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Sif, wife of Thor, goes forth and pours Loki a glass of mead into a crystal cup in a prose narrative.
Continuing the poem, Sif welcomes Loki and invites him to take a crystal cup filled with ancient mead, and says that among the children of the Æsir, she is singularly blameless.
Loki " takes the horn ," drinks it, and says that she would be, if it were so, and states that Sif had a lover beside Thor, namely, Loki himself ( an event that is otherwise unattested ).
Beyla ( referred to in the prose introduction to the poem as a servant of Freyr ) says that all of the mountains are shaking, that she thinks Thor must be on his way home, and when Thor arrives he will bring peace to those that quarrel there.
Loki tells Beyla to be silent, that she is " much imbued with malice ," that no worse female has ever been among the " Æsir's children ," and calling her a bad " serving-wench.

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