The Poetic Edda

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The Poetic Edda Page 12

by Jackson Crawford


  Volundarkvitha

  Nithuth was the name of a king in Sweden. He had two sons and a daughter named Bothvild.

  There were three brothers, sons of King Finni: one was named Slagfinn, the other Egil, the third Volund. They skied and hunted, and when they came to Ulfdalir they made themselves houses there. There is a lake called Ulfsja there. Early in the morning they found three women at the lakeshore who were spinning thread. There were swan-skins near them, since the women were Valkyries. Two of them were daughters of King Hlothver, and these were Hlathguth the Swan-White and Hervor the Wise. The third was Olrun, daughter of Kjar, king of France. The men took these three women home with them. Egil married Olrun, Slagfinn took Hlathguth, and Volund took Hervor. They lived like this for seven winters. But then the women left them in order to visit battlefields, and never came home again. Egil and Slagfinn skied away to search for their wives, but Volund stayed home in Ulfdalir. He was, as far as men know, the most capable with his hands of all the people in the old sagas. King Nithuth had him seized, and this poem is about that:

  [1] WOMEN FLEW FROM THE SOUTH

  through Mirkwood,

  those young Valkyries

  who choose mens’ fates.

  {124} These southern ladies

  paused to rest on a lakeshore,

  they spun and weaved

  precious threads.

  [2] Egil took one

  for his wife,

  he took that beauty

  in his embrace.

  Slagfinn took Hlathguth,

  clad in swan-feathers,

  and the third,

  their sister, took

  Volund’s handsome neck

  in her embrace.

  [3] Afterwards they stayed

  for seven winters,

  but in the eighth

  they became anxious,

  and in the ninth

  they had to depart.

  Those ladies yearned

  for Mirkwood,

  those Valkyries

  were eager to judge wars.

  [4] The sharp-eyed archer Egil

  and his brother Slagfinn

  came home from hunting

  and found their homes empty.

  They went in and out

  and looked all around,

  but finally Egil skied east

  to look for Olrun,

  and Slagfinn skied south

  to look for Hlathguth.

  [5] But Volund sat

  alone in Ulfdalir;

  he worked gold

  and colorful jewels,

  {125} he assembled rings

  and strung them on ropes.

  In this way

  he waited

  to see whether his

  lady would return.

  [6] Nithuth learned this,

  the lord of Njari,

  he heard that Volund

  was alone in his valley.

  He sent men in the night

  wearing well-made armor,

  their shields glimmered

  in the light of the waning moon.

  [7] They dismounted

  at Volund’s doorstep,

  they went inside

  his vast home.

  They saw Volund’s

  golden rings,

  seven hundred altogether,

  strung on a rope.

  [8] They took them in hand,

  then put them back,

  but stole a single one

  before they stepped out.

  Then the keen-eyed archer

  Volund came home.

  He had traveled

  a long way that day.

  [9] He started to roast

  the meat of a brown bear.

  The kindling burned,

  the dry wood burned,

  the wind-dry logs burned,

  and it warmed Volund.

  {126} [10] Volund the elf

  sat on the bearskin

  and counted his rings,

  but noticed one missing.

  He thought it must be

  Hervor, his wife—

  he thought she’d come back,

  and taken the ring.

  [11] He sat waiting for her

  so long he fell asleep,

  and when he awoke

  he was bound in chains.

  He saw the heavy chains

  restraining his hands,

  and on his feet

  there were also solid locks.

  [12] He called out,

  “Who are the kings

  who have put chains on me,

  who has tied me up?”

  [13] Nithuth, lord of Njari,

  gave him an answer:

  “Volund, you crafty elf,

  where did you find

  our treasures

  in your valley?”

  [14] Volund said, “It was hardly

  a hoard such as Sigurth’s gold—

  my home was not near

  the mountains of the Rhine.

  I remember

  that we used to have yet more,

  when we were a happy family

  at home in Ulfdalir.

  [15] “Hlathguth and Hervor

  were daughters of Hlothver.

  {127} Olrun, Kjar’s daughter,

  was a cunning sorceress.”

  [16] Nithuth’s queen came in

  to the magnificent hall.

  She stood proudly on the floor

  and spoke: “This man,

  who came in from the woods,

  will not be happy.”

  King Nithuth gave his daughter the gold ring that he had taken from Volund. He himself carried Volund’s sword. And the queen said:

  [17] “Volund shows his teeth

  every time he sees that sword,

  or when Bothvild wears

  that ring in his presence.

  His eyes are as cruel

  as a glistening snake’s.

  Cut his sinews,

  rob his strength,

  and put him away

  in Saevarstoth.”

