INTRODUCTION
				
By Leslie Shepard 
London, England, 1970 
				
				
More than half a century before 
				Immanuel Velikovsky’s best-selling 
			Worlds In Collision, Ignatius Donnelly’s Ragnarok put forward the 
			same basic concept that a comet passed close to or struck the earth 
			in ancient times, causing catastrophic changes remembered only dimly 
			in mythologies, scriptural history, and the ideas of divine judgment 
			upon a sinful world. 
				
				
Undoubtedly, the thousands of readers who were captivated by 
				Velikovsky’s book
			will want to study this equally startling forerunner of the 
			comet-disaster hypothesis, 
			and to compare the two works, with their different approaches and 
			scientific speculations. 
				
				
It takes a bold thinker to challenge orthodox science and, bearing 
			in mind the sensation created by Velikovsky in 1950, it is easy to 
			imagine the tremendous impact of Donnelly’s Ragnarok in 1883. Like 
				Velikovsky, Donnelly was not a trained scientist, and today it seems 
			incredible that an Irish-American farmerpolitician could have 
			developed such a strikingly original theme in the nineteenth 
			century, and have supported it with such powerful and convincing 
			arguments. Today his books have been largely passed over. Others 
			took up the subjects he pioneered, and some of his arguments are no 
			longer fashionable in the light of twentieth-century science. But 
			the present book deserves a fresh hearing following the brilliant 
			revival of the comet-disaster theme by Immanuel Velikovsky, and it 
			is instructive to compare similarities and differences in the two 
			treatments of the same basic theme. 
				
				
The word “Ragnarök” comes from 
				Norse mythology and describes the 
			cataclysmic Twilight of the Gods that convulsed the earth during a 
				Titanic conflict between gods and giants. 
				
				
Less scientific than 
				Velikovsky, and working within the limitations 
			of the science of his time, Donnelly nevertheless produced the 
			pioneer statement of the cometcatastrophe theme, now of value 
			chiefly for its inspired presentation of legends and mythologies 
			from Hindus, Persians, Britons, Chinese, Greeks, Scandinavians, 
			Central Americans, North and South American Indians, Aztecs, 
			Toltecs, Quiches, Peruvians, Arabians, Babylonians, and Egyptians, 
			with terrifying stories of disaster by fire, hail, frost, and 
			darkness, changes in climate, and folk tales of enormous dragons and 
			other monsters. 
				
				
Donnelly claimed that all these doom-laden myths reflected the 
			terrifying visitation of a giant comet in pre-historic times, and 
			that the evidence lay in the “drift” or unstratified deposits 
			commonly attributed to moving glaciers in the Ice Age. Donnelly 
			questioned the accepted theory of continental glaciation, and by 
			reviewing the nature and distribution of drift sought to show that 
			these deposits were the result of a cometic collision. Donnelly also 
			suggested that the Old Testament stories of destruction of wicked 
			cities, and the sun’s standing still and the fall of stones from the 
			heavens in the Book of Joshua, were reminiscences of the comet 
			catastrophe. Since then, Velikovsky has also adopted the 
			identification of Old Testament events with comet visitations. He 
			places a first comet approach during the Exodus of the Israelites, 
			and suggests that the earth then stopped spinning or slowed down, 
			causing a division of the Red Sea; he identifies a second comet 
			visit with the time of Joshua, and also further occasions connected 
			with Old Testament history. 
				
				
Writing in the present era, 
				Velikovsky’s scientific speculation is 
			understandably more plausible than Donnelly’s, but curiously enough 
			the present-day objection by orthodox scientists is more intense and 
			hysterical than in Donnelly’s time. Modern scientists plotted to 
			suppress Velikovsky’s book, vilified and ridiculed its concepts—yet 
			unperturbed, the author refuted all attacks with patience and 
			courtesy. The full story of the conspiracy against Velikovsky, and 
			the irrationality of his attackers, has been exposed in 
				
				The Velikovsky Affair: The Warfare Of Science And Scientism by
				Alfred De Grazia, published by University Books Inc. But what has given added 
			point to the work of both Donnelly and Velikovsky is that many of 
			the latter’s scientific formulations condemned as “fantastic” and 
			“cranky” have now been validated by recent discoveries. Velikovsky 
			is in great demand as a lecturer. 
				 
