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LI.
Then said Gangleri: What tidings are to be told concerning the Weird
of the Gods? Never before have I heard aught said of this. Hárr
answered: Great tidings are to be told of it, and much. The first
is this, that there shall come that winter which is called the Awful Winter:
in that time snow shall drive from all quarters; frosts shall be great then,
and winds sharp; there shall be no virtue in the sun. Those winters shall
proceed three in succession, and no summer between; but first shall come
three other winters, such that over all the world there shall be mighty
battles. In that time brothers shall slay each other for greed's sake, and
none shall spare father or son in manslaughter and in incest; so it says
in Völuspá;
[78]
Brothers shall strive and
slaughter each other;
Own sisters' children shall
sin together;
days among men, many a whoredom:
An axe-age, a sword-age, shields
shall be cloven;
A wind-age, a wolf-age, ere
the world totters.
Then shall happen what seems great tidings: the Wolf shall swallow the sun;
and this shall seem to men a great harm. Then the other wolf shall seize the
moon, and he also shall work great ruin; the stars shall vanish from the heavens.
Then shall come to pass these tidings also; all the earth shall tremble so,
and the crags, that trees shall be torn up from the earth, and the crags fall
to ruin; and all fetters and bonds shall be broken and rent. Then shall Fenris-WoIf
get loose; then the sea shall gush forth upon the land, because the Midgard
Serpent stirs in giant wrath and advances up onto the land. Then that too shall
happen, that Naglfar shall be loosened, the ship which is so named. (It is
made of dead men's nails; wherefore a warning is desirable, that if a man die
with unshorn nails, that man adds much material to the ship Naglfar, which
gods and men were fain to have finished late.) Yet in this sea-flood Naglfar
shall float. Hrymr is the name of the giant who steers Naglfar. Fenris-Wolf
shall advance with gaping mouth, and his lower jaw shall be against the earth,
but the upper against heaven,he
would gape yet more if there were room for it; fires blaze from his eyes and
nostrils. The Midgard Serpent shall blow venom so that he shall sprinkle all
the air and water; and he is very terrible, and shall be on one side of the Wolf.
In this din shall the heaven be cloven, and the Sons of Múspell ride
thence: Surtr shall ride first, and both before him and after him [79] burning
fire; his sword is exceeding good: from it radiance shines brighter than from
the sun; when they ride over Bifröst, then the bridge shall break,
as has been told before. The Sons of Múspell shall go forth to that field
which is called Vígrídr; thither shall come Fenris-Wolf also and
the Midgard Serpent; then Loki and Hrymr shall come there also, and with him
all the Rime-Giants. All the champions of Hel follow Loki; and the Sons of Múspell
shall have a company by themselves, and it shall be very bright. The field Vígrídr
is a hundred leagues wide each way.
"When these tidings come to pass, then shall Heimdallr rise up and blow
mightily in the Gjallar-Horn, and awaken all the gods; and they shall hold council
together. Then Odin shall ride to Mímir's Well and take counsel of Mímir
for himself and his host. Then the Ash of Yggdrasill shall tremble, and nothing
then shall be without fear in heaven or in earth. Then shall the Æsir put
on their war-weeds, and all the Champions, and advance to the field: Odin rides
first with the gold helmet and a fair birnie, and his spear, which is called
Gungnir. He shall go forth against Fenris-Wolf, and Thor stands forward on his
other side, and can be of no avail to him, because he shall have his hands full
to fight against the Midgard Serpent. Freyr shall contend with Surtr, and a hard
encounter shall there be between them before Freyr falls: it is to be his death
that he lacks that good sword of his, which he gave to Skírnir. Then shall
the dog Garmr be loosed, which is bound before Gnípa's Cave: he is the
greatest monster; he shall do battle with Týr, and each become the other's
slayer. Thor shall put to death the Midgard Serpent, and shall stride away
nine paces from that spot; then shall he fall dead to the earth, because of
the venom which the [80] Snake has blown at him. The Wolf shall swallow
Odin; that shall be his ending But straight thereafter shall Vídarr stride forth and set one foot upon
the lower jaw of the Wolf: on that foot he has the shoe, materials for which
have been gathering throughout all time. (They are the scraps of leather which
men cut out of their shoes at toe or heel; therefore he who desires in his heart
to come to the Æsir's help should cast those scraps away.) With one hand
he shall seize the Wolf's upper jaw and tear his gullet asunder; and that is
the death of the Wolf. Loki shall have battle with Heimdallr, and each be the
slayer of the other. Then straightway shall Surtr cast fire over the earth
and burn all the world; so is said in Völuspá:
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