<h2><SPAN name="THORS_DUEL" id="THORS_DUEL">THOR'S DUEL</SPAN></h2>
<p class="drop-cap3"><span class="smcap1">In</span> the days that are past a wonderful race
of horses pastured in the meadows of
heaven, steeds more beautiful and more
swift than any which the world knows to-day.
There was Hrîmfaxi, the black, sleek horse
who drew the chariot of Night across the sky
and scattered the dew from his foaming bit.
There was Glad, behind whose flying heels
sped the swift chariot of Day. His mane was
yellow with gold, and from it beamed light
which made the whole world bright. Then
there were the two shining horses of the sun,
Arvakur the watchful, and Alsvith the rapid;
and the nine fierce battle-chargers of the nine
Valkyries, who bore the bodies of fallen heroes
from the field of fight to the blessedness
of Valhalla. Each of the gods had his own
glorious steed, with such pretty names as
Gold-mane and Silver-top, Light-foot and
Precious-stone; these galloped with their
masters over clouds and through the blue air,
blowing flame from their nostrils and glinting
sparks from their fiery eyes. The Æsir
would have been poor indeed without their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">193</SPAN></span>
faithful mounts, and few would be the stories
to tell in which these noble creatures do not
bear at least a part.</p>
<p>But best of all the horses of heaven was
Sleipnir, the eight-legged steed of Father
Odin, who because he was so well supplied
with sturdy feet could gallop faster over land
and sea than any horse which ever lived.
Sleipnir was snow-white and beautiful to see,
and Odin was very fond and proud of him,
you may be sure. He loved to ride forth
upon his good horse's back to meet whatever
adventure might be upon the way, and sometimes
they had wild times together.</p>
<p>One day Odin galloped off from Asgard
upon Sleipnir straight towards Jotunheim
and the Land of Giants, for it was long since
All-Father had been to the cold country, and
he wished to see how its mountains and ice-rivers
looked. Now as he galloped along a
wild road, he met a huge giant standing beside
his giant steed.</p>
<p>"Who goes there?" cried the giant gruffly,
blocking the way so that Odin could not
pass. "You with the golden helmet, who are
you, who ride so famously through air and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">194</SPAN></span>
water? For I have been watching you from
this mountain-top. Truly, that is a fine horse
which you bestride."</p>
<p>"There is no finer horse in all the world,"
boasted Odin. "Have you not heard of Sleipnir,
the pride of Asgard? I will match him
against any of your big, clumsy giant horses."</p>
<p>"Ho!" roared the giant angrily, "an excellent
horse he is, your little Sleipnir. But
I warrant he is no match for my Gullfaxi
here. Come, let us try a race; and at its end
I shall pay you for your insult to our horses
of Jotunheim."</p>
<p>So saying, the giant, whose ugly name
was Hrungnir, sprang upon his horse and
spurred straight at Odin in the narrow way.
Odin turned and galloped back towards Asgard
with all his might; for not only must
he prove his horse's speed, but he must save
himself and Sleipnir from the anger of the
giant, who was one of the fiercest and wickedest
of all his fierce and wicked race.</p>
<p>How the eight slender legs of Sleipnir
twinkled through the blue sky! How his
nostrils quivered and shot forth fire and
smoke! Like a flash of lightning he darted<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">195</SPAN></span>
across the sky, and the giant horse rumbled
and thumped along close behind like the
thunder following the flash.</p>
<p>"Hi, hi!" yelled the giant. "After them,
Gullfaxi! And when we have overtaken the
two, we will crush their bones between us!"</p>
<p>"Speed, speed, my Sleipnir!" shouted
Odin. "Speed, good horse, or you will never
again feed in the dewy pastures of Asgard
with the other horses. Speed, speed, and bring
us safe within the gates!"</p>
<p>Well Sleipnir understood what his master
said, and well he knew the way. Already
the rainbow bridge was in sight, with Heimdal
the watchman prepared to let them in.
His sharp eyes had spied them afar, and
had recognized the flash of Sleipnir's white
body and of Odin's golden helmet. Gallop
and thud! The twelve hoofs were upon the
bridge, the giant horse close behind the other.
At last Hrungnir knew where he was, and
into what danger he was rushing. He pulled
at the reins and tried to stop his great beast.
But Gullfaxi was tearing along at too terrible
a speed. He could not stop. Heimdal threw
open the gates of Asgard, and in galloped<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">196</SPAN></span>
Sleipnir with his precious burden, safe. Close
upon them bolted in Gullfaxi, bearing his
giant master, puffing and purple in the face
from hard riding and anger. Cling-clang!
Heimdal had shut and barred the gates, and
there was the giant prisoned in the castle of
his enemies.</p>
<p>Now the Æsir were courteous folk, unlike
the giants, and they were not anxious to take
advantage of a single enemy thus thrown
into their power. They invited him to enter
Valhalla with them, to rest and sup before
the long journey of his return. Thor was not
present, so they filled for the giant the great
cups which Thor was wont to drain, for
they were nearest to the giant size. But you
remember that Thor was famous for his
power to drink deep. Hrungnir's head was
not so steady; Thor's draught was too much
for him. He soon lost his wits, of which he
had but few; and a witless giant is a most
dreadful creature. He raged like a madman,
and threatened to pick up Valhalla like a toy
house and carry it home with him to Jotunheim.
He said he would pull Asgard to
pieces and slay all the gods except Freia the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">197</SPAN></span>
fair and Sif, the golden-haired wife of Thor,
whom he would carry off like little dolls for
his toy house.</p>
<p>The Æsir knew not what to do, for Thor
and his hammer were not there to protect
them, and Asgard seemed in danger with this
enemy within its very walls. Hrungnir called
for more and more mead, which Freia alone
dared to bring and set before him. And the
more he drank the fiercer he became. At last
the Æsir could bear no longer his insults and
his violence. Besides, they feared that there
would be no more mead left for their banquets
if this unwelcome visitor should keep
Freia pouring out for him Thor's mighty
goblets. They bade Heimdal blow his horn
and summon Thor; and this Heimdal did in
a trice.</p>
<p>Now rumbling and thundering in his
chariot of goats came Thor. He dashed into
the hall, hammer in hand, and stared in
amazement at the unwieldy guest whom he
found there.</p>
<p>"A giant feasting in Asgard hall!" he
roared. "This is a sight which I never saw
before. Who gave the insolent fellow leave<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</SPAN></span>
to sit in my place? And why does fair Freia
wait upon him as if he were some noble
guest at a feast of the high gods? I will slay
him at once!" and he raised the hammer to
keep his word.</p>
<p>Thor's coming had sobered the giant somewhat,
for he knew that this was no enemy
to be trifled with. He looked at Thor sulkily
and said: "I am Odin's guest. He invited
me to this banquet, and therefore I am under
his protection."</p>
<p>"You shall be sorry that you accepted the
invitation," cried Thor, balancing his hammer
and looking very fierce; for Sif had sobbed
in his ear how the giant had threatened to
carry her away.</p>
<p>Hrungnir now rose to his feet and faced
Thor boldly, for the sound of Thor's gruff
voice had restored his scattered wits. "I am
here alone and without weapons," he said.
"You would do ill to slay me now. It would
be little like the noble Thor, of whom we
hear tales, to do such a thing. The world will
count you braver if you let me go and meet
me later in single combat, when we shall
both be fairly armed."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</SPAN></span>
Thor dropped the hammer to his side.
"Your words are true," he said, for he was a
just and honorable fellow.</p>
<p>"I was foolish to leave my shield and
stone club at home," went on the giant. "If
I had my arms with me, we would fight at
this moment. But I name you a coward if
you slay me now, an unarmed enemy."</p>
<p>"Your words are just," quoth Thor again.
