<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>XXIII<br/> <br/> <span class="f8">MURMUR GOOSE-EGG</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">Once</span> upon a time there were five women who
were standing in a field, mowing. Heaven had
not given a single one of them a child, and each of
them wanted to have one. And suddenly they saw a
goose-egg of quite unheard-of size, well-nigh as
large as a man’s head. “I saw it first,” said the
one. “I saw it at the same time that you did,” insisted
another. “But I want it, for I saw it first of
all,” maintained a third. And thus they went on,
and fought so about the egg that they nearly came
to blows. Finally they agreed that it should belong
to all five of them, and that all of them should sit
on it, as a goose would do, and hatch out the little
gosling. The first remained sitting on the egg for
eight days, and hatched, and did not move or do a
thing; and during this time the rest had to feed her
and themselves as well. One of them grew angry
because of this and scolded.</p>
<p>“You did not crawl out of the egg either before
you could cry peep!” said the one who was sitting
on the egg and hatching. “Yet I almost believe that
a human child is going to slip out of the egg, for
something is murmuring inside it without ever stopping:
‘Herring and mush, porridge and milk,’” said<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</SPAN></span>
she. “And now you can sit on it for eight days,
while we bring you food.”</p>
<p>When the fifth day of the eight had passed, it was
plain to her that there was a child in the egg, which
kept on calling: “Herring and mush, porridge
and milk,” and so she punched a hole in the egg, and
instead of a gosling out came a child, and it was
quite disgustingly homely, with a big head and a
small body, and no sooner had it crawled out than
it began to cry: “Herring and mush, porridge and
milk!” So they named the child Murmur Goose-Egg.</p>
<p>In spite of the child’s homeliness, the women at
first took a great deal of pleasure in him; but before
long he grew so greedy that he devoured everything
they had. When they cooked a dish of mush or a
potful of porridge that was to do for all six of them,
the child swallowed it all by himself. So they did not
want to keep him any longer. “I have not had a
single full meal since the changling crawled out,”
said one of them; and when Murmur Goose-Egg
heard that, and the rest agreed, he said that he
would gladly go his own gait, for “if they had no
need of him, then he had no need of them,” and with
that he went off. Finally he came to a farmstead
that lay in a rocky section, and asked for work.
Yes, they needed a workman, and the master told
him to gather up the stones in the field. Then Murmur
Goose-Egg gathered up the stones in the field;
he picked up some that were so large that a number
of horses could not have dragged them, and large<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</SPAN></span>
and small, one and all, he put them in his pocket.
Before long he had finished his work, and wanted
to know what he was to do next.</p>
<p>“You have picked up the stones in the field?” said
his master. “You cannot possibly have finished before
you have really begun!”</p>
<p>But Murmur Goose-Egg emptied his pockets, and
threw the stones on a pile. Then his master saw
that he had finished his work, and that one would
have to handle such a strong fellow with kid gloves.
So he told him to come in and eat. That suited
Murmur Goose-Egg, and he ate up everything that
was to have supplied the master and his family, and
the help, and then he was only half satisfied.</p>
<p>He was really a splendid worker; but a dangerous
eater, like a bottomless cask, said the peasant.
“Such a serving-man could eat up a poor peasant,
house and ground, before he noticed it,” said he.
He had no more work for him, and the best thing to
do would be to go to the king’s castle.</p>
<p>So Murmur Goose-Egg went to the king, and was
at once given a place, and there was enough to eat
and drink in the castle. He was to be the errand-boy,
and help the maids fetch wood and water, and do
other odd jobs. So he asked what he was to do
first.</p>
<p>For the time being he could chop fire-wood, said
they. So Murmur Goose-Egg began to chop fire-wood,
and hewed to the line in such fashion that the
chips fairly flew. Before long he had chopped up
all that there was, kindling wood and building wood,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</SPAN></span>
beams and boards, and when he was through with
it, he came and asked what he was to do now.</p>
<p>“You can finish chopping the fire-wood,” said
they.</p>
<p>“There is none left,” said Murmur Goose-Egg.</p>
<p>That could not be possible, said the superintendent,
and looked into the wood-bin. Yes, indeed,
Murmur Goose-Egg had chopped up everything,
large and small, beams and boards. That was very
bad, and therefore the superintendent said that Murmur
Goose-Egg should have nothing to eat until he
had chopped down just as much wood in the forest
as he had just chopped up for fire-wood.</p>
<p>Then Murmur Goose-Egg went into the smithy,
and had the smith make an iron ax of five hundred-weights.
