Pastebin
API
tools
faq
paste
Login
Sign up
Please fix the following errors:
New Paste
Syntax Highlighting
Thor was travelling from the east and he came to an inlet. On the other side of the inlet was the ferryman with his ship. Thor called: 1 ‘Who is that lad of lads who stands on that side of the inlet?’* He answered: 2 ‘Who is that churl of churls who calls over the gulf?’ Thor said: 3 ‘Ferry me over the water and I’ll feed you in the morning; I’ve a basket on my back, no food could be better; I ate at leisure before I left home, herrings and oatmeal—I’ve eaten my fill of these.’ The ferryman said: 4 ‘As your morning’s work you praise your breakfast! You don’t know clearly what’s before you; sad is your household, I think your mother’s dead.’* Thor said: 5 ‘What you say now would seem great news to most people, that my mother is dead.’ The ferryman said: 6 ‘It doesn’t look as if you own three decent farms; barelegged you stand, wearing your beggar’s gear, you don’t even have any breeches.’ Thor said: 7 ‘Steer the oaken ship here— I’ll direct you to the landing stage— anyway, who owns the ship which you keep next to the bank?’ The ferryman said: 8 ‘Hildolf he’s called, the man who ordered me to keep it, that warrior wise in counsel, who lives in Counsel-island Sound; he told me not to ferry highwaymen or horse-thieves but good men alone, and those whom I recognized clearly; tell me your name if you want to cross the inlet.’ Thor said: 9 ‘I’d tell my name, even if I were outlawed, and my origin to all: I am Odin’s son, brother of Meili, father of Magni, powerful gods-leader; with Thor you converse here! This I’ll ask now, what you are called.’ The ferryman said: 10 ‘I am called Harbard, I seldom conceal my name.’ Thor said: 11 ‘Why should you conceal your name, unless you are in a dispute?’ Harbard said: 12 ‘Whether or not I have a dispute, I’d defend my life from such as you are, unless I were doomed.’ Thor said: 13 ‘It seems to me that it’d be an unpleasant labour to wade over the water to you, and wet my prick.* I’ll pay you back, you babe in arms, for your jeering words, if I get over the water.’ Harbard said: 14 ‘Here I’ll stand and wait for you; you’ve encountered no tougher man since Hrungnir’s death.’* Thor said: 15 ‘This is what you’re talking about: that Hrungnir and I fought— the great-spirited giant whose head was made of stone: and yet I brought him down and made him fall before me. What were you doing meanwhile, Harbard?’ Harbard said: 16 ‘I was with Fiolvar five winters long on that island called All-green; we fought there and wreaked slaughter, we tried out many things, had our choice of girls.’ Thor said: 17 ‘How did it turn out with your women?’ Harbard said: 18 ‘We had frisky women, if only they were well-disposed to us; we had clever women, if only they were faithful to us; they wound a rope out of sand, and from a deep valley they dug out the ground; only I was superior to them all with my shrewdness; I slept with the seven sisters,* and I got all their hearts, and pleasure from them. What were you doing meanwhile, Thor?’ Thor said: 19 ‘I killed Thiazi, the powerful-minded giant,* I threw up the eyes of Allvaldi’s son* into the bright heaven; they are the greatest sign of my deeds, those which since all men can see. What were you doing meanwhile, Harbard?’ Harbard said: 20 ‘Mighty love-spells I used on the witches, those whom I seduced from their men; a tough giant I think Hlebard was, he gave me a magic twig, and I bewitched him out of his wits.’ Thor said: 21 ‘Malevolently you repaid him for his good gifts.’ Harbard said: 22 ‘One oak-tree thrives when another is stripped, each is for himself in such matters. What were you doing meanwhile, Thor?’ Thor said: 23 ‘I was in the east, and I fought against giants, malicious women, who roamed in the mountains; great would be the giant race if they all survived: there’d be no humans within Midgard. What were you doing meanwhile, Harbard?’ Harbard said: 24 ‘I was in Valland, and I followed the war, I incited the princes, never reconciled them; Odin owns the nobles who fall in battle and Thor owns the race of thralls.’ Thor said: 25 ‘Unequally you’d share out warriors among the Æsir, if you had as much power as you’d like.’ Harbard said: 26 ‘Thor has quite enough strength, and no guts; in fear and cowardice you were stuffed in a glove,* and you didn’t then seem like Thor; you dared in your terror neither to sneeze nor fart in case Fialar might hear.’ Thor said: 27 ‘Harbard, you pervert! I would knock you into hell if I could stretch over the water.’ Harbard said: 28 ‘Why should you stretch over the water, since we have no dispute? What were you doing meanwhile, Thor?’ Thor said: 29 ‘I was in the east and I defended the river where Svarang’s sons attacked me;* they pelted me with stones, yet they didn’t rejoice in advantage, before me they had to sue first for peace. What were you doing meanwhile, Harbard?’ Harbard said: 30 ‘I was in the east and I was consorting with someone, I sported with a linen-white lady and set up a secret meeting, I made the gold-bright one happy, the girl enjoyed her pleasure.’ Thor said: 31 ‘You had good dealings with the girl there.’ Harbard said: 32 ‘I could have done with your help, Thor, to hold the linen-white girl.’ Thor said: 33 ‘I’d have helped you with that, if I could have managed it.’ Harbard said: 34 ‘I’d have trusted you then, if you didn’t betray my trust.’ Thor said: 35 ‘I’m not a heel-biter like an old leather shoe in spring.’ Harbard said: 36 ‘What were you doing meanwhile, Thor?’ Thor said: 37 ‘Berserk women I battled in Hlesey; they’d done the worst things, betrayed the whole people.’ Harbard said: 38 ‘That was a shameful deed, Thor, to fight against women.’ Thor said: 39 ‘They were she-wolves, and scarcely women, they rattled my ship which I’d beached on trestles, they threatened me with an iron club, and chased Thialfi. What were you doing meanwhile, Harbard?’ Harbard said: 40 ‘I was in the army, which set out here to raise battle-banners and to redden the spear.’ Thor said: 41 ‘This is tantamount to saying that you set out to bring us harm.’ Harbard said: 42 ‘I’ll compensate you for that with an arm-ring* which arbitrators use, those who want to settle things between us.’ Thor said: 43 ‘Where did you find such despicable words? I’ve never heard words more despicable!’ Harbard said: 44 ‘I learned them from those ancient men who have their home in the woods.’* Thor said: 45 ‘That’s giving a good name to burial cairns, when you call them the “home in the woods”.’ Harbard said: 46 ‘That’s how I talk of such things.’ Thor said: 47 ‘Your glibness with words will bring evil upon you, if I decide to wade over the sound; louder than the wolf I think you’ll howl, if you get a blow from my hammer.’ Harbard said: 48 ‘Sif has a lover at home, he’s the one you want to meet,* that’s the test of strength you ought to attempt, that’s more pressing for you.’ Thor said: 49 ‘You say just what comes into your mouth, so that it seems the worst to me, coward, I think you’re lying.’ Harbard said: 50 ‘Truth I think I’m saying, you’re slow in your journey, you’d now be well on your way, Thor, if you’d travelled by day and night.’ Thor said: 51 ‘Harbard, you pervert, you’ve held me up too long!’ Harbard said: 52 ‘I never thought Asa-Thor would let a herdsman hold up his journeys.’ Thor said: 53 ‘I’ll give you some advice now: row the boat here, let’s stop this quarrelling, come and meet Magni’s father!’ Harbard said: 54 ‘Go further away from the inlet, you shall be refused passage!’ Thor said: 55 ‘Show me the way since you won’t ferry me over the water!’ Harbard said: 56 ‘It’s a little thing to refuse: it’s a long time to travel; a while to the stock, another to the stone, keep to the left-hand road until you come to Verland; there Fiorgyn will meet Thor, her son,* and she will show him the kinsmen’s road, to get to Odin’s land.’ Thor said: 57 ‘Can I get there today?’ Harbard said: 58 ‘With toil and difficulty you’ll get there, while the sun’s in the sky, since I think it’s thawing.’ Thor said: 59 ‘Short will our conversation be now, since you answer me only with jeers. I’ll reward you for refusing to ferry me, if we meet another time.’ Harbard said: 60 ‘Go where the monsters’ll get you!’ - Poetic Edda, Harbardzljod
