Ragnarok : the age of fire and gravel

THE BRIDGE. 381

the godlike race had given lands for the ice-giants to dwell in. And now we read that this Asa-bridge, this Bifrost, reached from earth to heaven, to wit, across this gulf that separated the island from the colonies of the ice-giants. And now we learn that, if this bridge were not defended by a divine defense, these troublesome ice-giants ‘would go up to heaven ; that is to say, the bold Northmen would march across it from Great Britain and Ireland to the Azores, to wit, to Atlantis. Surely all this could not apply to the rainbow.

_ But we read a little further. Har is reciting to Ganglere the wonders of the heavenly land, and is describing its golden palaces, and its mixed population of dark and light colored races, and he says:

“Furthermore, there is a dwelling, by name Himinbjorg, which stands at the end of heaven, where the BiFrost bridge is united with heaven.”

And then we read of Heimdal, one of the gods who was subsequently killed by the comet :

“He dwells in a place called Himinbjorg, near Bifrost. He is the ward,” (warder, guardian,) “of the gods, and sits at the end of heaven, guarding the bridge against the mountain-giants. He needs less sleep than a bird ; sees an hundred miles around him, and as well by night as by day. His teeth are of gold.”

This reads something like a barbarian’s recollection of a race that practiced dentistry and used telescopes. We know that gold filling has been found in the teeth of ancient Egyptians and Peruvians, and that telescopic lenses were found in the ruins of Babylon. :

But here we have Bifrost, a bridge, but not a continuous structure, interrupted in places by water, reaching from Europe to some Atlantic island. And the islandpeople regarded it very much as some of the English look