  So Volund’s hamstrings were cut, and he was placed on a small island next to the land, which was called Saevarstoth. There he made all kinds of treasures for the king, and no one dared to come to the island except the king himself. Volund said:

  [18] “My sword

  shines on Nithuth’s belt,

  the sword I sharpened,

  the sword I alone,

  the greatest smith, could make,

  the sword I hardened

  with my unmatched skill.

  Now that glistening sword

  is always far from my sight,

  since Nithuth will not bring

  that treasure to my workshop.

  His daughter Bothvild

  also wears a treasure

  {128} never meant for her,

  my bride’s golden ring.”

  [19] Volund worked, never sleeping,

  constantly swinging his hammer.

  He thought of a daring plot

  to foil Nithuth.

  Then Nithuth’s two young sons,

  the two boys,

  came to see Volund’s treasures

  on the Island of Saevarstoth.

  [20] They came to the treasure chest,

  they asked for the keys.

  They realized Volund’s skill

  when they peered inside.

  The boys saw

  many ornaments,

  all of them made

  of gold and gems.

  [21] Volund said, “Come back alone,

  just you two, the day after tomorrow.

  I will give all this

  gold to you if you do.

  Don’t tell the ladies,

  don’t tell the men—

  don’t tell anyone at all

  that you’re meeting with me.”

  [22] Early on the appointed day,

  one boy said to the other:

  “Let’
s go see the rings.”

  So the two boys came

  and asked for the keys.

  They realized Volund’s skill

  when they peered inside.

  [23] He cut off the heads

  of those young boys,

  he hid their bodies

  under his bellows.

  {129} But he took their skulls

  and scalped them,

  set them with silver,

  and sent them as cups to Nithuth.

  [24] And from the eyes

  of those young boys

  he made jewels for

  their mother, Nithuth’s wife.

  And Volund made ornaments

  from the teeth

  of her own two brothers,

  for Bothvild, Nithuth’s daughter.

  [25] BOTHVILD PRAISED

  a ring Volund had made,

  she told him it was broken:

  “And I don’t dare to tell it,”

  she said, “to anyone but you.”

  Volund said:

  [26] “I’ll repair it so that

  your father on his throne

  will look at it—and to him,

  and to your mother,

  it will look even better,

  and you’ll think so too,

  when you wear it.”

  [27] He gave her beer,

  he could easily outdrink her,

  and finally she sat in his chair

  and she slept. Volund said,

  “Now I have avenged

  the wrongs done to me,

  all except one

  of the most wicked.

  {130} [28] “I have done well.

  I wish I were on my feet,

  the ones cut from me

  by the wicked men of Nithuth.”

  But then, laughing, Volund

  launched himself in the air.

  Bothvild wept as she left

  the island—she wept for

  her lover’s departure,

  and her father’s anger.

  [29] Volund saw where

  Nithuth’s queen

  stood outside

  and went into the hall.

  Volund perched

  atop the wall and said:

  “Are you awake, Nithuth,

  lord of Njari?”

  [30] Nithuth said, “I am awake.

  I have no joy,

  I barely sleep

  since my sons’ death.

  Your cold actions

  have chilled me.

  Now I wish I had never

  dealt with Volund.

  [31] “Tell me, Volund,

  you crafty elf,

  what kind of fate

  did my sons meet?”

  [32] Volund said, “First,

  you must swear many oaths.

  Swear by a ship’s board,

  by a shield’s edge,

  by a horse’s withers,

  by a sword’s blade,

  that you will not

  {131} harm my lover,

  nor cause her death,

  even if my new bride

  is a woman of your kin,

  even if she bears my child

  inside your own hall.

  [33] “Then go to the workshop

  that you forced me into.

  There you’ll find bags

  full of blood.

  I cut your boys’

  heads off

  and left their bodies

  beneath the bellows.

  [34] “And after I scalped them,

  I took the bare skulls

  and decorated them with silver

  before I sent them to you.

  And after I took their

  eyes out,

  I turned them into jewels

  for your crafty queen.

  [35] “I made jewels

  from the teeth of those two boys,

  and I sent those

  to your daughter Bothvild.

  Now Bothvild

  walks about pregnant,

  yes, the only daughter

  of the two of you.”

  [36] The king said,

  “You could say nothing

  more awful to me,

  I would never torture you worse.

  There is no man so tall

  that he could reach you up there,

  nor so good a shot

  that he could shoot you down,

  {132} there where you hang

  among the clouds, Volund.”

  [37] Laughing, Volund

  flew up and away,

  and left the joyless Nithuth

  sitting below.

  [38] Nithuth said, “Get up,

  Thakkrath, my good servant,

  go to my pretty daughter Bothvild.

  Tell her to come to me

  in fine dress,

  to come talk to her father.”