				
				Donnelly was better treated by the 
			scientists of the nineteenth century. They picked holes in his 
			theories, but did so courteously and with a certain admiration for 
			his vision. Typical is this critic in “The Dial” (January, 1883):
				
				
					
					“We have here a very notable book…Like the author’s ‘Atlantis’, it 
			is based on a wide and varied accumulation of facts, histories, and 
			myths, juxtaposed and intertwined by a bold and inventive 
			imagination, and garnished with graphic phraseology and a glowing 
			style, which ranges from the didactic to the epigrammatic, and from 
			the descriptive to the poetic. Though not learned, nor original, 
			save in its fundamental conception and in its application of the 
			data of science and mythologies, the work will be read with curious 
			interest by the learned; and though it draw perpetually on the 
			treasuries of scientific and ethnic lore, the unlearned will pore 
			over its pages with eagerness and delight. It will be understood, 
			therefore, that ‘Ragnarok’ is a strong and brilliant literary 
			production, which will command the interest of general readers, and 
			the admiration and respect, if not the universal credence, of the 
			conservative and the scientific.” 
				
				
				That is a very fair description of 
			a remarkable book, and an epitome of the difference between 
			nineteenth- and twentieth-century attitudes. Religion was then not 
			yet dead, and science had not become the new dogma. The enormous 
			value of both Donnelly and Velikovsky is that they stimulate new 
			thought and vision. 
				
				
It does not matter that much of 
				Donnelly’s theory leans heavily on a 
			shaky interpretation of the data concerning glacial drift. He was 
			limited by the knowledge of his time. But he makes us think. 
				
				
				
Like the good lawyer he was, 
				Donnelly argues his case persuasively 
			with the only 
			evidence available, and there is never any doubt that the reader is 
			one of a jury 
			which must bring in its own verdict. There is much to be learned 
			from Donnelly’s 
			detail, and, even if we find the case wanting in the light of 
			today’s scientific 
knowledge, there are strong new evidences unknown to 
				Donnelly but 
			now presented 
			with equal vigor by Velikovsky. It is a rewarding exercise to read 
				Velikovsky side
			by side with Donnelly and see how old and new evidences and 
			speculations lean toward the same general conclusions. 
				
				
The importance of the present book is not simply in the details 
			(right or wrong) by which Donnelly has rationalized his bold vision, 
			but in the vision itself—an inspired intuition which Immanuel Velikovsky was to place on firmer ground over sixty years later. The 
			sophistication of Velikovsky’s science has silenced many witch 
			hunters steeped in orthodoxy who would have suppressed his 
			presentation. Ultimately it does not even matter whether Donnelly 
			and Velikovsky were right in their breathtaking concepts. Like so 
			many works of art and fiction they lead us out of a narrow view, 
			remind us of the mysterious infinities in which man lives and has 
			his being. No mature adult has ever been harmed by good science 
			fiction. And myth itself, indulged without guilt, has sustained many 
			richly satisfying societies of the past. 
				
				
PART THREE, CHAPTER FOUR—RAGNAROK
				
There is in the legends of the Scandinavians a marvelous record of 
			the coming of the Comet. It has been repeated generation after 
			generation, translated into all languages, commented on, criticized, 
			but never understood. It has been regarded as a wild, unmeaning 
			rhapsody of words, or as a premonition of some future 
			earth-catastrophe. 
				
				
But look at it! 
				
				
				
The very name is significant. According to 
				Professor Anderson’s 
			etymology of the word, it means “the darkness of the gods”; from 
			“regin”, gods, and “rökr”, darkness; but it may, more properly, be 
			derived from the Icelandic, Danish, and Swedish “regn”, a rain, and 
			“rök”, smoke, or dust; and it may mean the “rain of dust”, for the 
			clay came first as dust; it is described in some Indian legends as 
			ashes. First, there is, as in the tradition of the Druids, page 153, 
			ante, the story of an age of crime. 
				
					
						
						The Vala looks upon the world, and, as the “Elder Edda” tells us—
						
						
						There saw she wade in the heavy streams, 
						
Men—foul murderers and perjurers, 
And them who others’ wives seduce to sin. 
						
Brothers slay brothers; sisters’ children, shed each other’s blood.
						
Hard is the world! Sensual sin grows huge. 
There are sword-ages, axe-ages; shields are cleft in twain;
Storm-ages, murder ages; till the world falls dead, 
						
And men no longer spare or pity one another.
					