With that he went into the forest and
began to chop. He chopped down big pine and fir
trees, as thick as masts, and all that he found on the
king’s ground, as well as what he found on that of
his neighbors. But he cut off neither the branches
nor the tree-tops, so that all lay there as though
felled by the storm. Then he loaded a sizable stack
on the sled, and put to the horses. But they could
not move the load from the spot, and when he took
them by the heads, in order to pull them forward,
he tore off their heads. So he unharnessed them,
and left them lying in the field, and put himself to
the sled, and went off alone with the load. When
he came to the king’s castle, there stood the king
with the master carpenter in the entrance, and they
were ready to give him a warm reception, because<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</SPAN></span>
of the destruction he had wrought in the forest. For
the master carpenter had been there and seen the
havoc he had made. But when Murmur Goose-Egg
came along with half the forest, the king grew frightened
as well as angry, and he thought that if Murmur
was so strong, it would be best to handle him
with care.</p>
<p>“Why, you are a splendid workman,” said the
king, “but tell me, how much do you really eat at
once,” he continued, “for I am sure you are
hungry?”</p>
<p>If he were to have enough porridge, they would
have to take twelve tons of meal to make it; but
after he had eaten that, then he could wait a while,
said Murmur Goose-Egg.</p>
<p>It took some time before so much porridge could
be prepared, and in the meantime Murmur was to
carry wood into the kitchen. So he piled the whole
load of wood on a sled, but when he drove it through
the door, he did not go to work about it very gently.
The house nearly broke from its joints, and he well-nigh
tore down the entire castle. When at last dinner
was ready, they sent him out into the field, to
call the help. He called so loudly that hill and vale
reëchoed the sound. But still the people did not
come quick enough to suit him. So he picked a quarrel
with them, and killed twelve.</p>
<p>“You kill twelve of my people, and you eat for
twelve times twelve of them, but how many men’s
work can you do?” asked the king.</p>
<p>“I do the work of twelve times twelve, too,” said<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</SPAN></span>
Murmur. When he had eaten, he was to go to the
barn and thresh. So he pulled the beam out of the
roof-tree, and made a flail out of it, and when the
roof threatened to fall in, he took a pine-tree with
all its boughs and branches, and set it up in place
of the roof-beam. Then he threshed corn and hay
and straw, all together, and it seemed as though a
cloud hung over the royal castle.</p>
<p>When Murmur Goose-Egg had nearly finished
threshing, the enemy broke into the land, and war
began. Then the king told him to gather people
about him, and go to meet the foe, and do battle
with him, for he thought the enemy would probably
kill him.</p>
<p>No, said Murmur Goose-Egg, he did not want to
have the king’s people killed, he would see that he
dealt with the enemy himself.</p>
<p>All the better, thought the king, then I am sure
to get rid of him. But he would need a proper club,
said Murmur.</p>
<p>So they sent to the smith, and he forged a club of
two hundred-weights. That would only do for a
nut-cracker, said Murmur Goose-Egg. So he forged
another that weighed six hundred-weights, and that
would do to hammer shoes with, said Murmur Goose-Egg.
But the smith told him that he and all his
workmen together could not forge a larger one.</p>
<p>Then Murmur Goose-Egg went into the smithy
himself, and forged himself a club of thirty hundred-weights,
and it would have taken a hundred men
just to turn it around on the anvil. This might do<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</SPAN></span>
at a pinch, said Murmur. Then he wanted a knapsack
with provisions. It was sewn together out of
fifteen ox-skins, and stuffed full of provisions, and
then Murmur wandered down the hill with the knapsack
on his back, and the club over his shoulder.</p>
<p>When he came near enough for the soldiers to
see him, they sent to ask whether he had a mind to
attack them.</p>
<p>“Just wait until I have eaten,” said Murmur, and
sat him down behind his knapsack to eat. But the
enemy would not wait, and began to fire at him.
