FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   >>  
r. _Grovel_, to crouch low on the ground. _Guest-fain_, hospitable, ready to welcome guests. _Guile_, cunning, cleverness used for an evil purpose. _Guise_, appearance, kind, dress, e.g. "such was the guise of his raiment;" "fair-clad in hunter's guise." _Halers of the hawsers_, pullers of the ropes, _i.e._ seamen. _Hallow_, to set apart for a solemn purpose, to make holy, e.g. I hallow me to Odin for a leader of his host. _Hangings_, tapestry, woven stuff on which pictures or figures of gods and heroes were embroidered, used to decorate the walls of houses, e.g. "The walls were strange and wondrous with noble stories told;" "the gods on the hangings stirred." _Harness_, armour. _Hauberk_, a breast-plate. _Heave_, to rise and fall, sometimes merely to rise, e.g. "The doom ... heaves up dim through the gloom." _High-seat_, the dais or chief seat where the master of a house and his principal guests sat. _High-tide_, time of festival. _Hindfell_, the word means "deer-mountain," since "fell" means any hill, and "hind" is the word we still use for a deer. _Hireling_, a servant. _Hist_, to give attention, to listen. _Hithermost_, nearest. _Hoard_, a store. Generally used of a treasure which the owner keeps selfishly, e.g. Fafnir's wisdom is called "grudged and hoarded wisdom," and his gold the "heavy hoard." _Hoenir_, one of Odin's sons; a wise and blameless god who, the others believed, would return to reign over a new heaven and a new earth when Ragnarok was past. _Holt_, a woodland. _Hoppled_, fettered. _Horse-fed_, cropped by horses. _Horse-herd_, keeper of horses. "Herd" means any keeper of animals, and is generally joined with other words, e.g. shepherd, swine-herd. _Huddled_, twisted together in a small space. _Intent_, intention, purpose. In the passage, "For whom is the blood-point whetted and the edge of thine intent?" the meaning is, "Against whom is thy sword sharpened, and against whom is thy purpose so keen?" _Kin_, family, relations. _Kin of the Wolf_, Loki and his children, one of whom was a monstrous wolf which was to fight against the gods at Ragnarok. _Kine_, cattle. _Kirtle_, a long cloak. _Lack_, loss, e.g. "He knew there was ruin and lack." "The lack that made him loth" is used to describe the ring of Andvari which he was unwilling to give up with the rest of his treasure to Loki. n. "To be without," or, "to be found wanting."
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   >>  



Top keywords:
purpose
 

Ragnarok

 

wisdom

 
treasure
 

keeper

 

horses

 

guests

 

woodland

 

Andvari

 

unwilling


Hoppled

 
fettered
 

animals

 
describe
 
cropped
 

heaven

 

Hoenir

 

wanting

 

hoarded

 

blameless


return

 

believed

 

joined

 

Against

 

sharpened

 
meaning
 

intent

 

Kirtle

 

children

 

monstrous


relations

 

cattle

 
family
 

grudged

 

Huddled

 

twisted

 

shepherd

 

Intent

 

whetted

 

intention


passage
 
generally
 

hallow

 

solemn

 

seamen

 
Hallow
 

leader

 
embroidered
 
heroes
 

decorate