"I have never before been challenged by any
foe. I will meet you, Hrungnir, at your
Stone City, midway between heaven and
earth. And there we will fight a duel to see
which of us is the better fellow."</p>
<p>Hrungnir departed for Stone City in Jotunheim;
and great was the excitement of
the other giants when they heard of the duel
which one of their number was to fight
with Thor, the deadliest enemy of their race.</p>
<p>"We must be sure that Hrungnir wins the
victory!" they cried. "It will never do to
have Asgard victorious in the first duel that
we have fought with her champion. We
will make a second hero to aid Hrungnir."</p>
<p>All the giants set to work with a will.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</SPAN></span>
They brought great buckets of moist clay,
and heaping them up into a huge mound,
moulded the mass with their giant hands as
a sculptor does his image, until they had
made a man of clay, an immense dummy,
nine miles high and three miles wide. "Now
we must make him live; we must put a heart
into him!" they cried. But they could find
no heart big enough until they thought of
taking that of a mare, and that fitted nicely.
A mare's heart is the most cowardly one that
beats.</p>
<p>Hrungnir's heart was a three-cornered
piece of hard stone. His head also was of
stone, and likewise the great shield which he
held before him when he stood outside of
Stone City waiting for Thor to come to the
duel. Over his shoulder he carried his club,
and that also was of stone, the kind from
which whetstones are made, hard and terrible.
By his side stood the huge clay man, Möckuralfi,
and they were a dreadful sight to see,
these two vast bodies whom Thor must encounter.</p>
<p>But at the very first sight of Thor, who
came thundering to the place with swift<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</SPAN></span>
Thialfi his servant, the timid mare's heart
in the man of clay throbbed with fear; he
trembled so that his knees knocked together,
and his nine miles of height rocked unsteadily.</p>
<p>Thialfi ran up to Hrungnir and began to
mock him, saying, "You are careless, giant.
I fear you do not know what a mighty enemy
has come to fight you. You hold your shield
in front of you; but that will serve you
nothing. Thor has seen this. He has only
to go down into the earth and he can attack
you conveniently from beneath your very
feet."</p>
<p>At this terrifying news Hrungnir hastened
to throw his shield upon the ground and to
stand upon it, so that he might be safe from
Thor's under-stroke. He grasped his heavy
club with both hands and waited. He had
not long to wait. There came a blinding
flash of lightning and a peal of crashing
thunder. Thor had cast his hammer into
space. Hrungnir raised his club with both
hands and hurled it against the hammer
which he saw flying towards him. The two
mighty weapons met in the air with an earsplitting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</SPAN></span>
shock. Hard as was the stone of the
giant's club, it was like glass against the
power of Miölnir. The club was dashed into
pieces; some fragments fell upon the earth;
and these, they say, are the rocks from which
whetstones are made unto this day. They
are so hard that men use them to sharpen
knives and axes and scythes. One splinter
of the hard stone struck Thor himself in the
forehead, with so fierce a blow that he fell
forward upon the ground, and Thialfi feared
that he was killed. But Miölnir, not even
stopped in its course by meeting the giant's
club, sped straight to Hrungnir and crushed
his stony skull, so that he fell forward over
Thor, and his foot lay on the fallen hero's
neck. And that was the end of the giant
whose head and heart were of stone.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Thialfi the swift had fought
with the man of clay, and had found little
trouble in toppling him to earth. For the
mare's cowardly heart in his great body gave
him little strength to meet Thor's faithful
servant; and the trembling limbs of Möckuralfi
soon yielded to Thialfi's hearty blows.
He fell like an unsteady tower of blocks, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</SPAN></span>
his brittle bulk shivered into a thousand
fragments.</p>
<p>Thialfi ran to his master and tried to raise
him. The giant's great foot still rested upon
his neck, and all Thialfi's strength could not
move it away. Swift as the wind he ran for
the other Æsir, and when they heard that
great Thor, their champion, had fallen and
seemed like one dead, they came rushing to
the spot in horror and confusion. Together
they all attempted to raise Hrungnir's foot
from Thor's neck that they might see
whether their hero lived or no. But all their
efforts were in vain. The foot was not to be
lifted by Æsir-might.</p>
<p>At this moment a second hero appeared
upon the scene. It was Magni, the son of
Thor himself; Magni, who was but three
days old, yet already in his babyhood he was
almost as big as a giant and had nearly the
strength of his father. This wonderful youngster
came running to the place where his
father lay surrounded by a group of sad-faced
and despairing gods. When Magni
saw what the matter was, he seized Hrungnir's
enormous foot in both his hands, heaved<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</SPAN></span>
his broad young shoulders, and in a moment
Thor's neck was free of the weight which
was crushing it.</p>
<p>Best of all, it proved that Thor was not
dead, only stunned by the blow of the giant's
club and by his fall. He stirred, sat up painfully,
and looked around him at the group of
eager friends. "Who lifted the weight from
my neck?" he asked.</p>
<p>"It was I, father," answered Magni modestly.
