Yggdrasil And The Line In The Clavicle
The
name of the tree that binds heaven, earth and hell.
In the
Old Norse tongue it was spelt Yggdrasill, apparently, but the significance of
this extra consonant is not explained.
No
pronunciation guide in the Writer's Dictionary: perhaps there is a companion
book, a Reader's Dictionary?
Significance
of the tree and of the binding is apparent, though all these interpretations
have a personal element. Heaven, earth and hell, as bound by Yggdrasil and
regarded by myself, form a set. They represent life and consequences. They
represent the present moment, potential futures; a body of knowledge and
experience passed on by all the souls that have lived.
Further
ruminations are interrupted by a phone call that leads to a family trip to
hospital with Girl and Little Granddaughter, who has fallen from a chair in a
hard-floored kitchen and broken her left clavicle. We all look at the x-ray, at
a fine line in pale etched bone. Girl is blinking tears, they are ruining her
Brave Face.
'Look,
those are your bones,' we say to the Little One.
'It's
people!' She says: she is watching the CCTV screen, drawn to colour and
movement. She didn't much care for the x-ray machine, or the sling (until Teddy
had one too) but she was pleased with the sticker the nurse gave her. On the
way home we stopped to buy her a comic. She asked for pizza too, because
apparently the wind had blown her breakfast off the table and all over the
floor, leaving her hungry.
'Is that
what happened?' Girl smiles. (She had turned her back to fetch a tissue to wipe
a dot of spilt egg: heard the horrible thump.)
'Yes,'
Little Granddaughter says, 'it was the wind. I didn't have my breakfast and the
wind blew it: all over the floor. I like my sticker.'
It's all
about choices, I think: too much exists to think of it all. So we choose. We
set our own bindings.
Little
Granddaughter has a look, when I first walk in, ready to take her to the
hospital: I have not seen the look on her before. It is a hurt confusion,
because she has not experienced a broken bone before. It is her look that tells
me we should go to get an x-ray; that this is outside the usual brandishing of
a miniscule scratch. But how quickly she employs her customary imagineering:
and brings the situation back within a comfort zone: lets her mind grow over
it, fix it in a known place.
Comments
I have read a number of books which featured Yggdrasil often referred to as the World Tree. It seems to be popular with fiction writers.
Lisa, this:
'They represent the present moment, potential futures; a body of knowledge and experience passed on by all the souls that have lived.'
Thank you.
Thank you Jo: she is a brave girl. The world tree is a subject that can represent so much, I can see the writerly appeal.
Thank you for prayers Suze. Little Granddaughter is mostly comfortable; prognosis good.
The sentence you selected was the result of a thoughtful dog walk around the lanes. I came back with that and a bunch of wild flowers.