Ocean of Stars

Ocean of Stars

Hoist up the sail

Catch the suns 

And we will fly through

the ocean of stars.

Across the yawning void

Heed the ancestors call

As we see what we hear and we haul

We will capture the light

On this vast sea of night

And we’ll rule the ocean of stars. 

 

From the wreck of the world

Came the embers and sparks,

The star-way that called

From the deep night

 

They heard Heimdall’s horn

Echoing Past the blood-star 

Breaking earth’s forges

And ushering hordes

 

Within Ymir’s broad skull

Our cinder from heaven

Vile frost giants took

Down from the sky

 

# # #

 

But Thor built the hearth ship

And we left the cloud halls

Thrust by swift lightning

And our wind-oars. 

 

Shot through Loki’s arm ring

And infinite spaces

Lead the bright wave-flame. 

To uncharted seaas

 

Past the time markers

lands old as the Niflheim

As völven sing tales

And Seiðr songs   (sadyr)

 

# # #

 

The shamed Midgard serpent

Is too small to follow

Above the world tree

Flame-shields abound.

fields of prism and ice

Are seldom that barren

Oft laden with wealth

We’ll not ignore

 

We pillage the planets

That have no defenses

We take land and liege 

In our shield storm.

 

# # # 

 

We long sailed by Asgard

Past Oðinn’s Steed growing

Forty-two rivers

And Freya’s hens

 

We found our Valhalla

As have generations

On a lightning path

Beneath the wind cloth.

 

So follow the old ways

Of cattle and kinsmen

Steer to the mead hall

And cast down runes. 

 


Space. Vikings.

Vikings escape Ragnarok in solar ships. I constructed the “hearth-ship” as an “ark” of sorts and “Loki’s arm-ring” I envisioned as a jumpgate. The explorers move past all that’s known. The idea of Valhalla being found by spending eternity battling and pillaging throughout the entire universe is not a bad one.

This started out as a pretty easy concept, (actually, it started as me singing in the car randomly last week) but it got more complicated because I realized that I wanted to know more about ancient Norse cosmology and what the ancient Norse saw in their skies as I fleshed out the lyrics.

So that wound up being a rabbit hole. That said, I like this concept of the Norse leaving Midgard on the cusp of Ragnarok, thanks to Thor (because space ships are like thunder and lightning!) I envision the vessels having enormous golden solar sails and beautiful metalwork.

In Norse astronomy researchers have found some relatively consistent references that lead us to names of constellations. “Freya’s Hens” is the Pleiades. (Orion’s belt was “Freya’s Distaff.”) Mars, being red, was referred to as the “blood star” (So. Viking!) The yawning void is “Ginnungagap” – the primordial void mentioned in the Gylfaginning. Yggdrasil, the cosmic world tree, translates to “Oðinn’s Steed” according to the Hávamál. Another nod to the Hávamál is the “cattle and kinsmen” line that refers to the famous lines in verses 75-79, “Cattle die kinsmen die all men are mortal. Words of praise will never perish nor a noble name…” Forty-two rivers are the Hvergelmir referenced in the Prose and Poetic Eddas by Snorri Sturluson in the 13th century. These rivers, located in Niflheim, lead everywhere from Hel to the homes of some of the Norse gods.

The völven were like oracles/priestesses gifted with the sight of the future (kinda) and seiðr are magic incantations.

The kennings are mostly historic:
Ymir’s skull – that’s the sky that surrounds Midgard
star-way – a twist on the swan-road
Flame-shield / Cinder from heaven/sky cinder – the sun
cloud-halls – the sky
wave-flame – gold (the color of the solar sails 😉 )
wind-oars / wind cloth – a ship’s sails
shield storm – battle

And that’s where we are on the ocean of stars!