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How Loke Was Punished
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CHAPTER XV
HOW LOKE WAS PUNISHED
[222]
N the beginning Loke had been the brother of Odin, and one
of the foremost of the gods, but the lawlessness and passion
that were in him had won the mastery, and in earth and
heaven he was fast bringing ruin and sorrow. What the
hard-hearted frost-giants had always tried to do and failed,
Loke did; for in the end the evil in him destroyed Asgard,
and brought in the long winter of storm and darkness. It was
he who stole Sif's hair and Freyja's necklace, who persuaded
Idun to go into the woods that the giant Thjasse might carry
off her apples, who stung the dwarf
[223] so that the handle of
Thor's hammer was shortened, who induced Thor to go on his
dangerous journey to Geirrod; but worst of all his crimes
was the killing of Balder, and the refusal to weep for him
when all the world was in tears.
After bringing so much sorrow upon others, suffering at last
came to him. Not long after Balder 's death the sea-god
Æger gave a great feast, and brewed ale for the gods
in the great kettle which Thor had taken from the giant
Hymer. All the gods were there save Thor, and they tried to
be merry, although they were sad enough at heart. In the
midst of them sat Loke, gloomy and silent, as if his
terrible crime had drawn a black line around him. The feast
went on merrily; but he seemed to have no part in it, for no
one spoke
[224] to him. Great horns of ale passed from hand to
hand, and as they talked and feasted the gods forgot for a
moment the sorrow that lay upon all the world.
"Æger," said one, "these are good servants of yours.
They are quick of eye and foot, and one lacks nothing under
their care."
Loke was so full of rage that he could not endure that even
the servants of the other gods should be praised, and with
flashing eyes and a face black with hate he sprang from his
place and struck the servant nearest him so violently that
he fell dead on the floor. A silence of horror fell on all
the gods at this new sin, and then with fierce indignation
they drove him out, and shut the doors against him forever.
Loke strode off furiously for a little
dis- [225] tance, and then
turned and came back. The gods meantime had become merry
again.
"What are they talking about?" he asked another servant who
was standing without.
"They are telling their great deeds," answered the servant;
"but no one has anything good to say of you."
Maddened by these words, Loke forgot his fear in a terrible
rage, strode back into the hall and stood there like a
thunder-cloud; when the gods saw him they became suddenly
silent.
"I have travelled hither from a long distance," said he
hoarsely, "and I am thirsty; who will give me to drink of
the mead?"
No one spoke or stirred. Loke's face grew blacker.
"Why are you all silent?" he cried; "have you lost your
tongues?
[226] Will you find place for me here, or do you turn me
away?"
Brage looked at him steadily and fearlessly. "The gods will
never more make room for you," he said.
When he heard these words, Loke ceased to look like a god,
for the fury and hate of a devil were in his face. He cursed
the gods until every face was pale with horror. Like an
accusing conscience he told them all their faults and sins;
he made them feel their weaknesses so keenly that Vidar, the
silent god, rose to give him his seat and silence him, but
now that his fury was let loose nothing could stop him. One
by one he called each god by his name, and dragged his
weaknesses into the view of all, and last of all he came to
Sif, Thor's wife, and cursed her; and now a low muttering
was
[227] heard afar off, and then a distant roll of thunder
deepening into awful peals that echoed and re-echoed among
the hills. The gods sat silent in their places, and even
Loke grew dumb. Great flashes of lightning flamed through
the hall, and made his dark face more terrible to look at.
Crash followed close upon crash until the mountains quaked,
and the great hall trembled; then came a blinding flash, and
Thor stood in the midst swinging Mjolner, and looking as if
he would smite the world into fragments. He looked at Loke,
and Loke, cowering before Thor's terrible eyes of fire,
walked out of the hall cursing Æger as he went, and
wishing that flames might break upon his realm and devour it
and him.
