WORLD OF STORIES FOR KIDS

NORWEGIAN FOLK TALES
Big bird Oncemore Us
THERE WAS A KING who had twelve daughters, and he was so fond of
them they must always be at his side; but every day at noon, while the
king slept, the princesses went out to take a walk. So once, while the
king was taking his noontide nap, and the princesses had gone to take
their walk, all at once they were missing, and worse, they never came home
again. Then there was great grief and sorrow all over the land but the
most sorry of all was the king. He sent messengers out throughout his own
and other realms, and gave out their names in all the bakeries, and had
the bells tolled for them in all the steeples; but gone the princesses
were, and gone they stayed, and none could tell what was become of them.
So it was as clear as day that they must have been carried off by some
witchcraft.
Well, it wasn't long before these tidings
spread far and wide, over land and town, aye, over many lands; and so the
news came to a king ever so many lands off, who had twelve sons. So when
these Princes heard of the twelve king's daughters, they asked leave of
their father to go out and seek them. They had hard work to get his
leave, for he was afraid lest he should never see them again, but they
all fell down on their knees before the king, and begged so long, at last
he was forced to let them go after all.
He fitted out a ship for them, and gave them
Ritter Red, who was quite at home at sea, for a captain. So they sailed
about a long, long time, landed on every shore they came to, and hunted
and asked after the princesses, but they could neither hear nor see
anything of them. And now, a few days only were wanting to make up seven
years since they set sail, when one day a strong storm rose, and such
foul weather, they thought they should never come to land again, and all
had to work so hard, they couldn't get a wink of sleep so long as the
storm lasted. But when the third day was nearly over, the wind fell, and
all at once it got as still as still could be. Now, they were all so
weary with work and the rough weather, they fell fast asleep in the
twinkling of an eye; all but the youngest prince, he could get no rest,
and couldn't go off to sleep at all.
So as he was pacing up and down the deck, the
ship came to a little island, and on the island ran a little dog, and
bayed and barked at the ship as if it wanted to come on board. So the
prince went to that side of the deck, and tried to coax the dog, and
whistled and whistled to him, but the more he whistled and coaxed, the
more the dog barked and snarled. Well, he thought it a shame the dog
should run about there and starve, for he made up his mind that it must
have come thither from a ship that had been cast away in the storm; but
still he thought he should never be able to help it after all, for he
couldn't put out the boat by himself, and as for the others, they all
slept so sound, he wouldn't wake them for the sake of a dog. But then the
weather was so calm and still; and at last he said to himself; "Come what
may, you must go on shore and save that dog," and so he began to try to
launch the boat, and he found it far easier work than he thought. So he
rowed ashore, and went up to the dog; but every time he tried to catch
it, it jumped on one side, and so it went on till he found himself inside
a great grand castle, before he knew where he was. Then the dog, all at
once, was changed into a lovely Princess; and there, on the bench, sat a
man so big and ugly, the prince almost lost his wits for fear.
"YOU'VE NO NEED TO BE AFRAID," said the man -
but the prince, to tell you the truth, got far more afraid when he heard
his gruff voice - "for I know well enough what you want. There are twelve
princes of you, and you are looking for the twelve princesses that are
lost. I know, too, very well whereabouts they are; they're with my lord
and master, and there they sit, each of them on her chair, and comb his
hair; for he has twelve heads. And now you have sailed seven years, but
you'll have to sail seven years more before you find them. As for you,
you might stay here and welcome, and have my daughter; but you must first
slay him, for he's a hard master to all of us, and we're all weary of
him, and when he's dead I shall be king in his stead; but first try if
you can brandish this sword."
Then the king's son took hold of a rusty old
sword which hung on the wall, but he could hardly stir it.
"Now you must take a pull at this flask,"
said the troll; and when he had done that he could stir it, and when he
had taken another he could lift it, and when he had taken a third he
could brandish the sword as easily as if it had been his own.
"Now, when you get on board," said the troll
Prince, "you must hide the sword well in your berth, that Ritter Red
mayn't set eyes on it; he's not man enough to wield it, but he'll get
spiteful against you, and try to take your life. And when seven years are
almost out all but three days," he went on to say, "everything will
happen just as now; foul weather will come on you, with a great storm,
and when it is over you'll all be sleepy. Then you must take the sword
and row ashore, and so you'll come to a castle where all sorts of guards
will stand - wolves, and bears, and lions; but you need not be afraid of
them, for they'll all come and crouch at your feet. But when you come
inside the castle, you'll soon see the troll; he sits in a splendid
chamber in grand attire and array; twelve heads he has of his own, and the
princesses sit round them, each on her chair, and comb his heads, and
that's a work you can guess they don't much like. Then you must make
haste, and hew off one head after the other as quick as you can; for if
he wakes and sets his eyes on you, he'll swallow you alive."
