# SKIRNISMOL (THE BALLAD OF SKIRNIR)

Freyr, the son of Njorth, had sat one day in Hlithskjolf, and looked  
over all the worlds. He looked into Jotunheim, and saw there a fair  
maiden, as she went from her father’s house to her bower. Forthwith he  
felt a mighty love-sickness. Skirnir was the name of Freyr’s servant;  
Njorth bade him ask speech of Freyr. He said:

  
1\. “Go now, Skirnir! | and seek to gain  
 Speech from my son;  
 And answer to win, | for whom the wise one  
 Is mightily moved.”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
2\. “Ill words do I now | await from thy son,  
 If I seek to get speech with him,  
 And answer to win, | for whom the wise one  
 Is mightily moved.”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
3\. “Speak prithee, Freyr, | foremost of the gods,  
 For now I fain would know;  
 Why sittest thou here | in the wide halls,  
 Days long, my prince, alone?”

  
Freyr spake:

  
4\. “How shall I tell thee, | thou hero young,  
 Of all my grief so great?  
 Though every day | the elfbeam dawns,  
 It lights my longing never.”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
5\. “Thy longings, methinks, | are not so large  
 That thou mayst not tell them to me;  
 Since in days of yore | we were young together,  
 We two might each other trust.”

  
Freyr spake:

  
6\. “From Gymir’s house | I beheld go forth  
 A maiden dear to me;  
 Her arms glittered, | and from their gleam  
 Shone all the sea and sky.

7\. “To me more dear | than in days of old  
 Was ever maiden to man;  
 But no one of gods | or elves will grant  
 That we both together should be.”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
8\. “Then give me the horse | that goes through the dark  
 And magic flickering flames;  
 And the sword as well | that fights of itself  
 Against the giants grim.”

  
Freyr spake:

  
9\. “The horse will I give thee | that goes through the dark  
 And magic flickering flames,  
 And the sword as well | that will fight of itself  
 If a worthy hero wields it.”

  
Skirnir spake to the horse:

  
10\. “Dark is it without, | and I deem it time  
 To fare through the wild fells,  
 (To fare through the giants’ fastness;)  
 We shall both come back, | or us both together  
 The terrible giant will take.”

  
Skirnir rode into Jotunheim to Gymir’s house. There were fierce dogs  
bound before the gate of the fence which was around Gerth’s hall. He  
rode to where a herdsman sat on a hill, and said:

  
11\. “Tell me, herdsman, | sitting on the hill,  
 And watching all the ways,  
 How may I win | a word with the maid  
 Past the hounds of Gymir here?”

  
The herdsman spake:

  
12\. “Art thou doomed to die | or already dead,  
 Thou horseman that ridest hither?  
 Barred from speech | shalt thou ever be  
 With Gymir’s daughter good.”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
13\. “Boldness is better | than plaints can be  
 For him whose feet must fare;  
 To a destined day | has mine age been doomed,  
 And my life’s span thereto laid.”

  
Gerth spake:

  
14\. “What noise is that | which now so loud  
 I hear within our house?  
 The ground shakes, | and the home of Gymir  
 Around me trembles too.”

  
The Serving-Maid spake:

  
15\. “One stands without | who has leapt from his steed,  
 And lets his horse loose to graze;”  
 . . . . . . . . . | . . . . . . . . .  
 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

  
Gerth spake:

  
16\. “Bid the man come in, | and drink good mead  
 Here within our hall;  
 Though this I fear, | that there without  
 My brother’s slayer stands.

17\. “Art thou of the elves | or the offspring of gods,  
 Or of the wise Wanes?  
 How camst thou alone | through the leaping flame  
 Thus to behold our home?”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
18\. “I am not of the elves, | nor the offspring of gods,  
 Nor of the wise Wanes;  
 Though I came alone | through the leaping flame  
 Thus to behold thy home.

19\. “Eleven apples, | all of gold,  
 Here will I give thee, Gerth,  
 To buy thy troth | that Freyr shall be  
 Deemed to be dearest to you.”

  
Gerth spake:

  
20\. “I will not take | at any man’s wish  
 These eleven apples ever;  
 Nor shall Freyr and I | one dwelling find  
 So long as we two live.”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
21\. “Then do I bring thee | the ring that was burned  
 Of old with Othin’s son;  
 From it do eight | of like weight fall  
 On every ninth night.”

