Before my brain
injury, I wove altar cloths using wool on my lap loom. As I wove, I meditated
on what I was creating. During these times, I could sense the Norse Goddess
Frigga whispering to me. As the Lady of Asgard, Frigga would guide my efforts,
since She holds the Distaff. Eventually, the All-Mother became my Matron.
After I made my
Runes, I decided to weave a divination cloth in Frigga’s honor. To ascertain
the colors for this Goddess, I consulted Freya Aswynn’s “Northern Mysteries and Magick.” Aswynn said that silver grey was the
color for Frigga. I also researched various depictions of Her. I noticed that
many featured blue, gold, and white, which were symbolic of her position in
Asgard. The green and red of the divination cloth was requested by Frigga to
honor the women, as the Keepers of the Household, with their blood and
fertility. Then with her Blessing, I wove this cloth for my Runic divination.
For storing the
Runes, I purchased a linen bag and a wooden box (to put the bag in). Although
both were undecorated, I felt the Runes (Who I came to see as living entities)
wanted a depiction of the Nine Worlds on each. My sense was that the Runes
belong to all of the Nine Worlds, from which They gain their substance. After reading
Raven Kaldera’s “The Pathfinder’s Guide
to the Nine Worlds,” I understood that the Runes also holds the essence of
the Worlds in Themselves. Therefore, I think that it was appropriate to have
symbols of the Nine Worlds on the box and bag.
I used two different artistic
mediums for the bag and box. I employed magic markers for the bag, and painted the
box with tempura paints. Using Kaldera’s narratives, I was able to envision representative
colors for each World. Hel, the Land of the Dead, is black and white. (It is
the Ninth World, where all the Dead of the Worlds go.) I placed Hel’s symbol in
the center of the bag and the bottom of the box. Muspellheim, the Land of Fire,
is the orange and red circle. Niflheim, the Land of Ice and Fog, is white and
blue (box) or blue and white with a fork (bag). These Worlds are near Hel, and
on either side of the box.
For the worlds of
Ljossalfheim, Vanaheim, and Asgard, the circles all contain yellow to represent
the golden auras of these worlds. The world of the Light Elves, Ljossalfheim also
has green, the traditional color for elves. Vanaheim, the land of the Vanir, includes
brown for its fertile fields of grain. Asgard, where Odin the All Father lives,
is white symbolizing the shining world of the As.
Since Jotunheim is
similar to Midgard (according to Kaldera), I painted the two worlds green and
blue. Midgard, the home of the Humans, is green on the left, and blue on the
right. Jotunheim, the land of the Jotuns, is blue on the left, and green on the
right. On the bag, the world of the Jotuns is green and brown.
Svartalfheim is
shared by the Dark Elves and the Dwarves. Brown is for the Dwarves, who live
underground on this world. Meanwhile, dark green is for the Dark Elves. On the
bag, Svartalfheim is red and purple for the forges of the Dwarves and the
darkness of the Elves, respectively.
After I decorated the
box and the bag, I placed the Runes first in the bag, then in the box. After
They resided for some time in the bag/box, the Runes seemed, to me, happy. I
also felt that their power had increased since They were now connected with the
Nine Worlds.
Works
Used:
Aswynn, Freya, “Northern Mysteries & Magick,”
Llewellyn, Woodbury, MN, 1998.
Kaldera, Raven, “The Pathfinder’s Guide to the Nine Worlds,”
Asphodel, Hubbardston, MA, 2007.
Wild, Sean, “The Runes Workbook,” Thunder Bay, San
Diego, CA, 2004.
Please note that I decorated the box and bag for this assignment.
This is a blog about nature in all her glory. The folklore and general ideas about what messages nature bring to people.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Monday, December 09, 2013
Mythical Animals: The Catoblepas
As described by the
Roman naturalist Pliny, the Elder (1st Century CE), the Catoblepas
was a four-legged bovine-like animal. According to Pliny, this beast had the
body of a buffalo and the head of a boar. As an herbivore, the Catoblepas ate
poisonous plants that caused its breath to be toxic. Because of this, the beast
was often found alone, for out of self-defense, many animals stayed far away
from the Catoblepas.
