<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>XX<br/> <br/> <span class="f8">OLA STORBAEKKJEN</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">Once</span> upon a time there lived a man in the forest
of Dovre whose name was Ola Storbaekkjen.
He was of giant build, powerful and fearless. During
the winter he did not work, but traveled from
one fair to another, hunting up quarrels and brawls.
From Christiansmarkt he went to Branaes and
Konigsberg, and thence to Grundsaet, and wherever
he came squabbles and brawls broke out, and in
every brawl he was the victor. In the summer he
dealt in cattle at Valders and the fjords, and fought
with the fjord-folk and the hill people of Halling
and Valders, and always had the best of it. But
sometimes they scratched him a bit with the knife,
did those folk.</p>
<p>Now once, at the time of the hay harvest, he was
home at Baekkjen, and had lain down to take a little
after-dinner nap under the penthouse. And he was
taken into the hill, which happened in the following
way: A man with a pair of gilded goat’s horns came
along and butted Ola, but Ola fell upon him so that
the man had to duck back, again and again. But
the stranger stood up once more, and began to butt
again, and finally he took Ola under his arm like a
glove, and then both of them flew straight off into
the hill.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In the place to which they came all was adorned
with silver plates and dishes, and with ornaments of
silver, and Ola thought that the king himself had
nothing finer. They offered him mead, which he
drank; but eat he would not, for the food did not
seem to him to be appetizing. Suddenly the man
with the gilded goat’s horns came in, and gave Ola
a shove before he knew it; but Ola came back at
him as before, and so they beat and pulled each
other through all the rooms, and along all the walls.
Ola was of the opinion that they had been at it all
night long; but by that time the scuffle had lasted
over fourteen days, and they had already tolled the
church bells for him on three successive Thursday
evenings. On the third Thursday evening he was in
ill ease, for the people in the hill had in mind to
thrust him forth. When the bells stopped ringing,
he sat at a crack in the hill, with his head looking
out. Had not a man come by and happened to spy
him, and told the people to keep on ringing the
church-bells, the hill would have closed over him
again, and he would probably still be inside. But
when he came out he had been so badly beaten, and
was so miserable, that it passed all measure. The
lumps on his head were each bigger than the other,
his whole body was black and blue, and he was quite
out of his mind. And from time to time he would
leap up, run off and try to get back into the hill
to take up his quarrel again, and fight for the gilded
goat’s horns. For those he wanted to break from
the giant’s forehead.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p class="center">NOTE</p>
<p>A primitive enjoyment of brawling and pummeling is betrayed in
the story of “Ola Storbaekkjen” (Asbjörnsen, <cite lang="no" xml:lang="no">Huldreeventyr</cite>, II,
p. 73. From the vicinity of Osterdalen, told by a reindeer-hunter).</p>
</div>
<hr class="l1" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />