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"Vile Mischief-maker!" cried Thor, as he alighted upon the
top of a neighboring crag: "I know thee who thou art; and I
will make thee bitterly rue the work of this day. Limb from
limb will I tear thee, and thy bones will I grind into
powder."
Loki, when he saw that he could not by any means get away
from the angry Thunderer, changed himself back to his own
form, and humbly said to Thor,--
"What if you do your worst with me? Will that give back a
single hair to Sif's shorn head? What I did was only a
thoughtless joke, and I really meant no harm. Do but spare
my life, and I will more than make good the mischief I have
done."
"How can that be?" asked Thor.
"I will hie me straight to the secret smithies of dwarfs,"
answered Loki; "and those cunning little kinsmen of mine
shall make golden tresses for fair Sif, which will grow upon
her head like other hair, and cause her to be an
hundred-fold more beautiful than before."
Thor knew that Loki was a slippery fellow, and that he did
not always do what he promised, and hence he would not let
him go. He called to Frey, who had just come up, and said,--
"Come, cousin Frey, help me to rid the world of this sly
thief. While I hold fast to his raven hair, and his long
slim arms, do you seize him by the heels, and we will give
his limbs to the fishes, and his body to the birds, for
food."
Loki, now thoroughly frightened, wept, and kissed Frey's
feet, and humbly begged for mercy. And he promised that he
would bring from the dwarf's smithy, not only the golden
hair for Sif, but also a mighty hammer for Thor, and a swift
steed for Frey. So earnest were his words, and so pitiful
was his plea, that Thor at last set the trembling
Mischief-maker free, and bade him hasten away on his errand.
Quickly, then, he went in search of the smithy of the
dwarfs.
He crossed the desert moorlands, and came, after three days,
to the bleak hill-country, and the rugged mountain-land of
the South. There the earthquake had split the mountains
apart, and dug dark and bottomless gorges, and hollowed out
many a low-walled cavern, where the light of day was never
seen. Through deep, winding ways, and along narrow crevices,
Loki crept; and he glided under huge rocks, and downward
through slanting, crooked clefts, until at last he came to a
great underground hall, where his eyes were dazzled by a
light which was stronger and brighter than day; for on every
side were glowing fires, roaring in wonderful little forges,
and blown by wonderful little bellows And the vaulted roof
above was thickly set with diamonds and precious stones,
that sparkled and shone like thousands of bright stars in
the blue sky. And the little dwarfs, with comical brown
faces, and wearing strange leathern aprons, and carrying
heavy hammers, were hurrying here and there, each busy at
his task. Some were smelting pure gold from the coarse rough
rocks; others were making precious gems, and rich rare
jewels, such as the proudest king would be glad to wear.
Here, one was shaping pure, round pearls from dewdrops and
maidens' tears; there, another wrought green emeralds from
the first leaves of spring. So busy were they all, that they
neither stopped nor looked up when Loki came into their
hall, but all kept hammering and blowing and working, as if
their lives depended upon their being always busy.
After Loki had curiously watched their movements for some
time, he spoke to the dwarf whose forge was nearest to him,
and made known his errand. But the little fellow was
fashioning a flashing diamond, which he called the Mountain
of Light; and he scarcely looked up as he answered,--
"I do not work in gold. Go to Ivald's sons: they will make
whatever you wish."
To Ivald's sons, then, in the farthest and brightest corner
of the hall, Loki went. They very readily agreed to make the
golden hair for Sif, and they began the work at once. A lump
of purest gold was brought, and thrown into the glowing
furnace; and it was melted and drawn, and melted and drawn,
seven times. Then it was given to a little brown elf with
merry, twinkling eyes, who carried it with all speed to
another part of the great hall, where the dwarfs' pretty
wives were spinning. One of the little women took the yellow
lump from the elf's hands, and laid it, like flax, upon her
spinning-wheel. Then she sat down and began to spin; and, as
she span, the dwarf-wives sang a strange, sweet song of the
old, old days when the dwarf-folk ruled the world. And the
tiny brown elves danced gleefully around the spinner, and
the thousand little anvils rang out a merry chorus to the
music of the singers. And the yellow gold was twisted into
threads, and the threads ran into hair softer than silk, and
finer than gossamer. And at last the dwarf-woman held in her
hand long golden tresses ten times more beautiful than the
amber locks that Loki had cut from Sif's fair head. When
Ivald's sons, proud of their skill, gave the rare treasure
to the Mischief-maker, Loki smiled as if he were well
pleased; but in his heart he was angry because the dwarfs
had made so fair a piece of workmanship. Then he said,--
"This is, indeed, very handsome, and will be very becoming
to Sif. Oh, what an uproar was made about those flaxen
tresses that she loved so well! And that reminds me that her
husband, the gruff old Giant-killer, wants a hammer. I
promised to get him one; and, if I fail, he will doubtless
be rude with me. I pray you make such a hammer as will be of
most use to him in fighting the Jotuns, and you may win
favor both for yourselves and me."
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