- Þórsdrápa
"Þórsdrápa" ("Thorsdrapa", "Lay of
Thor ") is a skaldic poem byEilífr Goðrúnarson , a poet in the service of JarlHákon Sigurðarson . The poem is noted for its creative use ofkenning s and other metaphorical devices, as well as its labyrinthine complexity.Narrative synopsis
The principal subject of the poem is a narrative relating as to how Thor came by his hammer,
Mjolnir ("Mjunicode|ǫlnir"), and, as is usually the case in stories with Thor, how the giants came off worse. Behind it all, of course, isLoki , who gulls Thor into a confrontation with the giantGeirrod ("Geirrunicode|ǫðr"). With the aid of some magical gifts from the giantess Grid ("Gríðr"), Thor, accompanied by Þjálfi, defeats Geirrod and kills a number of other giants.The narrative begins with an account of the trickery of Loki in inciting Thor to make war again against the giants; Þjálfi joins up with Thor but Loki is altogether more reluctant to the point of not going. The narrative then details Thor's (highly metaphorical) crossing of the oceans to
Jötunheimr , with Þjálfi hanging onto his waist band. Being adrapa ("drápa") the poem is rich in praise of Thor and Þjálfi's valour in making the difficult crossing.They are immediately set upon by a gang of giants from the cave of Geirrod, but Thor and Þjálfi quickly put them to flight. Thor is then brought into Geirrod's house whereupon the seat he is sitting in is raised to the ceiling crushing him, however he strikes the ceiling with the stick gifted to him by Grid and he descends crushing two giantesses, daughters of Geirrod, beneath him.
Geirrod then invites Thor to play a game, and throws a lump of molten iron at him which he (Thor) catches in his iron gloves. Geirrod hides behind a pillar and then Thor throws the iron through the pillar and giant.
Analogues
The myth related in the poem is also preserved in prose form by
Snorri Sturluson in the "Skáldskaparmál " and a looser analogue is found inSaxo Grammaticus ' "Gesta Danorum ". There are a number of discrepancies between Snorri's and Eilífr's versions of the myth; for exampleÞjálfi is not present in the story in Snorri's "Edda" while he has a prominent role in "Þórsdrápa".Other "Þórsdrápur"
Two (fragments of) poems are sometimes referred to as "Þórsdrápa":
* three half-stanzas written by
Eysteinn Valdason in the 10th century relating Thor's fishing expedition to killJörmungandr ;
* one stanza and two verses composed byÞorbjörn dísarskáld in the 10th or 11th century, the stanza consisting of a list of giants and giantesses killed by Thor.Both were preserved only in the "
Skáldskaparmál " (4).References
* [http://www.hi.is/~eybjorn/ugm/thorsd00.html Jörmungrund: Þórsdrápa] Old Norse text with English translation and detailed analysis.
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