<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>VI<br/> <br/> <span class="f8">THE COMRADE</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">Once</span> upon a time there was a peasant boy, who
dreamed that he would get a princess, from
far, far away, and that she was as white as milk,
and as red as blood, and so rich that her riches had
no end. When he woke, it seemed to him as though
she were still standing before him, and she was so
beautiful and winning that he could not go on living
without her. So he sold all that he had, and went
forth to look for her. He wandered far, and at last,
in the winter-time, came into a land where the roads
all ran in straight lines, and made no turns. After
he had wandered straight ahead for full three
months, he came to a city. And there a great block
of ice lay before the church door, and in the middle
of it was a corpse, and the whole congregation spat
at it as the people passed by. This surprised the
youth, and when the pastor came out of the church,
he asked him what it meant. “He was a great evil-doer,”
replied the pastor, “who has been executed
because of his misdeeds, and has been exposed here
in shame and derision.” “But what did he do?”
asked the youth.</p>
<p>“During his mortal life he was a wine-dealer,”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>
answered the pastor, “and he watered the wine he
sold.”</p>
<p>This did not strike the youth as being such a terrible
crime. “Even if he had to pay for it with his
life,” said he, “one might now grant him a Christian
burial, and let him rest in peace.” But the pastor
said that this could not be done at all; for people
would be needed to break him out of the ice; and
money would be needed to buy a grave for him from
the church; and the gravedigger would want to be
paid for his trouble; and the sexton for tolling the
bells; and the cantor for singing; and the pastor
himself for the funeral sermon.</p>
<p>“Do you think there is any one who would pay all
that money for such an arrant sinner’s sake?” inquired
the pastor.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the youth. If he could manage to have
him buried, he would be willing to pay for the wake
out of his own slender purse.</p>
<p>At first the pastor would hear nothing of it; but
when the youth returned with two men, and asked
him in their presence whether he refused the dead
man Christian burial, he ventured no further objections.</p>
<p>So they released the wine-dealer from his block of
ice, and laid him in consecrated ground. The bells
tolled, and there was singing, and the pastor threw
earth on the coffin, and they had a wake at which
tears and laughter alternated. But when the youth
had paid for the wake, he had but a few shillings left
in his pocket. Then he once more set out on his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
way; but had not gone far before a man came up
behind him, and asked him whether he did not find it
tiresome to wander along all alone.</p>
<p>“No,” said the youth, he always had something
to think about. The man asked whether he did not
need a servant.</p>
<p>“No,” said the youth, “I am used to serving myself,
so I have no need of a servant; and no matter
how much I might wish for one, I still would have
to do without, since I have no money for his keep
and pay.”</p>
<p>“Yet you need a servant, as I know better than
you do,” said the man, “and you need one upon
whom you can rely in life and death. But if you do
not want me for a servant, then let me be your comrade.
I promise that you will not lose thereby, and
I will not cost you a shilling. I travel at my own
expense, nor need you be put to trouble as regards
my food and clothing.”</p>
<p>Under these circumstances the youth was glad to
have him for a comrade, and they resumed their
journey, the man as a rule going in advance and
pointing out the way.</p>
<p>After they had wandered long through various
lands, over hills and over heaths, they suddenly
stood before a wall of rock. The comrade knocked,
and begged to be let in. Then the rock opened before
them, and after they had gone quite a way into
the interior of the hill, a witch came to meet them and
offered them a chair. “Be so good as to sit down,
for you must be weary!” said she.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Sit down yourself!” answered the man. Then
she had to sit down and remain seated, for the chair
had power to hold fast all that approached it. In
the meantime they wandered about in the hill, and
the comrade kept looking around until he saw a
sword that hung above the door. This he wanted to
have, and he promised the witch that he would
release her from her chair if she would let him have
the sword.</p>
<p>“No,” she cried, “ask what you will. You can
have anything else, but not that, for that is my
Three-Sisters Sword!” (There were three sisters
to whom the sword belonged in common.) “Then
you may sit where you are till the world’s end!”
said the man. And when she heard that she promised
to let him have the sword, if he would release
her.</p>
<p>So he took the sword, and went away with it; but
he left her sitting there, after all. When they had
wandered far, over stony wastes and desolate heaths,
they again came to a wall of rock. There the comrade
again knocked, and begged to be let in. Just
as before, the rock opened, and when they had gone
far into the hill, a witch came to meet them with a
chair and bade them be seated, “for you must be
tired,” said she.</p>
<p>“Sit down yourself!” said the comrade. And
what had happened to her sister happened to her, she
had to seat herself, and could not get up again. In
the meantime the youth and his comrade went about
in the hill, and the latter opened all the closets and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span>
drawers, until he found what he had been searching
for, a ball of golden twine. This he wished to have,
and promised he would release her from the chair if
she would give it to him. She told him he might
have all she possessed; but that she could not give
him the ball, since it was her Three-Sisters Ball.
