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that he is particularly annoyed that Útgarða-Loki will now speak negatively about him. Útgarða-Loki, once the group has left his keep, points out that he hopes that they never return to it, for if he had an inkling of what he was dealing with he would never have allowed the group to enter in the first place. Útgarða-Loki reveals that all was not what it seemed to the group. Útgarða-Loki was in fact the immense Skrýmir, and that if the three blows Thor attempted to land had hit their mark, the first would have killed Skrýmir. In reality, Thor's blows were so powerful that they had resulted in three square valleys.
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he has never seen anyone who has come to his hall run faster than that. Þjálfi and Hugi run a second race. Þjálfi loses by an arrow-shot. Útgarða-Loki comments that Þjálfi has again ran a fine race but that he has no confidence that Þjálfi will be able to win a third. A third race between the two commences and Þjálfi again loses to Hugi. Everyone agrees that the contest between Þjálfi and Hugi has been decided.
157:
389:, raises it, and blesses the goat skins. Resurrected, the goats stand, but one of the two goats is lame in the hind leg. Noting this new lameness, Thor exclaims that someone has mistreated the bones of his goats; that someone broke the ham-bone during the meal the night before. Third notes that there is no need to draw out the tale, for:
424:. They continue through the woods until dark. The four seek shelter for the night and discover an immense building. Finding shelter in a side room, they experience earthquakes through the night. The earthquakes cause all four to be fearful, except Thor, who grips his hammer in defense. The building turns out to be the huge glove of
464:, an old woman. The two wrestle but the harder Thor struggles the more difficult the battle becomes. Thor is finally brought down to a single knee. Útgarða-Loki said to Thor that fighting anyone else would be pointless. Now late at night, Útgarða-Loki shows the group to their rooms and they are treated with hospitality.
491:, Old Norse "old age"), and there is no one that old age cannot bring down. Útgarða-Loki tells Thor that it would be better for "both sides" if they did not meet again. Upon hearing this, Thor takes hold of his hammer and swings it at Útgarða-Loki but he is gone and so is his castle. Only a wide landscape remains.
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are riding in Thor's chariot, pulled by his two goats. Loki and Thor stop at the home of a peasant farmer, and there they are given lodging for a night. Thor slaughters his goats, skins them and puts them in a pot. When the goats are cooked, Loki and Thor sit down for their evening meal. Thor invites
455:
At the course, Útgarða-Loki calls for a small figure by the name of Hugi to compete with Þjálfi. The first race begins and Þjálfi runs, but Hugi runs to the end of the course and then back again to meet Þjálfi. Útgarða-Loki comments to Þjálfi that he will have to run faster than that, yet notes that
394:
Everyone can imagine how terrified the peasant must have been when he saw Thor making his brows sink down over his eyes; as for what could be seen of the eyes themselves, he thought he would collapse at just the very sight. Thor clenched his hands on the shaft of the hammer so that the knuckles went
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The next morning the group gets dressed and prepares to leave the keep. Útgarða-Loki appears, has his servants prepare a table, and they all merrily eat and drink. As they leave, Útgarða-Loki asks Thor how he thought he fared in the contests. Thor says that he is unable to say he did well, noting
459:
Thor agrees to compete in a drinking contest but after three immense gulps fails. Thor agrees to lift a large, gray cat in the hall but finds that it arches his back no matter what he does, and that he can only raise a single paw. Thor demands to fight someone in the hall, but the inhabitants say
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Thor wakes up in the middle of the night, and a series of events occur where Thor twice attempts to destroy the sleeping Skrýmir with his hammer. Skrýmir awakes after each attempt, only to say that he detected an acorn falling on his head or that he wonders if bits of tree from the branches above
419:
At realizing how terrified he has made the peasants, Thor calms down and from them accepts a settlement of their children Þjálfi and Röskva. The two children become his servants and have remained so since. Minus the goats, Thor, Loki, and the two children continue east until they arrive at a vast
451:
to consume a trencher full of meat but loses. Útgarða-Loki asks what feat the "young man" can perform, referring to Þjálfi. Þjálfi says that he will attempt to run a race against anyone Útgarða-Loki chooses. Útgarða-Loki says that this would be a fine feat yet that Þjálfi had better be good at
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The four travelers continue their journey until midday. They find themselves facing a massive castle in an open area. The castle is so tall that they must bend their heads back to their spines to see above it. At the entrance to the castle is a shut gate, and Thor finds that he cannot open it.
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At the end of the meal, Thor places the skins of the goat on the opposing side of the fire and tells the peasants to throw the bones of the goats on to the goatskins. The peasant's son Þjálfi takes one of the goat ham-bones and uses a knife to split it open, breaking the bone to get to the
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Struggling, all four squeeze through the bars of the gate, and continue to a large hall. Inside the great hall are two benches, where many generally large people sit on two benches. The four see Útgarða-Loki, the king of the castle, sitting.