  [39] The king then said to her,

  “Is it true, Bothvild,

  what Volund said:

  That you and he lay together?”

  [40] She said, “It is true, father,

  everything he said to you is true.

  Volund and I

  lay together

  on his island

  a while—we never should have.

  I couldn’t fight him,

  father,

  I couldn’t withstand him,

  father.”

  {133} Alvissmal (The Words of All-Wise)

  In Alvissmal, a dwarf named “All-Wise” visits the home of Thor with the intent of marrying his daughter. Thor disapproves, and occupies the dwarf by asking him numerous questions of mythological trivia—namely, what various peoples (the Aesir, the Vanir, humans, dwarves, elves, etc.) call different phenomena of heaven and earth. The dwarf successfully answers all of his questions, but at the end it is revealed that Thor has been stalling for time, waiting for the sun to come up and turn the unlucky suitor to stone.

  Alvissmal

  All-Wise said:

  [1] GET THE BENCHES READY!

  Now I’m coming home

  with a bride in tow.

  It may not seem likely

  to others around me—

  but I won’t sleep when I get home.”

  Thor said:

  [2] “Who is this man?

  Why are you so pale around the nostrils?

  Did you spend the night with a corpse?

  It seems to me

  you have a monster’s appearance,

  you have no business seeking a bride.”

  All-Wise said:

  [3] “I am named All-Wise.

  I live beneath the earth

  on my underground estate.

  I came to visit you, Thor,

  lord of the goat-chariot;

  no one will make me retract my words.”

  Thor said:

  [4] “I will decide that,

  since I am the bride’s father,

  {134} and it’s I who gets to say about her.

  I was not home

  when she was promised to you;

  the girl is my daughter, and a goddess.”

  All-Wise said:

  [5] “Who is this man

  who speaks

  for the beautiful lady?

  You scoundrel,

  probably no one would defend you—

  who gave you those rings that you wear?”

  Thor said:

  [6] “I am named Thor.

  I’m a wide-traveled man,

  and son of long-bearded Odin.

  If I don’t consent,

  you’ll never get the girl;

  you’ll stay unmarried forever.”

  All-Wise said:

  [7] “I’d like to have

  your consent,

  and I’d certainly like the bride!

  I would rather have her

  than have to live without

  that girl, who’s lovely as snow.”

  Thor said:

/>   [8] “This girl’s love

  will never be yours,

  my clever guest,

  if you dare to leave this house

  without telling me

  what I want to know about every realm.

  [9] “Tell me, All-Wise—

  since I think you know

  everything about everyone, dwarf—

  what is the earth called

  {135} that people walk on

  in every world?”

  All-Wise said:

  [10] “Men call it Earth,

  the Aesir call it Soil,

  the Vanir call it Road,

  giants call it Green,

  elves call it Grower,

  high gods call it Clay.”

  Thor said:

  [11] “Tell me, All-Wise—

  since I think you know

  everything about everyone, dwarf—

  what do they call the sky,

  swirling above us,

  in every world?”

  All-Wise said:

  [12] “Humans call it Heaven,

  the Aesir call it Wind-land,

  the Vanir call it Wind-maker,

  giants call it Up-world,

  elves say ‘the High Roof,’

  dwarves say ‘the Drip-House.’”

  Thor said:

  [13] “Tell me, All-Wise—

  since I think you know

  everything about everyone, dwarf—

  what do they call the moon

  (it’s easy to see)

  in every world?”

  All-Wise said:

  [14] “Humans call it Moon,

  Gods say ‘Changer,’

  in Hel they call it the Turning Wheel,

  the giants call it Hurry—

  dwarves call it Shiny,

  and elves say ‘Year-counter.’”

  {136} Thor said:

  [15] “Tell me, All-Wise—

  since I think you know

  everything about everyone, dwarf—

  what do they call the sun

  (it’s easy to see, too)

  in every world?”

  All-Wise said:

  [16] “Humans call it Sun,

  Gods say ‘Southern Ball,’

  dwarves call it Dvalin’s Toy,

  giants say ‘Everglow,’

  elves call it the Beautiful Wheel;

  the Aesir say ‘All-clear.’”

  Thor said:

  [17] “Tell me, All-Wise—

  since I think you know

  everything about everyone, dwarf—

  what do they call

  the rain-making clouds

  in every world?”

  All-Wise said:

  [18] “Humans say ‘Clouds,’

  but gods say ‘Hope of Rain,’

  the Vanir call them Wind-floats,

  giants Hope of Hail,

  elves say ‘Weather-Causers,’

  in Hel they call them Helmets of the Hidden.”

  Thor said:

  [19] “Tell me, All-Wise—

  since I think you know

  everything about everyone, dwarf—

  what do they call the wind,

  which travels so widely,

 

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