				
				
				The world has ripened for destruction; and “Ragnarok”, the 
				darkness 
			of the gods, or the rain of dust and ashes, comes to complete the 
			work. The whole story is told with the utmost detail, and we shall 
			see that it agrees, in almost every particular, with what reason 
			assures us must have happened. “There are three winters,” or years, 
			“during which great wars rage over the world.” Mankind has reached a 
			climax of wickedness. Doubtless it is, as now, highly civilized in 
			some regions, while still barbarian in others.
				 
				
				[COMMENT: Here again 
			we encounter the idea that mankind reaches such a state of 
			wickedness, only some sort of “purification” by the “gods” can 
			restore the Earthly equilibrium. And immediately following is the 
			idea that “the wolf devours the Sun”, which is remarkably similar to 
			the phrase used by the Egyptians to describe the so-called “Great 
			Eclipse” of 15 June 762 BCE: The Day The Sun Devoured The Moon. RS]
				
				
					
					“Then happens that which will seem a great miracle: that THE WOLF 
			DEVOURS THE SUN, and this will seem a great loss.” 
				
				
				That is, the Comet strikes the sun, or approaches so close to it 
			that it seems to do so. 
				
					
					“The other wolf devours the moon, and this, too, will cause great 
			mischief.” 
				
				
				We have seen that the comets often come in couples or triplets. 
				
				
					
					“The stars shall be hurled from heaven.” 
					
				
				
				This refers to the blazing debris of the Comet falling to the earth. 
				
				
					
					“Then it shall come to pass that the earth will shake so violently 
			that trees will be torn up by the roots, the mountains will topple 
			down; and all bonds and fetters will be broken and snapped.” 
					
				
				
				Chaos has come again. How closely does all this agree with Hesiod’s 
			description of the shaking earth and the universal conflict of 
			nature? 
				
					
					“The Fenris-wolf gets loose.”
				
				
				This, we shall see, is the name of one of the comets. 
				
				
					
					“The sea 
			rushes over the earth, for the Midgard-serpent writhes in giant 
			rage, and seeks to gain the land.” 
				
				
				The Midgard-serpent is the name of another comet; it strives to 
			reach the earth; its proximity disturbs the oceans. And then follows 
			an inexplicable piece of mythology: 
				
					
					“The ship that is called 
					Naglfar also becomes loose. It is made of 
			the nails of dead men; wherefore it is worth warning that, when a 
			man dies with unpared nails, he supplies a large amount of materials 
			for the building of this ship, which both gods and men wish may be 
			finished as late as possible. But in this flood Naglfar gets afloat, 
			the giant Hrym is its steersman. The Fenris-wolf advances with 
			wide-open mouth; the upper jaw reaches to heaven and the lower jaw 
			is on the earth.” That is to say, the comet extends from the earth 
			to the sun. 
				
				
				[COMMENT: Probably what is being described here by this 
			myth is the establishment of the electromagnetic tethering beam from
				Earth’s North Pole to Nibiru’s South Pole. However, this peculiar 
			reference to “unpared nails” is indeed mysterious. If any of you 
			readers can suggest an explanation, please send email. Thanks! RS]
				
				
					
					“He would open it still wider had he room.” 
					
				
				
				That is to say, the space between the sun and earth is not great 
			enough; the tail of the comet reaches even beyond the earth. 
				
				
					
					“Fire flashes from his eyes and nostrils.” 
					
				
				
				A recent writer says: 
				
				
					
					“When bright comets happen to come very near to the sun, and are 
			subjected to close observation under the advantages which the fine 
			telescopes of the present day afford, a series of remarkable changes 
			is found to take place in their luminous configuration. First, jets 
			of bright light start out from the nucleus, and move through the 
			fainter haze of the coma toward the sun; and then these jets are 
			turned backward round the edge of the coma, and stream from it, 
			behind the comet, until they are fashioned into a tail.” 
					
					
“The Midgard-serpent vomits forth venom, defiling all the air and 
			the sea; he is very terrible, and places himself side by side with 
			the wolf.” 
				
				
				The two comets move together, like Biela’s two fragments; 
			and they give out poison—the carbureted-hydrogen gas revealed by the 
			spectroscope.
				
					
					“In the midst of this clash and din, the heavens are 
			rent in twain, and the sons of Muspelheim come riding through the 
			opening.” 
				
