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Svipdagsmol

What grows from the seed  of the tree so great,That fire nor iron shall fell?"
  Fjolsvith spake:32.[1] "Women, sick  with child, shall seekIts fruit to the flames to bear;Then out shall come  what within was hid,And so is it mighty with men."
  Svipdag spake:33. "Now answer me, Fjolsvith,  the question I ask,For now the truth would I know:What cock is he  on the highest bough,That glitters all with gold?"
  Fjolsvith spake:34.[2] "Vithofnir his name,  and now he shinesLike lightning on Mimameith's limbs;And great is the trouble  with which he grievesBoth Surt and Sinmora."

  1. Gering suggests that two stanzas have been lost between stanzas 15 and 16, but the giant's answer fits the question quite well enough. The fruit of Yggdrasil, when cooked, is here assumed to have the power of assuring safe childbirth.
  2. Vithofnir ("Tree-Snake"): apparently identical with either the cock Gollinkambi (cf. Voluspo, 43) or Fjalar (cf. Voluspo, 42), the former of which wakes the gods to battle, and the latter the giants. Surt: the giant mentioned in Voluspo, 52, as ruler of the fire-world; here used to represent the giants in general, who are constantly in terror of the cock's eternal watchfulness. Sinmora: presumably Surt's wife, the giantess who possesses the weapon by which alone the cock Vithofnir may be slain.

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