The myth of Lokis monstrous children Iseult Gillespie

Odin, the king of Asgard,
was plagued by nightmares.

Three fearsome figures haunted his dreams:

a massive, writhing shadow;

a shambling, rotting corpse;

and worst of all,
a monstrous beast with a deadly bite.

Night after night, the creatures
besieged the king.

And although their true forms
were unknown to him,

he could tell they were related
to Asgard’s most persistent problem:

Loki.

Despite having settled down
with his wife and sons,

Loki had been sneaking off to visit
the giantess Angrboda.

And when the king learned this affair
had produced three children,

he was filled with unease.

Odin summoned Thor and Tyr,
two of his bravest warriors,

to travel to Jotunheim to capture
Loki’s secret children.

Upon arriving at Angrboda’s home,

the pair were immediately accosted
by Loki’s first child,

a serpent named Jörmungandr.

The God of Thunder dodged
the snake’s venom

and swiftly bound him to a pine tree.

The second child, Hel, appeared as
a glowing young woman from the right

and a moldering corpse from the left.

Her flesh flaked onto the ground
as she silently submitted to her captors.

Finally, the third child leapt at Tyr.

The small wolf was fierce but harmless.

Tyr playfully cuffed its claws
and stowed the cub in his pocket.

Back in Asgard, the warriors
presented their prisoners

and fearful recognition
seized Odin’s heart.

Though these three were meager reflections
of his dark dreams,

the king was determined to dispose
of them before his visions came true.

First, he banished Jörmungandr
to the sea at the edge of the world.

Then he sent Hel deep below the earth
to join her fellow corpses.

But the wolf, named Fenrir,
presented a challenge.

He’d already grown strong
enough to threaten the gods,

so Odin took a more patient approach.

For months, he supervised the creature,
watching Fenrir grow

from a cub to a wolf to a beast
who spoke with the voice of a God.

Tyr visited frequently and found Fenrir
to be strong and clever.

But as their bond deepened,
Odin’s fear only grew.

One day, Odin forged his heaviest chains

and hauled them to Fenrir
with a challenge.

He would bind the wolf
to test his growing strength.

Fenrir eagerly accepted the challenge
and splintered the metal like old wood.

Odin returned to the forge, crafting
shackles that no man could lift alone.

These sturdy chains gave Fenrir pause.

But with an encouraging wink from Tyr,
he accepted the challenge.

The beast strained for a moment
and then shattered his restraints

into a thousand pieces.

Desperate, Odin sought help
from the most skilled makers of all:

the Dwarves.

Rather than metal, they sought
the rarest ingredients;

from feline footsteps and fish breath

to the sinews of mountains
and mighty bears.

With these, the Dwarves crafted Gleipnir,

an unbreakable chain in the guise
of fine thread.

When Odin challenged Fenrir a third time,
the wolf laughed.

But as he examined the thread
more closely,

Fenrir sensed Odin’s trickery
and began to feel some fear himself.

Fenrir struck a deal.

He would accept the challenge,

but only if a god kept their hand
in his mouth throughout.

With a heavy heart, Tyr volunteered.

The gods bound the wolf and as he strained
Gleipnir only grew tighter.

Fenrir felt the agony of betrayal—

not only from Odin,
but from his reluctant friend.

With a howl of fury,
he bit through Tyr’s wrist

and vowed to destroy Odin
for tricking him.

Watching his nightmare come to life,

Odin thrust Tyr’s blade
between Fenrir jaws,

releasing a torrent of saliva
that became a furious river.

While the beast was not dead,
he was bound,

and Odin celebrated his victory over fate.

But in truth, his actions had
only sealed his doom.

Beneath the waves,
Jörmungandr grew to encircle the world.

Hel rose to rule the dead
as queen of the Underworld.

And every day, Fenrir strained
a little more against his chains,

inching ever closer to his bloody revenge.