happy issue to the battle was expected, at all events in this
particular instance, only if it were fought at new moon. As far as I can make out from later remnants of German superstition,
with which that of Scotland should be compared (Chambers 35b. 36ª), new-moon,
addressed by way of distinction as 'gracious lord' p. 704, is an auspicious
time for commencements properly speaking. Marriages are to be concluded in it,
houses to be built: 'novam lunam observasti pro domo facienda aut conjugiis
sociandis' (Sup. C, 193b), the latter just the same in Esth. Sup. no. 1. Into
a new house you must move at new moon (223), she will increase your store (conf.
p. 704); on the other hands, she loves not to look into an empty purse (107).
All through, the notion is that money, married bliss and house stores will thrive
and grow with the growing light. So the hair and nails are cut at new-moon (French
Sup. 5. Schütze's Holst. id. 3, 68), to give them a good chance of growing;
cattle are weaned in the waxing light (I, 757), in the waning they would get
lean; Lith. Sup. 11 says, let girls be weaned at the wane, boys at the full,
probably to give the one a slim elegant figure, and the other a stout and strong.
Healing herbs and pure dew are to be gathered at new-moon (tou an des mânen
niwi gelesen, N. Cap. 100, conf. 25), for then they are fresh and unalloyed.
When it says in I, 764 that weddings should take place at full-moon, and in
238 that a new dwelling should be entered with the waxing or full moon, this
full-moon seems to denote simply the utmost of the growing light, without the
accessory notion of incipient decline. If our ancestors as a rule fought their
battles at new-moon, they must have had in their eye the springing up of victory
to themselves, not the defeat and downfall of the enemy. (35) At full-moon (as opposed to new), i.e. by a waning light, you
were to perform operations involving severance or dissolution, cutting down
or levelling. Thus, if I understand it rightly, a marriage would have to be
annulled, a house pulled down, a pestilence stamped out, when the moon is on
the wane. Under this head comes in the rule to cut wood in the forest when it
is wadel, apparently that the timber felled may dry. In a Calendar printed by
Hupfuff, Strasb. 1511: 'with the moon's wedel 'tis good to begin the hewing
of wood.' The same precept is still given in many modern forest-books, and full-moon
is therefore called holz-wadel: 'in the bad wädel (crescent moon) fell no timber,'
Sup. I, 973. In Keisersperg's Menschl. baum, Strasb. 1521, 19: 'Alway in wedel
are trees to be hewn, and game to be shot.' (36)
Grass is not to be mown at new, but at full moon (Lith. Sup. 7); that the hay
may dry quickly ? and treasures must be lifted at full-moon. If a bed be stuffed
when the moon is growing, the feathers will not lie (I, 372. 914); this operation
too requires a waning light, as if to kill the new-plucked feathers completely,
and bring them to rest. If you open trenches by a waxing moon, they will soon
grow together again; if by a waning they keep on getting deeper and wider. To
open a vein with the moon declining, makes the blood press downwards and load
the legs (Tobler 40b); set about it therefore by the mounting moonlight. Vuk
sub v. miyena says, the Servian women will wash never a shirt at new-moon, they
declare all the linen would get mooned (omiyeniti) in the water, i.e. bulge
and pucker, and soon tear; one might find another reason too for washing by
the waning moon, that stains and dirt should disappear with the dwindling light
(see Suppl.). Behind superstitious practices I have tried
to discover a meaning, which may possibly come near their original signification.
Such symbolical coupling of means and end was at all events not foreign to antiquity
anywhere: the holy water floats all misfortune away with it (p. 589), the spray
from the millwheel scatters all sickness (p. 593). So the sufferer stands with
his face to the waning moon, and prays: 'as thou decreasest, let my pains diminish'
(I, 245); he can also go on the other tack, and cry to the new moon: 'may what
I see increase, and what I suffer cease' (492). Turning the face toward the
luminary I take to be a relic of heathen moon-worship. (37) 25. Also niuwer mâno, N. ps. 80, 4. foller mâno, ps. 88, 38. In Cap. 107-8 he uses vol and wan (empty), and in Cap. 147 hornaht, halbscaftig and fol; conf. Hel. 111, 8 wanod ohtho wahsid. [Back] 26. Acc. to Alvismâl, the âlfar call the moon ârtali (OHG. jârzalo?), Sæm. 49b. [Back] 27. Comp. with 'nið ok ný' the Gr. enh kai nea. [Back] 28. Modern Icel. names are: blâný (black new, interlunium); prím (nova luna), also nýqveikt tûngl (first quarter); fullt tûngl (plenilunium); hâlfþrotid tûngl (last quarter). Here too the old names have gone out of use, 'blâný' replaces nið, and 'prim' ný. [Back] 29. Notker's Capella 100 has 'mânen niwi' fem. [Back] 30. Yet under luna he has 'plenilunium vollmon oder bruch,' and the same under bruch (=abbruch) a breaking off, falling off, defectus; which confirms my view, that we reckon the wane from full-moon itself (Wtb. 2, 408). Acc. to Muchar's Noricum 2, 36 the waxing and waning moon are called the gesunde and the kranke man (well and ill). [Back] 31. Following Tacitus, he says, the Germani always chose either new or full-moon, for after the wadel they thought it unlucky. Wadel then comprehends the two phases of new and full moon, but seems to exclude those of the first and last quarter. [Back] 32. The Engl. waddle, which is the same word, would graphically express the oscillation of the (visible) moon from side to side of her path; and if wedel meant that oscillation, it would apply equally to new and to full moon.----Trans. [Back] 33. Wezza mehnes, the old moon. In a Scotch ballad: 'I saw the new moon late yestreen wi' he auld moon in her arm.' Jamieson 1, 159. Percy 1, 78. Halliwell pp. 167-8. [Back] 34. New-moon was peculiarly holy to ancient peoples, thus to the Greeks the enh kai nea, which was also expressed by enh alone = Sanskr. amâ (new moon). The return of Odysseus was expected at that season, Od. 14, 162: tou men fqinontoj mhnoj, tou d istamenoio. Râmâ's birth is fixed for the new-moon after vernal equinox (Schlegel on Râmây. i. 19, 2). Probably bealteine were lighted at this new-moon of spring. [Back] 35. The Esthonians say to the new-moon: 'Hail moon! may you grow old, and I keep young!' Thom. Hiärne p. 40. [Back] 36. In Demerara grows a tree like the mahogany, called walala; if cut down at new-moon, the wood is tough and hard to split, if at full, it is soft and splits easily. Bamboo planks cut at new-moon last ten years, those cut at full-moon rot within the year. [Back] 37. Whoever at play turns his back to the moon, has bad luck (I, 801). But the seaman in his hammock takes care not to face the full-moon, lest he be struck with blindness. [Back] << Previous Page Next Page >>
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