But when she heard that she would have to sit in the
chair till the Day of Judgment, she changed her
mind. Then the comrade took the ball, and in spite
of it left her sitting where she was. Then they wandered
for many a day through wood and heath, until
they came to a wall of rock. All happened as it had
twice before, the comrade knocked, the hill opened,
and inside a witch came to meet them with a chair,
and bade them sit down. The two had gone through
many rooms before the comrade spied an old hat
hanging on a hook behind the door. The hat he
must have, but the old witch would not part with
it, since it was her Three-Sisters Hat, and if she gave
it away she would be thoroughly unhappy. But
when she heard that she would have to sit there until
the Day of Judgment if she did not give up the hat,
she at last agreed to do so. The comrade took the
hat, and then told her to keep on sitting where she
sat, like her sisters.</p>
<p>At length they came to a river. There the comrade
took the ball of golden twine and flung it against
the hill on the other side of the river with such force
that it bounded back. And when it had flown back
and forth several times, there stood a bridge, and
when they had reached the other side, the comrade<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span>
told the youth to wind up the golden twine again as
swiftly as possible, “for if we do not take it away
quickly, the three witches will cross and tear us to
pieces.” The youth wound as quickly as he could,
and just as he was at the last thread, the witches
rushed up, hissing, flung themselves into the water
so that the foam splashed high, and snatched at the
end of the thread. But they could not grasp it, and
drowned in the river.</p>
<p>After they had again wandered on for a few days,
the comrade said: “Now we will soon reach the
castle in which she lives, the princess of whom you
dreamed, and when we reach it, you must go to the
castle and tell the king what you dreamed, and your
journey’s aim.” When they got there, the youth
did as he was told, and was very well received. He
was given a room for himself, and one for his servant,
and when it was time to eat, he was invited to
the king’s own table. When he saw the princess,
he recognized her at once as the vision of his dream.
He told her, too, why he was there, and she replied
that she liked him quite well, and would gladly take
him, but first he must undergo three tests. When
they had eaten, she gave him a pair of gold shears
and said: “The first test is that you take these
shears and keep them, and give them back to me to-morrow
noon. That is not a very severe test,” she
said, and smiled, “but, if you cannot stand it, you
must die, as the law demands, and you will be in the
same case as the suitors whose bones you may see
lying without the castle gate.”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“That is no great feat,” thought the youth to himself.
But the princess was so merry and active, and
so full of fun and nonsense, that he thought neither
of the shears nor of himself, and while they were
laughing and joking, she secretly robbed him of the
shears without his noticing it. When he came to his
room in the evening, and told what had occurred,
and what the princess had said to him, and about the
shears which she had given him to guard, his comrade
asked: “And have you still the shears?”</p>
<p>The youth looked through all his pockets; but his
shears were not there, and he was more than unhappy
when he realized that he had lost them.</p>
<p>“Well, well, never mind. I will see whether I can
get them back for you,” said his comrade, and went
down into the stable. There stood an enormous
goat which belonged to the princess, and could fly
through the air more swiftly than he could walk on
level ground. The comrade took the Three-Sisters
Sword, gave him a blow between the horns, and
asked: “At what time does the princess ride to meet
her lover to-night?” The goat bleated, and said he
did not dare tell; but when the comrade had given
him another thump, he did say that the princess
would come at eleven o’clock sharp. Then the comrade
put on the Three-Sisters Hat, which made him
invisible, and waited for the princess. When she
came, she anointed the goat with a salve she carried
in a great horn, and cried out: “Up, up! over
gable and roof, over land and sea, over hill and dale,
to my dearest, who waits for me in the hill!”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>As the goat flew upward, the comrade swung himself
up in back, and then they were off like the wind
through the clouds: it was not a long journey. Suddenly
they stood before a wall of rock, she knocked,
and then they took their way into the interior of the
hill, to the troll who was her dearest. “And now a
new suitor has come who wants to win me, sweetheart,”
said she. “He is young and handsome, but
I will have none but you,” she went on, and made a
great time over the troll. “I have set him a test,
and here are the shears that he was to keep and
guard. You shall keep them now!” Then both of
them laughed as though the youth had already lost
his head. “Yes, I will keep them, and take good
care of them, and a kiss from you shall pledge the
truth, when crows are cawing around the youth!”
