The Finnish national Epic, The Kalevala, begins and ends with the
image of a skein of stories. The narrator talks of pulling one thread out and
seeing where that story goes. One story connects to another, as we know, like drawing
out more and more yarn from a skein.
I love to teach it at the end of our
epics class, when people are well-versed in the distinctions between primary
and secondary epics (primary being orally composed, the accretion of hundreds
of years of story-telling finally written down, like the Odyssey or Beowulf, while
secondary epics are authored, like Dante’s Divine
Comedy or Milton’s Paradise Lost).
I ask them on the first day which pile the Kalevala
falls in to, and the answer is both.
Not really, but close enough to be
interesting. The Kalevala was collected
and edited in the 19th century in a nationalistic effort comparable
to the Grimms’ in collecting their fairy tales. And just as folklorists chide
the Grimms for not being completely authentic in their reproduction of the
tales they collected, Elias Lönnrot shaped, edited, and generally intervened in
the song of the people much like an author would, even if not to the same
degree.
The result is amazingly cool. Yes,
I love it that much.
It’s got stories that feel achingly
ancient, like the creation of the world by the water mother, Ilmatar. She is
alone and lonely and begs for companionship, so allows herself to be
impregnated by the sea. But when her child takes 730 years to gestate (!), she
kills the time by shaping the heavens and earth from broken egg shells, the sun
and moon from a yolk and some egg whites.
When her child is finally born, he
is already an old man. He is a World Singer like Orpheus, capable of calling things
in to existence, transforming things, and moving rocks and trees and animals
with his songs. His name is Vainamoinen, and he is a rock star.
But he’s also old as the hills, so
no one wants to marry him. In fact, the first girl we see him woo (and she is a
girl—Merida from the Pixar film Brave leaps
to mind), essentially kills herself rather than marry him. Aino goes to the
edge of the water and is swept down in to the waves. It seems like she drowns,
but she actually transforms in to a salmon that Vainamoinen catches later and must
release. He mourns her twice. Like Orpheus.
So it feels old—very old—primal… creation
of the world and human society sort of old. When Vainamoinen is wounded, he
seeks the origin of iron, so he can write a spell to staunch the blood. The
ancient motif of knowing “true names” or true history as a source of power over
something feels prehistoric, almost. But here it is in a 19th century
poem, where they’re also concerned about controlling the iron in his blood. It’s
a beautiful mishmash.
These stories are so strange and
so unsettling, they remind me what it felt like to be a child, when everything
was new and therefore strange. But also marvelous. Also full of magic and
potential. And because they elevate storytelling to the level of spell-casting,
they remind me of our always present power to transform our world through
words. Weaving is one of the oldest metaphors we use for storytelling. Text and
textile are related. And we all have the ability to weave our words into wisdom;
all we do is tug on that thread and see where it takes us.
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