<h2><SPAN name="IN_THE_GIANTS_HOUSE" id="IN_THE_GIANTS_HOUSE">IN THE GIANT'S HOUSE</SPAN></h2>
<p class="drop-cap5"><span class="smcap1">Although</span> Thor had slain Thiasse
the giant builder, Thrym the thief,
Hrungnir, and Hymir, and had rid
the world of whole families of wicked giants,
there remained many others in Jotunheim
to do their evil deeds and to plot mischief
against both gods and men; and of these
Geirröd was the fiercest and the wickedest.
He and his two ugly daughters—Gialp of
the red eyes, and Greip of the black teeth—lived
in a large palace among the mountains,
where Geirröd had his treasures of
iron and copper, silver and gold; for, since
the death of Thrym, Geirröd was the Lord
of the Mines, and all the riches that came
out of the earth-caverns belonged to him.</p>
<p>Thrym had been Geirröd's friend, and the
tale of Thrym's death through the might
of Thor and his hammer had made Geirröd
very sad and angry. "If I could but catch
Thor, now, without his weapons," he said
to his daughters, "what a lesson I would
give him! How I would punish him for
his deeds against us giants!"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</SPAN></span>
"Oh, what would you do, father?" cried
Gialp, twinkling her cruel red eyes, and
working her claw fingers as if she would
like to fasten them in Thor's golden beard.</p>
<p>"Oh, what would you do, father?" cried
Greip, smacking her lips and grinding her
black teeth as if she would like a bite out
of Thor's stout arm.</p>
<p>"Do to him!" growled Geirröd fiercely.
"Do to him! Gr-r-r! I would chew him
all up! I would break his bones into little
bits! I would smash him into jelly!"</p>
<p>"Oh, good, good! Do it, father, and then
give him to us to play with," cried Gialp
and Greip, dancing up and down till the
hills trembled and all the frightened sheep
ran home to their folds thinking that there
must be an earthquake; for Gialp was as
tall as a pine-tree and many times as thick,
while Greip, her little sister, was as large
around as a haystack and high as a flagstaff.
They both hoped some day to be as
huge as their father, whose legs were so
long that he could step across the river valleys
from one hilltop to another, just as
we human folk cross a brook on stepping-<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</SPAN></span>stones;
and his arms were so stout that he
could lift a yoke of oxen in each fist, as if
they were red-painted toys.</p>
<p>Geirröd shook his head at his two playful
daughters and sighed. "We must catch
Master Thor first, my girls, before we do
these fine things to him. We must catch
him without his mighty hammer, that never
fails him, and without his belt, that doubles
his strength whenever he puts it on, or even
I cannot chew and break and smash him as
he deserves; for with these his weapons he
is the mightiest creature in the whole world,
and I would rather meddle with thunder
and lightning than with him. Let us wait,
children."</p>
<p>Then Gialp and Greip pouted and sulked
like two great babies who cannot have the
new plaything which they want; and very
ugly they were to see, with tears as big as
oranges rolling down their cheeks.</p>
<p>Sooner than they expected they came
very near to having their heart's desire fulfilled.
And if it had happened as they
wished, and if Asgard had lost its goodliest
hero, its strongest defense, that would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</SPAN></span>
have been red Loki's fault, all Loki's evil
planning; for you are now to hear of the
wickedest thing that up to this time Loki
had ever done. As you know, it was Loki
who was Thor's bitterest enemy; and for
many months he had been awaiting the
chance to repay the Thunder Lord for the
dole which Thor had brought upon him at
the time of the dwarf's gifts to Asgard.</p>
<p>This is how it came about: Loki had
long remembered the fun of skimming as
a great bird in Freia's falcon feathers. He
had longed to borrow the wings once again
and to fly away over the round world to see
what he could see; for he thought that
so he could learn many secrets which he
was not meant to know, and plan wonderful
mischief without being found out.
But Freia would not again loan her feather
dress to Loki. She owed him a grudge for
naming her as Thrym's bride; and besides,
she remembered his treatment of Idun, and
she did not trust his oily tongue and fine
promises. So Loki saw no way but to borrow
the feathers without leave; and this he
did one day when Freia was gone to ride in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">212</SPAN></span>
her chariot drawn by white cats. Loki put
on the feather dress, as he had done twice
before,—once when he went to Jotunheim
to bring back stolen Idun and her magic
apples, once when he went to find out about
Thor's hammer.</p>
<p>Away he flew from Asgard as birdlike
as you please, chuckling to himself with
wicked thoughts. It did not make any particular
difference to him where he went. It
was such fun to flap and fly, skim and
wheel, looking and feeling for all the world
like a big brown falcon. He swooped low,
thinking, "I wonder what Freia would say
to see me now! Whee-e-e! How angry
she would be!" Just then he spied the
high wall of a palace on the mountains.</p>
<p>"Oho!" said Loki. "I never saw that
place before. It may be a giant's dwelling.
