NJÖRD
Stiller of Storms
Njörd,
or Niord, is the Vana-God of seafaring. He is known as the "Stiller-of-Storms"
and controls wind, stills sea and fire. He is the son of Nott
(Night) and his first wife was Nerthus, with whom he had his most
famous children, Freyr and Freyja. After the terrible war between
the Æsir and Vanas, hostages were exchanged, and that while
Hoenir, Odin’s brother, went to live in Vanaheim, Njörd,
with his two children, Frey and Freya, definitely took up his
abode in Asgard.
“In Vana-heim
Wise powers him created,
And to the gods a hostage gave.”
-LAY OF VAFTHRDDNIR (Thorpe’s tr.)
As ruler of the winds, and of the sea near the shore, Njörd
was given the palace of Nôatûn, near the seashore,
where we are told he stilled the terrible tempests stirred up
by Ægir, god of the deep sea.
“Njörd, the god of storms, whom fishers know;
Not born in Heaven — he was in Van-heim rear’d,
With men, but lives a hostage with the gods;
He knows each frith, and every rocky creek
Fringed with dark pines, and sands where sea fowl scream.”
-BALDER
DEAD (Matthew Arnold)
He also extended his special protection over commerce and fishing,
which two occupations could be pursued with advantage only during
the short summer months, of which he was in a measure considered
the personification.
The God of Summer
Njörd is represented in art as a very handsome god, in the
prime of life, clad in a short green tunic, with a crown of shells
and seaweed upon his head, or a broad-brimmed hat adorned with
eagle or heron plumes. As personification of the summer, he was
invoked to still the raging storms which desolated the coasts
during the winter months. He was also implored to hasten the vernal
warmth and thereby extinguish the winter fires.
As agriculture was practiced only during the summer months, and
principally along the fiords or sea inlets, Njörd was also
invoked for favorable harvests, for he was said to delight in
prospering those who placed their trust in him.
Njörd’s first wife, according to some authorities,
was Nerthus, Mother Earth, who in Germany was identified with
Frigga, as we have seen, but in Scandinavia was considered a separate
divinity. He was, however, obliged to part with her when summoned
to Asgard, where he occupied one of the twelve seats in the great
council hall, and was present at all the assemblies of the gods,
withdrawing to Nôatûn only when his services were
not required by the Æsir.
“Nôatûn is the eleventh;
There Njörd has
Himself a dwelling made,
Prince of men;
Guiltless of sin,
He rules o’er the high-built fane.”
-LAY
OF GRIMNIR (Thorpe’s tr.)
In his own home by the seashore, Njörd delighted in watching
the gulls fly to and fro, and in observing the graceful movements
of the swans, his favorite birds, which were held sacred to him.
He spent many an hour, too, considering the gambols of the gentle
seals, which came to bask in the sunshine at his feet.
Skadi, Goddess of Winter
Shortly after Idun’s recovery from Thrymheim, and Thiassi’s
death within the bounds of Asgard, the assembled Gods were greatly
surprised and dismayed to see Skadi, the giant’s daughter,
appear one day in their midst, demanding satisfaction for her
father’s death. Although the daughter of an ugly old Hrim-thurs,
Skadi, the Goddess of Winter, was very beautiful indeed, in her
silvery armor, with her glittering spear, sharp-pointed arrows,
short white hunting dress, white fur leggings, and broad snowshoes,
and as she confronted the Gods they could not but recognize the
justice of her claim, and offered the usual fine in atonement.
Skadi, however, was so very angry that she at first refused this
compromise, and sternly demanded a life for a life, until Loki,
wishing to appease her wrath, and thinking that if he could only
make those proud lips unbend enough to smile the rest would be
easy, began to play all manner of pranks. Fastening a goat to
himself by an invisible cord, he went through a series of antics,
grotesquely reproduced by the goat; and this sight was so very
comical that all the Gods fairly shouted with merriment, and even
Skadi was seen to smile.
