How Ravens Came To Be Black by Michaela Macha
Ravens
Once
upon a time and long ago, Odin was walking under the branches of
Yggdrasil when two ravens swooped down and settled upon his shoulders.
The raven on his left was white as the mists of Niflheim (for back then,
all ravens were white), and his eyes mirrored the clouds. The raven on
his right glistened in the sun like the snows of Jotunheim, and looked
at him with bright clear eyes. And Odin called the raven to his right
Hugin, which is Thought, and the other one he named Munin, which means
Memory.
As the days
passed, Hugin and Munin matched the Allfather’s curiosity for everything
in the Nine Worlds, flying around and watching and listening to
whatever they could, and in the evenings, they returned to him to tell
him all they had seen and heard in the long hours of the day. They told
him about the slow thoughts of the mountains, the colorful and
ever-changing memories of men, and the sound of the song in the heart of
everything that lives.
And
though Odin delighted in the knowledge they brought, he always felt
they had missed something, and he said, “That was much, but not yet
enough. Tomorrow you must fly again. Try to rest now.” And the ravens
slept uneasily, not knowing what they had missed, and every morning,
they flew out again.
There
came one of many evenings after another long day when they had once
again seen all that Sunna’s shine could show, had listened to all men’s
bright thoughts in Midgard, and read their waking memories, when Hugin
said to Munin, “We cannot return yet. It is not enough. We must go
farther.” And they flew on into the night.
And
Hugin flew through the dark dreams of mankind and heard their thoughts
which they dared not think during the daytime, not even before
themselves. He winged through the black void between the stars where
there was nothing at all, and on to the twilight world of the future,
where there is equally nothing and everything at once. And when he
returned, his feathers, from tip to tip, were black as the night.
And
Munin flew through the minds of men into the shady corners and cellars
where they had hidden all the things they did not like, and locked them
away, saying “I do not remember.” He soared through the sightless void
of Ginnungagap, and on and on until he arrived at the ashes of Ragnarok
which obscured this age from the next. And when he returned, his
feathers, from beak to tail, were as black as soot.
The
ravens returned to Odin just before the break of morning, when the
night is at its darkest, and when they settled back on his shoulders, he
knew all that they had seen, and they did not need to tell. And he
understood what had been missing, and nodded, and said, “It is much, and
it is enough. For tonight. You may rest.” And the ravens blinked
drowsily into the first rays of the rising sun which glinted on their
now black feathers, tucked their beaks under their wings, and slept very
well.
Since that time,
all ravens have been seen to be as black as a shadow on a starless
night. Very rarely it happens that somebody catches a glimpse of a white
raven, and should you ever be lucky enough to see one, you’ll know that
you have wandered far off and back into the land of memory, before
ravens came to be black.
© Michaela Macha
License: This poem may be freely distributed, provided it remains unchanged, including the copyright notice and this License: This work by Michaela Macha is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution - No Derivatives License.
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