So the king's son went on board with the
sword, and he bore in mind what he had come to know. The others still lay
fast asleep and snored, and he hid the sword in his berth, so that
neither Ritter Red nor any of the rest got sight of it. And now it began
to blow again, so he woke up the others, and said he thought they
oughtn't to sleep any longer now when there was such a good wind. .and
there was none of them that marked he had been away. Well, after the
seven years were all gone but three days, all happened as the troll had
said. A great storm and foul weather came on that lasted three days, and
when it had blown itself out, all the rest grew sleepy and went to rest;
but the youngest king's son rowed ashore, and the guards fell at his
feet, and so he came to the castle. So when he got inside the chamber,
there sat the king fast asleep as the troll Prince had said, and the
twelve Princesses sat each on her chair and combed one of his heads. The
king's son beckoned to the princesses to get out of the way; they pointed
to the troll, and beckoned to him again to go his way as quick as ever he
could, but he kept on making signs to them to get out of the way, and then
they understood that he wanted to set them free, and stole away softly
one after the other, and as fast as they went, he hewed off the troll
king's heads, till at last the blood gushed out like a great brook. When
the troll was slain he rowed on board and hid his sword. He
thought now he had done enough, and as he couldn't get rid of the body by
himself, he thought it only fair they should help him a little. So he
woke them all up, and said it was a shame they should be snoring there,
when he had found the princesses, and set them free from the troll. The
others only laughed at him, and said he had been just as sound asleep as
they, and only dreamt that he was man enough to do what he said; for if
any one was to set the princesses free, it was far more likely it would
be one of them. But the youngest king's son told them all about it, and
when they followed him to the land and saw first of all the brook of
blood, and then the castle, and the troll, and the twelve heads, and the
princesses, they saw plain enough that he had spoken the truth, and now
the whole helped him to throw the body and the heads into the sea. So all
were glad and happy, but none more so than the princesses, who got rid of
having to sit there and comb the troll's hair all day. Of all the silver
and gold and precious things that were there, they took as much as the
ship could hold, and so they went on board altogether Princes and
Princesses alike.
But when they had gone a bit out on the sea,
the princesses said they had forgotten in their joy their gold crowns,
they lay behind in a press, and they would be so glad to have them. So
when none of the others was willing to fetch them, the youngest king's son
said,
"I have already dared so much, I can very
well go back for the gold crowns too, if you will only strike sail and
wait till I come again."
Yes, that they would do. But when he had gone
back so far that they couldn't see him any longer, Ritter Red, who would
have been glad enough to have been their chief, and to have the youngest
Princess, said, "it was no use their lying there still waiting for him,
for they might know very well he would never come back; they all knew,
too, how the king had given him all power and authority to sail or not as
he chose; and now they must all say it was he that had saved the
princesses, and if any one said anything else, he should lose his life."
The princes didn't dare to do anything else
than what Ritter Red willed, and so they sailed away.
Meanwhile the youngest king's son rowed to
land, went up to the castle, found the press with the gold crowns in it,
and at last lugged it down to the boat, and shoved off; but when he came
where he ought to have seen the ship, lo! it was gone. Well, as he
couldn't catch a glimpse of it anywhere, he could very soon tell how
matters stood. To row after them was no good, and so he was forced to
turn about and row back to land. He was rather afraid to stay alone in
the castle all night, but there was no other house to be got, so he
plucked up a heart, locked up all the doors and gates fast, and lay down
in a room where there was a bed ready made. But fearful and woeful he
was, and still more afraid he got when he had lain a while and something
began to creak and groan and quake in wall and roof, as if the whole
castle were being torn asunder. Then all at once down something plunged
close by the side of his bed, as if it were a whole cartload of hay. Then
all was still again; but after a while he heard a voice, which bade him
not to be afraid, and said, "Here am I, the
Big Bird Oncemore Us
Come to help you all I can."
"But
the first thing you must do when you wake in the morning, will be to go to
the barn and fetch four barrels of rye for me. I must fill my crop with
them for breakfast, else I can't do anything."