said the troll; and he laid the shears in an iron chest
with three locks. But at the moment he was dropping
the shears into the chest, the comrade caught
them up. None could see him, for he was wearing
the Three-Sisters Hat. So the troll carefully locked
the empty chest, and put the key into a hollow
double-tooth, where he kept other magic things.
“The suitor could hardly find it there,” said he.</p>
<p>After midnight the princess set out for home. The
comrade swung himself up in back again, and the
trip home did not take long.</p>
<p>The following noon the youth was invited to dine
at the king’s table. But this time the princess kept
her nose in the air, and was so haughty and snappish
that she hardly condescended to glance in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span>
youth’s direction. But after they had eaten, she
looked very solemn, and asked in the sweetest manner:
“You probably still have the shears I gave you
to take care of yesterday?”</p>
<p>“Yes, here they are,” said the youth; and he flung
them on the table so that they rang. The princess
could not have been more frightened had he thrown
the shears in her face. But she tried to make the
best of a bad bargain, and said in a sweet voice:
“Since you have taken such good care of the shears,
you will not find it hard to keep my ball of gold twine
for me. I should like to have it back by to-morrow
noon; but if you cannot give it to me then, you must
die, according to the law.” The youth thought it
would not be so very hard, and put the ball of gold
twine in his pocket. Yet the princess once more
began to toy and joke with him, so that he thought
neither of himself nor of the ball of gold twine, and
while they were in the midst of their merry play she
stole the golden ball from him, and then dismissed
him.</p>
<p>When he came up into his room, and told what she
had said and done, his comrade asked: “And have
you still the ball of gold twine?”</p>
<p>“Yes, indeed,” said the youth, and thrust his hand
into the pocket in which he had placed it. But there
was no ball in it, and he fell into such despair that
he did not know what to do.</p>
<p>“Do not worry,” said his comrade. “I will see
whether I cannot get it back for you.” He took his
sword and his hat, and went to a smith and had him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span>
weld twelve extra pounds of iron to his sword.
Then, when he entered the stable, he gave the goat
such a blow between the horns with it that he staggered,
and asked: “At what time does the princess
ride to her dearest to-night?”</p>
<p>“At twelve o’clock sharp,” said the goat.</p>
<p>The comrade once more put on his Three-Sisters
Hat, and waited until the princess came with the
horn of ointment and anointed the goat. Then she
repeated what she had already said: “Up, up! over
gable and tower, over land and sea, over hill and
dale, to my dearest who waits for me in the hill!”
And when the goat arose, the comrade swung himself
up in back, and off they were like lightning through
the air. Soon they had reached the troll-hill, and
when she had knocked thrice they passed through
the interior of the hill till they met the troll who
was her dearest.</p>
<p>“What manner of care did you take of the golden
shears I gave you yesterday, my friend?” asked the
princess. “The suitor had them, and he gave them
back to me.”</p>
<p>That was quite impossible, said the troll, for he
had locked them up in a chest with three locks, and
had thrust the key into his hollow tooth. But when
they had unlocked the chest and looked, there were
no shears there. Then the princess told him that
she had now given him her ball of golden twine.</p>
<p>“Here it is,” said she. “I took it away from him
again without his having noticed it; but what are
we to do if he is a master of such arts?”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The troll could not think of anything to suggest;
but after they had reflected a while they hit on the
idea of lighting a great fire, and burning the ball of
gold twine, for then the suitor could surely not
regain it. Yet when she threw it into the flames,
the comrade leaped forward and caught it, without
being seen, for he was wearing the Three-Sisters
Hat. After the princess had stayed a little while
she returned home, and again the comrade sat up
behind, and the trip home was swiftly and safely
made. When the youth was asked to the king’s
table, the comrade gave him the ball. The princess
was still more sharp and disdainful in her remarks
than before, and after they had eaten she pinched
her lips, and said: “Would it not be possible for
me to get my ball of gold twine again, which I gave
you yesterday?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the youth, “you can have it; there
it is!” and he flung it on the table with such a thud
that the king leaped up in the air with fright.</p>
<p>The princess grew as pale as a corpse; but she
made the best of a bad bargain, and said that he
had done well. Now there was only one more little
test for him to undergo. “If you can bring me what
I am thinking about by to-morrow noon, then you
may have me and keep me.”</p>
<p>The youth felt as though he had been condemned
to death; for it seemed altogether impossible for
him to know of what the princess was thinking, and
still more impossible to bring her the thing in question.
