WORLD OF STORIES FOR KIDS

NORWEGIAN FOLK TALES
The master-smith
IN THE DAYS when the first bigwig and holy Peter used to wander on
earth, they came to a smith's house. He had made a bargain with the devil
that the fiend should have him after seven years, but during that time he
was to be the master of all masters in his trade, and to this bargain both
he and the devil had signed their names. So he had stuck up in great
letters over the door of his forge,
"Here is the master over all masters."
Now when the first bigwig passed by and saw
that, he went in.
"Who are you?" he said to the smith.
"Read what's written over the door," said the
smith; "but maybe you can't read writing. If so, you must wait till some
one comes to help you."
Before the first bigwig had time to answer
him, a man came with his horse, which he begged the smith to shoe.
"Might I have leave to shoe it?" asked the
first bigwig.
"You may try, if you like," said the smith;
"you can't do it so badly that I shall not be able to make it right
again."
So the first bigwig went out and took one leg
off the horse, and laid it in the furnace, and made the shoe red-hot;
after that he turned up the ends of the shoe, and filed down the heads of
the nails, and clenched the points; and then he put back the leg safe and
sound on the horse again. And when he was done with that leg, he took the
other foreleg and did the same with it; and when he was done with that he
took the hind-legs - first the off, and then the near leg, and laid them
in the furnace, making the shoes red-hot, turning up the ends, filing the
heads of the nails, and clenching the points; and after all was done,
putting the legs on the horse again. All the while the smith stood by and
looked on.
"You're not so bad a smith after all," said
he.
"Oh, you think so, do you?" said the first
bigwig.
A little while after came the smith's mother
to the forge, and called him to come home and eat his dinner; she was an
old, old woman, with an ugly crook on her back, and wrinkles in her face,
and it was as much as she could do to crawl along.
"Mark now what you see," said the first
bigwig.
Then he took the woman and laid her in the
furnace, and smithied a lovely young maiden out of her.
"Well," said the smith, "I say now, as I said
before, you are not such a bad smith after all. There it stands over my
door - Here is the master over all masters; but for all that, I
say right out, one learns as long as one lives;" and with that he walked
off to his house and ate his dinner.
So after dinner, just after he had got back
to his forge, a man came riding up to have his horse shod.
"It shall be done in the twinkling of an
eye," said the smith, "for I have just learnt a new way to shoe; and a
very good way it is when the days are short."
So he began to cut and hack till he had got
all the horse's legs off, for he said, I don't know why one should go
pottering backwards and forwards - first with one leg, and then with
another.
Then he laid the legs in the furnace, just as
he had seen the first bigwig lay them, and threw on a great heap of coal,
and made his mates work the bellows bravely; but it went as one might
suppose it would go. The legs were burnt to ashes, and the smith had to
pay for the horse.
Well, he didn't care much about that, but
just then an old beggar-woman came along the road, and he thought to
himself, "Better luck next time;" so he took the old dame and laid her in
the furnace, and though she begged and prayed hard for her life, it was no
good.
"You're so old, you don't know what is good
for you," said the smith; "now you shall be a lovely young maiden in half
no time, and for all that, I'll not charge you a penny for the job."
But it went no better with the poor old woman
than with the horse's legs.
"That was ill done, and I say it." said the
first bigwig.
"Oh! for that matter," said the smith,
"there's not many who'll ask after her, I'll be bound; but it's a shame
of the devil, if this is the way he holds to what is written up over the
door."
"If you might have three wishes from me,"
said the first bigwig, "what would you wish for?"
"Only try me," said the smith, "and you'll
soon know."
So the first bigwig gave him three wishes.
"Well," said the smith, "first and foremost,
I wish that any one whom I ask to climb up into the pear-tree that stands
outside by the wall of my forge, is to stay sitting there till I ask him
to come down again. The second wish I wish is, that any one whom I ask to
sit down in my easy chair which stands inside the workshop yonder, has to
stay sitting there till I ask him to get up. Last of all, I wish that any
one whom I ask to creep into the steel purse which I have in my pocket,
has to stay in it till I give him leave to creep out again."
"You have wished as a wicked man," said holy
Peter; "first and foremost, you should have wished for Snout's grace and
good will."
"I hardly aim as high as that," said
the
smith; and after that the first bigwig and holy Peter bade him "
good-bye," and went on their way.
Well, the years went on and on, and when the
time was up, the devil came to fetch the smith, as it was written in
their bargain.
"Are you ready?" he said, as he stuck his
nose in at the door of the forge.
"Oh," said the smith, "I must just hammer the
head of this ten-penny nail first; meantime you can just climb up into
the pear-tree, and pluck yourself a pear to gnaw at; you must be both
hungry and thirsty after your journey."
So the devil thanked him for his kind offer,
and climbed up into the pear-tree.
"Very good," said the smith; "but now, on
thinking the matter over, I find I shall never be able to have done
hammering the head of this nail till four years are out at least, this
iron is so plague hard; down you can't come in all that time, but may sit
up there and rest your bones."
When the devil heard this, he begged and
prayed till his voice was as thin as a silver penny that he might have
leave to come down; but there was no help for it. There he was, and there
he must stay. At last he had to give his word of honour not to come again
till the four years were out, which the smith had spoken of, and then the
smith said, "Very well, now you can come down."
So when the time was up, the devil came again
to fetch the smith.