				
				Muspelheim, according to 
				Professor Anderson, means “the day of 
			judgment”. “Muspel” signifies an abode of fire, peopled by fiends. 
			So that this passage means, that the heavens are split open, or 
			appear to be, by the great shining comet, or comets, striking the 
			earth; it is a world of fire; it is the Day of Judgment. 
				
					
					“Surt rides 
			first, and before him and after him flames burning fire.” 
					
				
				
				Surt is a demon associated with the comet; he is the same as the 
			destructive god of the Egyptian mythology, Set, who destroys the 
			sun. It may mean the blazing nucleus of the comet. 
				
					
					“He has a very good sword that shines brighter than the sun. As they 
			ride over Bifrost it breaks to pieces, as has before been stated.” 
					
				
				
				Bifrost, we shall have reason to see hereafter, was a prolongation 
			of land westward from Europe, which connected the British Islands 
			with the island-home of the gods, or the godlike race of men. 
				
				
				
				[COMMENT: 
				Bifrost was a legendary “Rainbow Bridge” connecting the 
			Earth to “Asgard”, a land of gods beyond the North. Donnelly’s 
			interpretation of this is not quite correct. RS] 
				
				
There are geological proofs that such a land once existed. A writer, 
				Thomas Butler Gunn, in a recent number of an English publication, 
			says: 
				
					
					“Tennyson’s ‘Voyage of Maeldune’ is a magnificent allegorical 
			expansion of this idea; and the laureate has also finely 
			commemorated the old belief in the country of Lyonnesse, extending 
			beyond the bounds of Cornwall: ‘A land of old upheaven from the 
			abyss by fire, to sink into the abyss again; where fragments of 
			forgotten peoples dwelt, and the long mountains ended in a coast of 
			ever-shifting sands, and far away, the phantom circle of the morning 
			sea.’ 
					
					
“Cornishmen of the last generation used to tell stories of strange 
			household relics picked up at the very low tides, nay, even of the 
			quaint habitations seen fathoms deep in the water.” 
				
				
				There are those who believe that these 
				Scandinavian Eddas came, in 
			the first instance, from Druidical Briton sources. 
				
				
The Edda may be interpreted to mean that 
				the Comet strikes the 
			planet west of Europe, and crushes down some land in that quarter, 
			called “the bridge of Bifrost”. Then follows a mighty battle between 
			the gods and the Comet. It can have, of course, but one termination; 
			but it will recur again and again in the legends of different 
			nations. It was necessary that the gods, the protectors of mankind, 
			should struggle to defend them against these strange and terrible 
			enemies. But their very helplessness and their deaths show how 
			immense was the calamity which had befallen the world. 
				
				
				[COMMENT: This passage indicates to me—looking at it from a modern,
			scientific and “occult” standpoint—that the arrival and docking of 
			the Planet X 
			Nibiru to the Earth’s North Pole is a natural physical event of the 
			Universe; and 
			even these “gods” or “advanced extraterrestrials”—the
				Nefilim 
			Archons—have
			little power to control the devastation to our world, and quite 
			possibly to parts of their own. See also 
				Chapter 1. RS] 
				
				
The Edda continues:
				
				
					
					“The sons of Muspel direct their course to the plain which is called 
			Vigrid. Thither repair also the Fenris-wolf and the 
			Midgard-serpent.” 
				
				
				Both the comets have fallen on the earth.
				
				 
				
				[COMMENT: “Direct their course to the plain which is called
				Vigrid” 
			might also indicate that they are trying to establish the 
			electromagnetic connection between “Hyperborea” and the Earth, and 
			in this case Vigrid would refer to the northern sky position of the 
			tethered Comet-Planet X Nibiru. RS] 
				
					
					“To this place have also come Loke” (the evil genius of Norse mythology) “and Hrym, and with him 
			all the Frost giants. In Loke’s company are all the friends of Hel” 
			(the goddess of death). “The sons of Muspel have then their 
			efficient bands alone by themselves. The plain Vigrid is one hundred 
			miles (rasts) on each side.” 
				