And when he came to his room his comrade<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</SPAN></span>
could scarcely quiet him. He said he would take the
matter in hand, as he had done on the other occasions,
and at last the youth grew calmer, and lay
down to sleep. In the meantime the comrade went
to the smith, and had him weld an additional twenty-four
pounds of iron on his sword. When this had
been done, he went to the stable, and gave the goat
such a smashing blow between the horns that he
flew to the other side of the wall.</p>
<p>“At what time does the princess ride to her dearest
to-night?” said he.</p>
<p>“At one o’clock sharp,” bleated the goat.</p>
<p>When the time came, the comrade was standing in
the stable, wearing his Three-Sisters Hat, and after
the princess had anointed the goat and spoken her
formula, off they went through the air as before,
with the comrade sitting in back. But this time he
was anything but gentle, and kept giving the princess
a cuff here, and a cuff there, until she had received
a terrible drubbing. When she reached the
wall of rock, she knocked three times, the hill opened,
and they flew through it to her dearest.</p>
<p>She complained bitterly to him, and said she would
never have thought it possible that the weather could
affect one so; it had seemed to her as though some
one were flying along with them, beating her and
the goat, and her whole body must be covered with
black and blue spots, so badly had she been thrashed.
And then she told how the suitor had again had the
ball of twine. How he had managed to get it, neither
she nor the troll could guess.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“But do you know the thought that came to me?”
said she. Of course the troll did not.</p>
<p>“Well,” said she, “I have told him he is to bring
me the thing I am thinking of by to-morrow noon,
and that thing is your head. Do you think, dear
friend, that he will be able to bring it to me?” and
she made a great time over the troll.</p>
<p>“I do not think he can,” said the troll, who felt
quite sure of himself, and laughed and chortled with
pleasure in the most malicious way. For he and the
princess were firmly convinced that the youth would
be more apt to lose his own head, and be left to the
ravens, than that he would be able to bring the princess
the head of the troll.</p>
<p>Toward morning the princess wanted to fly home
again, but she did not venture to ride alone; the troll
must accompany her. He was quite ready to do so,
took his goat from the stable—he had one just like
that of the princess—and anointed him between the
horns. When the troll had mounted, the comrade
swung up in back of him, and off they were through
the air in the direction of the king’s castle. But on
the way the comrade beat away lustily at the troll
and his goat, and gave him thump after thump, and
blow after blow with his sword, until they were flying
lower and lower, and at last nearly fell into the sea
across which their journey led them. When the troll
noticed how stormy the weather was, he accompanied
the princess to the castle, and waited outside to make
sure that she really came home safely. But the
moment when the door closed on the princess, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span>
comrade hewed off his head, and went up with it to
the youth’s room.</p>
<p>“Here is the thing of which the princess was
thinking,” said he. Then everything was in apple-pie
order, and when the youth was invited to the
king’s table and they had eaten, the princess grew
as merry as a lark. “Have you, perhaps, the thing
of which I was thinking?” “To be sure,” said the
youth, and he drew forth the head from beneath his
coat, and flung it on the table so that the table and
all that was on it fell over. The princess looked as
though she had come from the grave; yet she could
not deny that this was the thing of which she had
thought, and now she had to take the youth, as
she had promised. So the wedding was celebrated,
and there was great joy throughout the kingdom.</p>
<p>But the comrade took the youth aside, and said
that on their wedding-night he might close his eyes
and pretend to sleep, but that, if he loved his life,
and followed his advice, he would not sleep a wink
until the princess was freed from her troll-skin. He
must whip it off with nine new switches of birch-wood,
and strip it off with three milk-baths beside;
first he must scrub it off in a tub of year-old whey,
then he must rub it off in a tub of sour milk, and
finally, he must sponge it off in a tub of sweet milk.
