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- The Young Giant
- The Three Sluggards (The Three Lazybones)
Once on a time a countryman had a son who was as big as a thumb, and did not become any bigger, and during several years did not grow one hair's breadth. Once when the father was going out to plough, the little one said, "Father, I will go out with you."
"You would go out with me?" said the father.
"Stay here, you will be of no use out there, besides you might get lost!" Then
Thumbling began to cry, and for the sake of peace his father put him in his pocket, and took
him with him. When he was outside in the field, he took him out again, and set him in a
freshly-cut furrow. While he was there, a great giant came over the hill. "Do you see that
great bogie?" said the father, for he wanted to frighten the little fellow to make him good;
"he is coming to fetch you."
The giant, however, had scarcely taken two steps with his long legs before he was in
the furrow. He took up little Thumbling carefully with two fingers, examined him, and
without saying one word went away with him. His father stood by, but could not utter a sound
for terror, and he thought nothing else but that his child was lost, and that as long as he
lived he should never set eyes on him again.
The giant, however, carried him home, suckled him, and Thumbling grew and became
tall and strong after the manner of giants. When two years had passed, the old giant took
him into the forest, wanted to try him, and said, "Pull up a stick for yourself."
Then the boy was already so strong that he tore up a young tree out of the earth by
the roots. But the giant thought, "We must do better than that," took him back again, and
suckled him two years longer. When he tried him, his strength had increased so much that he
could tear an old tree out of the ground. That was still not enough for the giant; he again
suckled him for two years, and when he then went with him into the forest and said, "Now
just tear up a proper stick for me," the boy tore up the strongest oak-tree from the earth,
so that it split, and that was a mere trifle to him.
"Now that will do," said the giant, "you are perfect," and took him back to the
field from where he had brought him. His father was there following the plough. The young
giant went up to him, and said, "Does my father see what a fine man his son has grown
into?"
The farmer was alarmed, and said, "No, you are not my son; I don't want you leave
me!"
"Truly I am your son; allow me to do your work, I can plough as well as you, nay
better."
"No, no, you are not my son; and you cannot plough go away!" However, as he was
afraid of this great man, he left go of the plough, stepped back and stood at one side of
the piece of land. Then the youth took the plough, and just pressed it with one hand, but
his grasp was so strong that the plough went deep into the earth. The farmer could not bear
to see that, and called to him, "If you are determined to plough, you must not press so hard
on it, that makes bad work."
The youth, however, unharnessed the horses, and drew the plough himself, saying,
"Just go home, father, and bid my mother make ready a large dish of food, and in the
meantime I will go over the field."
Then the farmer went home, and ordered his wife to prepare the food; but the youth
ploughed the field which was two acres large, quite alone, and then he harnessed himself to
the harrow, and harrowed the whole of the land, using two harrows at once. When he had done
it, he went into the forest, and pulled up two oak-trees, laid them across his shoulders,
and hung on them one harrow behind and one before, and also one horse behind and one before,
and carried all as if it had been a bundle of straw, to his parents' house. When he entered
the yard, his mother did not recognize him, and asked, "Who is that horrible tall man?" The
farmer said, "That is our son."
She said, "No that cannot be our son, we never had such a tall one, ours was a
little thing."
She called to him, "Go away, we do not want you!" The youth was silent, but led his
horses to the stable, gave them some oats and hay, and all that they wanted. When he had
done this, he went into the parlour, sat down on the bench and said, "Mother, now I should
like something to eat, will it soon be ready?" Then she said, "Yes," and brought in two
immense dishes full of food, which would have been enough to satisfy herself and her husband
for a week. The youth, however, ate the whole of it himself, and asked if she had nothing
more to set before him.
"No," she answered, "that is all we have."
"But that was only a taste, I must have more."
She did not dare to oppose him, and went and put a huge caldron full of food on the
fire, and when it was ready, carried it in.
"At length come a few crumbs," said he, and ate all there was, but it was still not
enough to appease his hunger. Then said he, "Father, I see well that with you I shall never
have food enough; if you will get me an iron staff which is strong, and which I cannot break
against my knees, I will go out into the world."
The farmer was glad, put his two horses in his cart, and fetched from the smith a
staff so large and thick, that the two horses could only just bring it away. The youth laid
it across his knees, and snap! he broke it in two in the middle like a bean-stalk, and threw
it away. The father then harnessed four horses, and brought a bar which was so long and
thick, that the four horses could only just drag it. The son snapped this also in twain
against his knees, threw it away, and said, "Father, this can be of no use to me, you must
harness more horses, and bring a stronger staff."
