<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>XXVI<br/> <br/> <span class="f8">HELGE-HAL IN THE BLUE HILL</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">Once</span> upon a time there was a sinister old
couple, who lived out under the open sky. All
that they had were three sons, an old cook-pot, an
old frying-pan, and an old cat. Then the man died,
and after a time his wife died, too. Now their estate
was to be divided. So the oldest took the old cook-pot,
and the second took the old frying-pan, and Ebe
Ashpeter had no choice. He had to take the old cat,
and they did not ask him whether he wanted to or
not.</p>
<p>“Brother Peter can scrape out the cook-pot after
he has loaned it out,” said Ebe. “Brother Paul gets
a crust of bread when he lends out his frying-pan;
but what am I to do with this wretched cat?” And
he was angry and envious. Yet he scratched the
cat and stroked it, and this pleased the cat so that
she began to purr, and raised her tail in the air.</p>
<p>“Wait, wait, I’ll help you yet,” said the cat,
“wait, wait, I’ll help you yet!”</p>
<p>There was nothing to bite or break in the hut.
Brother Peter and Brother Paul had each of them
gone off in a different direction. So Ebe set out, too,
with the cat in the lead, himself following; but after
a time he turned and went home again, to see
whether the floor had been swept, and the cat tripped<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</SPAN></span>
on alone. After she had gone her way, tipp, tapp,
tipp, tapp, for a while, she came to a great rock,
and there she met an enormous herd of reindeer.
The cat crept softly around the herd, and then with
one leap sprang between the horns of the finest
buck.</p>
<p>“If you do not go where I want you to, I’ll
scratch out your eyes, and drive you over rock
and precipice!” said she. So the buck did not dare
do anything save what the cat wished, and off they
went over stick and stone, from cliff to cliff, close
by Ebe, who was just polishing the door-sill of his
house, and with one bound right into the castle.</p>
<p>“I am to deliver a kind greeting from Ebe, and
ask whether my lord king might care to have this
buck reindeer to drive,” said the cat. Yes, he could
make good use of such a young, handsome animal,
some time, when he had occasion to drive out to visit
a neighboring king.</p>
<p>“This Ebe must be a proud and powerful lord,”
said the king, “if he can make me such presents.”</p>
<p>“Yes, he is the greatest lord in all your land and
kingdom,” said the cat, but no matter how many
questions the king asked, he learned nothing more.</p>
<p>“Tell him that I am much obliged,” said the king,
and he sent him a whole cart-load of handsome presents.
But Ebe looked past them and paid no attention
to them.</p>
<p>“Brother Peter can scrape out his cook-pot when
he has loaned it out, and Brother Paul gets a crust
of bread when he lends out his frying-pan; but what<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</SPAN></span>
am I to do with this wretched cat!” said he, and felt
angry and envious; but still he scratched the cat, and
stroked her, and this pleased her so much that she
began to purr, and raised her tail in the air.</p>
<p>“Wait, wait, I will help you yet,” said the cat,
“wait, wait, I will help you yet!”</p>
<p>The next day they both set out again, the cat in
the lead, and Ebe following. After a while he turned
back to see whether the folding-table at home had
been scoured. And the cat tripped on alone. After
she had gone her way, tipp, tapp, tipp, tapp, for a
while, she came to a dense forest slope. There she
found an enormous herd of elk. The cat crept softly
up, and suddenly there she sat between the horns of
one of the stateliest of the bull elks.</p>
<p>“If you do not go where I want you to, I will
scratch out your eyes, and drive you over rock and
precipice!” said the cat. The elk did not dare do
anything save what the cat wished, and so off they
went, like lightning, over stick and stone, from cliff
to cliff, right past Ebe, who stood before the house
scouring the shutters, and with one bound into the
king’s castle.</p>
<p>“I am to deliver a kind greeting from Ebe, and
ask whether my lord king might not care to have
this bull elk for courier service.” It was quite clear
that should the king want a swift messenger, some
time, he could not find a swifter in all his kingdom.</p>
<p>“This Ebe must be a most distinguished lord, since
he finds such presents for me,” said the king.</p>
<p>“Yes, indeed, one might call him a distinguished<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</SPAN></span>
lord,” said the cat, “his wealth is without end or
limit.” But no matter how many other questions the