When he woke up, sure enough there he saw an
awfully big bird, which had a feather at the nape of his neck, as thick
and long as a half-grown spruce fir. So the king's son went down to the
barn to fetch four barrels of rye for the Big Bird Oncemore Us, and when
he
had crammed them into his crop he told the king's son to hang the press
with the gold crowns on one side of his neck, and as much gold and silver
as would weigh it down on the other side, and after that to get on his
back and hold fast by the feather in the nape of his neck. So away they
went till the wind whistled after them, and so it wasn't long before they
outstripped the ship. The king's son wanted to go on board for his sword,
for he was afraid lest any one should get sight of it, for the troll had
told him that mustn't be; but Bird Oncemore Us said that mustn't be
either.
"Ritter Red will never see it, never fear;
but if you go on board, he'll try to take your life, for he has set his
heart on having the youngest Princess; but make your mind quite easy
about her, for she lays a naked sword by her side in bed every night."
So after a long, long time, they came to the
island where the troll Prince was; and there the king's son was welcomed
so heartily there was no end to it. The troll Prince didn't know how to
be good enough to him for having slain his Bigwig and Master, and so made
him king of the trolls, and if the king's son had been willing he might
easily have got the troll king's daughter, and half the kingdom. But he
had so set his heart on the youngest of the twelve Princesses, he could
take no rest, but was all for going after their ship time after time. So
the troll king begged him to be quiet a little longer, and said they had
still nearly seven years to sail before they got home. As for the
princess the troll said the same thing as the Big Bird Oncemore Us.
"You need not fret yourself about her, for
she lays a naked sword by her side every night in bed. And now if you
don't believe what I say," said the troll, "you can go on board when they
sail by here, and see for yourself, and fetch the sword too for I may just
as well have it again."
So when they sailed by another great storm
arose, and when the king's son went on board they all slept, and each
Princess lay beside her Prince; but the youngest lay alone with a naked
sword beside her in the bed, and on the floor by the bedside lay Ritter
Red. Then the king's son took the sword and rowed ashore again, and none
of them had seen that he had been on board. But still the king's son
couldn't rest, and he often and often wanted to be off, and so at last
when it got near the end of the seven years, and only three weeks were
left, the troll king said,
"Now you may get ready to go, since you won't
stay with us; and you shall have the loan of my iron boat, which sails of
itself, if you only say, "Boat, boat, go on!"
In
that boat there is an iron club, and that club you must lift a little when
you see the ship straight a-head of you, and then they'll get such a
rattling fair breeze, they'll forget to look at you. But when you get
alongside them, you must lift the club a little again, and then they'll
get such a foul wind and storm they'll have something else to do than to
stare at you; and when you have run past them you must lift the club a
third time, but you must always be sure and lay it down carefully again,
else there'll be such a storm, both you and they will be wrecked and
lost. Now when you have got to land, you have no need to bother yourself
at all about the boat; just turn it about, and shove it off, and say,
"Boat, boat, go back home!""
When he set out they
gave him so much gold and silver, and so many other costly things, and
clothes and linen which the troll Princess had sewn and woven for him all
that long time, that he was far richer than any of his brothers.
Well, he had no sooner seated himself in the
boat and said, "Boat, boat, go on!"
than
away went the boat, and when he saw the ship right a-head, he lifted up
the club, and then they got such a fair breeze, they forgot to look at
him. When he was alongside the ship, he lifted the club again, and then
such a storm arose and such foul weather, that the white foam flew about
the ship, and the billows rolled over the deck, and they had something
else to do than to stare at him; and when he had run past them he lifted
the club the third time, and then the storm and the wind rose so, they
had still less time to look after him, and to make him out. So he came to
land long, long before the ship; and when he had got all his goods out of
the boat, he shoved it off again, and turned it about and said,
"Boat, boat, go back home!"
And
off went the boat.
Then he dressed himself up as a sailor. -
whether the troll king had told him that or it was his own device, I'm
sure I can't say - and went up to a wretched hut where an old wife lived,
whom he got to believe that he was a poor sailor who had been on board a
great ship that was wrecked, and that he was the only soul that had got
ashore. After that he begged for house-room for himself and the goods he
had saved.
"Poverty mend me!" said the old wife, "how
can I lend any one house-room! look at me and mine, why, I've no bed to
sleep on myself, still less one for any one else to lie on."
