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But Loki was not caught napping. His wakeful ears had heard
the tumult in the air, and he guessed who it was that was
coming. He threw the net, which he had just finished, into
the fire, and jumped quickly into the swift torrent, where,
changing himself into a salmon, he lay hidden beneath the
foaming waters.
When the eager Asa-folk reached Loki's dwelling, they found
that he whom they sought had fled; and although they
searched high and low, among the rocks and the caves and the
snowy crags, they could see no signs of the cunning
fugitive. Then they went back to his house again to consult
what next to do. And, while standing by the hearth, Kwaser,
a sharp-sighted elf, whose eyes were quicker than the
sunbeam, saw the white ashes of the burned net lying
undisturbed in the still hot embers, the woven meshes
unbroken and whole.
"See what the cunning fellow has been making!" cried the
elf. "It must have been a trap for catching fish."
"Or rather for catching men," said Bragi; "for it is
strangely like the Sea-queen's net."
"In that case," said Hermod the Nimble, "he has made a trap
for himself; for, no doubt, he has changed himself, as is
his wont, to a slippery salmon, and lies at this moment
hidden beneath the Fanander torrent. Here are plenty of
cords of flax and hemp and wool, with which he intended to
make other nets. Let us take them, and weave one like the
pattern which lies there in the embers; and then, if I
mistake not, we shall catch the too cunning fellow."
All saw the wisdom of these words, and all set quickly to
work. In a short time they had made a net strong and large,
and full of fine meshes, like the model among the coals.
Then they threw it into the roaring stream, Thor holding to
one end, and all the other folk pulling at the other. With
great toil, they dragged it forwards, against the current,
even to the foot of the waterfall. But the cunning Loki
crept close down between two sharp stones, and lay there
quietly while the net passed harmlessly over him.
"Let us try again!" cried Thor. "I am sure that something
besides dead rocks lies at the bottom of the stream."
So they hung heavy weights to the net, and began to drag it
a second time, this time going down stream. Loki looked out
from his hiding-place, and saw that he would not be able to
escape again by lying between the rocks, and that his only
chance for safety was either to leap over the net, and hide
himself behind the rushing cataract itself, or to swim with
the current out to the sea. But the way to the sea was long,
and there were many shallow places; and Loki had doubts as
to how old AEgir would receive him in his kingdom. He feared
greatly to undertake so dangerous and uncertain a course.
So, turning upon his foes, and calling up all his strength,
he made a tremendous leap high into the air, and clean over
the net. But Thor was too quick for him. As he fell towards
the water, the Thunderer quickly threw out his hand, and
caught the slippery salmon, holding him firmly by the tail.
When Loki found that he was surely caught, and could not by
any means escape, he took again his proper shape. Fiercely
did he struggle with mighty Thor, and bitter were the curses
which he poured down upon his enemies. But he could not get
free. Into the deep, dark cavern, beneath the smoking
mountain, where daylight never comes, nor the warmth of the
sun, nor the sound of Nature's music, the fallen
Mischief-maker was carried. And they bound him firmly to the
sharp rocks, with his face turned upwards toward the
dripping roof; for they said that nevermore, until the last
dread twilight, should he be free to vex the world with his
wickedness. And Skade, the giant wife of Niord and the
daughter of grim Old Winter, took a hideous poison snake,
and hung it up above Loki, so that its venom would drop into
his upturned face. But Sigyn, the loving wife of the
suffering wretch, left her home in the pleasant halls of
Asgard, and came to his horrible prison-house to soothe and
comfort him; and evermore she holds a basin above his head,
and catches in it the poisonous drops as they fall. When the
basin is filled, and she turns to empty it in the tar-black
river that flows through that home of horrors, the terrible
venom falls upon his unprotected face, and Loki writhes and
shrieks in fearful agony, until the earth around him shakes
and trembles, and the mountains spit forth fire, and fumes
of sulphur-smoke.
And there the Mischief-maker, the spirit of evil, shall lie
in torment until the last great day and the dread twilight
of all mid-world things. How strange and how sad, that,
while Loki lies thus bound and harmless, evil still walks
the earth, and that so much mischief and such dire disasters
were prepared for Siegfried and the folk of Nibelungen Land!
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