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After the group spends the night at the keep, Útgarða-Loki reveals that he was in fact
Skrymir and that Thor actually nearly killed him. Similarly, the contests were not as they seemed; Þjálfi, for example, raced against thought itself
447:Útgarða-Loki says that no visitors are allowed to stay unless they can perform a feat. Loki, standing in the rear of the party, is the first to speak, claiming that he can eat faster than anyone. Loki competes with a being named
243:). Hárbarðr says that fighting women is a shameful thing. Thor responds that these females were she-wolves—hardly women at all—and details that they attacked his ship, threatened him with iron clubs and chased after Þjálfi:
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from a leg bone from one of the goats. When Thor resurrects the goats the next morning, he finds that one of the goats is lame in the leg and becomes enraged. As a result, Thor maintains Þjálfi and Röskva as his servants.
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138:'s keep and Útgarða-Loki has each member (excluding Röskva) perform a feat to gain boarding. Each member who performs a feat loses, including Þjálfi, who thrice loses a race against a figure named Hugi.
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meaning "thought" in Old Norse). Útgarða-Loki notes that he and the inhabitants were terrified at what the group was able to achieve, and that they must part. Útgarða-Loki and his keep disappear.
487:, and everyone was terrified when Thor was able to lift the paw of this "cat", for Thor had actually held the great serpent up to the sky. The old woman Thor wrestled was in fact old age (
440:'s men there won't put up with it. Skrýmir throws his knapsack onto his back and abruptly goes into the forest and "there is no report that the Æsir expressed hope for a happy reunion".
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is provided that refers to Þjálfi as "Röskva's brother". In the poem fragment, Þjálfi stands enraged, Thor lands a winning blow on his target, and the two feel no fear.
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white, and the peasant did as one might expect, and all his household, they cried out fervently, begged for grace, offered to atone with all their possessions.
428:, who has been snoring throughout the night, causing what seemed to be earthquakes. The next night, all four sleep beneath an oak tree near Skrýmir in fear.
134:. The next night, Thor finds that he is unable to kill Skrymir, and the group sleeps in fear beneath an oak. The following day the group arrives at
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The contests, too, were an illusion. Útgarða-Loki reveals that Loki had actually competed against wildfire itself, consuming all in its path (
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479:, Old Norse "thought"); Thor's drinking horn had actually reached to the ocean and with his drinks he lowered the ocean level (resulting in
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have fallen on top of him. The second attempt awakes Skrýmir. Skrýmir gives them advice; if they are going to be cocky at the castle of
546:(chapter 4), a list of ways of referring to Thor is provided, including "lord of Þjálfi and Röskva". In the same chapter, a quote from
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Røskva and Tjalfe appear as major characters in the 2019 movie "Valhalla: The Legend of Thor," originaL title, "Valhalla."
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85:, compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional material, while both Þjálfi and Röskva are attested in the
75:), also known as Thjalfi and Roskva, are two siblings, a boy and a girl, respectively, who are servants of the god
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running, for he is about to be put to the test. Útgarða-Loki and the group go outside to a level-grounded course.
34:Þjálfi and Röskva turn away in fear as Thor and Loki face the immense jötunn Skrymir in an illustration (1902) by
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After staying the night, Thor wakes up and gets dressed before the break of dawn. Thor takes his hammer
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doing so would be demeaning, considering Thor's weakness. Útgarða-Loki then calls for his nurse
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Thor issues blows to the sleeping Skrýmir while the group looks on in an illustration (1842) by
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stay a night at their farmstead and there Thor shares with the family the meat of his goats,
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Thor, Loki, Þjálfi, and Röskva ride in Thor's goat-driven chariot in an illustration by
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From the farm, Thor, Loki, Þjálfi, and Röskva head out to a vast forest in the realm of
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483:). The cat that Thor attempted to lift was in actuality the world serpent,
186:", has been proposed. The name also appears as a personal name on over 12
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Roskva and
Thialfi (Alfi) appear as major characters in the junior novel
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derives from Old Norse "rǫskr", meaning 'fast, quick, brave, skilled'.
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110:, Þjálfi and Röskva are the children of peasant farmers. Thor and
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While Röskva is absent, Þjálfi receives a single mention in the
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With clubs of iron they threatened, and
Thjalfi they drove off.
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the peasant family to share the meal with him and they do so.
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in disguise) that he fought women in Hlesey (now the island
567:Þjálfi and Röskva are two major characters in the Danish
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Echoes of
Valhalla: The Afterlife of the Eddas and Sagas
632:
Viking Myths and Sagas: Retold from
Ancient Norse Texts
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with iron clubs threatened me, and drove away Thiâlfi.
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They crushed my ship, which with props I had secured,
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436:it would be better for them to turn back now, for
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369:reluctantly relates a tale in which Thor and
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311:Both Þjálfi and Röskva are mentioned in the
284:She-wolves they were like, and women little;
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79:. Þjálfi receives a single mention in the
260:She-wolves they were, and scarcely women.
