Váli (son of Odin)
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In Norse mythology, Váli is a son of the god Odin and the giantess Rindr. He was birthed for the sole purpose of killing Höðr as revenge for Höðr's accidental murder of his half-brother, Baldr. He grew to full adulthood within one day of his birth, and slew Höðr. Váli is fated to survive Ragnarök.
The Váli myth is referred to in Baldrs draumar:
- Rindr will bear Váli
- in western halls;
- that son of Óðinn
- will kill when one night old—
- he will not wash hand,
- nor comb head,
- before he bears to the pyre
- Baldr's adversary. - Ursula Dronke's translation
- There formed from that stem,
- which was slender-seeming,
- a shaft of anguish, perilous:
- Hǫðr started shooting.
- A brother of Baldr
- was born quickly:
- he started—Óðinn's son—
- slaying, at one night old.
The two figures named Váli may originally have been conceived of as the same being.
In Gesta Danorum the figure Bous corresponds to Váli.
References
- Dronke, Ursula (1997). The Poetic Edda : Volume II : Mythological Poems. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Finnur Jónsson (1913). Goðafræði Norðmanna og Íslendinga eftir heimildum. Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmentafjelag.
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