And it fairly rained and hailed musket-balls all
around Murmur.</p>
<p>“I don’t care a fig for these blueberries,” said
Murmur Goose-Egg, and feasted on quite at ease.
Neither lead nor iron could wound him, and his knapsack
stood before him, and caught the bullets like
a wall.</p>
<p>Then the enemy began to throw bombs at him, and
shoot at him with cannon. He hardly moved when
he was struck. “O, that’s of no account!” said he.</p>
<p>But then a bomb flew into his wind-pipe.
“Faugh!” said he, and spat it out again, and then
came a chain-bullet and fell into his butter-plate,
and another tore away the bit of bread from between
his fingers.</p>
<p>Then he grew angry, stood up, took his club,
pounded the ground with it, and asked whether they
wanted to take the food from his mouth with the
blueberries they were blowing out at him from their
clumsy blow-pipes. Then he struck a few more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</SPAN></span>
blows, so that the hills and valleys round about trembled,
and all the enemy flew up into the air like
chaff, and that was the end of the war.</p>
<p>When Murmur came back and asked for more
work, the king was at a loss, for he had felt sure
that now he was rid of him. So he knew of nothing
better to do than to send him to the devil’s place.</p>
<p>“Now you can go to the devil, and fetch the tribute
from him,” said the king. Murmur Goose-Egg went
off with his knapsack on his back, and his club over
his shoulder. He had soon reached the right spot;
but when he got there the devil was away at a trial.
There was no one home but his grandmother, and
she said she had never yet heard anything about a
tribute, and that he was to come back some other
time.</p>
<p>“Yes, indeed, come again to-morrow,” said he.
“I know that old excuse!” But since he was there,
he would stay there, for he had to take home the
tribute, and he had plenty of time to wait. But when
he had eaten all his provisions, he grew weary, and
again demanded the tribute from the grandmother.</p>
<p>“You will get nothing from me, and that’s as flat
as the old fir-tree outside is fast,” said the devil’s
grandmother. The fir-tree stood in front of the gate
to the devil’s place, and was so large that fifteen
men could hardly girdle it with their arms. But
Murmur climbed up into its top and bent and shook
it to and fro as though it were a willow wand, and
then asked the devil’s grandmother once more
whether she would now pay him the tribute.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>So she did not dare to refuse any longer, and
brought out as much money as he could possibly
carry in his knapsack. Then he set out for home
with the tribute, and now no sooner had he gone
than the devil came home, and when he learned that
Murmur had taken along a big bag of money, he
first beat his grandmother, and then hurried after
Murmur. And he soon caught up to him, for he ran
over sticks and stones, and sometimes flew in between;
while Murmur had to stick to the highway
with his heavy knapsack. But with the devil at his
heels, he began to run as fast as he could, and
stretched out the club behind him, to keep the devil
from coming to close quarters. And thus they ran
along, one behind the other; while Murmur held
the shaft and the devil the end of the club, until they
reached a deep valley. There Murmur jumped from
one mountain-top to another, and the devil followed
him so hotly that he ran into the club, fell down
into the valley and broke his foot—and there he
lay.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i005" id="i005"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i005.jpg" width-obs="405" height-obs="573" alt="“THERE MURMUR JUMPED FROM ONE MOUNTAIN-TOP TO ANOTHER” —Page 189" title="" /><br/> <span class="caption">“THERE MURMUR JUMPED FROM ONE MOUNTAIN-TOP TO ANOTHER”<br/> <span class="flr">—Page 189</span></span></div>
<p>“There’s your tribute!” said Murmur Goose-Egg,
when he had reached the royal castle, and he flung
down the knapsack full of money before the king,
so that the whole castle tottered. The king thanked
him kindly, and promised him a good reward, and a
good character, if he wanted it; but Murmur only
wanted more work to do.</p>
<p>“What shall I do now?” he asked. The king reflected
for a while, and then he said Murmur should
travel to the hill-troll, who had robbed him of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</SPAN></span>
sword of his ancestors. He lived in a castle by the
sea, where no one ventured to go.</p>
<p>Murmur was given a few cart-loads of provisions
in his big knapsack, and once more set out. Long
he wandered, though, over field and wood, over hills
and deep valleys, till he came to a great mountain
where the troll lived who had robbed the king of
the sword.</p>
<p>But the troll was not out in the open, and the
mountain was closed, so Murmur could not get it.