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365:(chapter 44), the enthroned figure of
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293:What, Harbarth, didst thou the while?
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851:The American-Scandinavian Foundation
900:The Elder Edda of Saemund Sigfusson
269:What meanwhile didst thou, Harbard?
178:is unclear. An origin in *þewa-alfa
877:(2007) translated by Angela Hall.
856:Faulkes, Anthony (Trans.) (1995).
227:. In the poem, the god Thor tells
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656:Helgason, Jón Karl (2017-06-15).
610:by author Francesca Simon. 2019
91:, written in the 13th century by
879:Dictionary of Northern Mythology
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629:Kerven, Rosalind (2017-09-15).
190:in Sweden, including runestone
166:with the personal name Þialfi.
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1147:Swastika (Germanic Iron Age)
713:The University of Copenhagen
347:from an 1893 edition of the
1181:Servants in Norse mythology
1099:Tanngrisnir and Tanngnjóstr
116:Tanngrisnir and Tanngnjóstr
27:Siblings in Norse mythology
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573:comics series, and the
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1152:Thor in Marvel Comics
1044:List of names of Thor
820:Faulkes (1995:45–46).
811:Faulkes (1995:44–45).
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757:Faulkes (1995:38–40).
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843:Bellows, Henry Adams
552:by the 10th century
278:Henry Adams Bellows
182:, meaning "serving-
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793:Faulkes (1995:42).
784:Faulkes (1995:41).
766:Faulkes (1995:40).
748:Faulkes (1995:38).
734:Bellows (1923:92).
662:. Reaktion Books.
563:In popular culture
557:Eilífr Goðrúnarson
516:. You can help by
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406:Ludwig von Maydell
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345:Mårten Eskil Winge
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57:[ˈθjɑːlve]
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985:Numerous brothers
898:(Trans.) (1866).
845:(Trans.) (1923).
725:Thorpe (1866:76).
682:Simek (2007:314).
669:978-1-78023-773-2
642:978-0-7858-3555-4
608:The Sleeping Army
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1160:(sculpture)
1142:Jörmungandr
1132:Donar's Oak
883:D.S. Brewer
601:Thor comics
485:Jörmungandr
409: [
349:Poetic Edda
219:Poetic Edda
212:Poetic Edda
104:Poetic Edda
82:Poetic Edda
1079:Bilskirnir
1075:Dwellings
1069:Gríðarvölr
1064:Megingjörð
1059:Járngreipr
836:References
538:Prose Edda
525:April 2012
422:Jötunheimr
420:forest in
357:Prose Edda
314:Prose Edda
306:Prose Edda
188:runestones
128:Jötunheimr
108:Prose Edda
88:Prose Edda
1109:Lightning
1089:Þrúðvangr
1084:Þrúðheimr
1019:Servants
1004:Children
989:Consorts
549:Þórsdrápa
231:(the god
172:etymology
152:Etymology
52:Old Norse
1175:Category
1137:Hrungnir
1125:See also
1050:Arsenal
998:Járnsaxa
979:(Mother)
969:(Father)
963:Parents
862:Everyman
598:Marvel's
587:Ragnarök
570:Valhalla
387:Mjöllnir
229:Hárbarðr
1114:Thunder
1054:Mjölnir
977:Fjörgyn
709:"rǫskr"
696:Rundata
583:Völuspá
536:In the
434:Útgarðr
426:Skrýmir
355:In the
241:Denmark
132:Skrymir
102:In the
64:(O.N.:
18:Thjalfi
1095:Goats
1040:Names
957:Family
889:
868:
666:
639:
380:marrow
317:books
200:Röskva
192:Sö 194
176:Þjálfi
120:marrow
97:skalds
67:Rǫskva
62:Röskva
60:) and
48:Þjálfi
1034:Other
1013:Þrúðr
967:Óðinn
617:Notes
579:Völva
554:skald
540:book
481:tides
413:]
367:Third
359:book
221:poem
196:U 778
164:U 778
1158:Thor
973:Jörð
946:Thor
941:The
887:ISBN
866:ISBN
858:Edda
664:ISBN
637:ISBN
489:Elli
477:Hugi
473:Logi
462:Elli
449:Logi
371:Loki
323:and
237:Læsø
233:Odin
170:The
145:Hugi
112:Loki
77:Thor
993:Sif
975:or
948:in
943:god
596:in
581:in
520:.
239:in
184:elf
42:In
1177::
902:.
885:.
881:.
864:.
860:.
849:.
739:^
711:.
694:–
603:.
589:.
411:de
382:.
329::
99:.
54::
46:,
934:e
927:t
920:v
906:.
853:.
715:.
698:.
672:.
645:.
527:)
523:(
415:.
351:.
180:R
142:(
50:(
38:.
20:)
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