WORLD OF STORIES FOR KIDS
DANISH FOLK TALES
The Troll's Daughter
THERE WAS ONCE a lad who went to look for a place. As he went along he met
a man, who asked him where he was going. He told him his errand, and the stranger
said, "Then you can serve me; I am just in want of a lad like you, and I will give
you good wagesa bushel of money the first year, two the second year, and
three the third year, for you must serve me three years, and obey me in
everything, however strange it seems to you. You need not be afraid of taking
service with me, for there is no danger in it if you only know how to
obey."
The bargain was made, and the lad went home with the man to whom he had
engaged himself. It was a strange place indeed, for he lived in a bank in the
middle of the wild forest, and the lad saw there no other person than his master.
The latter was a great troll, and had marvellous power over both men and
beasts.
Next day the lad had to begin his service. The first thing that the troll
set him to was to feed all the wild animals from the forest. These the troll had
tied up, and there were both wolves and bears, deer and hares, which the troll had
gathered in the stalls and folds in his stable down beneath the ground, and that
stable was a mile long. The boy, however, accomplished all this work on that day,
and the troll praised him and said that it was very well done.
Next morning the troll said to him, "Today the animals are not to be fed;
they don't get the like of that every day. You shall have leave to play about for
a little, until they are to be fed again."
Then the troll said some words to him which he did not understand, and
with that the lad turned into a hare, and ran out into the wood. He got plenty to
run for, too, for all the hunters aimed at him, and tried to shoot him, and the
dogs barked and ran after him wherever they got wind of him. He was the only
animal that was left in the wood now, for the troll had tied up all the others,
and every hunter in the whole country was eager to knock him over. But in this
they met with no success; there was no dog that could overtake him, and no
marksman that could hit him. They shot and shot at him, and he ran and ran. It was
an unquiet life, but in the long run he got used to it, when he saw that there was
no danger in it, and it even amused him to befool all the hunters and dogs that
were so eager after him.
Thus a whole year passed, and when it was over the troll called him home,
for he was now in his power like all the other animals. The troll then said some
words to him which he did not understand, and the hare immediately became a human
being again. "Well, how do you like to serve me?" said the troll, "and how do you
like being a hare?"
The lad replied that he liked it very well; he had never been able to go
over the ground so quickly before. The troll then showed him the bushel of money
that he had already earned, and the lad was well pleased to serve him for another
year.
The first day of the second year the boy had the same work to do as on the
previous onenamely, to feed all the wild animals in the troll's stable. When
he had done this the troll again said some words to him, and with that he became a
raven, and flew high up into the air. This was delightful, the lad thought; he
could go even faster now than when he was a hare, and the dogs could not come
after him here. This was a great delight to him, but he soon found out that he was
not to be left quite at peace, for all the marksmen and hunters who saw him aimed
at him and fired away, for they had no other birds to shoot at than himself, as
the troll had tied up all the others.
This, however, he also got used to, when he saw that they could never hit
him, and in this way he flew about all that year, until the troll called him home
again, said some strange words to him, and gave him his human shape again. "Well,
how did you like being a raven?" said the troll.
"I liked it very well," said the lad, "for never in all my days have I
been able to rise so high." The troll then showed him the two bushels of money
which he had earned that year, and the lad was well content to remain in his
service for another year.
Next day he got his old task of feeding all the wild beasts. When this was
done the troll again said some words to him, and at these he turned into a fish,
and sprang into the river. He swam up and he swam down, and thought it was
pleasant to let himself drive with the stream. In this way he came right out into
the sea, and swam further and further out. At last he came to a glass palace,
which stood at the bottom of the sea. He could see into all the rooms and halls,
where everything was very grand; all the furniture was of white ivory, inlaid with
gold and pearl. There were soft rugs and cushions of all the colours of the
rainbow, and beautiful carpets that looked like the finest moss, and flowers and
trees with curiously crooked branches, both green and yellow, white and red, and
there were also little fountains which sprang up from the most beautiful
snail-shells, and fell into bright mussel-shells, and at the same time made a most
delightful music, which filled the whole palace.
The most beautiful thing of all, however, was a young girl who went about
there, all alone. She went about from one room to another, but did not seem to be
happy with all the grandeur she had about her. She walked in solitude and
melancholy, and never even thought of looking at her own image in the polished
glass walls that were on every side of her, although she was the prettiest
creature anyone could wish to see. The lad thought so too while he swam round the
palace and peeped in from every side.