And now Loke, no longer a god in nature or in rank, became
an outcast
[228] and a fugitive flying from the wrath of the gods
whom he had insulted and wronged. He went from place to
place until he came upon a deep valley among the mountains,
so entirely shut in that he thought no one from Asgard could
ever look into it. There he built a house in the hollows of
the rocks, with four doors through which he could look in
every direction, so that no one could come near his
hiding-place without his knowing it. He took on many
disguises; often in the daytime he took the shape of a
salmon and hid in the deep waters, where he floated solitary
and motionless while the gods were searching for him far and
wide.
Days and weeks passed away, and Loke began to think he was
safe from the pursuit of his enemies. He began to busy and
amuse
him- [229] self as he used to do before he was shut out of
Asgard. He had always been a skilful fisherman, and now, as
he sat alone in his house before the fire, he took flax and
yarn and began to knit the meshes of the first net that was
made since the world began. His eyes burnt at the thought of
the new sport which he was going to have, and his cunning
hand wove thread after thread into the growing web. Odin,
looking down from his lofty throne, saw the busy weaver, and
quickly calling Thor, the strongest, and Kvaser, the keenest
of the gods, was soon on the journey to Loke's home among
the mountains. Loke was so busy with his net that he did not
see them until they were close at hand; then he sprang up,
threw the net into the fire, and running to the river
changed himself into
[230] a salmon, and dove deep into the still
waters. When the gods entered the house Loke was nowhere to
be found, but the sharp-eyed Kvaser found the half-burnt net
among the glowing embers. He pulled it out and held it
before Odin and Thor.
"I know what it is," he said in a moment; "it is a net for
fishing; Loke was always a fisherman. Then, as if the
thought had suddenly come to him, he added, "He has changed
himself into a fish and is hiding in that river."
Odin and Thor were rejoiced to find their enemy so close at
hand, and they all began to work on the half-burnt net and
quickly finished it. Then they went softly down to the
water, threw it in, and drew it slowly up the stream from
shore to shore. But Loke swam between two large
[231] stones in
the bed of the stream and the net only grazed him as it
passed over. The gods finding the net empty hung a great
stone on it, and, going back to the starting place, drew it
slowly up stream again. Never, since the beginning of
things, had there been such fishing before! The noisy river
rolled swiftly down to the sea, the steep mountains rose on
either side and shut out the sun so that even at mid-day it
was like twilight. When Loke saw the net coming a second
time and found that he could not escape, he waited until it
was close at hand, and then with a mighty leap shot over it
and plunged into a waterfall just where the river rushed
into the sea.
The gods saw the great fish leap into the air and fall into
the water, and they instantly turned around and
[232] dragged the
net toward the sea, Thor wading after it in the middle of
the stream. As the net came nearer and nearer Loke saw that
he must either swim out into the sea or leap back again over
the net. He waited until the shadow of the net was over him,
and then with a mighty leap shot into the air and over the
net; but Thor was watching, and his strong hand closed round
the shining fish. Loke managed to slip through Thor's
fingers, but Thor held him by the tail, and that, as the
story goes, is the reason why the salmon's tail is so thin
and pointed.
Then the gods, glad at heart that they had caught the slayer
of Balder, changed Loke into his natural shape and dragged
him to a cavern in the mountains near at hand, where they
fastened three great rocks, having
[233] pierced them first with
holes. Loke's two fierce sons, Vale and Nare, they also
seized, and changed Vale into a wolf, and immediately he
sprang upon his brother and devoured him. Then the gods
bound Loke, hand and foot, to the great stones, with iron
fetters, and, to make his punishment the more terrible, they
hung a serpent over him, which moment by moment through ages
and ages dropped poison on his face. Loke's wife, Sigyn,
when she saw his agony, stood beside him and caught the
venom in a cup, as it fell drop by drop; but when the cup
was full and she turned to empty it the poison fell on Loke,
and he writhed so terribly that the whole earth trembled and
quaked. So Loke was punished, and so he lay, chained and
suffering, until the last great battle set him free.
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