**Stanza 5:** Máni is mentioned as companion of Sól.
‘Sól, companion of Máni, cast from the south
her right hand over the sky-horse-deer(?);
Sól did not know where she had halls,
stars did not know where they had stations,
Máni did not know what might he had
**Stanza 22-23:** Óðinn ask Vafþrúðnir where Sól and Máni come from.
Óðinn said:
22. ‘Say this secondly, if your mind is strong
and you, Vafþrúðnir, know:
whence Máni came, so that he journeys over men,
and Sól the same.’
Vafþrúðnir said:
23. ‘He’s called Mundilfæri, he’s the father of Máni,
and of Sól the same;
they must turn the sky each day,
as a year-reckoning for men.
**Stanza 39:** The wolf Hati pursues the moon.
‘Skǫll is the name of the wolf which pursues the shiny-faced god
to the shelter of the wood;
and the other, Hati, he is Hróðvitnir’s son,
he must be before the shining bride of the sky.
**Stanza 13-14:** Thor ask Alvíss the different names of the moon.
13. ‘Tell me this, Alvíss — I expect, dwarf, that you know
all the history of living beings:
how the moon, which men see,
is named in each world.’
14. ‘It’s named máni37 among men, but mýlinn38 among gods,
in Hel they call it hverfanda hvél,
giants skyndir, and dwarves skin,
elves call it ártali.’
Chapter 10-12(p.14): Mani is introduced as the son of Mundilfæri and brother of Sol. The gods set him in the sky to guide the moon's course. He took two children from the earth, Bil and Hjúki, who accompany him. He is pursued by the wolf Hati.
‘There was a person whose name was Mundilfaeri who had two children. They were so fair and beautiful that he called the one Moon and his daughter Sol [sun]... Moon guides the course of the moon and controls its waxing and waning. He took two children from the earth called Bil and Hiuki... These children go with Moon, as can be seen from earth.’
[...]
‘...and the one that is running ahead of her is called Hati Hrodvitnisson, and he is trying to catch the moon, and that will happen.’
Chapter 51(p.53): It is foretold that during Ragnarok, the wolf will finally catch the moon.
Then the other wolf will catch the moon, and he also will cause much mischief.
Chapter 25-29(p.93): A kenning for the sun is "sister of Moon," and a verse by Skuli Thorsteinsson mentions the moon.
How shall the sun be referred to? By calling it daughter of Mundilfæri, sister of Moon...
God-blithe bedfellow of Glen steps to her divine sanctuary with brightness; then descends the good light of grey-clad moon.