Skip to content
Answering Your Questions About Reactor: Right here.
Sign up for our weekly newsletter. Everything in one handy email.
When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

Reactor

Books Norse mythology

A Horse Between Worlds: The Mystical Side of Sleipnir

By

Published on December 31, 2018

Illustration by Arthur Rackham (The Rhinegold & the Valkyrie, 1910)
Illustration by Arthur Rackham (The Rhinegold & the Valkyrie, 1910)

The dark of the year in the Northern Hemisphere is a strange in-between period, a kind of time out of time. Even in cultures that begin their year around one of the equinoxes, there’s something just a little different about the weeks around the winter solstice.

When we last met Odin’s eight-legged horse Sleipnir, we focused on the practical aspects: how his parents got together, how his body might have been organized (or is it her? Or is it genderfluid?), what his superpowers were. But that’s not all there is to Sleipnir. Commenters were quick to point out the more mystical aspects of the All-Father’s mount.

One popular theory among academics and folkorists is that Sleipnir’s eight legs represent the legs of the pallbearers carrying the dead to the grave. Sleipnir had a direct connection with the dead and the otherworld in his ability to carry Odin through all the levels of existence including Hel.

I love the idea proposed by noblehunter and expanded by others that the extra legs were “shadow legs,” signifying Sleipnir’s ability to travel through air and water as well as over the earth, and by extension his ability to travel between worlds. From this perspective, the horse one would see in any given location would be a normal four-legged horse, but the secondary set of legs would exist in another continuum. The depictions of him with eight legs would be symbolic rather than literal. “This horse has superpowers,” rather than “This horse has eight actual legs.”

Either way, it’s no accident that Sleipnir is a grey. That’s a horse born dark, which turns white as it matures; it’s a genetic mutation, and it appears to descend from a single ancestor. Human breeders have cultivated it and woven myths around it.

The white horse is the king’s horse, the shaman’s horse, the horse of heaven. Pegasus and the unicorn are white. Celtic Rhiannon rode a pale horse. Herodotus tells of the sacred white horses of Persia; white horses were (and are) revered in India, Korea, Viet Nam, the Philippines.

Most horses come in shades of brown or black. Some are spotted, but solid colors are much more common. A white horse stands out not only visually but for the relative rarity of the color.

There’s a ghostly quality to it, a luminosity, especially in low light. White horses glow in the moonlight, and shimmer even in starlight. Against the green and brown of its natural habitat, the steppe or tundra, the white horse is impossible to miss. There’s no hope of camouflage unless the horse coats itself in mud or dust.

Of course, being horses, greys will joyfully do exactly that—and being grey horses, they add artistic touches, resulting in the rare and redolent Manure-Spot Appaloosa and the Pee-Stain Pinto. They do try to tone down their striking coats, to the despair of their grooms and caretakers.

That plays into the myth, too: the shining white horse whose coat never stains, the ghostly grey who passes like a mist from world to world. The white horse carries the dead and bears the shaman to the otherworld—white being the color of death in much of Asia, and all the way west to ancient Rome.

In modern Wales, the association of the white horse with death is literal and explicit in the Mari Lwyd, the Grey Mare. She’s a horse’s skull on a pole, trailing a white sheet; she trots singing from door to door around the winter solstice, challenging the occupants to a battle of wits, and bringing luck—because in her way she’s triumphed over death.

Mari Lwyd, photo by R. fiend.

The Mari Lwyd has two legs at most, which is a great reduction over Sleipnir’s double allotment, but they’re relatives nevertheless. They’re the embodiment of the role the horse has played in human culture. A human on even the most mortal and unexceptional horse is taller, stronger, faster, and can travel longer and farther. It’s no wonder so many cultures have given the horse mystical powers, and turned him (or her) into a means for humans to pass the veil between the worlds and even overcome death.

So of course the All-Father rides a pale horse, because that’s the most powerful form of transport his world can imagine. It’s a delightful bonus that the horse is the offspring of the trickster Loki, blessed with a unique number of legs. Even its color recalls the Loki-mare: grey is a trickster color, creeping up on the horse and gradually turning him the color of ghosts and death.

Sleipnir is everything that’s exceptional about horses, doubled. Death is no match for him. He can travel anywhere, through any medium. His eight legs stand in all worlds.

That’s a useful reflection as we stand between the years, in the month named after two-faced Janus. The winter solstice in our hemisphere is past. Days are very slowly getting longer.

The dark is ever so gradually retreating—very much so in the latitudes in which Odin was worshipped. Winter is a brutally cold, dark, all but sunless season. Sleipnir in his way, with his pale coat and his mystical powers, offers a promise that the dark will pass. The light will come back. The world will emerge from its annual descent into death, and come to life again.

Originally published in January 2018.

Judith Tarr is a lifelong horse person. She supports her habit by writing works of fantasy and science fiction as well as historical novels, many of which have been published as ebooks by Book View Cafe. She’s even written a primer for writers who want to write about horses: Writing Horses: The Fine Art of Getting It Right. Her most recent short novel, Dragons in the Earth, features a herd of magical horses, and her space opera, Forgotten Suns, features both terrestrial horses and an alien horselike species (and space whales!). She lives near Tucson, Arizona with a herd of Lipizzans, a clowder of cats, and a blue-eyed dog.

About the Author

About Author Mobile

Judith Tarr

Author

Judith Tarr has written over forty novels, many of which have been published as ebooks, as well as numerous shorter works of fiction and nonfiction, including a primer for writers who want to write about horses: Writing Horses: The Fine Art of Getting It Right. She has a Patreon, in which she shares nonfiction, fiction, and horse and cat stories. She lives near Tucson, Arizona, with a herd of Lipizzans, a clowder of cats, and a pair of Very Good Dogs.
Learn More About Judith
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
7 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments