Page:Curious myths of the Middle Ages (1876).djvu/258

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Purgatory. One is the house of gloom, another of men with sharp swords, another of heat, one of cold, one of the mansions is haunted by blood-sucking bats, another is the den of ferocious tigers[1]. Odin, in Northern Mythology, has mansions of cold and heat[2]; and Hell’s abode is thus described:— “In Niflheim she possesses a habitation protected by exceedingly high walls and strongly barred gates. Her hall is called Elvidnir; Hunger is her table; Starvation, her knife; Delay, her man; Slowness, her maid; Precipice, her threshold; Care, her bed; and Burning Anguish forms the hangings of her apartment[3].” Into this the author of the Solarliod, in the Elder Edda, is supposed to have descended. This curious poem is attributed by some to Soemund the Wise (d. 1131), and is certainly not later. The composition exhibits a strange mixture of Christianity and Heathenism, whence it would seem that the poet’s own religion was in a transition state:—

  1. Popul-Vuh: Brasseur de Boubourg, Paris, 1861; lib. ii. 7—14.
  2. Hrolf’s Saga Kráka, cap. 39; in Fornm. Sögur I., pp. 77—79.
  3. Prose Edda, c. 33.