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(108) Page 92 (108) Page 92
92 BRA Cl’S TELLING. Then bade these dwarves to them the giant hight Gillingr and his wife, then the dwarves bade Gilh'ngr to row out to sea with them, but as they fared forth along the land the dwarves rowed against a blind scar and overturned the skiff; Gilh'ngr was no swimmer and was drowned; but the dwarves righted their skiff and rowed to land: they told his wife this mischance, hut she bore it ill and wept aloud. Then Fialar asked her, if it would make her mind easier, if she were to see out on the sea the place where he had sunk; and she said it would; then spake he with Galar his brother, that he should go up over the doorway as she went out, and let the quernstone fall on her head, and said he was weary of her weeping; and so he did. Now when Suttungr the giant Gillingr’s son heard this, he fares thither and took the dwarves, and bears them out to sea, and sets them on a scar flooded at high tide, they pray Suttungr to spare their lives, and bid him (take) in atonement for his father’s blood the dear mead; and that was for an atonement between them. Suttungr bears the mead home, and hoards it in the stead hight Hnit- hiorg, and sets there to guard it his daughter Gunnlavfa. From this call we songship Kvasir’s blood, or dwarves drink or fill; or some kind of
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The Prose or Younger Edda

The prose or younger Edda commonly ascribed to Snorri Sturluson
Year
1842
Language
English
Pages
136


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