				
				[COMMENT: “Loke”, which is also spelled 
			“Loki”, is the Norse/Teutonic “god of the underworld” who in Nibiruan terminology would be Duke 
				Nergal, the Greek Hades, the 
			Roman Pluto. “Hel” was the wife or chief consort of Loki. “Hel” 
			refers to Nibiruan Duchess Ereshkigal, the Greek Persephone, the 
			Roman Pyrtania. “Hrym” is obviously the same name as “Thrym” who in 
			Greco-Roman traditions is Dionysus or Bacchus. All the “Frost 
			Giants” are undoubtedly the minor Archons, the faceless 
				Anunnaki 
			“who have no personalities, poor fellows, and who sit like poodles 
			and smile at Anu.” The Nibiruan Baron Ninurta and Baroness 
				Bau are 
			known in Scandinavia as “Niflhel” and “Nerthus” (or in the 
			Greco-Roman traditions, respectively, as Hephaestus/Vulcan/Typhon 
			and Athena/Minerva). The Norse word “Niflhel” bears a strong 
			resemblance to the Biblical/Sumerian term “Nefilim”, or 
			“Sky-Giants”. 
				
				
[As for the idea that the 
				Vigrid Plain is one hundred miles, or 
			“rasts”, on each side, this is clearly a parallel of the Siberian 
			legend of the Ostyaks of the Irtysh River Valley, which states, 
				
				
					
					“There is a mill which grinds by itself, swings of itself, and 
			scatters the dust a hundred versts away. And there is a golden pole 
			with a golden cage on top which is also the Nail of the North.” 
					
				
				
				A 
			“rast” is obviously the same measurement as a “verst”, which is 2/3 
			of a mile or about 1 kilometer in length; and since this north-polar 
			area of the “treetrunk” tether location is where this “dust” is 
			scattered about by the “giant millstone”, the Vigrid Plain may 
			actually refer to the immediate North Polar Region. It is simply not 
			possible to come to a definite conclusion in this regard, without 
			first observing this phenomenon once again. Let us hope and pray 
			that we live long enough to document this event—for the very first 
			time in human history—as a geological and astronomical cataclysm! 
			RS] 
				
				
That is to say, all these evil forces, the comets, the fire, the 
			devil, and death, have taken possession of the great plain, the 
			heart of the civilized land. The scene is located in this spot, 
			because probably it was from this spot the legends were afterward 
			dispersed to all the world. 
				
				
				[COMMENT: If “this spot” in indeed the Northern Sky, then the legend 
			would have been observed by peoples all over the Northern Hemisphere 
			and not need to have been “dispersed” to the rest of the world. RS] 
				
				 
				
				It is necessary for the defenders of mankind to rouse themselves. 
			There is no time to be lost, and, accordingly, we learn— 
				
					
					“While these things are happening, Heimdal” (he was the guardian of 
			the Bifrostbridge) “stands up, blows with all his might in the 
			Gjallar-horn and awakens all the gods, who thereupon hold counsel. 
			Odin rides to Mimer’s well to ask advice of Mimer for himself and 
			his folk. Then quivers the ash Ygdrasil, and all things in the 
			heaven and earth tremble.” 
				
				
				[COMMENT: This reference to the “Gjallar-horn” brings up thoughts of 
			“Gabriel’s Horn” which is said in the Scriptures will herald “the 
			end of the world”. Odin in Norse mythology is the Nibiruan Prince 
				Nannar, the Greek Hermes, the Egyptian Thoth, the Slavonic 
				Volga and 
			the Mayan Quetzalcoatl or “flying serpent”. RS] 
				
				
The ash [as in tree, not fire—RS] 
				Ygdrasil is the tree-of-life; the 
			tree of the ancient tree-worship; the tree which stands on the top 
			of the pyramid in the islandbirthplace of the Aztec race; the tree 
			referred to in the Hindu legends. 
				 
				
				[COMMENT: Read that to mean “The 
			Cosmic Tree”, “The Sacred Tree”, or “The World Tree”. RS] 
				
				
					
					“The asas” (the godlike men) “and the 
					einherjes” (the heroes) “arm 
			themselves and speed forth to the battlefield. Odin rides first; 
			with his golden helmet, resplendent byrnic, and his spear Gungner, 
			he advances against the Fenris-wolf” (the first comet). “Thor stands 
			by his side, but can give him no assistance, for he has his hands 
			full in his struggle with the Midgard-serpent” (the second comet). 
			“Frey encounters Surt, and heavy blows are exchanged ere Frey falls. 
			The cause of his death is that he has not that good sword which he 
			gave to Skirner. Even the dog Garm” (another comet), “that was bound 
			before the Gnipa-cave, gets loose. He is the greatest plague. He 
			contends with Tyr, and they kill each other. Thor gets great renown 
			by slaying the Midgard-serpent, but retreats only nine paces when he 
			falls to the earth dead, poisoned by the venom that the serpent 
			blows upon him.” 
				
