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Prose Edda - Anderson Trans.


Chapter 8


The Asas

Page (2)

                Breidablik it is called,
                Where Balder has
                Built for himself a hall
                In the land
                Where I know is found
                The least of evil. (7)

      23. The third asa is he who is called Njord. He dwells in Noatun, which is in heaven. He rules the course of the wind and checks the fury of the sea and of fire. He is invoked by seafarers and by fishermen. He is so rich and wealthy that he can give broad lands and abundance to those who call on him for them. He was fostered in Vanaheim, but the vans (8) gave him as a hostage to the gods, and received in his stead as an asa-hostage the god whose name is Honer. He established peace between the gods and vans. Njord took to wife Skade, a daughter of the giant Thjasse. She wished to live where her father had dwelt, that is, on the mountains in Thrymheim; Njord, on the other hand, preferred to be near the sea. They therefore agreed to pass nine nights in Thrymheim and three in Noatun. But when Njord came back from the mountains to Noatun he sang this:

                Weary am I of the mountains,
                Not long was I there,
                Only nine nights.
                The howl of the wolves
                Methought sounded ill
                To the song of the swans.

        Skade then sang this:

                Sleep I could not
                On my sea-strand couch,
                For the scream of the sea-fowl.
                There wakes me,
                As he comes from the sea,
                Every morning the mew.

        Then went Skade up on the mountain, and dwelt in Thrymheim. She often goes on skees (snow-shoes), with her bow, and shoots wild beasts. She is called skee-goddess or skee-dis. Thus it is said:

                Thrymheim it is called
                Where Thjasse dwelt,
                That mightiest giant.
                But now dwells Skade,
                Pure bride of the gods,
                In her father's old homestead. (9)

      24. Njord, in Noatun, afterward begat two children: a son, by name Frey, and a daughter, by name Freyja. They were fair of face, and mighty. Frey is the most famous of the asas. He rules over rain and sunshine, and over the fruits of the earth. It is good to call on him for harvests and peace. He also sways the wealth of men. Freyja is the most famous of the goddesses. She has in heaven a dwelling which is called Folkvang, and when she rides to the battle, one half of the slain belong to her, and the other half to Odin. As is here said:

                Folkvang it is called,
                And there rules Freyja.
                For the seats in the hall
                Half of the slain
                She chooses each day;
                The other half is Odin's. (10)

        Her hall is Sesrymner, and it is large and beautiful. When she goes abroad, she drives in a car drawn by two cats. She lends a favorable ear to men who call upon her, and it is from her name that the title has come that women of birth and wealth are called frur. (11) She is fond of love ditties, and it is good to call on her in love affairs.
      25. Then said Ganglere: Of great importance these asas seem to me to be, and it is not wonderful that you have great power, since you have such excellent knowledge of the gods, and know to which of them to address you prayers on each occasion. But what other gods are there? Har answered: There is yet an asa, whose name is Tyr. He is very daring and stout-hearted. He sways victory in war, wherefore warriors should call on him. There is a saw, that he who surpasses others in bravery, and never yields, is Tyr-strong. He is also so wise, that it is said of anyone who is specially intelligent, that he is Tyr-learned. A proof of his daring is, that when the asas induced the wolf Fenrer to let himself be bound with the chain Gleipner, he would not believe that they would loose him again until Tyr put his hand in his mouth as a pledge. But when the asas would not loos the Fenris-wolf, he bit Tyr's hand off at the place of the wolf's joint (the wrist; Icel. úlfliðr[12]). From that time Tyr is one-handed, and he is now called a peacemaker among men.
      26. Brage is the name of another of the asas. He is famous for his wisdom, eloquence and flowing speech. He is a master-skald, and from him song-craft is called brag (poetry), and such men or women are called brag-men (13) and brag-women. His wife is Idun. She keeps in a box those apples of which the gods eat when they grow old, and then they become young again, and so it will be until Ragnarok (the twilight of the gods). Then said Ganglere: Of great importance to the gods it must be, it seems to me, that Idun preserves these apples with care and honesty. Har answered, and laughed: They ran a great risk on one occasion whereof I might tell you more, but you shall first hear the names of more asas.
      27. Heimdal is the name of one. He is also called the white-asa. He is great and holy; born of nine maidens, all of whom were sisters. He hight also Hallinskide and Gullintanne, for his teeth were of gold. His horse hight Gulltop (Gold-top). He dwells in a place called Himinbjorg, near Bifrost. He is the ward of the gods, and sits at the end of heaven, guarding the bridge against the mountain-giants. He needs less sleep than a bird; sees an hundred miles around him, and as well by night as by day. He hears the grass grow and the wool on the backs of the sheep, and of course all things that sound louder than these. He has a trumpet called Gjallarhorn, and when he blows it it can be heard in all the worlds. The head is called Heimdal's sword. Thus it is here said:

                Himinbjorg it is called,
                Where Heimdal rules
                Over his holy halls;
                There drinks the ward of the gods
                In his delightful dwelling
                Glad the good mead. (14)

        And again, in Heimdal's Song, he says himself:

                Son I am of maidens nine,
                Born I am of sisters nine.

      28. Hoder hight one of the asas, who is blind, but exceedingly strong; and the gods would wish that this asa never needed to be named, for the work of his hand will long be kept in memory both by gods and men.
      29. Vidar is the name of the silent asa. He has a very thick shoe, and he is the strongest next after Thor. From him the gods have much help in all hard tasks.
      30. Ale, or Vale, is the son of Odin and Rind. He is daring in combat, and a good shot.
      31. Uller is the name of one, who is a son of Sif, and a step-son of Thor. He is so good an archer, and so fast on his skees, that no one can contend with him. He is fair of face, and possesses every quality of a warrior. Men should invoke him in single combat.
      32. Forsete is a son of Balder and Nanna, Nep's daughter. He has in heaven the hall which hight Glitner. All who come to him with disputes go away perfectly reconciled. No better tribunal is to be found among gods and men. Thus it is here said:

                Glitner hight the hall,
                On gold pillars standing,
                And roofed with silver.
                There dwells Forsete
                Throughout all time,
                And settles all disputes. (15)


ENDNOTES:
7. Elder Edda: Grimner's Lay, 12. Back

8. Compare Vainamoinen, the son of Ukko, in the Finnish epic Kalevala. Back


9. Elder Edda: Grimner's Lay, 11. Back


10. Elder Edda: Grimner's Lay, 14. Back


11. Icel. frú (Ger. frau; Dan. frue), pl. frúr, means a lady. It is used of the wives of men of rank or title. It is derived from Freyja. Back


12. This etymology is, however, erroneous, for the word is derived from oln or öln, and the true form of the word is ölnliðr = the ell-joint (wrist); thus we have ölnboge = the elbow; öln = alin
(Gr. wdinh; Lat. ulna; cp. AS. el-boga; Eng. elbow) is the arm from the elbow to the end of the middle finger, hence an ell in long measure. Back

13. Compare the Anglo-Saxon brego = princeps, chief. Back


14. Elder Edda: Grimner's Lay, 13. Back


15. Elder Edda: Grimner's Lay, 15. Back





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