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Popular Tales From the Norse p. cxxiv We have seen how our Lord and the saints succeeded to Odin and his children
in the stories which told of their wanderings on earth to warn the wicked, or
to help the good; we have seen how the kindliness and helpfulness of the ancient
goddesses fell like a royal mantle round the form of the Virgin Mary. We have
seen, too, on the other hand, how the procession of the Almighty God degenerated
into the infernal midnight hunt. We have now to see what became of the rest
of the power of the goddesses, of all that might which was not absorbed into
the glory of the blessed Virgin. We shall not have far to seek. No reader of
early medieval chronicles and sermons can fail to have been struck with many
passages which ascribe majesty and power to beings of woman's sex. Now it is
a heathen goddess as Diana; now some half-historical character as Bertha;
now a mythical being as Holda; now Herodias; now Satia;
now Domina Abundia, or Dame Habonde. 1 A very short
investigation will serve p. cxxv to identify the two ancient goddesses Frigga and Freyja with all these leaders of a midnight host. Just as Odin was banished from day to darkness, so the two great heathen goddesses, fused into one "uncanny" shape, were supposed to ride the air at night. Medieval chroniclers, writing in bastard Latin, and following the example of classical authors, when they had to find a name for this demon-goddess, chose, of course, Diana the heathen huntress; the moon-goddess; and the ruler of the night. In the same way, when they threw Odin's name into a Latin shape, he, the god of wit and will, as well as power and victory, became Mercury. As for Herodias--not the mother, but the daughter who danced--she must have made a deep impression on the mind of the early Middle Age, for she was supposed to have been cursed after the beheading of John the Baptist, and to have gone on dancing for ever. When heathendom fell, she became confounded with the ancient Goddesses, and thus we find p. cxxvi her, sometimes among the crew of the Wild Huntsman; sometimes, as we see in the passages below, in company with, or in the place of Diana, Holda, Satia, and Abundia, at the head of a bevy of women, who met at certain places to celebrate unholy rites and mysteries. As for Holda, Satia, and Abundia, "the kind," "the satisfying," and "the abundant," they are plainly names of good rather than evil powers; they are ancient epithets drawn from the bounty of the "Good Lady," and attest the feeling of respect which still clung to them in the popular mind. As was the case whenever Christianity was brought in, the country folk, always averse to change, as compared with the more lively and intelligent dwellers in towns, p. cxxvii still remained more or less heathen, 1 and to this day they preserve unconsciously many superstitions which can be traced up in lineal descent to their old belief. In many ways does the old divinity peep out under the new superstition--the long train, the midnight feast, "the good lady" who presides, the bounty and abundance which her votaries fancied would follow in her footsteps, all belong to the ancient Goddess. Most curious of all is the way in which all these traditions from different countries insist on the third part of the earth, the third child born, the third soul as belonging to the "good lady" who leads the revel; for this right of a third, or even of a half, was one which Freyja possessed. "But Freyja is most famous of the Asynjor. She has that bower in heaven hight Fólkvángr, and whithersoever she rideth to the battle, then hath she one-half of the slain, but Odin the other half." Again "when she fares abroad, she drives two cats and sits in a car, and she lends an easy ear to the prayers of men." 2 We have got then the ancient goddesses identified as evil influences, and
as the leader of a midnight band of women, who practised secret and unholy rites.
