| Page | |
| Banquet of the Sea-god Ægir | [114] |
| Thor and Tyr proceed to Giant-land to steal a Caldron | [114] |
| Adventures at the House of Hymir | [115] |
| Physical Meaning of this Mythos | [116] |
| The same Adventures paraphrased by the Danish Poet Ohlenschlager | [117] |
Thor and the Giant Thrym.
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| Thor loses Miölner | [124] |
| Loke discovers the Thief, who is the Giant Thrym | [125] |
| Thrym will not restore it, unless he have Freya to Wife | [125] |
| When Freya refuses, Thor is persuaded to assume Female Apparel, and go to Jotunheim | [126] |
| Adventures there | [127] |
| Metrical Version of this Legend | [128] |
| Magnussen’s Interpretation | [129] |
| Sif, the Wife of Thor | [131] |
Niord, Freyr, Freya.
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| Niord, Lord of the Vaner, and a God | [132] |
| His second Wife is Skada, from whom he separates | [133] |
| Freyr, the Son of Niord, in love with a Giant Maiden | [133] |
| Skirnir, his Attendant, goes to Jotunheim and wins her | [134] |
| Metrical Version of Skirnir’s Expedition | [135] |
| Freya, the Daughter of Niord, and the Goddess of Love | [136] |
| Her Functions and Authority in Asgard | [140] |
Ægir and Ran.
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| Ægir, the God of the Deep, more clement than Ran, his Queen | [141] |
| Another Feast given by the Sea-god, in which Loke is abusive | [142] |
Other Deities.
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| The Nornies | [143] |
| Night and Day | [143] |
| The Giant of Winter | [144] |
Balder.