Prose Edda - Brodeur Trans.
Gylfaginning
73
is called Hyrrokkin. When
she had come, riding a wolf and having a viper for bridle, then she leaped
off the steed; and Odin called to four berserks to tend the steed; but
they were not able to hold it until they had felled it. Then Hyrrokkin
went to the prow of the boat and thrust it out at the first push, so that
fire burst from the rollers, and all lands trembled. Thor became angry
and clutched his hammer, and would straightway have broken her head, had
not the gods prayed for peace for her.
"Then was the body of Baldr
borne out on shipboard; and when his wife, Nanna the daughter of Nep,
saw that, straightway her heart burst with grief, and she died; she was
borne to the pyre, and fire was kindled. Then Thor stood by and hallowed
the pyre with Mjöllnir; and before his feet ran a certain dwarf which
was named Litr; Thor kicked at him with his foot and thrust him into the
fire, and he burned. People of, many races visited this burning: First
is to be told of Odin, how Frigg and the Valkyrs went with him, and his
ravens; but Freyr drove in his chariot with the boar called Gold-Mane,
or Fearful-Tusk, and Heimdallr rode the horse called Gold-Top, and Freyja
drove her cats. Thither came also much people of the Rime-Giants and the
Hill-Giants. Odin laid on the pyre that gold ring which is called Draupnir;
this quality attended it, that every ninth night there dropped from it
eight gold rings of equal weight. Baldr's horse was led to the bale-fire
with all his trappings.
"Now this is to be told concerning
Hermódr, that he rode nine nights through dark dales and deep,
so that he saw not before he was come to the river Gjöll and rode
onto the Gjöll-Bridge; which bridge is thatched with glittering gold.
Módgudr is the maiden called who guards the
74
bridge; she asked him his
name and race, saying that the day before there had ridden over the bridge
five companies of dead men; 'but the bridge thunders no less under thee
alone, and thou hast not the color of dead men. Why ridest thou hither
on Hel-way?' He answered: 'I am appointed to ride to Hel to seek out Baldr.
Hast thou perchance seen Baldr on Hel-way?' She said that Baldr had ridden
there over Gjöll's Bridge,-'but down and north lieth Hel-way.'
"Then Hermódr rode on
till he came to Hel-gate; he dismounted from his steed and made his girths
fast, mounted and pricked him with his spurs; and the steed leaped so
hard over the gate that he came nowise near to it. Then Hermódr
rode home to the hall and dismounted from his steed, went into the hall,
and saw sitting there in the high-seat Baldr, his brother; and Hermódr
tarried there overnight. At morn Hermódr prayed Hel that Baldr
might ride home with him, and told her how great weeping was among the
Æsir. But Hel said that in this wise it should be put to the test,
whether Baldr were so all-beloved as had been said: 'If all things in
the world, quick and dead, weep for him, then he shall go back to the
Æsir; but he shall remain with Hel if any gainsay it or will not
weep.' Then Hermódr arose; but Baldr led him out of the hall, and
took the ring Draupnir and sent it to Odin for a remembrance. And Nanna
sent Frigg a linen smock, and yet more gifts, and to Fulla a golden finger-ring.
"Then Hermódr rode his way
back, and came into Asgard, and told all those tidings which he had seen
and heard. Thereupon the Æsir sent over all the world messengers
to pray that Baldr be wept out or Hel; and all men did this, and quick
things, and the earth, and stones,
75
and trees, and all metals, -even
as thou must have seen that these things weep when they come out of frost
and into the heat. Then, when the messengers went home, having well wrought
their errand, they found, in a certain cave, where a giantess sat: she
called herself Thökk. They prayed her to weep Baldr out of Hel; she
answered:
Thökk will
weep waterless tears
For Baldr's bale-fare;
Living or dead, I loved not the churl's son;
Let Hel hold to that she hath!
And men deem that she who
was there was Loki Laufeyarson, who hath wrought most ill among the Æsir."
L. Then said Gangleri: "Exceeding much Loki had brought to
pass, when he had first been cause that Baldr was slain, and then that
he was not redeemed out of Hel. Was any vengeance taken on him for this?"
Hárr answered: "This thing was repaid him in such wise that
he shall remember it long. When the gods had become as wroth with him
as was to be looked for, he ran off and hid himself in a certain mountain;
there he made a house with four doors, so that he could see out of the
house in all directions. Often throughout the day he turned himself into
the likeness of a salmon and hid himself in the place called Fránangr-Falls;
then be would ponder what manner of wile the gods would devise to take
him in the water-fall. But when he sat in the house, he took twine of
linen and knitted meshes as a net is made since; but a fire burned before
him. Then he saw that the Æsir were close upon him; and Odin had
seen from Hlidskjálf where
76
he was. He leaped up at once
and out into the river, but cast the net into the fire.
"When the Æsir had come
to the house, he went in first who was wisest of all, who is called Kvasir;
and when he saw in the fire the white ash where the net had burned, then
he perceived that that thing must be a device for catching fish, and told
it to the Æsir. Straightway they took hold, and made themselves
a net after the pattern of the one which they perceived, by the burnt-out
ashes, that Loki had made. When the net was ready, then the Æsir
went to the river and cast the net into the fall; Thor held one end of
the net, and all of the Æsir held the other, and they drew the net.
But Loki darted ahead and lay down between two stones; they drew the net
over him, and perceived that something living was in front of it. A second
time they went up to the fall and cast out the net, having bound it to
something so heavy that nothing should be able to pass under it. Then
Loki swam ahead of the net; but when he saw that it was but a short distance
to the sea, then he jumped up over the net-rope and ran into the fall.
Now the Æsir saw where he went, and went up again to the fall and
divided the company into two parts, but Thor waded along in mid-stream;
and so they went out toward the sea. Now Loki saw a choice of two courses:
it was a mortal peril to dash out into the sea; but this was the second-to
leap over the net again. And so he did: he leaped as swiftly as he could
over the net-cord. Thor clutched at him and got hold of him, and he slipped
in Thor's band, so that the hand stopped at the tail; and for this reason
the salmon has a tapering back.
"Now Loki was taken truceless,
and was brought with
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