I think this must be Jotunheim, from the
bigness of things. I must just peep to see."
Loki was the most inquisitive of creatures,
as wily minded folk are apt to be.</p>
<p>Loki the falcon alighted and hopped to
the wall, then giving a flap of his wings he
flew up and up to the window ledge, where<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</SPAN></span>
he perched and peered into the hall. And
there within he saw the giant Geirröd with
his daughters eating their dinner. They
looked so ugly and so greedy, as they sat
there gobbling their food in giant mouthfuls,
that Loki on the window-sill could
not help snickering to himself. Now at that
sound Geirröd looked up and saw the big
brown bird peeping in at the window.</p>
<p>"Heigha!" cried the giant to one of his
servants. "Go you and fetch me the big
brown bird up yonder in the window."</p>
<p>Then the servant ran to the wall and tried
to climb up to get at Loki; but the window
was so high that he could not reach. He
jumped and slipped, scrambled and slipped,
again and again, while Loki sat just above
his clutching fingers, and chuckled so that he
nearly fell from his perch. "Te-he! te-he!"
chattered Loki in the falcon tongue. It was
such fun to see the fellow grow black in
the face with trying to reach him that Loki
thought he would wait until the giant's fingers
almost touched him, before flying away.</p>
<p>But Loki waited too long. At last, with
a quick spring, the giant gained a hold upon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">214</SPAN></span>
the window ledge, and Loki was within reach.
When Loki flapped his wings to fly, he
found that his feet were tangled in the vine
that grew upon the wall. He struggled and
twisted with all his might,—but in vain.
There he was, caught fast. Then the servant
grasped him by the legs, and so brought
him to Geirröd, where he sat at table. Now
Loki in his feather dress looked exactly like
a falcon—except for his eyes. There was
no hiding the wise and crafty look of Loki's
eyes. As soon as Geirröd looked at him, he
suspected that this was no ordinary bird.</p>
<p>"You are no falcon, you!" he cried.
"You are spying about my palace in disguise.
Speak, and tell me who you are."
Loki was afraid to tell, because he knew
the giants were angry with him for his part
in Thrym's death,—small though his part
had really been in that great deed. So he
kept his beak closed tight, and refused to
speak. The giant stormed and raged and
threatened to kill him; but still Loki was
silent.</p>
<p>Then Geirröd locked the falcon up in a
chest for three long months without food or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">215</SPAN></span>
water, to see how that would suit his bird-ship.
You can imagine how hungry and
thirsty Loki was at the end of that time,—ready
to tell anything he knew, and more
also, for the sake of a crumb of bread and
a drop of water.</p>
<p>So then Geirröd called through the keyhole,
"Well, Sir Falcon, now will you tell
me who you are?" And this time Loki
piped feebly, "I am Loki of Asgard; give
me something to eat!"</p>
<p>"Oho!" quoth the giant fiercely. "You
are that Loki who went with Thor to kill
my brother Thrym! Oho! Well, you shall
die for that, my feathered friend!"</p>
<p>"No, no!" screamed Loki. "Thor is no
friend of mine. I love the giants far better!
One of them is my wife!"—which was
indeed true, as were few of Loki's words.</p>
<p>"Then if Thor is no friend of yours, to
save your life will you bring him into my
power?" asked Geirröd.</p>
<p>Loki's eyes gleamed wickedly among the
feathers. Here all at once was his chance
to be free, and to have his revenge upon
Thor, his worst enemy. "Ay, that I will!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">216</SPAN></span>
he cried eagerly. "I will bring Thor into
your power."</p>
<p>So Geirröd made him give a solemn promise
to do that wrong; and upon this he
loosed Loki from the chest and gave him
food. Then they formed the wicked plan
together, while Gialp and Greip, the giant's
ugly daughters, listened and smacked their
lips.</p>
<p>Loki was to persuade Thor to come with
him to Geirrödsgard. More; he must come
without his mighty hammer, and without
the iron gloves of power, and without the
belt of strength; for so only could the giant
have Thor at his mercy.</p>
<p>After their wicked plans were made, Loki
bade a friendly farewell to Geirröd and his
daughters and flew back to Asgard as
quickly as he could. You may be sure he
had a sound scolding from Freia for stealing
her feather dress and for keeping it so long.
