A
language of the birds, a mystical, perfect or
divine language, or a mythical or magical language used by
birds to communicate with the initiated, is postulated in
mythology, medieval literature and occultism.
History
Birds played an important role in Indo-European religion,
used for divination by augurs, and according to a suggestion
by Walter Burkert, these customs may have their roots in the
Paleolithic when during the Ice Age, early humans used to
look for carrion by observing birds.
From the Renaissance, it was the inspiration for some
magical a priori languages, in particular musical languages.
Whistled languages based or constructed on or
articulated natural languages used in some cultures are
sometimes also referred to, and compared with, the language
of the birds.
Mythology
According to
Apollonius Rhodius, the figurehead of Jason's ship, the
Argo, was built of oak from the sacred grove at Dodona and
could speak the language of birds. The language of birds in
Greek mythology may be attained by magical means.
Democritus, Anaximander, Apollonius of Tyana, Tiresias,
Melampus and Aesopus were all said to have understood the birds.
According to several Norse sagas, dragons' blood gives
its drinker the power to understand the speech of birds.
In
Celtic mythology, birds usually represent prophetic
knowledge or bloodshed (especially
crows).
Morrigan adopted the shape of a bird to warn the Brown Bull.
Echoing stories of the Edda and the Mabinogion, Richard
Wagner's Siegfried understands the birds after he tasted
Fafner's blood.
Folklore
The concept is also known from many
folk tales (including Welsh, Russian, German, Estonian,
Greek), where usually the protagonist is granted the gift of
understanding the language of the birds either by some
magical transformation, or as a reward for some good deed by
the king of birds. The birds then inform or warn the hero
about some danger or hidden treasure.
Religion
In Sufism, the language of birds is a mystical language
of angels. The Conference of the Birds (mantiq at-tair) is a
mystical poem of 4647 verses by the 12th century Persian
poet Farid ud-Din Attar
[1].
Francis of Assisi is said to have preached to the birds.
In the Talmud (Louis Ginzberg, Legends of the Bible,
1909), Solomon's proverbial wisdom was due to his being granted
understanding of the language of birds by God.
Alchemy
In
Kabbalah, Renaissance magic, and alchemy, the language of
the birds was considered a secret and perfect language and
the key to perfect knowledge, sometimes also called the
langue verte, or green language (Jean Julien Fulcanelli,
Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa de occulta philosophia).
Culture
In medieval France, the language of the birds (la langue
des oiseaux) was a secret language of the Troubadours,
connected with the Tarot, allegedly based on puns and symbolism drawn from
homophony, e. g. an inn called au lion d'or "the
Golden Lion" is allegedly "code" for au lit on dort
"in the bed one sleeps"
[2] (note that this particular pun cannot be medieval,
since final t was pronounced until Middle French,
c.f. e.g. the 14th century loanword
bonnet).
Compare also the rather comical and satirical Birds of
Aristophanes and Parliament of Fowls by Chaucer.
"The language of the birds" (Die Sprache der Vögel) is a
1991 German movie. Jean Sibelius composed a wedding march titled "The
language of the birds" in 1911. The children's book author
Rafe Martin has written "The Language of Birds" as an
adaptation of a Russian folk tale; it was made into a
children's opera by composer John Kennedy.
In Egyptian Arabic,
hieroglyphic writing is called "the alphabet of the
birds". In Ancient Egyptian itself, the hieroglyphic form of
writing was given the name medu-netjer ("words of the
gods" or "divine language").
References
-
Animal Symbolism in Celtic Mythology, by Lars Noodén
(1992)
- Davidson, H.R. Ellis. Myths and Symbols in Pagan
Europe: Early Scandinavian and Celtic Religions.
Syracuse University Press: Syracuse, NY, USA, 1988.
- Richard Khaitzine, La Langue des Oiseaux - Quand
ésotérisme et littérature se rencontrent
[3]
- Rene Guenon, The Language of the Birds,
Australia's Sufi Magazine "The Treasure" 2 (1998).
-
LE VERLAN DES OISEAUX (The Verlan of the Birds)
Collection "Pommes Pirates Papillons", Počmes de Michel
Besnier. Illustrations de Boiry, Editions Mřtus (in
French)
- Definition of
Verlan English
(in French)
External links