Well, well, it was all the same, said the
sailor; if he only got a roof over his head it didn't matter where he
lay. So she couldn't turn him out of the house, when he was so thankful
for what there was. That afternoon he fetched up his things, and the old
wife, who was very eager to hear a bit of news to run about and tell,
began at once to ask who he was, whence he came, where he was bound, what
it was he had with him, what his business was, and if he hadn't heard
anything of the twelve princesses who had been away the bigwig knew how
many years. All this she asked and much more, which it would be waste of
time to tell. But he said he was so poorly and had such a bad headache
after the awful weather he had been out in, that he couldn't answer any
of her questions; she must just leave him alone and let him rest a few
days till he came to himself after the hard work he'd had in the gale, and
then she'd know all she wanted.
The very next day the old wife began to stir
him up and ask again, but the sailor's head was still so bad he hadn't
got his wits together, but somehow he let drop a word or two to show that
he did know something about the princesses. Off ran the old wife with what
she had heard to all the gossips and chatterboxes round about, and soon
the one came running after the other to ask about the princesses, "if he
had seen them," "if they would soon be there," "if they were on the way,"
and much more of the same sort. He still went on groaning over his
headache after the storm, so that he couldn't tell them all about it, but
so much he told them, unless they had been lost in the great storm they'd
make the land in about a fortnight or before perhaps; but he couldn't say
for sure whether they were alive or no, for though he had seen them, it
might very well be that they had been cast away in the storm since. So
what did one of these old gossips do but run up to the castle with this
story, and say that there was a sailor down in such and such an old
wife's hut, who had seen the princesses, and that they were coming home
in a fortnight or in a week's time. When the king heard that he sent a
messenger down to the sailor to come up to him and tell the news himself.
"I don't see how it's to be," said the
sailor, "for I haven't any clothes fit to stand in before the king.
But the king said he must come; for the king
must and would talk with him, whether he were richly or poorly clad, for
there was no one else who could bring him any tidings of the princesses.
So he went up at last to the castle and went in before the king, who asked
him if it were true that he had seen anything of the princesses.
"Aye, et," said the sailor, "I've seen them
sure enough, but I don't know whether they're still alive, for when I
last caught sight of them, the weather was so foul we in our ship were
cast away; but if they're still alive they'll come safe home in a
fortnight or perhaps before."
When the king heard that he was almost beside
himself for joy; and when the time came that the sailor had said they
would come, the king drove down to the strand to meet them in great
state; and there was joy and gladness over the whole land when the ship
came sailing in with the princes and princesses and Ritter Red. But no
one was gladder than the old king, who had got his daughters back again.
The eleven eldest princesses too, were glad and merry, but the youngest,
who was to have Ritter Red, who said that he had set them all free and
slain the troll, she wept and was always sorrowful. The king took this
ill, and asked why she wasn't cheerful and merry like the others; she
hadn't anything to be sorry for now when she had gut out of the troll's
clutches, and was to have such a husband as Ritter Red. But she didn't
dare to say anything, for Ritter Red had said he would take the life of
any one who told the truth how things had gone.
But now one day, when they were hard at work
sewing and stitching the bridal array, in came a man in a great sailor's
cloak with a peddler's pack on his back, and asked if the princesses
wouldn't buy something fine of him for the wedding; he had so many wares
and costly things, both gold and silver. Yes, they might do so perhaps,
so they looked at his wares, and they looked at him, for they thought
they had seen both him and many of his costly thirds before.
"He who has so many fine things," said the
youngest Princess, "must surely have something still more precious, and
which suits us better even than these."
"Maybe I have," said the Peddler.
But now all the others cried "Hush," and bade
her bear in mind what Ritter Red had said he would do.
Some time after the princesses sat and looked
out of the window, and then the king's son came again with the great
sea-cloak thrown about him, and the press with the gold crowns at his
back; and when he got into the palace hall he unlocked the press before
the princesses, and when each of them knew her own gold crown again, the
youngest said,
"I think it only right that he who set us
free should get what is his due; and he is not Ritter Red, but this man
who has brought us our gold crowns. He it is that set us free."
Then the king's son cast off the sailor's
cloak, and stood there far finer and grander than all the rest; and so the
old king made them put Ritter Red to death. And now there was real right
down joy in the palace; each took his own bride, and there just was a
wedding! Why, it was heard of and talked about over twelve kings' realms.
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