				
				He has breathed the carbureted-hydrogen gas!
				
				
				
				[COMMENT: 
				Thor equals Nibiruan Crown-Prince Enlil
			(Osiris/Zeus/Indra/Vishnu/Yahweh and by default, Jehovah/Allah). 
			Frey is Nibiruan Baron Marduk (Amon-Ra/Belus/Bel/Ba’al/Volos). RS] 
				
				
					
					“The wolf swallows Odin, and thus causes his death; but Vidar 
			immediately turns and rushes at the wolf, placing one foot on his 
			nether jaw.” (“On this foot he has the shoe, for which materials 
			have been gathering through all ages, namely, the strips of leather 
			which men cut off from the toes and heels of shoes; wherefore he who 
			wishes to render assistance to the ‘asas’ must cast these strips 
			away.”) 
				
				
				This last paragraph, like that concerning the ship 
				Naglfar, 
			is probably the interpolation of some later age. 
The narrative continues: 
				
				
					
					“With one hand Vidar seizes the upper jaw of the wolf, and thus 
			rends asunder his mouth. Thus the wolf perishes. Loke fights with 
			Heimdal, and they kill each other. Thereupon Surt flings fire over 
			the earth, and burns up all the world.” 
				
				
				This narrative is from the 
				Younger Edda. The Elder Edda is to the same purpose, but there are 
			more allusions to the effect of the catastrophe on the earth: 
				
				
					
					“The eagle screams, and with pale beak tears corpses…Mountains dash 
			together. Heroes go the way to Hel, and heaven in rent in twain…All 
			men abandon their homesteads when the warder of Midgard in wrath 
			slays the serpent. The sun grows dark, the earth sinks into the sea, 
			the bright stars from heaven vanish. Fire rages, heat blazes, and 
			high flames play against heaven itself.” 
				
				
				And what follow then? Ice 
			and cold and winter. For although these things come first in the 
			narrative of the Edda, yet we are told that “before these” things, 
			to wit, the cold winters, there occurred the wickedness of the 
			world, and the wolves and the serpent made their appearance. So that 
			the events transpired in the order in which I have given them.
				
				
				
				[COMMENT: Here is a very, very important point to consider when 
			reading these legends that have survived from Scandinavia. Before 
			the last arrival sequence of the Planet X Nibiru, before 1587 BCE, 
			then the geographical location of Scandinavia per se would not have 
			been so extremely northern as nowadays, since before 1587 BCE, 
			before this last Polar Axis Shift, Scandinavia would have been 
			located more southerly in latitude. Thus, these legends relating to 
			the advent of a “long winter” might simply refer to the fact that 
			after the last Polar Axis Shift, Scandinavia pivoted to a higher 
			northern latitude and thus experienced—for the first time—what they 
			are by today quite accustomed to, i.e., long, dark, cold winters.
				
				
				
[To be more specific, before 1587 BCE, the North Pole was located in 
			the middle of 
			the North Atlantic Ocean somewhere between France and Québec, 
			possibly in the 
			vicinity of southern Greenland. The previous Equator would have run 
			through present-day Mongolia and the Kamchatka Peninsula of the 
			Russian Far East. Most of Russia/Siberia from Kazakhstan to Alaska 
			would have been tropical and subtropical in climate. The Irtysh 
			River would have flowed in an eastwardly direction into a non-frozen 
			temperate sea. The main Scandinavian Peninsula, now north-south, 
			would have been in an east-west direction at about the latitude of 
			present-day Central Europe. The British Isles and Iceland would have 
			been on the very northern fringes of the previous North Polar Zone. 
				
				 
				
				Those who would have been living in what is now 
				Scandinavia would 
			not have had such long, dark, arctic winters as they do today, when 
			some places experience a couple of months of total or near-total 
			darkness. Thus, if the arrival of Planet X Nibiru and the 
			re-establishment of The Cosmic Tree, as its natural consequence, 
			moved the North Pole from the North Atlantic location to the current 
			Arctic location, and if this occurred in December-January, then 
			those ancient Scandinavians and Siberians would have been catapulted 
			into a totally different winter environment of ice, snow and 
			darkness—and they have preserved the legend of the “Fimbul Winter” 
			that accompanied the previous cataclysm. Other locations would not 
			necessarily have suffered this same sort of wintry side-effect of 
			the Polar Axis Shift. This cannot be proven with any certainty, of 
			course, but it does contain an element of logic. RS] 
				
					
					“First there is 
			a winter called the Fimbul Winter, the mighty, the great, the iron 
			winter, when snow drives from all quarters, the frosts are so 
			severe, the winds so keen, there is no joy in the sun. There are 
			three such winters in succession, without any intervening summer.”
					