Later Aeolian, a
Greek naturalist in the 2nd Century, noted that the Catoblepas had a
killing stare. He called the beast “Katobleps”,
the “Down-looking One,” since the naturalist observed that the beast was
conscious of its peculiar power. Since the animal seemed unwilling to lift its
heavy head, people were safe from its stare. The Greek naturalist added that
the beast’s eyebrows were high and shaggy, with narrow and blood shot eyes.
Although Pliny and
Aeolian agreed that the Catoblepas lived in North Africa, they differed as to
where. Pliny, in his writings, said that the Catoblepas inhabited Western
Ethiopia near the source of the Nile. Aeolian believed that the beast lived in
Libya. Meanwhile early travelers said that the beast could be found near the
islands of the Gorgons in the far side of the Mediterranean Sea near the Hesperidies.
Travelers’ reports
lead to confusion between the Catoblepas and the Gorgons, which caused people to
think that both possessed killing stares. Another reason for the confusion was
that the Catoblepas had a scraggly mane which fell over its forehead. This mane
covered its eyes similar to the snakes on the Gorgon’s head. Because of this
similarity, people thought that the gaze of the Catoblepas would turn them into
stone. Since the mane covered the beast’s head, people believe that they were
relatively safe. However, when the Catoblepas raised its head and belched, the
breath would kill anyone nearby.
In his book, “The Temptation of Saint Anthony,” (1874),
Gustave Flaubert (France, 1821 - 1880) described various Monsters that appeared
in Saint Antony’s nightmares. One of them was the lonely and solitary
Catoblepas. This beast told the desert saint that it was aware of very little
around it. The beast was mostly focused on the warm mud under its stomach. Then
mournfully, the Catoblepas informed St. Anthony that once it had
absently-mindedly eaten its own foreleg. (This contradicts Pliny’s observations
that the beast was an herbivore.)
Flaubert described the Catoblepas with a long thin neck that could not
support the head, but had stiff bristles hiding its face. For whatever the
reason, St. Antony survived his encounter with the beast.
Later a naturalist,
Baron Georges Cuvier (French, 1769 - 1832) deemed that Pliny and Aeolian were
describing an African gnu or wildebeest. Modern zoologists agree that Cuvier’s
identification of the Catoblepas was accurate. However, that does not mean that
the Catoblepas is a fictional beast or a misidentified member of the deer
family. Flaubert observed that this beast does wanders absent mindedly through
our nightmares. That alone makes the Catoblepas real in our world.
Works
Used:
Allan, Tony, “The Mythic Bestiary,” Duncan Baird: London, 2008.
Atsma, Aaron, “Katoblepones,” Theoi Project, 2011, http://www.theoi.com/Thaumasios/Katoblepones.html.
DeHoff, Nathan, “The Catoblepas that Got the Cream,” Vovatia, 20 May 2013, http://vovatia.wordpress.com/2013/05/20/the-catoblepas-that-got-the-cream/.
Macumbeira, “‘The Temptation of Saint Anthony’ by Gustave Flaubert,” A Reader’s Dairy, 21 August 2010, http://www.macumbeira.com/2010/08/temptation-of-saint-anthony-by-gustave.html.
Nigg, Joseph, “The Book of Dragons and Other Mythical Beasts,” Quarto: London, 2002.
Zell-Ravenheart,
Oberon and Ash DeKirk, “A Wizard’s
Bestiary,” New Page Press: Franklin Lakes, NJ, 2007
Monday, December 02, 2013
Mythical Animals: The Peryton
From Wikipedia |
Little known in
modern times, the Peryton was an animal feared by ancient peoples, for these
beasts often hunted humans out of spite. Resembling a winged deer, the Peryton
had the antlers, head, and legs of a deer. In addition, this beast possessed
the wings and body of a bird. Furthermore, some Europeans thought that Perytons
were relatives of the Stymphalids, the man-eating birds of Arcadia.
