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Kraheera
January 20th, 2009, 12:16 PM
1. Within the gates | ere a man shall go,
(Full warily let him watch,)
Full long let him look about him;
For little he knows | where a foe may lurk,
And sit in the seats within.
2. Hail to the giver! | a guest has come;
Where shall the stranger sit?
Swift shall he be who, | with swords shall try
The proof of his might to make.
3. Fire he needs | who with frozen knees
Has come from the cold without;
Food and clothes | must the farer have,
The man from the mountains come.
4. Water and towels | and welcoming speech
Should he find who comes, to the feast;
If renown he would get, | and again be greeted,
Wisely and well must he act.
5. Wits must he have | who wanders wide,
But all is easy at home;
At the witless man | the wise shall wink
When among such men he sits.
6. A man shall not boast | of his keenness of mind,
But keep it close in his breast;
To the silent and wise | does ill come seldom
When he goes as guest to a house;
(For a faster friend | one never finds
Than wisdom tried and true.)
7. The knowing guest | who goes to the feast,
In silent attention sits;
With his ears he hears, | with his eyes he watches,
Thus wary are wise men all.

1) I take this to mean "Be Aware" wherever you may be. To not become complacent.
2)I'm not quite sure what to make of this. The first two lines are pretty straightforward, the 3 and 4 confuse me.
3)To be hospitable to guests, I think.
4)Guests should return hospitality with wisdom and politeness.
5)The witless are the butts of jokes?
6)Reservation, good manners?
7)Again, alertness seems to be a big thing.

Hangatyr 13
January 20th, 2009, 01:28 PM
To me, lines 3 and 4 of the second stanza say "Don't try to be a nice guy, then try to be a bad ass only after you think you have to. You'll end up sitting on the floor." In other words "Make a good first impression." It also says "Be weary of strangers." Medieval Iceland was very dog-eat-dog, very "wild west".

Stanza six says to me "Keep your mouth shut so as not to put your foot in it." and it ties in with the seventh stanza, saying "Listen more than talk in an unfamiliar place."

I love the Havamal. You can read it and re-read it and every time, you'll find more meaning in it because different things will be happening in your life at the time to help you relate more to certain stanzas.

Kraheera
January 20th, 2009, 02:14 PM
So far, the Havamal is my favorite collection. It very much applies to life for me at the moment. I think it ties into current events, really.

Imagine if we as a nation applied these lessons in the middle east. *sigh* ah well, we can only try our best as individuals, as far as the military goes.

Rick
January 20th, 2009, 06:33 PM
The Sigrdrifumal (I think) also contains lay similar in nature, ie: the simple instructions to life.