				
				
				Here we have the Glacial period which followed the Drift. Three 
			years of incessant wind, and snow, and intense cold. 
				
				
The Elder Edda says, speaking of the 
				Fenris-wolf:  
				
					
					“It feeds on the 
			bodies of men, when they die; the seats of the gods it stains with 
			red blood.”
				
				
				This probably refers to the iron-stained red clay cast 
			down by the Comet over a large part of the earth; the “seats of the 
			gods” means the home of the god-like race, which was doubtless 
			covered, like Europe and America, with red clay; the waters which 
			ran from it must have been the color of blood.
				 
				
				[COMMENT: From a personal standpoint here in Texas, my local 
			regional topsoil 
			is built upon a bed of red clay. Recently there was a utility crew 
			digging along my 
			street to lay a new water-main for an extension of this 
			neighborhood. After the 
			back-hoe had dug the 10-foot-deep ditch for the water-main, I took a 
			look.
				 
				
				Only
			about the top 2-3 feet of earth was “humus” or “sandy-loam” soil. 
			Below that was 
			only hard red clay. By the time that the utility crew had finished 
			their work and 
			refilled the ditch, rather haphazardly, they had dumped red clay all 
			over the yards of 
			these new houses; and I was thinking to myself how “infertile” the 
			top layer of earth 
			would be for these new neighbors for several years to come, until it 
			could remix 
			itself with fallen leaves and other organic matter and recreate some 
			sort of viable 
			topsoil. I also understood why it is sometimes quite difficult for 
			me to dig down below a certain depth, because this red clay, when 
			dry, is practically like hardened cement in texture. Whether it all 
			resulted from these “cosmic cataclysms” is, of course, impossible to 
			know. RS] 
				
					
					“The sunshine blackens in the summers thereafter, and the weather 
			grows bad.” 
				
				
				In the Younger Edda (p. 57) we are given a still 
				more 
			precise description of the Ice Age: 
				
					
					“Replied Har, explaining, that as soon as the streams, that are 
			called Elivogs” (the rivers from under ice) “had come so far that 
			the venomous yeast” (the clay?) “which flowed with them hardened, as 
			does dross that runs from the fire, then it turned” (as) “into ice. 
			And when this ice stopped and flowed no more, then gathered over it 
			the drizzling rain that arose from the venom” (the clay) “and froze 
			into rime” (ice) “and one layer of ice was laid upon another clear 
			into the Ginungagap.” 
				
				
				Ginungagap, we are told, was the name applied 
			in the eleventh century by the Northmen to the ocean between 
			Greenland and Vinland, or America. It doubtless meant originally the 
			whole of the Atlantic Ocean. The clay, when it first fell, was 
			probably full of chemical elements, which rendered it, and the 
			waters which filtered through it, unfit for human use; clay waters 
			are, to this day, the worst in the world. 
				
					
					“Then said Jafnhar: ‘All 
			that part of Ginungagap that turns to the north’ (the north 
			Atlantic) ‘was filled with thick and heavy ice and rime, and 
			everywhere within were drizzling rains and gusts. But the south part 
			of Ginungagap was lighted up by the glowing sparks that flew out of 
			Muspelheim.’” 
				
				
				The ice and rime to the north represent the age of ice 
			and snow. Muspelheim was the torrid country of the south, over which 
			the clouds could not yet form in consequence of the heat—Africa.
				
				
				
But it cannot last forever. The clouds disappear; the floods find 
			their way back to the ocean; nature begins to decorate once more the 
			scarred and crushed face of the world. But where is the human race? 
			The “Younger Edda” tells us: 
				
					
					“During the conflagration caused by Surt’s fire, a woman by the name 
			of Lif and a man named Lifthraser lie concealed in Hodmimer’s hold, 
			or forest. The dew of the dawn serves them for food, and so great a 
			race shall spring from them, that their descendants shall soon 
			spread over the whole earth.” 
				
