“Where you see evil, call it evil and give your enemies no peace” is a modern English translation/paraphrase of a line from Hávamál (Old Norse: “Sayings of the High One”), stanza 127.
Hávamál is one of the most famous poems in the Poetic Edda, a 13th-century Icelandic collection of Old Norse mythological and heroic poetry. It’s traditionally attributed to Óðinn (Odin), the chief god in Norse mythology, who dispenses practical and philosophical wisdom throughout the poem.
Collaboration with English Historian Tom Rowsell from Survive the Jive.
Limited edition of 50 printed on A2 Sugarpaper
“Where you see evil, call it evil and give your enemies no peace” is a modern English translation/paraphrase of a line from Hávamál (Old Norse: “Sayings of the High One”), stanza 127.
Hávamál is one of the most famous poems in the Poetic Edda, a 13th-century Icelandic collection of Old Norse mythological and heroic poetry. It’s traditionally attributed to Óðinn (Odin), the chief god in Norse mythology, who dispenses practical and philosophical wisdom throughout the poem.
Collaboration with English Historian Tom Rowsell from Survive the Jive.
Limited edition of 50 printed on A2 Sugarpaper