A Few Pages From The Rune Primer
A Few Pages From The Rune Primer
A Few Pages From The Rune Primer
The
Rune Primer
A Down-to-Earth Guide to the Runes
by
Sweyn Plowright
Organiser, Rune-Net
Second Edition
© 2006
ii
Copyright © 2006
by Sweyn Plowright
ISBN 978-1-84728-246-0
iii
Contents
1............................ INTRODUCTION 1
2......IMPORTANCE OF CONTEXT 3
Acknowledgements
This new edition of the beginners guide was made possible
by the suggestions and requests of the members of Rune-Net.
Special thanks to my wife Kara, who’s unfailing support and
understanding have enabled the completion of this and many
other projects.
1 Introduction
On the other hand, the problem with the more reliable and
academic works is that they are often rather dry and obscure
for beginners. They tend to throw the beginner in at the deep
end. In some ways the more academic popular writers
require more caution in reading, as their own agendas and
inventions are harder for the beginner to see.
One thing students asked for was a more concise and plain
writing style. Most of the books they reviewed were found to
be too padded out and wordy. They lacked focus and
structure, and made it difficult for students to gain a clear
basic picture.
2 Importance of Context
The word “rune” can also mean a mystery or secret. Not only
are there written characters we call runes, but spells and
incantations could also be called runes. The Futhark runes
were a special kind of mystery.
First Aett
f u th a r k g w
Second Aett
h n i j ei p z s
Third Aett
t b e m l ng d o
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Since the mid 1980s, there have been many New Age rune
manuals. Although some have interesting insights, few are
worth much comment. They have so far been characterised
by a superficial approach, poor research, and a mix and
match attitude that removes the Runes from their magico-
religious culture. Often these writers will merely take the
rune basics from another manual, and slot it into whatever
system interests them; tarot, Wicca, shamanism, etc.
We need not reject the new out of hand, but neither should
we count on a neat, complete system packaged for us. The
way forward is to work within the Northern culture, and
enable the re-emergence of a natural runic tradition from the
foundation of the surviving lore.
66
Old English:
Modernised script:
1
Wealth. From a word originally meaning cattle.
2
Drihten. Lord. Usually a king or deity.
79
aurum12 fylkir13
gold
drizzle is the clouds' tears/ and the harvest’s ruin/ and the
herder's hate.
umbre vísi
shadow
9
Money or cattle, indicators of of wealth.
10
Kenning for booty. The flood (high) tide was best for raiding up rivers from
the sea.
11
Graf-seidh = “grave-magic”.
12
Latin word relating to each rune’s meaning.
13
Each verse includes a term for King or leader demonstrating the rune
sound.
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Authors
Here is a brief discussion of the better-known authors of
books on esoteric runology.
Edred Thorsson
Blum claims that this blank rune idea came from a hand
made rune set he bought in England the 1970s. He kept them
unused for a few years, until one day he found them and
started playing with them.
Erilaz
Historical Instances
Roman: Heruli, Greek Eruloi (dating from around 250ce onwards)
The initial h in *harjaz was never dropped (eg. Heer), most likely because
there were other words that needed to be distinguished from it by the h.
Dropping it would have caused it to sound like another existing word.
However, with Herilaz, there were no competing words. In this situation
an initial h often becomes optional.