Nine Herbs Charm


The Nine Herbs Charm, Nigon Wyrta Galdor, Nine Plants Spell, Lay of the Nine Healing Herbs, or Nine Wort Spell is an Old English charm recorded in the tenth century AD. It is part of the Anglo-Saxon medical compilation known as Lacnunga, which survives in the manuscript Harley MS 585 in the British Library. The charm involves the preparation of nine plants.
The poem contains one of two clear mentions of the god Woden in Old English poetry; the other is Maxims I of the Exeter Book. Robert K. Gordon's translation of the section reads as follows:
Nine and three, numbers significant in Germanic paganism and later Germanic folklore, are mentioned frequently throughout the charm.
Some scholars have proposed that this passage describes Woden coming to the assistance of the herbs through his use of nine twigs, each twig inscribed with the runic first-letter initial of a plant.
According to Gordon, the spell is "clearly an old heathen thing which has been subjected to Christian censorship." Malcolm Laurence Cameron states that chanting the poem aloud results in a "marvellously incantatory effect".

Mugwort and Swedish folklore

The spell contains a variety of hapax legomena, words only found in it. One of those words is una, a name which the plant mugwort is referred to. In 2025, Swedish folklorist Sara Bonadea George identifies a parallel to the section of the spell on mugwort in much later Swedish folklore. In an obscure item from Gotland found in the Uppsala landmålsarkiv and dated to 1875, mugwort requests to be called Luna before it will provide healing powers:
The bottom of the entry card makes references to noa-names but contains no further information, implying that the word Luna was understood at least by the folklorist as a form of taboo avoidance. Bonadea George says "the definitive answer on why mugwort should be called Luna to become healing herb is hidden in an obscure past that we can no longer access."

Contemporary arts

Joseph S. Hopkins's and Stephen Pollington's translations of the spell are adapted and prominently featured in the 2025 film Hamnet directed by Chloé Zhao.