Taking the bait? lol
I agree, without a horse, you were a no one. Which was most people. Few of the average farmers and villagers could afford horses, though they'd have sheep, goats, maybe an ox or two for the plow.
Kings, Princes, Earls, Æthlings, Gesiths, and Thegns, on the other hand, certainly or most likely did.
One of the areas the OERP seems to focus on here is nobility, the horse as a status symbol.
Also, apparently, a symbol of freedom. (a source of comfort to the restless) "Ride like the wind" comes to mind.
Perhaps above all though, "a joy to princes in the presence of warriors": the horse must have also represented a degree of safety or superiority, the ability to outmaneuver, or if need be, flee, in times of war - which was pretty common. Calvary were regarded as fearsome to the foot warrior, and in fact, in the Battle of Hastings, one of the reasons William the Conqueror won against Anglo-Saxon King Harold Godwinson is that Harold had only foot soldiers. (So one wonders if the poem wasn't "touched up" a bit after 1066 to reflect this lesson?)
Something else I'd like to touch on; the shape for Ehwaz, quite similar to an M, has sometimes been identified as two horses facing each other, viewed from the side, touching noses. Probably many of you have read this too. However, I think this is a modern author's take, it has no historical substantiation, and in fact I find it has some serious issues.
But for the moment, let's assume this was the case (I like to play devil's advocate with myself, this way I look fairly at all sides of a debate); logically then, would that not make Laguz a single horse facing to the right; Laguz is, after all, shaped like one half of Ehwaz. Only.. Laguz means water or lake, not horse. (or single horse)
Now, there is a (long) way around this, and I imagine that it presumes that the Laguz shape represents the head carved into the prow of their ships, or even a regular high prow (though, for one thing, not all Norse ships had these, usually just the war ships, the Drakkars); one will-known kenning for a ship is "brine-stallion" - it's in the OERP Laguz poem.
But honestly, how contrived is that? If you try hard enough, you can connect the dots between any two unrelated things on Earth. You don't even need 6 degrees of separation in most cases. But besides that, Laguz means water, not ship. It's a fine distinction but one nonetheless, I think the poems are quite clear on that.
So, I don't think the rune for Ehwaz represents two of anything. It's "horse", not "horses".
I'm a firm believer in Occam's Razor; the more convoluted you have to twist something to get it to fit a theory, the more leaps of association you're forced to make to get from Point A to Point B ..or wherever, the more likely it is that the theory is incorrect.
If you happen to question this as I do, what else do you think the shape might represent? A bridle or saddle perhaps? Or maybe even the image of a horse from the front, the "V" being the horses head, the two outer staves the front legs? (I rather like this, myself.)
(This leaves us begging to ask what the rune for Laguz represents, but let's leave that for the Laguz board
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