So the father harnessed eight horses, and brought one which was so long and thick,
that the eight horses could only just carry it. When the son took it in his hand, he broke
off a bit from the top of it also, and said, "Father, I see that you will not be able to
procure me any such staff as I want, I will remain no longer with you."
So he went away, and gave out that he was a smith's apprentice. He arrived at a
village, wherein lived a smith who was a greedy fellow, who never did a kindness to any one,
but wanted everything for himself. The youth went into the smithy and asked if he needed a
journeyman.
"Yes," said the smith, and looked at him, and thought, "That is a strong fellow who
will strike out well, and earn his bread." So he asked, "How much wages do you
want?"
"I don't want any at all," he answered, "only every fortnight, when the other
journeymen are paid, I will give you two blows, and you must bear them."
The miser was heartily satisfied, and thought he would thus save much money. Next
morning, the strange journeyman was to begin to work, but when the master brought the
glowing bar, and the youth struck his first blow, the iron flew asunder, and the anvil sank
so deep into the earth, that there was no bringing it out again. Then the miser grew angry,
and said, "Oh, but I can't make any use of you, you strike far too powerfully; what will you
have for the one blow?"
Then said he, "I will only give you quite a small blow, that's all."
And he raised his foot, and gave him such a kick that he flew away over four loads
of hay. Then he sought out the thickest iron bar in the smithy for himself, took it as a
stick in his hand and went onwards.
When he had walked for some time, he came to a small farm, and asked the bailiff if
he did not require a head-servant.
"Yes," said the bailiff, "I can make use of one; you look a strong fellow who can do
something, how much a year do you want as wages?" He again answered that he wanted no wages
at all, but that every year he would give him three blows, which he must bear. Then the
bailiff was satisfied, for he, too, was a covetous fellow. Next morning all the servants
were to go into the wood, and the others were already up, but the head-servant was still in
bed. Then one of them called to him, "Get up, it is time; we are going into the wood, and
you must go with us."
"Ah," said he quite roughly and surlily, "you may just go, then; I shall be back
again before any of you."
Then the others went to the bailiff, and told him that the head-man was still lying
in bed, and would not go into the wood with them. The bailiff said they were to awaken him
again, and tell him to harness the horses. The head-man, however, said as before, "Just go
there, I shall be back again before any of you."
And then he stayed in bed two hours longer. At length he arose from the feathers,
but first he got himself two bushels of peas from the loft, made himself some broth with
them, ate it at his leisure, and when that was done, went and harnessed the horses, and
drove into the wood. Not far from the wood was a ravine through which he had to pass, so he
first drove the horses on, and then stopped them, and went behind the cart, took trees and
brushwood, and made a great barricade, so that no horse could get through. When he was
entering the wood, the others were just driving out of it with their loaded carts to go
home; then said he to them, "Drive on, I will still get home before you do."
He did not drive far into the wood, but at once tore two of the very largest trees
of all out of the earth, threw them on his cart, and turned round. When he came to the
barricade, the others were still standing there, not able to get through.
"Don't you see," said he, "that if you had stayed with me, you would have got home
just as quickly, and would have had another hour's sleep?" He now wanted to drive on, but
his horeses could not work their way through, so he unharnessed them, laid them on the top
of the cart, took the shafts in his own hands, and pulled it all through, and he did this
just as easily as if it had been laden with feathers. When he was over, he said to the
others, "There, you see, I have got over quicker than you," and drove on, and the others had
to stay where they were. In the yard, however, he took a tree in his hand, showed it to the
bailiff, and said, "Isn't that a fine bundle of wood?" Then said the bailiff to his wife,
"The servant is a good one, if he does sleep long, he is still home before the
others."
So he served the bailiff for a year, and when that was over, and the other servants
were getting their wages, he said it was time for him to take his too. The bailiff, however,
was afraid of the blows which he was to receive, and earnestly entreated him to excuse him
from having them; for rather than that, he himself would be head-servant, and the youth
should be bailiff.
"No," said he, "I will not be a bailiff, I am head-servant, and will remain so, but
I will administer that which we agreed on."
The bailiff was willing to give him whatever he demanded, but it was of no use, the
head-servant said no to everything. Then the bailiff did not know what to do, and begged for
a fortnight's delay, for he wanted to find some way of escape. The head-servant consented to
this delay. The bailiff summoned all his clerks together, and they were to think the matter
over, and give him advice. The clerks pondered for a long time, but at last they said that
no one was sure of his life with the head-servant, for he could kill a man as easily as a
midge, and that the bailiff ought to make him get into the well and clean it, and when he
was down below, they would roll up one of the mill-stones which was lying there, and throw
it on his head; and then he would never return to daylight. The advice pleased the bailiff,
and the head-servant was quite willing to go down the well. When he was standing down below
at the bottom, they rolled down the largest mill-stone and thought they had broken his
skull, but he cried, "Chase away those hens from the well, they are scratching in the sand
up there, and throwing the grains into my eyes, so that I can't see."