				
				[COMMENT: Again, see also 
				Chapter 1. 
			Compare this to Dr. Velikovsky’s discussion of the early-morning 
			“honeydew” or “ambrosia” or “manna” that sustained other ancient 
			cultures. RS] 
				
				
The “Elder Edda” says:
				
				
					
					Lif and Lifthraser will lie hid in Hodmimer’s-holt;
			The morning dew they have for food.
			From them are the races descended. 
				
				
				“Holt” is a grove, or forest, or hold; it was probably a cave. We 
			shall see that nearly all the legends refer to the caves in which 
			mankind escaped from destruction. 
				 
				
				[COMMENT: And where on Earth will 
			most of us find such sheltering caves today? RS]
				
				
This statement, “From them are the races descended”, shows that this 
			is not prophecy, but history; it refers to the past, not to the 
			future; it describes not a Day of Judgment to come, but one that has 
			already fallen on the human family. Two others, of the godlike race, 
			also escaped in some way not indicated: Vidar and Vale are their 
			names. They, too, had probably taken refuge in some cavern. 
				
				
					
					“Neither 
			the sea nor Surt’s fire had harmed them, and they dwell on the 
			plains of Ida, where Asgard was before. Thither come also the sons 
			of Thor, Mode, and Magne, and they have Mjolner. Then come Balder 
			and Hoder from Hel.”
				
				
				Mode and Magne are children of 
				Thor; they 
			belong to the godlike race. They, too, have escaped. Mjolner is 
				Thor’s hammer. Balder is the Sun; he has returned from the abode of 
			death, to which the Comet consigned him. Hoder is the Night. All 
			this means that the fragments and remnants of humanity reassemble on 
			the plain of Ida—the plain of Vigrid—where the battle was fought. 
			They possess the works of the old civilization, represented by 
			Thor’s hammer; and the day and night once more return after the long 
			midnight blackness. 
				
				
And the Vala looks again upon a renewed and rejuvenated world:
				
					
						
							
							She sees arise the second time, 
							
From the sea, the earth, completely green. 
The cascades fall, the eagle soars,
From lofty mounts pursues its prey. 
							
						
					
				
				
				It is once more the glorious, the sun-lighted world; the world of 
			flashing seas, dancing streams, and green leaves; with the eagle, 
			high above it all, “battling the sunny ceiling of the globe with his 
			dark wings”; while “the wild cataracts leap in glory”. 
				
				
What history, what poetry, what beauty, what inestimable pictures of 
			an infinite past have lain hidden away in these Sagas—the despised 
			heritage of all the blue-eyed, light-haired races of the world!
				
				
Rome and Greece cannot parallel this marvelous story: 
				
				
					
						
							
							Slow-Motion Doomsday 
							
The gods convene on Ida’s plain,
And talk of the powerful Midgard-serpent;
							
They call to mind the Fenris-wolf 
And the ancient runes of the mighty Odin. 
							
						
					
				
				
				What else can mankind think of, or dream of, or talk of for the next 
			thousand years but this awful, this unparalleled calamity through 
			which the race has passed? A long-subsequent but most ancient and 
			cultivated people, whose memory has, for us, almost faded from the 
			earth, will thereafter embalm the great drama in legends, myths, 
			prayers, poems, and sagas; fragments of which are found today 
			dispersed through all literatures in all lands; some of them, as we 
			shall see, having found their way even into the Bible revered alike 
			of Jew and Christian. The Edda continues, 
				
					
					“Then again the wonderful 
			golden tablets are found in the grass: In time’s morning, the leader 
			of the gods and Odin’s race possessed them.” 
				
				
				And what a find was 
			that! This poor remnant of humanity discovers “the golden tablets” 
			of the former civilization. Doubtless, the inscribed tablets, by 
			which the art of writing survived to the race; for what would 
			tablets be without inscriptions? For they talk of “the ancient runes 
			of mighty Odin”, that is, of the runic letters, the alphabetical 
			writing. And we shall see hereafter that this view is confirmed from 
			other sources. 
				
				
There follows a happy age: 
				
				
					
						
							
							The fields unsown yield their growth; 
							
All ills cease. Halder comes.
Hoder and Balder, those heavenly gods,
							
Dwell together in Odin’s halls. 
						
					
				
				
				The great catastrophe is past. Man is saved. The world is once more 
			fair. The sun shines again in heaven. Night and day follow each 
			other in endless revolution around the happy globe. Ragnarok is 
			past.