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Gods and Men
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CHAPTER II
GODS AND MEN
[13]
GREAT many hundreds of years after the creation of the
world, there ruled in Sweden a wise king whose name was
Gylfe; and the wisdom of this king, like all wisdom, was in
part knowledge and in larger part goodness. He knew how to
give as well as how to receive. A wayfaring woman once found
shelter at his hands, and, in return told him many wonderful
stories; which so pleased the king that he gave her, as a
reward, as much land as four oxen could plough in a day and
a night.
Now this woman was of the race of the gods and her name was
Gefjun. She took four great oxen from
Jotun- [14] heim, who were
the offspring of a giant, and set them before the plough and
drove them forth into the Land which the king had set apart
for her. And the plough, being drawn by giants, cut so deep
into the soil, that it tore away a great piece of land, and
carried it into the sea to the west, and there left it.
Gefjun called this new country which she had taken from the
mainland, Seeland; and the place from which the land was
taken was filled by the sea and formed a lake which is now
called Logrinn.
This was but the beginning of King Gylfe's acquaintance with
the gods; for he was a seeker after wisdom and he who
searches for wisdom must go to the gods to find it. He saw
the wonderful things which the gods did and the marvellous
ways in which their will was done in Asgard,
[15] and upon the
earth, and he thought much upon their power and wondered
whence it came. He could not make up his mind whether these
gods, of whom he had heard and whose mighty works he saw,
were powerful by reason of the force in themselves, or
whether they were made strong by other and greater gods.
After thinking much about these things and finding that no
man could answer the questions which he was continually
asking himself, Gylfe assumed the form of a very old man and
made the long journey to Asgard, thinking to learn the
secrets of the gods without letting them know who he was.
The gods know all things, and they not only knew that the
old man who one day came to Asgard was Gylfe, but they knew
that he
[16] was to make the journey long before he had so much
as thought of it. They received him, however, as if they
thought he was what he appeared to be, and he learned as
much as he could understand; which is as much as a man ever
learns.
The gods have often visited men, but men have rarely visited
the gods, and the King's coming to Asgard was the beginning
of a new wisdom among men.
No sooner did he enter the home of the gods than he found
himself in a great hall, so high that he could hardly see
over it. And the roof of this hall was thatched with shields
of gold in place of shingles:
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Thinking thatchers
Thatched the roof;
The beams of the burg
Beamed with gold.
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[17] When Gylfe came to the door of this great hall he saw a man
playing with swords with such wonderful quickness and skill
that he kept seven flashing in the air at one time. When
this player with swords asked his name, the king speaking as
an old man, answered that he was Ganglere, or the Walker,
that he had come a long distance and that he begged a
lodging for the night; and he asked, as if it were a very
unimportant matter, who owned the hall. The man, who was a
god in disguise, replied that it belonged to their king and
that he would take Ganglere to him.
"You may ask him his name yourself when you see him," he
added.
Then the man led the way into the hall and no sooner were
they
[18] within its walls than the doors were shut. There were
many rooms under the shining roof and every room seemed to
be full of people, some of whom were playing games, and some
were drinking out of great horns or cups, and some were
fighting with different kinds of weapons; and Gylfe did not
understand half of the things he saw. He was not at all
frightened by his ignorance, however, and he said to
himself:
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Gates all,
Before in you go,
You must examine well;
For you cannot know
Where enemies sit
In the house before you.
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When Gylfe had looked about him he saw three seats or
thrones and upon each of these a man sat
[19] high above the
throng which played and drank and fought.
"What are the names of these kings?" he asked. And the man
who led him into the hall answered that he who sat on the
lowest of the three thrones was the king and was called Har,
and that he who sat on the throne next above him was called
Jafnhar, and he who sat on the highest throne was called
Thride. Now these three gods were as many different forms of
Odin, and Gylfe was really seeing one god when he seemed to
be seeing three.
Then Har, or Odin, spoke in a deep and wonderful tone and
asked Gylfe who he was, and why he had come there, and bade
him welcome by inviting him to eat and drink as much and
often as he chose. But Gylfe was so bent upon learning the
[20] secrets of the gods that he did not think of food or drink,
nor did he stop to answer Har's questions. He replied boldly
that he wanted to find a wise man if there were one. Then
Har answered him, as the gods often answer men, in words
which were so full of meaning that he did not understand
them until long afterwards:
"You shall not go from this place unharmed unless you go
wiser than you came."
It is dangerous to seek the gods, unless we profit by what
they tell us; for it is better to be ignorant than to
possess knowledge and not live by it.
Gylfe stood boldly before Odin
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Then Gylfe stood boldly before Odin,—a man standing in the
presence of God and seeking for knowledge,—and asked many
and deep questions about the gods and their ways and power;
and about the
[21] giants, and their homes; and about the making
of the world and the creation of man; and about the sun and
moon and stars; and about the seasons and the wind and fire.
And Odin answered his questions and told him the things
which men are eager to know, but cannot learn unless the
gods teach them.
When Odin had told Gylfe all that a man could understand of
these deep mysteries he refused to answer any more questions
and bade the questioner make the best use of what had been
told him, and when Odin had spoken these words Gylfe heard a
great noise and found himself standing alone in a great
plain, and the hall and Asgard had vanished utterly. Then,
filled with wonder by all he had heard and seen, he went
home to his own kingdom, and told of the
[22] marvellous things
which had befallen him on his journey to the home of the
gods; and what he said was remembered by those who heard the
wonderful stories and told again to their children and their
children's children to the latest generations.
Now Gylfe was not the only man who talked with the gods; for
Æger, who lived on the island called Hler's Isle and
was also a man of great wisdom, made the journey to Asgard
and the gods knew of his coming before he came and prepared
a great feast for him. When the feast began Odin had swords
brought into the hall and these swords were of such
brightness that they lighted the hall without the aid of
fire or lamps; and the hall was hung with glittering
shields. The gods sat on their thrones and ate and drank
with Æger, and
[23] Brage told him strange and wonderful
tales of the things which had befallen the gods.
And this is the way in which men came to know the stories
which are told in this book.
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