This leads us at once to witchcraft. In all ages and in all races this belief
in sorcery has existed. Men and women practised it alike, but in all times female
sorcerers have predominated. 3 This was natural enough. In those
days women p. cxxviii were priestesses; they collected drugs and simples; Women alone knew the virtues of plants. Those soft hands spun linen, made lint, and bound wounds. Women, in the earliest times with which we are acquainted with our forefathers, alone knew how to read and write, they only could carve the mystic runes, they only could chant the charms so potent to allay the wounded warrior's smart and pain. The men were busy out of doors with ploughing hunting, barter, and war. In such an age the sex which possessed by natural right book-learning, physic, soothsaying, and incantation, even when they used these mysteries for good purposes, were but a step from sin. The same soft white hand that bound the wound and scraped the lint; the same gentle voice that sung the mystic rune, that helped the child-bearing woman, or drew the arrow-head from the dying champion's breast; the same bright eye that gazed up to heaven in ecstasy through the sacred rove and read the will of the Gods when the mystic tablets and rune-carved lots were cast--all these, if the will were had, if the soothsayer passed into the false prophetess, the leech into a poisoner, and the priestess into a witch, were as potent and terrible for ill as they had once been powerful for good. In all the Indo-European tribes, therefore, women, and especially old women, have practised witchcraft from the earliest times, and Christianity found them wherever it advanced. But Christianity, as it placed mankind upon a higher platform of civilisation, increased the evil which it found, and when it expelled the ancient goddesses, and confounded them as demons with Diana and Herodias, it added them and their votaries to the old class of malevolent sorcerers. There was but one step, but a simple act of the will, between p. cxxix the Norn and the hag, even before Christianity came in. As soon as it came, down went Goddess, Valkyrie, Norn, priestess, and soothsayer, into that unholy deep where the heathen hags and witches had their being; and, as Christianity gathered strength, developed its dogmas, and worked out its faith, fancy, tradition, leechcraft, poverty, and idleness, produced that unhappy class, the medieval witch, the persecution of which is one of the darkest pages in religious history. It is curious indeed to trace the belief in witches through the Middle Age,
and to mark how it increases in intensity and absurdity. At first, as we have
seen in the passages quoted, the superstition seemed comparatively harmless,
and though the witches themselves may have believed in their unholy power, there
were not wanting divines who took a common-sense view of the matter, and put
the absurdity of their pretensions to a practical proof. Such was that good
parish priest who asked, when an old woman of his flock insisted that she had
been in his house with the company of "the Good Lady," and had seen
him naked and covered him up, "How, then, did you get in when all the doors
were locked?" "We can get in," she said, "even if the doors
are locked." Then the priest took her into the chancel of the church, locked
the door, and gave her a sound thrashing with the pastoral staff, calling out,
"Out with you, lady witch." But as she could not, he sent her home,
saying, "See now how foolish you are to believe in such empty dreams."
1 But as the Church p. cxxx increased in strength, as heresies arose, and consequent persecution, then
the secret meetings of these sectarians, as we should now call them, were identified
by the hierarchy with the rites of sorcery and magic, and with the relies of
the worship of the old gods. By the time, too, that the hierarchy was established,
that belief in the fallen angel, the Arch-Fiend, the Devil, originally so foreign
to the nations of the West, had become thoroughly ingrafted on the popular mind,
and a new element of wickedness and superstition was introduced at those unholy
festivals. About the middle of the thirteenth century, we find the mania for
persecuting heretics invading the tribes of Teutonic race from France and Italy,
backed by all the power of the Pope. Like jealousy, persecution too often makes
the meat it feeds on, and many silly, if not harmless, superstitions were rapidly
put under the ban of the Church. Now the "Good Lady" and her train
begin to recede; they only fill up the background, while the Prince of Darkness
steps, dark and terrible, in front, and soon draws after him the following of
the ancient goddess. Now we hear stories of demoniac possession; now the witches
adore a demon of the other sex. With the male element, and its harsher, sterner
nature, the sinfulness of these unholy assemblies is infinitely increased; folly
becomes guilt, and guilt crime. 1 © 2004-2007 Northvegr. Most of the material on this site is in the public domain. However, many people have worked very hard to bring these texts to you so if you do use the work, we would appreciate it if you could give credit to both the Northvegr site and to the individuals who worked to bring you these texts. A small number of texts are copyrighted and cannot be used without the author's permission. Any text that is copyrighted will have a clear notation of such on the main index page for that text. Inquiries can be sent to info@northvegr.org. Northvegr™ and the Northvegr symbol are trademarks and service marks of the Northvegr Foundation. |
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