Skírnir

She will weep rather than feel joy, and she will live the rest of her life in misery with a three-headed thurs or otherwise be without a man altogether.

He tells her that the thurs's name who will own her below the gates of Nágrind is Hrímgrímnir and that there, at the roots of the world, the finest thing Gerðr will be given to drink is goat urine.

[3] Gerðr responds by telling to Skírnir to take a crystal cup containing ancient mead, noting that she thought she would never love one of the Vanir, which indicates her intention to go with him.

After the vicious wolf Fenrir evades capture, Skirnir visits the mountain dwarves, known for their mining and smithing.

Gylfaginning also retells the narrative of Skírnismál in prose, quoting from the poem and placing great emphasis on Freyr giving his sword to Skírnir.

[5] The Skirnir Mountains, a group of nunataks along the King Frederick VI Coast in the Sermersooq municipality of southeast Greenland also take their name from Skírnir.

An illustration from Fredrik Sander 's 1893 Swedish edition of the Poetic Edda