So he joined a party of stone-breakers, who were
working at a mountainside, and worked along with
them. They had never had such a helper, for Murmur
hewed away at the rocks till they burst, and
stone bowlders as large as houses came rolling down.
But when he was about to rest and eat up the first
cart-load of his provisions, it had already been eaten
up. “I have a good appetite myself,” said Murmur,
“but whoever got hold of it has an even better one,
for he has eaten up the bones as well!”</p>
<p>Thus it went the first day, and the second was no
better. On the third day he went to work again, and
took along the third cart-load, lay down behind it,
and pretended to be sleeping.</p>
<p>Then a troll with seven heads came out of the hill,
began to smack his lips, and eat of his provisions.</p>
<p>“Now the table is set, so now I am going to eat,”
said he.</p>
<p>“First we’ll see about that,” said Murmur, and
hewed away at the troll so that the heads flew from
his body.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Then he went into the hill out of which the troll
had come, and inside stood a horse eating out of a
barrel of glowing ashes, while behind him stood a
barrel filled with oats.</p>
<p>“Why don’t you eat out of the barrel of oats?”
asked Murmur Goose-Egg.</p>
<p>“Because I cannot turn around,” said the horse.</p>
<p>“I will turn you around,” said Murmur Goose-Egg.</p>
<p>“Tear my head off instead,” pleaded the horse.</p>
<p>Murmur did so, and then the horse turned into
a fine-looking man. He said that he had been enchanted,
and turned into a horse by the troll. Then
he helped Murmur look for the sword, which the
troll had hidden under the bed. But in the bed lay
the troll’s grandmother, and she was snoring.</p>
<p>They went home by water, and just as they sailed
off the old troll grandmother came after them; but
she could not get at them, hence she commenced to
drink, so that the water went down and grew lower.
But at last she could not drink up the whole sea,
and so she burst.</p>
<p>When they came ashore, Murmur sent to the king,
and had him told to have the sword fetched; but
though the king sent four horses, they could not
move it from the spot. He sent eight, he sent twelve,
but the sword remained where it was, and could not
be moved from the spot by any means. Then Murmur
Goose-Egg took it up, and carried it alone.</p>
<p>The king could not believe his eyes when he saw
Murmur once more; but he was very friendly and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</SPAN></span>
promised him gold and green forests. But when
Murmur asked for more work, he told him to travel
to his troll’s castle, where no one dared go, and to
remain there until he had built a bridge across the
sound, so that people could cross. If he could do
that, he would reward him well, yes, he would even
give him his daughter, said the king. He would
attend to it, said Murmur.</p>
<p>Yet no human being had ever returned thence
alive; all who had gotten so far, lay on the ground
dead, and crushed to a jelly, and the king thought,
when sending him there, that he would never see
him again.</p>
<p>But Murmur set out. He took with him his knapsack
full of provisions, and a properly turned and
twisted block of pine-wood, as well as an ax, a wedge
and some wooden chips.</p>
<p>When he reached the sound, the river was full
of drifting ice, and it roared like a waterfall. But
he planted his legs firmly on the ground, and waded
along until he got across. When he had warmed
himself and satisfied his hunger, he wanted to sleep;
but a tumult and rumbling started, as though the
whole castle were to be turned upside down. The
gate flew wide open, and Murmur saw nothing but
a pair of yawning jaws that reached from the
threshold to the top of the door.</p>
<p>“Let’s see who you may be? Perhaps you are
an old friend of mine,” said Murmur. And sure
enough, it was Master Devil. Then they played
cards together. The devil would gladly have won<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</SPAN></span>
back some of the tribute Murmur had forced from
his grandmother for the king. Yet, no matter how
he played, Murmur always won; for he made a cross
on the cards. And after he had won all the devil
had with him, the latter had to give him some of
the gold and silver that was in the castle.</p>
<p>In the midst of their game the fire went out, so
that they could no longer tell the cards apart.</p>
<p>“Now we must split wood,” said Murmur. He
hewed into the block of pine-wood with his ax, and
drove in the wedge, but the tree-stump was tough,
and would not split at once, though Murmur gave