  
Gerth spake:

  
22\. “The ring I wish not, | though burned it was  
 Of old with Othin’s son;  
 In Gymir’s home | is no lack of gold  
 In the wealth my father wields.”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
23\. “Seest thou, maiden, | this keen, bright sword  
 That I hold here in my hand?  
 Thy head from thy neck | shall I straightway hew,  
 If thou wilt not do my will.”

  
Gerth spake:

  
24\. “For no man’s sake | will I ever suffer  
 To be thus moved by might;  
 But gladly, methinks, | will Gymir seek  
 To fight if he finds thee here.”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
25\. “Seest thou, maiden, | this keen, bright sword  
 That I hold here in my hand?  
 Before its blade | the old giant bends,—  
 Thy father is doomed to die.

26\. “I strike thee, maid, | with my magic staff,  
 To tame thee to work my will;  
 There shalt thou go | where never again  
 The sons of men shall see thee.

27\. “On the eagle’s hill | shalt thou ever sit,  
 And gaze on the gates of Hel;  
 More loathsome to thee | than the light-hued snake  
 To men, shall thy meat become.

28\. “Fearful to see, | if thou comest forth,  
 Hrimnir will stand and stare,  
 (Men will marvel at thee;)  
 More famed shalt thou grow | than the watchman of the gods!  
 Peer forth, then, from thy prison.

29\. “Rage and longing, | fetters and wrath,  
 Tears and torment are thine;  
 Where thou sittest down | my doom is on thee  
 Of heavy heart  
 And double dole.

30\. “In the giants’ home | shall vile things harm thee  
 Each day with evil deeds;  
 Grief shalt thou get | instead of gladness,  
 And sorrow to suffer with tears.

31\. “With three-headed giants | thou shalt dwell ever,  
 Or never know a husband;  
 (Let longing grip thee, | let wasting waste thee,—)  
 Be like to the thistle | that in the loft  
 Was cast and there was crushed.

32\. “I go to the wood, | and to the wet forest,  
 To win a magic wand;  
 . . . . . . . . | . . . . . . . .  
 I won a magic wand.

33\. “Othin grows angry, | angered is the best of the gods,  
 Freyr shall be thy foe,  
 Most evil maid, | who the magic wrath  
 Of gods hast got for thyself.

34\. “Give heed, frost-rulers, | hear it, giants,  
 Sons of Suttung,  
 And gods, ye too,  
 How I forbid | and how I ban  
 The meeting of men with the maid,  
 (The joy of men with the maid.)

35\. “Hrimgrimnir is he, | the giant who shall have thee  
 In the depth by the doors of Hel;  
 To the frost-giants’ halls | each day shalt thou fare,  
 Crawling and craving in vain,  
 (Crawling and having no hope.)

36\. “Base wretches there | by the root of the tree  
 Will hold for thee horns of filth;  
 A fairer drink | shalt thou never find,  
 Maid, to meet thy wish,  
 (Maid, to meet my wish.)

37\. “I write thee a charm | and three runes therewith,  
 Longing and madness and lust;  
 But what I have writ | I may yet unwrite  
 If I find a need therefor.”

  
Gerth spake:

  
38\. “Find welcome rather, | and with it take  
 The frost-cup filled with mead;  
 Though I did not believe | that I should so love  
 Ever one of the Wanes.”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
39\. “My tidings all | must I truly learn  
 Ere homeward hence I ride:  
 How soon thou wilt | with the mighty son  
 Of Njorth a meeting make.”

  
Gerth spake:

  
40\. “Barri there is, | which we both know well,  
 A forest fair and still;  
 And nine nights hence | to the son of Njorth  
 Will Gerth there grant delight.”

  
Then Skirnir rode home. Freyr stood without, and spoke to him, and  
asked for tidings:

  
41\. “Tell me, Skirnir, | ere thou take off the saddle,  
 Or farest forward a step:  
 What hast thou done | in the giants’ dwelling  
 To make glad thee or me?”

  
Skirnir spake:

  
42\. “Barri there is, | which we both know well,  
 A forest fair and still;  
 And nine nights hence | to the son of Njorth  
 Will Gerth there grant delight.”

  
Freyr spake:

  
43\. “Long is one night, | longer are two;  
 How then shall I bear three?  
 Often to me | has a month seemed less  
 Than now half a night of desire.”