The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

162


a time, Ilmatar was preoccupied
with her creations, but after 700
years of pregnancy, she gave birth
to the first man: the fully-formed
Väinämöinen. Old and wise from
birth, the hero is usually depicted
with white hair and a beard.

The first challenge
Väinämöinen wove magic spells
with his singing. Word of this skill
traveled to Pohjola, far to the north,
where a young minstrel named
Joukahainen was consumed by
envy. He challenged Väinämöinen
to a singing match, but when he
lost, he sank into a swamp.
Panicking, he offered Väinämöinen
his sister Aino’s hand in marriage
in exchange for saving his life. But
when Joukahainen returned home
and told his sister, she drowned
herself at the idea of marrying
such an old man.
After this, Väinämöinen set out
to woo another woman: the maiden
of Pohjola, whose mother Louhi
ruled the country. Joukahainen lay

in wait with a poisoned crossbow,
intent upon avenging his sister’s
death, and shot Väinämöinen into
the sea. He was saved by Louhi,
who promised to return him to
Kalevala and give him her
daughter’s hand if he created the
Sampo, a magical artifact.
Väinämöinen offered to send the
blacksmith Ilmarinen to forge the
Sampo, and hurried home.
On his way, however, he met the
maiden herself and proposed to her.
She agreed, but said that first he
must complete a list of seemingly
impossible tasks. While carving
a wooden boat from a spindle—the
last of the tasks—Väinämöinen cut
his knee with an axe and was
unable to complete the task.

Ilmarinen’s refusal
Returning home, Väinämöinen
discovered that the smith Ilmarinen
was unwilling to travel to Pohjola to
forge the Sampo. As a result, he
summoned a stormy wind to blow
Ilmarinen there, and the smith

THE KALEVALA


made the Sampo out of white swan
feathers, the milk of greatest virtue,
a single grain of barley, and the
finest lambswool. The epic never
clearly defines the Sampo. However,
based on the description of its
purpose—to grind flour and
produce salt and gold—it is thought
to be a mill. When Louhi got the
Sampo, she shut it inside a hill of
rock and sent Ilmarinen home
without the maiden.

Raised from the dead
Meanwhile, the warrior and
adventurer Lemminkäinen set off
for Pohjola, but not before leaving a
magic comb with his mother. If he
died, the comb would supposedly
drip blood. When Lemminkäinen
arrived, he also set his sights on
the maiden of Pohjola. To win the
maiden, Louhi set him three tasks:
to catch the demon’s elk, bridle the
demon’s horse, and kill the swan of
Tuonela (the land of the dead). Alas,

Ilmarinen forges the Sampo,
by Berndt Abraham Godenhjelm
(ca. 1860). The creation of the
Sampo is just one of the tasks
Väinämöinen is set in order to
win the maiden’s hand in marriage.

Far away the news was
carried, far abroad
was spread the tidings
of the songs of
Väinämöinen, of the
wisdom of the hero.
Kalevala

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163


Väinämöinen fights Louhi, who is
transformed into a bird, to defend the
stolen Sampo. This battle is sometimes
interpreted as a metaphorical fight for
the soul of Finland.

Lemminkäinen was killed by
a herdsman, who scattered his
body parts in the river. At that
moment, the comb he left behind
dripped with blood. His mother
rushed to Pohjola and brought him
back to life by reassembling his
body, anointing it with an ointment
acquired from the gods, and
chanting magic spells.

A second contest
Väinämöinen and Ilmarinen then
competed for the hand of Louhi’s
daughter, who preferred the young
blacksmith to the wise old man.
Before he could marry the maiden,
Ilmarinen had to perform three
“impossible” tasks: ploughing a
field of vipers, hunting the bear of
Tuonela and the wolf of Manala,
and fishing the great pike from the
Tuonela River. He completed the
tasks and a wedding feast ensued.
Only Lemminkäinen was not
invited to the feast. Furious at the
snub, he decided to settle the score
by challenging Louhi’s husband to
a duel. After a singing contest and

swordfight, Lemminkäinen killed
the man and fled to an island full
of beautiful women.

Stealing the Sampo
The three heroes were reunited
much later, after Ilmarinen’s wife
was killed. Hearing of the wealth
that the Sampo had brought to
Pohjola, the men decided to sail
there to steal it. On the way, their
boat collided with a giant pike,
which Väinämöinen killed. From its
jaw, he created a kantele (a type of
harp) which only he could play; the
magic instrument had the power to
enchant all living things. Using it,
he charmed the people of Pohjola
to sleep and his companions rowed
away with the Sampo.
As the three men fled, Louhi
awoke and used her powers to send
obstacles to block their path. The

NORTHERN EUROPE


heroes survived but the kantele
was lost in the water. Transformed
into a giant bird of prey, Louhi gave
chase to the heroes’ boat, and
during the battle, the Sampo, too,
fell from the boat. It sank to the
bottom of the sea, where it broke
into pieces. Scattered in the depths
of the sea, they produced salt, and
Louhi was left with only the lid.
In retaliation, Louhi sent nine
plagues to the people of Kalevala,
but Väinämöinen cured them. She
sent a bear to attack their cattle,
but he defeated it. Louhi then hid
the sun and the moon inside a hill,
and took the gift of fire from man.
Väinämöinen fought the people
of Pohjola but eventually asked
Ilmarinen to forge keys to the
mountain of Pohjola to release
the sun and moon. Relenting, Louhi
finally set the sun and moon free. ■

And he saw the
Sampo forming,
with its brightly
colored cover.
Kalevala

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