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The Teutons and Their Myths
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The Teutons and Their Myths
F
OR a long while, as we have seen, the Roman Empire had been growing
weaker and the Teutons, or Germans, had been growing
stronger. These Teutons were a most interesting people. They were
tall and strong, with blue eyes and light hair. They
were splendid fighters, and nothing made them so happy as the
sound of a battle-cry. They cared nothing for wounds, and
they felt it a disgrace for any one to meet death quietly at home.
A man should die on the field of battle, thought the
Teutons; and then one of the Valkyrs, the beautiful
war-maidens of Odin, would come and carry him on
her swift horse straight to Valhalla,
her armour gleaming as she rode
through the air, with the
flashing glow which men call the northern lights.
The Ride of the Valkyrs
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Valhalla, they
believed, was a great hall with shields and
spears hanging on its walls.
The bravest warriors who had ever fought on
the earth were to be found there. Every morning they went out to some
glorious battle. At night they came back, their wounds were
healed, they drank great cups of mead and listened to songs
of deeds of valour. Odin, or Woden, king of the gods, ruled
in this hall.
Woden
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He had a son Thor, who was
sometimes called the thunder-god. Thor rode about in a chariot
drawn by goats. He carried
with him a mighty hammer, and this he threw at any one who
displeased him. Tyr, another son of Odin, whose sword
Attila thought he had found, was the god of war.
Not all the gods were thunderers and fighters. There was Odin's
wife, Freya, who ruled the sunshine and the rain,
and who loved fairies and flowers and all things dainty and
pretty. Then there was Freya's son, Baldur,
whom
every one loved, and Loki, whom everyone feared and hated.
Loki was always getting the gods into trouble, and it
was he who brought about the death of Baldur. Freya had once made
beasts and birds and trees and everything on the earth
that had life promise never to hurt her son; but the mistletoe was
so small and harmless that she forgot it. There was a
chance for wicked Loki. It was a favourite game of the gods to
shoot arrows at Baldur, for they knew that nothing would
harm him. One of the gods was blind, and Loki offered to guide
his hand, saying that all ought to do honour to so good a god as
Baldur. In all innocence, the blind one threw the twig
of mistletoe that Loki gave him. Baldur fell down dead, and had to
go forever to the land of gloom and darkness.
Freya
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The Teutonic story of the creation of the earth was
this:—Long ago there was far to the northward a gulf of mist. In the
mist was a fountain, and from the fountain there flowed twelve
rivers. By and by, the waters of the rivers froze, and
then in the north there was nothing but a great mass of ice. Far
to the southward was a world of warmth and light. From
this a warm wind blew upon the ice and melted it. Clouds were
formed, and from them came forth the giant
Ymir and his children and his cow. The cow was one
day licking the hoar frost and salt from the ice, when
she saw the
hair of a man. The next day she licked still deeper,
and then she saw a man's head. On the third day a
living being, strong and beautiful, had taken his place in this
strange world. He was a god, and one of his children was
Odin. Together the children
slew Ymir. Of his body they made the earth, of his blood the seas,
of his bones the mountains, of his eyebrows they made
Midgard, the mid earth. Odin arranged the seasons, and
when the world was covered with green things growing, the
gods made man of an ash tree and woman of an alder. An immense ash
tree, which grew from the body of Ymir, supported the
whole universe. One of its roots extended to Asgard, the
home of the gods; one to Jötunheim, the abode of
the giants; and one to Niflheim, the region of cold and
darkness beneath the earth. It was believed that some
day all created things would be destroyed. After this a new
heaven and a new earth would be formed in which there would
be no wickedness or trouble, and gods and men would live together
in peace and happiness. All these fancies had some
meaning; for instance, Baldur the beautiful, at sight of whose
face all things rejoiced, represented the sunshine.
Poetical as the Germans were in some of their fancies, they were
by no means poetical when any fighting was to be done.
They had a custom of choosing some man as leader and following
him wherever he led; but the moment that he showed himself a poor
commander or failed to give them a fair share of
whatever spoils they had captured, they left him and sought
another chief. When the time had come that the Romans were
no longer willing to defend themselves, it seemed to them a most
comfortable arrangement to send a
messenger to some of
the Teuton chiefs to say, "If you will help us in this war, we
will give you so much gold." Unluckily for themselves,
the Romans looked upon barbarians as nothing more than convenient
weapons, and did not stop to think that they were men
who kept their eyes open, and who sooner or later would be sure to
feel that there was no reason why they, as well as
the Romans, should not take what they wanted if they could get it.
A Barbarian Ally of
the Romans (From the Column of Trajan, at Rome.His weapons are a club and a sword.)
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The Goths, especially, were always ready to give up their old ways
if they found something better; and by the time
Alaric invaded Italy, those who lived nearest the Roman
territories had learned something of Christianity, and
Ulfilas, a Greek whom they had captured in war, had
translated nearly all of the Bible into their language.
They had learned to enjoy some of the comforts and conveniences of
the Romans. They had discovered that there were
better ways of governing a nation than their haphazard fashion of
following any one who had won a victory; and they had
begun to see that it was a good thing to have
established cities. But if they gave up their roving life and made
their home in one place, they could no longer live by
fishing and hunting, for the rivers and forests would soon be
exhausted; they must cultivate the ground. We have seen
how the Goths had become the most powerful of all the Teutonic
tribes. To so warlike a people, it
seemed much easier to
take the cultivated ground of the Romans than to make the wild
forest land into fields and gardens. These were reasons
why the Goths, among all the Germans, were so persistent in their
invasions of the Roman Empire. There was one more
reason, however, quite as strong as these. It was that other
tribes even more barbarous than they were coming from Asia,
and pressing upon them in order to get their
land. The Romans might
have found some way to save their country; but they were
too busy enjoying themselves to be troubled about such
matters. Their only care seemed to be to find the easiest way out of
a difficulty, and when a nation is faced by pwerful and determined enemies
whose hearts are not set upon a life of ease and luxury, they are sure,
sooner or later, to be destroyed.
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