 |
Freyja, her Necklace, and how she lost Odur
YES, Loki went through Asgard silent and with head bent, and the Dwellers
in Asgard said one unto the other, "This will teach Loki to work
no more mischief." They did not know that what Loki had done had
sown the seeds of mischief and that these seeds were to sprout up and
bring sorrow to the beautiful Vana Freyja, to Freyja whom the Giant wanted
to carry off with the Sun and the Moon as payment for his building the
wall around Asgard.
Freyja had looked upon the wonders that Loki had brought into Asgard--the
golden threads that were Sif's hair, and Freyr's boar that shed light
from its bristles as it flew. The gleam of these golden things dazzled
her, and made her dream in the day time and the night time of the wonders
that she herself might possess. And often she thought, "What wonderful
things the Three Giant Women would give me if I could bring myself to
go to them on their mountaintop."
Long ere this, when the wall around their City was not yet built, and
when the Gods had set up only the court with their twelve seats and the
Hall that was for Wotan and the Hall that was for the Goddesses, there
had come into Asgard Three Giant Women.
They came after the Gods had set up a forge and had begun to work metal
for their buildings. The metal they worked was pure gold. With gold they
built Gladsheim, the Hall of Wotan, and with gold they made all their
dishes and household ware. Then was the Age of Gold, and the Gods did
not grudge gold to anyone. Happy were the Gods then, and no shadow nor
foreboding lay on Asgard.
But after the Three Giant Women came the Gods began to value gold and
to hoard it. They played with it no more. And the happy innocence of their
first days departed from them.
At last the Three were banished from Asgard. The Gods turned their thoughts
from the hoarding of gold, and they built up their City, and they made
themselves strong.
And now Freyja, the lovely Vanir bride, thought upon the Giant Women and
on the wonderful things of gold they had flashed through their hands.
But not to Odur, her husband, did she speak her thoughts; for Odur, more
than any of the other dwellers in Asgard, was wont to think on the days
of happy innocence, before gold came to be hoarded and valued. Odur would
not have Freyja go near the mountaintop where the Three had their high
seat.
But Freyja did not cease to think upon them and upon the things of gold
they had. "Why should Odur know I went to them?" she said to
herself. "No one will tell him. And what difference will it make
if I go to them and gain some lovely thing for myself? I shall not love
Odur the less because I go my own way for once."
Then one day she left their palace, leaving Odur, her husband, playing
with their little child Hnossa. She left the palace and went down to the
Earth. There she stayed for a while, tending the flowers that were her
charge. After a while she asked the Elves to tell her where the mountain
was on which the Three Giant Women stayed.
The Elves were frightened and would not tell her, although she was queen
over them. She left them and stole down into the caves of the Dwarfs.
It was they who showed her the way to the seat of the Giant Women, but
before they showed her the way they made her feel shame and misery.
"We will show you the way if you stay with us here," said one
of the Dwarfs.
"For how long would you have me stay?" said Freyja.
"Until the cocks in Svartalfheim crow," said the Dwarfs, closing
round her. "We want to know what the company of one of the Vanir
is like." "I will stay," Freyja said. Then one of the Dwarfs
reached up and put his arms round her neck and kissed her with his ugly
mouth. Freyja tried to break away from them, but the Dwarfs held her.
"You cannot go away from us now until the cocks of Svartalfheim crow,"
they said.
Then one and then another of the Dwarfs pressed up to her and kissed her.
They made her sit down beside them on the heaps of skins they had. When
she wept they screamed at her and beat her. One, when she would not kiss
him on the mouth, bit her hands. So Freyja stayed with the Dwarfs until
the cocks of Svartalfheim crew.
They showed her the mountain on the top of which the Three banished from
Asgard had their abode. The Giant Women sat overlooking the World of Men.
"What would you have from us, wife of Odur?" one who was called
Gulveig said to her.
"Alas! Now that I have found you I know that I should ask you for
nought," Freyja said.
"Speak, Vana," said the second of the Giant Women.
The third said nothing, but she held up in her hands a necklace of gold
most curiously fashioned. "How bright it is!" Freyja said. "There
is shadow where you sit, women, but the necklace you hold makes brightness
now. Oh, how I should joy to wear it!"