himself all manner of pains.</p>
<p>“You are supposed to be strong,” he said to the
devil. “Spit on your hands, slap in your claws here,
and pull the block apart, so that I can see what you
can do!”</p>
<p>The devil obediently thrust both hands into the
split, and tore and clawed with all his might; but
suddenly Murmur Goose-Egg knocked out the wedge,
and there the devil was caught in a vice, while Murmur
belabored his back with the ax. The devil
wailed, and begged Murmur to let him go; but Murmur
would hear nothing of it until he had promised
never to come back and make a nuisance of himself
again. Besides that, he had to promise to build a
bridge over the sound, on which one could go back
and forth at all seasons of the year. And the bridge
was to be completed immediately after the breaking
up of the ice-drift.</p>
<p>“Alas!” said the devil, but there was nothing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</SPAN></span>
for it but to promise if he wished to go free. Yet
he made one condition, that he was to have the first
soul that crossed the bridge as sound-toll.</p>
<p>He could have it, said Murmur. Then he let the
devil out, and he ran straight home. But Murmur
lay down and slept until far into the following day.</p>
<p>Then the king came to see whether Murmur Goose-Egg
were lying crushed on the ground, or had merely
been badly beaten. He had to wade through piles
of money before he could reach the bed. The money
was stacked up high along the walls in heaps and in
bags, and Murmur lay in the bed and snored.</p>
<p>“May heaven help me and my daughter!” cried
the king, when he saw that Murmur Goose-Egg was
in the best of health. Yes, and no one could deny
that everything had been well and thoroughly done,
said the king; but there could be no talk of marriage
as long as the bridge had not been built.</p>
<p>Then one day the bridge was finished; and on it
stood the devil, ready to collect the toll promised
him.</p>
<p>Murmur Goose-Egg wanted the king to be the first
to try the bridge with him; but the king had no
mind to do so, therefore Murmur himself mounted
a horse, and swung up the fat dairy-maid from the
castle before him on the saddle-bow—she looked
almost like a gigantic block of wood—and dashed
across the bridge with her so that the planks fairly
thundered.</p>
<p>“Where is my sound-toll? Where is the soul?”
cried the devil. “Sitting in this block of wood! If<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span>
you want her, you must spit on your hands and catch
hold of her,” said Murmur Goose-Egg. “No, thank
you! If she does not catch hold of me, then I’ll
certainly not catch hold of her,” said the devil.
“You caught me in a vice once, but you can’t fool
me a second time,” said he, and flew straight home
to his grandmother, and since then nothing more
has been heard or seen of him.</p>
<p>But Murmur Goose-Egg hurried back to the castle
and asked for the reward the king had promised
him. And when the king hesitated and began to
make all sorts of excuses, in order not to have to
keep his promise, Murmur said it would be best to
have a substantial knapsackful of provisions made
ready, since now he, Murmur, was going to take his
reward himself. This the king did, and when the
knapsack was ready, Murmur took the king along
with him in front of the castle, and gave him a
proper shove, so that he flew high up into the air.
And he threw the knapsack up after him, so that
he would not be left altogether without provisions;
and if he has not come down yet, then he, together
with the knapsack, is floating between heaven and
earth to this very day.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p class="center">NOTE</p>
<p>“Murmur Goose-Egg” (Asbjörnsen, N.F.E., p. 172, No. 96. From
Gudbrandsdal, title and introduction after a variant from the vicinity
of Christiania) is predestined to great deeds from birth, like his
Swedish counterpart Knös. This giant fellow, who fears neither
death nor the devil, if he only has enough to eat, is of old a favorite
figure in Norse fairy-tale. It is by means of similar giant fooleries<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span>
that Thor, the god of the Norwegian peasant, was made ridiculous,
and shown up as a braggart; and in the Song of Harbord he is
mocked because of his fondness for herring and mush, the very dish
Murmur demands before he crawls from the egg. Thor is also
credited with a trip to the nether world, just as Murmur is sent
to the devil in hell, to collect a tribute.</p>
</div>
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