"Here, indeed, it would be better to be a man than such a poor dumb fish
as I am now," said he to himself; "if I could only remember the words that the
troll says when he changes my shape, then perhaps I could help myself to become a
man again." He swam and he pondered and he thought over this until he remembered
the sound of what the troll said, and then he tried to say it himself. In a moment
he stood in human form at the bottom of the sea.
He made haste then to enter the glass palace, and went up to the young
girl and spoke to her.
At first he nearly frightened the life out of her, but he talked to her so
kindly and explained how he had come down there that she soon recovered from her
alarm, and was very pleased to have some company to relieve the terrible solitude
that she lived in. Time passed so quickly for both of them that the youth (for now
he was quite a young man, and no more a lad) forgot altogether how long he had
been there.
One day the girl said to him that now it was close on the time when he
must become a fish againthe troll would soon call him home, and he would
have to go, but before that he must put on the shape of the fish, otherwise he
could not pass through the sea alive. Before this, while he was staying down
there, she had told him that she was a daughter of the same troll whom the youth
served, and he had shut her up there to keep her away from everyone. She had now
devised a plan by which they could perhaps succeed in getting to see each other
again, and spending the rest of their lives together. But there was much to attend
to, and he must give careful heed to all that she told him.
She told him then that all the kings in the country round about were in
debt to her father the troll, and the king of a certain kingdom, the name of which
she told him, was the first who had to pay, and if he could not do so at the time
appointed he would lose his head. "And he cannot pay," said she; "I know that for
certain. Now you must, first of all, give up your service with my father; the
three years are past, and you are at liberty to go. You will go off with your six
bushels of money, to the kingdom that I have told you of, and there enter the
service of the king. When the time comes near for his debt becoming due you will
be able to notice by his manner that he is ill at ease. You shall then say to him
that you know well enough what it is that is weighing on himthat it is the
debt which he owes to the troll and cannot pay, but that you can lend him the
money. The amount is six bushelsjust what you have. You shall, however, only
lend them to him on condition that you may accompany him when he goes to make the
payment, and that you then have permission to run before him as a fool. When you
arrive at the troll's abode, you must perform all kinds of foolish tricks, and see
that you break a whole lot of his windows, and do all other damage that you can.
My father will then get very angry, and as the king must answer for what his fool
does he will sentence him, even although he has paid his debt, either to answer
three questions or to lose his life. The first question my father will ask will
be, "Where is my daughter?" Then you shall step forward and answer "she is at the
bottom of the sea." He will then ask you whether you can recognise her, and to
this you will answer "Yes." Then he will bring forward a whole troop of women, and
cause them to pass before you, in order that you may pick out the one that you
take for his daughter. You will not be able to recognise me at all, and therefore
I will catch hold of you as I go past, so that you can notice it, and you must
then make haste to catch me and hold me fast. You have then answered his first
question. His next question will be, "Where is my heart?" You shall then step
forward again and answer, "It is in a fish." "Do you know that fish?" he will say,
and you will again answer "Yes." He will then cause all kinds of fish to come
before you, and you shall choose between them. I shall take good care to keep by
your side, and when the right fish comes I will give you a little push, and with
that you will seize the fish and cut it up. Then all will be over with the troll;
he will ask no more questions, and we shall be free to wed."
When the youth had got all these directions as to what he had to do when
he got ashore again the next thing was to remember the words which the troll said
when he changed him from a human being to an animal; but these he had forgotten,
and the girl did not know them either. He went about all day in despair, and
thought and thought, but he could not remember what they sounded like. During the
night he could not sleep, until towards morning he fell into a slumber, and all at
once it flashed on him what the troll used to say. He made haste to repeat the
words, and at the same moment he became a fish again and slipped out into the sea.
Immediately after this he was called on, and swam through the sea up the river to
where the troll stood on the bank and restored him to human shape with the same
words as before.
"Well, how do you like to be a fish?" asked the troll.
It was what he had liked best of all, said the youth, and that was no lie,
as everybody can guess.
The troll then showed him the three bushels of money which he had earned
during the past year; they stood beside the other three, and all the six now
belonged to him.
"Perhaps you will serve me for another year yet," said the troll, "and you
will get six bushels of money for it; that m&kes twelve in all, and that is a
pretty penny."