king asked, he received no more explicit information.</p>
<p>“Tell him that I am much obliged, and to do me
the honor to call when he is passing here some
time,” said the king, and sent him a robe as handsome
as the one he himself was wearing, and three
cartloads of handsome presents. But Ebe did not
even want to put on the royal robe, and hardly
looked at the other presents.</p>
<p>“Brother Peter can scrape out his cook-pot when
he has loaned it out, Brother Paul gets a crust of
bread when he lends out his frying-pan; but of what
use is this wretched cat to me!” he said, in spite
of all. Yet he stroked the cat, and pressed her to
his cheek, and scratched her, and this pleased the
cat so very much that she purred more than on the
other occasions, and stuck her tail up into the air as
straight as a rod.</p>
<p>“Wait, wait, I will help you yet,” said the cat,
“wait, wait, I will help you yet!”</p>
<p>On the third day they set out again, the cat in the
lead, and Ebe following. After a time it occurred
to him to go back and let the mice out of the house,
so that they would not be altogether starved in the
old hut; and the cat tripped on alone. After she
had gone her way, tipp, tapp, tipp, tapp, for a while,
she came to a dense pine forest, and there she met
a father bear, a mother bear and a baby bear. The
cat crept softly up to them, and all at once she was
hanging by her claws to the father bear’s head.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“If you do not go where I want you to, I will
scratch out your eyes, and drive you over rock and
precipice!” said the cat, and spit and arched her
back. Then the father bear did not dare do anything
save what the cat wished, and now they dashed
past Ebe, who had just carried all the young mice
over the threshold, like a storm, over stick and stone,
from cliff to cliff, so that the earth trembled and
shook. The king was just standing in the hallway,
and was not a little surprised to see such guests
arriving.</p>
<p>“I am to deliver a kind greeting from Ebe, and
ask whether my lord king might not care to have
this bear for a general or royal counselor,” said the
cat. The king was more than pleased to secure such
a creature for his nearest adviser, who could
doubt it.</p>
<p>“Tell him that I am much obliged, but that I do
not at all know how to show my appreciation,” said
the king.</p>
<p>“Well, he would like to marry your youngest
daughter!” said the cat.</p>
<p>“Yes, but that is asking a good deal,” said the
king. “He really ought to pay me a visit.”</p>
<p>“Ebe does not enter such plain houses,” said the
cat.</p>
<p>“Has he a handsomer castle than this?” asked
the king.</p>
<p>“Handsomer? Why, your castle seems like the
shabbiest hut in comparison with his!” was the cat’s
reply.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“You dare come into my presence, and tell me
that there is some one living in my kingdom who
is more handsomely housed than I, the king!”
shouted the king, beside himself with rage. He came
near wringing the cat’s neck.</p>
<p>“You might wait until you see it,” said the cat.
And the king said yes, he would wait. “But if you
have told me a falsehood, you shall die, and though
you had seven lives,” said he.</p>
<p>In the morning the king and the whole court set
out to travel to Ebe Ashpeter’s castle. The cat was
in the little hut, and called for Ebe, thinking it would
be best if both of them got underway an hour earlier.
After they had gone a while, they met some
folk who were herding sheep; and the sheep were
bleating and grazing over the whole plain. They
were as large as full-grown calves, and their wool
was so long that it dragged along the ground after
them. “To whom do the sheep belong?” asked the
cat. “To Helge-Hal in the Blue Hill,” said the
shepherds.</p>
<p>“The court is coming past in a moment,” said
the cat, “and if then you do not at once say that
they belong to Ebe, I will scratch out your eyes, and
drive you over rock and precipice!” said the cat,
and spat and arched her back, and showed her teeth.
Then the shepherds were so frightened that they
at once promised to do as the cat had ordered.</p>
<p>“But to whom do all these sheep belong?” asked
the king, when he came by with the court somewhat<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</SPAN></span>
later. “They are every bit as handsome as my
own!”</p>
<p>“They belong to Ebe,” said the shepherds.</p>
<p>Then the cat and Ebe wandered on for a while, and
came to a dense forest slope. There they met folk
who were tending goats. The goats skipped and
leaped about everywhere, and gave such fine milk
that better could no where be found.</p>
<p>“To whom do the goats belong?” asked the cat.</p>
<p>“To Helge-Hal in the Blue Hill,” said the herdsmen.
Then the cat again went through her ferocious
preparations, and the herdsmen were so frightened
that they did not dare oppose her wishes.</p>
<p>“Now who in the world can be the owner of so
many goats?” asked the king. “I myself have none
finer!”</p>
<p>“They belong to Ebe,” said the herdsmen.</p>
<p>Then they wandered on for a while, and met folk
who were tending cows: wherever one looked the
cows lowed and glistened, and each yielded milk
enough for three. When the cat heard that these
herdsmen were also in the service of Helge-Hal of
the Blue Hill, she spat once more, and arched her
back, and then all the herdsmen were ready that
moment to say what she wished.</p>
<p>“But in heaven’s name, to whom do all these
beautiful cattle belong?” asked the king. “There
are no such cattle in my whole kingdom!”</p>
<p>“They belong to Lord Ebe,” said the herdsmen.</p>
<p>Then they wandered on for a long, long time. At<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</SPAN></span>
last they came to a great plain, and there they met
horse-herders; and horses whinnied and disported
themselves over the whole plain, and their coats were
so fine that they glistened as though gilded, and each
horse was worth a whole castle.</p>
<p>“For whom do you herd these horses?” asked the
cat.</p>
<p>“For Helge-Hal in the Blue Hill,” the herders
replied.</p>
<p>“Well, the court will come by here in a little
while,” said the cat, “and if you do not say you
are herding them for Ebe, I will scratch out your
eyes, and drive you over rock and precipice!” said
the cat, and she spat, and showed her teeth and claws,
and grew so angry her hair stood up all along her
back. Then the herders were terribly frightened,
and did not dare do anything but what the cat
wished.</p>
<p>“But in the name of heaven, to whom do all these
horses belong?” asked the king, when he came by
with his court.</p>
<p>“They belong to Ebe,” said the herders.</p>
<p>“I never have seen or heard anything like it in
all my life!” cried the king. “This Ebe is such a
distinguished lord that it is past my understanding!”</p>
<p>The cat and Ebe had long since gone on their way,
and had wandered far and ever farther over hill and
rock. In the evening, at dusk, they came to a royal
castle that glittered and shimmered as though it
were of the purest silver and gold—which it was.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</SPAN></span>
Yet it was gloomy and depressing, and lonely and
barren there, and nowhere was there a sign of life.</p>
<p>Here they went in, and the cat stood with a cake
of rye meal just below the door. Suddenly there
came a thundering and a thumping so that the earth
trembled, and the whole castle shook, and that was
the troll who was coming home. And suddenly all
was quiet again, and before they knew it, Helge-Hal
in the Blue Hill had thrust his three great horrible
heads in at the door.</p>
<p>“Let me in! Let me in!” he cried, so that every
one shivered. “Wait, wait a bit while I tell you
what the rye had to go through before he was made
into this cake,” said the cat, and spoke to him in the
sweetest way. “First he was threshed, and then he
was beaten, and then he was pounded, and then he
was thumped, and then he was thrown from one wall
to another, and then he was sifted through a
sieve....”</p>
<p>“Let me in! Let me in, you chatterbox!” cried
the troll, and he was so furious that the sparks flew
from him.</p>
<p>“Wait a bit, wait a bit. I will tell you what the
rye had to go through before he was made into this
cake!” said the cat, and he spoke to him still more
sweetly.</p>
<p>“First he was threshed, and then he was beaten,
and then he was pounded, and then he was thumped,
and then he was thrown from one wall to another,
and then he was sifted through a sieve, and shaken
here and there, and then he was put on the drying-board,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</SPAN></span>
and then in the stove, until it grew so hot
that he puffed up more and more, and wanted to
get out, but could not,” said the cat, and took her
time.</p>
<p>“Get out of the way and let me in!” cried the
troll once more, and nearly burst with rage; but the
cat acted as though she did not hear him, and talked
down the blue from the sky, and went up and down
the while, and whenever the troll tried to come in,
she met him beneath the door with the cake.</p>
<p>“O, but do take a look at the shining maiden coming
up there behind the mountain!” said the cat,
after she had talked at length about the sufferings
of the rye. And Helge-Hal in the Blue Hill turned
his three heads around in order to see the beautiful
maiden, too. Then the sun rose, and the troll stiffened
into stone. Now Ebe obtained all the riches
that the troll had possessed, the sheep and goats,
the cows and all the spirited horses, and the handsome
golden castle, and some big bags of money besides.</p>
<p>“Here come the king and all his court,” said the
cat. “Just go out before the door and receive
them!” So Ebe got up and went to meet them.</p>
<p>“You are indeed a very distinguished lord!” said
the king to him. “So far as I am concerned you may
have the youngest princess!”</p>
<p>Then they started brewing and baking on a large
scale in the greatest haste, and everything was made
ready for the wedding. On the first day of the feast
the cat came and begged the bridegroom to cut off<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</SPAN></span>
her head. This he did not at all want to do; but the
cat spat and showed her teeth, and then Ebe did not
dare disobey her. But when the head fell to the
ground, the cat turned into a most handsome prince.
He married the second princess, and as the wedding
procession was on its way to church, they met a
third prince who was looking for a wife, and he took
the oldest princess. Then they all three celebrated
their weddings so that the story went the rounds in
twelve kingdoms.</p>
<div class="centered"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0a">“Spin, span, spun,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Now our tale is done!”<br/></span></div>
</div></div>
<div class="blockquot">
<p class="center">NOTE</p>
<p>The tale of “Helge-Hal in the Blue Hill” (Bergh, No. 2, p. 19) is
delightfully told. There is the timid, abidingly helpless nit-wit, and
the wise and energetic cat, who is quite at home in the ancient
wisdom that enables her to render trolls harmless. Their attention
must be held through the night by means of some pretext, a meaningless
tale, for instance, until the first ray of the rising sun falls
on them, when they turn to stone, or have to burst. In the Edda
this is what happens to the dwarf Alvis, so full of sinister lore.</p>
</div>
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