Optional Paste Settings
Category:
None
Cryptocurrency
Cybersecurity
Fixit
Food
Gaming
Haiku
Help
History
Housing
Jokes
Legal
Money
Movies
Music
Pets
Photo
Science
Software
Source Code
Spirit
Sports
Travel
TV
Writing
Tags:
Syntax Highlighting:
None
Bash
C
C#
C++
CSS
HTML
JSON
Java
JavaScript
Lua
Markdown (PRO members only)
Objective C
PHP
Perl
Python
Ruby
Swift
4CS
6502 ACME Cross Assembler
6502 Kick Assembler
6502 TASM/64TASS
ABAP
AIMMS
ALGOL 68
APT Sources
ARM
ASM (NASM)
ASP
ActionScript
ActionScript 3
Ada
Apache Log
AppleScript
Arduino
Asymptote
AutoIt
Autohotkey
Avisynth
Awk
BASCOM AVR
BNF
BOO
Bash
Basic4GL
Batch
BibTeX
Blitz Basic
Blitz3D
BlitzMax
BrainFuck
C
C (WinAPI)
C Intermediate Language
C for Macs
C#
C++
C++ (WinAPI)
C++ (with Qt extensions)
C: Loadrunner
CAD DCL
CAD Lisp
CFDG
CMake
COBOL
CSS
Ceylon
ChaiScript
Chapel
Clojure
Clone C
Clone C++
CoffeeScript
ColdFusion
Cuesheet
D
DCL
DCPU-16
DCS
DIV
DOT
Dart
Delphi
Delphi Prism (Oxygene)
Diff
E
ECMAScript
EPC
Easytrieve
Eiffel
Email
Erlang
Euphoria
F#
FO Language
Falcon
Filemaker
Formula One
Fortran
FreeBasic
FreeSWITCH
GAMBAS
GDB
GDScript
Game Maker
Genero
Genie
GetText
Go
Godot GLSL
Groovy
GwBasic
HQ9 Plus
HTML
HTML 5
Haskell
Haxe
HicEst
IDL
INI file
INTERCAL
IO
ISPF Panel Definition
Icon
Inno Script
J
JCL
JSON
Java
Java 5
JavaScript
Julia
KSP (Kontakt Script)
KiXtart
Kotlin
LDIF
LLVM
LOL Code
LScript
Latex
Liberty BASIC
Linden Scripting
Lisp
Loco Basic
Logtalk
Lotus Formulas
Lotus Script
Lua
M68000 Assembler
MIX Assembler
MK-61/52
MPASM
MXML
MagikSF
Make
MapBasic
Markdown (PRO members only)
MatLab
Mercury
MetaPost
Modula 2
Modula 3
Motorola 68000 HiSoft Dev
MySQL
Nagios
NetRexx
Nginx
Nim
NullSoft Installer
OCaml
OCaml Brief
Oberon 2
Objeck Programming Langua
Objective C
Octave
Open Object Rexx
OpenBSD PACKET FILTER
OpenGL Shading
Openoffice BASIC
Oracle 11
Oracle 8
Oz
PARI/GP
PCRE
PHP
PHP Brief
PL/I
PL/SQL
POV-Ray
ParaSail
Pascal
Pawn
Per
Perl
Perl 6
Phix
Pic 16
Pike
Pixel Bender
PostScript
PostgreSQL
PowerBuilder
PowerShell
ProFTPd
Progress
Prolog
Properties
ProvideX
Puppet
PureBasic
PyCon
Python
Python for S60
QBasic
QML
R
RBScript
REBOL
REG
RPM Spec
Racket
Rails
Rexx
Robots
Roff Manpage
Ruby
Ruby Gnuplot
Rust
SAS
SCL
SPARK
SPARQL
SQF
SQL
SSH Config
Scala
Scheme
Scilab
SdlBasic
Smalltalk
Smarty
StandardML
StoneScript
SuperCollider
Swift
SystemVerilog
T-SQL
TCL
TeXgraph
Tera Term
TypeScript
TypoScript
UPC
Unicon
UnrealScript
Urbi
VB.NET
VBScript
VHDL
VIM
Vala
Vedit
VeriLog
Visual Pro Log
VisualBasic
VisualFoxPro
WHOIS
WhiteSpace
Winbatch
XBasic
XML
XPP
Xojo
Xorg Config
YAML
YARA
Z80 Assembler
ZXBasic
autoconf
jQuery
mIRC
newLISP
q/kdb+
thinBasic
Paste Expiration:
Never
Burn after read
10 Minutes
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
2 Weeks
1 Month
6 Months
1 Year
Paste Exposure:
Public
Unlisted
Private
Folder:
(members only)
Password
NEW
Enabled
Disabled
Burn after read
NEW
Paste Name / Title:
Create New Paste
Hello
Guest
Sign Up
or
Login
Sign in with Facebook
Sign in with Twitter
Sign in with Google
You are currently not logged in, this means you can not edit or delete anything you paste.
Sign Up
or
Login
Public Pastes
Decentralized Moneys
39 min ago | 0.42 KB
120 million in 5 years
1 hour ago | 0.12 KB
December smells like money
1 hour ago | 0.07 KB
Crypto Liquidity Pools
1 hour ago | 0.47 KB
Trustless Finance
2 hours ago | 0.51 KB
The Lunar Kitsune - Yohana Tsukiko
3 hours ago | 21.38 KB
Crypto profits are insane
3 hours ago | 0.12 KB
Decentralized Money
3 hours ago | 0.42 KB
We use cookies for various purposes including analytics. By continuing to use Pastebin, you agree to our use of cookies as described in the
Cookies Policy
.
OK, I Understand
Not a member of Pastebin yet?
Sign Up
, it unlocks many cool features!