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Prose Edda - Anderson Trans. Chapter 15
The Death of Balder 50.
Then asked Ganglere: Have there happened any other remarkable things among
the ases? A great deed it was, forsooth, that Thor wrought on this journey.
Har answered: Yes, indeed, there are tidings to be told that seemed of
far greater importance to the asas. The beginning of this tale is, that
Balder dreamed dreams great and dangerous to his life. When he told these
dreams to the asas they took counsel together, and it was decided that
they should seek peace for Balder against all kinds of harm. So Frigg
exacted an oath from fire, water, iron and all kinds of metal, stones,
earth, trees, sicknesses, beasts and birds and creeping things, that they
should not hurt Balder. When this was done and made known, it became the
pastime of Balder and the asas that he should stand up at their meetings
while some of them should shoot at him, others should hew at him, while
others should throw stones at him; but no matter what they did, no harm
came to him, and this seemed to all a great honor. When Loke, Laufey's
son, saw this, it displeased him very much that Balder was not scathed.
So he went to Frigg, in Fensal, having taken on himself the likeness of
a woman. Frigg asked this woman whether she knew what the asas were doing
at their meeting. She answered that all were shooting at Balder, but that
he was not scathed thereby. Then said Frigg: Neither weapon nor tree can
hurt Balder, I have taken an oath from them all. Then asked the woman:
Have all things taken an oath to spare Balder? Frigg answered: West of
Valhal there grows a little shrub that is called the mistletoe, that seemed
to me too young to exact an oath from. Then the woman suddenly disappeared.
Loke went and pulled up the mistletoe and proceeded to the meeting. Hoder
stood far to one side in the ring of men, because he was blind. Loke addressed
himself to him, and asked: Why do you not shoot at Balder? He answered:
Because I do not see where he is, and furthermore I have no weapons. Then
said Loke: Do like the others and show honor to Balder; I will show you
where he stands; shoot at him with this wand. Hoder took the mistletoe
and shot at Balder under the guidance of Loke. The dart pierced him and
he fell dead to the ground. This is the greatest misfortune that has ever
happened to the gods and men. When Balder had fallen, the asas were struck
speechless with horror, and their hands failed them to lay hold of the
corpse. One looked at the other, and all were of one mind toward him who
had done the deed, but being assembled in a holy peace-stead, no one could
take vengeance. When the asas at length, tried to speak, the wailing so
choked their voices that one could not describe to the other his sorrow.
Odin took this misfortune most to heart, since he best comprehended how
great a loss and injury the fall of Balder was to the asas. When the gods
came to their senses, Frigg spoke and asked who there might be among the
asas who desired to win all her love and good will by riding the way to
Hel and trying to find Balder, and offering Hel a ransom if she would
allow Balder to return home again to Asgard. But he is called Hermod,
the Nimble, Odin's swain, who undertook this journey. Odin's steed, Sleipner,
was led forth. Hermod mounted him and galloped away.
51. The asas took the corpse of Balder and brought it to the sea-shore. Hringhorn was the name of Balder's ship, and it was the largest of all ships. The gods wanted to launch it and make Balder's bale-fire thereon, but they could not move it. Then they sent to Jotunheim after the giantess whose name is Hyrrokken. She came riding on a wolf, and had twisted serpents for reins. When she alighted, Odin appointed four berserks to take care of her steed, but they were unable to hold him except by throwing him down on the ground. Hyrrokken went to the prow and launched the ship with one single push, but the motion was so violent that fire sprang from the underlaid rollers and all the earth shook. Then Thor became wroth, grasped his hammer, and would forthwith have crushed her skull, had not all the gods asked peace for her. Balder's corspe was borne out on the ship; and when his wife, Nanna, daughter of Nep, saw this, her heart was broken with grief and she died. She was borne to the funeral-pile and cast on the fire. Thor stood by and hallowed the pile with Mjolner. Before his feet ran a dwarf, whose name is Lit. Him Thor kicked with his foot and dashed him into the fire, and he, too, was burned. But this funeral-pile was attended by many kinds of folk. First of all came Odin, accompanied by Frigg and the valkyries and his ravens. Frey came riding in his chariot drawn by the boar called Gullinburste or Slidrugtanne. Heimdal rode his steed Gulltop and Freyja drove her cats. There was a large number of frost-giants and mountain-giants. Odin laid on the funeral-pile his gold ring, Draupner, which had the property of producing, every ninth night, eight gold rings of equal weight. Balder's horse, fully caparisoned, was led to his master's pile. 52. But of Hermod it is to be told that he rode nine nights through deep and dark valleys, and did not see light until he came to the Gjallar-river and rode on the Gjallar-bridge, which is thatched with shining gold. Modgud is the name of the may who guards the bridge. She asked him for his name, and of what kin he was, saying that the day before there rode five fylkes (kingdoms, bands) of dead men over the bridge; but she added, it does not shake less under you alone, and you do not have the hue of dead men. Why do you ride the