But he told such a pitiful story of being
kept prisoner by a cruel giant, and he looked
in truth so pale and thin from his long fast,
that the gods were fain to pity him and to
believe his story, in spite of the many times<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">217</SPAN></span>
that he had deceived them. Indeed, most of
his tale was true, but he told only half of the
truth; for he spoke no word of his promise
to the giant. This he kept hidden in his
breast.</p>
<p>Now, one day not long after this, Loki invited
Thor to go on a journey with him to
visit a new friend who, he said, was anxious
to know the Thunder Lord. Loki was so
pleasant in his manner and seemed so frank
in his speech that Thor, whose heart was
simple and unsuspicious, never dreamed of
any wrong, not even when Loki added,—"And
by the bye, my Thor, you must leave
behind your hammer, your belt, and your
gloves; for it would show little courtesy to
wear such weapons in the home of a new
friend."</p>
<p>Thor carelessly agreed; for he was pleased
with the idea of a new adventure, and with
the thought of making a new friend. Besides,
on their last journey together, Loki
had behaved so well that Thor believed him
to have changed his evil ways and to have
become his friend. So together they set off
in Thor's goat chariot, without weapons of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">218</SPAN></span>
any kind except those which Loki secretly
carried. Loki chuckled as they rattled over
the clouds, and if Thor had seen the look in
his eyes, he would have turned the chariot
back to Asgard and to safety, where he had
left gentle Sif his wife. But Thor did not
notice, and so they rumbled on.</p>
<p>Soon they came to the gate of Giant
Land. Thor thought this strange, for he
knew they were like to find few friends of
his dwelling among the Big Folk. For the
first time he began to suspect Loki of some
treacherous scheme. However, he said nothing,
and pretended to be as gay and careless
as before. But he thought of a plan to
find out the truth.</p>
<p>Close by the entrance was the cave of
Grid, a good giantess, who alone of all her
race was a friend of Thor and of the folk in
Asgard.</p>
<p>"I will alight here for a moment, Loki,"
said Thor carelessly. "I long for a draught
of water. Hold you the goats tightly by the
reins until I return."</p>
<p>So he went into the cave and got his
draught of water. But while he was drinking,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">219</SPAN></span>
he questioned good mother Grid to
some purpose.</p>
<p>"Who is this friend Geirröd whom I go
to see?" he asked her.</p>
<p>"Geirröd your friend! You go to see
Geirröd!" she exclaimed. "He is the wickedest
giant of us all, and no friend to you.
Why do you go, dear Thor?"</p>
<p>"H'm!" muttered Thor. "Red Loki's
mischief again!" He told her of the visit
that Loki had proposed, and how he had
left at home the belt, the gloves, and the
hammer which made him stronger than any
giant. Then Grid was frightened.</p>
<p>"Go not, go not, Thor!" she begged.
"Geirröd will kill you, and those ugly girls,
Gialp and Greip, will have the pleasure of
crunching your bones. Oh, I know them
well, the hussies!"</p>
<p>But Thor declared that he would go,
whether or no. "I have promised Loki that
I will go," he said, "and go I will; for I
always keep my word."</p>
<p>"Then you shall have three little gifts of
me," quoth she. "Here is my belt of power—for
I also have one like your own." And<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">220</SPAN></span>
she buckled about his waist a great belt, at
whose touch he felt his strength redoubled.
"This is my iron glove," she said, as she put
one on his mighty hand, "and with it, as
with your own, you can handle lightning and
touch unharmed the hottest of red-hot metal.
And here, last of all," she added, "is Gridarvöll,
my good staff, which you may find
useful. Take them, all three; and may Sif
see you safe at home again by their aid."</p>
<p>Thor thanked her and went out once more
to join Loki, who never suspected what had
happened in the cave. For the belt and the
glove were hidden under Thor's cloak. And
as for the staff, it was quite ordinary looking,
as if Thor might have picked it up anywhere
along the road.</p>
<p>On they journeyed until they came to the
river Vimer, the greatest of all rivers, which
roared and tossed in a terrible way between
them and the shore which they wanted to
reach. It seemed impossible to cross. But
Thor drew his belt a little tighter, and planting
Grid's staff firmly on the bottom, stepped
out into the stream. Loki clung behind to
his cloak, frightened out of his wits. But Thor<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">221</SPAN></span>
waded on bravely, his strength doubled by
Grid's belt, and his steps supported by her
magic staff. Higher and higher the waves
washed over his knees, his waist, his shoulders,
as if they were fierce to drown him.
And Thor <span class="locked">said,—</span></p>
<p>"Ho there, river Vimer! Do not grow
any larger, I pray. It is of no use. The
more you crowd upon me, the mightier I
grow with my belt and my staff!"</p>
<p>But lo! as he nearly reached the other
side, Thor spied some one hiding close down
by the bank of the river. It was Gialp of the
red eyes, the big elder daughter of Geirröd.
