Þökk
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Þökk ("Thanks") is a giantess in Norse mythology, presumed to be Loki in disguise, who refuses to weep for the slain Baldr, thus forcing him to stay in Hel.
After Baldr was killed, Hermóðr rode to Hel. Hel, the ruler of the realm of the dead, agreed that Baldr should go back to the living if all things in the world wept for him. So the Æsir sent messengers all over the word, and all wept for him but:
- "Then, when the messengers went home, having well wrought their errand, they found, in a certain cave, where a giantess sat: she called herself Thökk. They prayed her to weep Baldr out of Hel; she answered:
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- Thökk will weep
- waterless tears
- For Baldr's bale-fare;
- Living or dead,
- I loved not the churl's son;
- Let Hel hold to that she hath![1]
- And men deem that she who was there was Loki Laufeyarson, who hath wrought most ill among the Æsir."
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- —Gylfaginning (49), Brodeur's translation[2]
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[edit] Notes
- ^ Where this stanza comes from is unknown.
- ^ Brodeur, Arthur Gilchrist (trans.). 1916. Snorri Sturluson: The Prose Edda. New York: The American-Scandinavian Foundation.
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