He had laid the birch switches beneath the bed, and
had stood the tubs of milk in the corner; all was prepared.
The youth promised to follow his advice, and
do as he had told him. When night came, and he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span>
lay in his bed, the princess raised herself on her
elbows, to see if he were really asleep, and she tickled
him under the nose; but he was sleeping quite
soundly. Then she pulled his hair and his beard. But
it seemed to her that he slept like a log. Then she
drew a great butcher’s knife out from beneath her
pillow, and wanted to cut off his head. But the
youth leaped up, struck the knife from her hand,
seized her by the hair, whipped her with the
switches, and did not stop until not one was left.
Thereupon he threw her into the tub of whey, and
then he saw what sort of creature she really was,
for her whole body was coal-black. But when he had
scrubbed her in the whey, and rubbed her in the sour
milk, and sponged her in the sweet milk, the troll-skin
had altogether disappeared, and she was lovelier
than she had ever been before.</p>
<p>On the following day the comrade said that now
they must get on their way. The youth was ready
to set forth, and the princess, too, for her dower had
long since been made ready. During the night the
comrade had brought all the gold and silver, and
all the valuables which the troll had left in the hill
to the castle, and when they wanted to start in the
morning, the castle court-yard was so full they could
scarcely get through. The dower supplied by the
troll was worth more than the king’s whole country,
and they did not know how they were to take it
home. But the comrade found a way out of the
difficulty. The troll had also left six goats who
could fly through the air. These he loaded so heavily<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>
with gold and silver that they had to walk on
the ground, and were not strong enough to rise into
the air; and what the goats could not carry, had to
be left at the castle. Thus they traveled for a long
time, but at last the goats grew so weary and
wretched that they could go no further. The youth
and the princess did not know what to do; but when
the comrade saw that they could not move from the
spot, he took the whole treasure on his back, topped
it with the goats, and carried it all until they were
no more than half a mile from the youth’s home.
Then the comrade said: “Now I must part from you,
for I can stay with you no longer.” But the youth
would not hear of parting, and would not let him go
at any price.</p>
<p>So he went along another half mile, but further
than that he could not go, and when the youth
pressed him, and insisted that he come home with
him, and stay there; or that he at least celebrate
their home-coming, he merely said no, he could not
do so. Then the youth asked him what he wished in
the way of payment for his company and aid. “If I
am to wish for something, then I would like to have
half of all that you may gain in the course of the
next five years,” said his comrade. And this was
promised him.</p>
<p>Now when the comrade had gone, the youth hid
all his treasure, and went straight home. And there
they celebrated a home-coming feast that was talked
about in seven kingdoms; and when that was over
they spent the whole winter going back and forth<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span>
with the goats, and his father’s twelve horses, bringing
all the gold and silver home.</p>
<p>After five years the comrade came again and asked
for his share. Then the man divided all his possessions
into two equal parts.</p>
<p>“Yet there is one thing you have not divided,”
said the comrade.</p>
<p>“What could that be?” asked the man. “I
thought I had divided everything.”</p>
<p>“You have been blessed with a child,” said the
comrade, “and that you must also divide into two
equal parts.”</p>
<p>Yes, such was really the case. Then he took up
his sword, but when he raised it and was about to
divide the child, his comrade seized the point of the
sword so that he could not strike.</p>
<p>“Are you not happy, since you need not strike?”
said he.</p>
<p>“Yes, indeed, I never was happier,” said the man.</p>
<p>“That is how happy I was when you delivered
me out of the block of ice,” said the comrade.
“Keep all you have: I need nothing, for I am a
disembodied spirit.” And he told him he was the
wine-dealer who had lain in the block of ice before
the church door, spat upon by all; and that he had
become his comrade, and had aided him, because the
youth had sacrificed all he had in order that he
might have peace, and a burial in consecrated
ground. He had been permitted to accompany him
for the space of a year, and the time had run out
when he had first parted with him. Now he had once<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span>
more been allowed to visit him; yet on this occasion
he would have to part for all time, for the bells of
heaven were calling him.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p class="center">NOTE</p>
<p>In no event originally Norse, but thousands of years old, current
in many lands, and even recounted in the book of Tobias—though
in other words—is the story of the grateful dead man, “The Comrade.”
(Asbjörnsen, N.F.E., No. 100, p. 201. From Aadal, together
with variants from Valders and Aamot.)</p>
</div>
<hr class="l1" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />