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XXXIV.
Yet more children had Loki. Angrboda was the name of a certain giantess
in Jötunheim, with whom Loki gat three children: one was Fenris-Woif, the
second Jörmungandrthat is the Midgard Serpent,the third is Hel.
But when the gods learned that this kindred was nourished in Jötunheim,
and when the gods perceived by prophecy that from this kindred great misfortune
should befall them; and since it seemed to all that there was great prospect
of ill(first from the mother's blood, and yet worse from the father's)then
Allfather sent gods thither to take the children and bring them to him. When
they came to him, straightway he cast the serpent into the deep sea, where
he lies about all the land; and this serpent grew so greatly that he lies in
the midst of the ocean encompassing all the land, and bites upon his own tail.
Hel he cast into Niflheim, and gave to her power over nine worlds, to apportion
all abodes among those that were sent to her: that is, men dead of sickness
or of old age. She has great possessions there; her walls are exceeding high
and her gates great. Her hall is called Sleet-Cold; her dish, Hunger; Famine
is her knife; Idler, her thrall; Sloven, her maidservant; Pit of Stumbling,
her threshold, by which one enters; Disease, her bed; Gleaming Bale, her bed-hangings.
She is half blue-black and half flesh-color (by which she is easily recognized),
and very lowering and fierce.
The Wolf the Æsir brought up at home, and Týr alone
dared go to him to give him meat. But when the gods saw how much he grew every
day, and when all prophecies [43] declared that he was fated to be
their destruction, then the Æsir seized
upon this way of escape: they made a very strong fetter, which they called Lædingr,
and brought it before the Wolf, bidding him try his strength against the fetter.
The Wolf thought that no overwhelming odds, and let them do with him as they
would. The first time the Wolf lashed out against it, the fetter broke; so he
was loosed out of Lædingr. After this, the Æsir made a second fetter,
stronger by half, which they called Drómi, and bade the Wolf try that
fetter, saying he would become very famous for strength, if such huge workmanship
should not suffice to hold him. But the Wolf thought that this fetter was very
strong; he considered also that strength had increased in him since the time
he broke Lædingr: it came into his mind, that he must expose himself to
danger, if he would become famous. So he let the fetter be laid upon him. Now
when the Æsir declared themselves ready, the Wolf shook himself, dashed
the fetter against the earth and struggled fiercely with it, spurned against
it, and broke the fetter, so that the fragments flew far. So he dashed himself
out of Drómi. Since then it passes as a proverb, 'to loose out of Lædingr,'
or 'to dash out of Drómi,' when anything is exceeding hard.
After that the Æsir feared that they should never be able to get
the Wolf bound. Then Allfather sent him who is called Skírnir, Freyr's
messenger, down into the region of the Black Elves, to certain dwarves, and
caused to be made the fetter named Gleipnir. It was made of six things: the
noise a cat makes in foot-fall, the beard of a woman, the roots of a rock,
the sinews of a bear, the breath of a fish, and the spittle of a bird. And
though thou understand not these matters already, yet now thou mayest speedily
find [44] certain proof herein, that no lie is told thee: thou must
have seen that a woman has no beard, and no sound comes from the leap of a
cat, and there are no roots under a rock; and by my troth, all that I have
told thee is equally true, though there be some things which thou canst not
put to the test.
Then said Gangleri: This certainly I can perceive to be true: these things
which thou hast taken for proof, I can see; but how was the fetter fashioned? Hárr
answered: That I am well able to tell thee. The fetter was soft and smooth
as a silken ribbon, but as sure and strong as thou shalt now hear. Then, when
the fetter was brought to the Æsir, they thanked the messenger well for
his errand. Then the Æsir went out upon the lake called Ámsvartnir,
to the island called Lyngvi, and summoning the Wolf with them, they showed him
the silken ribbon and bade him burst it, saying that it was somewhat stouter
than appeared from its thickness. And each passed it to the others, and tested
it with the strength of their hands and it did not snap; yet they said the Wolf
could break it. Then the Wolf answered: 'Touching this matter of the ribbon,
it seams to me that I shall get no glory of it, though I snap asunder so slender
a band; but if it be made with cunning and wiles, then, though it seem little,
that band shall never come upon my feet.' Then the Æsir answered that he
could easily snap apart a slight silken band, he who had before broken great
fetters of iron, 'but if thou shalt not be able to burst this band, then
thou wilt not be able to frighten the gods; and then we shall unloose thee.'
The 'Wolf said: 'If ye bind me so that I shall not get free again, then ye
will act in such a way that it will be late ere I receive help from you; I
am unwilling that this band [45] should be laid upon me. Yet rather
than that ye should impugn my courage, let some one of you lay his hand in
my mouth, for a pledge that this is done in good faith.' Each of the Æsir looked at his neighbor, and none was willing to
part with his hand, until Týr stretched out his right hand and laid it
in the Wolf's mouth. But when the Wolf lashed out, the fetter became hardened;
and the more he struggled against it, the tighter the band was. Then all laughed
except Týr: he lost his hand.
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