"It is the necklace Brisingamen," said the one who was called
Gulveig.
"It is yours to wear, wife of Odur," said the one who held it
in her hands.
Freyja took the shining necklace and clasped it round her throat. She
could not bring herself to thank the Giant Women, for she saw that there
was evil in their eyes. She made reverence to them, however, and she went
from the mountain on which they sat overlooking the World of Men.
In a while she looked down and saw Brisingamen and her misery went from
her. It was the most beautiful thing ever made by hands. None of the Asyniur
and none other of the Vanir possessed a thing so beautiful. It made her
more and more lovely, and Odur, she thought, would forgive her when he
saw how beautiful and how happy Brisingamen made her.
She rose up from amongst the flowers and took leave of the slight Elves
and she made her way into Asgard. All who greeted her looked long and
with wonder upon the necklace that she wore. And into the eyes of the
Goddesses there came a look of longing when they saw Brisingamen.
But Freyja hardly stopped to speak to anyone. As swiftly as she could
she made her way to her own palace. She would show herself to Odur and
win his forgiveness. She entered her shining palace and called to him.
No answer came. Her child, the little Hnossa, was on the floor, playing.
Her mother took her in her arms, but the child, when she looked on Brisingamen,
turned away crying.
Freyja left Hnossa down and searched again for Odur. He was not in any
part of their palace. She went into the houses of all who dwelt in Asgard,
asking for tidings of him. None knew where he had gone to. At last Freyja
went back to their palace and waited and waited for Odur to return. But
Odur did not come. One came to her. It was a Goddess, Wotan's wife, the
queenly Frigga. "You are waiting for Odur, your husband," Frigga
said. "Ah, let me tell you Odur will not come to you here. He went,
when for the sake of a shining thing you did what would make him unhappy.
Odur has gone from Asgard and no one knows where to search for him."
"I will seek him outside of Asgard," Freyja said. She wept no
more, but she took the little child Hnossa and put her in Frigga's arms.
Then she mounted her car that was drawn by two cats, and journeyed down
from Asgard to Midgard, the Earth, to search for Odur her husband.
Year in and year out, and over all the Earth, Freyja went searching and
calling for the lost Odur. She went as far as the bounds of the Earth,
where she could look over to Jötunheim, where dwelt the Giant who
would have carried her off with the Sun and the Moon as payment for the
building of the wall around Asgard. But in no place, from the end of the
Rainbow Bifröst, that stretched from Asgard to the Earth, to the
boundary of Jötunheim, did she find a trace of her husband Odur.
At last she turned her car toward Bifröst, the Rainbow Bridge that
stretched from Midgard, the Earth, to Asgard, the Dwelling of the Gods.
Hemidall, the Watcher for the Gods, guarded the Rainbow Bridge. To him
Freyja went with a half hope fluttering in her heart.
"O Heimdall," she cried, "O Hemidall, Watcher for the Gods,
speak and tell me if you know where Odur is."
"Odur is in every place where the searcher has not come; Odur is
in every place that the searcher has left; those who seek him will never
find Odur," said Heimdall, the Watcher for the Gods.
Then Freyja stood on Bifröst and wept. Frigga, the queenly Goddess,
heard the sound of her weeping, and came out of Asgard to comfort her.
"Ah, what comfort can. you give me, Frigga?" cried Freyja. "What
comfort can you give me when Odur will never be found by one who searches
for him?"
"Behold how your daughter, the child Hnossa, has grown," said
Frigga. Freyja looked up and saw a beautiful maiden standing on Bifröst,
the Rainbow Bridge. She was young, more youthful than any of the Vanir
or the Asyniur, and her face and her form were so lovely that all hearts
became melted when they looked upon her.
And Freyja was comforted in her loss. She followed Frigga across Bifröst,
the Rainbow Bridge, and came once again into the City of the Gods. In
her own palace in Asgard Freyja dwelt with Hnossa, her child.
Still she wore round her neck Brisingamen, the necklace that lost her
Odur. But now she wore it, not for its splendor, but as a sign of the
wrong she had done. She weeps, and her tears become golden drops as they
fall on the earth. And by poets who know her story she is called The Beautiful
Lady in Tears.
|
 |