She was splashing the water upon Thor,
making the great waves that rolled up and
threatened to drown him.</p>
<p>"Oho!" cried he. "So it is you who are
making the river rise, big little girl. We
must see to that;" and seizing a huge boulder,
he hurled it at her. It hit her with a
thud, for Thor's aim never missed. Giving
a scream as loud as a steam-whistle, Gialp
limped home as best she could to tell her
father, and to prepare a warm reception for
the stranger who bore Loki at his back.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">222</SPAN></span>
When Thor had pulled himself out of
the river by some bushes, he soon came to the
palace which Loki had first sighted in his
falcon dress. And there he found everything
most courteously made ready for him. He
and Loki were received like dear old friends,
with shouts of rejoicing and ringing of bells.
Geirröd himself came out to meet them, and
would have embraced his new friend Thor;
but the Thunder Lord merely seized him by
the hand and gave him so hearty a squeeze
with the iron glove that the giant howled
with pain. Yet he could say nothing, for Thor
looked pleased and gentle. And Geirröd
said to himself, "Ho, ho, my fine little
Thor! I will soon pay you for that handshake,
and for many things beside."</p>
<p>All this time Gialp and Greip did not appear,
and Loki also had taken himself away,
to be out of danger when the hour of Thor's
death should come. For he feared that dreadful
things might happen before Thor died;
and he did not want to be remembered by
the big fist of the companion whom he had
betrayed. Loki, having kept his promise to
the giant, was even now far on the road back<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">223</SPAN></span>
to Asgard, where he meant with a sad face
to tell the gods that Thor had been slain by a
horrible giant; but never to tell them how.</p>
<p>So Thor was all alone when the servants
led him to the chamber which Geirröd had
made ready for his dear friend. It was a
wonderfully fine chamber, to be sure; but
the strange thing about it was that among the
furnishings there was but one chair, a giant
chair, with a drapery all about the legs. Now
Thor was very weary with his long journey,
and he sat down in the chair to rest. Then,
wonderful to tell!—if elevators had been invented
in those days, he might have thought
he was in one. For instantly the seat of the
chair shot up towards the roof, and against
this he was in danger of being crushed as
Geirröd had longed to see him. But quick
as a flash Thor raised the staff which good
old Grid had given him, and pushed it
against the rafters with all his might to stop
his upward journey. It was a tremendous
push that he gave. Something cracked; something
crashed; the chair fell to the ground
as Thor leaped off the seat, and there were
two terrible screams.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">224</SPAN></span>
Then Thor found—what do you think?
Why, that Gialp and Greip, the giant's
daughters, had hidden under the seat of the
chair, and had lifted it up on their backs to
crush Thor against the roof! But instead of
that, it was Thor who had broken their backs,
so that they lay dead upon the floor like
limp rag dolls.</p>
<p>Now this little exercise had only given
Thor an excellent appetite for supper. So
that when word came bidding him to the
banquet, he was very glad.</p>
<p>"First," said big Geirröd, grinning horribly,
for he did not know what had happened
to his daughters,—"first we will see
some games, friend Thor."</p>
<p>Then Thor came into the hall, where fires
were burning in great chimney places along
the walls. "It is here that we play our
little games," cried Geirröd. And on the moment,
seizing a pair of tongs, he snatched a
red-hot wedge of iron from one of the fires
and hurled it straight at Thor's head. But
Thor was quicker than he. Swift as a flash
he caught the flying spark in his iron glove,
and calling forth all the might of Grid's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">225</SPAN></span>
belt, he cast the wedge back at the giant.
Geirröd dodged behind an iron pillar, but it
was in vain. Thor's might was such as no
iron could meet. Like a bolt of lightning
the wedge passed through the pillar, through
Geirröd himself, through the thick wall of
the palace, and buried itself deep in the
ground, where it lodges to this day, unless
some one has dug it up to sell for old iron.</p>
<p>So perished Geirröd and his children, one
of the wickedest families of giants that ever
lived in Jotunheim. And so Thor escaped
from the snares of Loki, who had never done
deed worse than this.</p>
<p>When Thor returned home to Asgard,
where from Loki's lying tale he found all the
gods mourning him as dead, you can fancy
what a joyful reception he had. But for Loki,
the false-hearted, false-tongued traitor to them
all, there was only hatred. He no longer
had any friends among the good folk. The
wicked giants and the monsters of Utgard
were now his only friends, for he had grown
to be like them, and even these did not trust
him overmuch.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">226</SPAN></span></p>
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