Jorge Luis Borges
(Argentina, 1899 - 1986) documented in his “The
Book of Imaginary Beings” (1969) that the Peryton had originally came from
Atlantis. When that continent sank, these beasts fled east beyond the Pillars
of Hercules to the mountains of Greece and North Africa. Since they perceived
that Atlantis, their home, was destroyed by humans, the Perytons sought their
revenge by murdering people.
Whenever a Peryton
hunted, the beast would cast the shadow of a human on the ground. Since it was not
vulnerable to human weapons, a Peryton could easily kill a person. However once
the beast did so, its shadow was transformed into that of a winged deer. According
to Dr. Karl Shuker, (U.K., 1959 - ) a zoologist and cryptozoologist, a Peryton
lost its invulnerability after slaying a person. Moreover, the beast could only
kill one human in its lifetime.
Roman accounts tell
that a sibyl prophesied that the Perytons would bring about the end of Rome.
During the Punic Wars (264 BCE to 146 BCE), these beasts fought for Carthage
against the Romans. From their home in North Africa near the city, Perytons regularly
attacked Roman ships in the Mediterranean Sea.
During the Second Punic War in
218 BCE, Hannibal had attacked Rome. As he laid siege against the city,
Hannibal waited for more reinforcements to arrive from Carthage. Meanwhile the
Roman general Publicus Scipio Africanus sailed to North Africa to stop them. As
he sailed, the Perytons attacked his fleet killing many Roman legionaries. To
stop the on-going carnage, Scipio ordered the survivors to raise their large
square shields (scutum) towards the
sun. The reflection from these shields blinded the Perytons, which then fled to
the mountains of North Africa where they are reputed to be living today.
Various scholars have
claimed that Borges made up his stories about the Perytons. According to them,
Borges’ sources were bogus, and the Peryton was a figment of the writer’s imagination.
Borges, himself, claimed that his
information came from a 16th century Rabbi’s essay, who cited an
ancient Greek scholar. Borges said that the only known copy of this Rabbi’s treatise
was destroyed in World War II. Many think that this is very suspicious and
highly coincidental.
However, Dr. Shuker
points out the abundance of portrayals of winged deer in various cultures. He thinks
that Borges had other sources for his information about the Peryton. Dr. Shuker
points to the statues in Segovia, Spain, and at the palace grounds of
Linlithgow Palace in Scotland as evidence.
Meanwhile, Caspar
Henderson (U.K., 1963 - ), author of “Book
of Barely Imagined Beings: A 21st Century Bestiary,” asked, “which dreams are wholly fantastical and which are vision or
distortions of what is real or has the potential to be so?” Henderson observed
that life is inventive and creatures today are as fantastic as the ones that
Borges wrote about. Therefore, the Peryton exists whether we want to believe Borges
or not.
Works
Used:
Allan, Tony, “The Mythic Bestiary,” Duncan Baird: London, 2008.
Henderson, Caspar, “Rereading The Book of Imaginary Beings by Jorge Luis Borges,” “The Guardian,” 23 November 2012, http://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/nov/23/caspar-henderson-rereading-jorge-luis-borges,
Nigg, Joseph, “The Book of Dragons and Other Mythical Beasts,” Quarto: London, 2002.
Shuker, Karl, “‘And Hast Thou Slain the Peryton?’ – An
Antlered Atlantean,” ShukerNature, 21 November 2011,
http://karlshuker.blogspot.com/2011/11/and-hast-thou-slain-peryton-antlered.html,
.
Zell-Ravenheart,
Oberon and Ash DeKirk, “A Wizard’s
Bestiary,” New Page Press: Franklin Lakes, NJ, 2007.