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XLII.
Then said Gangleri: Who owns that horse Sleipnir, or what is to be said
of him? Hárr answered: Thou hast no knowledge of Sleipnir's
points, and thou knowest not the circumstances of his begetting; but it will
seem to thee worth the telling. It was early in the first days of the gods' dwelling
here, when the gods had established the Midgard and made Valhall; there came
at that time a certain wright and offered to build them a citadel in three seasons,
so good that it should be staunch and proof against the Hill-Giants and the Rime-Giants,
though they should [54] come in over Midgard. But he demanded as wages
that he should have possession of Freyja, and would fain have had the sun and
the moon. Then the Æsir
held parley and took counsel together; and a bargain was made with the wright,
that he should have that which he demanded, if he should succeed in completing
the citadel in one winter. On the first day of summer, if any part of the citadel
were left unfinished, he should lose his reward; and he was to receive help from
no man in the work. When they told him these conditions, he asked that they would
give him leave to have the help of his stallion, which was called Svadilfari;
and Loki advised it, so that the wright's petition was granted. He set to work
the first day of winter to make the citadel, and by night he hauled stones with
the stallion's aid; and it seemed very marvellous to the Æsir what great
rocks that horse drew, for the horse did more rough work by half than did the
wright. But there were strong witnesses to their bargain, and many oaths, since
it seemed unsafe to the giant to be among the Æsir without truce, if
Thor should come home. But Thor had then gone away into the eastern region
to fight trolls.
Now when the winter drew nigh unto its end, the building of the citadel
was far advanced; and it was so high and strong that it could not be taken. When
it lacked three days of summer, the work had almost reached the gate of the stronghold.
'Then the gods sat down in their judgment seats, and sought means of evasion,
and asked one another who had advised giving Freyja into Jötunheim, or
so destroying the air and the heaven as to take thence the sun and the moon
and give them to the giants. The gods agreed that he must have counselled this
who is wont to give evil advice, Loki Laufeyarson, and they declared [55]
him deserving of an ill death, if he could not hit upon a way of losing the wright
his wages; and they threatened Loki with violence. But when he became frightened,
then he swore oaths, that he would so contrive that the wright should lose his
wages, cost him what it might.
That same evening, when the wright drove out after stone
with the stallion Svadilfari, a mare bounded forth from a certain wood and
whinnied to him. The stallion, perceiving what manner of horse this was,
straightway became frantic, and snapped the traces asunder, and leaped over
to the mare, and she away to the wood, and the wright after, striving to
seize the stallion. These horses ran all night, and the wright stopped there
that night; and afterward, at day, the work was not done as it had
been before. When the wright saw that the work could not be brought to an
end, he fell into giant's fury. Now that the Æsir saw surely that the hill-giant was come thither, they did not regard their oaths reverently, but called on Thor, who came as quickly. And straightway the hammer Mjöllnir was raised aloft; he paid the wright's wage, and not with the sun and the moon. Nay, he even denied him dwelling in Jötunheim,
and struck but the one first blow, so that his skull was burst into small
crumbs, and sent him down below under Niflhel. But Loki had such dealings
with Svadilfari, that somewhat later he gave birth to a foal, which was
gray and had eight feet; and this horse is the best among gods and men.
So is said in Völuspá:
Then all the Powers strode to
the seats of judgment,
The most holy gods council
held together:
Who had the air all with
evil envenomed,
Or to the Ettin-race Ódr's
maid given. [56]
Broken were oaths then, bond and
swearing,
Pledges all sacred which
passed between them;
Thor alone smote there, swollen
with anger:
He seldom sits still when
such he hears of.
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