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Loki and says
In chapter 34, High describes Loki, and says that Loki had three children with a female jötunn named Angrboða located in the land of Jötunheimr ; Fenrisúlfr, the serpent Jörmungandr, and the female being Hel.
Loki tells her to be silent, and says that he knows all about her — that Freyja is not lacking in blame, for each of the gods and elves in the hall have been her lover.
She says that Loki is lying, that he is just looking to blather about misdeeds, and since the gods and goddesses are furious at him, he can expect to go home defeated.
Njörðr interjects — he says that a woman having a lover other than her husband is harmless, and he points out that Loki has borne children, and calls Loki a pervert.
Loki says that he will go into the feast, and that, before the end of the feast, he will induce quarrelling among the gods, and " mix their mead with malice.
Breaking the silence, Loki says that, thirsty, he had come to these halls from a long way away to ask the gods for a drink of " the famous mead.
Odin says that Loki must be insane to make Gefjun his enemy, as her wisdom about the fates of men may equal Odin's own.
Frigg, a major goddess and Odin's wife, says that what Loki and Odin did in the ancient past should not be spoken of in front of others, and that ancient matters should always remain hidden.
Freyr himself interrupts at this point, and says that he sees a wolf lying before a river mouth, and that, unless Loki is immediately silent, like the wolf, Loki shall also be bound until Ragnarök.
Byggvir ( referred to in the prose introduction to the poem as a servant of Freyr ) says that if he had as noble a lineage and as an honorable a seat as Freyr, he would grind down Loki, and make all of his limbs lame.
Loki refers to Byggvir in terms of a dog, and says that Byggvir is always found at Freyr's ears, or twittering beneath a grindstone.
The god Heimdallr says that Loki is drunk and witless, and asks Loki why he won't stop speaking.
The goddess Skaði says that while Loki now appears light-hearted and " playing " with his " tail-wagging ," he will soon be bound with his ice-cold son's guts on a sharp rock by the gods.
Loki says that, even if this is his fate, that he was " first and foremost " with the other gods at the killing of Skaði's father, jötnar Þjazi.
Skaði says that, with these events in mind, " baneful advice " will always come from her " sanctuaries and plains " to Loki.
Loki says that Skaði was once gentler in speech to him ( referring to himself as the " son of Laufey ") when Skaði once invited him to her bed ( an event that is unattested elsewhere ), and that such events must be mentioned if they are to recall " shameful deeds.
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 ).
Acknowledging that Thor has arrived, Loki asks Thor why he is raging, and says that Thor won't be so bold to fight against the wolf when he swallows Odin at Ragnarök.

Loki and Odin
But a man called Loki somehow knew it, and came to tell Odin.
King Odin commanded Loki to steal the necklace, so Loki turned into a fly to sneak into Freyja's bower and stole it.
In that poem Bragi at first forbids Loki to enter the hall but is overruled by Odin.
In both the Poetic Edda and Prose Edda, Fenrir is the father of the wolves Sköll and Hati Hróðvitnisson, is a son of Loki, and is foretold to kill the god Odin during the events of Ragnarök, but will in turn be killed by Odin's son Víðarr.
Two of the figures are understood to be Baldr and Odin while both Loki and Hel have been proposed as candidates for the third figure.
In stanza 35 of the Poetic Edda poem Völuspá, a völva tells Odin that, among many other things, she sees Sigyn sitting very unhappily with her bound husband, Loki, under a " grove of hot springs ".
Loki does not respond to Bragi directly, but instead directs his attention to Odin, and states:
Odin then asks his silent son Víðarr to sit up, so that Loki ( here referred to as the " wolf's father ") may sit at the feast, and so that he may not speak words of blame to the gods in Ægir's hall.
Odin responds that even if this is true, Loki ( in a story otherwise unattested ) once spent eight winters beneath the earth as a woman milking cows, and during this time bore children.
Loki counters that Odin once practiced seiðr on the island of Samsey ( now Samsø, Denmark ), and, appearing as a wizard, traveled among mankind, which Loki condemns as perverse.
The prose introduction to Reginsmál details that, while the hero Sigurd was being fostered by Regin, son of Hreidmar, Regin tells him that once the gods Odin, Hœnir, and Loki went to Andvara-falls, which contained many fish.
Loki is mentioned in stanza 14, the final stanza of the poem, where the völva tells Odin to ride home, to be proud of himself, and that no one else will come visit until " Loki is loose, escaped from his bonds " and the onset of Ragnarök.
Gylfi is furthermore informed that when Loki had engendered Hel, she was cast into Niflheimr by Odin:
In Norse mythology, Ragnarök (, or ), typically spelled Ragnarǫk in the handwritten scripts, is a series of future events, including a great battle foretold to ultimately result in the death of a number of major figures ( including the gods Odin, Thor, Týr, Freyr, Heimdallr, and Loki ), the occurrence of various natural disasters, and the subsequent submersion of the world in water.
In stanza 35 of the Poetic Edda poem Völuspá, a Völva tells Odin that, amongst many other things, she sees Sigyn sitting very unhappily with her bound husband, Loki, under a " grove of hot springs ".
Gylfaginning ( 20. ff ) gives a list of twelve male aesir, not including Odin their chief, nor including Loki, " whom some call the backbiter of the asas ":
Regarding the accusations that Loki makes to Sif in Lokasenna, Carolyne Larrington says that Sif is not elsewhere attested as unfaithful, though notes that Odin makes a similar accusation in Hárbarðsljóð, and theorizes a potential connection between the story of Loki cutting off Sif's hair with these references.

Loki and does
In verse, after Loki has flyted with the goddess Frigg, Freyja interjects, telling Loki that he is insane for dredging up his terrible deeds, and that Frigg knows the fate of everyone, though she does not tell it.
The goddess Freyja declares that Loki must be mad, stating that Frigg knows all fate, yet she does not speak it.
Loki tells him to be silent, that Byggvir does not know how to apportion food among men, and that he hides among the straw and dais when men go to battle.
In response to Thor, Loki says that he " spoke before the Æsir ," and " before the sons of the Æsir " what his " spirit urged " him to say, yet before Thor alone he will leave, as he knows that Thor does strike.
Loki responds by asking Andvari " what requital " does mankind get if " they wound each other with words ".
Víðarr does so, and then Loki toasts the Æsir before beginning his flyting.
The text says that Loki's other son, Narfi, was turned into a wolf, but does not make clear that he tears his brother apart ; also in the Gylfaginning version it is a son of Loki named Váli whom the Æsir transform into a wolf and who kills Narfi.
Frigg does not deny the charge from Loki, and in this story Freyja intervenes, warning Loki that Frigg has powers of prophecy.
Another quality of Loki is that his sense of foresight is quite remarkable, as he can usually figure things out way before anyone else does ( though Yamino, Fenrir, and Ecchan figured out who Spica really was long before Loki did ).
" ( strange mystery ) as often as she does in the anime and seems to have a sharper sense ( being able to know Loki is " different " and wanting to ask him who or what he was in the seventeenth chapter ).
She loves Loki, but Loki does not return the feelings.
Despite this, Freya refuses to give up and does everything she can to put Loki into situations where she can take advantage of him.
Ella does not believe Loki when Loki tells her that Gaia is fearless.

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