There is a great story about the Wild Hunt in Jacob
Grimm’s ‘Teutonic Mythology’:
That the wild
hunter is to be referred to as Wôdan, is made perfectly clear by some
Mecklenburg legends. Often of a dark
night the airy hounds will bark on open heaths, in thickets, at cross-roads.
The countryman well knows their leader Wod,
and pities the wayfarer who has not reached his home yet; for Wod is spiteful,
seldom merciful. It is only those who keep in the middle of the road that the
rough hunter will do nothing to; that is why he calls out to travellers:
‘midden in den weg!’
A peasant was
coming home drunk one night from town, and his road led him through a wood;
there he hears the wild hunt, the uproar of the hounds and the shout of the
huntsman up in the air: ‘midden in den weg!’ cries the voice, but he takes no
notice. Suddenly out of the clouds there
plunges down, right before him, a tall man on a white horse. ‘Are you strong?’
says he, ‘here, catch hold of this chain, we’ll see which can pull the
hardest.’ The peasant courageously
grasped the heavy chain, and up flew the wild hunter into the air. The man
twisted the end round an oak that was near, and the hunter tugged in vain.
‘Haven’t you
tied your end to the oak?’ asked Wod, coming down. ‘No,’ replied the peasant,
‘look, I am holding it in my hands.’ ‘Then you’ll be mine up in the clouds,’
cried the hunter as he swung himself aloft. The peasant hurriedly knotted the
chain around the oak again, and Wod could not manage it. ‘You must have passed
it around the tree!’ said Wod, plunging down. ‘Not I,’ said the peasant, who
had deftly disengaged it, ‘here I have it in my hands.’ ‘Were you heavier than
lead, you must up to the clouds with me!’ He rushed up quick as lightning, but
the peasant managed as before. The dogs yelled, the waggons rumbled and the
horses neighed overhead; the tree crackled to its roots and seemed to twist
round. The man’s heart began to sink,
but no, the oak stood its ground.
‘Well pulled!’
said the hunter, ‘many’s the man I have made mine, you are the first that ever
held out against me, you shall have your reward.’ On went the hunt, full cry:
hallo, holla, wol, wol! The peasant was slinking away, when from unseen heights
a stag fell groaning at his feet and there was Wod, who leaps off his white
horse and cuts up the game. ‘Thou shalt have some blood, and a hindquarter to
boot.’ ‘My lord,’ stammered the peasant, ‘thy servant has neither pot nor
pail.’ ‘Pull off thy boot,’ cries Wod. The man did so. ‘Now walk, with blood
and flesh, to wife and child.’
At first, terror
made the load seem light, but presently it grew heavier and heavier and he had
hardly strength to carry it. Bent double
and bathed in sweat at last he reached his cottage and behold! – the boot was
filled with gold, and the hindquarter was a leather pouch full of silver.
‘Teutonic
Mythology’ Book III p924
I love the humour in this story: first that the powerful and terrifying hunting god is still too simple to realise that the peasant is tricking him; then the unwelcome gift of raw flesh and blood, of supernatural and uncertain origin, which the peasant must lug painfully home. (In other stories, the Hunt pursues harmless little creatures called woodwives, and sometimes a quartered woodwife will be hung up as a horrifying gift beside a helpful peasant's door.) One feels this peasant thoroughly deserves its fairy transformation into silver and gold once Wodan's little joke is over.
A very excellent book, ‘European Paganism’ (Ken Dowden, Routledge 2000) provides a comprehensive, fact-based overview of just about everything that is actually known about pagan Europe. At one point Dowden, an academic at the University of Birmingham, discusses a type of Gaulish priest described by the Greek writer Poseidonius as wateis (specifically distinguished from druids or bards). Dowden explains the meaning of the term:
A very excellent book, ‘European Paganism’ (Ken Dowden, Routledge 2000) provides a comprehensive, fact-based overview of just about everything that is actually known about pagan Europe. At one point Dowden, an academic at the University of Birmingham, discusses a type of Gaulish priest described by the Greek writer Poseidonius as wateis (specifically distinguished from druids or bards). Dowden explains the meaning of the term:
Wateis is evidently the same as the
Latin vates, a rather olde-worlde word denoting a prophet or seer, but in any
case implying some inspiration: the Gothic word is wods, ‘frenzied or possessed’, as in the German Wodan or the
daemonic Wütende Heer [furious army]
that is let loose at Yule.
European Paganism, p236
In English, the meaning of ‘wode’
or ‘wood’ as ‘mad’ survived at least into the late 16th century. In
‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ Demetrius exclaims that he’s crazy for love of
Hermia:
And here am I,
and wood within this wood
Because I cannot
meet my Hermia.
Act 2 Sc 1
The word can been traced back all
the way to proto-Indo-European where it’s been reconstructed as *weh₂t- with the meanings ‘excited, inspired’,
‘possessed, raging’. So Wodan or Odin is an inspired, prophetic, raging, furious
god, and this is certainly how he appears as one – maybe even the first, who knows? – of
the many leaders of the European-wide Wild Hunt. Ken
Dowden tentatively connects this phenomenon with ancestor worship, and pagan
festivals of the dead which were often held at the end of the year:
Evidence for
Yule as a pagan religious festival may be slender, but it is so very suggestive
that this is the period when the Wild Hunt (Wilde
Jagd, or the ‘Raging Army’, Wütende
Heer) flies through the air, a spectral army corresponding to the ancestors
once worshipped in ritual. Does this awareness of the dead survive in the
custom of Serbian coledari (derived
from the Latin Kalendae), a sort of
masked Christmas-carol group who include in their visits houses where there has
been a death during the year, and ‘intone funeral chants and bring news from
the departed’? Have they taken on the
character of the dead themselves?
European Paganism, p266
Whatever the truth of it, the Wild
Hunt has a very long history.
Picture credits:
Johann Wilhelm Cordes: Die Wilde Jagd, Wikimedia Commons
Friedrich Wilhelm Heine: Wodan's Wild Hunt, Wikimedia Commons
August Malmstrom: Odin, Wikimedia Commons
Lorenz Frolich:Odin riding Sleipnir with the ravens Huginn and Munin, Wikimedia Commons
Great post. Woden behaves rather like the folk-lore devil in this story.
ReplyDeleteThere's a little road near Barrow Gurney, not far from Bristol, called Wild Hunt Lane. I'd love to know why!
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