Taking advantage of this softened mood, the Gods pointed to the
firmament where her father’s eyes glowed like radiant stars
in the northern hemisphere. They told her they had placed them
there to show him all honor, and finally added that she might
select as husband any of the Gods present at the assembly, providing
she were content to judge of their attractions by their naked
feet.
Blindfolded, so that she could see only the feet of the gods standing
in a circle around her, Skadi looked about her until she saw a
pair of beautifully formed feet. She felt sure they must belong
to Balder, the god of light, whose bright face had charmed her,
and she designated their owner as her choice.
But when the bandage was removed, she discovered to her secret
chagrin that she had chosen Njörd, to whom her troth was
plighted, and with whom she nevertheless spent a very happy honeymoon
in Asgard, where all seemed to delight in doing her honor. This
time passed, however; Njörd took his bride home to Nôatûn,
where the monotonous sound of the waves, the shrieking of the
gulls, and the cries of the seals so disturbed Skadi’s slumbers
that she finally declared it was quite impossible for her to remain
there any longer, and implored her husband to take her back to
her native Thrym-heim.
“Sleep could I not
On my sea-strand couch,
For screams of the sea fowl.
There wakes me,
When from the wave he comes,
Every morning the mew (gull).”
-NORSE
MYTHOLOGY (R. B. Anderson)
Njörd, anxious to please his new wife, consented to take
her to Thrymheim and dwell there with her nine nights out of every
twelve, providing she would spend the remaining three with him
at Nôatûn; but when he reached the mountain region,
the soughing of the wind in the pines, the thunder of the avalanches,
the cracking of the ice, the roar of the waterfalls, and the howling
of the wolves appeared to him as unbearable as the sound of the
sea had seemed to his wife, and he could not but rejoice when
his time of exile was ended, and he once more found himself domiciled
at Nôatûn.
“Am weary of the mountains;
Not long was I there,
Only nine nights;
The howl of the wolves
Methought sounded ill
To the song of the swans.”
-NORSE
MYTHOLOGY (R. B. Anderson)
Parting of Njörd and Skadi
For some time, Njörd and Skadi, who are the personifications
of summer and winter, alternated thus, the wife spending the three
short summer months by the sea, and he reluctantly remaining with
her in Thrymheim during the nine long winter months. But, finding
at last that their tastes would never agree, they decided to part
forever, and returned to their respective homes, where each could
follow the occupations which custom had endeared.
“Thrymheim it’s called,
Where Thjasse dwelled,
That stream-mighty giant;
But Skade now dwells,
Pure bride of the gods,
In her father’s old mansion.”
-NORSE
MYTHOLOGY (R. B. Anderson)
Skadi now resumed her wonted pastime of hunting, leaving tier
realm again only to marry the semi-historical Odin, to whom she
bore a son called Saeming, the first king of Norway, and the supposed
founder of the royal race which long ruled that country.
According to other accounts, however, Skadi eventually married
Uller, the winter-god. As Skadi was a skillful markswoman, she
is represented with bow and arrow, and, as Goddess of the chase,
she is generally accompanied by one of the wolf-like dogs so common
in the North. Skadi was invoked by hunters and by winter travelers,
whose sleighs she guided over the snow and ice, thus helping them
to reach their destination in safety.
Skadi’s anger against the Gods, who had slain her father,
the storm giant, is an emblem of the unbending rigidity of the
ice-enveloped earth, which, softened at last by the frolicsome
play of Loki (the heat lightning), smiles, and permits the embrace
of Njörd (summer). His love, however, cannot hold her for
more than three months of the year (typified in the myth by nights),
as she is always secretly longing for the wintry storms and her
wonted mountain amusements.
The Worship of Njörd
As Njörd was supposed to bless the vessels passing in and
out of port, his temples were situated by the seashore; it was
there that the oaths in his name were commonly sworn, and his
health was drunk at every banquet, where he was invariably named
with his son Frey.
As all aquatic plants were supposed to belong to him, the marine
sponge was known in the North as “Njörd’s glove,”
a name which was retained until lately, when the same plant has
been popularly called the “Virgin’s hand.”
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