"No," said the youth; he thought he had done enough, and was anxious to go
to some other place to serve, and learn other people's ways; but he would,
perhaps, come back to the troll some other time.
The troll said that he would always be welcome; he had served him
faithfully for the three years they had agreed on, and he could make no objections
to his leaving now.
The youth then got his six bushels of money, and with these he betook
himself straight to the kingdom which his sweetheart had told him of. He got his
money buried in a lonely spot close to the king's palace, and then went in there
and asked to be taken into service. He obtained his request, and was taken on as
stableman, to tend the king's horses.
Some time passed, and he noticed how the king always went about sorrowing
and grieving, and was never glad or happy. One day the king came into the stable,
where there was no one present except the youth, who said straight out to him
that, with his majesty's permission, he wished to ask him why he was so
sorrowful.
"It's of no use speaking about that," said the king; "you cannot help me,
at any rate."
"You don't know about that," said the youth; "I know well enough what it
is that lies so heavy on your mind, and I know also of a plan to get the money
paid."
This was quite another case, and the king had more talk with the
stableman, who said that he could easily lend the king the six bushels of money,
but would only do it on condition that he should be allowed to accompany the king
when he went to pay the debt, and that he should then be dressed like the king's
court fool, and run before him. He would cause some trouble, for which the king
would be severely spoken to, but he would answer for it that no harm would befall
him.
The king gladly agreed to all that the youth proposed, and it was now high
time for them to set out.
When they came to the troll's dwelling it was no longer in the bank, but
on the top of this there stood a large castle which the youth had never seen
before. The troll could, in fact, make it visible or invisible, just as he
pleased, and, knowing as much as he did of the troll's magic arts, the youth was
not at all surprised at this.
When they came near to this castle, which looked as if it was of pure
glass, the youth ran on in front as the king's fool. Heran sometimes facing
forwards, sometimes backwards, stood sometimes on his head, and sometimes on his
feet, and he dashed in pieces so many of the troll's big glass windows and doors
that it was something awful to see, and overturned everything he could, and made a
fearful disturbance.
The troll came rushing out, and was so angry and furious, and abused the
king with all his might for bringing such a wretched fool with him, as he was sure
that he could not pay the least bit of all the damage that had been done when he
could not even pay off his old debt.
The fool, however, spoke up, and said that he could do so quite easily,
and the king then came forward with the six bushels of money which the youth had
lent him. They were measured and found to be correct. This the troll had not
reckoned on, but he could make no objection against it. The old debt was honestly
paid, and the king got his bond back again.
But there still remained all the damage that had been done that day, and
the king had nothing with which to pay for this. The troll, therefore, sentenced
the king, either to answer three questions that he would put to him, or have his
head taken off, as was agreed on in the old bond.
There was nothing else to be done than to try to answer the troll's
riddles. The fool then stationed himself just by the king's side while the troll
came forward with his questions. He first asked, "Where is my daughter?"
The fool spoke up and said, "She is at the bottom of the sea."
"How do you know that?" said the troll.
"The little fish saw it," said the fool.
"Would you know her?" said the troll.
"Yes, bring her forward," said the fool.
The troll made a whole crowd of women go past them, one after the other,
but all these were nothing but shadows and deceptions. Amongst the very last was
the troll's real daughter, who pinched the fool as she went past him to make him
aware of her presence. He thereupon caught her round the waist and held her fast,
and the troll had to admit that his first riddle was solved.
Then the troll asked again: "Where is my heart?"
"It is in a fish," said the fool.
"Would you know that fish?" said the troll.
"Yes, bring it forward," said the fool.
Then all the fishes came swimming past them, and meanwhile the troll's
daughter stood just by the youth's side. When at last the right fish came swimming
along she gave him a nudge, and he seized it at once, drove his knife into it, and
split it up, took the heart out of it, and cut it through the middle.
At the same moment the troll fell dead and turned into pieces of flint.
With that a,ll the bonds that the troll had bound were broken; all the wild beasts
and birds which he had caught and hid under the ground were free now, and
dispersed themselves in the woods and in the air.
The youth and his sweetheart entered the castle, which was now theirs, and
held their wedding; and all the kings roundabout, who had been in the troll's
debt, and were now out of it, came to the wedding, and saluted the youth as their
emperor, and he ruled over them all, and kept peace between them, and lived in his
castle with his beautiful empress in great joy and magnificence. And if they have
not died since they are living there to this day.
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