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- <title>Ear</title>
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- <p class="center"><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Runic_letter_ear.svg"><img src="../img/runes/ear.svg" alt="Ear rune" title="Ear rune"></a></p>
- <h1>Ear</h1>
- <p>Traditional meaning: hanging tree / grave</p>
- <p>Meanings when upright:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>death and loss are part of life</li>
- <li>for one thing to live, another must die</li>
- <li>your life needs a reboot</li>
- <li>it is certain your life will be radically upended</li>
- <li>all you can control is how you react to it</li>
- <li>passage from one state of being to another</li>
- <li>let go and move on</li>
- </ul>
- <p>Meanings when inverted:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>Jett's promise ("I will never leave you behind")</li>
- </ul>
- <p>Ear can be useful for:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>welcoming gradual but inevitable change</li>
- </ul>
- <hr>
- <p>Anglo-Saxon rune poem:</p>
- <blockquote>Ear byþ egle eorla gehwylcun,<br>ðonn[e] fæstlice flæsc onginneþ,<br>hraw colian, hrusan ceosan<br>blac to gebeddan; bleda gedreosaþ,<br>wynna gewitaþ, wera geswicaþ.</blockquote>
- <blockquote>The grave is horrible to every knight,<br>when the corpse quickly begins to cool<br>and is laid in the bosom of the dark earth.<br>Prosperity declines, happiness passes away<br>and covenants are broken.</blockquote>
- <p>There is not a Norwegian rune poem for Ear.</p>
- <p>A modern poem:</p>
- <blockquote>
- <p><strong>Death and loss are a part of life.<br/>
- For one thing to live, another must die</strong>,<br/>
- or maybe a great many things,<br/>
- the blood on my hands accumulating over time.</p>
- <p>When our bodies have decayed<br/>
- and the earth has our flesh reclaimed,<br/>
- it will for archeologists be hard<br/>
- to tell our skeletons apart.<br/>
- And that is if they can even plumb Yewiffe,<br/>
- can descend down the roots of that massive tree<br/>
- where tangled and intertwined lies<br/>
- the forgotten, the repressed, the passed parts of my life.</p>
- <p>Maybe one of them will find<br/>
- a moment that has yet to happen<br/>
- where my parents finally of my wretched blood ken<br/>
- and toss me out onto the streets.<br/>
- This is, of course, if they do not deem<br/>
- me a demon, a thief,<br/>
- a persistent adept-at-lying possessor<br/>
- of what they all this time called their daughter<br/>
- and grant me at their own hands a slaughter.</p>
- <p>For this to come to pass I know is certain,<br/>
- for even the best of my secrets I could not hide forever.<br/>
- In Ragnarok even the gods from their lives were severed.<br/>
- <strong>It mattered not<br/>
- how mightily anyone fought:<br/>
- for all ill-fated was drawn life's curtain.</p>
- <p>All that anyone could control<br/>
- was how they reacted to it,<br/>
- how the coming end they greeted.</strong></p>
- <p>And the coming end I seek,<br/>
- if this is the fate I am doomed to keep,<br/>
- is that this time<br/>
- for once in my life<br/>
- I do not from my beliefs<br/>
- back down.<br/>
- Instead of snapping in the hurricane,<br/>
- I rest on these roots dug so deep<br/>
- and refuse to recant my name.</p>
- <p>And when I die,<br/>
- I will be able to look you in the eyes<br/>
- with no burning guilt and no unsettled regrets.<br/>
- I will have proved to you my loyalty<br/>
- and you to me your promise<br/>
- to never leave me behind.<br/>
- Now take me to Sablade, set us free.<br/>
- We have earned our three days of rest.</p>
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