Thor clasped him in his arms and
hugged him tight, beaming with pride and
gratitude.</p>
<p>"Truly, you are a fine child!" he cried;
"one to make glad your father's heart. Now
as a reward for your first great deed you
shall have a gift from me. The swift horse
of Hrungnir shall be yours,—that same
Gullfaxi who was the beginning of all this
trouble. You shall ride Gullfaxi; only a
giant steed is strong enough to bear the
weight of such an infant prodigy as you, my
Magni."</p>
<p>Now this word did not wholly please
Father Odin, for he thought that a horse so
excellent ought to belong to him. He took<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</SPAN></span>
Thor aside and argued that but for him there
would have been no duel, no horse to win.
Thor answered <span class="locked">simply,—</span></p>
<p>"True, Father Odin, you began this trouble.
But I have fought your battle, destroyed
your enemy, and suffered great pain for you.
Surely, I have won the horse fairly and may
give it to whom I choose. My son, who has
saved me, deserves a horse as good as any.
Yet, as you have proved, even Gullfaxi is
scarce a match for your Sleipnir. Verily,
Father Odin, you should be content with the
best." Odin said no more.</p>
<p>Now Thor went home to his cloud-palace
in Thrudvang. And there he was healed of
all his hurts except that which the splinter
of stone had made in his forehead. For the
stone was imbedded so fast that it could not
be taken out, and Thor suffered sorely therefor.
Sif, his yellow-haired wife, was in despair,
knowing not what to do. At last she
bethought her of the wise woman, Groa, who
had skill in all manner of herbs and witch
charms. Sif sent for Groa, who lived all
alone and sad because her husband Örvandil
had disappeared, she knew not whither. Groa<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</SPAN></span>
came to Thor and, standing beside his bed
while he slept, sang strange songs and gently
waved her hands over him. Immediately the
stone in his forehead began to loosen, and
Thor opened his eyes.</p>
<p>"The stone is loosening, the stone is coming
out!" he cried. "How can I reward you,
gentle dame? Prithee, what is your name?"</p>
<p>"My name is Groa," answered the woman,
weeping, "wife of Örvandil who is lost."</p>
<p>"Now, then, I can reward you, kind Groa!"
cried Thor, "for I can bring you tidings of
your husband. I met him in the cold country,
in Jotunheim, the Land of Giants, which you
know I sometimes visit for a bit of good
hunting. It was by Elivâgar's icy river that
I met Örvandil, and there was no way for
him to cross. So I put him in an iron basket
and myself bore him over the flood. Br-r-r!
But that is a cold land! His feet stuck out
through the meshes of the basket, and when
we reached the other side one of his toes was
frozen stiff. So I broke it off and tossed
it up into the sky that it might become a
star. To prove that what I relate is true,
Groa, there is the new star shining over us<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</SPAN></span>
at this very moment. Look! From this day
it shall be known to men as Örvandil's Toe.
Do not you weep any longer. After all, the
loss of a toe is a little thing; and I promise
that your husband shall soon return to you,
safe and sound, but for that small token of
his wanderings in the land where visitors are
not welcome."</p>
<p>At these joyful tidings poor Groa was so
overcome that she fainted. And that put an
end to the charm which she was weaving to
loosen the stone from Thor's forehead. The
stone was not yet wholly free, and thenceforth
it was in vain to attempt its removal;
Thor must always wear the splinter in his
forehead. Groa could never forgive herself
for the carelessness which had thus made her
skill vain to help one to whom she had reason
to be so grateful.</p>
<p>Now because of the bit of whetstone in
Thor's forehead, folk of olden times were
very careful how they used a whetstone; and
especially they knew that they must not throw
or drop one on the floor. For when they did
so, the splinter in Thor's forehead was jarred,
and the good Asa suffered great pain.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</SPAN></span></p>
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