So the bailiff cried, "Sh-sh," and pretended to frighten the hens away. When the
head-servant had finished his work, he climbed up and said, "Just look what a beautiful
neck-tie I have on," and behold it was the mill-stone which he was wearing round his neck.
The head-servant now wanted to take his reward, but the bailiff again begged for a
fortnight's delay. The clerks met together and advised him to send the head-servant to the
haunted mill to grind corn by night, for from there as yet no man had ever returned in the
morning alive. The proposal pleased the bailiff, he called the head-servant that very
evening, and ordered him to take eight bushels of corn to the mill, and grind it that night,
for it was wanted. So the head-servant went to the loft, and put two bushels in his right
pocket, and two in his left, and took four in a wallet, half on his back, and half on his
breast, and thus laden went to the haunted mill. The miller told him that he could grind
there very well by day, but not by night, for the mill was haunted, and that up to the
present time whoever had gone into it at night had been found in the morning lying dead
inside. He said, "I will manage it, just you go away to bed."
Then he went into the mill, and poured out the corn. About eleven o'clock he went
into the miller's room, and sat down on the bench. When he had sat there a while, a door
suddenly opened, and a large table came in, and on the table, wine and roasted meats placed
themselves, and much good food besides, but everything came of itself, for no one was there
to carry it. After this the chairs pushed themselves up, but no people came, till all at
once he beheld fingers, which handled knives and forks, and laid food on the plates, but
with this exception he saw nothing. As he was hungry, and saw the food, he, too, place
himself at the table, ate with those who were eating and enjoyed it. When he had had enough,
and the others also had quite emptied their dishes, he distinctly heard all the candles
being suddenly snuffed out, and as it was now pitch dark, he felt something like a box on
the ear. Then he said, "If anything of that kind comes again, I shall strike out in
return."
And when he had received a second box on the ear, he, too struck out. And so it went
on the whole night. He took nothing without returning it, but repaid everything with
interest, and did not lay about him in vain. At daybreak, however, everything ceased. When
the miller had got up, he wanted to look after him, and wondered if he were still alive.
Then the youth said, "I have eaten my fill, have received some boxes on the ears, but I have
given some in return."
The miller rejoiced, and said that the mill was now released from the spell, and
wanted to give him much money as a reward. But he said, "Money, I will not have, I have
enough of it."
So he took his meal on his back, went home, and told the bailiff that he had done
what he had been told to do, and would now have the reward agreed on. When the bailiff heard
that, he was seriously alarmed and quite beside himself; he walked backwards and forwards in
the room, and drops of perspiration ran down from his forehead. Then he opened the window to
get some fresh air, but before he was aware, the head-servant had given him such a kick that
he flew through the window out into the air, and so far away that no one ever saw him again.
Then said the head-servant to the bailiff's wife, "If he does not come back, you must take
the other blow."
She cried, "No, no I cannot bear it," and opened the other window, because drops of
perspiration were running down her forehead. Then he gave her such a kick that she, too,
flew out, and as she was lighter she went much higher than her husband. Her husband cried,
"Do come to me," but she answered, "Come you to me, I cannot come to you."
And they hovered about there in the air, and could not get to each other, and
whether they are still hovering about, or not, I do not know, but the young giant took up
his iron bar, and went on his way.
A certain king had three sons who were all equally dear to him, and he did not know
which of them to appoint as his successor after his own death. When the time came when he
was about to die, he summoned them to his bedside and said, "Dear children, I have been
thinking of something which I will declare to you; whichever of you is the laziest shall
have the kingdom."
The eldest said, "Then, father, the kingdom is mine, for I am so idle that if I lie
down to rest, and a drop falls in my eye, I will not open it that I may sleep."
The second said; "Father, the kingdom belongs to me, for I am so idle that when I am
sitting by the fire warming myself, I would rather let my heel be burnt off than draw back
my leg."
The third said, "Father, the kingdom is mine, for I am so idle that if I were going
to be hanged, and had the rope already round my neck, and any one put a sharp knife into my
hand with which I might cut the rope, I would rather let myself be hanged than raise my hand
to the rope."
When the father heard that, he said, "You have carried it the farthest, and shall be
king."

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