"You're ready now, of course," said he;
"you've had time enough to hammer the head of that nail, I should think."
"Yes, the head is right enough now," said the
smith; "but still you have come a little tiny bit too soon, for I haven't
quite done sharpening the point; such troublesome, hard iron I never
hammered in all my born days. So while I work at the point, you may just
as well sit down in my easy chair and rest yourself; I'll be bound you're
weary after coming so far."
"Thank you kindly," said the devil, and down
he plumped into the easy chair; but just as he had made himself
comfortable, the smith said, on second thoughts found he couldn't get the
point sharp till four years were out. First of all, the devil begged so
prettily to be let out of the chair, and afterwards, waxing wroth, he
began to threaten and scold; but the smith kept on, all the while
excusing himself, and saying it was all the iron's fault, it was
annoyingly hard, and telling the devil he was not so badly off to have to
sit quietly in an easy-chair, and that he would let him out to the minute
when the four years were over. Well, at last there was no help for it,
and the devil had to give his word of honour not to fetch the smith till
the four years were out; and then the smith said,
"Well now, you may get up and be off about
your business," and away went the devil as fast as he could lay legs to
the ground.
When the four years were over the devil came
again to fetch the smith, and he called out, as he stuck his nose in at
the door of the forge,
"Now, I know you must be ready."
"Ready, aye, ready," answered the smith; "we
can go now as soon as you please; but there is one thing I have stood
here and thought, and thought, I would ask you to tell me. Is it true
what people say, that the devil can make himself as small as he pleases?"
"Snout knows, it is the very truth," said the
devil.
"Oh!" said the smith; "it's true, is it? Then
I wish you would just be so good as to creep into this steel purse of
mine, and see whether it is sound at the bottom, for, to tell you the
truth, I'm afraid my travelling money will drop out."
"With all my heart," said the devil, who made
himself small in a thrice, and crept into the purse; but he was hardly in
when the smith snapped to the clasp.
"Yes," called out the devil inside the purse;
"it's right and tight everywhere."
"Very good," said the smith; "I'm glad to
hear you say so, but "More haste the worse speed," says the old saw, and
"Forewarned is forearmed," says another; so I'll just weld these links a
little together, just for safety's sake." With that wisdom he laid the
purse in the furnace, and made it red hot.
"Ouch! Ouch!" screamed the devil, "are you
mad? don't you know I'm inside the purse?"
"Yes, I do!" said the smith; "but I can't
help you, for another old saw says, "One must strike while the iron is
hot;" and as he said this, he took up his sledge-hammer, laid the pulse
on the anvil, and let fly at it as hard as he could.
"Ouch! Ouch! Ouch!" bellowed the devil,
inside the purse. "Dear friend, do let me out, and I'll never come near
you again."
"Very well!" said the smith; "now, I think,
the links are pretty well welded, and you may come out;" so he unclasped
the purse, and away went the devil in such a hurry that he didn't once
look behind him.
Now, some time after, it came across the
smith's mind that he had done a silly thing in making the devil his
enemy, for he said to himself,
"If, as is like enough, they won't have me in
the realm of lordship, I shall be in danger of being homeless, since I've
fallen out with him who rules over Hades."
So he made up his mind it would be best to
try to get either into Hades or Poker, and to try at once, rather than to
put it off any longer, so that he might know how things really stood.
Then he threw his sledge-hammer over his shoulder and set off; and when he
had gone a good bit of the way, he came to a place where two roads met,
and where the path to the realm of lordship parts from the path that
leads to Hades, and here he overtook a tailor, who was pelting along with
his goose in his hand.
"Good day," said the smith; "where are you
off to?"
"To the realm of lordship," said the Tailor,
"if I can only get into it; - but where are you going yourself?"
"Oh, our ways don't run together," said the
smith; "for I have made up my mind to try first in Hades, as the devil
and I know something of one another from old times."
So they bade one another "Good-bye," and each
went his way; but the smith was a stout strong man, and got over the
ground far faster than the tailor, and so it wasn't long before he stood
at the gates of Hades. Then he called the watch, and bade him go and tell
the devil there was some one outside who wished to speak a word with him.
"Go out," said the devil to the watch, "and
ask him who he is?" So that when the watch came and told him that, the
smith answered,
"Go and greet the devil in my name, and say
it is the smith who owns the purse he knows of; and beg him prettily to
let me in at once, for I worked at my forge till noon, and I have had a
long walk since."
But when the devil heard who it was he
charged the watch to go back and lock up all the nine locks on the gates
of Hades.
"And, besides," he said, "you may as well put
on a padlock, for if he only once gets in, he'll turn Hades topsy-turvy!"
"Well!" said the smith to himself, when he
saw them busy bolting up the gates, "there's no lodging to be got here,
that's plain; so I may as well try my luck in the realm of lordship;" and
with that he turned round and went back till he reached the cross-roads,
and then he went along the path the tailor had taken. And now, as he was
cross at having gone backwards and forwards so far for no good, he strode
along with all his might, and reached the, gate of Poker just as holy
Peter was opening it a very little, just enough to let the half-starved
tailor slip in. The smith was still six or seven strides off the gate, so
he thought to himself, "Now there's no time to be lost;" and grasping his
sledge-hammer, he hurled it into the opening of the door just as the
tailor slunk in; and if the smith didn't get in then, when the door was
ajar, why I don't know what has become of him.
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