 |
Building the Wall
ALWAYS there had been war between the Giants and the Gods--between the
Giants who would have destroyed the world and the race of men, and the
Gods who would have protected the race of men and would have made the
world more beautiful.
There are many stories to be told about the Gods, but the first one that
should be told to you is the one about the building of their City.
The Gods had made their way up to the top of a high mountain and there
they decided to build a great City for, themselves that the Giants could
never overthrow. The City they would call "Asgard," which means
the Place of the Gods. They would build it on a beautiful plain that was
on the top of that high mountain. And they wanted to raise round their
City the highest and strongest wall that had ever been built.
Now one day when they were beginning to build their halls and their palaces
a strange being came to them. Wotan, the Father of the Gods, went and
spoke to him. "What dost thou want on the Mountain of the Gods?"
he asked the Stranger.
"I know what is in the mind of the Gods," the Stranger said.
"They would build a City here. I cannot build palaces, but I can
build great walls that can never be overthrown. Let me build the wall
round your City."
"How long will it take you to build a wall that will go round our
City?" said the Father of the Gods.
"A year, O Wotan," said the Stranger.
Now Wotan knew that if a great wall could be built around it the Gods
would not have to spend all their time defending their City, Asgard, from
the Giants, and he knew that if Asgard were protected, he himself could
go amongst men and teach them and help them. He thought that no payment
the Stranger could ask would be too much for the building of that wall.
That day the Stranger came to the Council of the Gods, and he swore that
in a year he would have the great wall built. Then Wotan made oath that
the Gods would give him what he asked in payment if the wall was finished
to the last stone in a year from that day.
The Stranger went away and came back on the morrow. It was the first day
of Summer when he started work. He brought no one to help him except a
great horse.
Now the Gods thought that this horse would do no more than drag blocks
of stone for the building of the wall. But the horse did more than this.
He set the stones in their places and mortared them together. And day
and night and by light and dark the horse worked, and soon a great wall
was rising round the palaces that the Gods themselves were building.
"What reward will the Stranger ask for the work he is doing for us?"
the Gods asked one another.
Wotan went to the Stranger. "We marvel at the work you and your horse
are doing for us," he said. "No one can doubt that the great
wall of Asgard will be built up by the first day of Summer. What reward
do you claim? We would have it ready for you."
The Stranger turned from the work he was doing, leaving the great horse
to pile up the blocks of stone. "O Father of the Gods," he said,
"O Wotan, the reward I shall ask for my work is the Sun and the Moon,
and Freyja, who watches over the lovers and heroes, for my wife."
Now when Wotan heard this he was terribly angered, for the price the Stranger
asked for his work was beyond all prices. He went amongst the other Gods
who were then building their shining palaces within the great wall and
he told them what reward the Stranger had asked. The Gods said, "Without
the Sun and the Moon the world will wither away." And the Goddesses
said, "Without Freyja all will be gloom in Asgard."
They would have let the wall remain unbuilt rather than let the Stranger
have the reward he claimed for building it. But one who was in the company
of the Gods spoke. He was Loki, a being who only half belonged to the
Gods; his father was the Wind Giant. "Let the Stranger build the
wall round Asgard, Loki said, "and I will find a way to make him
give up the hard bargain he has made with the Gods. Go to him and tell
him that the wall must be finished by the first day of Summer, and that
if it is not finished to the last stone on that day the price he asks
will not be given to him."
The Gods went to the Stranger and they told him that if the last stone
was not laid on the wall on the first day of the Summer not Sol or Mani,
the Sun and the Moon, nor Freya would be given him. And now they knew
that the Stranger was one of the Giants.
The Giant and his great horse piled up the wall more quickly than before.
At night, while the Giant slept, the horse worked on and on, hauling up
stones and laying them on the wall with his great forefeet. And day by
day the wall around Asgard grew higher and higher.
But the Gods had no joy in seeing that great wall rising higher and higher
around their palaces. The Giant and his horse would finish the work by
the first day of Summer, and then he would take the Sun and the Moon,
Sol and Mani, and Freya away with him.
But Loki was not disturbed. He kept telling the Gods that he would find
a way to prevent him from finishing his work, and thus he would make the
Giant forfeit the terrible price he had led Wotan to promise him.
It was three days to Summer time. All the wall was finished except the
gateway. Over the gateway a stone was still to be placed. And the Giant,
before he went to sleep, bade his horse haul up a great block of stone
so that they might put it above the gateway in the morning, and so finish
the work two full days before Summer.
It happened to be a beautiful moonlit night. Svaldifari, the Giant's great
horse, was hauling the largest stone he ever hauled when he saw a little
mare come galloping toward him. The great horse had never seen so pretty
a little mare and he looked at her with surprise.
"Svaldifari, slave," said the little mare to him and went frisking
past.
Svaldifari put down the stone he was hauling and called to the little
mare. She came back to him. "Why do you call me 'Svaldifari, slave'?"
said the great horse.
"Because you have to work night and day for your master," said
the little mare. "He keeps you working, working, working, and never
lets you enjoy yourself. You dare not leave that stone down and come and
play with me.
"Who told you I dare not do it?" said Svaldifari.
"I know you daren't do it," said the little mare, and she kicked
up her heels and ran across the moonlit meadow.
Now the truth is that Svaldifari was tired of working day and night. When
he saw the little mare go galloping off he became suddenly discontented.
He left the stone he was hauling on the ground. He looked round and he
saw the little mare looking back at him. He galloped after her.
He did not catch up on the little mare. She went on swiftly before him.
On she went over the moonlit meadow, turning and looking back now and
again at the great Svaldifari, who came heavily after her. Down the mountainside
the mare went, and Svaldifari, who now rejoiced in his liberty and in
the freshness of the wind and in the smell of the flowers, still followed
her. With the morning's light they came near a cave and the little mare
went into it. They went through the cave. Then Svaldifari caught up on
the little mare and the two went wandering together, the little mare telling
Svaldifari stories of the Dwarfs and the Elves.
They came to a grove and they stayed together in it, the little mare playing
so nicely with him that the great horse forgot all about time passing.
And while they were in the grove the Giant was going up and down, searching
for his great horse.
He had come to the wall in the morning, expecting to put the stone over
the gateway and so finish his work. But the stone that was to be lifted
up was not near him. He called for Svaldifari, but his great horse did
not come. He went to search for him, and he searched all down the mountainside
and he searched as far across the earth as the realm of the Giants. But
he did not find Svaldifari.
The Gods saw the first day of Summer come and the gateway of the wall
stand unfinished. They said to each other that if it were not finished
by the evening they need not give Sol and Mani to the Giant, nor the maiden
Freya to be his wife. The hours of the summer day went past and the Giant
did not raise the stone over the gateway. In the evening he came before
them.
"Your work is not finished," Wotan said. "You forced us
to a hard bargain and now we need not keep it with you. You shall not
be given Sol and Mani nor the Goddess Freyja."
"Only the wall I have built is so strong I would tear it down,"
said the Giant. He tried to throw down one of the palaces, but the Gods
laid hands on him and thrust him outside the wall he had built. "Go,
and trouble Asgard no more," Wotan commanded.
Then Loki returned to Asgard. He told the Gods how he had transformed
himself into a little mare and had led away Svaldifari, the Giant's great
horse. And the Gods sat in their golden palaces behind the great wall
and rejoiced that their City was now secure, and that no enemy could ever
enter it or overthrow it. But Wotan, the Father of the Gods, as he sat
upon his throne was sad in his heart, sad that the Gods had got their
wall built by a trick; that oaths had been broken, and that a blow had
been struck in injustice in Asgard.
|
 |