neptunesdolphins: dolphins leaping (Default)
 
 
At her hall of Fensalir, Frigga, the Norse All-Mother, has twelve handmaidens (Note 1) or ladies-in-waiting to attend to Her. Not much is known about who these handmaidens were since the Lore is scanty about Goddesses in general. Much of what is known today is by Group Verified Gnosis.
 
Eir (Briefly)
A master physician, Eir lives with Mengloth, the Jotun healer, at the Mountain of Healing, Lyfja. As the Healer of the Gods, Eir could be considered a shaper of fate. She is the Patroness of Doctors.
 
The lore surrounding Eir presents Her as different Beings – Goddess, Jotun, or Valkyrie. However, they all agree that Eir is a Healer. In the Prose Edda, Snori Sturluson writes of the Goddesses who are with Frigga, “The third is Eir who is the best leech,” (Note 2)
 
In the Poetic Edda, Eir is listed with Mengloth the Jotun, who answers the prayers of women in distress. She lives at Lyfjaberg, the Healing Mountain. That verse says,
“Svipdag spake:
“Now answer me, Fjolsvith, the question I ask,
For now, the truth would I know:
What maidens are they that at Mengloth’s knees
Are sitting so gladly together?”
 
Fjolsvith spake:
“Hlif is one named, Hlifthrasa another,
Thjothvara call they the third;
Bjort and Bleik, Blith and Frith,
Eir and Aurbotha.”
 
Then in the Skaldskaparmal, Eir is listed as a Valkyrie. Apparently, Valkyries do have healing powers which can be used on the battlefield. However, none of the lore says that She was a chooser of the slain. In fact, Eir’s name could be translated as “helper” or “mercy.”
 
Eir is a very powerful Healer, no matter her “beingness.” She protects people from illnesses and helps with childbirth. She is thought to heal with the Runes and the Nine Herbs. (Note 3) She is said to use a white flower for healing.Although Her name is also associated with metal ore, metals are prepared for use in healing in alchemy.
 
Eir has been guiding me in dealing with my acid reflux. She has helped in choosing the proper foods and healing herbs. In this process, I feel that I will be healed.
 
Notes:
Note 1. Saga (seer), Eir (healer), Gefjun (unmarried girls), Fulla (plenty), Sjofn (love), Lofn (forbidden love), Var (oaths), Vor (wisdom), Syn (truth), Hlin (protector), Snorta (diplomacy), Gna (travelers).
 
Note 2. Leech means doctor from the Anglo-Saxon. Disease was believed to be caused by evil spirits in the body. A leech would rid the body of these demons.
 
Note 3. The Nine Herbs Charm was a spell using herbs to heal. It was said while preparing the herbs and administering them. The herbs are Una (mugwort), Waybread (plantain), Stune (lamb’s cress), Atterlothe (betony), Maythe (chamomile), Wergulu (nettle), Crab apple, Chervil, Fennel.
 
Part of the Charm:
 
Now these nine herbs have power against nine evil spirits,
against nine poisons and against nine infections:
Against the red poison, against the foul poison.
against the yellow poison, against the green poison,
against the black poison, against the blue poison,
against the brown poison, against the crimson poison.
Against worm-blister, against water-blister,
against thorn-blister, against thistle-blister,
against ice-blister, against poison-blister.
Against harmfulness of the air, against harmfulness of the ground,
against harmfulness of the sea.
neptunesdolphins: dolphins leaping (Default)
“Winters in the World: A Journey Through the Anglo-Saxon Year”
Eleanor Parker
Reaktion, 2022.
 
“Winters in the World” celebrates the turning of seasons by the Anglo-Saxons. Eleanor Parker explains that “Anglo-Saxon poetry is full of winters.” Furthermore, “winters in the world” also refers to a person’s lifespan. Therefore, the title refers to both as Parker goes through the year from winter to winter.
 
By using poetry, Parker explains the mind of the Anglo-Saxons and their culture. She relates their thinking in time and nature with their Christian and Pagan calendar of feast days. As a Polytheist, I could see that although they were Christian, the Anglo-Saxons kept their “Pagan” sensibilities. To the Anglo-Saxons, time was sacred, with the calendar imbued with divine power.
 
Parker presents the following poem for the Anglo-Saxon attitude on the seasons and time.
“Winter is coldest,
Spring frostiest – it is longest cold,
Summer sun-brightest – the sun is hottest,
Harvest – most glory-blessed; it brings to men
The year’s fruits, which God sends them.”
 
Her chapter headings detail in depth these concepts.
 
Winter
 
From Winter to Winter: the frost fetters
Midwinter Light: ‘night shadows deepen, Advent and Apocalypse, Modranith, Midwinter, and Yule
New Year to Candlemas: Year’s Day, waking the crops, winter carried away: Candlemas
 
Spring
 
The Coming of Spring: unwinding the water’s chains, the spring and the sea
Cheese and Ashes: A pure and holy time draws near, gold in the dust, the Birthday of Time
Easter: Eostre and Easter, the silent days, the young warrior awoke
 
Summer
 
Blossoming Summer: trees of life, summer pleasures, eternal summer
Festivals of the Land and Sky: holy and healthy days
The Son Rising: Ascension Day, Whitsun
Midsummer: The Sunstead, the summer-long day, months of gentleness
 
Autumn
 
Harvest: the Feast of Bread, harvest kings, the Season of gift and glory
Fallow and Fall: the holy harvest month, the coming Fall, the tree’s grief.
The Month of Blood: the Helpful Dead, blood and blessing
 
One thing that was invaluable to me was Parker’s explanation of Easter and Eostre. Jacob Grimm, in the 19th Century, invented Ostara, the Goddess of Spring. He speculated that there was a pan-German Goddess of Light or Spring. Ostara could be thought of as a corruption of “Eostre.”
 
Centuries earlier, the Venerable Bede, Anglo-Saxon historian, listed the “months of the English.” He was trying to align the Christian calendar with the Anglo-Saxon Pagan one. Bede recorded for April: “Eastermonth,” explaining that it was “named for a goddess, Eostre, in whose honour feasts were celebrated in that month.” Parker says that Bede probably got his sources from Kent and Canterbury, the seat of Anglo-Saxon Christianity. In Kent, there was a highly localized cult of a Goddess named Eostre. However, “Eastermonth” itself refers to the Christian Easter. (Associations of eggs and rabbits with Eostre came much later.)
 
“The Winters of the World” opens a window into the sacredness of time and place. Although it focuses on the Anglo-Saxons, all modern Polytheists will gain from reading this book. They can start to resacralize their time as well as their place.

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