[25]. Pigott’s translation, p. 95.
[26]. See Vol. I. p. 54.
[27]. See Vol. I. p. 46.
[28]. Thorlacius Noget om Thor og hans Hammer, in the Skandinavisk Museum for 1803.
[29]. Thorlacius ut supra, says the thundering Thor was regarded as particularly inimical to the Skovtrolds, against whom he continually employed his mighty weapon. He thinks the Bidental of the Romans, and the rites connected with it, seem to suppose a similar superstition, and that in the well-known passage of Horace,
Tu parum castis inimica mittes
Fulmina lucis,
the words parum castis lucis may mean groves or parts of woods, the haunt of unclean spirits or Skovtrolds, satyri lascivi et salaces.
[30]. The analogy of Deev, and other words of like import, might lead to the supposition of Spirit being the primary meaning of Alf.