way to Hel? He answered: I am to ride to Hel to find Balder. Have you seen him pass this way? She answered that Balder had ridden over the Gjallar-bridge; adding: But downward and northward lies the way to Hel. Then Hermod rode on till he came to Hel's gate. He alighted from his horse, drew the girths tighter, remounted him, claped the spurs into him, and the horse leaped over the gate with so much force that he never touched it. Thereupon Hermod proceeded to the hall and alighted from his steed. He went in, and saw there sitting on the foremost seat his brother Balder. He tarried there over night. In the morning he asked Hel whether Balder might ride home with him, and told how great weeping there was among the asas. But Hel replied that it should now be tried whether Balder was so much beloved as was said. If all things, said she, both quick and dead, will weep for him, then he shall go back to the asas, but if anything refuses to shed tears, then he shall remain with Hel. Hermod arose, and Balder accompanied him out of the hall. He took the ring Draupner and sent it as a keepsake to Odin. Nanna sent Frigg a kerchief and other gifts, and to Fulla she sent a ring. Thereupon Hermod rode back and came to Asgard, where he reported the tidings he had seen and heard. 53. Then the asas sent messengers over all the world, praying that Balder might be wept out of Hel's power. All things did so,---men and beasts, the earth, stones, trees and all metals, just as you must have seen these things weep when they come out of frost and into heat. When the messengers returned home and had done their errand well, they found a certain cave wherein sat a giantess (gyger= ogress) whose name was Thok. They requested her to weep Balder from Hel; but she answered: Thok will weep With dry tears For Balder's burial; Neither in life nor in death Gave he me gladness. Let Hel keep what she has! It is generally believed that this Thok was Loke, Laufey's son, who has wrought most evil among the asas. 54. Then said Ganglere: A very great wrong did Loke perpetrate; first of all in casing Balder's death, and next in standing in the way of his being loosed from Hel. Did he get no punishment for this misdeed? Har answered: Yes, he was repaid for this in a way that he will long remember. The gods became exceedingly wroth, as might be expected. So he ran away and hid himself in a rock. Here he built a house with four doors, so that he might keep an outlook on all sides. Oftentimes in the daytime he took on him the likeness of a salmon and concealed himself in Frananger Force. Then he thought to himself what stratagems the asas might have recourse to in order to catch him. Now, as he was sitting in his house, he took flax and yarn and worked them into meshes, in the manner that nets have since been made; but a fire was burning before him. THen he saw that the asas were not far distant. Odin had seen from Hlidskjalf where Loke kept himself. Loke immediately sprang up, cast the net on the fire and leaped into the river. When the asas came to the house, he entered first who was wisest of them all, and whose name was Kvaser; and when he saw in the fire the ashes of the net that had been burned, he understood that this must be a contrivance for catching fish, and this he told to the asas. Thereupon they took flax and made themselves a net after the pattern of that which they saw in the ashes and which Loke had made. When the net was made, the asas went to the river and cast it into the force. Thor held one end of the net, and all the other asas laid hold on the other, thus jointly drawing it along the stream. Loke went before it and laid himself down between two stones, so that they drew the net over him, although they perceived that some living thing touched the meshes. They went up to the force again and cast out the net a second time. This time they hung a great weight to it, making it so heavy that nothing could possibly pass under it. Loke swam before the net, but when he saw that he was near the sea he sprang over the top of the net and hastened back to the force. When the asas saw whither he went they proceeded up to the force, dividing themselves into two bands, but Thor waded in the middle of the stream, and so they dragged the net along to the sea. Loke saw that he now had only two chances of escape,---either to risk his life and swim out to sea, or to leap again over the net. He chose the latter, and made a tremendous leap over the top line of the net. Thor grasped after him and caught him, but he slipped in his hand so that Thor did not get a frim hold before he got to the tail, and this is the reason why the salmon has so slim a tail. Now Loke was taken without truce and was brought to a cave. The gods took three rocks and set them up on edge, and bored a hole through each rock. Then they took Loke's sons, Vale and Nare or Narfe. Vale they changed into the likeness of a wolf, whereupon he tore his brother Narfe to pieces, with whose intestines the asas bound Loke over the three rocks. One stood under his shoulders, another under his loins, and the third under his hams, and the fetters became iron. Skade took a serpent and fastened up over him, so that the venom should drop from the serpent into his face. But Sigyn, his wife, stands by him, and holds a dish under the venomdrops. Whenever the dish becomes full, she goes and pours away the venom, and meanwhile the venom drops onto Loke's face. Then he twists his body so violently that the whole earth shakes, and this you call earthquakes. There he will lie bound until Ragnarok. << Previous Page Next Page >>
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