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Introductory Note:
The Thrymskvitha is found only in the Codex Regius, where it follows the Lokasenna. Snorri does not quote
from it, nor, rather oddly, does the story occur in the Prose Edda.
Artistically the Thrymskvitha is one of the best, as it is, next to the Voluspo, the most famous, of the entire collection.
It has, indeed, been called "the finest ballad in the world," and not without some reason. Its swift, vigorous action, the sharpness of its
characterization and the humor of the central situation combine to make it one of the most vivid short narrative poems ever composed. Of course
we know nothing specific of its author, but there can be no question that he was a poet of extraordinary ability. The poem assumed its present
form, most critics agree, somewhere about 900, and thus it is one of the oldest in the collection. It has been suggested, on the basis of stylistic
similarity, that its author may also have composed the Skirnismol, and possibly Baldrs Draumar. There is also some resemblance between the
Thrymskvitha and the Lokasenna (note, in this connection, Bugge's suggestion that the Skirnismol and the Lokasenna may have been by the same man),
and it is not impossible that all four poems have a single authorship.
The Thrymskvitha has been preserved in excellent condition, without any serious gaps or interpolations. In striking contrast to many of
the poems, it contains no prose narrative links, the story being told in narrative verse--a rare phenomenon in the poems of the Edda.
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